The Snyder Star. (Snyder, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1903 Page: 3 of 12
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irrigation rumo
•• i
•»« • WllIlM *»« W*
WMtUMHUI IW«llM«N Kxh
m4* «4 Ito IMMkl Uk4 o«M kM k*4
l«»|a»>*U s •iai»w>nl fistag iIm tun
•IMUMMI of III* fs*-l art t|«ll fut Ik*
l**lkiMl«4i of klhl l.a.1. IIMlM III*
#*• of im ll atM tt. 1 Mil
ol 9l.Uu.nn few Ik* bml ;**i IBbl e*4
ion. rfitinkiiM amtmg ika states ul
bmiHM m follow*
Artsuoa. |*i.M i'*lifonna |MM,?7o,
• WkttsUo. #ojB SB* l<laltv.
94».iw. Muutoim. •
Nebraska. *fhA IM. Nr**.l*. |»J ltd.
N** M»ki«n. Ilii.eT. Notih Makxia.
9l.t1T.4M. Oklahoma |l,niw 7W- Ot*
gou 9MI0.MI. booth I Nikola. ,
I'lali 9144 It.'l; Waalunai»a. 9TM.Ml».
Wjon.it.*. 111* total fut iv»t
•** 93.U4.Mtl. Mil fi.1 liar* 94.6M 6H»
Tfc* irluini un Ika wtls of public)
lauds fur lb* Aral ibra* quart* is of |ha
IWrorot taml jrar indicate that lb* r*-
rail** will la ala>al i-qual li> iba I wo
innulikf y-srs m that kj ib» Biai of
aaal Julj tl* irrigation tun.l of ilia
Ifaaaarjr d*|*ci tmrtit will amouul lo
aU ui 9iA,nuu.t»0
DELAWARES TALK MOVE
■••aataal aa fan fur ikaat la Ml*rala
la MM Masts*
I'lANiannr; Thai* la a movemml
ob fool for Iba Delaware Imliana lo soil
tbalr allotlaii lamia In Iba Clmrok*# ba-
llon and go io Ibnica. A location baa
bean proiniaad anil nafotialiou* are now
|amlin* K. C. Adam*. r*|>ra**alatir*
at Washington of iha Delaware*, and
bia attorney. Utolf* 8. Cbaae, have
been In the tern lory aareral weeka
bolding a oonncll with the Delawan a,
lo induce them lo relinquish I heir
claima iu the larritory for laud In Mex-
ico. Tlie tribe la divided over the prop-
oaition, bnt about thirty-two familiea
have aiitned the contract to go. The
Delawares’ land, acatiered in Urge
tract* all throogh the Cherokee nation,
pnrehaaed from the Cherokee Indiana,
comprise* tome very rich tract*. It ia
very probable that many of the Indiana
will accept the proposition and go
eouth.
REGISTER OF THE U. S. TREASURY
USES PE-RU-NA FOR SUMMER CATARRH
AHtkte Pita uU
DEED RECOMMENDED
Ageal MaaaalWIt Bead* first Mead la
lalarlar I>*|»ertiii«*nt for Ac-c-rptanre
Mi'skooxc: J. Blair Shoenfelt, Indian
agent at this place sent to the secretary
of the interior the first recommeutUtion
ever made in regard to a deed issued by
an Indian to a non-citizen for li ni in
the Indian Territory. If the deed slionltk^
be confirmed the grantee will be the first
white man to acqnire full ownership.
There are 30.000,000 acre* of laud in the
territory occupied by the five civilized
tribes, and 80,000 allottees, bnt until
now none of them has ever been able to
alienate hia rights to the laud which he
held. The 'rausmission of this deed,
wss recoguizrd in the office here as a
historical event and was witnessed by a
large number of the employes of the
office
|JON JL’DhON W LVUNK
s 1 hag me *4 Iba I'Bilal
bisias ii«w**M. <a a Mist
fl«# Wali*|j.a. U. C. **»•
"(AM Area* t* Mas
rwrAraf rangy far IM **-
MrrtUf aflhUai af aprlmg
•M laabaar, mm3 lisa* wfkw
•mttmr tram Mgsmb* tram
tM Mat at ika aammwr mill
AMm .nawi^MHkf ryml at
N« man I* tanw Be--** ia iba
haaa.ial mold ihaa |ud«uw W.
Lj.ma. k'lmili <4 Ai>*u»ia. t,*
Hs asata i* aveif j»a of
mooaj of mmi data mass* hi*
s.gaaiuia oaaol iha anal Ismdiaf
IB lb* I'a.lad Nialv*
TwolAttmilag LgfttraFrMB
Ttaakfgi Wmma.
M.*a t'amilla t'baiiiar. 9 \V**i
l.exngi.m bt , Halnmoi*, bid.
wijjaa:
' Lai# *U| psisgtadually affect-
rd my d■•**!...a aud mad* m* a
miaarabla d)t|«ptcr, tuganag la-
irately at lima*. I look *a*atal
kiad* ol medmaa wbnh weia
pi escribed hyd.gaiaat plicakisat
but •till coallaaed le augvr. llul
the trial ol ooe boiila ol I'riuoa
(uaviacrd me that il would nd
ms ot ibis IrouMa. so I rnnliaued
takiag il for several waaka and I
•»» in ascetleol baallh. havia* gaioad lea
pound*"—Miss Camilla Cbarliar.
Summer Catarrh.
Mrs. Kaia Bohn 1119 Willoughby Ava.,
Brooklyn. Jf. T, write* :
''When 1 wrote you 1 was troubled with
lrsqueal header bee. duty, siraage lealiog
in the head, sleeplessness, siakiag faeliag*.
faiuloeaa aad numbosu. Soma lime* I bad
bsartbura. My food would rias lo rnt
throat after every meal, and my bowels
wars vary irregular.
." 1 wrote you for advice, aud I now lake
pleasure in informing you that my improve-
meet ia very great ladeed. 1 did not as-
pect to improve so quickly after auSering
WITH NERVES UNSTRUNG AND HEADS
THAT ACHE
WISE WOMEN
BROMO - SELTZER
TAKE
TRIAL BOTTLE IO CCNTR.
FOLLOW THE FLAG.'
pi
Only Double Daily Sleeping Car
Line to BOSTON.
THE WABASH LINE,
In connection with the Weal Shore and Boston L Maine Railreada.
ha* inaugurated double daily service between St. Louie and Boatoo-
for Ava long years. I am feeling very good
aed sliung. I thank you so much toy re-
runs. I shall recommend il to all suflenog
w.tb Iha efle.it of ratarrb. aad I consider
il a huutchold blasting. 1 shall never be
without I'sruss. ’*
for thi>*s phases of catarrh peculiar lo
summer, reruns will tie found sfliractoue.
I’sruss cures catarrh iu all phases **d
stages.
it you do not derive prompt and satisfac-
tory results from the use of Feruna write
el oaoe io Dr Hartman, giving u full ataie-
ment of your case and he will be pleased to
give vou his valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Ilartman, Prasidaot of The
Hartman Sauitarium, Columbus, Okie
Laavlng St. Isafi........
Arriving Barton ......
Arriving Maw York -----
9:00 m. m. 8:3V p. m.
3:20 p. m. 9:30 n. m.
3:30 p. fit. 7:40 a. us.
Additional Train, via Wabash and Delaware. Lackawana L Western.
Loovat St. Louh
Arrival Maw York
Arrival Boilon ....
■ 11:39 p. m.
7:03 a. m.
■ 10:10 a. m.
AI1 Rbovp IftlBA carry Ihrouth Sleeping <'am w» New York 4*1|? biVI arc ronr»ntf»ni
for MkkroMriklo Toledo. Dflroit Niagara t all* and Huffalo.
For lull Information regarding *u turner tour ticket* YiB tlicar train* to nil Kanteru
reaoru call at
TicKwt OBc*. Olivo and Eighth Strwwto, N. E. Car,
Auction or Town Lois
Muskouec J W Zevely. acting
(Jutted States Indian inspector for the
Indian Territory lias announced the
date for the anctioo of town lots, the
disposition of which has not been other-
wise provided for, to several of the
towns of the Creek nation They are:
Inola. 17? lots, Juno 17. Wagoner Htt
lots. Juoe 18: Coweta. 33 lots. June 19;
Muskogee. 3 lots. Jane 33; Lee. .1 lots,
Jnne 33; Clarktville. 37 lots, June 34;
Checotah. 3 lots, June 36; Gufeo a. 6
lots. June 37 Ten per cent of the pur-
chase price must be paid Ju cash at the
time of sale; within four months there-
after the purchaser must pay 15 per
aent additional, and the -einainder of
the purchase money in three equal in
stallments.
Anti-Race gulcioa Club.
An anti-race suicide club has been
formed by tba students of Columbia
university. President Roosevelt is to
be slooted honorary vice president,
end the rules for membership, con-
stitution and by-laws are all in the
following: If you are single you agree
to marry as soon as your income will
allow, and your family must not num-
ber fswsr than Are; If you are married
you agriSe to stay married, even unto
the third or fourth jrlfe, and the same
family requlremei.fs prevail.—Phila-
delphia Record.
Pressure on Naval Quna.
A naval gun when fired sustains a
pressure of fifteen, to seventeen tons
to the square inch. It has previously
stood a charge giving a force of twenty
toua to the square inch at the prov-
ing grounds.___
Leave? Collage for Farm.
Prof. P. R. Marshall has left a col-
lege faculty to be beau of a great farm
In Iowa. He was assistant to the
chair of animal husbandry at the Iowa
Agricultural college, and his new place
Is in the live stock division of the
famous Brookmount farm*.
Could Not Ratain Ufa.
After having been pronounced dead
by the local physician, a well-known
lady, who witb her family bad long
resided In the village of Woore. North
Staffordshire, was recently laid ready
for Interment. All preparations for
the funeral had been made and friend*
and relatives assembled to take a final
! farewell. As the mourners watched.
| (he eyes of the lady wer* seen to open
and her lips to move. Life bad re-
J turned lo the supposed corpse. The
i news of the strange event spread
! throughout the village and district and
; produced the greatest excitement. To
! the grief of all, however, there same
j a relapse, and life was declared to be
definitely extinct
Fira Screen of Human Skin.
The Sultan of Turkey Is said to pos-
sess a fire screen made of tanned hu-
man skin, exquisitely embossed, and
over two hundred years old. The
skins were those of twelve faithful
servants who rescued one of hie maj-
esty’s ancestors from a blazing wing
of the palace, afterwards succumbing
to the effects of their burns.
Origin of “Agnostic."
Prof. Huxley Invented the word "ag-
nostic." Finding himself one day a
"man without a rag of a label to cover
himself with," he concluded to call ,
himself by a name of bis own coining.
It came Into his bead, said Huxley, as
suggestively antithetic to the gnostic
of church history, who professed to
know so mucb about the very things 1
of which he himself was ignorant, and
the professor "took the very earliest
opportunity of parading It at our soci-
ety. to show that t, too, had a tall, like
other fo»*“”
Sad, Indeed.
Terry McGovern's mother has fut*
nished a press syndicate with a thrill-
ing story of how it feels to sit In the
front parlor with the blinds drawn and
know that tbe boy you have watched
from th« cradle to tbe ringside is get-
ting his block knocked off.—Washing-
ton Post.
General duarry.
Graduates of our public schools may
know a heap about sociology, Roman
history, and geometry, but they cannot^
spell the English language. What'l
the matter?—Brooklyn Eagle.
Light From Bacteria.
What a miserable, dried up, derelict
world this would ba without those al-
leged enemies of mankind—bacteria!
Why. we do not begin to appreciate
their manifold Importance. In physiol-
ogy and the arts. The possibilities la
Prof. Ilans Mollsrh's diet-over/ ot a
bacteria lamp light cannot be esti-
mated. Farewell to gas and electrla
light monopolies! A simple glass jar
Is lined with saltpetre and gelatine
Inoculated with bacteria. Two daye
after inoculation the jar becomes Il-
luminated with a wonderful bluteh-
green light, caused by the Innumera-
ble bacteria which have developed ta
the time. The light will burn bril-
liantly from two to three weeks.—New
vork Press.
Futtlng It Delicately.
Here is the extremely delicate way
which a man states bis chief reason
fur asking that be be freed from mat-
rimonial bonds, which gall: "The de-
fendant has acted In such a way that
said husband has had difficulty in dla-
tlngulshlng her treatment of bim as a
husband from her treatment of others
who bore no such relation to her.”
A New TownNlte
El Reno: A Bite" of 160 acres has
been secured for a town on the S(.
Louts, El Reno & South western eight
miles east of El Reno. The town will
be platted as soon as the right of way
is secured and it is not known wlidthr r
the road wilt come from Oklahoma City
or Guthrie
others, do you know
V)*.
Missouri River Racing
Kansas City: The Kansas and Mis-
souri rivers are rising here at an alarm-
ing rate and the indications are that
all previous high water records ut this
point will be broken. Much dnmage
lias already been done to property in
the lowlands along the two rivers and
much apprehension is felt for the prop-
erty in the west bottoms district of this
city. The Kansas river is rising at the
rate of an inch an hour and the heavy
and almost continual rains have added
to the gravity of the situation. Super-
intendent Conner of the Kansas City
weather bureau predicts that the rise of
the Missouri river during the next three
days will be unprecedented. He says
that the volume of water from the Kan-
sas river and other streams for which
the Missouri river is an outlet, added
to the nanal Jnne rise, will carry the
Missouri river to a higher stage than it
reached in 1881, when it broke all pre
viens records. The Missouri gauge reads
23.7 fact above low water mark and
tHuperintendent Conner predicts a rise
of three feet. At the little town of
Harlem, across from this city, the
residents in the flooded district were
rescued from house tops in boats after
let ving tfce r personal effects
Tgr-'L
9
TA
that a perfectly healthy baby never cries,^^ When the little one does cry
there’s something wrong, and generally it's the stomach. Paregoric, Soothing
Syrups, Cordials, Teething Syrups and Pain Killers contain opium and
morphine. Don’t use them. They are harmful—costly too. Such drugs
constipate and derange the digestive organs.
Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin
(A Laxative)
is pleasant to take, augments and supplies the natural digestive ferment,
acts as a gentle laxative, makes and keeps babies in health and good
humor. A trial will convince you.
Gentlzi
hod been trou
it hitbly to mother* io
Pepsin. My little dr I. aw* d eight months,
y it. and 1 can recommend
Mrs. C. Fi.urky.
hen : For constipation I would cheerfully recommend Dr. C*ld-.v»Tl> Syrup *-«»>»•>•■ -••
ibled since birth with constipation, and reading of your valu»t medicine 1 concluded to try it.
uthers for immediate relief. Only two ten-c«nt bottles cured my L*»by.
Mrs. C. F■•••****s.
1013 W. Macon Stieet. Decatur. 11L
Yoor druggist sells it. If not send us his name and we will send sample
bottle FREE. SO cent snd (1 bottles. It is economy to buy the Si size.
PEPSIN SYRUP CO*. Monticello. Ills.* U. S. A.
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McCarthy, E. E. The Snyder Star. (Snyder, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 11, 1903, newspaper, June 11, 1903; Snyder, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc497281/m1/3/: accessed May 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.