Oklahoma City Daily Pointer (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 25, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 15, 1910 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Pasre Four.
OKLAHOMA CITY DAILY POINTER
Tuefdav februarv 15. 1910.
GR
n
pro]
mar
i«g
the
eiti
can
h er>
are
E
sba
Fa I
of
Yoi
off
Bi,X
fcur
the
cue
cav
me
of
clu
"B
fir.
lar
W<
Yo
Ha
hal
riai
yoi
th<
hit
in
«il
Me
mc
ini
No
J. AUSTEN CHAMBERLAIN
letting the chips fall where they may
Now that h# has set his hand to the
plow he will not look backward. And
he isn't reticent about it, cither.
RICH HEBREW SUICIDES
The poisonous loco weed, that bus
j caused tjjo loss of hundreds of thou-
i sands of dollars and thousands of cat-
1 tie, is to be made a nutritious food,
! owing to the experiments of Dean I.
iJ. Sayre of the Kansas University
I pharmacy school.
! Dean Sayre recently delivered an
address before a stockmen's conven-
1 tion at Topeka, Kan., in which he
I explained the food value of the plant
| as he had found it after the po. «on
had b«-Q r 'iiiov.-l, and Mb AUCD I AQIWP FORTHNF
jvtix LUjinu rui\iunL
white clover.
"It contains more proteld than al-
falfa and nearly as uiuch as white
clover," said he in his address, "and
nearly as much as bran, and more
nitrogen than either clover or ah
, falfa."
The chemist explained that the bar-
.uin, the poison that is in the weed
' and that which, when it comes in
contact Vith the digestive organs of
! stock, causes a paralysis of the brain,
could be made soluble by sodium phos-
phate.
I He advises the gathering of the
weed and stacking. a-.- would be stack-
ed hay, and then the pouring of the
i sodium sulpnate over :ne sta k. He
also explained the poison was absorb-
ed from the soil, only small quantities
being absorbed in some regions, while
j in others it abounds in the weed.
Sodium sulphate1 is what is com-
monly known as "horse salts."
Loco weed abounds in thirteen
states west of the Mississippi river.
only fifty classified varieties, out of
the running.
Naturally enough, the '.*tand-pat-
ers" regard all these measures for
reform as "ominous." They fear that
Mayor Nathan may yet propose tx> alter
•he topography yf the townsite itself.
■hey have sworn to oppose any at
in jit at revision downward, especial .
where any of the ffeven hills of
Home are concerned.
Needless to say, the mayor is a tar- j m Jj
g. r fur much abuse heapeil 1>j- the in-! Elmquist, is rear* old" saved" he Si
corrigible and recalcitrant members j ,-aui railroad from one of the worst
tlie board of aldermen. Aliuw rolls I wrecks in Southern Minnesota when,
i.r, him like water from a duck's back, with lower limbs mangled, he dragged
He has emerged from more tuan one himself by hit, hands more than half
eiback without a sore spot on his a miie to his station and warned the 1
body, lie proposes to new to tlie line, northbound passonger train of the
POISONOUS LOCO
WEED MAY BECOME
FINE STOCK FOOD
CRAWLS TO STOP
WRECK WHEN HIS
LIFE BLOOD RUNS
St. Paul, Minn., Feb. 15.—Rudolph
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul rail
road from continuing on its schedule
For only ten days Klmquist haf
been operator at Benning. four miles
north of Mankato, Minn., on the joint
tracks of the St. Paul and ureal West-
ern. In order to reach his boarding
place in Mankato he has been in the
habit of catching the inbound f reign t
of the Great Western every evening. |
In boarding the cars he faded and
slipped under tne caboose. One foot
was mangled and his lower limbs
mangled.
The freight continued on the way,
but was stopped about two miles
down the tracks by the train crew.1
•eft notes, one w,1° missed Elmquist and suspected
nd the other to Mrs. an accident.
Elmquist was tniown to one side
Denver, Feb. 16 Having made ar-
rangements for his funeral, Solomon
Dreyfus, 71 \ears of age. formerly a
wealthy Hebrew warrant shaver, swal-
lowed poison in his room at 2330
Larimer street.
to the coroner
Minnie Dempsey, landlady of the
rooming house where he had made: regaining consciousness he saw
his home for man- years. |the tal1 lights of the caboose coming |
The old man was alone in the world. back About this time the northbound
He had lived in benver for nearly st- Paul passenger was due and is al-1
thirty years and of late had become °n orders of a clear track,
involved financially to such an extent1 klmquist. failing in desperate ef-
that he had fallen to the position of j ;orf8 t0 attract the attention of t^e
a roustabout in the lodging house freight crews, began his bloody crawl
where be died, lie managed to eke "<*ck to his key I pon arriving there
ou a slender livelihood by his labor j ?. °H ,ra .?,n 5!u.r ^a,er sent the
in the placc
Mankato office this
warning:
It is presumed ihe lot s of money I ^ foot is cut off and No. 271 is
drove him to suicide. He nad two coming back to pick me up. She will
wea'ithy brothers, one of them beln?l _® °_ "®lP against 142, which is due
Son of .loueph Chamberlain, will be one of the forceful figures on
the Unionist side of the house of commons at the appro® siting session
cf parliament. Mr. Chamberlain ha much of hi- distinguished father's
oourago and ability in debate and has a very large following.
COLLEGE TEACHERS MILLIONAIRE WANTS
FAKE CLASS, SAYS DiVORCE ANNULLED >
The experiments of Dean Sayre cover .... — . ,, , . .
a period of tw(M > yeai 11m theories | Emanuel D. Dreyfus of the firm of at Mankato in a few minutes.
were )ff« ! li '"- kmen, state : Kahn. Drevfus & <*o.. G3H-638 Broad- When the St. Paul passenger arr v-
officlals and ot|,« and finally the way, New York clt\ The other broth a1 *?nnin.K about twenty minutes
government exp r look cognizance er is a resident of San Francisco and ; later, Klmquist was found lying al
of bis efforts .i; i followed liis sug there s a nenhew. Milton D. Dreyfus, moBt Jif7<,1SB over operators desk,
gesli.m:. He ti"' first chemist to of Little Reck. Ark. I * "oo1 °[ blood gathered on he floor,
tind the real poisai in the w< . d and A few days ago Solomon Dreyfus j ™eas taken to the hosmtal in Man-
to disprove the theories that it was -met Carl .1 Meyer of the undertaking j kato and is under the care of the corn-
similar io larkspur, opium and similar firm of Whitehead & Meyer on the Ph-vsic,uns
poisons. street and said: , Passengers of the saved train
"1 cannot ate ,>os tiveiv .it this! "When I die, anil it won't be Jong. nl*de up a substantial sum in reward
time that sodium sulphate w ili do the take mv body and see.that it is buried tho P^ticky operator s efforts.
Operlj I GOLD MFOAL FDR PFARV
Of ' a un urther e) mei Meyer, ..f course, bad no idea that A
now under way are completed, but i the old man contemplated suicide. i Washington. Feb 15.—The Italian
everything is favorable • > proving thK The ' oroner lias been unable to | geographical society decorated Com-
and if proven, a cheap way • > niskHi-: determine the nature of the poison , uiander Peary with a gold medal and
a world of food products will be Hindi taken by Dreyfus. One note left by | faptaln Bartlett with a silver one.
I a worse than useress w ' J 1 -*■
Tomorrow's Bargains at
BROCK'S
$3.50 Patent Colt Shoes $2.00
The power of quick CASH is again
illustrated. They wanted the money
QUICH. We paid them the cash.
They speak for themselves. Think
of a woman's Patent Colt Black
Cloth Top Shoe, absolutely new and
made to retail at $3.00 and $3.50,
WHILE THEY LAST only $2.00.
No old lots. No clean-ups. Every
one a NEW SPRING STYLE,
made on the new stage last. No
such values have ever been offered
in this store.
WATCH
THIS SPACE
DAILY
FOR REAL
BARGAINS
DONT
OVERLOOK
THIS S'PACE
FOR REAL
BARGAINS.
EROTHES OF GARFIELD
ransfortned into
flclal food."
WOMAN CARRIES HEN'S
EGGS IN HER PURSE
wonderfully bene
Chicago. Peb. 15-Richard T Crane. Colorado Springs. Feb .15. (!r0HS i ltT«im*p||tpci |M r|T|/
the multimillionaire manufacture: it purposes are strangeh mingled n tie INxHkI^NIV <J\| | II Y
Chicago. In a volume Just published (lome8tic relations of It. F. Perkln
!nto !• .- ——
of "higher education" of nil kinds. He
charges that the millions spent annu-
ally on universities, colleges, technical
and agricultural schools, in general,
are swallowed up in one of the most
gigantic "swindles" of the age.
Among other things be sa\
"The college men talk as though
they knew all about every other man's
business and that they could manage
affairs better than the business men
themselves.
"College professors and teachers ure
prepared to give advice on all sub-
jects. At $2,000 a year teachers they
tell us how to turn out "$5,000 and
$10,000 a year business men. Isn't it
a bit strange that it never has oc-
curred to these smart college fellows
to go into business for themselves?
Why draw a salary for telling young
men how to draw big salaries if you
are capablc of drawing the big sal-
ariea yourself?"
FORCES WIFE TO LOOK
WHEN HE SHOOTS SELF
ed wife, Anna R. Perkins, who is
well known in the exclusive social set
of this city.
Mrs. Perkins has been a frequent
visitor at the Antlers and Is now with
"To Coroner E. P. McGovern: Ac-
ording to the law you take mv body,
wish to have you order an inouest
or reasons known to myself. I have
10 obiecti in against you to bury me,
>ut. .Mr. Meyer is mv friend of the
GOVERNMENT OF ROME.^r
the coroner's jury tt> turn the body
Home.
Amerlc
How Is
Feb.
Rome is becoming
nized" rapidly. The Town
being waged more fiercely
her youngest daughter, a guest at, than ever and the "Insurgents" in tho
the Mayhursl, a fashionable hoarding (-itv government are slowly but surely
house near Stratton park. getting the upper nand over the
The domestic trouble of the family , "stand-patters."
came to light when Mrs. Perkins was j international exhibition Is to be
served with a summons to appear in held here next year and Mayor Xatli-
the district court of Farmlngtou.! an desires the visitors to Koine to see
Mass.. n, suburb of Boston, und show modern rity. To that end «.c is ad-
cause why her divorce de< ree secure.t vocatlng the widening of the narrow
at Sioux Falls, S. D.. a little over a <y*t of the street.-, the extension of
year ago should not be set aside an I the street railway sys' m and many
her husband granted a divorce and other Improvements. The street car
the custody of their four children on ; Bervice is owned by Ihe citj. ^o fights
the ground of desertion. For the last f„r long-term franchises are not
several days the law firm of Water among Rome's troubles.
man. Valle Ai- McAllister of Denver. Mavor Natlnn h the leader of the
on behalf of the husband, has been "insurgents." His election Was u pfc>
ndeavorlng to locate Mrs. Perkins. >o test against the "lve! well enough
that she might be notified of tin
tion, which conies up iu the Massa-
chusetts court next. Mondin but it
was not until toda\ that .loel F. \ :iile.
.Ir, wHJj Deputy Sheriff Compton «)f
this city, found the woman at M
hurst und left the paper in her pos-
session.
Mrs. Perkins divorced her hu nip I
on the grounds of cruelty and ineom
patlbility of temper, and was granted
liberal alimony by the Dakota cour*.
The husband, however, wanted the d<
cree nimself and the possess'on of
alone" policy, which had dominated
municipal affairs througn all the ad-
ministrations fpr nearly twenty cen-
turies. He i.^ on Italian of i.nglish
extraction, with the Anglo-Saxon
blood predominating His camnaicu
'ogan, rouchly translated, was "Make
R.iine a Good Place to Live In."
The Tail Goes With the Hide.
Mayor Nathan carrh
aldermanic candidates
him to obtain control
■il The "Bo-s Buste
ugh of hi$
vlcto
if tht
Denver, Feb. 15.—Forcing his wife
at the point of a revolver to be a
witness to his suicide, and ordering
her under pain of death into a corn v
of their room, where she cowered be j the four children, hence his milt lorl their candidate n th Amphitl
lievlng every moment to be he- last, legal separation on the ground . f de- torium Flaviuni Ward, where the in-
Morris Fittnis, a young homesteader aertlon. Perkins allegea hi-tj i?• left tereata" had no! known defeat slnca
from Arroya. In Lincoln county, sent him in February. 1907, and has since the memorable da\ when Brntu beat
u bullet through his left breast refused to return It is rumored that I'aesar by a scratch. It is significant
Then when he realized that his life Mrs. Perkins is engaged at pre.:«>nt that nearlx every precinct n the city
|,ad been spared by the bullet strik- to a wealthy Wyoming cattleman by in which there ure nan> nrienlflcent
ing a rib, he decided to make another) tne name of Rumsey. ruins are rock-ribbed in thek Bour-
•oun-
over to Whitehead & Meyer. You good taste,
have no obie^tion in doing so. I know]
you, Mr. M Govern, for many long
years, and I feel assured you have no
irl feel ngs to my request. I told
Meyer to g t my body after the cor-
ener'j .1nrv is settled. My friend,
Henry Morris. 1529 Arapahoe, sees
that thing j are dou.j proper. I have
nothing against you. Mr. McGovern
and know for a fact that you will do
lust ice to my bodst You know we all
have favorites. I am respect fully,
DREYFUS
The refusal of the house to make
Peary a rear admiral has evoked
much talk. Captain B. S. Osborn,
president of the Artie club and a Cook
supporter, says congress wouki have
done a shameful thing bad it given
Peary the rank of a rear admiral be-i farm five miles from here,
cause the discoverer had broken prac-j been a continuous resident
tlcally all the rules of decency and I gan fully lorty-five year
pled with rheumatism.
is in good health. He
Hudsonville, Minn., Feb
Thomas Garfield, aged 87, tii
brother of James A. Garfieh
martyred president, resides
WHILE HELD IN JAIL
MORSE EARNS $26,000
New York, Feb 15.—In the last few
weeks that Charles W. Morse, convict-
banker, was in the Tombs before he
was sent to the federal prison at At-
lanta. he made much money in stock
of his time reading. He was the old
est of the two boys and his father
died when Thomas was but 10 years
of age. Hard work was alwajs hte lot.
Obliged to support his mother, two
sisters and James, the young brother,
he had no opportunity to acquire an
education. He carried James to
school on his back when the winter
snows made walking a hardship for
the little fellw and saw to it that
James got through the ♦high school
and then arranged for the future
president to go to college.
All of this self-sacrifice Thomaa
15.— Denver, Feb. 15.—Carrying hen'i
e only eggs like money in a purse is the lafc
1. the | est wrinkle.
ou liis It was discovered by a oonducior
nd has "n the Twenty-second avenue line
Michi- when a woman living near City parK
le is crip- left his car at Sixteenth and Curtis
bu! otherwise streets. Inadvertently she left on thfl
fiends much oar her purse, one of the large aleed
The second note addressed Yo* the I deals, he believes. In fact, in one
Iandbi<]v follows: I transaction alone lie contends he made
"Please Dear Minnie (Dempsev:^ ;a profit, of $28,000. This belief was
''Do not allow anyone to disturb! revealed in a suit brought by Morse Garfield row calls a blessing an he
the package which is addressed to j against his brokers, which came up be- looks, back upon the past with
llenrv Morris. The first man to send ?ore Justice Platzek of the supreme tent and peac
for is Henry Morris, 1529 Arapahoe -court. Morse has sued John Wallace ways a poo
street. He pays the messenger. In ' & Co. for an accounting. He alleges for polities
this package are only letters for Mr. I the firm never gave him a statement brother was
Mori s to send away. Do not molest of his transactions and converted to j fam
the package. It Is of no interest to | its own use.
anyone. You, dear Henry, find the] 1 -
con-
i al-
man and cared nothing
While his distinguished
climbing the ladder of
felling the trees of
ones used by women.
No sooner had the car left than the
woman discovered her She rush-
ed to Policeman George Malone, who
stands on that corner, and he advised
her to wait for the return of the car.
This she did. When the car stopped
she rushed to the conductor, declar-
ing that, she had lost her purse.
What was in it?" asked the Tram-
way official.
The woman replied: "$10.26 io
change and a gas receipt."
"Anything else?" asked the conduc-
tor.
"Do I have to tell?" asked the loser
of the purse m an embarrassed man
ner.
When told she must she blurted
out: "Three hen's eggs."
Why she carried the eggs or what
she intended doing with them she did
trunk key on a ring, in with the door
key. hanging on the door. There is
no use for the Yale key but take the
trunk key off the ring, Henrv Mor-
ris Semi for Mr. Morris the first man
before the coroner. Do not send for
the col or the coroner. Mr. Morris
is the first man to T>e sent for. Do
not forget, dear Min.
•S. DREYFUS."
BARONET WES TO
LIVE WITH SOLDIER
WOMAN HELD PRISONER
HAS COUPLE ARRESTED
Michigan forest und attending to tli-' n°t say.
|,ar\< inis ..f In "top- II"' jii-v<m The conduilor handed t],e woman
vislied Washington, although invHed | her purse, remarking that at th« pres.
to do so.
He saw his brother for the lust
time at Menter before the inaugura-
tion and says that James would hive
preferred to have gone to the mmi;•?■
as he thought he could accomplish
Drugged and rob-1 more good tliece.
Los Angeles, Cal.,
Wolflej. former go
died at Iris home
attempt- this time to blow out his
brains, lie would have succeeded but
For i he time! ai I al of Polk email
Leonard S. Anderson. The officer
after a firce struggle in which the
would-be suicide tried to turn the wea-
pon on the policeman, succeeded an
lisartning him Police Surgen Mc-
• villivray rushed Burns to the county
hospital where his wound was found
to be slight.
The attempt was made in tho room
af the couple on the third floor of
the Hotel Brasle, 516 Sixteenth street.
Mrs. Burns has been employed as a
waitress while her husband has been
ou his homestead in Arroya for the
past few month He came to Denver
and from what the police learned, the
ounle spent the greater part of yes-
terday in their rov.m in wrangling.
ACTRESS ADMITS SHE
HAS "STAGE FRIGHT"
YEARLY, 101,001 STOCK
PERISH ABOARD CARS
Washington. Feb. 15.—It was staf-
fed today at the hearlpg at the house
'omraitteo on interstate and foreign
ommerce that as a result of brutal
refitment, 100,000 head of stock are
taken dead from the ears each year,
Involving a pecuniary lo*s of millions
the railroads are blamed.
The committee was considering a
proposition to fix at sixteen mil
sour the minimum rate at which rail
roads may transport live stock sh p-
MJrt* !l wm laid by shippers that
•allroads under present conditions
nay carry cattle at less than two
niles an hour.
"The present conditions are a dis
rrace to civilization," declared Dr
William O. Rtlmpson, president of the
American Humane association. He
tald the railroads constantly sidetrack
Ive stock to put througn other freight
taying a more profitable rate. They
requently overloaded engines, too. lie
nslsted, resulting in slow time. Ma
erial Injur*, he thought, is done to
lie meat of live stock mishandled in
ihlpment.
"Most of the railroads are crazy
ver this proposition of loading the
•ngines With ull they can haul, re-
mit ing necessarily in slow handling.
Imd great loss to shippers," was one
f the statements made bv F. W.
•oodlng of Wyoming, president of the
satlonal Wool tJrowers' association.
iiargaius of every description n**e
•fftred In the real estate columns of
onight'a paper
! bonism.
The mayor and his opponents In the
, council. have been at war ever since
| the day of their inaugural ion. The
"stnnd pat" aldermen, all of them de-
fenders of things as ihey are, or
. ' rather as they were 1950 years ago,
"view with alarm' every suggestion
Chicago, Feb. 1.7>— M,v#. William of th'nirs as the mayor thinks they
Faveraham, wife of the actor-manager' ^e
and prominent on tho slago aB Julio I ,'a "rgi"R n lmfrov*
i h nient right now. One of Home s efern.il
Opp, made her maiden speech before bills- -as all students of Baedecker
a woman's club and confessed to know—is crowned by three polices
stage fright. She addressed the1 representing the work of Michael
Evanston Drama club and there were|Angelo The city has appropriated
present 400 women and one man, 'the palaces and uses them for mu-
the Rev. William T. McElveen. pas-l n,c,Pal Panoses, particularly public
tor of the Evanston Congregational
church. The club met in the Lunt
library
.. ntions and aimfinr entertainment...
I Nathan has asked the council 'o or
r'nr the connect'on of the hnVldings
with covered bridges or footways.
Let Well Enough Alone. They Cry.
The "stand-patters" cry out that to
touch the handiwork oi tho great
of Northwestern university.
As soon as Mrs. Faversham had
regained her composure she congratu-
lated the women of Evanston as
"pioneers in a movement for better- t j
lug the drama, and said she believed architect and painter would be shame
the club would accomplish its aim,! lesa desecration. And these protests
for "what a woman really desires she are hacked by the indignant repre-
Ke,s " sentations of the Pure Ruins League.
Continuing. Mrs. Faversham said: nut Mayor Nathan is hopeful and
"The women of England restored it would be untrue to say that he is
Shakespeare In the Eighteenth cen- without influential support. Some of
tury to the theater. The women the most insistent of the progres-
appealed to Garrlck and he admits li' sivists regard the Coliseum as much
was from them he received the In*! of an eye sore as Kansas City's old
splratlon to restore to the stage the I'nlon station. Thev take the posi
true Shakespeare, which had been 'l°n iiiat if Kansas City could rebuild
dropped entirely or appeared only In "s Convention hail n ninety days it
mutilated forms." ! should not be too much to ask Rome
A reception followed In the rooms !restore its big hall 1n nineteen linn-
the University Guild | years
; The recently erected Pnlar.io dl
I Glusfi/la, or Palace of Justice, Is a
I proof that big things may he accomp-
\ew York. Feb 15.—'The empire Hshed when a town's boosters stand
state has got the legislative probe together and Ignore the obstruction-
Idea in its assembly and Representa- l*t«. The Palazzo i- modern and it
tlve L. S. Chanler, formerly heuten- pleasing to th
ant governor, yeaiercay Introduced a
resolution calling for a full and com-
plete Investigation. The majority
leader promptly objected and the mat-
ter was put off until next Monday.
of
DEMANDS INVESTIGATION.
PUTS OFF BALLOON ASCENSION.
L-
Frank Stern, the midget aero
who was to have madt a balloon as ro
reunion Friday afternoon, postponed ti-
the event from dsv to dav on net um ti
of the high wind. He declarea he won't | K
make a trip until the wind is milder \\
and from the eouthwesi He has built
it hot-air producer to fib hi u .s l a«
at South Hroadwav and Weal Chick
asaw, and wants a wind that wltl rai
ry him over the city towards ihe i
nort^ i
Tin Bridges To Go, Too.
A movement is on foot now to re-
place the tin bridges across the Tiber
with substantial structures, and the
baths of Caracella may be remodeled
ann used as nubile baths. There is
great need of some such provision
Another proposal rrntemnlatej th
reonen'np of the street whl-h pern-
t rales herein o' the Forma aomano
looks tod*\ like Mulberry street,
ai huh C.iy, after the big flood of
London. Feb. la.—The world-wid'
search Baron Arnold ^le Forest is
making for his wife has just revealed
the fact that she eloped with Lieut.
H. C. S. Vsluon of the Second Life
Guards, a noted show horseman, pop-
ular n and out of the English army
set.
It has been common gossip here
(hat the baron and baroness were un-
happy, and >t was whispered that a
separation bad been threatened.
They were married February 11.
1904. She is the only daughter of the
second Baron Gerard and a goddaugh-
ter of the late Lady Rosebery. Before
marriage she gained a reputation as
an equestrienne.
In abandoning her husband the
baroness also let behind two sons,
Alarlc, ti"' Quit# 5 years old. and
John, who will be 3 next week.
Maurice Arnold. Baron de Forest,
is :il years old. two years the senior
of the baroness He was adopted by
the late Baron llirsch, and it has been
cossip that he is a natural son. his
mother betac a Miss De Forest, an
American When Baron Hirach died
De Forest was created a hereditary
baron Of the Austrian empire by Km-
neror Francis Joseph, and Queen Vic-
toria's roval license empowered him
to eftjoy his title in the I'nlted King
dom.
When De Forest was 22 he wedded
the wealthy widow of Albert Menter
♦ be French chocolate manufacturer
They did not get along well, and the
marrlnee was annulled on account of
nrs religion.
COUNCIL PW B'LL
FOR FEEDING GERMS
• Pittsburg. Feb 1.". "To meat, milk
and eggs for feeding germs. $11.31
Deqver. Feb. 15.
bed and held prisoner two nights in a
lodging bouse above a saloon at Nine-
teenth ;.nd Arapahoe streets was the
fate of a pretty young married wo-
man. Mrs. Sadie Sherrler of 2128
California street, according to state-1J" \ , .
jmtnts she hoc made to Chief Arm-'
stroitg and Captain Rinker.
Mrs. Sherrter has caused the arrest
' of Joseph McAvoy, a saloonkeeper, Iffi^e
! and Bert Bundy, bartender, for in-
vestigation. The chief ordered Mc-
Avov's saloon closed pending an in-
vestigation. Both men were arrested
and are 'in the city jail
Mrs. Sherrier srys that she called
at the rooming house above McAvoy's
saloon to see a woman friend whose
first name Is Dottie. The woman was
not in, and later she ascertained that
she had removed from the block.
However, she was told that Dottie
was in the back room of McAvoy's,
and called there for her.
Mrs. Sherrier says that -he met a
man and two women who induced
her to drink, and that atter the sec-
ond <lrlnk she lost her senses and
awoke the next morning ip a room
upstairs
She discovered that her stocking
had been cut and $0 removed there-
from, also that her furs, worth about
550. her wedding ring, a solitaire dia-
mond ring, an extra pair of shoes and
an ostrich plume from her hat were
misting.
WHY DOOLAN IS A DENTIST.
STREET CAR ACCIDENT.
Feb 15.—Lewis
rnor of Arizona,
here trom injuries
was struck by a
street car. Wolf ley was run down
at Sixteenth street and Harvard boule-
rd, while he was on his way lo ]jis
He suffered concussion of the brain.
hi3 scalp was torn from his head, one
rib was fractured and be was cut from
head to foo1 He never regained con-
sciousness after being struck.
ent price of eggs he did not blame
I her for carrying them. "They're as
' good as money," was his comment.
ANIMALS OF B'G ZOO
DISLIKE THE BOYCOTT
Pittsburg. Feb 3 5.*—The lions, tig-
ers. wolves and other carnivorous ani-
mals at the Highland park zoo have
joined the meat boycott and, accord-
ing to Superintendent. George W.
Burke, thev did not tafte kindly to it.
The animals fight and snarl bccau. w
meat has been taken off t^eir biU ZJ
fare. This has become necessary
cause of high prices and the small ap-
propriation allowed by the city for t'n«
care of the animals.
In vie
high-priced
that be. hinii
the crusade a r.iin4t such
delicacies and the fact
elf, was boycotting them
counoilmv natural•*
H|C al ove '11 * ,
\ <; Sandhlr'i :b*
The
alt
Friend Soaked "Mike" for a Broken
Tooth—Thought It an Ea«y Game.
Springfield Republican.
"Mike" Doolau, one of the best
shortstops In the business, was asked
the other day how he broke into the
dentist business, and he peeled off1
the following: "It was this way I
often wondered what I would do when
my days as a hall player were over, i
but 1 couldn't pick out the profes-
sion. You see, I wanted something
that brought quick returns without j
much labor. One day Ihe Phillies
were playing in Cincinnati. A badly
bounding ball bit me in the face and
broke off one of my teeth. There
was a friend of mine in Cincinnati
who was a dentist, so. naturally. '
went to him to have* my tooth at-
tended to. Being a friend I thought
his price would be reasonable The
dentist put on a crown and filled a
couple of other teeth. Then he hand-
ed me a bill It was for $52. I paid
"'.o b'll without klokln.7 any harder
an 1 * ould ; * :• d" Islon by
VIlav or 'Bob" Emslie Tha
at the hotel the thought
o t ie that tills dentistry c
Attention
•he • lei lis ••
habit'mi < o
be
THE EARL OF ROSEBERY
.MP'
k
I w m*rwmwiMm
Kuw, iu ivansas City, which hi
;>n convene.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Oklahoma City Daily Pointer (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 25, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 15, 1910, newspaper, February 15, 1910; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc101474/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.