The Record. (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 24, 1902 Page: 2 of 12
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THE RECORD.
NOllI.K,
II. «. KVERTON, PnblUher.
OKLAHOMA
, KI AIIOMA AND INDIAN TKRItlTOB*
T. D. Bartliolie, of Kingfisher, lost
by lire a fine barn and two horses.
A lighting and heating plant is to be
put into the Edmond Normal college.
Indiahoma, 20 miles west of Lawton,
is populated by people from Carrollton,
Mo.
Fort Cobb people will have deeds to
their town lots shortly if not by this
time.
The name of the town of Qnanali,
Comanche county, has been changed to
Cache.
Tecumseh voted bonds for water-
works and an electric light plaut by a
majority of 210.
The district court of Lincoln county,
at the close of the term, convicted
eighteen felons.
Corn planting is actively commenced
about Ponca City, with an increased
acreage over last year.
The Santa Fe will run a special train
to Kingman for the anniversary of the
Odd Fellows' organization.
There is a man living at Ponca City
who was formally "banished to Okla-
homa" by a court in Illinois.
Good authority is claimed for the
statement that the Rock Island will
build from Kingfisher to Watonga.
Sheriff Tilghman, of Chandler, has
just drawn rewards amounting to §700
earned by him in catching criminals.
Artliur James and W. M. Lawson, of
Ardmore paid J. M. Watson, of Mill
Creek, §40,000 for 2,000 head of cattle.
Near Whiteliorse, 0. T., E. Howe,
his wife and 12 children were all sick
with smallpox, except one. They were
without food for four days when aid
arrived. This is told by the Alva
Courier.
Messiah week at Lindsborg will be-
gin on May 18 and continue until the
23rd. There are 520 voices in the
chorus and an orchestra of 50 pieces.
The Missouri Pacific will run special
trains from Wichita.
The commissioners of Comanche
county have authorized the building
of toll bridges by private parties under
the supervision of the townshipoflicers;
the county reserving the right to buy
the bridges at actual value.
The Santa Fe is to survey a line from
Woodward through Gage, Saver, and
Mangum, to Quanali, 1 exas, a distance
of 300 miles. This is in Rock Island,
Orient and Frisco country. This comes
in a dispatch from Guthrie.
Canadian county now has no repub-
lican paper, and .Secretary of State
Clark, of Kansas, according to rumor,
is planning to start a daily and weekly
paper at El Reno next January. It
will be a verv healthy rumor that lives
on air for nine months.
Judge Burwell has given a decision
in the contest for the location of the
Southwestern normal, which favors
Weatherford. This will go to the ter-
ritorial supreme court on appeal and
may defeat the building of the school
anywhere under the existing law.
The route of the Katy through Ok-
lahoma is said to be decided upon; to
start from Stevens, I. T., through the
Cherokee and Osage lands to Cushing
and Flynn, diverging there to Guthrie
and then southwest through El Reno,
Anadarko and Mangum, O. T., to
Quanah, Texas, a distance of 300 miles.
From Cushing a line will be run to Ok-
lahoma City, and near Mominy, in the
Osage nation, the extension from Mus-
kogee, I. T., will connect with the
Stevens-Guthrie line.
IMPURE BAKING POWDER SEIZED
Till" New York Hoanl of limit li Find It
C'oiititliiH Alum anil Itork, Declare It
Ditngeroiis to llimllh and Dump
It Into tli« Kiver.
The New York papers report that
the Health Department of that city
has seized as dangerous to health
nearly two tons of cheap mixtures sold
for baking powder and dumped them
into the offal scow to be destroyed.
More of the powder was found in a
Sixth ave. department store. The re-
port of the analysis of the Health
Department stated that it was "an
alum baking powder" containing alum
and pulverized rock.
The different Health Authorities
seem to ha*ve different ways of re-
pressing the sale of had baking pow-
ders. In England they have prosecut-
ed the grocers under the general law
and broken up the traffic. In Missouri
the sale of alum baking powder is
actually prohibited by law. In New
York they seize the unwholesome stuff
and cast it into the river without any
discussion. The latter way Is certain-
ly effective.
The alum baking powders are usu-
ally offered at a low price, ten to
twenty cents a pound, or with some
prize, as a temptation to the house-
wife.
Consumers can protect themselves
by buying only high-grade baking
powder of established name an 1
reputation. Do not be tempted by the
grocer to take something else as "just
as good" or "our own brand," for the
trials show that the grocer himself is
often deceived by unscrupulous mak-
ers, and is selling an alum powder
without knowing it.
There are several good powders on
the market; let the housekeeper insist
on having what she knows is right,
and not be induced to risk the life of
the family for an imaginary saving of
a few cents.
ltrefid from
Banana bread is now on sale in
some places. It is made of bananas
dried and ground down into flour, and
is considered twenty-five times as nu-
tritive as ordinary white bread made
of wheat.
Has Title for Fnle.
The Marquis Townshend is in this
country on a business trip. It is said
he is willing to transfer his title for
a consideration. Just what this con-
sideration must be is only surmised,
but the rumor is that for the small
sum of $250,000, as a retainer, he will
grant someone the privilege of writ-
ing marquise before her name
Tearing Down Pun-American.
The Buffalo park department has a
big job on its hands to restore to its
former condition that part of Dela-
ware Park which was included in the
Pan-American Exposition grounds.
Probably a number of years must
elapse before all traces or the havoc
worked by the exposition will have en-
tirely disappeared. The department
wants a special appropriation of $20,-
600 for the work of restoration.
Street Railway Stop Siens.
Beginning on Wednesday next the
"white pole" stop-signs arrangement
on the Boston & Northern street rail-
way will go into effect. The poles are
placed very near together. At first it
was proposed to have them 600 feet
apart, but constant clamors for poles
at this place and that place have re-
duced the distances in some cases to
less than 200 feet apart. It is ex-
pected that the system will gradually
be introduced on other lines.—Boston
Globe.
Sew President of Brail!
Dr. Francisco De Paula Rodrigues
Aires, who has just been elected pres-
ident of Brazil, has for many years
been a conspicuous figure in the pol -
tics of that republic. He is a nativr-
of the state of Sao Paulo, and is now
governor of that state. He will be
inaugurated on Nov. IB, the anniver-
sary of the proclamation of Brazil s
Independence. The tenure of office is
four years.
Asher has organized a Woman s Club
with a large membership.
Tulsa is slated for two more rail-
roads; the Katy and the Santa Fe.
Purcell re-elected J. F. Sharp as
mayor and II. L. Vaden as marshal.
A charter has been issued for a cot-
ton seed, oil cake and meal mill at St.
Leger.
Work on the Choctaw is awaiting the
completion of the bridge over Turkey
Creek.
The Bartlesville vitrified brick plant
is ready for business. It has a capital
of $40,000.
Regular trains are now running over
the Ardmore extension of the Choctaw
road from Haleyville.
The Catholic Sisters of St. Joseph
have ordered plans for a hospital at
South McAlester to cost $35,000.
The Katy extension from Wybark,
1. T., into Oklahoma will run on the
north side of the Canadian river.
A site for the Shrincr's temple at Ok-
lahoma City, where a $50,000 building
is to be erected has been secured.
The Cottage hotel at Durant, I. T.,
burned the other day, the guests mak-
ing a narrow escape. Loss $3,500.
Judge Clayton of the Central district
of Indian Territory decides that In-
dians may lease lands for townsites.
Graders are throwing dirt on the
Pawnee and Long wood branch of the
Santa Fe between Newkirk and Kay
City.
The Frisco people are figuring on
making a watering resort at Sulphur,
which plan includes the building of a
brancn from Hickory.
The Frisco surveyors found an easy
grade line from Pawnee to Jennings.
From there the line is to follow up
Bear Creek most of the way.
The construction of the Rock Island
shops at Chickasha is well under wg. ,.
It is thought the shops will be ready
for use by the middle of May.
The Muskogee Times says the Ozark
and Cherokee Central railroad has
swallowed the Muskogee and Western
and will make Muskogee a division
point,
A convention of postmasters of In-
dian Territory lias been called to meet
at Muskogee on .lune 13. The purpose
is to improve the postal service of the
territory.
Ex-Governor Mosely was nominated
at Sandy for governor of the Chicka-
saw nation, on the national ticket, de-
feating Col. Richard McLish, of Emet,
by six votes.
J ames A. Holland, of Cushing, who
has been in the Philippines for several
years as a soldier, returned to Guthrie
where he was met by his sweetheart,
Miss Daisy A. Brown, of Lawton, and
the two were married.
The railroads interested in the new
townsites along the line of their roads
fought the provision in the Indian ap-
propriation bill which makes it a fine
and imprisonment for anyone to lay
out tracts of land for townsites with-
out the consent of the secretary of the
interior. Representatives of the roads
went to Washington in opposition to
the measure.
At the meeting of the Chickasaw and
Choctaw Stockmen s association, two
thousand dollars were awarded. llo-
venkamp, of Fort Worth; Washington,
of Marietta, I. T.; Gary, of Armstrong,
I. '1'.; Burgess, of Fort Worth, and Al-
lure, of Oklahoma, won most of the
premiums in the Shorthorn classes.
Russell, of Bennett, 1. T., and B. C.
Rhome, Fort Worth, Texas, won in the
Herefords. Many registered bulls and
heifers sold at good figures. The new
oflicers of the association arc: Dr. T.
P. Howell, of Davis, president; O. F.
Haley, Gainsville, Texas, secretary;
Matthew, Wolf Davis, treasurer.
Whit He Believed In
Mrs. Bacon—Your husband believes
In throwing physic to the dogs,
doesn't he? Mrs. Egbert—Yes; and
alarm clocks at the cats.—Yonkers
Statesman.
How Words Orii;in.ite.
When one of the boodle aldermen
coined the word "combine," did any-
body imagine that within a few years
a justice or the Supreme Court of the
United States would use it in a sol-
emn opinion, with no apparent doubt
of its perfect validity and propriety?—
New York Tribune.
INSIST ON GETTING IT.
Some grocers say they don't keep De-
fiance Starch because they lnve a stock
in hand of 12 oz. brands, which they know
cannot be sold to a customer who has
once used the 16 oz. pkg. Deliance Starch
for same money.
When a man asks a favor he always
puts his best foot forward.
Do Your Feet Ache and Horn?
Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures
Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot ami
Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and
Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Lelloy, N. Y.
Experience is a teacher whose lessons
should be learned once for all.
To the housewife who has not yet
become acquainted with the new tilings
of everyday use in the market and who
is reasonably satisfied with the old. wo
would suggest that a trial of Defiance
Cold Water Starch be made at once.
Not alone because it is guaranteed by
the manufacturers to be superior to
any other brand, but because each lOu
package contains 16 ozs., while all the
other kinds codtain but 1'! ozs. It is
safe to say that the lady who once vises
Defiance Starch will use no other.
Quality and quantity must win.
One swallow may not make a sum-
mer but a grasshopper can make a
spring.
r
!t L - ua
rr
i «•: J
!Irs. Ecliis Stevenson of Salt
Lake City Tells How Opera-
tions For Ovn.rian Troubles
31ay lie Avoided.
"Dear Mks. Pinkiiam :—I suffered
with inflammation of the ovaries aud
womb for over six years,enduring aches
und pains which none can dream of but
those who have had the same cxpe-
V
V
MRS. ECKIS STEVENSON.
rience. Hundreds of dollars went to the
doctor and the druggist. I was simply
a walking medicine chest and a phys-
ical wreck. My sister residing in Ohic
wrote me that she had been cured oi
womb trouble by using Lydia F,.
Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound? and advised me to try it. I
then discontinued all other medicineu
and gave your Vegetable Compound a
thorough tri^il. Within four weeks
nearly all pain had left me; I rarely
had headaches, and my nerves were in
a much better condition, and 1 was
cured in three months, and this avoided
a terrible surgical operation.''—Mas.
Eckis Stevenson. 250 So. State St.,
Salt Lake City, Utah.— $5000 forfeit if
above testimonial Is not genuine.
Remembpr every woman is
cordially invited to write to Mrs.
Pinkkam if there is anything
about lier symptoms she does nat
understand. Mrs. Pinkkam s
address is Lynn, Mass.
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Everton, H. G. The Record. (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 24, 1902, newspaper, April 24, 1902; Noble, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc106223/m1/2/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.