The Moore Messenger. (Moore, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 25, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 30, 1910 Page: 3 of 8
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N?w arrivals daily.
We can save you money.
We make up to suit \fou.
Our prices are right.
Try us and see.
Remember the place.
314 North Broadway
Between Second and Third St«.
OKLAHOMA CITY
TENTS, AWNINGS
And all Kinds of
Canvas Goods
First-CUm Workman.hip, Prompt S-rvict.
GIVF. L'S A TRIA1.
BATES MFG. CO.
20 West California
1-2 Block West Santa Fe Depot
JfAZ>U3X T&OFT C/TTWJUy dolpciiun as 1 he Atlantic headquarters ot
HALIFAX. N S.-ThU city Has Rained udd*° th* hou,e station ..I Hie two Hrlslol cruisers. the
the new navy that Canada is 10 have his s a, co8t o( $2,000,000. and the navul
six destroyers and the cruiser Mobe. w hich1 ti^ to be • u>aged by thB choice of their city as
college will be built here. I he ',le °' 'I f ^rrvil^ otit ihe plans of the provincial government
the naval base, and alreauy there Is great act vlty■ ncarry g ^ ^ ^ (g g)x lnlleg ,ong and a
The royal dockyard here Ik one ot the finest In Ibe British _ (,onn(,(,ts wUh Bedford Itasln. which
.nlle wide, with excellent anchorage In every pail. orllllcations protect the city and harbor.
Is capable of containing all the navies ol the world Numerous
1 was ..t first the Intention to do with
' out such things as kitchen and lunch
room, but on mature consideration I1
1 was found better to put them I11. Ev
I ery one knows the Influence of a Root
— " I meal (111 the temper ot mail N" badly
the roof with 4,200 cubic feet of small I nolirjshed individual can bo expected
granite and 70,000 square feet of slate j to be fine,j with peace and good will
The great tower will weigh 15.000,- j towards his fellow men. and Ro a
BIG SCAFFOLD USED
Novel Method of Constructing
Peace Palace at The Hague.
Never Before in Holland Has Super
structure of Such Immense Pro-
portions Been Seen—Provis-
ion Made for Enlarging.
neglect of the food problem nilglit
have spelled disaster to the arbitra
lion court. The architect said that
the palace would he completed In
191!t in time to receive the delegates
of the third peace conference.
Meet Me Face to Face
19 N. Broadway
OKLAHOMA CITY
Opposite
Hotel Lee-Huckins
■4 | *
The Hague.
progress madL
I in course of construction here, Mr.
j Van der Steur, the Dutch architect,
1 who has practical charge of the build-
1 ing operations, in talking of the novel
j methods adopted in its construction,
said:
"Such a free-standing scaffolding a? ]
I this right around a building lias never
been seen before in Holland. It is
quite a piece of work in itself, being
GO feet high and costing $16,000. but
then it will stand firm for many years,
and we Intend to let it remain until
the whole outer part of the palace is
complete, which will be in two years.
I in that way it will protect the walls
Do You Need a Well Drilled ? from injury Two great lift towers.
If so either write, phone or call on us. 13S feet high, are built into this scat
Satisfactorywo k, prompt service. folding, with two mighty cranes, each
hatisiaci y 1 | (.apnb,e of llfUng ,. ouo pounds. Such
Hamlin & rlariSUCK ^ great lifting; power is absolutely nee-
Office 22 W. California. Phone 260- ,,8Bary# 8im.P, for example, the blocks
Res. 1214 W. 28th St. Oklahoma Cit ^ Swedish granite lor the balustrade
- — of the lower terrace weigh 4,000
_ __ TUZ? OCbSIIIMP pounds each, though when you see
uEl J till UBLRUInk I them in place they do not look so
000 pounds. Although the palace is
| of such important dimensions, the
| members or the Carnegie foundation
< committee have foreseen that it will
| eventually have to be enlarged, es-
| pecially w hen America's project of
making the arbitration court truly per- l
| inanent shall have been accepted by i Recognized Sweetheart.
In speaking of the 1 (he powers The architect Is conn i York —.John Dltmor, n cowboy
on the peace palace. | dent that any such extension will In • Nortll IJak0ta, visited Kills
no wise detract from the beauty' of the other day and identified
the building, because with M. ( ordon- , m hp had npvpr Been
nier he has planned the proportions | h'sna.. ^ wh)ch
in view to such an eventuality. i ^ ^ |m)ther lllul sl.nt from Hamburg
The girl, Kusa Heinke of Hamburg
The Northwest
Railroad
Endorsed and Approved by
Chamber of Commerce
Oklahoma Cily's Prayer Answered
Denver, Kingfisher
and Gulf Railroad
AND
Northwest Motor Line
1). k. & G. Railroad
Through Piedmont, Kingfisher, Okeene, Longdale'
Shattuck and Texas and Oklahoma Panhandle.
Northwest Motor Line
From Oklahoma City to Kingfisher via "Forest
Hill" with regular interurban service and tast
motor cars now beginning construction from
Oklahoma City.
Northwest
The Greatest Boon
of the Year
Opening Sale, Monday, May 2nd
I Sell Clothing and
Furnishings
1 The upper part of the walls in the
| balls and stairways is to be of white
j French sandstone, alternated with
I sculptures and marble mosaics. All
1 the doors are to be of precious woods
j inlaid with Ivory and other rich ma-
terials. In the assembly rooms and
I justice halls, the floors, wainscoting
and ceilings will be of oak wood and
| the walls of hewn stone. These will
! almost disappear under the tapestries,
pain'ings and other mural decorations.
In the basement is located the res-
i taurant, close to the kitchen. It is a
i vaulted chamber, which has been
md the cowboy were married and left
for their home soon afterward.
Ditnier recently wrote his mother
at Hamburg that there were not eligi-
ble girls where he lived and asked her
to pick out a bride lor him. She sent
Rosa's picture. A correspondence
and later the engagement followed.
Mustn't Wear Birds.
Trenton, N. J.—The assembly has
passed the bill making any woman
.„ found wearing a "closed season bird
It j on her hat guilty of a criminal offense
Old "L" Engines in China
Forest Hill
Terminal Townsite Adjoining Oklahoma City.
400 Acres in the Famous Northwest
Between 13th and 21th streets just four miles
west of Western Avenue on the hill, west of Lin-
wood.
1OO acres platted for industrial sites and homes
in part of the addition where will be located
The Terminal
(Mf'fia
%
tpaoe
Helping in Construction Work of Can-
ton-Hankow Railway With Other
American Material.
men are proud of the fact, that they
got these big engines together In 11
days front the unpacking of the first
case.
Of coaches and freight cars there
are 30 American-type passenger
coaches, one directors' car, 72 Ameri
can freight cars and 106 China-made
freight cars. At the works of Won-
i lag.
1 the
future bridges will be made from
material imported In the rough. The
mechanical department at the head
station at Wongsha, which is exceed-
ingly well equipped, the latest ma-
Bottled by
OKLAHOMA C0C1 GOU BOTTLING COMP't
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Bottlers of the
GENUINE COCA COLA
^+++++++*+++++++++++++'M-+*
* FOR $3 per year READERS OF J
IMOTOR
AGE
Rcteir. 2200 pun f inUrt.tioI m«h..K.I
•criplioBS and tourin* hint
f WHERE CAN YOU BEAT THIS? <
t+++++++++++.t.++++++++++++
particularly big. The scaffolding is
built in several tiers and along each
level runs a Decauville railway for
hauling materials. We use as much | - .,, .
machinery as possible to lighten the Washington.—Consul Albe™
I labor, and not one draft animal en- Pontius of Swatow, submits the tol-
| ters our precincts, the material being | lowing rrom a Hong-Kong newspaper
i brought close up to the building | concerning the equipment for fhe t,an-
i ..round liv esneeiallv made small rail- ton-Hankow railway: With regard to
| * ° ?i„e8 from the station on the ! the rolling stock, six American loco- I gaha three first-class compartmen
I Hague-Schovenlngen line. Thence the j motives are already In operation and | coaches are now being built, as well
I materials are hauled in trucks to the j ]fi are in stock. There are six moguls ( as three second-class coaches, and four
I foot of the lifts and brought to their of 120 tons, the cylinders of which are , third-class coaches. The steel tinder-
' destination by means of the cranes I 19 by 26 Inches, the coal capacity nine '.frames have been sent on from
and tinv railroads along the scaffold- ] tons, and the water 5,000 gallons America.
Another novelty for Holland Is There are four Manhattan locomotives In the future much of the super-
cement-mixing "machine, which I being used In construction work: | structure of cars will be built by the
be handled by one man. The these engines were formerly in | Chinese themselves, and a change
i foundations are entirely of concrete 1 service on the elevated railways in | ,0 be made with regard to bridge con
tounaatlons are entirely rp are a]sQ s,x structlon whereas the practice has
I crDete' talowTelr'^w o marble | double-tender tank engines of 50 tons been ,0 Import the bridge from Eng
or wood which are engaged in running the 1 land or America a ready for erection
i "Twete million brick will be used j freight and passenger trains to rail-I future bridges will be made Hon
1 on the walls and about 66,500 cubic 1 head. . ,
i feet of Obernkirchen sandstone. 38,500 1 The mogul engines have Jus ap
cubic feet of white French sandstone peared 011 th" road, and they will cer-
| and 15,570 cubic feet of Norwegian j tainly itispii<_ ,hp J ^ The I chines having been imported from
granite. Four hundred thousand : ter■ or• * ten > ,h nnd his I Great Britain and America, is capable
pounds of iron will be required for | foreign engineer in chaige 1 of turnlng out all manner of work. At
present the machines are in tempor
5 ary sheds, but permanent shops will
I shortly be erected.
KISSES ARE WORTH $1 EACH
That Is Valuation Fixed by Pennsyl-
vania Magistrate—Price Proves
Satisfactory.
| Scranton. Pa.—One dollar apiece i
| was fixed in police court as the price |
j of kisses in the Scranton market. The
j quotation was given by Magistrate
John T Howe, when Nathan Perlman.
! a clerk in a Penn avenue shoe store.
I pleaded guilty to a charge of disor-
j derly conduct preferred by Agnes
' Mosher, a comely girl who works In
% candy store In the same block
The girl declared that Perlman
| bought some candy and when asked to
: settle he asked her If she wouldn't
| rather accept kisses than money. He-
fore she could reply Perlman circled
I her waist and planted two resounding
' smacks on her cheeks. When she re-
i monstrated with htm he refused to
: be squelched and she finally notified
| police headquarters.
) A warrant was issued and it was
' served on Perlman. When he paid the
| $2 tine Imposed by the magistrate.
J Perlman expressed satisfaction with
| the bargain.
Fish With a Horn Appears
Queer Looking Creature Terrifies
Three Anglers at Greenwood Lake,
in New Jersey.
Montclair, N. J.—The sea serpent of
J the Atlantic coast resorts will have i
I to take a back seat for a queer am- J
! phibious creature that is reported in ^
Clreenwood lake by Charles \ an |
! Gleson, John Willis and George Mc- i
! Cormick, all of this town, who have |
1 just returned from a week's stay at I
] the lake.
| Van Gleson bears evidence of a con-
flict of some kind, for his wrist is |
gashed as with a saw. The wound,
he says, was inflicted by the lake mon-
ster when It made a desperate effort
to get into a boat occupied by him
and his companions.
The three men were fishing for bass
| in the lake when they saw the mon-
| ter jump out of the water after a
flsh which McCormick had pulled up.
The first sight of the creature led the
men to believe that It was a huge
eel, but Its second appearance was
more terrifying. The thing dashed
close up to the boat after one of
the captured fish. It had a long horn
' on its snout and measured about
seven feet in length. Its general fa-
cial appearance was like a catfish, ex-
cept for the sharp horn. It was this
horn which cut Van Gleson
The strange visitor managed to
crawl over the bow of the boat before
the occupants could recover from
I their amazement. it impaled a bass
I which was lying in the bottom of the I
I boat, and then made overboard again j
As the creature slid back into the wa
I ter it beat its tail, which seemed to
have sponge-like qualities, so fiercely
| that, the air was filled with a fine
spray that blinded and drenched the
Montclair men.
Ladybugs to Save Melons.
j I.os Angeles. Cal.—Millions of lady-
' bugs are receiving free transportation
! on the railroads while traveling from
the state insectary at Sacramento to
I the melon fields of the Imperial valley,
j Three consignments have passed
' through l.os Angeles to be turned
j loose to browse on aphides and other
j insect pests that harm the melon
j crops. There are 011 hand in the In-
sectary 52.000,000 ladybugs, weighing
more than a ton.
Railroad Shops
Employing 200 to 300 Men
CI oice buiiness lots on Austin Avenve, the buis-
n« 88 street.
300 Acres
High class residence sites. All will be modern
with first-class car service. Elevated above all
others, shaded with beautiful trees, with purest
Spring water, the finest possession in north Okla-
homa City will be
A Home in Forest Hill
Soon to be a live young city in itself, not a suburb
miles away from life's necessities, and yet a part
of greater Oklahoma City, made immensely great-
er by that which makes Forest Hill great in itself.
Forest Hill Opening: Sale
Monday, Hay 2nd
First 500 Lots at Lowest Prices
One=Fourth Cash
6, 12 and 18 Honths
Opens Monday, May 2.
Forest Hill Co.
234-5.6-7-8 l.ee Buildinj
Phone 6I7O
Turner & Reed, Townsite Mgrs.
1). K. &Q. Railway Co., and Northwest Motor Co.
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Simms, P. R. The Moore Messenger. (Moore, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 25, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 30, 1910, newspaper, April 30, 1910; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109144/m1/3/?q=led+zeppelin: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.