The Noble News (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 23, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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KOILE.
K. LAMI KING
OKLAHOMA
American,
STATE HAPPENINGS
Fire of unknown origin de«tro>ed
Oie general merchandise tore of M.
I. Markle, and the Bank of Hlil*>iai«,
at Coldwater. The low ia 110.000.
The Athletic Club, of Chickasha haj
been chartered. The directors are: E
Goben and Dr. A. 8. Riddle, of ( hick
assha, and Dr. C. L. Goeber of Lawton.
E. L. Copple, Day Fezier ar.d Warren
K. Snyder have organized "The Hoot-
erie." A charter was granted them
to do a retail shoe business In Okla-
homa City.
WILLIAM A
ADFORI>
Eatt
Harold, the ^year-old son of Robert
Alkin, of Binger, fell out of a farm
wagon, one of the front wheels pass
ing over his head. It was believed
his skull was fractured.
Farer Roubldeau_ aged 87. a son of
that Joseph Roubideau who founded
St. Joseph, Mo., secured a marriage
license in Perry to wed Mrs. Eliza-
beth Smith, a white woman.
While C. A. Suliin-.! and wife were
driving Thursday night, their daugh-
ter, Beulah, fell from the buggy be-
tween the wheels, striking on her head
and was critically injured, her head
being cut In several places.
A Jury at Muskogee awarded Mrs.
Guy McKellop $10,000 damages from
her mother-in-law for alleged defam-
ation of character and alienation of
affections of her divorced husband.
A number of cases of scarlet fever
have broken out in the school at Cash-
ion which caused the board to close
the school for a time. One death li
reported from the disease.
Leonard Peyton, a step son of John
R. Morgan_ of Perkins, has been taken
to the Methodist hospital In Guthrie
for treatment aB the result of acci-
dentally shooting himself with a revol-
ver.
The city council of Beggs has de
cided to establish a fire department.
A four horse power gasoline engine
and 500 feet of hose will be purchased.
A water tank will be erected in the
center of the town to supply water.
For the purpose of raising funds to
build a high school. Beggs will vote
on a bond issue of $8,200. The present
high school contains ten pupils and is
Bo crowded that one grade is ron*?d
to use the Baptist church. The new
school will be built of cement blacks,
will be two stories high and contain
eight rooms.
When Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Cook of
near Quay, awakened Thursday of last
week, they found iheir two-months old
daughter dead in bed. The child had
been sick with a cold and had evi-
dently chocked to death during the
night.
Sir. William A. Radford will answer
question* and pive advice FREE OF
COST on all aubjects pertaining to the
subject of building for the re« >rs of
tt.la paper. On account of his wide expe-
rience as Editor, Author and Manufac-
turer, he Is. without doubt, the highest
authority on all these subjects Address
all In^ulri's to William A. Radford. No.
1M Fifth A vs., Chicago. 111., and only en-
close two-cent stamp for reply
There are many who speak of the
present as the Age of Cement. And
certainly, from the rapidly multiply-
ing evidences to be found on every
band, it would appear as If concrete
had already gone too far to establish
Its claims as a very serviceable substi-
tute for the old-time stone and brick
and timber—not necessarily driving
these latter out of use in building
construction, save where their cost be-
comes prohibitive, but lending itself
easily to attractive com'blnaUon with
them, showing a wider adaptability
to varying conditions affecting de-
sign, and having Bome exclusive ad-
vantages that readily explain the tre-
mendous popularity of this versatile
form of building material.
A few years ago, a "cement house"
was felt to be an "uncertain quan-
tity;" and here and there, even to this
day, we find a few lingering remnants
of the old prejudice against this type
of construction. But now that the
manufacture of Portland cement has
been mechanically and scientifically
perfected, and experience has taught
the world absolute safe and reliable
methods of using it in the mixing and
structural application of concrete,
people everywhere are coming in in-
creasing numbers to recognize that
the cement house may be just as at-
tractive as any other—just as dry
and healthful and light and cheery—
and may possibly be In tho long run
Just a little bit the most economical.
In the accompanying perspective
and floor plan, we illustrate a very at-
tractive little house design especially
adapted to cement 6tucco construction
—e type of construction which Is
forging its way into increasing favor
because of its pleasing appearance
when appropriately designed, and its
comparative cheapness. This house
Is of the characteristic western bunga-
low style. It Is very compact and con-
venient In arrangement, all space be-
ing used to good advantage. Five
as Florida and Louisiana, but In the
main not suitable for practical build-
ing throughout the country at large.
It has been affirmed that the cost of
the bungalow style dwelling is far in
excess of that of the ordinary type
twextory house providing the same
accommodations.
| The criticism against the bungalow
i has been due. not so much to the real
characteristics of the style itself, as
to the over-enthusiasm of its devo-
tees, wto have advocated It for build-
ings for which It was never Intended.
Designed originally for summer cot-
tage work and for spacious building
sites, preferably of a hilly nature,
there have been too many Instances
where this type of dwelling has been
squeezed into a narrow city lot and
put In between high two or three-story
dwellings, much to the detriment of
the typical bungalow style. Much
very peculiar art has been perpetrated
in the name of the bungalow, and It
has to account for many freakish
dwellings for which It is not in any
way to blame.
We have never happened to see a
bungalow-style office building, nor do
we remember having heard of one;
still, what is almost as bad, the bunga-
low style church Is quite a common
| thing in many of our cities and
suburbs. These are uses never con-
templated by the originators of the
bungalow In this country, and should
not be charged up against the style.
The bungalow, rightly understood, Is
an artistically designed cottage, and
within that sphere has some exceed-
| lngly creditable features of work to
show.
The estimated cost of the house
here shown ranges from $1,650 to
$1,800, depending to some extent on
| the locality and on local market con-
i ditlons of material and labor. The
j design has thaC simplicity and direct-
ness which are the keynotes charac-
j teristic of the bungalow style of
1 house. At a cost no greater than for
a plain, unornamented cottage with
the same accommodations, a real
i home-like, cozy and attractive dwell-
ing Is secured.
The porch, as can be seen, Is a
prominent feature adding to the
external appearance—and the same
! Is true of every typical bungalow. This
decorative feature of the front of tin
building, but serves the extremely
practical end of being the cutdco#
living room for the family In summer
weather.
Entering the house, we find the en
tire front portion given up to a living
room, 16 by 14 feet, opening directly
Into a spacious dining-room, 12 by 14
feet, the latter having a large mantel i
and fireplace, adding much to the
pleasing home likeness of the Interior
Both of these rooms are nicely light-
ed, and provide the accommodations
| for the necessary furniture lor con-
venient housekeeping. The broad
space In the dining-room near the
| kitchen door is Just the location which
a built-in sideboard or buffet should
have to be most convenient and orna-
' mentally located. There are numer
ous stock designs for built-in side-
boards, as well as for other pieces of
j built-in furniture which can be bad at
' very small cost. Ask your building
supply dealer or building contractor to
show you the designs that can be fur- j
| nlshed along this line at moderate i
cost.
The kitchen connects directly with |
the dining-room, giving convenient
<ir> ta vour druggist and g®t "Two
ounces of Ulycertn.. arid half an 0U«V"
of Concentrated Pine compound. Mia
thaio with half a pint of good whlaky.
Hhake well. Take Sue to two tea pooU-
fuls after each meal and at l>-4 Ume.
Smaller doses to children according to
.g." Any can prepare U.I. at
Any on «- « -- -
home. This Is saM to t,., the ^Ickest
cough and cold cure known to tha
couxn ana * •>" - f - w
medical profession. Be sure to g t oniy
the genuine "llobe) Concentrated Pine
rach half ounce bottle conies In a tin
sSew-top sealed ' iwe If «h« druggist
\n out of stock h« will quickly g'ri it
from his wholesale housj. Donit fool
with uncertain mixture*, it Is rlJikjr.
NOT EXACTLY THE 3AME.
r i. >/ \ 4'-wBBmMLl
I 133?
3ld R* r™P
^UVXIO'O-
' KlTCHE.fi
Bed Rm.
I^O'XIO'O
l^-fXICO'
] Living Room I'DiningPm'I
; i(>;o'xi4-'o* ,] i£'0"xi4y ^
Porch
S^fc'Xfc'O mi
3
Floor Plan
A boosters' club has been organized
at Altus with over 1,000 members.
Paul Bumbarger is temporary chair-
man and George Hill secretary. Per-
manent oftlcers will be elected. A
prize will be offered for the best name
and slogan for the club. The organi-
zation will co-operate with the Cham-
ber of Commerce.
George M. Chapman, traveling sales-
man for a wholesale drug house, was
found dying at his home in Shawnee
Thursday night. A bottle found in his
pocket was about two-thirds full of
morphine. It is believed that he took
the drug with suicidal intent. He
never recovered consciousness after
being found by his wife. Chapman
was well known to the druggists of
this section of the state. He leaves
his wife and five children. No causo
for his act is assigned by the family.
In the district clerk's office at Perry
a case has been filed wherein Peter
Sullivan sues the Frjsco railroad for
$15,000 for the Iobs 6f a leg incurred
from alleged fault of the railroad em-
ployes.
The 5-year-old daughter of Henry
Schick, living southwest of Shattuck,
had the first finger of her right hand
pinched off while playing around the
windmill. The mill was running, but
not connected and her finger was
between the mill rod and the pump.
It was offilclally announced at the
government offices In Muskogee that
the timber appraisers at work apprais-
ing the pine timber on one and a half
million acres of Indian land In the
Choctaw nation would conjjlete their
work by July 1. The secretary of the
interior is arranging now a set of
rules and regulations under which this
timber and the land on which it stands
will be sold as soon as the appraise-
ment is completed. It is supposed
now that the timber and the land will
be sold together, though the timber
is many times as valuable as the land.
good-sized rooms are provided, besides
bathroom and pantry, each room be-
ing very well lighted, and each bed-
room having a capacious closet.
Many practical builders have said
that the bungalow Is a fad, no doubt
good enough, it is true, for Southern
California or the southern states, such
one is six feet wide by nineteen and
a half feet long, extending along al-
most the entire front of the dwelling,
supported by massive pillars, and tho
coping of the inclosing wall affording
a convenient scheme of further adorn-
ment by the use of flower boxes and
vases. It forms not only the main
MIPT7<irHF<i VIFW OF WOMAN ! Pecullar t0 herself. Alas! he who
NltUbUHt b Vltw ur wumHii , ^ hear(. flnds out how poorf
helpless, pretentious and liable to er-
Cwerythlng In Her Is a Riddle, and
She Is Man's Most Dangerou*
Plaything.
Nietzsche, the German philosopher,
has little to say of women. In his
philosophy there Is to be no over-
woman. "Everything In woman la a
riddle," he says. And again. "The
true man wants two different things
danger and diversion. He therefore
wants a woman as the most dangerous
plaything." In his Wagner book, he
puts women In a strange category,
•in the theater," he declares, "one be-
comes mob, herd, woman, Pharisee,
voting animal, patron, idiot, W agner-
Ian." "As yet," he says, Jn Zarathua-
tra, "women are incapable of friend-
ship."
"In a woman's love," Nietzsche
eays "there Is unfairness and blind-
ness to all she does not love. And
even in woman's enlightened love
there are still outbreaks and light-
nings." In his Wagner essay he says:
•Woman would like to believe that
•cxr. can do all. It Is a superstition
ror even the best, the deepest love is;
how it rather destroys that saves."-
Forum.
Welcome Moving Picture Shows.
Thecinomatograph theaters which are
springing up like mushrooms In Berlin
and other German cities are a sociolog-
ical blessing. Countless thousands who
were In the habit of wasting their
time, money and substance In beer gar-
dens and cafes are now attracted to
the moving picture showB.—Deutche
Tageszeltung, Berlin.
The Real Davy Jones' Locker.
"Davy Jones' locker," that perilous
spot, mention of which so often comes
from the lips of sailors, Is not shown
on any ocean chart, principally be-
cause it is not really a settled place;
but If any ocean death trap deserves
the title it Is the Thames estuary. The
British naval authorities have a chart
upon which Is marked the position of
wrecks, shown by black dots. On this
chart the Thames mouth tract Is a
service; and the pantry Is also cen-
veniently located near the back porch
entrance and the cellar stairway. A
hall leads directly from the living
room back to the bathroom. Doors
open leading into this hallway, afford
lng easy access also from kitchen and
bedrooms to the bathroom.
The bedrooms in this cottage both
lie on the same side of the house.
Each i£ twelve and a half by ten feet
and well lighted, the closets forming
a feature that will be much appreci-
ated by the housewife.
The exterior material for thl3
' bungalow is Portland cement stucco
which lends itself readily to a great
variety of schemes of ornamentation
The body of the wall may be either
wood or steel framework, or it may
be built up of brick or concrete blocks
or hollow tile. If built of molded
shapes, the stucco may be plastered
on directly; but If of framwork, tho
stucco must be carried by lathing
preferably of wire mesh or of one of
the forms of expanded metal lath,
which must be fastened firmly to the
frame, but sufficiently loose to allow
for expansion and contraction, thus
preventing the formation of cracks.
The exterior finish may be of rough
plaster effect, or pebble dash, or em-
body a color scheme secured by the
use of colored aggregates exposed by
brushing and acid washing, or ob-
tained by mixing mineral colors with
the mortar or by the external appli-
cation of appropriate colored finishes.
The use of mosaics of colored tiling
or angular fragments of vitreous ma-
teria! Is another possibility that offers
itself. The massive chimney leading
up from the grate at one end of the
: dining-room, Is in itself an important
element in the exterior scheme of ar-
tistic ornamentation.
Comes Easy.
ft never requires any practice to ba
dissatisfied.
solid black spot; so numerous have
been the wrecks, the dots run to
gether. The point where the black
dots actually pile the one on the top
of another Is the Kentish Knock, and
this is the place among all of the
ocean danger spots that deserves the
title of Davy Jones' locker.—Harper's
Weekly.
The Traveler—Hello, Hans! I hear
you've taken a chance In the matri-
monial lottery again. I suppose you've
won a prize?
Hans—Yaas; I got a surprise.
CURE THAT SORE THROAT
Sore throat is inflammation of the
mucous membrane of the throat, and
if this membrane happens to be at all
sensitive a predisposition to sore
throat will exist.
Paxtlne ToHet Antlseptlo Is both a
preventative and a cure for sore
throat because it possesses extraor-
dinary cleansing, healing and germi-
cidal qualities. Just a little in a glas3
of water, used as a gargle, will quick-
ly relieve all soreness and strengthen
the mucous membrane of the throat,
and thus overcome all tendency to
gore throat.
Paxtine Is far superior to liquid an-
tiseptics or Peroxide for all toilet and
hygienic uses.
Paxtine may be obtained at any
drug store, 25 and 60o a box, or sent
postpaid upon receipt of price by The
Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass.
Send for a free sample.
All Snakes Are Killers.
But all snakes, great and small, are
killers. All of them eat creatures
which they slay. None eat vegetablo
food of any kind. Nor will they eat
animals which they find dead. That
is one reason, no doubt, why they bav«
always been shunned and dreaded by
human beings.
cniiureu, auu oca
Important to Nlothera
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy I or
infants and children, and see thax it
Bears the
Signature of <
In Use For Over 80 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
True friends visit us in prosperity
only when invited, but in adversity
they come without Invitation.—The-
ophrastus.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up
40 years ago. They regulate and invigor-
ate, stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-
coated tiny granules
Rotten Cigarette Paper.
Much cigarette paper is made from
waste untarred hemp rope.
ARE YOUR CLOTHES FADED?
Use Red Cross Ball Blue and make them
white again. Large 2 oz. package, 5 cents.
Those days are lost In which we do
not good; those worse than lost in
which we do evil.—Cromwell.
Taking Garfield Tea keeps the system
clean, the blood pure and the general
health good. Buy from your druggist.
v Even a little trial is a big one if you
have no others.
French Family Life.
It is a threadbare criticism by Eng-
lishmen that the French have no word
for "home." They have "foyer."
which answers nearly enough; but
even if that be thought to stand for
something different, the obligations of
family are strong and general. The
respect and affection of English sons
for their mothers do not compare with
those of French sons, and in France
family ties extend to relations whom
we in England should regard as hav-
ing no claim upon our consideration.
The frothy gaiety "tend the solidity of
the French character exist side by
Bide fn permanent dualism—mobility
for the visitor to see at a glance; so-
lidity for him to discover if he takei
the trouble.
Work While
You Sleep
Millions of people have CAS-
CARETS do Health work for
them. If you have never tried
this great health maker—Get a 10c
box—and you will never use any
other bowel medicine. mj
CASCARETS ioc a box for * week's
treatment, nil druggists. Bipgest seller
in the world. Million boxes a montU.
Tuft's Pills
stlmulste the torpid liver, strengthen the di-
gestive organs, regulate the bowels, cure slclc
headache. Inequaled as an ■■
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE.
Elegantly sugar coated. Small dose. Price, 23o
THE BEST MEDICINE
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King, M. Lane. The Noble News (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 23, 1911, newspaper, March 23, 1911; Noble, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109786/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.