The Tulsa Chief. (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, April 1, 1910 Page: 5 of 8
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ALL WHO WANT
LAND
Or Who Have Land to Sell
Should See Us
We Have Some Nice Tracts
Town Wauls aiol Must
\VaU‘r W ork s.
Have
40 Acres Up
And Some Good City Property
We may be able to find
a customer for you--If you
want to sell LIST YOLR
I PROPERTY WITH US
and LET US TRY.
1
HUNTER
LAND
CO
119 E. 2nd. Phone 720.
MERRY
Recorded Remark* of Visitor* That
Furnished Amusement to the
Writer*.
“Well, Kttie, dear, 1 hope you’ve
been a little mother to your brother
whilst I've been out '
-- --Oh, vrs. I have. I've smacked
It is not every poet who possesses i hj))) (|lli,‘( .,
the sense of humor. Longfellow had
it in unusual decree, writes W ill nun
Winter in “Old Friends.” Nothing
absurd escaped him. Among the
relies that he especially treasure!
■was an inkstand, once the property
joTlFCK ITEMS OF INTKKKST.
The nuestjoli of waterworks for
jBroken Arrow is again to l«e sub
lllitted to the people I he (piestion
was voted on some time ago and ear-
| ril'd almost unanimously But the
i law was not fully complied with and
| tin volt must 1< an tut taken By
j being eareless the city council lias
laid ifself open to criticism, lint
I this is no time to tied tuult Let
I us remedy tbe niistnki atouee and
j again trust the council to proceed
II 111 a legal way.
Kev. l.t'lloy Tliol.ipson, pastor df I
tin I’reshv teriau church at this place -
received u call Tfotu a church at
Shawlin to act as their pastor at a
much larger salary than lie is now ,
l'eeeiviug, but his pcoph objected
so strongly that lie hits decided to 1
xtuv lit re.
Many fanners have planted or are 1
]>lanting their eorn. This tine]
warm weather makes one think the
corn should be planted, lmt it we ^
get some cold wi at her and the seed j
rots, then the farmer who was not]
m a Iturrv will say. "1 told you so 1
Miss Nellie Leslie, last Monday;
took Mrs. Fellows place as teacher 1
m the High school. 1 lie hid} is a
sister of Miss Hattie, teacher of the I
tilth grade.
Our peach crop seems to lu all]
right up to date, although the M is
soiiri Valle} Horticultural society j
sn\ their average is about ten perl
cent of a full crop.
broken Allow Ledger
Wo carry the best line of shoes
made. Ldwin Clapp. Stacy Ad-
ams- .) usl Wright A \\ L. Dou-
glass. Easter togs now on tap.
Drop in on us. 1st. A so. Main.
Wright Clo. Co. dw I
The mai'i'iage ol County 'fudge
N. J. (iubser to .Miss Lisle Heaton
to take,place at Joplin Mo., on April I
(i ia announced. 1 he l liiet is sure 1
tins will be a huppy'uuiou and e\-]
tends congratulations in advance.
Fire early Monday morning did
about #700 worth of damage to
bouse owned by Edith Long on the
coiner of F irst and Kenosha street.
Alerrils Market is in the Dijon
Theatre Building.
Several more merchants have]
been losers of money by cashing |
cheeks for a stranger, one lirm being j
out a suit and ten dollars 111 money.
It is hard to avoid cashing checks
alter the banks are closed,
Fa rmei's
W11 o
F< 0!
good groci:rii:s
THAT
WILL ALWAYS KIND
KIND AT
PICKERING'S
Shreck & Shreckold stand
120 EAST SECOND ST. Phone 127
If you leant to be Well fed come to see us
PRICES LOWEST
QUALITY HIGHEST
Yours, Anxious to Please,
S. D. PICKERING
mmmammmmmmm r. ■ 'punr-r;rr •" ■
r—« T-KSmKNV^ir. .V.
V J1 UlT111 If ~ . 7 T ...IV- \...
I$$ -SAVED-
ON
FURNITURE
jRugs-Stoves-Queerssware.j
A 42 Piece Handsome Dinner Set
FREE!
WHEN YOUR PURCHASE AMOUNT TO $50
O. C. CLONINGER
PHONE 1 bb3 14 WEST SECOND
“The Store that Saves You Money'
KHaM»^3.g£iLr..,---3Eaa -laam
PAY BY DEGREES! ’
llioh Quality—Low Prices
Cash if prefered, Credit if desired
TULSA HOUSEHOLD SUPPLY COMPANY
112 WEST SECOND, Oppo. Central Eire Station
RHONE 1106
The real estate meu have not yet j
perfected their organization hut]
hope to do so tonight, when they
times, lmt now anil then some busi-1 to hear report of the commit,
ness man gets the hot end of the jpe mi constitution ami by-laws.
mm.
m
of Coleridge. One day, showing
that relie In a si ranger who had
called on him. he said: “Perhaps
‘The Ancient Mariner' was written
from this.” “Yes.'’ said his visitor,
“and ‘The Old Oaken Ducket,’ wlm
done that ?"
An admirer of Longfellows once
wrote him. saying: “Please send
your autograph in your own hand-
writing.'*
lie has recorded a characteristic |
dialogue with a strange lady, who
accosted him one summer morning
at his house door.
“Is this the house where Longfel-
low was horn ?”
“No. he was not horn here.”
“Did lie die here?”
“No, lie is not dead.”
“Are vou Longfellow?”
“1 am.”
“1 thought you died two years
M
ago.
That recalls the intelligent re-
mark made to Walter Suvage Landor
oy a lady who rushed to compliment
him on iiis “Pericles and Aspasia.
“Mr. Landor,” she said. “1 haven t
had time to read your ‘Periwinkles
and Asparagus.’ but 1 hear it is very
pood.” Sunday Magazine of the
Milwaukee Sentinel.
tinker by cusliing one.
The Dem°ernts are to have
(‘ V, Joseph, manager for the
Southwestern Culvert Co., Ins
moved his office from 1*21 L. Sec-
ond to Hip uew factory buib bag, a
handsome concrete structure, at 1 Lri
water from the city mains and it
will be a great help towards keep-
iu . tile LitV of the Head attractive
Not that any one will be any readier
to go there for a permanent abode
lmt those \vho ha• e friends and it 1-
iHtives lit erred there will be able to
1 keep tlowei s blooming grass grow ,
iug and trees increasing in size,
I showing more respect for the de-
I pin red.
Polities are hot now and from
1 1111 till Tuesday afternoon it will
b< 'towing letter ail the time,
the different candidates and their
Irieiidsare eertuiultainly st tenuously
i employed.
l'lilsa is to have another mail
carrier. This will make nine in
tln-citv and give better service to
I all parts of the city. Vernon IticktV
■ is to have the position, us be has
■ { been serving as ubstitute for sonic
I j time.
The Oklahoma hoard of Health is
trying to arouse illicit st in the
he dtli of (lie negro, and is a-ting'
wisely . The negro can spread dis-
eases aiming the white people as
well as any place else, and *he does
it "The tilth of the alley In comes
the fever of the nveini" and the
aveiiu dwellers should see that those
who dwell in the alleys keep every
thing clean. If Tulsa wants to
have good health oil 111 I* avenues let
her see that the alleys me kept
clean.
Tuba county fanners arc spread-
ing tlicit rural telephone lines over
the country rapidly. At tin expen-
se of less than a dollar a month a
funner can keep in touch with the
Tills 1 markets and that w ill often be
j.; 1 v 1 -11 on one item the farmer has to
sell.
1 lie eit v has had its full stlsi e of
beggars and then some lately. 1 Lie
blind, lame, sick, orphans, widows
niid every other sort of seeker of
alms has kept the charitably inclin-
ed guessing 11s to which needed as-
sistance worse than the other?
Nint v nine cases out of a li 11 ndred are
i fakes and the other one pretty
I much so. The majority are travel-
ling' mendicants who wouldn’t work
at any price, nor stay at any one
place a month on any suit ol a plea.
The pool hall at 214 Main was
burglarized Tuesday night and
some *20 in money and a gold
w ich were taken.
The case of <’. p. and (4. K. Kline,
charged with assaulting an ofheei,
win put off till Saturday afternoon
Some senstaioual testimouey is pro.
mined. The officer is still unable
to be oil duty.
Messers. Fnrwell and Crawford,
interested in oil and investments
generally, are here from Chicago to
locate.
i
V
V
NATION’S
MOST PRIZED
POSSESSION
▼
Our big feature next week is
peculiarly timely owing to the
proximity of tbe birthday of
Thomas Jefferson. It tells in
an interesting way the pre-
cautions taken by the govern-
ment to safeguard the historic
document written by that
great statesman.
v Preserving»
^Declaration
. —Hi—
Independence
Br WALDON FAWCETT
is the title to look for. No
relic in the world is more
carefully guarded than this
piece of parchment with its
roster of significant signatures.
Tor several years it has been
hermetically sealed to pre-
vent its fading oul altogether.
▼
THIS WILL
INTEREST YOU
The mn 11 v friends of \\ A. Kiug . .
.... ■ . . N Llgin.
will sympathize with him 111 the loss'
grand rally at the Bijou Theater j be has sustained by the death of his
t iUI„B .....l.lLwill Jl........ l"n„.k, *....... loot Ulomll r r.s«u M, every
»,e,.kiog . 1.I0..I,. | ,.t Sulin.l,... TiwUy. 1ll |,|l"nel,0i
Fri*
JOKE TURNED ON THE JOKE*
Scheme of “Social Climber”
Didn't Turn Out Ju*t a* It
Was Intended.
that
J
H. McBIRNEY, President LEE CLINTON. Vice President S P. McBIRNFA, Cashier
CONDENSED STATKM ENT Ol THE BANK OF
BANK OK OOMMKKOE
OF TULSA. OKLAHOMA
AT ( LOSE OF 111 SIN ESS, TFESDAY, NOV. H>, 1DOD
RESOF1K ES
lj hi ns find Discmills -----
Overdrafts.....- - ----------
Warrants..............-
Rea I Estate — - -.......
f urniture and Fixtures .. ----
Cash and Sight Exchange
8211,971. id
ld.l-.01
(fitit). 70
d.200.91
i,000.00
2 73.374.99
W
81 id,.I 1‘2. JO
Capital Stock....... ...... $21,000.00
Surplus and Profits ______ . 20,8 j9.*2
Deposits..............— - 491,482.38
Sl id,.} 12.20
The above Statement is correct,
S. P. M. B1HNF.Y
SAFKTY DEPOSIT BOXES KOH KKNT
Two women who live on country
places near Philadelphia -ire great
friends and great rivals. Kach ha*
long desired that her husband buy
her an automobile: each has feared
i lest the other attain the object of
her desire first.
Not long ago a small man, who
is well known in financial circles,
called at the home of one of these
women and suggested that he take
the young woman to call on her
i friend. The invitation was accept-
j ed.
••You get under the seat, I want
j Mrs. to think this is mv car,”
commanded the fair guest, as the
machine rolled through the gate of
tlie other woman’s home. I he broker
did as he was told. Mrs. —— alight-
ed majestically and was received
with a constrained air by her friend.
“See mv nice ear.” smiled the vis-
itor. “My husband bought it for
nie yesterday.”
“He did, did he?" said Mrs. -—,
unable to conceal her vexation.
“Well, mv Harry shall buy me on®
*1 once." After a time the ear drov*
aw.iv with the broker still under th®
•cat.
The joke in the end was on th®
joker. Mrs. B.'s husband, taunted
bv ltis wife, bought her an automo-
bile, while Mrs. A. Iiusn’t got her
car yet.
4
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Burkhart, Richard W. The Tulsa Chief. (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, April 1, 1910, newspaper, April 1, 1910; Tulsa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1173855/m1/5/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.