The Noble Weekly Journal. (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1905 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
The Noble Journal.
Published I'verv Friday.
J. O. FOX, Proprietor.
Entered October 13, 1!K)4 at Noble
1\ st Ofllec, Okluhoma, its eecond class
matter.
SUBSCRIPTION KATES.
One year $1.00 j
six months 50 Sin advance
Single copies "5 )
advertising rates.
Made Known on Application.
AUGUST 4, 1806.
With Noble as headquarters
for the Fanners Union. You
will see her come to the front
this fall.
Noble has been selected as
the central cotton market of
the Farmers Unions of Cleve-
land county.
Physicians diagnosis Gen
Woods aflliction of the head
as "oxtosis" . Is that another
name for swelling?
Nohle being the central cot
ton market for the Farmer
Union, she should receive not
1<J>> than 15000 bales of cottoi
tlii< fall.
Senator Piatt says he would
remodel his political life if he
bad it to live over. Nobody
stopping liiiu from beginning
it now.
The Nuie Free J'resse twits
Fngland on luving isolated
herself during tho peace ne
gotiations. Probably England
thinks Japan is pretty well
(nullified to look after herself.
A Democratic contemp
orarv says the people arc pre-
paring to oust the wicked par-
ty that has been so long in
power, Those federal oflicials
who have already grafted half
a million out of t heir positions
probably will view this con-
tingency with indifference.
CAPITAL $ICQ,Q00.00
SURPLUS $30,000.00
l'lie Chickasaw National Hank
of Purcell, offers to the people
of Noble and vicinity its servi-
ces as a large, up-to-date, suc-
cessful bank, ready and able
o yive proper attention to
anything in the banking line.
If you have any idle money
you are not going to use for
six or twelve months, wo will
bo glad to take it on time de-
posit and pay you interest on
it. We lend money on good
security at the lowest rates.
I f we can serve you please
come and see us, write us or
phono us
CHICKASAW
NATIONAL BANK
LAUNDRY
AGENCY
At Keiser & Harrison's bar-
ber shop. Don't forget to
bring your laundry by Thurs-
ay noon of each week.
MODERN LIGHT FOR THIT f YRAJWD3,
Touibi of Montrcll* Kent 1° 1
Flooded «' '• Klectrlr Lamp*.
Perhaps the mummies tfc t have for
many centuries lain in tho gloomy cat-
acombs ' ° pyramid. ef Kgypt
will ghuddcr in their «seiueius If lue
plan of a modern electrician is carried
into e! • ,t. The darkness that has so
long eiiffii'ouded them is to be dissipa-
ted for the benefit of touri sts who flock
to these ancii nt burial plar "3 hy thou-
sands every year. It is announced that
General Director Mifrpero of the so-
ciety which has in ( liaise the preserva-
tion of th<> anUquitltt of the country
has been experlmentins wirh the elec-
tric light an J b'^an ills work on llio
temple of K; r.t Th> The ex-
periment met vi,-i so 1 i^li approval
that lie has decided to 11 iit the inner
passages and catacombs of the great
pyramids. This will provide Egyptian
tourists with new attractions and they
will be able to penetrate to the inner
most recesses of the pyramids.
The lighting will be o.r « fecial value
to women, who have confined their in-1
vestlgations of the pyramids of the left
shore of the Nile to climbing up on the
outside, as they were afi'.iid of the in-
tern,darkness wit'iin. With the Intro-
duction of the electric l a the toml)3
of the Pharoaha will be accessible to
all.
CAUINET MINISTERS COME HIGH.
Ilia
The hc®p r«r* oi mo litu;*.
It Is not generally known, even in,
England, that no fewer than fix j
sceptres are ineluded In the royal re- (
galia. First cornea the so-called St.
Edward's staff of gold, 4 (eet 7 inches j
1 .jrn..d set v.'lth many rer^s; thc-J
the gold sceptre tipped with a cross, |
which, during the coronation cere- j
monies will be placed in the king .1 |
1 Ight hand by the archbishop of Can-
terbury. A third and somewhat simi- j
lar one Is ornamente! with a go'.d dove :
and i* intended for the left hand of 1
the sovereign. There is also the small
jeweled sceptre which is kc.pt for the |
queen cpnsort, and which will he car- 1
lied by Queen Alexandra; and an j
ivory sceptre, beautifully wrought, j
which was made for the queen of I
James ir. ..astly, there Is the splendid !
golden staff, which was designed for
the queen at the time of the corona-
tion of William and Mary.
TENNESSEE AND KENTUCKY PICNIC.
Many citizens of Cleveland
county were formerly from
either Tennessee or Kentucky.
In order to renew our ac-
quaintances. meet old time
friends and get acquainted, let
us have a picnic, basket dinner
melon feast and one good day
in the shade.
(let together and talk of the
hills and vallies, blue grass,
thorns and dasies.
What do you say? Will you
come with your family and
baskets and some melons.
Let us here by mail or in
person and give the address
of any friends so we can noti-
fy them, and then we can
-elect a place and time.
Yours for a pleasant time.
A. Murphy.
At Noble Supply Co.
Oklahoma Territory Patents.
Granted this week. Report-
ed by C. A. Snow & Co.. Patent
Attorneys, Washington I). 0..
Thomas F. Bryan, Ponca.
Road-grader. F o r copy o f
above patent send ten cents
in postage stamps with date
of this piper to 1 A. Snow &!
Co, Washington iJ. C.
flew Bray in Town.
1 will from now on make all train
do all kinds of dray work and your
business is ■,elicited. Reasonable
charges with satisfaction guaranteed.
L. O HQ8AUGH
Farm For Sale.
1G0 acres two miles cast of
Noble, 40 acres in cultivation
ill fenced and cross fenced,
8 acres in timber, two good
tanks, 1 well and pump, H
story house with (> rooms and
cellar, barn and hay shed, a
chicken house, line orchard,
on rural route.
This is a bargain for some
one with $1,500.00. Price
$8,000.00, three years time on
half.- Call or address J 0 Fox.
1U i n
!- H
For Sals or Trade.
An SO acre farm in South-
east Mo. 45 acres in cultiva-
tion, 20 in good timothy med-
ow. Good six room house and
)arn 20x40. See or write J.
Dixon or J. 0. Fox, Noble, Ok.
Short order, confectionery
and cold drink business for
sale cheap if sold at once.
Confectioneries alone will in-
voice between $200 and $225.
Price $250,00. See or write
J. 0. Fox.
Prof. Woraack, who is new located
at Maguire, will tune and clean organs
when as many as three will notify him
in a district for $2.00. Leave your or-
der at tho Journal office.
He has some of the best of refer-
ences, and guarantees allhls work.
Subscribe for Noble Journal.
We Want Correspondents.
We want a correspondent in
every neighborhood
fifteen miles of Noble.
We will furnish stamps and
ICx-Socretarjr Profits by Aclvlca
Brother Lawyer.
A cabinet officer, who not very long
ago retired to private life, started to
build up anew his law practice. A
corporation ca30 was s i t to him by a
brother lawyer. Meeting that lawyer
later, the ex-cabinet minister asked
what he ought to charge.
"What did you think of charging?"
asked his friend.
"Well," the reply was, "I thought.a
thousand dollars would be about
right."
"My dear fellow," the other lawyer
responded, "if you do that you will
never get another ease. Ex-cabinet
ministers are a luxury, if they are
worth anything. Send a hill for ?5,000
retaining fee and you will get a check
to-morrow. Then adjust your regular
charges at your leisure."
The thing was done, with the result
predicted. It is said that the gentle
man in question made in a month as j
much as the sum of :.<« salary during
his entire official term,
f«jiel al dabbing Offt'i'
Every man should subscribe to his
local paper, because from it he secure:-*
a class of ne ws and ir ful information
that he can get nowhere else. He
should however, ai: > subscribe to a
first-class general newspaper. Such a
newspa; :• is
TIio Meml-Wfs'lily Xew*.
Thousands of its rc ulers proclaim it
the best newspaper in the world. Its.
secret of success is that it gives the
farmer and his fan. y just wh'1' they
want in the way of>a family newspaper
It furnishes all the news of the world
twice a week. It ha a splendid page
where the farmers write theit prac-
tical experiences on the farm. It is
like attending an immense farmers' in-
stitute. It has pag specially got:cn
up for the wife, for the boys and for
the girls. It gives he latest market
reports. In short it gives a combina-
tion of news and instructive reading
matter that can be secured in no other
way.
For $1.75 cash in advance, we will
send The Semi-We< Hy News and the
Noble Weekly Journal. Each for one-
year. This means you will get a total i
of 156 copies, it's a combination
which can't be beat, and you will sec
ure your money's worth many times
over,
Subscribe at onccat the office of thi~
paper.
Why Jnp n«4> Women Look l'leajant.
Perhaps the secret of the sweet ex- |
pression and habitual serenity of the J
Japanese women can he found in their
freedom from small worries. The
fashion of dress never varying saves j
the wear of mind on that subject, and
the bareness of the houses and sim-1
pllclty 'f diet makes housekeeping aj
mere bagatelle. Everything is exquls-
Itgly clei n, and easily kent so. There
Is no paint, no drapery, no crowd of
little ornaments, no coming into the
houses with the footwear worn in a
dusty street. And then the feeling of
living in rooms that can be turned j
into balconies and verandas at a mo- j
ment's notice, of having walls that
slide away as freely as do the scenes
on the st^je, and let in all out-of-doors
or change the suites of rooms to the
shape and 3lze that the whim of the
day or the hour requires.—Pearson's
•Weekly.
PANAMA HATS WORN IN ENGLAND.
They Are AU ManufRCiarel lu Germany
and lielgtuni.
One curious effect of modern fash-
Ion is seen in the rise in the price of
Panama straw hats. The Panama hats
as sold in England, it need scarcely
be said, do not come from America, lu
almost every case they are made in
Belgium, or in the southern Rhineslde
towns and villages. In 1900 the Pana-
ma slowly became popular here. Last
year It was impossible to supply the
demand, and prices rose very much.
This year they will be considerably
higher, although the most experienced
buyers regard this year as the end of
the craze.
One of the largest firms in the hat
trade in London had its order to tho
manufacturers for this year's goods re-
turned, with an intimation that the
manufacturer could not consider it un-
less the prices were increased 50 pet-
cent over those of last year. Hats
which fetched 1 guinea last spring will
not he had now for less than 30 shill-
ings, and after a f#w weeks will be
difficult to obtain at that. This year
will also see the introduction of a
number of cheap imitations of this
hat. No attempts apparently have been
made to secure the very profitable Pan-
ama trade for British strawmakers.
The beads of such undertakings com-
plain that it is impossible for them to
get skilled hands to do the work.—
London Mail.
A,
%
Indian Women :i Trained Nurne.
One. of the first Indian women to
take up the calling of a trained nurso
is an educated girl of the Pueblo tribe,
Miss Seicher Atsye.
®.rca aaasEE*
"It isn't what's in the people's eyes."
said the oculist; "it's what I can get __ ^
out of them."
cfs-J
R
GOOD FOR
1 VOTE
m THE NOBLE JOURNAL
SCHOLARSHIP CONTEST FOR
Miss
e cc rrF- tiassBa.«tfiae^ s re2s:s3G> SBESflTCL'. ".5 csiTCsr:rst 0
<■; mQwmmmo -:
?! F
u
It •
II
#
$r>\
9 A
Insurance, Tornado
/
and Hall
Insure your crop against los- by Ilail with the Far-'
■' mors Mutual Insurance Company of Oklahoma City.f|
money saved is money earned. This is a home compa-i||
*•
m
©
1.3
I#
m
• -"J-
(|||
©
ny and you should keep your money at home.
List your property with us for -ale or vent, and \ve^
will give it special attention.
@
U
surance u
€'•}
J. O. FOX
Rsal Estate and Fire
Agent,
m
t'hmvli Diri'i'lory
M. E. CHUROIl SOUTH.
Sunday School, ev:ry Sunday at 10
a.m. Preaching every 2nd and 4th
Sunday at 11 u. m: an 1 3 p. m. Prayer
meeting every Thursday night. Every
body invited.
Ilev Sullivan, Pastor.
PRESBYTER IA
Sunday School l\
a. m. Preaching c.
J CHURCH,
•y Sunday at 10
,y 1st and 3rd
1 S p. m. Prayer
day night, visi-
'■.->7
\ y .. ; ivV;. W 'k-.. V v.-"...: v.: v.:
Special Safflffier TotiFist Rates to The
SOUTHEAST
VIA
FRISCO
D.
Sunday at 11 a. in. ai
meeting every Wedu
tors welcome.
Rev. Kil l-patrick, Pastor.
within
BAPTIST CHURCH:
Preaching every, ^nd and 4th Sun-
day at 11 a, in. and S p. in. Sunday
,, , . school at 10 u m. Prayer meeting
stationery, also tne Journal j (,v^ry Wednesday nijrht.
FItEE. ■ 1 Revi Rankin, Pastor,
ta
SYSTEM
One fare plus two dollars for round
trip. Daily to September 30. 1(J05.
Sixty days from date of sale. Alaba-
ma, Florida., Georgia, K ent ucky,
Louisiana, Mississippi. North and
South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia
and West Virginia.
Ask Frisco agent or address the undersigned for more de-
iled information.
ATES:
VTES OF SALE:
MIT:
3L1RIT0RY:
F. B. Olark, D. P. A.
Wichita Kansas
Send the JOUENAL to friends,
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.
The Noble Weekly Journal. (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1905, newspaper, August 4, 1905; Noble, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117900/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.