Bartlesville Enterprise. (Bartlesville, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1911 Page: 2 of 4
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fauk two.
I'AUK TWO.
Tin-: nARTi,i -<vii.r,K i:\TKurnisi:.
KHIIHY. -\l (il ST n, ion.
THE WEEKLY ENTERPRISE
- hy, the: :
Bartlesville Publishing Co
111 East Third Stroot
Published ovcry Friday morning.
Weekly subscriptions *ru payable in
advuscc.
One year II.06
Six months
ilnint against IUb brother Ardenite
a result of which Mr, Sinclair \va
'oliVlotftl of playing tennlw upon tin
toblintb <lny, and sentenced to th.
xywchhug bounty workhouse fo
■l^hti'i n hours, Keven of which In
iponl at bard labor on the stone pile
'SSSiJMHina)
.501
'thgy w
temper
f An archil
^iri k, to Hv
nilbring it Into
I that for the. rea o
not allowed to till
O niori'H. Also a
It is Id laiinh.
Bter,
to bo hoped that the
Ill's
Re,
lemselveH,
bout law,
i to thai r
.primrose path along whiclfthe red
' lights burn. When a town has that
J reputation it meant" that the homes
J are being guarded and that voting
Kills and women aro safe on the
irnefs at any time of the night. It
means that the fathers arid brothers
guard the honor of their daughters
sml snifter*, wliera hocte means some-
llian n boarding Uottse.
where i ho ti rat leasou of
thing
It is u
the ")
the da
dale
DC
earned oy
- Iolu,
iy of eucb a town, wh
instead of despair, where
s instead of dishouer,
bappiuerg silt> enthroned and
bout a rival, and where
of goVr
ie mil-
age of
Th« above label is iesned to tbe
Bartlesville Enterprise by the later-
aatiou&l Typographical Union, be-> It Is to be hoped that the notor-
CAiise the Kuterprlae employe none iously rotten telephone service Oar-
but members of the Typographical; ri^svllle has been getting for the
llnlon In Its mechanical (Jepartmeat. • |Vftst yp(lr wm im)JI.0ved when the
FRUMV, Al'ta.ST II. 1011. ' P 1 . vr-|.;ir|K,. cvltiM! lr
fu . invv , i ed In its new building. One Har-
Thcre are 23!> corporations In tlesville subscriber says that the
Montgomery county on their death j trouble witb the exchange lies more
bed, and wnat is mow, their parentsjin teb inexperience of the operators
em to care. And they hurtjthan In the lack of facilities. Thl«|n rt w"mo" of '^nation have come
to iiless and ennoble the earth, -
hope reig
honor rt\
wher
crowned w
the home Is the supreme
lernment. It i# the dawi
|Ir*nliim and tbe twilight
darkness,
I Let Chanute encnurag
utntlon as "a slow towi
Imenns all this.
j towns" that, th
iwn", when it
rom such "sjow
ami good men
don't
fiueh hopes for them when they were fault cannot be corrected by a new
born, thinks the Parsons, Kas., Hun. j exchange. It Is a question or or-
|Ranization and management. This
Ur. A. M. Woods Hutchinson 'probably will be corrected, though,
otl!
and
Sun.
: A:
ning. and I predict that we will be
In accord at tbe end.
"When I brought out the free list
bill Hryan did not accuse mc of being
n protection Democrat. Not until I
I differed with hlni on the wool scbed-
' ]<■, not until I refused to take his
dictation as to duty on raw wool, did
! M/. Bryan bring theso charges
I against me and attempt to make the
|country beliove that I' was not an
I honest democrat attempting an hon-
est revision of the tariff".
Mr. Underwood then dramatically
called upon Representative Kitchen
of North Carolina to stand up and
tell the house whether Kitchen had
upbraided Underwood in the caucus
anrl accused blni of protecting the
iron and steel Industries as charged
by Bryan,
Mr. Kitchen nlood up, "Bryan is a
badly misinformed man", declared
Kitchen. "1 don't know who his in-
formant Ik', but when he Ms talking
about publicity of caucus action he
ought I i make public the name of
bis informant".
Culled From Many Comers
The Prohibition National commit-
tee will meet December l> t.o choose
the time and place for holding the
party's presidential convention.
Arthur P. Gorman, son of the late
Senator Gorman, is a candidate for
the Democratic nomination for gov-
ernor of Maryland.
Senator James M. McCreary, the
Democratic nominee for tbe Ken-
tucky governorship, filled that ofllee
something like a generation ago.
Thomas L. Hisgen, who was tbe
Independence League candidate for
President three years ago, denies the
report that he intendd to run for
governor of Massachusetts this year.
. The Republican leaders in Penn-
sylvania hope to reduce the Demo-
cratic delegation from that state by
the election of a Republican from the
Fourteenth district, where a vacancy
exists by the death of Representative
George W. Kipp, Democrat. A spe-
cial election to fill the vacancy will
be held next November.
IT IS TO I.U'CJU.
spends ro much of bis time writing [when tbe new exchange gets to work-1 A few -veur8 Sinclair
on medical subjects for the mag:i-|inK wioothly. j wrote u book which he railed "Tbe
zinep that he probably iias no time ———-:0: j.litngle," and Which undoubtedly bad
to carry out the bountiful theories; A Htranger lias offered to save tb®Jmu6h to do with directing public at*
be* advances in Ills articles. j life of Henry Clay Beaiie. lr, !|jii>nlloii to conditions In some of the
__ -it): j wealthy young man of Richmond, Iplaces where food Is packed which
ction which
s. Hut Sin-
,loe (tank prints an editorial in j Va., who Is under
the Atchison Globe saying that golf witb the murder of
is ti sissy amusement. Joe Wfllttdn'i , wife. The stranger
know a golf club from a croquet,
mallet and has no more business
running down tbe game than any
other Ignoramus.
:0:-
We don't just now remember the
name of the Mississippi seuator
•whom Vardman will suceecd. but his
election will no. bo of any particu-
lar advantage to the senate or the
country at largo and will not be an
improvement.
While the Democrats are on tho
arrest charged badly neodofl the
his pretty young Congress 1 promptly
says be is dying clalr seems to have concluded that,
lonsumptlon and.since these particular conditions
and (llvc small were bad, our whole system, of gov-
He therefore of-Lrnment was out oj> j0jn^• all(j so
(ers for the sum of $5,000, to confess | i,epftlne ;i socialist, with a 'strong
that he did t he killing, and go j leaning to anarchy. And a few
the hangman for the murder. Great- months ago lie ami so spirits
r love hath no man than that he will which thought they were kindred
a slow death with t
will'leave bis wife
children penniless.
lay down his Ufa for tho
DON'T BRLIKVM IT.
John D. Rockefeller admits that
great wealth is a burden; that it de-
stroys the real zest of life and ban-
ishes peace from the heart. He hoard
a, sermon last Sunday preached by
an Oklahoma City minister, during
"wool bill, we respectfully call\ atten-
tion to the epigrammatic remark of
John Flanigan ot Carthage, Mo., dur- wl ch the minister spoke or the "cor-
ing the campaign of 1900: "Abra- onation crown of kings" and the
ham Lincoln, with six strokes of hisj ""'owning wealth and its incident
anxieties and mental torture". At
the conclusion of the sermon Mr.
Rockefeller told tho minister that his
words were full of solemn truth, j otherwise and
that the coronation crowns of ftlnes himself of it, was refused permiss-
erown of j ion to speak in the town hall by Air,
pen, made more free wool than me
Democratic party ever did or ever
■will".
Thig would be a good time for the
water company to demonstrate itfl|arG a" *00 heavy, and th
founded Uie little town of Afden, in
Delaware, which was to be run on
an entirely different plan. It was
to he a sort of paradise where overy-
body should do tho work he liked
best and nobody should do what lie
didn't like, and ho a law unto him-
self generally. The "'Law" was the
"black beast" of these kindred spir-
its and it was never to rear its hid-
eous head in this new Arcadia. But
the other day a member of tba-eom-
munity, bearing the plebian name of
Brown ami having a burden on his
soul of some divine message or
wishing to deliver
ability to care for tbe city in case of
emergencies. Tbe water has been
niuddy for a Week and there seems
to be little chance of improving it.
The water company does not want
to pass into the possession of the
city, but the kind of water the con-
sumer® are being furnished now will
hasten the day of municipal owner-
ship.
:0:
John Jacob Astor's bride to be is
reported to receive as a marriage set-
tlement the stipend of |100,000 a
wefk. It Is very apparent that a
large part of the joy of a married
housewife will not be hers. How
could a woman with $100.000 a week
have any fun ransacking ljer bus-,
hand's pockets lodking for a stray
half dollar?
The situation at Hunnewell, Kas.,
■where the. woman mayor and her
council are at loggerheads, would be
serious If it was not so ridiculous.
It is a blow to ranting, suffragists.
wealth is much too burdensome.
Upton Sinclair who seems to carry
tiay dirt whan she sees it."
THR LAW OF THK. AIR. ;0
"Alt Imo usque and coleum" is \\'||i:ri: ARK THE MOTKKJtS?
the old saying which means that Hvery cltjr Jn the TJnited Stat0s
when a man owns real estate be has its quota of Beulah Bin fords- -
owns from the heavens to where Loung W0UJen rftlge(] on the .St |ets,
land runs to a point at the center permitted the indulgences of fjvery
of the earth. Connecticut is the childish whim, unwarned or Ijpn-
first Rtato to pass a. law governing, matched by mother, untaught in the
the movements of air ships, which rlght or vrong of conduct.
a man may control as long as they] ..j „over i,a(1 a ,>hailce t() ))e K0Od„"
On September 1 I the voters of
Maine will decide upon the question
of repealing the constitutional
amendment providing for state wide
prohibition. Tho amendment has
been in force for twenty-seven years.
After a long and bitter tight Tim-
!othy L. Woodruff, former lieutenant
governor of New Yo^Hc and former
chairman of the Republican state
committee, has been forced to relin-
quish control of the Republican or-
ganization in Kings county (Brook-
lyn' where he lives.
In case Governor Deneen seeks a
third term, which now appears a
probability, the primaries in lllinoiis
next' spring will see all the out-going
state officers candidates for re-nom-
ination, with the solitary exception
of tho state treasurer, who is bar-
red by constitutional provision from
succeeding himself.
TALES OE THE TELEGRAPH •
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
(listed a large portion of the London j jUst to show the great value a
press by large advertising contracts., woman places upon piano playing:
He hired public halls and gave "lect-L. . . ,
... I Mrs- Minnie O'Herrln, of Chicago, is
ures in typical luckapoo Indian,
Medicine" style. Moreover, as a mas- jwilling t0 have a finSer of of
ter-stroke of advertising he was able M^r hands cut off and give it to an-
to interest, that well-known but er- j other woman for a sum large enough
ratic individual, W. T. Stead, editor j to give her daughter piano lessons.
Of the 'British Review of ReviewsjMrs. Reginald Waldorf, of Philadel-
and author of the classic, "If Christ iphia, is shy a finger, and wants a
Came to Chicago". Mr. Stead's ad- new one grafted ou her hand. She
>lil U It A COMES HACK.
"Dr." Gtrald Macaura i> an Amer-
ican "vibro-theraplst", who for the
past three or four years has been sep-
arating gullible Britishers from their
money. In 190X, Macaura was con-
dueling an "institute" in Manchester,
England. Hlj particular branch of
quackery consisted in operating and
selling a "blood circulator" that his
dupes were assured was "Protected
,by His Majesty's Royal Letter Pat-
ent". In his advertisements, Macau-1
ra asserts that he is a "graduate of
Die National Medical University of
Chicago", although the official list of
alumni of the National Medical I'ni-
verslty of Chicago, published in 1 009,
does not contain Macapra's name.
Macaura's success in Manchester
was so great that he decided to trans
fer Iiis quack institution to larger
and more profitIhie fields. He went
to London and, with th? money that,
he had made in Manchester, subsi-
diaries R. Jones, of Chicago,
chairman of the Prohibition nation-
al committee has been making an ex-
tensive tour of the far West, con-
sulting with the leaders of tho par-
ty in regard to the advisability of
holding the next national convention
of the Prohibition party in that sec-
tion of the country.
Wilbur P. Wakeman of New York,
'treasurer-general land secretary of
the American Protective Tariff
league, the organization of the ad-
vocates of a high protective tariff,
has announced himeslf as a candi-
date for thg United States senate to
succeed 121ih,u Root, whoso term of
ofllee will expire March 3, 111 15.
are over his own land, but not be-
yond. A man may fly all over his
own. farm in his own aeroplane, but
if be crosses the line he must have
a license or be arrested. Just at
this time there Is no aerial police
force to do this duty and it. is neces-
sHrv for a man to alight before you
read a warrant to him or clasp the
"come alongs" on his wrists. How-
ever. as we begin to adjust our-
selves to the new order of things the
"fly cop" will probably be the real
thing Instead of a mere slang ex-
pression. It will be interesting to
i
The fact is woman's place is atlotue |kHaw J,,8t w,1Ht ,lie lftW of the nlr is
and whenever *he goes out into.pol- S°'nP 1° he.
it.lcs, or attempts to usurp the)
places of men, she runs against thej BO\ SCOUTS NOT MIL1TAUV
laws and intentions of "He who[ The leader# of the Hoy Scouts of
doeth all things well." America Insist that tht> movement
'• r-sO! — is nut military. Upon this point they
Walled Beulah Blnford. "My mother
did not look after me."
■Go down the streets of Bartles-
ville any night and you will look
into the faces of young girls who
are getting their education, in tbe
same school that Beulah Blnford got
hers. They are permitted to go on
the street unattended at all hours.
Their school education is limited,
they rarely go to church or come in
contact, with the softening influ-
ences. They are not bad girls at
heart. If they were never called on
to face temptation they might go
through the world unscathed, fairly
worthy members of society.
It is the jfirl of this stripe that
fall? easily into the wiles of men
like Henry Clay Beattie, young fel-
lows of some money and little prin-
ciple. The lure of the joyride, of
the theatre lights, of late suppers a(
confesses she will soon be 2". too«
up the idea and replied as follows:
There are some bright newspaper have issued the following statement:
women in Kansas. One of them re- "The primary object of the BoyU flashy cafe, all of these things ap-
cently said: "ALer she is 2!> a girl Scouts of America is not military, I peal to these girls as tho joy of life,
is apt to marry the fellOw she used but peace scouting and educational it is not always that they end in
to make fun of," Another one, who character building for good cltlien- places of disrepute. Sometimes tltey
ship. The military virtue of obedi- pass through every danger unscath-
e, neatness, order, endurance and ed. More often they lead the life of
"Ueg, after shb is 2* a girl has [erect alert bearing are, however. Beulah Blnford, not exactly a social
sense enough to k«ow that glad togs scout virtues. It also appreciates!outcast but bearing names that car-
nud diamonds do not make a man. the faet. that boyhood properly de-lry a cloud of suspicion. It is this
After a girl is 2.*. she has also learn- veloped and cared for will produce | class' of femininity, ' fast but not
eil from observation that the sport I efficient material for the defense of wholly disreputable, that breaks up
does not make a desirable. huSband. | our land if this should become ncc-1 homes and causes hi«art aches. The
Yes. and after she is 2~> a girl hasjeaeary. Its aim therefore is to een-j Beulah Binford stripe Is too eom-
learned (If she has come in contact ter Its interests on the peace seout-imon. Where are the mothers?
with the world at all) that the bagpv I iug activities that will fill up the rec- :0:
trousers, hand-me-down suits or reatlon periods of a boy's life, and j UXDEI^WOOI) LAN'BN Ills HAY-
i overalls which she was wont to give him the training which Is nec- MAKER.
make fun of when she was young essar.v to the development of an all- Tfcat certainly was some jolt that
I and giddy may serve as the wearing round man. Everything that tends• Representative Underwood put across
I apparel of one of nature's noblemen, to develop boys In this manner is on Bill Bryan, the chafhpion also-ranj
yes, and after a girl is 2." she has good Scoutcraft. and the Boy Scouts of the Democratic party, in the house
learned to Appreciate true worth of of America insist on the knowledge yesterday . Not only did Underwood!
eharacter and brain®, and she knows of camp craft, woodcraft, chivalry, land bard and often, but he was sup-
the keys to that forum. Whereupon . life,saving, personal hygiene, and I ported by !he cheering of the Demo-
| the plebian Brown lodged a com-1patriotism being put into the boy'sicratic house. He also furnished thej
recreation education in right prop- proof of what he was eaylng. When
vocacy of anything medical is, gen-
erally speaking prima facie evidence
of .its uuscientific and bizarre charac-
ter. Some years back, the versatile
editor of the Review of Reviews
championed the notorious Count
Mattie cancer cure, which on analy-
sis proved to be nothing but water.
Macaura has recently announced
that he would return to the TJnited
States.—The Journal of tho Ameri-
can Medical Association.
\OISES THAT SAVE LIFE.
In the headlong desire to enforce
the suppression of anything that is
included, whether legitimately or
otherwise, in the category of what
the anti-noise societies have been so
frequently trying to suppres, there
Is something of a tendency to con-
demn some of the anti-danger de-
vices. Unnecessary noise, the misusfc
of any invention, the temporary tor-
ture of the human ear through any
unnecessary noise whatsoever ought
not. only to be condemned, but pun-
ished. whenever possible.
One fault with public indignation
in this regard is the fact that tbe
antl-nolse question is considered too
hastily, and not always with wise
discrimination.
The locomotive's whistle, unneces-
sarily blown, is something that, calls
for action on the part of the authori-
ties. On the other hand not one of
these same authorities would wish to
banish the locomotive whistle alto-
gether.
The same statement is true o." au-
tomobile warning signals
som
is willing to pay for the piano less-
ons for the Unger, so if Mrs. Her-
ring finger tits Mrs. Waldorf, the
deal will be made.
Raymond D. Pond, a Texas col-
lege professor, has always contend-
ed that physically and mentally man
is much superior to woman. He
married a brainy girl, and people
said she was Ismarter than he. So
he began showing her that he was
superior to her physically. He treat-
ed her cruelly, intending to break
her pride. She kept her pride in-
tact, went home to her father, and
the professor was so discouraged at
his failure that be tied their wed-
ding ring about his neck, and killed
himself.
The Democratic partv in the com-
ing national campaign expects to de-
vote especial attention to Wisconsin
which has been regarded as safely
Republican for many years past. Tbe
Democrats now are inclined to look
up.on It as a doubtful state. As a
basiu for this view, prominent Demo-
crats point to the Republican situa-
tion and affirm that the light be-
tween Taft and LaFolIette support-
ers will be so Intense and so product-
ive of bitterness that Wisconsin can
well be claimed as doubtful.
tracks. He stopped his car and up-
on investigation discovered the ob-
ject to bo a girl apparently 16 years
of age, literally soaked in blood. The
man in the buggy had stopped and
the motorman requested a passenger
on the car to watch the girl and the
man in the buggy while he notified
the police. When he returned all
three had disappeared. No report
has been received of any crime and
as the motorman can not say wheth-
er the girl was living or dead, the
police are completely baffled by the
mysterious affair.
No New York airs for Tacoma,
Wash. H. F. Sturgis, a Tacoma ar-
tist, sprung pictures of women with
out a stitch of clothing on before the
Tacoma art club, and when he was
asked 'where he pointed his pictures
he replied right in Tacoma from
L1FI2. The Weifare League took af-
ter him, and arrested him. Tie says
that the arrest is an outrage, and
an insult to Art. "That's all right,"
says tho Welfare League, "but you
will put elothos on our Tacoma girls
when you paint them or stay in jail
until yoltr artistic temperament cools
off."
Sheriff Long of Wagoner county,
and Sheriff Ridenhour of Craig coun-
ty, came to McAlester, each with four
prisoners for the state penitentiary.
One of the prisoners Sheriff Long
had was a white man hand-cuffed to
a negro woman. He reached Wag-
oner Monday, went to the country
about there and bought chickens
from farmers, agreeing to pay 20
cents per pound for them. He got
the chickens and gave the sellers or-
ders on his partner in Wagoner.
When the farmers got to Wagoner,
they found no partner and no money.
The man had beaten them to Wagon-
er and sold the chickens at 9 cents
a pound and got away with some of
the money. The sheriff caught him
as he was trying to get out of town.
He was arraigned yesterday, pleaded
guilty and today is In the penitenti-
ary to spend two years.
That cotton will be king in Ok-
lahoma this ye.vr .is Conclusively
shown by the monthly crop bulletin
issued by the state board of agri-
culture and showing conditions for
the month ending July 2f>. While the
state average shows 87 tier cent for
the growing condition, over 78.9 for
the month preceding, in some coun-
ties the growing condition is given
as high as 12"i per cent in Harmon
county. In 'Custer and McIntosh it
is given as high as 110 per cent,
Roger Mills 107, Seminole 105, Rog-
ers 104. and Adair, Alfalfa, Ellis,
Hughes, Johnston, McClain, Push-
mataha, Washita and Woodward
shows up at 100 per ceut.
Exactly 2:30 A. M.
Arthur—"Why is it, fairest Evan-
geiine, that wher. 1 am with you the
bands on that clock seem to tak*
wings and fly?" Stern Voice (at the
bead or the stairsj—"Without wish-
In' to be impertinent, young man, I
etmply want to observe that them
bands hain't got nothln' on the ones
on our gas meter."—Judge.
Explained at Last.
O'Keefe—Tls sthrange bow slow an
Arthic explorer thravels whin he's
goiu' towar-rds th' pole an' how fasbt
he covers th' ground eotuin' frum it.
O'Shea- Nawtbin' sthmnge about it.
bedad! Shure, don't th' law iv gravi-
tation tacbe us that it's harder to go
ip thin to come down?
Liquid Glue.
An excellent cold liquid glue la
made as follows: Dilute 2 to 2%
parts crude nitric acid with 40 to 50
of water, soak In this 25 parts of glue
for twenty-four bours and then heal
tlie mixture until it is homogenous.
Tbe quantity of acid used depend* on
the quality of the glue.
How to Converse,
In conversation men should not talk
to please tbeinselveB, but those that
bear them. Were this rule gen-
erally observed. It would make them
consider whether w a^ the speak
be worth hearing; whether there be
either ^-it or sense in what they are
about to say; and whether it be adapt-
ed to the time when, the plice where
and the person to whom it Is spoken.
Busy Bohemian Spas.
Some idea of tbe volume of busi-
ness transacted at the great Bohemi-
an spas may be deduced from the fact
that ihe -railroad office in Marlenbad.
which has a resident population of
6.297, receives from out-bound passen-
gers lor transportation tickets alone,
exclusive of baggage receipts, |40#,-
000 umually.
Tliirty Years Together.
Thirty years of association-think
of it. How the merit of a good thing
stands out in that time-or the worth-
leesneta of a bad one. So there's no
guess work in this evidence of Thos.
Arias, Concord, Mich., who writes.
"I have used Dr. King's New Discov-
ery for 30 years, ad its tbe best
cough ana cold cure 1 ever used".
Once it finds entrance in a home you
can't pry it out. Many families have
used it forty years. It's the most
infallible throat and lung medicine
on earth. Unequaled for lagrippe,
asthma, hay-fever, croup, quinsy or
sore lungs. Guaranteed by Eureka
Drug Co.
How is this for nerve? A boy 14
years of age, Sftmuel Nessenfleld, of
Austria, audaciously walked on
There are!board the Kaiser Wilhelm II, and
chauffeurs who seem to take I sailed with it for America. He did
keen delight in making the most
jlong drawn out and unearthly noise
possible with the warning signal at-
tached to their carl in this way
wrong impressions have gone out,
and the wrathful public, in order to
end tbe nuisance of the erring chauff-
not have one cent of money, but
found an empty berth in a state-
room, and took possession of it. Hej
found a vacant seat In the dining
room and took it. He got through
all right until the inspectors on this
side saw him. They soon "caught
surs, now and then, urges the aboil-j on" and Samuel was shipped back to
:ion of everything except the soft Austria, having crossed the ocean as
Gem City
Business
College
QUINCY, ILL.
tooool attundmoce IMO.
SludouU front
Joritf ol Mala*. Ocru-
Good* S gnedainl tqiuppari builditir.
Positions JrV."
hand. Typewrit!nr.
ttt.il Butine*# Practice-, iViimanship •od
Ma thraifitir«. Wrti* f>r our
THK "TOWN TOO SLOW."
Two young girls, just entering
rdertand of womanhood, left th
things of this kind can occur in the
Democratic councils it begins t^
look like Mr. Bryan is going to agA
have to bolt the tarty nominee.
Listen to this account of the affair
aoted and inconsequential warning
:ignal.
Thf> more deeply this question is
investigated the clearer becomes the
factnhat the automobile warning sig-
nal necessary to prevent lOss of life
and limb and to avert collisions is
one whose harsh and menacing note
can be used in small ae well as large
volume.
i the du
"In
a first class stowaway.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ HERE AND THERE IN OK- ♦
♦ LAHOMA. ♦
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Complete mystery surrounds the
finding of an unknown girl, blood
be-spattered, lying In the tracks of
jthe Oklahoma Union Traction com-
What is known as the electric pany, by Motorman Hedfard, in Tul-
power horn, with the rauccous com- .-:a, and the subsequent disappearance
manding note, has accomplished | of the girl and an unidentified man.
life saving than The inotorman was bringing in kw
th which the an-jcar from Orcutt pars about
>d. Why, then. I o'clock, when he noticed a man in
DR. HENDERSON
811 TO B15 WALNUT ST., KANSAS CITY, MO.
Th* Old Mailable Doetwr-OMMt In aca and langest located. A
sssi^ssrk'yssis'.'
WFuM CMc, Ninram and Special Ditiaus.
Curat guaranteed or money refunded. All medicines furnished ready tor uie—no
aareury er in] u rloua medlct nes used. No detention from bust ness. Pat lente a t a dlitanee
treated by mail and txprcis. Medicines sent everywhere, free from gaze or breakage.
Chargeslow. Over 60,000 cases ci-red. Age and experience are important. Slate your
ease and send for terms. Consultation tree and •onfldsntlal, personally or by letter.
Seminal Weakness
Sexual Debility, ofyouthful
follies and exoeM—causing nigbt losses
and loss of sexual power, pimples and
b'.otcheson tbe face, confused Ideas and
forfreifulness,bashfulness and aversion to
sootety, etc., cured for life. I stop night
losses, restore sexual power, nerve and
brain power.enlarge and strengthen weak
parts and make you flt for marriage. Send
for free book and list ot questions.
Stricture KBSE'iffiS
and aieetSsSStK.?.?..'.":
detention from business.Cure guaranteed.
Book and listof questions fre sentsealed.
Hydrocele and £S5"if"2
Phimosis X""iSC
Varirnpoln Enlarged veins in the
sanvubOlO scrotum.oauslngner-
vous debility, weakness of the sexual sys-
tem , stc., permanently cured without pain.
Swnhilie That terrible disease. In
SypnillSf all its forms and stages,
cured for life. Blood poisoning ana all
private diseases permanently oured.
BOOK for both sexes—W pages, W
Hwwn plotures, with full description
of abovedlseases, the eflectsandcure,seal
sealed in plain wrapper—free.
0T teUOislaekte the tahrutln ltMtilu.
Frce Museum op Anatomy For MinOnly
FARMERS' HORSE REMEDY CO., Central Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
HEALING POWDER, 50c Box; 6 Boxes S2.00. Alterative Salts, 60c Box: • Boxes
*2.00. Jolic Remedy, 11.50 Box: 6 Boxes *5 00.
WE TABLETS for all kinds of trouble, 50c Per Bex. « Boxes S2 00.
KIDNEY AND BLADDER, none better, SI 00 Box, 6 Boxes «5.00.
LONG FEVER, Distemper. Influensa, SLOO Box; cash with order. A(«nta Wanted.
ded
th
buggy <
*acks at
oring to crot
sing this tide
the
Df the
Prize Offers from Leading Manufacturers
Book on patents. "Hints lo inventors." "Inventions needed.",
"Why some inventors fail." Send rough sketch or model for
search of Patent Office records. Our Mr. Greeley was formerly.
Acting Commissioner of Patents, and as such had full charge of
the U. S. Patent Office.
GREELEY &M9INTIRE .
Patent Attorneys frm
Washington,. D. C.
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Bartlesville Enterprise. (Bartlesville, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1911, newspaper, August 11, 1911; Bartlesville, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc140861/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.