The Mustang Enterprise (Mustang, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, June 10, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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Mustang Enterprise
J. M. DAILY, Publisher
Entered at the Postoflics at Mustang,
Oklahoma, as second-class mail mutter.
NEW STATE NOTES.
Quaker Oats
Bonds for erecting * new high
school build ins have been voted at
Watonga. As yet tho site has not
been selected.
than in the
quantity or the
any
value o:
The Oklahoma Letter Carriers' as-
sociation, which adjourned at Gftthrle
last week, chose -McAlester as the
place for the next annual meeting.
Seven prisoners were sentenced to
terms in the slate penitentiary from
the district court at Muskogee last
week.
Two hundred and fifty dentists at-
tended the annuffl meeting o(f the
Oklahoma State Dental association
which held a three days' session at
Tulsa last week.
The Wichita mountains have de-
veloped a new Industry. George Dro-
ste of Cache, has established a linio
kiln and is turning out 1,000 pounds
as an experiment.
tramp knew human nature
Simple Stratagem That Secured for
"Knight of the Road" a Sub-
stantial Meal.
A clever little bit of human natura
was used by a "knight of the road" re-
cently on a matron living in a suburb
of Pittsburg, and as a result he slept
with a full stomach that night.
The suburb Is quite small, and when
the tramp dropped off a freight and
nmbled up the main street he was quite
hungry. There were about ten houses . .
which fair chance of meals, and IOOCl yOtl Can eat*
the tramp lost no time. Ho was not
surprised when the first housewife
slammed the door in Ills face, nor the
second, for that was natural and the
proper thing to do. But when he
reached the ninth house, or rather was
helped away, he was thoroughly dis-
gusted. The town certainly had him
hoodooed.
After a short rest and a deep think
the hungry one knocked at the door
of the tenth house.
"Madam, can you let a hungry man
have a bite to eat? I don't think you
can, though," he said. The woman
opened her ears.
"Why can't I?" she inquired.
"The woman next door said you
didn't have enough for yourself."
He got his meal.
There's more strength INEXPENSIVE
in a bowl of
MENU
GOOD DINNER THAT MAY BE PRE-
PARED AT 8MALL COST.
Not the Reply He Expected.
"Do you object to smoking?" he
asked.
"Not at all. Have you a cigarette?"
she replied.
f
same
same
other
Most nourishing,
least expensive
Parked In regular size packages, and In
hermetically sealed tins f*>r hot cli-
mates. 60
WESTERN CANADA
What Prof. Shaw, the Well-Known Agri-
culturist, Says About It:
I would sooner tk1b« cattle In Western
Cunuila thtiu In tho corn belt of
the United fltotei. Food
la cheapor and climate
better for the purpose.
Your market will Im-
prove faster than your
farmers will produce the
sup plies. Wheat can b
The case against. Governor Charles
N. Haskell, in which he is charged
with an alleged conspiracy to pro-
cure Muskogee town lots fraudulently,
will be tried at McAlester September
26.
Oklahoma City bank clearings for
tho month of May total $!t,792,004,
which is an Increase of $3,241,000
over the month of May for last year
and an increase of $5,721,000 over
May, 1908.
Ada boasts of having tho finest rad-
ishes of any section in the state. 0!.
B. Dlsmakes raised some radishes
this year that averaged- over twelve
inches In length and six inches in
circumference.
The Kansas, Oklahoma it Panama
railroad has been granted a charier.
Application for the charter was mado
some ten days ago, but. was held up
at that time in order to determine
which of the eastern capitalists
should go on the directorate.
Need of Beds for Consumptives.
The National Association for the
Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis
says that in seven states, Alabama,
Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oklahoma,
Wyoming and Utah, with a combined
population of over 5,000,000, not one
bed for consumptives has been pro-
vided. In nine states and territories,
Alaska, Delaware, Florida, Kansas,
Mississippi, South Carolina, South Da-
kota, Vermont and West Virginia, the
number of beds for consumptitves in
each case is less than fifty, while the
combined population of these states is
over 7,000,000. On the basis of 400
deaths .'o a million of population,
which is approximately the present
rate In the United States, there would
be nearly 5,000 deaths annually from
tuberculosis in these 14 states, with at
least. 20,000 cases of this disease all
the time, and less than 500 beds to
care for them.
ill
m
the International hound-
arvl. Your vacant land
frOl h# taken at a rate
beyond present concep-
tion.' \N o have anongh
people In the IJnited
btatoH alone who want
homes to take up this land." Ifsarlj
70,000 Americans
will entorandmnke their homes
in Western Canada thla year.
190'.) produced another large
cliownn and Alberta.
Free homestead and pre-emp-
tion areas, an weil as lands hvid
by railway and land companies, will
provide homes for millions.
Adaptable soil, healthful cli-
mate, aplendld schools and
church •*, and pood rullwnys.
For settlers' rates, descriptive
literature " .Last Best West," how
to reach the country and other par-
ticulars, write to Sup't of Immi-
gration, Ottawa, Canada, or to the
Cuaudlaa Government Agent,
J. S. CRAWFORD
No. 125 W Ninth Street. Kansas City, Me.
(Use address nearest you). (f<
Thompson's Eys Watsr
On the recommendation of Repre-
sentative Creager, a hoard ol pension
examining surgeons has been estab-
lished at Weleetka, composed of Doc-
tors J. M. l'emiberton, F. E. Hils-
meyer and J. D. Scott.
Negotiations "nave been consum-
mated for the location of a glass fac-
tory at Okmulgee. Lots were sold
at one dollar down and fifty cents a
week to raise money to purchase a
site for the factory.
An Economist.
'Do you mean to tell me you enjov
being fat?"
'Yes," answered the philosophic citi-
zen. "I get more transportation for
my money when 1 buy a railwav
ticket."
LTHE KEYSTONEj
TO HEALTH
IS
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH
BITTERS
A Cynical Synonym.
"Poor Myra Kelley," said a maga-
zine editor at the Authors' olub in
New York, "was almost as distressed
as Mr. Carnegie at the spirit of graft
and crookedness rampant among us.
'"the young writer, at a dinner of
magazine contributors, said that we
worshiped wealth—that was our trou-
ble. Then she crystallized her mean-
ing in an anecdote.
"She said that one man asked an-
other:
" 'What position does Blank hold In
the community?'
" 'A very honorable position,' was
the reply.
" 'Is he wealthy?"
" 'Wealth and honor,' said the other,
'are synonymous terms In America to-
day.' "
Secretary Ilallln.ser, of the interior
department has called upon congress
to appropriate $6,000 out of tribal
funds now in the treasury to set aside
conveyances of Indian lands in the
Seminole nation.
The Salvation Army at Tulsa has
appealed to the city commissioners
to give It a tract of land in the city
cemetery In which to bury paupern.
The argument put forth by the lead-
ers of the army. Is that the army, be-
ing a charitable organization, is not
able to buy land.
A number of citizens of Bartlesville
filed a complaint with the corpora-
tion commission stating that the Pi<>
neer Telephone company is about to
raise its telephone rates In that city
and aslng the corporation commis-
sion to take the matter in hand and
fix rates.
The fact that Ilostett-
er's Stomach Kilters has
helped thousands of sickly
people back to health during
the past 56 years should
convince you that it is the
medicine you need for Indi-
gestion (K Stomach Ills.
His Excellence.
'1 tell you," said one man to an-
other as they emerged from the dimly
lighted corridor of a concert hall, "I
envy that fellow who was singing."
"Envy him!" echoed the other.
"Well, if I were going to envy a sing-
er I'd select somebody with a better
voice. His was about the poorest I
ever heard."
"It's not his voice I envy, man,"
was the reply. "It's his tremendous
courage."—Ladles' Home Journal.
Recipes by Which to Prepare Nutri-
tious and Tasty Dishes That Will
Tempt Any Appetite—Excel-
lent Beef Stew.
Potato Balafl.
Beef Stew With Lima Beans.
Cabbage Salad,
Ilread and Butter, nice and whole Milk.
Coffee.
Potato Soup—Two medium sized
potatoes, one small onion, one medium
sized carrot, one tablespoonful of
dried fine bread crumbs, one table-
spoonful of butter, salt and pepper to
taste, and three cupfuls of boiling
water. Slice potatoes and carrot very
thin, mince onion, add water, and boil
three-quarters of an hour. Mash vege-
tables, add bread crumbs, butter, salt
and pepper, boll five minutes longer,;
divide In four portions, and serve in
heated sour plates. Cost, 6 cents.
Beef Stew with Lima Beans.—One
pound of fresh plate beef, one bay
leaf, one whole clove, one slice of
onion (reserved from soup), three cup-
fuls of boiling water, salt and pepper
to taste. Cut beef in Inch cubeB and
brown in deep iron skillet or pot. Add
water and seasoning and simmer
slowly for two hours, then add lima
beans prepared as follows: Soak one-
half pound of lima beans overnight.
Pour off water and look over care-
fully. Add boiling water to cover and
simmer three hours, adding more
water if necessary, but allowing the
beans to become rather dry at the end
of three hours. They should retain
their shape, but be well cooked. Add ,
salt and pepper to taste and pour
beans into beef stew and slmme* all
ten minutes longer. Remove beef to
hot platter and pour beans around.
Garnish with thin strips of cabbage,
using an outside green leaf. Cos4:
One pound of plate beef, 8 cents;
beans, 4 cents; condiments, 1 cent;
total, 13 cents.
Cabbage Salad.—Crisp one small
cabbage well in cold water for an
hour. Chop fine and add salad dress-
ing Just before serving. Salad dress-
ing: One-half cupful of vinegar, one-
half teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth tea-
spoonful of^pepper, one-half teaspoon-
ful of dry mustard, one teaspoonful of
sugar, and one teaspoonful of flour.
Mix dry ingredients, then mix them
well with vinegar. Boil slowly for
five minutes. Chill and add to cab-
bage at time of serving. Total cost,
6 cents.
Kice and Whole Milk.—Wash one
cupful of broken rice In several
waters. Add one quart of boiling
water and one teaspoonful of salt. Boll
rapidly one-half hour, occasionally
shaking pan. Rinse four cups In cold
water and fill them with rice. Let rice
become very cold and unmold on in-
dividual plates just before serving.
Pour over milk and sugar to taste.
Total cost, 8 cents
Reserve one-half cupful of milk
from pint, heat very hot, and serve
with coffee. Serve this dinner daintily
and in courses.
When our names are blotted out,
and our place knows us no more, the
energy of each social service will re-
main.—John Morley.
Nora Wilson, aged 25, who hap been
running a rooming house at Ardmore,
ended her life by swallowing carbolic
acid.
The report of Game Warden Askew
covering the month of May, filed with
the secretary of state, shows fines
collected for violations of the game
laws of $46 and 801 resident licenses
issued.
A new process has been Installed
at the water plant for purifying tho
cltv water at Chickasha. Iron and
lime are thrown In the reservoirs as
coagulants for the purpose of set-
tling and ridding tho water of tho
sediment.
C. W. Ruckman, Indian farmer, of
Watonga, who has for several year*
had supervision over the Indian fann-
ers, will be transferred to some oilier
point. An experienced farmer will
be placed In charge of the Indians at
a kalary of 11,200 a year.
FEED CHILDREN
On Properly Selected Food. It Pays
Big Dividends.
If parents will give Just a little In-
telligent thought to the feeding of
their children the difference in the
health of tho little folks will pay,
many times over, for the small trouble.
A mother writes saying: "Our chil-
dren are all so much better and
stronger than they ever were before
we made a change In the character of
the food. We have quit using pota-
toes three times a day with coffee
and so much meat.
"Now we give the little folks some
fruit, either fresh stewed, or canned,
some Grape-Nuts with cream, occa-
sionally some soft boiled eggs, and
some Postum for breakfast and sup-
per. Then for dinner they have some
meat and vegetables.
"It would be hard to realize the
change in the children, they have
grown bo sturdy and strong, and we
attribute this change to the food ele-
ments that, I understand, exist In
for you. That's why we want you 0r,fPe NIut®' n,"d Po,tum-
1 fMciAnrwi «• ' I A ®kort t,me a8° baby w(*s
to take CASCARnTS for liver and teething and had a great deal of storn-
bowels. It's not advertising talk—j ach and bowel trouble. Nothing
but nicrit—the great, wonderftil, seemed to agree with him until I tried
lasting merit of CAGCARKTS tli.it Orape-Nuti softened and mixed with
we want you to know by trial. Then r'c^ mi"<. ®nd he Improved rapidly and
you'll have faith—and join the mil- *nf l,tun,y Hrul wel1"
lions who keep well by CASCA-
RUTS alone. v°
W. L. DOUGLAS
SHOES
5, 4, 3.50, *3, *2.50 & *2
THE STANDARD
FOR 30 YEARS.
Millions of men wear
W L. Douglas shoss h®-
cnutr they ar® th® low-
est price*, quality con-
sidered, in the world.
Mad® upon honor,ot th®
be«t leathers, by th®
moat skilled workmen.
In all the latest fashions.
W. L. Douglas $5.00
and $4.00 shoes equal
Custom Bench Work
costing $3.00 to $8.00.
Boyu Shoes. $S,$2.60A$2
W. L. Do'
Ms nam* n
Tuke No Niibatltnte. Putt Color net*.
<\ak \ our <i« nler for W 1„ Douglas shoes. If not
fnrnalalnyour town write for MallOrdnrCatalog,show-
ing how to order hy mall. Shoes ordered direct from
factory dallvsrsd free. W. L. hong Us. Hroektoti. Mas*
Guar a11
The Drink of Quality
The Texatone Boy
AT FOUNTAINS AND IN BOTTLH8.
mXATONH COMPANY DALLAS, THXA8
FREE
Send postal for
Free Package
of Paxtine.
Better and more economical
than liquid antiseptics
FOR ALL TOILET USES.
Give, one a tweet breath; clean, white,
germ-free teeth—anti«eptically clean
mouth and throat—purifie, the breath
after smoking—dispels all disagreeable
perspiration and body odors—much ap-
preciated by dainty women. A quick
remedy for sore eyes and catarrh.
A little Psitine powder dis-
| solved in a pines of hot water
mokes a delightful antiieplic so-
lution, possessing extraordinanr
cleansing, germicidal and heal-
ing power, and absolutely harm-
less. Try a Sample. 50c. a
large box at druggifls or by mail.
"HE PAXTON TOILITCO., Boston, Mass.
n
Minnehaha Cake.
One-half cup butter, 1% cups sugar,
three eggs, two heaped cups sifted
flour, two rounded teaspoons baking
powder, one teaspoon orange extract,
one-half cup water. Rub the butter In
a warm bowl until creamy. Add the
sugar gradually and the eggs whole,
one at a time. Mix the baking pow-
der with the flour. Add this to th#
egg mixture, In alternation with the
water. Hake in three layers and till
with raisin filling.—Mary J. Lincoln.
Vinegar Sauce.
One and one-half cups sugar, one
and one-half tablespoonfuls of flour
in a little water, two tablespoonfuli
vinegar, a little grated nutmeg and a
pinch of salt. Pour over this mixture
one and one-half pints boiling water
and boil ten minutes; Just before ta-
king from the Btove add a dessert-
spoonful of butter.
Flower Cake Decoration*.
If you desire a beautiful decoration
for a white cake, secure fresh violet*
from your garden .or the florist, saya
the Woman's Home Companion. Make
a sirup of sugar and water. Dip the
violets carefully into this and put aside
on a platter to harden. If you ara
careful to let the sirup hair befor®
dipping the flowers, they will in a few
moments be ready to adorn the cake.
Any small flowers may be treated in
this way. Arrange in a wreath or
garland.
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
Can quickly be overcome by
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegetable
—act lurel v and
gently on th<
liver. Cure
Biliousness,
Head-
ache,
Dizzi*
new, and Indigestion. They do their dutp.
Small Pill, Small Dote, Small Price.
GENUINE must bear signatures
OLD SORES CURED
A1 l'-ri - I .•.■niu,S; lv«M'iir sCliroiil«,l lr« rH. "one
I |,.« rn>rrofiilo«m I'lrer*.\ >trlr M< I In-
dolent I IrorOlfrrurliil 1 Irer*. \\ It 11Sw «1I-
lnir Milk I «'ir j->ver Sore*. no
fallurt-. II] mil I ..lie. 0.1' A I.I.KN.iluiit. A'i.Sl.PHUl.MInn.
.... wealth. M-paife Book — - -
fe'lUgoruld & u>.,i'at.Aitya., lloi K.Waahlngton, U-C.
Carters
PILLS.
Oklahoma Directory
■QUAL8 DEERE IMPLEMENTS
and VELIE VEHICLES
Ask your dealer, or
JOHN DEERE PLOW CO., Oklahoma Ctl>
Nothing Too Good
The Wily Dealer.
indignant Customer—"I want to re-
turn this jewel box. It's not ivory, a*
represented." Dealer (musingly)—
"Now, 1 wonder if it can be possible
that elephant had false teeth."—Cleve-
land Leader.
CASCARHTS ioc a box for e weelc'e
treatment, HlUlru«ulsts. lliggeat aetlor
In the wotki Milium boies e mouth.
Read "The Road to Wellvllle," found
in pkjs "There's a reason."
Hver rend thr ihovp letter? A new
sap ■piieflr. from time to time. They
n re |i>.ul,e, true, Rid lull «f hmuia
tat.iMt.
Cheerfully Admitted.
"Owen Flannaganl Are you Owe
Flannagan?" said the clerk of the
court. "Yes, begorra," replied the
prisoner, with a merry twinkle In hi*
eye. "I'm owln" everybody."—Tltr
lilts
BILLIARD TABLES
POOL TABLES
LOWEST PRICES EASY PAYMENTS
You cannot afford to experiment with
untried goods sold by commission
agents. Catalogues free.
THE BRUNSWICK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO.
14 W. Main Street, Dept. B, Oklahoma Clt>, Okla.
TENTS AND AWNINGS
STACK COVERS
Water Proof Pnulltis, or nny klml of CnnTa.
llooiln. Full weight Omuls. First clasa
construction. Prleea Hi^-ht.
BATES MANUFACTURING COMPANY
OKLAHOMA CITY
23 W.California. One-hall Bloci West Santa Fe 0sd«I
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Daily, J. M. The Mustang Enterprise (Mustang, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, June 10, 1910, newspaper, June 10, 1910; Mustang, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc157343/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.