Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 26, 1914 Page: 6 of 8
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pace six.
OKLAHOMA STATE REGISTER
Racing Meets at Fairs
Prosper—Bright Pros-
pects for 1914.
Hliv Lent Begins
Three Weeks Later
the earth s interior a
region for specu
lation.
Ardmore, Ok.. Fob. 21.—That theref
wore nearly 1,400 licensed harness ra-
ring meetings in connection with fairs
last year, and about 200 unlicensed
meets and that the season ot 1914
"ill break even that record, are the
statements of W. H Knight, secretary
of the American Trotting Association,
who was in Oklahoma recently to at-
i ad the annual mooting at Muskogee
( i the Kansas and Oklahoma racing!
circuit. |
Of the 1,(100 meetings here last sea-
son in connection with fairs, Knight
said, only a few have reported that the
results were not satisfactory either
Irom a linancial or public standpoint.
1 here were more horses in training
l.ist yeai than ever before, according
to Knight, more horses wree raced and
more people paid to see races than cv-
>-r before. The same condition will
exist the coming season, he declares
only tnat the game will be on an even
more healthy footing as regards pub i
i< interest, lie was exceedingly (111-1
tnnistie for the future of the game es-1
peciaiiy as regards the exhibiting and
money-making end.
The directors of the Kansas and Ok-
lahoma racing circuit elected I,. <;
niiiKb <>l Anthony, Kan., president for
the ensuing year, with Or. 1<\ s. Heat-
tie of loia, Kas., vice president, and Ktl
teed of Hutchinson, Kas
tary Teeds succeeds himself in thai
liosition. Altliough ho is one ot tin
most enthusiastic supporters of the rai
ing game in tho Southwest, he is no
direct y connected with it, being ,
ZlC "g^leama" 0Ut 01 "otohinsot.
l.uthne Okja.. and Chaiiute, Kan
were admitted to membersliip in th<
the ? i" thf delegates voted to hold
L meeting of the circuit in loin
The association awarded racing dat-
es to the members or the circuit as f„|-
■ .. beginning .luly jo ul
ouncil drove, Kans..; .iulv u'7 ller-
nngton, Kans., August ;j, Anthony
Angus, 10, I'ratt. Kans.; Aug-
Mcl'lirrson, Kans .; August 24
, ; '"a'i 31. lola, Kans
ber 14 w i, VVlnflel(i' « "«•: Septein-'
son K , 'T'C'B ut '")th "Utchin-
son Kans. and Guthrie, Okla.; Sep.
--to October ,i, Oklahoma City, Ok ■
October ;i, week meetings at both
Muskogee, Ok., and t'hanute, Kans
A feature of the circuit meeting at
luskogoe was, the ejection of a w6iu-
' . 1Nhss TniniA It. Knell of Muskogee
as one of the circuit association di-
ectors. Miss Knell lived formerly at
urthnge, \tn. where she was associa-
id with her father, the late E. Knell
n fair managements. He was promi-
ient as a harness-racing man and was
iiundi-r of the Carthage Fair. Miss
\neil was the first secretary of the
Muskogee Fair, but resigned in 1912,
•*'10 has just been elected secretary of
be New Stale Fair Association of Mus-
rogee, with Mrs. Cora Dougherty
ler first assistant.
The three big Oklahoma fairs sched-
uled for this season are the Oklahoma
■Hate at Oklahoma City, the Cimarron
/alley Fair at Guthrie and the New
<'atc at Muskogee. The week of Sep-
ember 14 has been set for the (iuthrin
"air. in accordance wit lithe date
iwarded the city by the Kansas and
Mtlahoma Racing Circuit. Joliii Cloio-
bie, "ditor of the State Register has
buen re I ec ted president for the ensu
ing year. Willi Fred I.. Weuner, secre-
ary; Rd Stobaugh, Vice President,
■'id ' harles S. Olsen, treasurer. The
ifier directors are; Hoy Teal. 1.. K.
Week, Heinz Braun, Frank Hurford.
'eorge Watkins, lx,uis I. Beland and
it. .1. t 'on lie way.
The Oklahoma State Fair Asiocla-
ion has also re-elected their 1012
resident, James I,. Wilkin, for the
ensuing year, and the following di-
ne tors llenry Overholser. Sidney I,
,'rock' Joseph Huckins, (l. ft. ston'i
■ f oleord, .1. M. Owen. I. S. Mahan,
• illiam Mee and Orin Ashton.
Dates for 1914 State Fairs and ex
L
kansas city live stock
market.
Kansas City Stock Yards, Feb. 21.—
Cattle trade had a keen edge today
\ strictly scientific contribution to ll) lh<' small supply, 4.000 head
>* i . if T , ' knowledge in the form of a discussion ' storm restricted loading yes-
• IlIS 1 ear I ll/lfl I I'St ol son"' °' results incidi nial to the 'onlay, railroads in some cases being
triangulalion work done by th. Coast ''"lirely incapacitated. The storm has
and Geodetic Survey is presented by ,l,e effect of elevating prices 01;
Grove Karl Gilbert of tin- I'nited Stat- kill'ng grades I.". to :i0 cents this week
es Geological Survey, in a short paper but " I|;1S had au opposite effect or
on tlie 'Interpretation of Anomalies of Prices of stockers and feeders. There
;vr 1 tIiik year three weeks
later than last year.- being of
March
course based upni the ,]ute ,,f
Raster, which Is April 11' this
year as '.gainst March 2.'! in nn;;.
Very few |teople u.|j wh>. j |1||t
varies s„ fi.un year t,. year ,,,'ul whv
Raster may come as earlv
or as tale as April L'.*i.
it Is something of an anomaly from
the religious point ..r view thai tile an-
niversary of Christ's death
any one of thirty tin. dates while the
anniversary „f his t.i,i|, is oil
'he same ti is i,„ les> ,f „„ „I1('U0II|V
from tile asirolloutii-aI standpoint, for
'here " no reason why we, having
adopted ||„. solar year as ti,,. (.asls of
our calendar, should , ling f. the lunar
for of
one date
It Is a niysterv why. when the date
Gravity, recently published by the were feature sales in various classes
Geological Survey as Part ( of I'ro- today, three loads 1500 lb natives sell-
tessional Taper S
After stating the anomalies of gray-
ify. which are also expressed graphi-
cally on tlie may of the United States
accompanying the paper, .Mr. Gilbert
discusses the interpretation of these
anomalies under tlie assumption of im
perfect Isostatic adjustment, vertical
mav fall on i ol ,he crust, varia-
„ ii— I "°l'rh 01 compensation. The
in gal $9.20, a six car drov - of *.-60
lb. panhandles, fed in their natii"
country, at $00. fair to rood i'oh
rado $8.SO, Oklahoma steers !• " Fa.ij grantees
to good fed steers sell at $7.. " to t " ' '
inust 'insw'iT^n, "St,Hon" ,
^irt"efor,, the .rrt'di' ^ ,«• ««
•am tii titliin ivitt !„. taken as ,ru"
judgment nil! t„. rendered i«ainx."
l>ln.r .... , | j
adjud^inp and
owner in
defendants
plaintiff to bo t ie~soii
lots 'i'liirt '«*n. Fourteen Fiftr>«<n t
ind Spvpntc n in Block ,Vrv Xt*', M
that f•£•!*! of tli.. fitv nf Uu£ i ,ri
•S Ciuthrl.- IT !r. In Iiwin .. wtl
«ind 1 hat a„v rlalm ;"',n,v-
Uilaess agiunst I:. U' illifitini ,
Ht'lelT1- iK "° """ "I"'" aiid not r',"'
titled to payment out of said
ay against plaintiff; and ttmt any e "
of any kind by any of said defenrtan*
said action In- ti,.Id invallil null and C'
so tar as ,t„. said real premises ,OW'
K-ernote ..«,i !!"ses «*On-
mi" and vill i
a'::vrS;i;hpS'^
ss ssq&rzrikA&ip
V tu-
, I ally debarred aii'!' fo?eC!-n" ,M'- r"'rtw'
® assertinjr "
may havr-
Native cows $6.00 to $7.50. ouiis $«5(
to $7.50, best veal valves $l&.£:i S'eer,
in the riuarantine division todny
weighed from 820 to 985 lbs. and
brought $7.00 to $7.25. Some 1060 lb. t0 said rent premises,
any indebtedness' th™
against said H. ty. —
that
Higjfi,,-
botham, deceased. i„ a pen upon
titled to payment out of said nn^mio""
ir malntaln.nT o?"^
geologic relations suggested by 't'lie 'l"aranlln,'s brought $7.60 yesterday,
ma|i showing the geographic distri- sharp advance this week on kill-
bution of the anomalies are net set !"?. Rrades discloses the weakness of
forth. j killers, and smoking stockyards horse-
Tli especulative nature of this scien 'Ih ^' t0d|Uy teStA'1fi.ud l° thp urBpnc>' of
title contribution is well expressed hv . o^crs. Although meat imports
Mr. Gilbert in the tew sentences ih .t last,we,ek w,Lr" Breater than >' other
introduce the section dis< ussing inter- 1 !vee.k.8in.<'e ll?e tariff was removed and
pretation by nueleal heterogeneity:
thereof; and that p ain"^^ h'lv/™7 p"',rt
all otner prope, relief 8 any and
SKIl! Ht'MI'HRRY. t'°rmiy ^/r plam'tlfr.
Cterk of said Court.
First published in Oklahoma State Reg-
ister, Thursday, Feb. 6, lai-i.
\oticc—Sheriff's Sale.
1^-nt begins this week, these influences ....
. .have been completely nullified by the "llereas, it appears from an Order
, , . , I n|,®, h 18 ,h(" inalienable drop in receipts. There will be larger Sale issue out of the District (k>nn
l.i isi s birth was fixed as Dec. 25. i I(nn,'o,',,i''i « lma8"'ation. Once supplies later in the week, but buy- °f the County oi Ixigan and State of
'U Vprll w-re the | IL,° e J°'Tea of Macksmith ers could not wait. Stockers and feed-
same tline seltted upon as tin,
gods, or it was the birthplace of our ers are
moving slowly, bad weather
Oklahoma, bearing data the 30tS~dav
of January, A. IX J9i4, to me dir-
iiis ile.ith and resurrection. Thai woul'd I bodlecf RnihHtah°n,"\0r £r,80n of disem-l exerting a big Influence on "the'markl| f,cte?, and now in my hand"s. That
i i , I spirits, later Symmes hollow " " " ■
Kas.,
ust 17
Kuroka
positions have been set by the twenty
t'Urd annual convention of the Amcr-
Xorth Dakota State
til Association of Fairs and Impo-
sitions as follows;
July 20 to 25-
air at Fargo.
August 27 to September Iowa
'tate Fair at Ilea Moines.
September 7 to 12—Nebraska State
I air at Lincoln.
September 14 to 19—South Dakota
tate l air at Pierre, Kansas Slate Fair
<t Hutchinson and Kansas State Fair
Association at Topeka.
September 21 to October 2. Oklaho
r.ia State Fair at Oklahoma t'ity
September 21 to 2«— Interstate Uve
Sltock Fair at Sioux City, la.. and St.
Joseph Uve Slock Fair at St. Joseph
■Mo.
September 28 to October :!
State Fair at Sedalia.
October . to 10—American Royal
lave Stock Show at Kansas City, Mo.,
"d New State Fair at Muskogee, Ok.
logieal would have bin" I ed""from'"i't"a h^'tT" hollow-| !''• and Prices somewhat lower than'!!'e ^ of July, 1913 in an" ac-
isheii from the i al.-ii.11r , liin'ir evel* ' concave like ,h habitable empire, last week, at $6,25 to $7.75. Onlv "?n ,ht'" Pending in said Court
Hun lu< loii" i , , , ! , i i vvoiid ot Koresh.i -i,000 hogs arrived today and r> 000 yes- whercin First wN'ational ilauk -m.
M,,';:; L l,v aM &:itnchi^ vn, n.eXt,USir ,it,e "u* ot enough to inVte much C. P'aintifr and Ocorge K. Rouch Ita
,. , \ I ' noses ,„h lu • !. speculat,ve Pur- Petition. Packers have selected to- AIlnnie A Kouch were defendants i
I. should no, be dilheiil, ti5 the I ^s and the livedo,,, of speculation day as good time to put prices down "er80,,al Judgment was rendered' in
live for I.aster If Christ "flons The tnner mrth" 7° "mita* in 8t*yin«r out of ,he market costs Sa!^ co,urt in action in favor of
rucitied on II,e ,|:lv „f the ! j, is - J ,'lle 'nner Hls denst'' and t,hem 'e.ss when th«re is a light supply. ,said Plaintiff and against said fie
nkki. As to «il lother nrnnort.Areordine'lv tho r«o,.b« , lendants- (Zvnrcr-, i ^ .
x,a" '• gi„ to beloVnlonTs nm,,!^''i'e°ihf'r Properties, Accordingly the market is 57o lolowl ^ndantb„: George E. Rouch and Min-
■ibie 11 • ealeiilate on what date this fell "It is my own view th t ti • n Jj' *8'6"' bu,k *8-'10 to $8.60 f, ®ouch for the sum of Three
r v• ,1 . I n«irt V.I lle ,nnpr' )rr,or ,)nv<^s have been the main sun Huildrt'd Sixty and 50-100 dollar
, linr verv r ',"le? eUK ls not me,'e|y hot Port of the market for some time and (*a60-5°), debt, bearing interest at
.t .in- anaehro- "ut U'ry hot. If the law of compres-1 crippled railroads - ■ ' and rate „f * nte«« at the
1 • '.v« 11i jiif mast hi*.
It l.s to | hp council
owe l In* |hm |mM ual i< n
iiixi it* met hod of n
I his council decrectI
tin* first Siiixlay hI'um ill
moon that .n-enrs .«ill?. i
no*. March *j 1. I'ojm* tlrc^oiy XIII
deitook at that Ii:u«>
slon
„ , , of com pres-1 crippled railroads last two davs'have r,ate of ten Per cent per annum frn„,
by pressure and the law ot' ex-1 temporarily sfonnwi tho .1,1 the date thereof una t— the ™um ™
i ...«t ' ucijo iid\p .1 , **v 1
" " ' * 1 !u,ni!.'.?"^by heat'. aa we.know them at business, leaving",he ni.a^ket wide'op- Thirty"8ix DoHars"''(I'le^OO j "a tto^ey
> ..e .... 1 1 fe# illlfi pnale U,1IC'
first full I ,the su,'rarf'. apply equally to the
#>i'o then the mean temperature
^arth must be enormous in order day Sheep and lambs"aVmaking Sru'ng costs and" which""s'ums" were
irnnit irn no t. dpolnrnrl „ji...i . . ° wrre
leus then the to the m,<" Pn to the «««" of packers More fee 'ind costs of suit taxed a Nine
P'HtheS'ea^\!u:, Tea2nIZr"^rL will ruie after to- Ji™ „Do"ars ($11.35, and 1c!
"U" ! t°-aff°rd " mean density so low as 5.66. rood^ gains this weeXVccount'of^Se aljudg^by Ta'id Co"rt
re implies an small supply, Uambs sold at $7 SO , a first mortgage lieu on tbe
top price here being described^ tllerein' an<i hereinafter
use j enormous store of heat
H. C.
... , reform the An enormous temperature ininlie
Julian calendar, which had been iu - —- - • 'niptte
ever since Julius Caesar In -It;
had preseribed that a year should con-
sist of :tly days, every fourth year
having :!( ;. This Julian calendar was
a reform of a still more ancient svs-
leui liased upon the motions of tlie
moon, which system varied widely iu
different lands In Rome it had origi-
supply. Ixtmbs sold
It0 today, the top price 1
I e""3' to Chicago top today on lambs
fight pipe line built to woufd°°be aT here' l)ut ,ha, u "• " er apjK>ars
galveston. | c&fe m
ducers"i'ii Hd, sigh", number
whereas, it further appears
er ordered by said
| cuotable up ,0 $7."' Re^elpta 'weTe T- Sale ii^t^i^S d^cte^
1 . !! ®L.n_yl, r, <?n0 today and there ' ">e Sheriff of said Countv n?0^
-Missouri
LOST HIS MIND IN A STANrp"*, ..
PniINTDV N°E about his condition until last Sunday
COUNTRY. | when he sutfered rfom a nervous
" j spell, but still showed 110 signs of be-
Assvrian Rihu c a rf nu'nta'ly unbalanced. Yesterday
rtssyrian Bible Students at Enid "l< l'noon he disappeared from the
University Overstudy Sends
Him to Asylum.
1 niversit\ and made his way to town
stopping in many houses on his way
I down and telling people he was a
missionary. At one place he is known
■>. ■■■■
■
■ north ot this city, -all of whom, prac
| ticnlly, are in favor of the government
owned pipe line to the Gulf—will
, make a tigiit 10 have the line construe- „■
ted as originally intended from Okla-I il1,' ■n'"'l.in Oklahoma state K.g
| Honia to Calves.,,,, rather than to Mem 1;' ' •
Phis, a scheme recently hatched ' '
Bel" t0san;SK'nr^;K "to"advertise and
ot-u saia real estate
lor balance of the week. —• «iu real estate, without an
3. A RICKART. Praisement, or s„ mu'ch thercof
^larket Correspondent. j"a- be necessary to satisfy
oil men of other gelds but
by
without
1 Notice is hereby
' given that in pur-
ounty Court ecution
judgment, inteVeTt.'attorncTs'Z and
rigt'un C0S,'S °f Sale' and all the
right title, interest and equity of re-
demption of said defendant in' and to
| said property or any part thereof n
°L8alef of real ^tate on ex-
without appraisement, sub-
any Kovcrnment approval as yet The SUanc0 ot a order of the (
biVuTw^^hrLhl^tU^giv^g'u,^ Okliom'r?,0" 'T a"d State OVeAnd0 -n^'^t-n^'^^urt"
a government market also for the ex p 1 " °" 12th day of said rirH faS' J am commanded
tensive field that now seems certain ' 1 'Uar>'' A' D" 1914' in the matter of! r Sale D0W
• rtain 1 , " 1,1 ule matter of tn m my hands
as a TUle estate Torrance, deceased1 pursuant to the order and jud^en?
The Assyrian boy whom Rev I w ? . " T'! and receiving a re-
ihnpliries, a former pastor of " the ;P°nB,! h's knock, announced to the
Christian church at this place met in 'l'"(_1>at the Kingdom of Heav-
alestine and raised money bv sub- ev. |V"8r He mfde no further
scription to pay his expanses to the m 1 "" hurri(^ away. Fam-
United States, has lost his ,„iud ac- 'lf ,Ll "'1"*'11, ,uu thought little
cording to the following article from i f . y a,,er he had departed. Down
Fridays Knid Eagle, but it is renorted 0NW1 ,H' was found teaching and
that members of the University resent pi?*® busil"'ss men about the
not bei"f taken to Norman a« thTdo 11 soon observed that he was in-
not consider him crazy. sane. OiRcers were notitled and he
, „ Having apparently lost his mind! t^?,fi °Ved ' °"u' Ja" to await his
trom a too intensive studv of Viie Hible „ ! . morning. Monsour offered
aself Monsour, a student of tlie I'hii „ when ,ako" in charge by 1
>P« I nnersity, wug 1 the 'officers, but after he was alone
judged insane in the county conn and' 1 "^entf became calm and im-l
ill. t i«ken tomorrow morning l.vj!! i'm',"1111 his slol'>' "f missions,
the sherilf. "'h the Bible to officers who had him
"Naself Monsour is an Assyrian born ul:i"'K<''
to theT.; 1''! h.'"l, 81ini'' ^yria, coming 1 ■ ,s h1,'lk'Vl'l !>'s insane condition
to stmlv tn 1 au!" fo,lr months ago| ,1(l, u brought about by too hard a
to .study to be a missionary. The bov " a"d loo much thought given to'
fc twenty iea.s ol ug0 ;,iti,ouga ,le subject. The board of insanity "al,,,'w'th itomntiis.
fl!e n=^ « much >'ou"ger and for <xProsa'd the belief that the boy would1'V1'?r ' t''" lWu,lls '"'vhig alternately
le past live tears. In fact since he was j' weeks or months af-j t'drty one and thirty davs. making :itl4
given I ''n.vs in all Numa IVimpllhiN added
r the months .if I'elirnary and .lanunrv
> and in the year i:c It. c. 11,,. ,1.
down virs
g--
he has no""" wriu™ in Kngllsh '
hive0 '^''""rlta''he'''seems''to TRIMMED THE LAWMAKERS
have become almost a fanun.
studied night and day. teachers being1 0tIoV T ^
unabit to t om ince him that it was un- Legislators were Vic
necessary to study hard. At all I
hous Of the night the boy has been
All Oklahoma producers, as „ lulc
Un™'' 'T rrg8|e!0Sf,?hb"!W,-,hC ^ lh" "nder9iSned a3 ,he -dministratrixof said Court "^s aforesaid
rit 'ry I ii 11 initiating company to"d Tn" o 0t 8''id deceased' will,I Now, therefore, public notice is
dian Commissioner Sells and I.ieuten- !!' °' Monday the ninth day of hereby given, that 011 the Hth day of
■?_nt. (.'°mm.,,nd" Boyd of the Navy, the March- A «>• >914. and within six! \ D« 1911 at the hour of
in vestigating committee for the"govern months from said last mentioned date ! north h!^ of 8aid day. at the
" very sell a, private sale ,0 the highest and! cointy of i°i,gan TlLn'^ "id
would >Kt!fy the co"sTri,ctlon,• b,ddor therefor, all k sale anrt .«n ... ' tfer 'or
respect, and that the Oklahoma
Ply WOUld >l<ttlfy the ,
title, interest and estate of
Torram
to tisit Oklahoma in tho all the right, title and interest that! wit7
toX'K announcement!1 Th^ ^Te '*>'
make an invcstlerntinn nr ti.o r>i.i..u_ otherwise, acquired in and to all
of a six hundred mile pipe line.
t'01
Boyd are
CoiiraiHstoner SeHs and Commander To,rancc a, the time of his death, and of'"saie"a
the right, j ??'? a"d sell at public auction to the
of said J. M. Wtf*" and best bidder for the
w ,1„D,1. ....j' estate mentioned in sai.t n^.._
Plioto I.V American I'rrm Assi.ei.itli
PBIXKSSIOV ON ASH b ONES IM v
'irema"rtboV,i't llas " ills sole de- 1 mind and nerves had been g
Sire and ambition to bee
pa° ta7oilr 'I'" "0T co""try " ^o/'uu" I i1""1'"8'1 kh for several days and since
past tour >ears he has attended a ,I.? ^ ,las frequently broken
lance to rest, lie has been vi
mission school in Palestine,
. « investigation 7Z ,,'Soma n aCl,Uired in and t
oil I,e'ds with a view to establishing a certain lot, piece, or parcel, of
vaPvv WUH0.,??"^ nited Suates la"d '>< « a"d being In the County of ,.,e.
ssfAr^. sih.'sss r:vr st:
tion, according to such spokesmen 'as !, described as follows, and upon
Hoy M. Johnson, .lake I, Hamon. R. H. following terms and conditions, to-
•oster and otiiers prominent in this wi,: Tlle Southeast quarter (1-1, of
r?;6;w:rrR^
The Magnolia company's pipe line Said Property cannot be sold for less
W1" be completed into the U iisou- than ^IR-'O.OO that being 00 per cent
1 est. connecth,g^ wi't't °the"refinery 'at f aP"n'iS"" V!"U" thPrPOf' w"i("
lieauinont, Texas. The company now ®P,,ralsen,ent was made 011 the 23rd
has two 55,000 barrel tanks receivin" of Deccmher, 1913,
mentioned in said Order
jnd described as follows, to-
ri ,1 T,11"ee (3) Four (4) jfive
Thirrt p f ■"i) in bloek Five <5) in
ci^y of Cn.i? S.h'3 additio" the
tit} of Guthrie state of Oklahoma J
and cried to
placed them where they now j?.',,"1 t!'ia fi''id' lot'atfd just north of 0fr«rs or bids for said land must be
""i t.he Present time four made in writing and the same may be
found in his room
time of Crooked Roulette.
Oklahoma City, Feb. 23.
rending his Wble and"irv'ing fomasier 'H?..lust" spring "a^lix"
When i'ope tiregory undertook to re
form tile Julian calendar that had by
that time become incorrect hi about
ten days the rerolutiou of the earth
around the sun was not yet fully un-
derstood. so instead of making a
change that would be thoroughly sci-
euiitlc the present form of year was
adopted, the Julian calendar being
modified by calling Oct. ."i. I5S2. Oct
ar.s of
\Wlson, and at
out of thu'ei'ty. fnoTdlr'io Uke^cirf '"Z b<?f°r" S,1<''h sule at
Ot tiie r. .idly increasing production 1 (,ut|irie addressed to Ella E. Torrance
care of Arthur R. Swank, or delivered
There °f I>IM" or so muca
thereof as may be necessary to sat-
and attorney's fee
and costs of sale and all the right
title, interest and equity of r,.,i.!!!,..
tion of said defendants in and to s ikt
premises, or any part thereof as in
!iifC! °f real ,>state on execu-
tion without appraisement subject to
confirmation by .said Court
Witness my hand this 3rd day of
February, 1914.
John Ma honey.
By Walter II. Humphrey, slj>riff.
I'nder Sheriff.
BRINGING BIG TREES
TO SAN FRANCISCO.
, °,ld t.ret's from India, Africa and the
1 hiliipiae Islands have been uprooted
transported by elephonts, ox teams
"orse an dmule power, electricity
steam "J ■ J
to the undersigned personally, or the
same may be filed in the office of tin
Judge of said County Court.
Dated February 12th, 1914.
Ella E. Torrance,
Arthur R. Swank, Administratrix
the English language. 111 "*phii'lips' I"n' i j"lous gambling house was maintained, • - .
M f^rc^ mX.r:;';r- r„r— - — «
grasping the uses bidding of g„,sts. Vh"'p* i hm> 2000' «tc.. which should be leap im^wf tS^ccomp'llllf, "his wTthoSl r„ . -?L,CATI0N-
ways and followed "hia^profeaslon '"U"a8er h"d
| lantic
and
steamers, and
oil trans-At-
his hospitality
daily progress
of the English languagi
customs.
"The story of the boy's life runs .
something like this: |n the sumner -'Sreeable manners did much to
of 1911 While xascif Monsour was '"",,a8<' the patromigc of h|8 l"
attention of .1 w
who rr^t t'ime"tourIng"'V1'8''' -
after his return to the I'nited States b,0i . Ji,°/r,T?,,rd ,ht> a"<i
m steam and sai Ito the grounds of tile i.nblj«he,i m Owtab.ima state Heir-
I 1-anama-i aciflc Exposition in Sen !• 0 "'tiiliri'el"1 ev' ■'','b""lTrv i'J. ifn.
U J rancuco. The method employed U OI,-:.l„^,!n ' ',,rt '•«*" County,
ians and visitors in search
nni„ . way to the
J,*! ,l 8°'ect patronage
yours.
Ilofe
Plaintiff.
i« . «. Ia very ,Rr*e Percentage of these
those days they were so a ecus | turies old trees dying. marv m, n0fee, defendant
tomed to movable feasts that it never A rectangular cut is mnH or a „„Th", j';1'' "' i h.im:, tn tt„, above
occurred to the reformers of the cileu- j the base of the tree at .ome Uttie di's " wHl""^^' ^ '
dar that a day might come wbeu their tance from the edge of the trunk, sev- the above namJd"rSurte
movabllity should lie inconvenient ?■ ,"K tht' sids roots, leaving only the r,.f ,, the* obbv-T^t pl"ii'.',.lrf <:,'n''K" W
They knew so little about the rela- ,,°U°Sn To nourish th> tree ,al'' Plaintiff mav obtain a dTvoree from
lions between the sun and the earth . a.r' '/irct'd llowii into these cu's £ro'inrts'of3,w, ?' "y M
that they did not want to renounce the t.Jet^.^ nL'L61^',..0?.'3 f^om erowing you ..r pialntiir
?irH""'"PKhrer t00k l'P ''ollectiiTns l'i wfhat Happened now re
Callous churches sufUcient to pay the "
>oung missionary's expenses across
the water. Mr. Ilumphrevs is „0
Pastor oi the Christian church at
Sedgwick. Kansas where young Mon
sour made his way immedintelv after
arriving ,,, New y„rk. A, Sedgwick
i,i m• , . n,tt)lic schools, where
bo Studied for four months. Mr Him
oaeving Phillips
look bac
si'n',cki rtheUh af,Pr a" averages were
" 1" sur .lv at. W "nl,lf!8 gradually
n , a "" nM u'" other win-
longs and the stakes as well.
,e secret has been discovered Sev
ora months ago the police raided this
wheel s„ver 't H™"'1' th<" rm""tt->
• °tvtral days ago orde
prs were
. —■* «r.. 1 him here
he entered school at the open I
tne s«co„u semester about two weeks thi
He learned rapidly considering the *,re- "r"nd"J--A".'.«op-
great task he has had before h m anrt * maK,"'t-
made 11 constant study of his Bible V; ■slr''t''hed a net work of wlr.^s I!niter
8<nce t huttons and
^ , ,7 «-g ,ni„,ps a beUerS^^'^^'af^
Place for the boy sent him here where v ,iefldqunrters. at po
hA ° " of w eTUwJtdrre atrUlk ,he roulette
a magnet V^1" b"" pocket was
str!'!f h!..i „ L".rou*".out. the woodwork
lunar year entirely and so upset" the i iX^ndislurbM Tr "i'0 tree ,s thf"
order of feast days that had from time ; that timi th"^e ha. ten^c.oo, Vy
Immemorial been based UI>on the move ad to living through its bottom roots
trients of the moon. and these are no wsevered and boards'
luou^n the Gregorian calendar was urc*'d beneath the tree, which is then
issued in 1582. prejudice against any- j luIled over 011 its side. The boards
tiling that came from Rome was so ! are then secured into a
was so
strong I11 England that It was not
adopted there until by an
from
Tl-oiimis of desertion ■, .,T "" tile
croon and abandonment hv
for more than one
You wtlT ftirtber takn notice ti ni
•>l«'nttff from y„„, the sVd defen.lnnt"Wd
J' M. AnAMS
A ttori
First pubHshed in ok„„,olnn Stat0
In the^ i'l Jrietr"ciy' tK"'-' l:i
State ..f Okiiii,0111a. Bttn (*""ntv.
JennieNChTJ?Cwe||BY,.|ainn!?!CAT'0N
°!iver Chadweit, Defeinhmt.
wlllt.ke'mui^'Vin'rii; ! "lvV ^hadwetf,
-3e&tSS&^
todj nf the minor I n . 1 i lln'l "Is-
and that the .lefeiubi !t rn:-rria-e
petition (it..,t th.-rehi on n h ■'lnsw''r the
'lav .,f Mareb. lV|t " «•« 2*tb
taken as true and n h. i lon wil' I"'
rendered
M;II. HI MPHRByf y'
AUTItru It. 8\V\NK t ,(' Court.
Attorney for PhUntlfT.
Mrst published in Oklahoma state J;,,
i-ster. Thursda.v. K,v2, ml
lahoma ib . °?nly' StHte "f Ok-
et al, are defendants
Attfst:
homa State
-rapped heavily wlth wlretrop! and 7" "™HKv. M
act of oar- i , „.tree f,ed b-v derrick to car on ^'rst published ln oklnh
Uament passed ln ,75,. Sept. ,W SVLcli Xer" afl^afulbT
was reckoned as Sept. 14, and New i Hoisted on shipboard the "tree is *• I>«-enbeck, p.aintitr,
cept from the light, and when weeks N-Hn|„, v „ v«.
Hournnn. Adr<,'.. HlJlKlmin
Sear's day was changed from March
SO to Jut,, l, beginning with 1763,
To fix one definite date Tor Kaster
would require a decree from the pope.
The whole Itoman Catholic world
would at once adopt it. and there ls
little doubt that the Protestant church-
es would follow. As It Is a purely re-
.i ,. J ** *,uuB ainee lie ntit ,, , „. . ' " "ulious and n° 11 |!1 «« pureiy re-
was'^l,,e«iiyDK,ty'■„"Vh0«". d'aler comnIe°I th" " ,hat w«"ld ^
learn.
and
Nothing was noticed
quick to There •ire"iPlPte |r.0,"ro1 of tile play, necessary.
Peculiar rlnul r'oii**l,Tie°ph-.er = 1 T'r.^U,°h 1 ln "nd '!recce the .lullan eai-
I a. ers in Oklahoma. | endnr Is still In U!<i\ so their dates are
W twelve days dilTeieut fr« iu oars. ,
r months later it arrives at the ex do-
1 11 grounds it is living, but in a
•orry condition. A place having been
ire pa red for it in rich soil brought
ti eV iV',-" ,'d8 0,1 the Sacramento
■ '' 13 replanted under conditions
-rowth Th' f°r 1,8 continued
r?. e . . n® box ,s removed and the
rte carefully nursed for ;!u davs by
vhirh t mu !♦ u*
!«■«-
h':n'andAdev|.sees thS
going named
the creditors
tbm "i" ""'V niust answer the neti
Court in said art?",lff '"e<1 in 8,id
-'Htl, dav of Mareh i'Ma °r bef,°/e ,he
tion win ho t u ' or said peti-
rendered aga^st'said"d 1'^"
iqii ,, , i from February 7th
mmmm
glnbotham
defendants.
In said petition 08 prayed for
t>ated February 4lh, 19)4
clwrenmul: J,
::::
rohahility
cbarics.
live.-
March ropu'ar M# - ll)nt p'aint ir <11.1
of F-hnwrv. I'M f flu'
on the isth ,t.,v
hl« n'-titlon n„d
nimt'l Court .igaln.si
(Seal)
John
Nell Humphrey,
flerk District Court
W. M. Neal, Deputy,
\ d"ms.
Attorney for Plaintiff
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 26, 1914, newspaper, February 26, 1914; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc169338/m1/6/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.