The Hastings Herald (Hastings, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, February 14, 1913 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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'ihc Hastings Hcrad
lUdTtNUH
a
OKLAHOMA
OXLAIIOMA NfWS NOlfS
l ratio alas will b I up
tlta la Culaalt tbl fall -
Hli hundred panlrlpatod la th (
drive at tUarhwcU and ci iu
wo captured
Th TuUa iMlolllr mad a (at of
So per cent List mouth ovr ilia aam
Limih a fr
Work oa Eufaula’s I7SIHH) newer
system and wiir extension la pro
ireoslnd satisfactorily
Tba ground hog failed to bin
Shadow and according to tradition
Ibcra will ba an enriy spring
Tba Santa Pa railway I replacing
the eighty pound steel ralla along Ita
load bed with ninety pound ratio
A company organised at Manliuu
baa been quietly act urine leaaea and
III shortly bap in boring for oil
Tha bllniaterlal aaaorlutlon of Law-
tou baa put tba kibosh on dancing
card games and Hunday theaters
Yds smelting plant at Sand Springs
la axpoctod to bo completed by the
end of tha month and In operation
thereafter '
Terlton will soon have gaa lights
at the depot and on the main street of
the towu which' Is an advance In the
right direction
Business men of Mam beater Grant
county mean to bore for oil and gas
and hare already subscribed $14ud
for that purpose
The Noble county poultry show re
ceutly held did not only break eveu
but the sum of 129 07 was found on
baud after all expenses bad been paid
Kingston Marshall county is to
bare more brick and concrete build-
ings on Main street the contract for
several new ones already having been
let
Some miscreant threw a whisky bot-
tle through the plate glass In front
ot the Altus city hail building thus
anting bis spleen on the city offi-
cials Duncan la preparing to hold a pea-
nut carnival this coming fall and from
all reports It will be a bummer in
every way and "all that the name im-
plies” There is a movemnt on foot to dig
for coal on the outskirts of Checotah
A company has been organized and
several hundred dollars’ worth of
stock sold
Seventeen new locations were made
in the Terlton oil field In one day and
one well was brought In Loks as If
things are picking up In that district
in the oil and gas line
HAVE YOU TRIEO THIS?
timpi Prescript! held te Werh
j Wenders fee Rheumatism
T-U Ms Imi fear In the
thwart dnrlitrt ff Vmi M IW itukisH
ftl M fwllwtsl ruf fnf
rltrUMMhfll ImI It hbl ImwA
rulllrtr4 fcwf ?tsf mrfhl tPIHlrr m
immIM mt ftt ofrt rstrt ruM bif
It 14 Hnrt tim Krnm rmir 4r
i f Tftt rmwBuM
un oftfin! MNiirdl m4
uiw tf arrup of idrMpirilU o
twtm4 Taka (Hew too tfigrMial
fvnni and fxil IIh-ni Into half Pint of
ffns4 Ptialkw tbo fetstlU 04
taka teMwaifwinhfiil Mfora oorli IPwal
p m at bHtifiw M IIpoiH com ha
flrot (tbf If jrmir rfrtitfttot 4wm M
hrtf THa f’nfnpnuiwl n iarh M will
1 H It l ftw hour frm Ma aholo
Palo baurt ant ho nnuoro4 tl takio
puM pa loot mosllrtno lnaa1 of thla
ntt on tiavlnf ho ponulno Tnrw
cnffipmirwl In iho original nnoaunr
PtM yrllnw parliapo fihhaho by tha
lllstho rharmaratilh al tartr af
CbU ago
MEHT BILL
NAMgg or MAXIV CRAWFORD
WILLIAMS ANO BOLEN ARC
AMONG THE AUTHORS
6TH DISTRICT MAY CAUSE FIGHT
EXCELLENTI
Carter Murray and Thmpa All le
eluded In This Division—
Other News af Tha
Legislature
r Caddo will soon vote on a bond Issue
“ for the Installation of a sanitary
-sewerage system for that own Vari--'
ous estimates have been made rang-
' tag from 910000 to $25000 on tlie
cost of the work'
The mayor of Shawnee received a
tetter from a peanut products factory
In Texas offering to establish a factory
if the farmers in the vicinity will
agre to raise more peanuts
Ponca City school teachers have
taken precautions against possible loss
of life in case of fire by drilling the
school children In a fire drill until
' they have become so they can empty
the building In less than ninety sec-
onds The city of Stonewall has been per-
inanetly enjoined from using the
schoolhouse sinking fund for the pur-
pose of instating an electric light plane
- The injunction was issued Saturday
by Judge McKeown who holds how-
evr Stonewall may vote a bond Issue
for that purpose
Carter county has a larger cotton
crop this year than last year and the
staple brought $1760 per bale more
than last year
Most of the city councllmen of Fair-
view are holding office by appoint-
ment' as are also several members of
the school and now a city election is
desired for this spring
' From all sections of the state news
of rejoicing over the recent heavy
snow Is considered much more valu
able than a heavy rain would have
been and will put the ground in fine
condition for early winter plowing
Tulsa Is making elaborate arrange-
ments to entertain ''the members of
the State Press association on Sun-
day May 11 A banquet auto rides
over the city' and possibly a trip to
the oil fields will be included on the
entertainment program
The Checotah city council has con-
demned --the old city burial grounds
and issued an order that no more
bodies be buried therein A new cem
etery has been platted and soon the
bodies from the old cemtery will be
reburied In the new one
Pat Watson of Mangum convicted
of manslaughter in the second degree
has been fined $1000 by Judge Brown
who decided on fining the defendant
rather than Imposing a jail sentence
because some members of the trial
Jury were loath to vote on a verdict
of guilty -Antlers'
is soon to have a new brick
depot plans for which have already
been drawn It will have a ladies’
resting room stroking room gen-
eral waiting room sanitary toilets ne-
gro waiting room express and bag-
gage room and ticket office
Strong indications of oil have been
encountered In the Grandfield well be
lng drilled on thA Maple farm near
Grandfield Tillman county and the
people In that section are greatly ex
cited - -
Oil men in Tulsa have started a
petition in circulation asking that the
secretary of the interior departmenl
at Washington open the Osage oil
lands to bidding in a way so as to
give the independent oil producers a
chance against the pipe line conn pa
iies It is stated many signatures art
being affixed to the document
’Are you first In anything In school
Earlier
"First out of the building nben th
bell rings”
ECZEMA BEGAN BY ITCHING
Goldsboro N C — “My daughter suf-
fered from eczema The trouble be-
gan In the ears by Itching and run-
ning water and Inter It formed pus
nd became very offensive She began
to scratch It and it went Into sorea
When tbe scabs came off there was
a yellowish watery discharge Tba
outside of tbe ear was one solid sore
She tried several different remedies
but received no relief She had been
troubled with It between one and two
years nhen she finally began using
Cuticura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment
"She had not made but two treat-
ments nben all tbe scabs came off and
the flesh just looked very red and
dry She kept up the treatment four
or five weeks and she was entirely
cured It also cured other sores on
tbe children especially chapped feet
on one of tbe little boys” (Signed)
Mrs W H Edgerton Jan 24 1912
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world Sample of each
free with 32-p Skin Book' Address
poet-card “Cutlcura Dept I Boston”
Adv
One Ray of Sunshine
"John you are sure It is safe In
this yacht?”
“Yes my love”
"And you know how to sail It?”
"My sailing master does"
“How long vlU It take us to
cross?”
“About two weeks”
“Oh dear there’s so much to worry
about on a yacht”
“There’s one thing that needn’t
cause you any wory”
“What Is that?”
"The cook can’t leave until we get
to Liverpool” — Louisville Courier
Journal
Fuller’s Earth
F'uller’s earth so named from Its
earliest use in fulling wool is a
rather rare soft friable rock whose
value depends altogether on its tex-
ture and its filtering andabsorbent
properties It has no definite compo-
sition mlneraloglcally Its physical
properties rather than a chemical an-
alysis determining Us commercial
value Fuller's earth was first pro-
duced In the United States In the
early 'nineties
We’ve Done Our Share
Woodby — Is there any money
writing for the magazine?
Scriblins — Sure! The postal de-
partment is about half supported that
way — Boston Transcript
Too Hasty
“Diggs can dash off epigrams with-
out a moment’s thought”
“That’s just the way they sound ”
imiiniiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiuniiuinnn
Of irrrOC Depends largely
1 II I A r 11 n pon one's phye-
1 leal condition
No man or woman can do their best
work if troubled with s wesk stomach
or a torpid liver Don't be careinHS
Don't procrastinate
Dr Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery
Iiromote the flow of digestive juices
n vigors tea tbe liver and purifies and
enriches tbe blcbd It makes men
and women strong in body and
active in mind
Ask Your Druggist
miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiii
A Cotigrelonal rmllstrlnllng biC
expressing lh sentiment of a majority
af the loaders of the house of rrprw
sen (a tires mss Introduced and with
not more than one Important change
probably sill be the bill finally passed
by tba house
Among the authors of lh proposed
measure afe ftpeaker Maxey J Hoy
Williams John J Crawford (demo
rrailc caucus leader) Tom W
Hunter (chairman of the congres-
sional redlstrlctlng committee) Hu-
bert L Union of Oklahoma City and
Wyand of 'Muskogee
Tbe bill proposed seven safe demo-
cratic districts with Muskogee Okla-
homa City and Tulsa each tha center
of compact districts and one heavy
republican district In the central
northern part of the state tha latter
running from Osage over to Harper
and fur enough south to catch Logan
8lxth District May Not Plaase
District No ( as proposed In the
bill probably tn III cause a fight If any
does It Is well proportioned and
wltb a goodly democratic majority
but includes within Its borders Cou-gresamAn-elect
William H Murray
Congressman-elect Charles D Carter
II II Smith of Fottawatomle Speaker
Pro Tempore C B Emanuel of Mur-
ray and other good congressional tim-
ber who might find one district en-
tirely too small for them all
Follonlng are tbe counties and their
population of the proposed eight dis-
tricts under the new bill:
District No t
Congressional District No shall be
comiMKel of the following counties:
Cimarron 46' 1 Texas 14249 Beaver
133(11 Burner 1184 Kills 15375 Irewev
14133 Custer 2J211 linger Mills 12-
561 Waxhlta 25 tJ4 He I ham 19 66'!
Greer 10419 llarmon llJJx Jackson
23737
District No 2
Congressional district No t shall be
oompoeed of the following counties:
Wood 17567 tVoodward 16592 Al-
falfa IX 138 Grant lx700: Kay 26994
Major 15 248 Garfield 33 060 Noble
14945 leigan 31740 I’avne 237e3
District No $
Congressional district No 3 shall be
composed of the following counties'
Osage 20101 t'aunee 17332 N'a-’i-Inglon
17684 Nowata 14 221 Oraig
17404 Ottawa 15713 Ungers 17736
Staves 13546 Delaware 11469 Tulsa
34995 Creek 26213
District No 4
Congressional district No 4 shall be
comprised of the following counties:
Wagoner 22 066 Cherokee 16778
Adair 10535: Okmulgee 21 tin' Musko-
gee 62743 Okfuskee 19 445 McIntosh
20961 Bequovah 25005 Haskell 18875
District No 8
Congressional district No 6 shall be
composed of the follow lng counties
Hughes 24040- Pittsburg 47650 T-ntl-mer
11321 KeFlore 24127: Coal 15X17
Atoka 13808: Pushmataha 10118
Bryan 24854 Choctaw 21862 McCur-
tain 20681
District No 6
Congressional district X'n 8 shall be
composed of the following counties'
Lincoln 34 779 Pnttauatomte 43 545
Seminrrie 19 464 Pontotoc 21331 Gsr-
vln 26 545- Murray 12 755 Carter 26-
858 Johnston 16734 Marshall 11619
District No 7
Congressional district No 7 shall be
composed of the following counties
Kingfisher 18 825- Canadian 23501:
Oklahoma 85232 Clevrrand 18843 Mc-
Clain 15659 Grailj 30309
District No 8
Congreslonal district No 8 shall be
compoaed of the following conntiea
Blaine 17960: Caddo' 35685 Kiowa
27626 Comanche 41484 Cotton (no
census Tillamn 18650 Stephens 22-
252 Jefferson 17 430 I-ove 10236
The senate killed the bill abolishing
the office of state highway commis
sioner
I
layiMNntat fiMHlis(
BUM AndltuC Lew Major nd BUI
Printer UUe W rarrla aero formally
ami gawd before tba eewai alma 4
as court af impeackmsal la aaaaer
la tbe rhsrgea jisitrod against them
la lb art tcle of lapetiwstl re-
pealed by lb bints of repreoentatlre
and tbeir trie la m4 fur February It
and IT respectively Wheat lb rno
ngslnat Kama waa reached bis nltor-
bey K J Ulddlng demurred I lb
Impeachment articles contending thrl
the stale printer won not a aupertor
officer sad therefore ma not subject
to Impeachment The quest Ion a
submitted to the aenat and th de-
murrer wna overruled by a vota of 13
to T
The rule governing Impeachment
proceedings adopted some time ago
by tha aenat wero again mlopted by
(he gens I a g court of Impeachment
Hint Auditor Leo Meyer la hla an
awer to each of tha fiva article of Ita
pearhmnnt tlenlea specifically that la
respect to any of tba milter aieged
against him ha acted falwly fraudu-
lently or foinnluusly
To the first nrtlda which charge
that Meyer committed perjure by
awearfiig that h had paid Mis Jen-
nlnga 1240 for making 3100 entrlt-a
from th Woodward land office ha
answer that ha did make the affidavit
and ataled at tba time th affidavit
was mad b Intended to pay Mia
Jennings tha aum of $140 but after
making tha affidavit h fo'ittd out that
ah waa not entitled to that amount
of money for the' reason thnt aba
had mad only 17&0 abstracts of en-
tries and thnt ba thereupon pilil her
th aum of $1T8 which waa th
amount due her and that thu “euialu-
Ing $6$ he paid to J E Snow for fin-
ishing th work which Mis Jennings
had agreed to pay
To tba second article of Impeach-
ment wherein Meyer Is charged with
issuing certain Illegal warrants based
upon an unauthorised publication and
compilation of what ia known ns th
Red Book ha denies that any fraudu-
lent state warrants were knowingly
Issued by him and be alleges that all
warrants issued by him In connection
with tbe publication or compilation of
the Red Beek were Issued or caused
to be Isseud upon claims Investigated
by him and believed by him to be
valid charges against the state
To the third article of Impeachment
wherein he la charged with issuing
warrants in payment of claims of the
Leader Publishing company ba stater
that all claims audited by him for that
company were duly investigated and
that he lsued the warrants after h
had come to the conclusion that the
claims were a valid charge against
tbe state and he makes similar an-
swer to each and all of the charge
against him
In answer to the fourth article ol
Impeachment be denies that he ever
intentionally acted as assistant secre-
tary of state after he had ceased to
hold that office and had become state
auditor He admits however that hr
did indorse on a claim representing
about $1600 hla approval and signed
the approval as assistant secretary ol
state after he had become auditor
but supposed t£at was merely a
non pro tunct order of approval and
that in connection therewith he war
guilty of no neglect or guilty of any
offense Involving moral turpitude:
that the claim Indorsed by him repre-
sented goods which the state received
and used and that the claim was a
valid claim againBt the state He
states that the original claim for
that amount had been approved by
him while assistant secretary of state
but that It had become lost when the
office was removed from Guthrie tc
Oklahoma City and that U was after
wards found by him and a notation
made on the claim as assistant secre
tary of Btate after he had' become
state auditor but was made in the
utmost good faith that no other per
claim was based and no other person
claim was based and no olherperson
was in position ’to approve the claim
FdlSOOiSIEIiS
Federal Girl Sleuth Runt Dawn
Suspected Bivalve
G0J07iPA7i0
A Matron's hs-rv
a "V run 04 ooltka all oh-
J j m Uuinaawtsto-
r ia too
V J! J ho lot araay by
gile aatiwN tov
For Every Baking
(SALUKHTu
CAKING POWDZIT
Ur— because it'a the
furtit Best — because
it never fails Bat—
because it makes every
baking light fluffy and
evenly raised Bat
—because it is moder-
ate in cost — highest in
quality
At your grocer
RECEIVED
HIGHEST
AWARDS
t7aU Para Food Ei
Pfcei EirmIUm Fn
ftUrcfc !!&
Ym don’t mat montg aaAsa gaa kqf
cheap or hif-caa taking ptteJtt Don't
kt m ItUJ Bag CaiumtL 1C am
acononUcaJ — mart wholeeomt — gioea
tad nmlto Calumtt to fm papodtt tn
mm milk and mxU
Ma Rwta C OroatN E gy4
as so Eagorl titi4 In in
lovtatogiaM Dtviato of Boras
f Cnmi4i7 4 Wni(ta
Washington —la Ik voih which la
Ming duo by lh govrnant to I-
uro a supply of absolutely good I
lara loading part la halng tha by '
a young woman Mia Ruth C Groat-
boua by lama who Is hp( busy
when tba oyatar Maoa la at Its
holghL
Mlaa Graalhoua la on of Iho at-
part aclratlat of th bar'arkilogical
division of tha bur of cbamUtry la
Washington and has don tome ot Its
must Important work l'ndr tba U
torioluglral division romt nil lb In
apoctlon of oyatar and aballflab of All
aorta as woll at lb lasting of lb
milk tupply Oyatar may ho tatd
for dloaaa grma - aaually typhoid
gatbsrod from lh waters In which tba
oyatar bada art Iocs tod or they
man b tartrd to datrtnln tbeir fit-
neaa for food under th requlramenta
of tba law
“It all sound vary difficult” ah
said on day In speaking of her work
but It's Ilk n good many other
thing It Isn't half bad when you
know more about It Wherever It la
posslbl a man Inapector I aent out
with any young woman
But naturally It Isn't always con-
venient to send two on one undertak-
ing 0 then I go alone I manage tba
small laboratory all right but of
course I can't tha bl£ on For that
however there are always trainmen
or station men or boatmen or wharf-
men somebody anxious to bA nice”
Looking Into thos blue eyea and at
the crinkles In her hair on la quit
aura that “somebody Is always anx-
loua to ba nice”
And having seized tha suspected
oysters tha laboratory must be aet up
promptly Sometimes It's a vacant
store room aometlmea In a freight
warehouse at the atatlon or on the
wharf or It may even be on an
old barge that never heard the word
science
Setting up tbe laboratory meana
opening the big case and taking there-
from a gasolene lamp a Jar of a sea-
weed product for making a sort of
gelatine used In tba work and a lim-
itless - number of small flat glass
plates with inch high ritiA fitting one
M getp they it
woahee bet they 44
ext oil to 004
of to fever ad anon
mb ia a way tons
pal lfea Of gs to
Moahhy condihua sad
OOTartt cnaalipsiluO Maayoa Paw Paw
Fill pm o foots to to amuck hoof sod
am4 They tovigeewto toofoad of waofean
ffeey earlcb lh bfcuto instead of Impoeer
Itoeg N they enable toe imuch Is gal all
tba ocio riii meet from food tool it pot lot
X Fnc ce All Drvgg rt
E
—I fStVTAf
J 1011 IVII
PARADOXICAL
Tva mad great discovery papa”
“Well what la It?”
Tv found out that tbe heavy end
of a match la th light end”
within the other The laboratory set
'except himself
CANADA’S OFFERING
TO THE SETTLER
TKE AMERICAN RUSH TO
WESTERN CANADA
IS IMCREASIN6
Free Homestead
In th new District of
Manitoba Saskatche-
wan and Alberta there
are thousand of 1 rre
Homesteads left which
to tbe man making entry
In 8 rears ttoie will be
worth from S3U to 826 per
acre Tbe land are
well adapted to grain
growing and caitie raising
KXCXLLUt RAILWAY PAOUTRS
In man? case the railways In
Canada have bera built in ad-
vance of settlmant and In a
short time there will not be a
settler who need be more than
ten or twelve miles from a line
of railway Railway Rate are
regulated bj taovenunent Com-
mission Social Condition
Tbe American Bettlerisathome
in Western Canada He Is not a
stranger in a strange land hav-
ing nearly a million of his own
peopie aireadv seuied there if
Jou doetre to snow why the oon-
ition of the Canadian Pettier is
prueperoos write and send for
literature rates etc to
’ G A COOK
t2S to in Err uism enr at
Canadian Government Aiwith or
eddrese Nqperioteodeot of
ImmiCTMiMV Ousws Cmada
Mlllage Tax For Schools Proposed
A bill proposing a specific tax of
nine-tenths of one mill on the assessed
valuation of the state for the support
and maintenance of state educational
Institutions has been introduced by
Senator George L Aycock Senator
Aycock has -prepared the following
table showing the appropriations made
for the different institutions last year
the specific levy his bill proposes and
what each Institution would receive:
1913 MMillege
Scholls Appro Mlllage Isevy
State U 1150000 5-8 of 1-10 $200000
A and M 112500 4-3
C A and N
Connor
Murray
Haskell
Cameron
Connell
Panhandle
Ind IandC
Mines
Cen Normal
NW Norm’l
8 W Norm’!
NE Noijm'l
8 FJ Norm'l
E C Norm’l
Tonk&w a
Clareinore
36000
19000
19000
19000
19000
19000
13000
30000
-£6000
45000
40000
40000
30000
30000
30000
35000
30000
of 1-10
1-3 of 1-30
J-6 of 1-10
1-6 of 1-10
1-6 of 1-10
1-6 of 1-10
1-6 of 1-10
1-6 of 1-10
1-3 of 1-10
1-3 of 1-10
6-12 of 1-10
1-3 of 1-10
1-3 of 1-10
7-24 of 1-10
7-24 of 1-10
7-24 of 1-10
1-3 of 1-10
1-4 of 1-10
160000
40000
20000
20000
20000
20000
20000
?0000
40000
30000
$0000
40000
40000
35000
35000
35000
40000
30000
Women’s Workday Measuremanded
After a conference between officials
of the State Federation of Labor and
the Retail Merchants’ association the
number of hours provided In a legis-
lative bill as the lagal working day
for women will be changed from eight
hours as originally drafted to nine
hours Ab now amended the bill pro-
hibits employment of women In cer-
tain named occupations for more than
nine hours out of twenty-four nor
more than fifty-four hours a week
The bill as amended will pass both
houses
State Board Abolition ‘ Bill Reported
An exceedingly important bill re-
ported out of house committee is by
H H Smith and would abolish the
state board of affairs The bill pro-
vides for a state purchasing agent at
$3500 one clerk at $1800 and one
stenographer at $1200 to take the
place of the present board of affairs
and assistants A proposed amend-
Mor”' Information Wanted
Resolution offered by Senatoi
Thompson recites the fact that the
pure food and drug commission in
connection with the state health de
partment has the power to conduct
hearings in the violation of the pure
food laws and asks that that depart
ment furnish the senate with the com
plete report of how many hearings It
has conducted how many violations
have been reported convictions had
and fines assessed by reason of the
activity of the department
Resolution by Senator Thomas
memorializes congress to grant to the
state all unallotted lands embraced in
the acts of 1890-93 for the use of
the consolidated school district fund
Senator Barrett introduced a bill
which if it becomes a lew would re-
strict the powers of the state equali-
zation board The Jaw would prevent
the board from increasing or decreas-
ing the grand total of the tax valua-
tions in the state and would radically
change the method of conducting its
business
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE
—“—'TO OWN A— —
CATTLE RANCH OR STOCK FARM
IT Is Hie Xm'i far tk tl Mtpuded ntiina of Ik
ilati Call ara kiik (rial la team aol cant k
laaac far aa leagik aftioa Tkatp foack ilaiati
a lamai aW-tkaa raaek aae kalag cat oa a4 fra II pis
aaa (at aaa aacllaa I Ml elik am 4tilra4 casblaatM d
talaaSM lanalnf Iaa4 far rtitlM olnltr Ini Prlcaa lo
Itraa tat Saciira faar cnA tract kefara It Ic lea laic
Nan taiacHan Is mm tint ft alts altar tlraltkl fane
lag iaogt klgXI gnciieflf rtmaakla (ricaa aim farm
4m (Ml farm caa mta tkaas langi gaa fkaaaalm tot
fraa Ik graSncta ikaragf RUs far frat NmlraM kooklaf
C A JONES ton Spur Tet
SlUiCBlS'CIGAB
ALWAYS RELIABLE
Wlut ettry woman need! “Perfection Ve
num Clot tie W Halier' clean whiter than bj
band have time requirt no rubbing 01
crubbing Prepaid for 2 60 Write for clr
culara I tllltle Import A Export Cftm lac
II Broadway New York
A— 11 1 -!— i
Oklahonfb Directory
Darning on Your Sewing Machine
Attachment N6o with full direction Stock!
linen clothing underwear Agent Wanted
Addreafl HENRY FRIEDENHEIT
SIS CqlbertEon Bulldira Okfahtoia City Okla
Miss Ruth C Greathouse
“bug
kSOUTHWESTj
kSILOj
lCOj
The SOUTHWEST
(AH Steel) SILO
Stand the Oklahoma hot
gin and winds Warranted
cot to leak rust or go tc
pieces Write the makei-
Da Sontkwtal Silo Ca Oklahoma CityOkiafea
Sure
“Don’t you think that we shoulf
have a more elastic currency?” asked
the Old Fogy
“It’s elastic enough” replied the
Grouch “Why don’t they make il
more adhesive?”
' Capital Fund Certain
The Federal Guaranty company of
Washington D C has authorized its
state agents to negotiate a land value
guaranty on a Email portion of the
650 acres that was donated by Okla-
homa City citizens for the purpose of
raising $1000000 for a free capitol
building for the state This' makes
it possible for the legislature to take
advantage of the offer of the Oklahoma
City citizens without any fear as to
the value of the offered donations and
to proceed with the capitol plans
Limitations
“Is your wife a suffragette?”
“Yes” replied Mr Meekton ' “To a
certain extent She thinks she ought
to have the ballot but she knows a
lot of women who she is sure do not
deserve it”
' Dr Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up
40 years ago They regulate and inrigorau
stomach liver and bowels Sugar-coated
tiny granules Adv
An old bachelor gets a bad case ot
stage fright every time he thinks of
marriage
Judge Says Rolls And Blood Enough
- The rolls of the Dawes commission
are conclusive and the quantum of
blood in Indian allottees and no out-
side evidence may be introduced to
disprove the truth and correciLess of
these rolls according to a decision of
Jndge R E Campbell in the United
ment to the constitution to limit qp- States district court The suit in-
peals to the supreme court to amounts volved was Instituted by H E Hazel-
over $100 was introduced by Repre-
sentative Morris of Stephens He
claims It would relieve th congestion
f the snprem court
rig vs Charles Nunn over a deed
obtained from Tena Dan a supposed
negro freedman but later found to
be of mixed Indian blood
Only One “BBOMO QUININE-
s LiXATIVB BIIOMO QUIT
fur the altfiuLtnre of B W GllOVK
ULMNH Look
K Cure told
in One in Cure Grip in Two iftjt 96c
It is far better to make your mark
In tbe world than It is to be an easy
one
Stealing away from bad company Is
justifiable larceny
V
w
parevpms
Backache Rheumatism
Kidneys and Bladder
-3
PAftKEft'i
HAIR BALSAM
mm end VMffrtfise lh inln
jBrttnsn growth
Hewer Mile to Seetore Gray
So ftte Youthful Ooleew
Prevent heir felllor
up everything Is ready for tbe
hunt”
When tbe slippery bivalve has been
vivisected his remains are trans-
ferred toi the glass plates and tbe
plates filled up with the seaweed
gelatine seaweed gelatine being re-
garded as an especially happy- at-
mosphere for the growth and prosper-
ity of “bugs"
As testing oysters also contemplates
testing tbe water from which they
have been brought if the oysters are
seized at the point df shipment Miss
'Greathouse must promptly visit the
oyster beds and bring back to tbe lab-
oratory vials of tbe water in which
tbe oysters were grown and submit it
to scientific tests '
In the course of a very short time
the embryo “bugs" if any existed in
tbe oysters have grown to husky ma-
turity and £en$ discovered under mi-
croscope to he oeady- -for the trans-
ference they are placed in vials of
alcohol 'and are sealed Later they
will be introduced as evidence when
the case comes up -for trial
MAKE $800 DAILY ON CATS
Just
Read How This Skowhegan
Maine Man Has It All
Figured Out
Bangor Me — R Skowhegan (Me )
man has a scheme to get rich easily
starting with one tabby cat as capital
He figures that this cat will produce
twelve kittens in a year and that hei
female descendants will be equally
prolific so that in about four yean
he will have 100000 cats whose skim
will sell at the average price of 3(
cents each
He proposes to breed rats to feef
the cats and to feed the rats on th
carcasses of the skinned cats Th
net profits of this rat and cat ranch
the projector estimates will be about
$800 a day "At present the promotei
Is earning $45 a month
Literary Bathrothal
Inscriptions In complimentary copies
of learned works do not always serve
th graceful purpose to which on
wa dedicated by the celobrated Pro-
fessor Wilson of Edinburgh
When tbe suitor for tbe hand of 1
Profoasor Wilson' daughter hod
gained the young woman’ approba-
tion she of course referred him to
her father Having atated his case
the young gentleman was asked to
bid the young lady to come to her
father Her obedience was prompt -Professor
Wilson had before him
for review a ponderous volume on
the fly-leaf of which was duly In-
scribed “With the author’s compIL
ment”
He tore this fly-leaf out pinned ID
to bl daughter’ dress solemnly led
her to the anxious lover — and went
back to his work — Youth’ Companion
8urely Good Cook
Mrs Champ Clark was engaging a
new cook The applicant a nice look-
ing woman made a fine Impression on
Mrs Clark After the usual prelimi-
nary questions the speaker’s wife
asked
“Can you really cook?”
“Can I cook!” exclaimed the appli-
cant “I should say I can cook!”
“But are you a good cook?” s
“Am I good cook!" echoed the wom-
an I go to mass every morning” —
The Sunday Magazine ‘
Incompetent Georgia
Little George was six years old and
the family was much interested in
having him start to school but he In-
sisted that he was not going
One day his grandmother said to
him: “Georgie you ate going to school
with sister this winter aren't you?”'
“No grandma I’h not going to '
school at all 1 can’t read nor I can’tft
write nor I can’t sing and I’d like to
know what good I’d be at school?” I
Evening Matters Up
Mrs March took a bite of the cake
and laid It down hastily ’
Norah” she said “did you follow
the recipe or ddv as you usually do
and guess?” v
‘‘Sure mum I follow the recipe’
only I put In six eggs Instead of four
because two was bad and I wanted
to even ’em up” — Youth’s Campanion
“Is
Proof
Isabel going to a beauty doc
tor?
Can’t you tell she Is by the way
she 1b changing countenance?”
FRESH EGGS AT 27 CENTS
Philadelphia Women Make Big Blast
In New Food Crusade — Are Only -Two
Weeks Old
Philadelphia Pa — The Housekeep-
ers’ league of this city which recent-
ly brought about a reduction in the
price of storage eggs began another
crusade the other day placing on sale
strictly fresh eggs” for 27 cents a
dozen s The eggs It was said are
“western southern and nearby and
none more than two weeks old” - -They
are sold from seventy-five sta-
tions throughout the city The pries
Is a reduction of about 12 cents from
the previously prevailing rate
Shivery
Mornings
You can have a taste of the
summer sunshine of the com
fields by serving a dish of
Post
Toasties
These crisp flavour bit
of toasted white com make
an appetizihg dish at any
of y
tune ot year
V
Try them in February
and taste the delicate true
maize flavour -
A dish of Toasties served
either with cream or milk
or fruit is surprisingly good
The Memory Lingers '
Grocers everywhere sell
Toasties -
Pofttoa Ceral Co
BMtlt Creek Kick
y
t
i -
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Banner, H. E. The Hastings Herald (Hastings, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, February 14, 1913, newspaper, February 14, 1913; Hastings, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1782099/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.