The Inola Register. (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 2, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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WHERE EARTHQUAKE SHOCKS KILL THOUSANDS
I GREAT MULE STATE
^ Tsxai Haj Gradually Forced
Missouri Into Second Place.
sho1ckB,nrt' terrifying the people of Costa Rica almost dally and It is feared there will he a repe
i m n 'he <1"ake ln whlch a thousand or more persons lost their lives at Cartago. That old city was
virtually destroyed and there was widespread desolation in the beautkul valley of Orosi. in the province ot
Ca,*a8°- Among the buildings ruined was the handsome home of thf Central American court of arbitration
Andrew carnegie already has ofTered to rebuild this structure Devastating earthquakes are of rather freyucnt
ccurrence ln Costa Rica, and this is not the first time that Cartago has t 'en destroyed.
CITY MEN GET GAME
# |
Terrible Death Struggles With eolng a mlle froni hls hot('' hPr<i raay
Bear Is Proven by Picture. pho'08,w" "k'° '■
Couple of Seventy-Two and Sixty-Two
Wed at Nearly Like Elopement as
Possible—Plan Surprise.
^ or't. ra.—That age Is no bar to re-
full hunting rig. apparently at a camp mance w'a demonstrated here the
miles from civilization and surrounded i °*her day, when announcement was
Total Value of Animals In Lona Star
Territory Placed at $69,498,000—
More Than Half of World's
Stock In United States.
(By MAX BAUM.)
Time was when Missouri claimed
to have more mules than any other
state or country in the world. But
Missouri has been forced by Texas
Into a bad second place. Of the 7,500,-
000 mules in the world almost one-
tenth are in Texas, the Lone Star
state having 702,000, valued at $99
each. The total value of the state's
mules was $69,498,000.
Apparently the mule Is specially
adapted to the southern climate, for
most of the four-footed kickers aro to
be found south of the Ohio river. The
Missouri mule is worth more than bis
Texas brother, $20 more. The 344,000
mules in Missouri are valued at $119
each, or $40,936,000 for all of them.
Georgia, which has $38.93G,000 worth
of mules, is third on the list. Tennes-
see is fourth, with $35,670,000; Missis-
sippi Is fifth, with $32,770,000; Ala-
bama Is sixth, with $30,866,000 worth;
North Carolina is seventh, with $24,-
797,000, but Is closely pressed by Ken-
tucky, which has mules valued at $24,-
426,000. Arkansas is ninth, with $23,-
435,000; South Carolina Is tenth, with
AGE IS NO BAR TO ROMANCE wifh $2oS8awa.Ujul8iana 18 eleventh'
Then the mule belt jumps over into
Oklahoma, which new state has $20.-
WHEN TO PRUNE PLUM TREES
FIGHTERS IN THE MAJORITY
Veteran Member of Congregation Was
Tired of Part Ha Had Baan
Playing.
Representative Harry Maynard of
Virginia tells the story of how a re-
ligious old negro in his district put a
atop to the exercise of Christian char-
ity In the congregation of which h
was a member. It seems that it was
a practise In the church to excom-
municate for one year any member
who had bet-n guilty of a "blood fight"
—that is, any man who had attacked
another with a pistol or a razor.
At l he end of the year. If the of-
fender wished reinstatement, he could
Moat Serloua Quaatlon Confronting
Hortleulturieta la Dleouaaad
by Experienced Men.
(BT 8. H. MARSHALL, WISCONSIN
horticultural society.)
The most serious problem that con-
fronts the plum grower today la
pruning. How and when to prune? I
head my trees low and the next sea-
son cut off all but three or four main
branchea.
The second season there are these
three or four main branches, with a
growth of from four to eight feet, and
each variety with a different shaped
head.
If the branches are let go they will go to the "mourners' bench," rise anii
be loaded with fruit the following sea- declare his repentance, and be forgiven
son, just ready to bend and break with by the congregation. This went on
the first hard wind. for many years. At last a young
On the other hand, cut the branchea darky who had been in a particularly
back and the second season there will objectionable broil appeared for rein-
be from two to four branches of near- statement. The pastor made an elo-
ly the same length, where the one quent appeal to the congregation and
would have been had It been left everybody began to shout and say
alone. j "Amen."
Now. what we are after Is to get It was at •111" point that the old
the fruit closer to the trunk, where It fcgro arose and said hotly:
will not have so much leverage. Next "Look liyah, pahson; eber since I
been a menibuh of dis congergashun,.
dar ain' been nothin' but tightln' an"
fuhglvln'—an' I been doing all df>
fuhgivin'. I'se tired of It!"
That broke up the meeting.—Popii-
lar Magazine.
$100 Reward, $100.
Good Pruning Shears.
season I propose to cut my vounn°
• . . ** Nram 01 me nysit-
trees hack to make a proper shaped foundation of the
growth
head, and pinch the new
«uui uruudiiun anu surrounded i *ut?u announcement was , ... — ■ "
by trophies of the chase. If he cares "lade of 'he secret wedding In liar- 8t®te which passes the $15.
Photographic Studio It Equipped With for the rose after the fallen ferest
risburg of Rev. Adam \V Shenberger ouu'u"u mark The Sunflower state
Every Accessory for Producing monarch he is taken to a little glen j °' Kansas, a retired minister cf the
uoo.uuu worth of the animals. Another H„rin„7h 7 bi wui
skip is then taken to Illinois which ' 8umraer fron> time to lima
is thirteenth, with a total of 152.000 • ' Krtat ,,eaeh and
mules, worth $19,912,000. or $131 each.
Kansas, fourteenth on the list, Is the
Thrilling Hunting Scenes
While You Walt.
Greenville. Me.—Mr. Cityhunter will
be trooping in due season in scores to
the Maine woods with bis bulky, new
and shining impedimenta and well-
stuffed pocket book. If the former
will not encompass the destruction of
of a moose or two deer, the latter will
be unerring ln its aim Of course, the
great majority of hunters who come
has 164,000 mules. 2,000 more than Illi-
nois. but they are valued at only $116
each, giving a total value of $17,854-
000.
The mule crop in the loading live
stock states is rather small with the
a short distance from the studio and l'nitp<l Evangelical church, and Kl-
two of the supers bring out the fallen tnora Swartz of this city, a former
forest monarch on their shoulders and matron at the York county almshouse.
dump It down. bHng careful to handle Shenberger is seventy-two and his
it carefully for fear of wearing off the ' hrlde 02.
hair The couple planned their wedding exc®Pt'°n of Texas, Missouri, Tennes-
Qulck drying and rapid printing pro- 38 a surprise, and the only Yorker let Sfe' Kentuc,t>'. Oklahoma. Illinois and
cesses are employed, and in an hour | in,° the secret was Rev. Harry Kan8a8
or two the customer is supplied with l-'aniels of the West Street Methodist Indiana, which is the eighth live
finely mounted, convincing photo- j phurch. He was awakened from sleep f,ock state, is fifteenth on the mule
graphs, to all intents and purposes, before daylight and requested to ac li8t- with H1.8H.000. California, whose
taken in the heart of the wilderness company the pair to Harrisburg and rank ln the general table is seven-
to Maine for the big Kame ,hnn in* by "°n* °f 0Ur party' who had the ! Perform the ceremony, which took teenth. holds sixteenth place in the
are not satisfied unless they do their TP"^°t bU<5 V"y badly- Jon t >'tr ' "'aCe 'n ,h* 1"irlor'i of lhe Metropoli- Ust with $10,126,000 worth. Ne-
own killing but there are /ti h know ,an hole' braska, the sixth live stock state, is
come after a moose or the two dier , The ph0,08'-aphlng of fake hunters Shenberger is a widower and a for the •eventeenth mule state, with
allowed by the .Maine law and th.-v 'S„iDOt lh<? °nl> kusiness of the Green ,u<r York pastor. On a visit here from *!( !'6ti-00u Pennsylvania drops from
don't care much how thev eJ th..m studio, for many g.-nulne hunters Kansas two years ago he met Miss lwelfth P'ace in the general list to
Manv so-oaUeVi hnnt-r , ' t \ r0m,e Witb tb<ir «ame and the studio Swartz. Recently he returned to
thlr"north than this v.'Ii reD<l8 artlsts lnto ,he ca'ups. where York «"<! renewed his suit, and thw
e village. I large parties pay well for real photo- ' marriage was arranged.
great
plutu grower of Connecticut and
Georgia, has visited my orchard and
has proposed the following remedy,
which he practises successfully in his
orchards.
Instead of pinching back in the
Tbe reader* of thin paper will be pieaaed to tmm
Hut thrrt is at Ic&at out- dreaiifd dUM-aiic ttiat icirofa
baa i h:u abw to cure in ail iu> suurt*. and that lm
Caurrij Hali'a Cat&rrh lurr ti* th«- only pokith*#
run- now known to tne medical fratemitr. < atnrrb
being a constitutional disuuie. rc«juirea a eon*titii-
ttonal treatment. Hall'* ( atarrh Oire b taken in-
ternaliy actuur directly upon the bloud and mucous
•urfacf* of the Hyutein, thereby deatmyinir the
and iflvlna the put lent
Strength by bulkllng up the cuft*tituti<>n antl KMint-
liu nature In doin* tta work. The proprietor* hav
•o much faith lu ita curative power* that they offer
One Hundred I ol!ar« for any eaa« that It (alia Ic
eure Hand for Uet of t"«tlnifmlatii
Andrew F- J CIII si:V A CO. Toledo. O.
Hold by all I>ruiret«tA "5c.
lake UuuM >amiiy I'llia for coriatipalioik
Perspiring Vegetation.
The eyes of a little Washington,
miss were attracted by the- sparkle of
dew at early morning. "Mamma." she-
summer he allows the shoots to grow exclaimed: "It s hotter'n I thought it
until the rapid growth has ceased.
hMHb'i tb|C '°y1 °' lbe KFeat Moo8e" KraPhs Another class of work is sup-
of a vast '"'"K Photographs for the railroad
hunting region. They find others who
are equally indisposed to venture out
of reach of the comfortable hotels,
daily papers with the sporting news
and stock reports and other marks of
civilization to be found here. They
see "game" enough, but It has to do
with pasteboard affairs and is pursued
Estate.
eighteenth In mules, with $6,235,000.
Iowa tops the list of live stock
states, but it falls to nineteenth posi-
tion in mules, with a total of only
$5,781,000—a small Item ln Its $392.-
probably about the first of August.
1 hen cut the branches back to a
double shoot, being careful to go clos*
enough so that no dormant bud is
left above the shoots remaining
This will force the rest of the
growth of that branch Into the short
fruit steps and start new ones below
wheu pruned.
was
"What do you mean?"
"Look here, the grass Is all covered!
with perspiration."—llaptist Common
wealth
GENERAL FARM NOTES.
Dead" Man to Share
guide books and for illustrators. By I'ittstleld. Mass —Franklin All.-n 381 000 worlh of live stock Ohio holds
means of the well equipped studio, the j Smith of Fort Wayne, Ind . previously the 6ev«n,h place in the general live
supers and properties, a series of hunt pronounced legally dead by the pro- 8100,4 ranking, but drops to twentieth
ing scenes may b.> arranged by the ex bale court of Central Uerkshire, was ln ,uule8 with a total of but $2,750,000.
en lse of a little Ingenuity. restored to legal life by that tribunal Ne* Vork has $189,716,000 worth of
" ° Las several stuffed and declared entitled to receive a be- I've stock, occupying the uihth place
moose and bear, and more than a quest of 12,600 from the estate of his In the list, but the Empire state has
The man who "got out with hoga"
a year ago wishes be was in.
Cowpeas are the clover of the
south. There Ik hope for auy aoll
on which they will grow
Important to Mothers
Examine careluhy every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that it
Dears the
Signature of (
In t'se For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always BoughL
Not in the Agreement.
Daniel had been cast into the lions*
len.
"My main objection." he said, as he-
It is common to say public land Is pla'rf,,,1> tweaked a lion s mane. "Is.
all taken, but there still remains land
open to entry in 20 states and terri-
tories.
Goats are found profitable In moun-
tainous countries where food is scarce.
Why should they not pay on farms
that produce plenty of feed?
In view of the fact that wool is
and is VrlnS'ng good prices and the demand
-hat I get no moving picture royal
Jes."—Puck.
In a comfortable corner not far from fhe^mar f°, mountt'd °>at father. Hiram A. Smith of Williams- only $575,000 worth of mules. ,
the great open fire in the hotel office and o ^ ,h T i" ^ P08'1'0"- town Smith left Williamstown nearly the twenty-fifth mule state. , f"r and mutton Is growing.
They may buy souven.r cardf In supposed to rnLr fh P'C,Ure* 30 aD" ""thing wa, neard There are 4.123,000 mules In the "hould be Profitable on moat
great variety to send to friend* h«. eiona <,f \t-1, ** * game re- from him until a few weeks ago, when United States—more than half the . nu8-
pitting thrilling scenes In the Maine acre of MooseheaTlake'lhore. ha" ^ ^ am"'ared bere aud cla't"ed a sharo world s stock-of the average value of \ _ 1,0 not fail
Jungle; home-made ones of birch bark
may be had from the stock of the
several souvenjr stores and are said
to be more effective and convincing
A most original enterprise, born of
the demand by this class of fireside
in his father's estate.
Fewer Ships, But Bigger
appropriate sign, if any sign was
needed. It Is a photographic studio,
conducted by an enterprising firm of
young men whose specialty is pro-
hunters, is the place where "Huntlne r Champion Maine Builder Comments on I
j 'be coal of these three.
Bangor, Me.—With a record of 75 "rhere are fewer vessels, but the
vessels designed and 66 built. John J |quant,ty cf coal or lumber they will
vidlng convincing proofs. A city hunt U ard*ell of Hockland, Is believed to
er may go homo with his allowance of be tbe <hampion wooden sh!p design-
game and fail to impress upon his an<i huilder of the Atlantic sea-
friends the feet that It fell before his Loard lf D°t of tbe l/nlted States.
fatal rifle, but when he produces pho- flrst design was made in 1873,
tographs showing himself in a forest aDd two years l ter he took charge of
defile standing over the yet quivering ,be corstruction of his first schooner.
monarch of the forest and others of lle wa8 then but twenty-one oke '
camp scenes with much game hung e had the distinction of designing he vawl b< t tor ^ r . ***
up. our^ hero surrounded by pictur' -d building the firs, a„-maste5 "One da^T "
erage value of ~ " to plant l>eanuts. The
$119,84, and with a total value of $101.- j nut" are wholesome food for man and
095.000 There are 70,000 more than itn,Inal8. the hay is excellent food
last year, and they are worth $12 more for st°ck Prepare the land for pea-
each. Mules cost most In South C'aro- 1111,8 alld wa,t till the soli Is warm
Una, where they are valued at $157 before you plant.
each; and least in Nevada and New Milo is very valuable as a grain
Mexico, where they are worth only anil forage crop, it is resistant to
$<0. | drought and should be extensively
■ —— planted In regions subject to periodic
drought. For all kinds of stock milo
is an excellent food.
There Is more in type than breed
carry aggregates as much and prob- One Built of Woven Wire Will Baffle of animals. Some cows of a good
Guara*1
THIS FENCE WILL STOP DOG
Most Determined Chicken Thief
as Well as Canine.
ably more than the capacity of five or
six times their number of the old
schooners. 1 remember w~hen we were
building the Crowley, one of the early
six masters. At the same time on '.be ^
stocks beside her was a small .'our- from the lines Indicated ln the picture
masted schooner. Everybody used to will do the business
j dairy breed are poor milkers and
j some scrubs give a large quantity of
good milk. To select a good dairy
There are few fences that will baf- j cow one must know the charac
fle a determined dog. but one bull; ! teristics of a dairy type.
Soy beans are quite similar to cow-
peas as soil renovators and as food
The woven wire fence consists of I lor stock. They have an upright
wires, the three lower wires one hubit of growth and are theretore
A Beautiful Skin
Milady can use
Freckeleater
Face Powder
t , uy pic-iur- k uu,,u,u« nrii six-masted "One ilav a m n frf,m nt^i,, ~ ^ ~ . u. •*« u aie mereiore
esque glades and looking the part of | ctoooner in the world. This wan the th< r*m*rk t om St^kt^n m®de half Inches aaprt and the upper tamer harvested fur hay than cow
a real hunter-such are convincing K^ge W. Wells. At the time the „ he Temembered Z* '^nf f flv_e 'nc^ . ^,8 The soy bean may be planted
Slid Cfimplftrljr orer>
c 'ine nuj routrhn****
t<>ndrrrir«« of the kia.
It 1m com|>lfxloQ'n )>«••%
friend. Oet it from
your dealer today.
Price 25 Cents
esting place located near tbe lake 1 p""1 at Hath, but the Wells ent over-
The wire Is fastened to posts ,,5 earlier than the cowpeas.
feet apart. One barbed wire is set
shore Just outa'de the village and "bat* Loartl first- n She wa* 'he, *onder ber day.
been there for a number of years It I VVben be started work a schooner of ! " TheTare^'shln fn .h • .
sides got up to show a different front. | modern coaster is big enough to
carry 3,500 or 4,000 tons of coal. Said
Mr. Wardwell in speaking about this
matter:
"People get the Idea that there lsn t
much doing In the way of carrying
goods
goods in wooden ships these dav* I,.. , ^ "" ",,r """ ground in order to breaking
They don t understand IL it u true Cla,m He Drove Hie Herd of Cattle on dlarourage the dog from crawling or ; or three
that ships are not built a* forn^riv R'®hl of W,y ,nd Car und" One barbed wire la slightly
Damaged In Collision.
Thus, when a customer appears he
Is asked, diplomatically, of course.
what camp "he Intended to visit, but
was detained." etc. If he say, •(•ttmp
Comfort, a well-known resort, the
aide of the studio which most resom.
ties Camp Comfort is selected and in
a few mlnutea a sign Is produced and
hung over th* door reading "Camp
Comfort." Tbla makes the background
Then the properties are arranged ac-
cording to the wishes of the customer
Stuffed moose, deer, bear and game
birds galore are carried In the equip-
ment of the etudlo.
Theae may b* bung up by the heels In, n.., .#u«ii« . ..
a row or disposed In picturesque heaps hti*e required shout six of the schoou- ' a peti,tlon $1,500 dam-
on tbe ground. The hunter Is posed 1 er uf the type used when I started af"". aKaln,,t1 ^ F Cotnba, a prosper-
equipped In full hunting regalia. If ! working, the kind which people are "u" ,ar™^r "v,n,t we8t of Kansas City,
la lacking any essential part of the I talking about when lhey talk of the . . lw,,Uon ,eU '°"h that a
reetilHfinn nnifti it,. . ... ii ., ., L lu rd of cows belonvinff In Vfr
Bon tag.
"Then be began to understand that
ships today are bigger than were those
when he and I were boys."
Woven Wlra Fence.
RAILROAD NOW SUES FARMER midway between the bottom horizon
The great demand for breakfast
bacon has put a premium on the ba-
ton type hog. The animal that dresses
a large amount of good bacon la uow
desired by many breeders. Tbe Vork-
shire and 'I'auiworth breeds abuw
this type very prominently.
Planting Kafir.
Kafir may now be planted in most
sections of the southwest. The land
should be well prepared by
ships are not built sb formerly,
but one of the new schooners carries
as much as did sa entire fleet of the
old-timers.
"Just take tbe I'almer fleet of
fastened to the posts three Inches
— higher than the top wire and two
Kansas City, Kan —The usual order more *re 't«<"hcd eight Inches apart
of things was reversed the other day to cantllng nailed to the posts above
tal wire and the ground In order to breaking. The rows should
and one half feet apart %ud
above the level If the land
Baker-Wheeler Mfg. Co., Dallas, Tex.
Julfs Pills
I he first Joie often aMonlthta the invalid,
fc.tlni elasticity of «n*nd, buoyancy of b*d> .
GOOD DIGES1I0N,
rrfulif NmrUand *<i|ltl flesh. I'rlce, 29 eta
MOVING PICTURE MACHINES
All ni;ike« At the lowest nrlrra. Ft linn for
i uc itauu «ia ami rent We furnlah complete outAlai
by deep Slc,.urt> Traveim*
VJ Uivp B hlbltor ; (Main*. Hll<lt>a, Tleketa. C'arb. n«
be three <.(« . i mtrtta. Llmen, Oiune, Ether, Ktc.
Just take tbe I'almer fleet of 14 " 4""r,n"u inavr • ^ ,u^ ruutb
schooners. Before they lout this iant filing of a suit for damages ln wire. If these are firmly nailed
boat, the Davis I'almer the combined 'he COUrt coniraon of Wyan- and wthe •c«ntllng extended to take
carrying capacity of the' 14 was about dolte V0UDty. when the Kansas City n«ther *,re. It will baffle the most
66.00U tons of coal. Now, It would We"t*rn iullw y company, a corpora- <lets.'mlned chicken thief as well aa a
regulation outfit, tbe studio will SUp- decline of shipping, to carry
lily it. If he wants sporting conipan j untl tons of coal.
Jons to appear the studio people call
lu their regular "supers," who are
ready to go on without much change
of cohtume These are the hangers
cn around the Bteamboat landing at
• he foot of the lake, who are too laxy
to do anything tuore arduous than hav-
ing thiir pictures taken.
V ! herd of cows belonging to Mr. Combe
riiou- .1 *i.,*..* s. .i.ki .
So It la ihat Mr. Qtymas, without
"To be fair, call It five of them.
Multiplication sbows that It would re-
quire a fleet of 2*0 of the schoonera of
30 years ago to carry the coal which
la lugged ln the 14 vessels of the
I'almer fleet.
"Then tbera were tha three veaaela
of tha Crowley Including tha
Thomas W. Lawton. Their combined
were driven on the right of way aud
tracks of the railway company near
llethel, Kan., and that an oast bound
car, running at the usual rate of speed,
struck the cattle, damaging the car
and endangering the lives of the paa-
sengera.
There la one thing about an egotis-
tical person; he la not talking about
his neighbors.—boaton PoaL
Early Cultivation of Corn.
Early cultivation of corn will great-
ly accelerate growth. My stirring the
soli early air and sunlight enter, warm
the aoll, atart the action of soli bac-
teria In making plant food available
and thereby hasten the development
and maturity of the planta. Weeds aro
very easily destroyed when tbe soil
la cultivated as they germinate, or
coon nfMr. Much teolsture will alae
be aaved ii a mulct la mage early.
does not drain well. Plant the aeed
very ahallow; one Inch la deep enough
to cover tbe aeed.
Wrli# lor Cats!,,*.
BOSWELL FILa « TRANSPARENCY CO.
WMm Building auiheflae, Okla.
Silage the Solution.
The paat winter haa set feedera
t. nklng and the fact la dawning on
many that silage inay extricate them
from the dllemiua In which the rapid
Increase In the feed bill, when practla-
Ing dry feed methods exclusively, haa
placed them.
Oklahoma Directory
■quaLa DEERE IMPLEMENTS
a..d VELIE VEHICLES
Aak four dealer, or
JOHN DKKRK PLOW CO., OklahomaCit
MACHINERY ALL *mot fo« •*«
IdflUllinkll I K«-|,ulr Wfirk c«r fuily u«
prompt], ,1,,,,,. Writ*, rail or photir
Southwestern Minafacturlng Co.
Sugar Cane Thrives.
Louisiana sugar cane thrives In
most sectlona of the humid and seml-
humld regions of the southweat. and
should command more attention. For
home un oane sirup la not to be aotn-
pared with sorghum.
'•hipi>«-<l |)14} w«i lia4
pnFs*™^!
■ ILCO>M r.U'T1*1
0Htt-.S f2^2W;o0ii.V^To!5r i
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The Inola Register. (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 2, 1910, newspaper, June 2, 1910; Inola, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc180246/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.