Claremore Progress. And Rogers County Democrat (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, August 15, 1913 Page: 4 of 8
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CLAREMORE, OKLA.. PROORESS
M.B.CHURCH'8
LADIES' STORE
la iJeieraiiiM**) to Ok an up mII Summer Stork this montli.
Tbnjr have a few more pairs of Shoe* fur SI .00
Short kimono* only
All Millinery at Half Price
.50
HIS VOWS FORGOTTEN
LITTLE WOMAN AD OVER AR-
CHIE'S LACK OF MEMORY.
THE CLAREMORE PROGRESS
h. L. KfcTl , Fubliaher,
Officii! Paper of Rogers County
tiatsrad at U PoatoOca at Clarwnur*. Oku., u
FRIDAY. AUG 8. 1 13.
WANT A NEW COUNTY
Dissatisfied over present conditions
wherein they declare they have never
received any political recognition and
that otherwise they are caused much
annoyance, residents of Vera and Ra-
mona in this county are ready to se-
cede. Collinsville over in Rogers
county is ready to take the initiative
in the game connection. A meeting
it to be held early next week in which
all parties interested will meet and
arrange plans for forming a new
county. Under the proposed plan two
tdwnships would be taken from
Washington county, a part of Roger -
county and also a part of Tulsa coun-
ty'which would include Skiatook and
that section of Tulsa county is one of
the jwealthiest sections of the county.
tne southern part of Washington
county whould l>e a part of the new
county, 'litis, it is said, would give
the tentative county the required
population as well as the necessary
square miles. Collinsville wants to
be the county seat and as an induce-
ment has offered a free site tor a
court house besides guaranteeing a
large sum of money. Residents ol
Ramona and Vera declare they have
been "goats" long enough, and that
there never has been a time when a
candidate from that section ot the
county was elected to office.
It will require a special election to
AMAZONS ASKED NO FAVORS
Woman In Dahomeyan Army Cam-
pelted the Admiration of Their
French Conqueror*.
An Interacting account of the
prowess of the Dahomeyan Amazons,
the female furies who fought the
French during their struggle with the
refractory King liehaniln, la given by
Mr. Frederic Nlartyn In hla book,
"Life In the Legion " The author, a
former Engllah officer, enlisted In the
"Spiritual resurrection may be very j Foreign legion of France and saw
—well." sighed the little woman, accept- sharp lighting both In Tonkin and la
ii hit \w mvr i hi.' Ing a cup of tea with a diagruntled Dahomey.
Althou-a rulm r , I T ",r' but " OU8ht '° b# connned t0 Th* ,urn Of the Senegaleae Tlrall-
Althougn C laremore cannot boast pure|y sp,rltua, |>e less use I lenrs came next. A battalion of Ama-
of having very many forms ol amuse- for Ideas of material resurrection. ; sous attacked them, at id gave them a
merits for the bathers, she can truly this moment, than I ever had. Wheu ; very rough time indeed, but the
boast of those which she does possess a period, an episode, a friendship Is I Tirailleurs stood their ground until
a* being the best to be found any- deail -It ought to stay dead, that's j reinforced by some marine Infantry,
where. There is no town or city in all!" Any one who Is Inclined to sympa-
the United States which has any bet- "You remember Archibald Down- thl*e with the Amazons on account of
. " • 1 • >■ their sex can be assured tbat their
Also Ha Waa Middle-Aged and Fat.
and Accidental Meeting Waa Not
for Hor an Occasion of
Croat Joy.
CELEBRATION
IN LOUISVILLE
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Foster and son,
of Tahlepuah, arrived in the city Wed
SAY, MR FARMER
oi laniepuan, arrived in the city wed , htlV, ^ guQti work nu|rlt( ,,
nesday for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. I,, |h,m ^
. C. Vinson. j ^grjiy, | |,RV#l m vcry
Lbuis
KENTUCKY METROPOLIS WILL i popular"store.
COMMEMORATE INCIDENTS |
IN WAR OF 1812.
Morris Haas, proprietor of the j 8iere.l Jersey bull which I wish to die -
Leader, is spending the week in St. \ p,we of a- I hare had him as long as I
purchasing goods for his j Cllll with my herd
Dr. W. W Bryan.
HUNDRED YEARS Of PEACE
Battles Which Kentuckiana Won and
Massacres in Which They Suffered
Will Be Repru0uce4 in Fireworks
and Shams on Land and Water.
ter picture shows than we have right ,ng " " tha u" womau lo^,ked h*r tht'lr c«n b<>
here in our city. As soon as the pic- •>ln««,he,lc of sympathy la misplace
, . , . , 1 course, you wouldn t remember linn as women were far and away the best
tures are released and are beingshown „ , do bpr.uge ht> llk#d th„ DmhomvJ .rmy, 4nd
in the cities we are seeing them in a|wayg indeed, he always used to woman to man were quite a match for
our city. The houses in which the aay that he'd know m.v step across the any of us. They were armed with
pictures are shown are kept clean and world In the dark, and 1—well. I was Spencer repeating rilles, and made
well ventilated; everything pertaining Idiot enough to believe him. I never much better use of them than the men
to the comtort of the patrons is seen wanted to marry him. but 1 waa g. nu- made of their carbines. For work
to immediately; each manager tries
to secure pictures which will please
his patrons and we do not know if
there is another show in the world
where you are given more for your
money than you are right here in
Inely sorry when his firm aent him at close quarters, they had a small,
out to China tfti years ago, and I've heavy-backed chopping sword. or
always thought I'd llko to see him knife, very much like a South Amerl-
agaln. can machete.
"Well, today 1 did see him. I don't Tlfev fought like unchained de-
know when he returned nor how long mnns, and If driven into a corner, did
he's going to stay, and I don't want : tm disdain to use their teeth and
your home town at the pitture shows, to. Hut as I was walking up State nails. A marine infantryman seized
A week's celebration, which Louis-
Vllllaiis declare will be the greatest
and most spectaculur in the hlslor>
•leiiiatlon.s in America, will be
Tboae young I held lu itie Keutucky metropolis for
seven days, commencing September
2 . and will he the climax of a se-
ries of celebrations held in a dozen
lake cities, to commemorate the suf-
ferings and victories of American
arms In the War of 1812 as well as
to focus attention on the achieve-
ments of a century of peace. The
crucial and decisive engagement of
the War of 1H12 was the battle of the
Thames, fought and won on Canadian
aoll October 5. IMS. The series of
celebrations, which will be held In
America will close in Louisville, Octo-
ber n. 1913, and just one hundred
They are up to date and deserving
of the literal patronage which they
receive.
Nowhere in the state can be found
a nicer swimming pool than we have
at the Athletic hall. Under the new
management (his popular place of
amusement will flourish and soon be-
come the "good time place" of Clare-
more where one may go to spend a
pleasant evening bowling, playing pool
swimmi,^, skatig and dancing. Mr.
O'Neal has the right idea about run-
ning the Athletic Hall and we predict
that he will soon have one of the
nicest places to be found anywhere.
WOKLO
street whom should 1 see before me na disarmed one of them In this ! ?.eB™ 'rom thl> hour N'*'1"*"1
but Archlbsld Downing! He's grown fight, but she was so far from being! . Johlj*,°n' afterward \ ice President
fat and middle aged and stodgy, but beaten that ahe turned on her captor 1 °£, Ti"*,' w ln.dlan
I'd know his back anywhere, at any and began to bite liis nose off. , chief Tecumseh, President Woodrow
time I walked a little faster so as "The uniform of these female war
to see his face, and It was Archibald rlors was a aort of kilted divided skirt
Mayberry Bros.
«E3D.
| Hay Tools : Implements |
-"1—r:?z y;. rm>
SERIES WILL START
OCTOBER 6
President Bne Johnston announced
last week that the world series would
I lie started on Monday, October ti, ac
' cording to the plan of the national
commission, provided the New York
determine the fate of the proposed N,tionaU HmJ the Philadelphia Amer-
county and if a majority vote to se- ,cails wm It has ^ p|antied, ac-
cede then the new county will be j cordln(f ty Mr johnston, to have a
formed. Washington county is the ciasg band amuse the spectators
amallest county in the state, being | who ftl, the pj|rk hours before the
approximately 40 miles long and ten | gume This an excelient idea for
milos wide. Chopping off the "rear I lhe Ume before the beginning of the
end" of the county will not effect it i Kan]e hlu !oll(f dieud d by tho:
Wilson will probably be addressing a
crowd of loo,000 people In Louisville.
aur« enough, though a good deal 0, blue cotton .tuff The garment | t£ Se^VSe: ^
Changed 1 waa just going to speak barely reached to the kneea. It was 1 Ken.uckv^ wiTasslaned the cToslnr
to him when I remembered what ht> supported at the waist by a leather | and hoj d , of tbe celebration
used to Vy about knowing my step, belt that carried the cartridge pouch- Wauae of the Slstlnaulshed na«
to I dertded to walk along behind him ... They wore little or nothing above pIaved by thP Kentuckiana in the War
and try It. And, ray dear he didn t the waist, but on their heads they ; of lga>. Kentucky began to play her
know It-no. hough I followed him wore a coquettish red fez. or tarboosh. | part ln the ^ration before the war
Off State street to a quieter neighbor- ornamented with an eagle', feather 0,)ened. wh(<n 8he aent Gen. Ceorge
bjmd. and even marked time behind These women were all exceedingly | Bogers Clark and other Louisville
blm when he stepped Into an empty well developed, and some of them soldier. Into the ho.tlle wlldemes-
to light his cigar And all the were handsome In their own^ay. which they wrested from the French
poetry he u.ed to talk about knowing "Wo of the Legion had a good o^ and Indians and out of which waa alt
my step across the world in tho portunlty of aeelng them In action. ! erward carved the great States of
darl<'" t ., *nd wp were rau-h pressed with I Ohio. Indiana. Illinois. Wisconsin and
Why didnt you speak to him? their dash and gallantry."—Youth's I Michigan.
asked the tall woman, filling her > Companion.
friend's cup with consolatory unction. ) _
Ten years Is a long time for a man
••*■*** •««««* nsrWM
FIRST NATIONAL BANK,
CLAREMORE, OKLA.
Capital and Surplus, $61 .OOO
^ DirW"on' C V R H. W. Gray,
Oldest Bank in Rogers County
W. U Unrrr. J. O. Hell sad
financially.—World.
CONGRESS WILL NOT ADJOl'BN
UNTIL "SNOW FLIES"
Congress will remain in session
antil snow flies and if necessary pro-
long the extra session until the regu-
lar term begins in December to dis- i
pose of tariff and currency legisla
tion.
This was the decision of the demo- j
cratic caucus of the senate Thursday
who are forced to go to the ball park
hours before the game in order to get
good seat.
Vi Anderson has been on the sick
; list for several days.
Jim Moore, of Tiawah, was a I'lare-
] more visitor Friday.
For Sale—One driving mare safe
| for children. Emmett Mayberry.
B. F. Denman of Verdigris, was in
night which adopted a resolution de- i the city Saturday trading with our lo-
claring that congress should proceed cal merchants.
to consider and determine legislation { "Bride of Two Months Seeks Di-
concerning currency and banking im- vorce," reads headline in state paper,
mediately following the passage of j .She should never have married at that
the pending tariff bill. f age.
The decision to keep at work until j Jf you wan\ u don# wel|t do lt your.
the legislative program as outlined by j se,f aM(J theo lf >ou are Ilot ,-atrstied
President Wilson had been disposed i you wi„ no onv but yourBelf to
of, came after u motion offered by i,iame-
Senator Lewis, of Illinois, that a re
cess be taken following the passage of
After all, although Claremore can
not afford any amusements lor tne
bathers, those which are afforded are
to remember "
"Well. I did think of It." sighed thn
little woman, sweetening her tea a.
though to .weeten also a sad mem-
ory. "but 1 decided not to. His neck
showed a roll of fat above hi. col-
lar. and I thought that If hi. mind
had turned a. commonplace a. bl.
body I Ju.t .Imply couldn't bear It. 1
feel aa if I'd been to a funeral now,
tnd 1 waa afraid—I might as well ad-
mit It—to find that he d forgotten all
ibout me. He was so sure he'd rec-
ognize my step through ajl eternity,
you remember And and," her eyes
moist and her lips quivering, "I never
wanted to marry Archie, but 1 did
aant him to care euough to remein
ber No: I hope 1 shan't st* him
•gain I sball try to forget all about
(his morning, and plav that he's dead
in t'hina Talk of the sadness of
death, dearie' Nothings so sad as
tuch a resurrection a. I've seen to-
day!"—Chicago Record-Herald.
the tariff bill, had been withdrawn for
lack of support Though there
, the beat to be had anywhere.
were some democratic senators who I
would not have been adverse to re- I ^h'* thinK ot juggling state, coun
cess, the eventa of the day in the sen- l>' a"d cit> Peculiar business
ate showed them that such a thing ! A" the verage ta* payer knows u
would be out of the question. I that service is on the wane and ex
pense is aviating.
Since Otdahoma City, Tuba and
Muskogee have adopted the moving
pictures at a medium of advertising
their cities, it will be Claremore's
turn next to get in tj)e swim.
The park is being kept )n very fine
COMBINED FINANCIAL CONDI-
TION OF CLAREMORE BANKS.
Is in certainly a matter of pride
for Claremore and its people to see by
the published statements of the three
banks of the city, which appeared in
this paper, issued at the close of busi- .... ...
ness Saturday, August *th. 1913, that ^L° 1-'
these three banks represent the fol- ""
lowing assets, showing the per capita
amounts to a population of 4,000 in-
habitants:
Total capital and surplus,
49, or perajjapita
Total dep^^, $".'<9,089.46, or|149.-
00 per capii
Total cash on hand, $195,240.07, or
$48,00 per capita.
The remarkable proof of the safe
methbds of the Claremore banks ia
showh by the fact, that they have 32
par cent of their deposits in actul cash
and sight exchange.
Major 11. W. Lipe was reported on
the sick list Friday.
B. F. Halley, of Catale, transacted
buaineas in the city Thursday.
KeV. Patrick, of Oolagah, spent
Thursday in the city on business.
Born, Friday morning, to Mr. and
Mrs. J. 6. Dougherty, a nine pound
boy Prof. Dougherty is wearing
the smila that won't wear off.
Zack Odom, while playing with
some boys Thursday afternoon, got
hit on the head with a rock and was
badly hurt. Ha is not thought to be
serious.
Of IMWORT or MM. MARTHA RIUtiH
boy scouts, under whose care it lui
I been placed. Uuynne Jennings gets
the credit for watering it Thursday
night.
"Our Son John" Hill, of Hubart,
arrived in the city Thursday for a
few days visit with friends. John ia
attending law school at Washington,
D. C. and from all reports is making
good.
Miss Florence O'Connor, one of the
teachers in the Claremore schools for
the coming term, aci.omwi.Med by her
mother, returned from a several
weeks' vacation to points in Illinois
first of the week.
While you are standing at one of the
fountains taking a cool drink or while
you are in your hot office attending to
terbusiness, do not forget always to
register a boost for the Rogers county
fair. Many boosts make light kork.
A. O. Goldstein, the farmer who is
going to install a creamery in the
near vicinity of Claremore soon, left
Friday night for San Francisco, Cal.,
Alarm Lecats. Fire.
A Are alarm box which indicate, the
Boor on which the fire Is located and
ilso In what part, designed particular-
ly for factory buildings In which a
large number of women are employed.
aas been brought out by a Brooklyn
inventor
Boxes are placed on each floor In
eaae of fire, the alarm Is sounded by
pushing the button Indicating the part
of the floor where it haa started If Gladstone on Disraeli.
tho lire Is at the eaat end. for In- O. A. Storey, A. R. A., recorda a
•tacce the button marked "Fast" Is :ouchlng Incident he witnessed at the
pushed This sets off an alarm bell Academy banquet of 1$£1 In London,
00 ail the boxes in the building and
Illuminates a number and letter tq In-
dicate the firposition If, for ex
ample, the Are is near the center ot
Kentucky was the last state which
could have benefited from the war, In-
' fiPRMAN "KIIPQ" MOT "Plir-rc asmtich as It was brought about cinef
ucKMAN KUHS NOT CU..ES ,v bJ the „rltUh i,upregtniei„ of
American seamen, none ot whom
were Kentueklans. whereas should
war prevail the unfriendly Indians on
the frontier of ihe border states could
be expected to commit atrocities from
which Kentucky bad already received
the name "liark and Bloody Ground "
However, it was chiefly Henry Clay, in
the Kentucky Congressional Helegu
tion that forced President Madison (><
declaim the second war with ti rem
Britain, and Kentucky furnished for
ty per cent of her lighting population
to go Into that war. and at the rlo*e
ot the war of the listed dead more
than eighty per cent were the name-
of Kentueklans. Kentucky troops tr
a man were ma-sacred at the Iti.c
Raisin auil again at the first attach
on fort Meigs
When the time came to man Ferry's
ne^hewn ships, be selected Kentucl.
tans unaccustomed to the mntlon of
the lake, to mount Into the insecure
rigging and from that vantage point,
with their practiced eye and unerring
aim, fired down upon the British and
won the battle of Lake Erie. I'rais-
tically every officer and soldier In the
battle of (he Thames was a KentucK
Ian, excepting alone Gen. William
Henry Harrison, who, however, held
Error of Tranalator Cau.ea a Madt-
clna'a Value to Bt Over-
estimated.
Many newspapers are hasty In an-
nouncing the discovery In Germany of
some method of treatment more of
less new. and not infrequently mis-
Information 1* given the public
through the failure to keep In mind
the actual meaning of one little word.
The German word kur does not mean
"cure." although It Is not an un
common thing to And It so translated
into English.
"To cure" ln English means "to re-
store to health; to effect a cure;' but
In other languages It means merely to
apply "a method of remedial treat-
ment of disease; medical or hygienic
care; method of medical treatment."
The German word for "restoration to
health" Is heliung, not kur.
The Latin word cura mean, merely
"care," a shade of meaning which 1.
preserved in the derlred term "cura-
tor." An Italian phy.lclan was re-
cently made to say. when hi. article
was translated into English, "I cured
ten typhoid i.afienta last month and
ix of them died." What he really
9 DOES SAFETY APPEAL TO YOU O ♦
■ WHEN DEPOSITING YOUR FUNDS f I
The Farmers Bank and Trust Company ♦
offer, you absoli'te serunty I , den nis r«%| i< iin d bv the l>e|K i- Z
tor« Guaranty furd . f the State ol Okiwli n a. CI msu g a I at k is quite 2
sn in pori er t pn b'i n , ti i i p< r> \i ur d« cinor h -i gs ti« nft t\ ot jour *
money, the n:i ur l . f in. ri si y<n will riiow i d th. i un l et of itduie- X
mei.la pl«c«d bi fore y. u for th. tale irv« mig « f j.tr t'Mosite Ve X
pay 4 per c«nt interest on time d. p. sits. Fegm 11 w. *
Farmers Bank & Trust Co., f
Claremore, - Oklahoma |
Three Good Reasons Why THIS BANK
Should Be YOUR BANK
■aid was that lie had treated ten pa- his commission ar Major-General fron
tients —From th Journal of the Amor-
lean Medical Association.
the third floor. '3C" will ba illuminat-
ed on every box This tella every per-
ion In the building the location of tbd
Are and enables them to determine
the safe.t way to take to reach •
place of aalety—Popular Mechanics.
Quinine Industry #f Java.
Java produce, about two-tblrda of
the world', .upply of cinchona, and It
has for years been regularly .hipped
to Holland. The large quinine mann-
factories mostly altuated In Germany. | ln no other sense an opponent
snen a portrait tor wmcn neacoha-
B ld had .at to Mlllala shortly befor*
Bl. death was among the exhibits. Orleans after the war had In reality
"Tbl. unfinished work, pals and even closed
the Kentucky legislature. The chargi
of the forlorn Hope, about the brief
est. most terrible and most heroic at-
tack narrated In the annals of war
tare, consisted exclusively of Ken-
tucky soldier, when nineteen of them
and their twenty horse, went down
to certain death. It was the Kea-
u cKy .narp.nooters wno are credited
with having won the battle of New
ghastly, was in one of the side gal
ien d. Gladstone, catching sight of
the picture, w.-r.t and .tood In front of
It. . . . No one disturbed him. At
the end of the feast Gladstone rose,
nd In the flne.t and most feeling tone,
lellvered a panegyric on the great
man who had passed away. In a voice
ilear and sympathetic and full of emo-
tion, he told u« of bis admiration for
the sterling qualities of the man who,
though opposed to him In politic, was
He
Kentucky proposes to reproduce
mo.t of the.e scenes of the w^r of
1812 in the Loul.ville celebratlon/rhe
battle of the Thame, will be repro-
duced on land In Cherokee I'ark. to-
pographically situated similar tn the
land on which was fought the battle
of the Thames, and every detail of
the .ham battle will be a. nearly
historically correct a. can be done.
Louisville will take advantage of her
magnificent river frontage in orde.-
to celebrate suitably the battle of
l.ake Erie. The actual battle will be
'' jll'VlT'llt •
t si d ulhi r ti
• im* 4 jrt c
ml o the |H( |'Pr eon-
hi si! tia**
•I. r.ur pafnr.r. intelll-
!>' • rif si* invited to
« UK'.iif.
The National Bank of Claremore
Claremore, Oklahoma
• • <«**«,• —tip* in i itwumiium
I • I £• ill Twst.
Littlefield Loan and Investment Co.
CLAREMORE, OKLAHOMA
-* «!•*%> Json you We buy farm land ....
, 1 e , •??k * ,T ** Klr ami Tornado Ir*. .
coo.r« ib < x!mt tk« ven^loB^t rnU> Wo mlmu fumf.h you Sural )
% '\mpbfll Buiidinir. Cor. Cli«>roli%
* 8 a. m. to 6 p. m.
olkltud
; C. Q. Littlefield, Manager f
SMM^ssssesssssssMssesssttseeseso —— fi, si mi
•upply tbemaelfM In the Dutch mar- spoke as only one generous In heart uw
ket, and of late years U)e ma^nufactur- tnd of broad and great mind could depicted In a gorgeous entertainment
of firework, and all morning and all
Ma have combined to keep the price, .peak of another great man who had
uch low level aa to render the cin- pa.sed a ay. Th« .peech surpassed
ebona cultivation unprofitable, al- mytbing I ever heard "—London
though earning large dividends. To Chronicle.
meet tble combination it was resolved
to establish a quinine factory in Java,
*ay. the British con.ul at Hatavla,
whore the firs' Java quinine ba. beeo
produced. This I. de.crlbed aa of ex-
cellent quall<> and equal In all I
.pects to the best Koxopean brands
Last year the total producUAifc of cln-
afternoon preceding the engagement
there will be boat race., life saving
feats and aquatic sport*. A historical
pageant, depicting various scene, of
the war of 1811 will also include •
magnificent floral parade, such ns
Ju.t On* Little Thing Wrong.
The late John II Twachtman, the
trell known landscape paliter. waa mn,J" '^ulsville famou. a year ago.
essentially an artists' artist," In that •"ll wlM lnclu,1«' rlTlc •«<! ml'ltary
hi. style' appealed more to bl. col- Par«','"i m nv '-"Ph Drills
leagues of the art world than to tho «• „ "-"W co.tuniM
lav nubile r.ng* familiar «itK *ch001 children Will be b**ld in the
•riroMttfioJs* ^010°^ the man and hip'work would aay that f,rBt Aj!m0ry; •
avolrdubol. —London Globe th. following Incident, which I. re- «m >'• given to the descend-
lated of him might e«ll< be true: •J1" of Kentucky wldler. and sal.oi.
O^ton Bonnie*- hM subn,.,^ !
e National AeHeultor.l paintings wished his opinion h„nnr
MnMapoto.—London Globe
New Vegetefel* Ivory.
to ibe National Agricultural Society . , ..
of Parte samplea of a ne. vegetable .°" „,b; of nd
Ivory mad- from the albumen of the rtlne *fr"
fruit of a certain a«ajl palm <of the ap''^ ?'
genus II) bauna tribe Boreas us j grow- . ,bt wblc!> JJ*
Ing In tL- forests of French Sudan. ^ , .1, <"e
The albumea harden, on exposure to "*ht ,«,ror bl' ln^- ">erw
honor
Exceedingly low railroad ratea,
probably as low a. one ceii. per mllg,
from a distance of aeveral hundred
miles of lewisville, will be granted
and efforts are being made to aecura
to other Kentucky polnta rales from
—.. . . . o-iuct.. uu u> _«i_ ... _ . _.. . . iv oinei r\ en iuck j point, istes rrom
where he will remain for three months ] the air and It rea*inblaa natural lv- M. ° '' Particular In which ha f|,r ,bs wwk |mlnMilat9|r
o.
nr.
for tht w ^
Mae Ml mni rm henn
Wsaitas mar dw old nxrth.r.
Whe hat reM us all with « r..
AaS aew. mk Im tmmUt restin*
AM on* ptaa now Is hare.
I kmm. kind IrlMds. w.11 Mel hw.
left 1
A ad all I
"Zi'jsr
memory at Imt w. II met her.
I sndll leve her del and th. mm.
SkSra^e'Sirj"""-
We (Mi m aed aad baeir.
[ tjjf Mots bmOmt has saas awes.
And elee to thlak so aadl,
net flh. hae Ms to slar.
her Daaahtor.
Mr. Goldstein repuested that the Pro- ory in color and textnra This product W°?.J.""'J**'
gres* be sent to him ao that he could I < • <! <o resemble the vegetable lv- Ul,tT "•
keep up with the new. nt "the capital or fro1" another palm iFhytelephM wh " said tho artlaL "I should
of Oklahoma. ^ ^ IsmK 1 S£I
Word received from J. Ryan, who have"—K very body's Magaalnn.
ia takinK in the beauties of the Yel- M_ „ ...
low Stone National Park and the | *r" **' of FV^i,V'k" "
mountain scenery of Colorado, enlight-, ' course o ium ba' s.
ens us to the fact that he had the C' ® l«ft Wednesday f r
pleasure of playing snow ball on tha p,tt,,burK. **■ . tor an indefinite sUy.
eighth day of August and that the M. T. Mabrey left recently for La-
weather ia idaal. All we ask Mr. Ryan m,lr' f°., on a several days business
is that he put a little piece of that tr'P-
.now ih hi. pocket and bring back to I Don't mention it. Its hot enough
u. for we had forgotten that thera | w'thout it. The hnthera keep com-
aver was any anow in the world. Mr. '"*■
Ryan requests that we aand tha Pro- I Mrs. John Staigers, ' of Kelleyville,
greaa to him aa ha wanU to keep up | ia a Radium bather ln thn city this
with tha times nt homo. *"
ABSTRACTS
THE CENTRAL TITLE AND TRUST COMPANY
Capital SI0,000
OLDEST SKT OK BOOKS IN THE COUNTY. ~
We have money to loan on farms and town prop-
erty anywhere in Kogcrs county.
KEI.IABLK WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS ACCOMMODATING
F. G. Griswold, Mgr.. Claremore. Okla.
Rogers County Abstract Co.
Claremore, Oklahoma
NOTHING BUT
ABSTRACTS
(FHlIM TIIK RKCOltlia)
Prompt - Service
Phone 06
3rd and Cherokee
r
THE WORLD FAMOUS
..... SIN ER
ON EASY" PAYMENTS
Old machinea taken aa part pay. I
sell sll kinds of machine aupplles
and rapnir old machinea.
M. T. MA REY
Phone M Rear Farmers Bank Bldg
followitiK the celebration, to enable
former Kentuckiana who return houie
to vl.lr the celebration, to irl.lt also
their old Kentucky home..
Artificial I—.
The method oominonly need la
making lea for commercial production
la to .Ink oblong tin boiaa ooet«lolQ(
dlatnied or altera* water Into tanks
of aalt water, through which ran Iron
pipe. Then com preened ammonia gu
la released |n tbeae pi pea and by rap-
Id eipan.lon producee an lntenae cold
tbat free.ee thn water la the tin
hoiea into cabea averagingVx> to S00
pound. In weight, la cold atorage tha
aamo process ia nand mloaa tha watar.
The Iron pipaa Into which tha non
pressed ammonia goee ran on tha aide
W tOP' U*- *°*d ""W .j
Si .at- rrl111" ** •••■a*lri" ,li
Phone Day or Night No. 33
J. HERBERT MOORE
Undertaker and Embalmer
Home and Offlcc corner of Secon.l Street and Cherokee Av.-nue
Opposite the Bungalow Hotel,
My office is never locked op. and if at night yon need the aerv cna
ot an undertaker and embalmer. you will find me neat dw ^7^5!
I have a licenae issued by tho Egamining Board of Oklahoma to
practice embalming and funeral directing, and holding that llcenao It ia
necessary for me to conform to the lows In this state as to the nronwr
fumigatinn of the home, which work ha. heretofore been ao
glected. T have on hand at all times Del'ree'. p,t,nt KorraVl^hyi
s6c * ^h. Sufficient to fumigate any room or olftce
and tbould be used in all caaoa of contagioua diaeaana. omc#
I ennlpJrXn*.COmn" *"d un,Wrt*k,n« ""pplloa are always tho beat that
flve^lMur"*1 ,#f "hlpm*,,t' •nd *" wo,k '• rua ran toed to
J. HERBERT MOORE
■M
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Claremore Progress. And Rogers County Democrat (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, August 15, 1913, newspaper, August 15, 1913; Claremore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc181391/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.