The Reporter. (Chelsea, Indian Terr.), Vol. 10, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, June 24, 1904 Page: 4 of 8
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The Reporter. I additional locals
Published Fridays
R. E. MILLER.
Entered In th.; po.t office at Chelsea
T., as second claaa mail.
•f.OO A YEAR.
I, AND OFFICE BULLETIN.
-To al number cards issued toTues
day noon 129:4
.To al numler filed to Tuesday
rooti i_—* 16736
Number filed Friday afterccou
.Number filed Saturday
Number fihd Mont'ny ——52
Number filed Tuesday forerr.cou
— -r*—- — 25
.Rtstura number on call Tuesday
oon 536
Card on call Tuesday coon.—1955
I Oil & Gas Notes I
♦0*0000$ c*ooooooo<>oooo«>$«« %
The extra gang is repairing and
putting the pipelines in good shape
this week.
• P. W. Roth, of Buffalo, N. Y*r
was here this week looking after
his oil interests,
F. R. Kemp is here from New
York City in the interest of th
National Development Co.
The new 80 horse power boiler
has been put on a new foundation
and is ready for business.
Mr. Mason, gauger for the Prair-
ie Oil & Gas Co., has permanently
focated in Chelsea and will loot
alter the company's interests at
this place.
The Oklahoma 8c Cherokee Cen-
tral surveyors have passed the
Cherokee Oil & Gas Co. 's least
and are now somewhere near the
vw.a s.,j river.
Messrs R. M. and R. G. Jen-
tiiags, of Pittsburg, Pa., represet
tatives of the Prairie Oil Co.,
have been looking after oil inter-
ests here this week.
On account of the bill of lading
getting lost the American Consoli-
dated Oil 4 Gas Co., has been un-
able to unload their rigs whicfc
have been on the cidb track here
for some time.
Jack Roberson, driller for the
Cherokee Oil & Gas Co., brought
in No 69 yesterday. It is impos-
sible yet to tell just what the well
will make, but the company 23 ton
fident it is a good one.
The Cherokee Oil & Gas Co. are
taking advantage of the shut-down
by improving their property and
and getting things in shape for
lots of wcrk as soon as the pipe
line reaches their lease.
A patt of the Prairie OH & Gas
Co.'s tank building force consist-
ing of twenty-two experienced men
catne in from the company's Wg
t*ok near Neodesha, Kans., Fri-
day night and are at work on the
35Coo barrel tank that is being
built for the Cherokee Oil & Gas
Co. M. Daugherty, superintend-
ent of tank construction for the
company, is in charge of the work.
The right of way for the Prairie
Oil & Gas Co.'s pipe line has been
spproved by the secretary of the
1 nterior. The pipe has been order-
eel shipped and as soon as it arrives
the work of hying it wju com.
nj-nce. The company has decided
to Ifiy four inch pi|e jnstead of
three inch pipe as was first an-
nounced. It will have a capacity
o: 4000 to 5000 barrels jxtr day an.l
■fti!: be able to take cafe of all of
the oil this side of the river lor a
•vbile at least.
Chelsea is golug to hive the Ok-
lahoma aud Cherokee Central Rail-
road, and to give proper recogni-
tion of their success the Chelsea
Reporter came out last week print-
£in red ink.-Denison Herald.
[The Reporter is always equal to
the occasion, and as yet has never
been found wanting when it comes
to boosting Chelsea.]
A large crowd of young folks
drove oat to the home Crum De-
Lozier last Saturday evening and
spent a few hours very plea-anti y
in music and games. Refreshments
consisting of ice creum and cake
were served. After praising the
boys 011 their nice way of entertain-
ing, this happy crowd boarded the
hay frame and all were soon at
home. _
Those who attended the basket
dinuer up in the hills between here
and Catale Sunday expressed them-
selves as being highly pleased with
the good preaching and hinging
that lasted throughout the entire
day: As usual, a large bttsket din-
ner was served, and who partook
say that the crowd, large as it w-aa,
was much too small for the dinner.
Louis E. Hohraan & Co., real
estate dealers of Hammond, Ind.,
have opened for business iq the
Hester building, upou which they
have a lease for two and one-half
years. Mr. and Mrs. Holiman ar-
rived -In Chelsea last Saturday.
These people are experienced real
estate deale/s aud are backed by a
l^rge capital which they expect to
invest here.
The Woman's Home Mis ion
Society has given several enter-
tainments in Chelsea, all of which
were good, but the one presented
at the Opera House last Friday
night was the best of all, It wa^
an old fashioned entertainment,
consisting of songs, recitations,
etc., that were in vogoe years ago.
The entire program was highly
entertaining, and the ladies realiz-
ed a neat sum from the crowded
house which greeted them.
...
V
The warm days have come, but
still there is cooking to be done
and you no doubt will need a good
stove. We have them, and in our
large stock you will find the cele-
brated
ROUND OAK
also the
PENINSULAR
Cook Stoves
and 5
Steel Rajvges
These stoves are unsurpassed
for cooking and this fact has made
them a reputation. To learn the
true value of jiiese, stoves you
must call and see them?
W. 6.- MILAM I SONS.
"Hi Chee's Hlorsee" furnishes
the-theme for a capital story in the
July McClure's, by Clara Byrnes.
Life, politics aud sport in the
"Sixt* of New York" are all pic-
tured with true comic instinct into
* uugnaoie complication aud hnp
py ending. The story is a real
farce-comedy, no knock-about or
slap-stick work, but genuine hu-
morous caricaturing in both char-
acter and incident. The quandary
of the poor Chinaman in the pos
session of the horse and his rescui
from it furnish ample plot for the
author's fnnmaking.
The Palate of the Louisiana Pur-
chase exposition differs in one impor-
tant essential from the art building's
at Chicago and those at Paris. All
the exhibit* will be installed upon one
floor—there will be ao upstairs gal-
leries, no long staircase* to ascend
and discern). The authorities of the
department demanded the observation
of four conditions in the planning of
the Art Paiaice; first, that the galleries
should be adequately lighted; second,
that they should re.IHK rentilated;
thir«, that the bnildlftgt Should he so 1
arranged jw to afford the free eihrnla-
tfon oi Itffca numbers of visitor* irith-
iMgtr yRr congestion, and, fourth,
— jtakatrfcctotaf should be fifepreol
iF'upon a
hill eoutb^PSgCCtouaifotfp ez.
hlbit Buildinga isolated
from other exhibitio^VM|urt£ it
cooslits of four pavtllone, tWl
«4 letteUkof the front of whl
CORiW DRUG STORE,
r 1 1 . /
TO FICHT MICROBES.
The Government Will Have an Elab-
orate Exhibit of Models at
World's Fair.
The Bureau of Public Health and
the Marine Hospital Service will show
many practical models. Among these
will be a model showing how a well
is contaminated with typhoid fever or
cholera by proximity to a neighboring
cesspool; models of drawings of prac-
tical improved tenement houses to re-
place the unsanitary dwellings Which
crowd congested-* portions of some of
our cities, and models showing how
the purification of water diminishes
the number of cases, and the death
rate from typhoid fever and gastro-
intestinal disease in general.
There wiy bo a model of a Quaran-
tine Station;- a display of improved
disinfecting machinery, showing use ol
steam, sulphur, formaldehyde and
chemical disinfectants in soluUon; a
model of a floating Quarantine plant
°rjfl*iafectlng barge; a field bacterio-
logical outfit and photo-micrographic
apparatus; * model of yellow feter
detention camp with the display of the
X-ray and ^projection' apparatus; a
model of a public health and Marine
Hospital Service operating room.
The wall space will contain photo-
graphs illustrating marine hospitals
domestic quaranUne. foreign quaran-
tine, immigration service, sanitariu®
tuberculosis. etc.
C. L. LANE, Proprietor
Always Carries a Complete Gtock of
Pure Drugs,
Patent Medicines,
Fine Cigars,
Tobaccos,
Stationery,
School Supplies.
SpecifI Motion paid to pr«c,ip,„„ worU.
Only the best and purest of dru^s used iu our
compounding. Polite clerks in attendance.
Comer Sixth & Olive Streets
Bills of skis for sale at this of-
fit?-
TRY AN AD
IN THE REPORTER
PAY
A-Years sub-
scription to the
R e p o r t e R
tares, if# of brick with decorative de-
vils la ad*. la the f^JoftWXrt
falaes provtifcto is mad* lor an elatf. .
I A N 0 your choice
provided for sculpture. CfluifK piece* I the followiflff
ci Miliary appropriate Co the posi-
tion have been installed outdoors. la
th* Immediate neighborhood of the Art
Palace many lam foreet trees bar*
bjen left stasliaf, whieb add much I r/ /■> -r^
* ****** <* th* ^Hral elect K. C. TOURNAT
Th* Art Palace contains 134 sky-light- I J X A
ed tolleries, a large court for the ex- ^
falbltio* of sculpture, and a number of I t. oiAR.
side-lighW galleriee especially veil
adapted fer ^he exhiblUen of works
belonging to certain groape of the
classification. For scnlftural decora-
tloc as applied So archltectare there
are special galleries opening Into the
sculpture court of the central pull-
ion, so that these ezblMts, elosely re-
11'ated both to sealptnre aad arcbltec-
| tu£pf be IggtaUed, WUi|||jr, with
Free.
:i Chelsea Barber Shoo
AND BATH ROOMS.
W. C. FORBES. Pno^ron.
Only first-class workmen employed. Courteous trpafwAnf
-redder, p,lren of the Sh„p. Clean tabT^IrrJ^"
Agency for New Method. Steam Laundry, of JonhW
,|"| •
Chelsea Pharmacy
Fancy cold drinks of all kinds. A
general line of dnigs and sundries.
Prescriptions given special atten-
tion.
T
B. F. C ULLY, Prop. ♦
Mdi
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The Reporter. (Chelsea, Indian Terr.), Vol. 10, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, June 24, 1904, newspaper, June 24, 1904; Chelsea, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc185725/m1/4/: accessed April 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.