The Temple Tribune. (Temple, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, May 7, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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THE TEMRE TRIBUNE
E G ETZOLD
TEMPLE - - OKLA
April showers also bring wet feet
We close theaters when they are de-
clared unsafe but not schoolhouses
Woman generally gets what she
wants whether It be an Easter hat or
the ballot
Quarrels over street paving con
tracts will not help Baltimore to get
rid of its cobblestones
Milwaukee is making less beer than
formerly but it is large enough now
to be famous on its own account
There ts no other stealing so
cruel as stealing children and un-
fortunately none that seems to be less
profitable
All's not so serene on the Danube
at the very latest accounts but Servia
still retains a fair stock of the instinct
of self-preservation
If old man Satan ever finds It nec-
essary to move his headquarters be
may be expected to choose Pittsburg
without a moment’s hesitation
A South Carolina negro has been
jailed for cruelty to animals because
he twisted a mule’s tall He ought to
have got a Carnegie medal
A New York society girl has gone
into the chorus to cure herself of
nervous prostration Is this transfer-
ring of diseases fair to the public?
Divorce reports go to show that the
turning lightly to thoughts of love is
no more acute in the spring than
when the furnace has to be run to its
full capacity
A Chicago preacher says members
of the clergy should always have a
third party present when they are
talking to a woman Do they always
need watching?
Great Britain wants now to build six
big battle-ships a year Peace hath its
burdens as well as its victories and as
far as their expense is concerned can
compete creditably with those of war
A movement has been started from
Boston to unionize the teachers of the
country Will the educational strike
be the next thing on the program of
progress?
This college fraternity" business
must be looked into farther if it as-
sumes to tell a fellow whom he may
or may not marry And then it’s the
wrong time of year to short-reef the
sails of love
The New Jersey minister who ad-
vised his congregation to keep a sharp
eye on their coal scuttles to keep
them from being stolen for spring
hats may amuse his sex but he will
not stem the fashion
In a test in New York oranges a
thousand miles away are to be counted
by auto-suggestion It is not thought
however that this mode of mathe-
matics will ever soon displace adding
machines in commercial life
A oaseball manager who doesn’t
threaten every winter to quit the
game Js not considered worth while
Only the first-class managers can re-
sign without the fear that their resig-
nations may be accepted
An Indiana negro has been sentenced
to ten years in the penitentiary for
stealing four bottles of whisky With
the state going "dry” it was deter-
mined to furnish a good strong deter-
rent against stealing whisky in bulk
A New York automobinst has hit
upon a cure for "joy riding” by chauf-
feurs who make sneaks from garages
with their employers' vehicles It is a
double gasoline tank that can be
locked by the owner when the ma-
chine is in the garage This leaves
only a small supply of gasoline avail-
able not enough for a "joy ride” of
any length The New York automo-
bilist’s contrivance will doubtless win
general adoption
The latest cult has the "ultra violet
ray” as its central feature The soul
responds to the ray acording to its
believers Nothing is impossible if
you vibrate to its vibrations Just how
to learn to vibrate is not made quite
clear but at any rate when you have
learned everything Is within reach
But it seems a pity to have to take up
this fad after one has devoted him-
self painfully to some kind of “science"
er "thought" which has promised the
same thing
When Rev Dr Aked of New York
was asked whether as a friend of
woman suffrage he favored the quiet
methods of the “regular” suffragists
or the rampageous ones of the suf-
fragettes he replied that both were
rebels against the law of men and
that no man had the right to dictate
to them how they should rebel any
more than the slaveholder in the old
days had a right to dictate to bis
slaves how they should escape All of
which was rather clever of Mr Aked
Prince Henry thinks the Zeppelin
airship will be “very useful in war”
All thoughts seem to lead to war over
there
Up to the latest March dato report-
ed there was a decrease of 8 507 in
the number of idle freight cars in the
United States and Canada compared
with the same timo last year The
gain is proceeding steadily nnd even
the so-called uncertainties of business
due to considering the new tariff-bill
do not stop the car wheels from turn
Inc more rapidly
News of the World
Briefly Told
Mott Important Event of tbe Part Week
Boiled Down for the Bnty Reeder
WASHINGTON
Finding that there will ho money
available to pay them the secretary
of the interior Saturday appointed Ned
Sisson of Anadarko A W Dunnegan
of Taloga and Vernon Whiting of
Enid as special district Indian agents
for the three new districts created on
the west side of the state of Oklahoma
During the tariff debate in the sen-
ate Friday Senator McCumber of
North Dakota strongly advocated the
placing of lumber on the free list He
said that tariff revision this year is
universally understood to mean revi-
sion downward He asserted that lum-
ber needed no protection and that no
other industry had produced more mil-
lionaires for the sum invested than the
lumber Industry
To afford all protection possible to
American citizens and their Interests
in Turkey President Taft and his cab
inet have decided to dispatch a spe
cial cruiser squadron to that country
President Taft has placed his ap-
proval upon the plan to establish at
Fort Sill one of the largest military
posts in the country The president
made this known to Senator T P
Gore who called at the white house
to inquire what was the executive
mind in the matter
Determined to save the government
money on paying for the bonds for its
officers and at the same time taking
a hard whack at the bonding trust
Representative Tawney chairman of
the appropriation committee put the
opening wedge in the census bill in
the form of an amendment which pro-
vides that the government shall not
stand for any Increase In the price of
bonds for government officials and
employes
Upon the conclusion of Senator
Scott’s speech on the tariff In the
senate Tuesday Senator Goree of Ok-
lahoma engaged both Senator Scott
and Elkins in a colloquy concerning
i he wages paid American miners
Gore declared he had been reliably In-
formed that in the rich Pocahontas
coal mines of West Virginia the wages
paid were less than in Nova Scotia
and England This statement was de-
nied by Senator Elkins Incidentally
ce spoke of the teratment of' coal
operatives which he attributed to the
tariff and which he declared was out
of keeping with the civilization of the
day He declared that wages in the
Pocahontas mines amounted to only
from 27 cents to 5G cents a ton which
he understood was less than paid in
Nova Scotia
DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN
The board of school trustees of Ard-
more have just closed a deal ’with
Fisk Robinson & Compauy of Chicago
bond buyers for the issue of 8160000
school bonds which will he voted on
at a special election to be held May
8th The price paid was five and seven-eighths
the highest price so far as
is known that has ever been paid in
Oklahoma
John W Gates of Galveston Tex
has decided to endow the Mary Gates
hospital which he Is to erect at Port
Arthur Texas as a monument to the
memory of his mother with an ac-
cumulation fund of $100000 and will
add to it every year 2 per cent of his
net profits from oil which it is under-
stood will amount to anywhere from
$2000 to $3000 per annum
Chief Justice Kane Wednesday as-
signed Judge Malcomb E Rosser of
Poteau to Shawneee to replace Judge
Carulhers in the special investigation
of the Bulgin charges against District
Jurge Maben and others Judge Caru-
tliers was sworn off the bench by
Judge Maben’s attorneys
Dispatches gathered throughout the
south indicate that from 50 to 75 peo-
ple met sudden death in the great
wind that loosed havoc throughout the
section Friday The number of in-
jured is probably three-fold the list of
the killed and it will probably be sev-
eral days before a complete list can
be gathered While the storm which
reached the south from the upper Mis-
sissippi valley left its scar on Missis-
sippi Arkansas Kentucky Alabama
Missouri and more remote states Ten-
nessee perhaps suffered the most se-
verely It Is substantiated that 60 peo-
ple wero killed in Tennessee alone
A tornado struek Douglas Kans in
butler county Wednesday evening
One man died of fright and several
were injured A number of houses
were wrecked and a large amount of
stock was killed Tbe storm came
from the southwest
Phil D Brewer or McAlester Thurs-
day received his commission as judge
of the superior court of Pittsburg
county the governor making the ap-
pointment by Bimply awarding the
commission and without any formal
announcement There were six or
seven applicants for the place
Judge Caruthers in district court
Tuesday Issued an order suspending
County Attorney Virgil R Blggers
from office pending his trial upon the
Indictments returned against him by
the grand jury at Shawnee the order
being effective May J
Owing to tbe premature releasing
of the nlrbrakes of several dump cars
an accident was caused Saturday in
the Gold Pill section In Panama The
cars stnrted down the incline and fell
into the Culebrr cut below killing
eleven men and seriously Injuring nine
more
Four lions were trophies of ex-Presi-dent
Roosevelt's camp in the Mau hills
Saturday and the 200 or more native’
followers are joining with the Ameri-
can party in the celebration of the un-
usually good luck
On a basis of practical ideas a cam-
paign is to be launched this week for
the initiation of a measure providing
for the permanent location of a state
capital and a companion measure pro-
viding for an amendment to the state
constitution whereby the capital may
be moved from Guthrie before the
year 1913 as provided in the enabling
act
- The lid will be on tight In Shawnee
now Sheriff Pearce and his deputies
have served notice on all bootleggers
and gamblers that they must stop
their business and the order is being
generally observed In each case a
time limit was set and where the or-
der was not observed within the time
prescribed the sheriff’s force person-
ally removed the bar fixtures screens
and everything else that might indi-
cate that the places were kept for the
purpose of violating the law
Two men were killed by the wreck-
ing of passenger train No 1 north-
bound on the El Paso line of the Na-'
tlonal Railway of Mexico Saturday
The proposition to make the Arkan-
sas river a navigable stream between
Tulsa and its mouth is entirely feas-
ible according to William Parkins
assistant United States engineer Mr
Parkins was in Tulsa last Thursday
for the purpose of making a prelimi-
nary report on the condition of the
river His report will be made to the
chief engineers end then to the rivers
and harbors committee of each house
before an appropriation bill is sub-
mitted to congress
Mehmed V new Bultan of Turkey
was Wednesday officially recognized
as the reigning ruler of that empire
by the Washington government This
action followed the communication of
the fact of the accession to the throne
of the new sultan to the state de-
partment by H Kiazim Bey the Tur-
kish embassador and similar Informa-
tion from American Ambassador Irish-
man at Constantinople A dispatch
according recognition signed by Pres
Taft was forwarded to Constantinople
Wednesday night for presentation by
tbe embassador there
The Madill oil fields are attracting
more attention as the sixth well has
been brought in by the Malmilkin
company and is the best well of the
number the oil being of a better
grade
Governor Shafroth of Colorado has
signed the campaign expense bill pas-
sed by the last legislature and It be-
comes a law In nenety days The bill
provides that the state shall contri-
bute for campaign expenses every two
years a sum equal to 25 cents for each
vote cast at the preceding general
election
'it Is hoped that the uprising in Tur-
key is near an end Tuesday Sultan
Abdul Hamid was notified that a de-
cree had been issued declaring that he
must abdicate or be dethroned Princo
Reschad was also informed that the
nation had chosen him to succeed
his brother and admonished him to
serve God and keep the sacred law
Abdnl Hamid’s disastrous reign which
opened with Bulgarian atrocities clos-
es in a most dramatic fashion with
massacres of Armenians in Anatolia
His disappearance as sultan causes
but few regrets abroad but the course
of Turkish affairs will still be watched
with great anxiety
With the money derived from the
sale of souvenir hatchets she has sold
during her campaigns in behalf of the
temperance cause Carrie Nation the
Kansas lecturess and champion saloon
smasher has purchased an extensive
tract of land in Boone county Ark
where she expects to spend the re-
mainder of her days
Eight persons are known to be dead
and many are injured in a fire which
swept through a five story tenement
house at 37 Spring street New York
Friday morning
The agreement between the miners
and the operators insuring industrial
peace in the anthracite coal regions
of Pennsylvania for another period of
threo years was signed Thursday by
the representatives of the employers
and the men
An electrical storm accompanied by
a gale of wind that approached the
fury of a cyclone burst upon Chi-
cago at 6:15 Thursday night bringing
death to at least five persons and cut-
ting the city off from direct outside
communication for nearly two hours
The center of the storm was on the
south side of the city Three laborers
were killed and several more wero
injured
The sterm which swept across Ar-
kansas and northern Mississippi
Thursday night is reported to have
swept away the little town of Horn
Lake DeSoto county Miss
Fire which started In a tailor Bhop
at Parsons Kans shortly after 9
o'clock Thursday morning did about
$100000 worth of damage
For the third time In six years
Fred McDaniel a Cherokee Indian
has been elected mayor of Bartlesville
Friday 585 saloons and ten brewer-
ies in 19 counties of Michigan which
voted dry at the last election closed
their doors Thirty of the 83 counties
in the state are now dry
Announcement has been made at the
University of California that Roosevelt
will deliver his first public speech in
this country upon his return from Af-
rica at that Institution
In on effort to prevent the placing
of a duty on hides a committees rep-
resenting the western leather manu-
facturers left Chicago Tuesday for
Wnshnleton
Oklahoma Outlines
What People of the New State are Doing Told in Short Paragraph!
Roy Hoffman Its Chairman — The
state board of public affairs has held
Its first meeting and organized elect-
ing Colonel Roy Hoffman of Chand-
ler chairman Thomas C Beeler of
Hobart was named as clerk and J
Harlow of Shawnee secretary
8apulpa Secures Packing Plant—
Contracts have been signed for a
$300000 packing plant for Sapulpa
work to begin within thirty days
It will be built by tho Wells-
SapulpaPacking company and slip
have a capacity of 500 hog' 200 ett-
tle and will employ over 300 men
Fatal Shooting Follows Election—
tn a fight at Tahlequah which follow-
ed an election day arrest John Tay-
lor was shot and killed by Peter
Smith a special election - officer
Smith arrested Taylor and charged
him with being Intoxicated but as
the men had been friends the officer
signed his prisoner’s bond at the sta-
tion Later the men met on tbe
street and Taylor fired at Smith and
missed The latter then returned the
fire killing Taylor
Asks Oklahoma for Pointers— State
Examiner and Inspector Charles Tay-
lor Is feeling good over the receipt
from New Jersey one of the oldest
states In the country of a letter ask-
ing for pointers on accounting meth
ods from the newest of the states
The letter comes from William E
Drake state auditor of accounts who
kays: "I would be glad to receive
from you samples of forms of vouch-
ers reports etc especially for state
institutions and municipalities”
Secret Societies Barred— The hoard
of agriculture has put an emphatic
veto upon all attempts to organize
Greek letter fraternities or other se-
cret societies at the A & Si college
at Stillwater on the ground that they
are undemocratic and interfere with
the real work of the school Several
attempts have been made lately to ef-
fect such organization but all met
with the Bame fate The question was
brought up a number of years ago un-
der the territorial regime and “with
the same results as at this time
Newspaper Man Gets Appointment
—State Reporter Howard Parker has
announced the appointment of Elmer
V Jessee editor of the Ellis county
Democrat and representative from El-
lis county in the first state legislature
as assistant state reporter succeed-
ing Claude Davenport of Pauls Valley
who resigned to become chief clerk
in the attorney general’s office Mr
Parker has the first volume of state
supreme court reports now ready for
publication Enough opinions have
been handed down by the supreme
court to make three more volumes
and enough by the criminal court of
appeals for one volume
Oppose Gypsum Tariff Cut— Peo-
ple of western Oklahoma are wrought
up over the proposed reduction of the
tariff on gypsum from 50 cents to 20
cents a ton They fear that If the re-
duction Is made the plaster industry
of Oklahoma will suffer serious in-
jury The constituents of Dick T
Morgan congressman from the Sec-
ond district of Oklahoma have asked
him to use his influence to have the
tariff left as it Is on this product and
the Oklahoma congressman Is exert-
ing every effort In this direction Al-
though the plaster industry in Okla-
homa Is In its infancy geological sur-
veys have developed the fact that
there Is enough gypsum in the state
to supply the world and if properly
encouraged this would become one
of the leading industries of the new
state
Organized Band Safe Blowers—
That there is an organized gang of
robbers who have been operating in
Oklahoma and Kansas for years and
who have headquarters In Coffeyvfile
Kan Is the statement of Ed Coleman
In an alleged confession made to Dep-
uty Sheriff Clark Compton at Musko-
gee Coleman waa arrested in Inde-
pendence Kan on a charge of being
implicated in the robbery of the Fris-
co depot at Muskogee on January 4
last when $400 In money and a large
number of checks were secured Cole-
man is said to have turned state’s evi-
dence on the gang and to have made
a complete confession
Fire Threatened City of Mangum—
Fire completely destroyed the Gilli-
land Mercantile company’s store at
Mangum and for a time threatened
the entire west side of town The
loss to the Mercantile company will
rench $40000 exclusive of the build-
ing which will probably be another
$20000 Other firms damaged by the
flames were: DeArman and Norton
hospital $1500 City National bank
$500 McKinney Auld and company
$500 The fire was caused by the ex-
plosion of a gasoline tank
8tate Poultry Show In December—
Secretary W P Smalley of the Okla-
homa branch of the American Poultry
association has announced that the
next show will be held In Shawnee
December 13 to 18 1909 The show
Is set for an earlier date this year in
order that Oklahoma exhibitors will
have a better opportunity to display
their fowls The premium list is ex-
pected to excel that of the last show
which set a new record for the south-
west Judge J W Mlllenix of Toledo
Ohio who served bo acceptably at the
last show has been engaged for the
:
Cotton Market
New York April 30— The cotton
market opened steady at a decline oi
1 point to an advance of 2 points and
after selling off a point or two from
the initial figures rallied on steady
cables more aggressive support from
bullish sources and moderate cover
ing by shorts who seemed to he ren
dered nervous by the steady ruling of
May contracts on the eve of the first
notice today Prices during the mid-
dle of the morning ruled about six tc
eight points net higher
St Louis Mo April 30 — Quiet
middlings 10c sales none ' Rfr
ceipts 897 bales shipments 998
bales Stock 42743 bales
New Orleans La April 30 — Spot!
were steady unchanged low ordln
ary 6 9-16c nominal ordinary 7
nominal good ordinary 813-16c low
middling 911-16c middling 10c
good middling 10c middling fair
11c fair llc nominal Receipts
6952 stock 203645 Spots less on
the 2000 bales to arrive 4255 futures
opened steady at an advance of 2 to 4
points April 1025c nominal May
1036c June 1038c July 105tc Oc-
tober 1016c December 1014c
Galveston Tex April 30 — Lower
10V4c
Copper Ore Deposits Near Lawton
— Within thirteen miles of Lawton is
deposited an almost unlimited supply
of copper ore is the opinion of City
Enginer John Kennard who has just
made a thorough investigation of a
new mine shortly to he opened up in
the Wichita mountains
Big Contract la Let— Contracts
have now been let for the construc-
tion of the woman's building and
boys’ dormitory additions to the Ag-
ricultural and Mechanical college at
Stillwater The work will be done by
the Cook Construction company of
Des Moines Iowa at a cost of $83000
All buildings will be oompleted in
time for school next fall Plans are
being drawn for other buildings in
addition to the Institution which will
cost $70000
Investigating Ada Lynching— Twelve
grand jurors have been selected at
Ada and began the investigation of
the lynching there in which J B Mil-
ler Joseph Allen Jesse West and B
B Burrell were hanged in a barn for
alleged complicity in the murder of
A A Bobbitt in February last The
progress of the investigation will he
watched with Interest as it is be-
lieved it will be almost impossible to
locate and identify members of the
mob Jitdge West is conducting the
session of court
Two Oklahoma Families Fight—
Repeated quarrels over rentals alleged
to be due from Etanley Ware to Per-
ry Brewer farmer residing near Ash-
er resulted in a pitched battle be-
tween these men and others of their
families Ware was killed Brewer
was fatally wounded Jesse Brewer
his son was seriously wounded and
Clyde Ware received a shot in the
head Two other Ware boys who par-
ticipated in the battle but were not
Injured -have been placed in jail at
Asher Perry Brewer under charge
of killing a man at Asher about a
year ago was adjudged insane and
sent to an asylum at Washington D
C While he was away the Wares oc-
cupied his farm One night recently
the Brewer home was fired upon
The Wares thought this was done by
the Brewers and the fight was the
result Fearing more trouble Sheriff
Pierce and a posse of deputies went
from Tecumseh to Asher
May Be a Fish Story — The recent
rains caused the Salt Fork of the Ar-
kansas to overflow on the Great Salt
Plains and hundreds of pounds of fish
were left on the sand unable to get
back to tho water A farmer by the
name of Dillon living near Jet got
over 400 pounds of channel catfish
and many other farmers got smaller
amounts
Jewelers and Opticians in Session—
After a three-days’ Joint session at
McAlester the Oklahoma Retail Jew-
elers' association and the State Op-
tical society closed their annual con-
vention with a banquet The officers
for the year are as follows Opti-
cians — President C O Lynch Chand-
ler vice president W E Grady
Stillwater and W C Phaeffle Enid
treasurer L F Lloyd Pond Creek
secretary Willard D Hale Weather-
ford Jewelers — President- Joseph
Mezer McAlester re-elected by ac-
clamation vice president W P
Haup Bartlesville secretary W C
Holt Stillwater treasurer O N
Barnhill El Reno chairman of tho
executive committee C H Shortess
McAlester The next meeting will be
held at Enid
next state show
Freight Rates to Be Increased—
The corporation commission has Just
received southwestern lines tariff No
9-A effective May 27 1909 This
tariff names rates from New York
Boston Baltimore Philadelphia etc
to points in Oklahoma and shows
quite an increase In tlie present rates
— as an example the present first
class rate from New York to Guthrie
ts $180 per 100 pounds while after
May 27 the rate wUl he $187 per 100
pounds 1
Lightning’s Destructive Work
Lightning when it strikes a tree
sometimes converts the-sap into steam
with such enerby that it explodes
scattering the wood in every direction
Cat Fosters Rabbits
At Woqlbrook Sirmouth England
a tame rabbit had six young ones The
mother was killed acldentally The
house cat: has since fostered and
fondled them and Is brnglng them up
ns if they were her own kittens
North America supplies more than
three-fifths of the world’s copper -
AMONG THE NEW BOOKS
A list df really important publica-
tions this spring is not complete with-
out the mention of two of Doubleday
Page's latest offerings “With the
Night Mall” by Kipling and John D
Rokefeller’s “Random Reminiscences
of Men and Events”
Mr Kipling's remarkable tale chron-
icles a trip in the postal packet "162”
on her aeriel run from London one
night to Quebec tbe next morning in
the year 2000 It offers an intensely
dramatic glimpse of the future civiliza-
tion Naturally the story is in a class
distinctively its own and no one could
be better equal to a recital of so odd
and unusual a bit of fiction than Rud-
yard Kipling
Mr Rockefeller’s story is well worth
the reading This great business gen-
ius tells with wonderful conciseness
the very essence of what he has found
to be the making of his success A
close study of this volume which is
replete with Bound business advice
and philosophy will repay every man
who wants to make a financial success
A comparatively recent publication
from L C Page Boston is Robert
Neilson Stephens' “Tales From Bohe-
mia” This comprises two dozen and
more storyettes each one capital rep-
resenting the first literary efforts of
the man who afterwards wrote many
successful books among them: "An
Enemy to the King” and "Philip Win-
wood” The stories are all dramatic
and Intensely interesting and are
bound together in a handsome volume
Splendidly printed and illustrated
Stramoline
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thin people healthy fat and strong
Ask us about it Write or call Kills
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Etzold, E. G. The Temple Tribune. (Temple, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, May 7, 1909, newspaper, May 7, 1909; Temple, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1859937/m1/2/?q=music: accessed June 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.