The Cushing Herald. (Cushing, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 4, 1902 Page: 2 of 8
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CUSHING,
OKLA.
OKUWtU AW IWDIAST VIIUTCH
Wlmt eutting to laiakid in Okla-
The Onm Mata delegation to the
Bold convection.
Tho Hobart Ttlo aad Brick oompany
ku Incorporated.
A nnraery company has been char-
land to do buelacea at Hobart
Governor Ferguaon deelaree his In-
tra tion to prevent prise fights ia the
territory.
Judge Gillette opened oonrt at Law
ton on Jnne 17, with a heavy docket to
dispose o£
The achate haspassed the appropria-
tion for the tfUs* of Hobart, Lawton
and Anadarko.
The Payee county delegation to the
congressional coo Ten tion took along an
agricultural exhibit
The Bnid oonrention to name a suc-
cessor to Delegate Flynn gathered early
and there was a large attendance.
The seoretary of the Interior has
passed favorably upon the free homes
bill for settlers In the new counties.
Blanche Johnson was discharged
from the Book Island hotel at Bl Reno,
and because of that she killed herself.
The sanitary eommission is station
Ing inspectors at convenient points to
lodk after cattle which are being
Shipped.
' Jake Admire laid the early gathering
of the Said convention was like unto
the Republican state convention at
Wlohlta.
The Comanche oounty commissioners
have commeaoed work for plane and
eontraet for a 940,000 oonrt houee at
Lawton.
The body of B. W. Johnson, who
wss killed at Oklahoma City, was taken
by rough riders, his companions, to
Ripley lor burial,
The potato crop about Shawnee turns
out 1SS bushels to the acre and eells
from 40 to 09 cento a bushel. One
grower sold ti,400 worth from seven
aores.
f B. B. Brown, oi Oklahoma City, was
discharged as the reeult of the prelim-
inary hearing upon the charge of com-
plicity in the killing of Johnson, the
rough rider.
Some young men of Marvin were
playing with a revolver. One was
twirling it, supposing It was not load-
ed It went oft and killed OLtis Hemes,
aged 18 years.
John Caepereob was killed at Hen-
nesssy by Charlee Campbell who was
drunk. Campbell said he could shoot
QespersOn'e hat off his head, and ths
bullet pasosd, through the man's hat and
head too.
iContraots are olosed between the two
branohee of the Af. B. ohuroh for the
aonsM0M|iiggf the Bpworth university
at The ooet will reaoh
•SS0,00a ww|pi city furnishes the site
*M#10,ttfvlrnash.
Redell, of the bridge gang at
111, went on a visit to hla fam-
| Bloomington, II)., and reached
tot as the tornado had passed.
The (amity home had been dsstroyod
his father had baea killed and a sister
la the name of the new
I by the Roek Island
i aad Addington whleh
Hoe of the main line of
had the aaw branch
TRBEfc' Aaa*
j§ tat*l*«a will
W' ■.
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Hah a court at Bristow, I. T.
The senate haa ratified the agreed
amat with the Chootawa aad Chicka-
saw*.
Samuel Love ie the newly appotated
poatmaater at Aatiooh, Cbtckaaaw na-
tion.
StUlwell Rusaell, a Dallas, Texas,
lawyer, haa reeently looated at Ard-
more.
Tralne are aow running Into Chicka-
sha over the Oklahossa City A Western
railroad.
Harry, son of T. M. South, of Wynne-
wood, was throwa from hla horse aad
seriously hurt.
The senate'has passed the bill pro-
viding penalty for killing game in In
dian Territory.
Lyman MeHardy, alleged murderer
of dty Marshal Hyers, of Davis, died
ia the Lawtoa jail.
Mr. Curtis, of the Iadiaa oommitts*
has reported favoradly a bill for allot*
mentof thelands of the Cherokee In-
Articlea of Incorporation have been
died for the Fort Smith and Western
Town oompaay and for a bank at We
leetka, I. T. —,
Six hundred handa will be neede^ U
pick aad load the 350 car loade of cj£>-
teloupee to be shipped from Tulsa,.bf-
ginning about July S.
The president haa nominated. Wm.
H. Darrough U. 8. marshal of thf
northern district of Indian Territory,
and Wm. M. Mellette U. a attorney
for the Western district
The Katy has abandoned its Wybark
extension for the preeeht This waa
made necessary because the farmers
would not sell thslr growing cotton
and oorn upon the proposed right of
way.
R. Curphy, of Scranton, Iota, was
at Enid seeking Investments, being a
wealthy farmer. He waa on the atveef
with aome friends When he suddenly
lurched forward and struck Ids head
receiving serious injuries.
The direotore of the Woodward and
Quanah railroad have decided to go
aheadprith the .surveying of the routs
from Woodward to Carmel. The ob-
jective point of the road la to meet tbe
Texae Central at Quanah.
There were six candldatee for nomi-
nation to congress at Enid: McNeal,
MoGuire, Robberte, Morgan, Eihbry
and Goodrich. They held a. eauoua
over organlaatlon and agreed upon Col.
0. T. Llnooln, of El Reno, for tempo-
rary chairman.
The lateat from Washington aays
that indications point to the selection
of William Mellette of Vlaita for the
appoiatment of United Statee attorney
for the Northern district of Indian
Territory and the nomination of Wil-
liam Darrough for marshal of the same
district is virtually aaaured.
The earoUmeat of the Cherokee full-
bloods 1s practically oompleted. All of
the carolling parties were oalled to
meet at Muskogee oa June 80 and are
to be disbanded. There are aow less
thaa 900 on the IMO roll of Cherokees
unaccounted foe, The total rolla show
S,M0 Cherokees. All these will get
ailotmeata aad tribal annuities,
Hons, J. George Wright, Indian
agent, and Haary B. Asp, general so-
licitor for the A. T. dt 8. F. railway
oompany for Indtah Territory and Ok*!
lahoma ware at Purcell adjusting right*
of* way aad the tovnsits limits. The
railway right-of-way Ilea along the
beaks of the South Canadian riw,
which la the boundary line between la*
dlaa Territory aad Oklahoma, aad
throdgk.a taleuaderataadlag the right
of-way was left out of the «My limits
eattola taotheaa dafteylathe
Klnf Edward VI) Still In an Alarm-
inf Condition*
FIRST WORD WAS "GEORGE."
'•' ' "■ ' ■ ■
Londoa, Jane—ladlserlbable eoa-
sternatlon prevails throughout the
oountry aad this consternation Is re-
fleeted la the eamgrarns reoeived from
all oentera. Should any complications
ooeur, such as aeptlo peritonitis or
blood poisoning, It le feared his majee*
ty's present physical oondltlon would
prove unequal to the etrain involved.
There Ie ooueequcutly intense anxiety
as to the outcome. The king's doctor*
believe that his majesty would 'have
been dead before now except for the
operation.
Hie condition beoame so alarming
that at one time It was feared death
might ensue before the surgeon's knife
could afford htm relief. Ia tense swell-
Ing of the extremtttee, accompanied
by alarming symptoms of mortification,
constituted the emergency whifch de
mended ia Immediate operslt^. To
the leet the king tiled to' avoid this,
and he wee willing to be ferried to
the abbey for jthe ooconation ceremony
in order that it ehould; occur as ar-
ranged. The influence of Queen Al-
exandria was enlisted, however,.and at
an early hour the royal patient wee
prepared for the operation, whleh,
even in thei skillful hande of England's
beet surgeon e, waa fraught with grave
■ Hla majesty waa moved from his
couch to the operating table aad the
aneathctio administered. Sir Frederick
Treves made the incision near the pa-
tient's groin aad carried It upward
with an outward slant for nearly four
Inchest The obstruction waa removed
aad atablng wee plaoed in the affeeted
Intestine.
King Edward's first words when he
returned to ooneoloueness were to ask
for "George,!'and the Prfnoeof Wales,
who was waiting In the next room,
wee immediately admitted to hie
father'e presonoe.
, ; i
VesfMir Hosm for. the PrcslcUat.
Washington, June 88.—Until the
new olflee building for the presidents
completed the headquartere of the Uni-
ted States will be located in a rented
building. The building was selected
by Secretary Corteiyou, who has closed
all arrangements for, it The building
oon tains 90 rooms and when the presi-
dent is In Washington he will live
there, eating, sleeping and entertain-
ing friends.
During the president's absence from
Waehiugton, the White Houee furnl*
ture neoeeeary for hie official and per-
sonal aooommodatlon and for that of
hie offloe force has been removed to
the temporary eeat of gbvernment and
much of It le in plaoo for the president
to go on with business.
Pasama fteete Wins. „
Washington, June 88.—The oonfereee
on the isthmian oanal reached a com-
plete and unaalmoua agreement la
•favor of aooeptlag the estate amend-
meat which oontemplatss the building
of the Panama oaaal If the president
can seoure a clear title to that route,
Both houaaa later agreed to theriport
.of the eontarenee oommlttec, thus
passing the hill up to the |gealw* for
hie approval
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waa being Mid tfi a ohareh at frlaert,
la tfcl proylnee of Ordoae, the building
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Rendall, William J. The Cushing Herald. (Cushing, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 4, 1902, newspaper, July 4, 1902; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc270085/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.