The Cushing Democrat. (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 30, 1908 Page: 4 of 8
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CUSHING DEMOCRAT
OOBHtNO.
OIL A
NIW HTAT8 NOTii
Tb» I*MI<1 of tefrftU •( lb# a*gr#
•irt« and aormal ttniveraiit si
UmduQ re Olerlrd I'lrcldml I. U
>*•«• «i»<l all mi>nlM>n of ih» iMttll)
villi lb* i*ir»pllMi of M Hill® 14. pro
feasor of agriculture, A A l-aal
lor. last met or in •cuiiHIog. tbi
k««« resigned.
I.a*t »*«*k Mary Parker. lb* nrtb
daughter of Chief Quanab Parker. ol
lb* Comanche In-lun*. *u married
lo Kdward II Clark, of Faxon, a half
blood aon of !»r Clark, who * a* a
aoldler at Port Hill many year* ago,
and married a Comanche aquaw
t'on area* man Carter of Oklahoma
ban Introduced a bill authorising the
government to spend $2."i,000 for a
achool of mines and mining at Wil-
burton. Okla.. whenever the atate of
Oklahoma appropriates a similar sum
for I be »ame purpose.
.1 udRe Thomas Ryan, at the bead of
the Held forces ll Oklahoma for the:
interior department, ban gone to
Washington to connult Secretary Oar
field on Indian matters.
John D. Benedict, supervisor ot
government schools in the five civil-
ised tribes has received a notice
from the commissioner of Indian af-
fairs to furnish at once a comprehen-
sive statement of the national schools
owned by the five nations, where they
are located,1 who owns them, how
much land eucli school has and aay
other Information that he can secure.
Stale Insurance commissioner Mc-
Comb has authorized the operation
of the Union Life & Trust company,
of Muskogee, with a paid up capital
of $1200,000. The Washington Trust
company, of Oklahoma City, has also
been authorized to establish an of-
fice. Its capital is $500,000.
By an almost unanimous vote the
citizens of Erick voted on a $15,000
bond proposition for the erection of
a new eight-room school house—the
vote being 179 for bonds to 4 against.
•Aiv BORN IN Migromc INN.
ft ft* Generation la In IN HfM Ml
ina On Mama.
Nora la the bout* uf Ala great gr«ai-
grandfather aad rurbN la IN «»adle
ibai lulled bla great grvat grandfather
... • u < j. t,«. k a. old » "Utt- > «i. ui
before tha beginning of the MP
Iur>. la ilia patrician beginning of
wee Kd*atU Urlawold McCullougb.
• bo mad* bla appearance on earth
Humid« In the old Urlawold Inn al
Wortblngion tie Is the aon of Kd
ward Milea McCullougb. aa>a tba Co
lumbua Dispatch
In all the romance of old Worthing
Ion tbara la no greater balo than that
which banga ovar the Oriawold Inn II
was built In MOf by Rxra Urlawold.
who came front Connecticut with tha
ploneera who eel tied much of tha
•eatern raaarva and caatral Ohio. The
family waa an old one even for old
ConnectIcul and Ksra Urlawold »aa a
sturdy repreaeutatlve of It. He
hrouiht thla family Into the "great
west" with him aud bla aon, Oeorge
Grlswold. waa reared In the Inn He
was eight years old wheu his father
brought him to Ohio.
George Urlawold. In turn, luherltad
the duty of perpetuating the name,
and when his father died he fell heir
to the Inn property and lived through-
out his life where his father had build-
ed so well. Ills aon waa Worthlngton
Krauklln Oriawold. who. us his father
had done, iuherlted the inn and lived
In It. To him and his good wife waa
born a daughter Harriet, who was
reared In the home of the family, and
who continued to live there when ahe
became Mrs. McCullough.
Now ahe Is the happy mother of a
son and she Is rocking him in the
Oriawold cradle that was brought to
Ohio along with other household pos-
sessions by Kzra Urlswold when he
drove his ox team overland from
Connecticut in 1806. No one knows
bow long the unique heirloom had
been In the Grlswold family before
that time, but it Is supposed that
Kara Grlswold was himself rocked In
it when he was a baby long before
revolutionary times.
When little Edward Grlswold Mc-
Cullough is baptised he will wear a
little white dress that was made for
the baptismal ceremony of his grand-
father, by his great-grandmother—a
dress that has been handed down in
the family with great care and which
will be treasured more dearly than
ever when another epoch has been
'noted in its history.
ON TMC OLAO MIOMWAV.
Governor Haskell has offered a re-
ward of $500 for the arrest and con-
viction of the person or persons who
murdered C. W. Williams and wife
near Binger on April 6. The aged
couple was murdered and the house
burned to hide the crime.
The city council of Durant has ac-
cepted the plans and specifications
for a sewer system that will cost
$20,000. The contract will be award-
ed after due publication of the re-
quired call for bids.
A cow which weighed 1,880 pounds
and cost the butchers $88 has been
slaughtered at Ponca City. It is be-
lieved that she was the largest ani-
mal of the bovine variety in the
state and was so considered by the
Miller brothers, who considered tak-
ing her with their wild west show for
exhibition.
Mayor Stearns, of Shawnee, will
reduce the hours which city prison-
ers are required to work upon the
streets to eight hours.
John Sharp Getting Busy.
"The fact is," said John Sharp Wil-
liams to a gentleman who had twice
ineffectually sought to gain his at-
tention by calling him "senator," "I
haven't got accustomed to the title,
gut I've begun to accustom myself to
the atmosphere of my field of labor
to he. To-day I went over to the sen-
ate chamber, slipped into the cloak-
room on the Democratic side, and
tried to feel at home."
"Did you tell a story?" was asked.
"No, I didn't."
"Well, you can't hope to rank as a
senator until you have a cloakroom
story and it has been printed."
"Well, I did borrow a cigar from a
new senator. Then I sauntered over
to the Republican side as carelessly
aS I could, took a seat alongside a
brand new senator there, almost as
new as I will be, and chatted with him
with as much of an air to the manner
born as my perturbed condition
would permit. From time to time I
■ball repeat the visit, in the hope
tbat I shall be able to fully accustom
myself to the change when it comes."
.-Washington Post.
"Say. boas, you baan'l or dime la
rer clothe* has y»rf
"No, my man. I have oof. Hut bow
lid you gueaa Uf*
Haw I Cured tweeny and Fistula.
"1 want to tell you bow I aaved one
if our horaea tbat had a fistula We
sad the horae doctor out and be aald
t was ao bad that be did not think he
*>uld cure It. and did not come again.
Then we tried Sloan's Liniment and
t cured It up nicely.
"One day last aprlng I was plowing
.'or a neighbor who had a horae with
tweeny, and I told him about Sloan's
Liniment and he had me get a bottle
for him. and It cured his horse all
i-lght, and he goes off now like a colt.
"We had a horse that had sweeny
awfully bad and we thought it was
never going to be any good, but we
used Sloan's Liniment and It cured It
up nicely. I told another neighbor
tbout It and he said it was the beat
Liniment he ever used.
"We are using Sloan's Sure Colic
Cure and we think it is all right."
A. D. Bruce, Aurelia, la.
Money to Burn.
The big touring car had juat
whizzed by with a roar like a gigantic
rocket, and Pat and Mike turned to
watch it disappear in a cloud of dust.
"Thlm chug wagons mufat cost a
hape av cash," said Mike. "The rich
Is fairly burnln' money."
"An", be the smell av it," sniffed
Pat, "it must be that tainted money
we do be hearin' so much about."
BABY'S ITCHING HUMOR.
WOMKirt KIONBVB.
AN IN Source of Meat •« W
SieAneea.
Mr* Rebecca Mark. I7M ft Rich
Blreef. Columbus. Ohio, wrttee "I be
Rave I would edit be
a victim at k!dae>
trouble* but for
lJuaa's Kdlney Pllla.
for when I started
ualng them I waa la
coaatant pain wltb
my back, and no
other remedy bad
been of any use. Tba kidney aecre
tlona were Irregular, and 1 waa nerv-
oua and lacked energy. But (loan's
Kidney Pills gave me prompt relief
and continued uae cured me ."
Sold by all dealers. 60 centa a bog.
FtosterMllburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y.
The Oltfeet Professions.
Aa old friend of the family had
dropped In to see a young lawyer
whoae rather was still paying hla of-
fice rent. #
"So you are now practising law," the
old frleud aald. genially.
"No. air," aald the candid youth. MI
appear to he, but I am really practis-
ing economy."—Youtb'a Companion.
HOW TO TEST LINSEED OIL
There is nothing that will make
paint go wrong on the houae more
quickly than poor oil. it is as bad in
its way a8 adulterations in the white
lead. Petroleum oil cheapeners may
be detected by placing a drop of the oil
on a black painted surface. If one sees
the characteristic iridescence or play
of colors which kerosene exhibits, it
is evidence of adulteration.- Corn and
flsh oil can be detected by the smell.
Adulteration In white lead can best
be discovered by the use of a blow-
pipe, which National Lead Company
will aend with instructions free to
anyone interested in paint. Address,
National Lead Company, Woodbridge
Building, New York.
When a man's dog turns against him
it is time for his wife to pack her
trunk and go home to mamma.
Four years in- the penitentiary
with possibly a year off for good be-
havior, is the sentence given Click
Lumpkins, at Perry, convicted there
for the killing of Ed Fltxpatrlck.
Judge Boles, In sentencing the boy,
aald tbat if there waa any way to
Fad for Sheffield Plate.
Many women are collecting Sheffield
plate, which ia silver on copper, and as
none has been manufactured for more
tban half a century it Is worth more
than solid silver. The piecea are very
feautifully decorated, and unlike old
china It la really worth colle ting, aa
Nothing Would Help Him—Mother Al-
most in Despair—Owes Quick
Cure to Cuticura.
'Several months ago, my little boy
began to break out with itching sores.
I doctored him, but as soon as I got
them healed up in one place they
would break out in another. I was
almost in despair. I could not get
anything that would help him. Then
I began to use Cuticura Soap and Cuti-
cura Ointment, and after using them
three times, the sores commenced to
heal. He is now well, and nbt a scar
is left on his body. They have never
returned nor left him with bad blood,
as one would think. Cuticura Reme-
dies are the best I have ever tried,
and I shall highly recommend them to
any one who is suffering likewise.
Mrs. William Geeding, 102 Washing-
ton St., Attica, Ind., July 22, 1907."
are soon
Enjoyment of It.
"A tool and his money
parted, my son."
"Yes, but parting is such sweet sor-
row, pa."
"We Have Many Similar."
The following Is an extract from a
letter received from Mr. H. H. Meyers
of Stutgart, Ark.: 'You would greatly
oblige me if you would Introduce
Hunt's Lightning Oil at Milledgeville,
111., as I have many friends and rela-
tives there, in whom 1 am much con-
cerned, and I understand the Oil Is not:
kept there. I can recommend it as
the best medicine I ever had in my !
house. It cured me of a bad case of
the Bloody Flux in less than one-half !
hour, and It cured my grand-daughter
of a bad case of Cholera Morbus In a
very abort time."
THE DUTCH
BOY PAINTER
STANDS FOR
PAINT QUALITY
IT IS POUND ONLY ON
PURE WHITE LEAD
MADE BY
TMC
OLD DUTCH '
PROCESS
FREE HOTHHbYMH
Our gokl mine shows free gold In the rock at 10.80.
100 and 300-foot depths. Tests made show values of
•mo to MK-SO gold per ton of ore. Write for free
specimens and particulars. B. X. DAWSON.
T07 Fey Building, Loi Angeles, Csl.
PILES
"ANAKllll"
Tribaae Bids.. Raw Tan.
The road leading to a woman'a heart
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The Cushing Democrat. (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 30, 1908, newspaper, April 30, 1908; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc284087/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.