The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, November 4, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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1
News of the World
Briefly To!d
Most Important Events of the Past Week
Boiled Down for tbe Busy Readers
i r
WASHINGTON
The old United Slates $1 note,
Which disappeared from circulation in
1885, is to be called into service again.
Tlie huge gates for the Panama can-
til, costing $5,500,000, are nearing com-
pletion at Pittsburg.
A new census will be taken at Ta-
cotna, Wash., as a result of the
charges of fraud In the enumeration
there.
The fight for a complete investiga-
tion of the sales and leases of public
lands in the Philippine Islands will
bo resumed early in the next session
of congress.
The interstate commission has is-
sued a notice suspending the advances
fj' rates on general and grain prod-
ucts from producing points in the west
to milling points in Omaha.
Sixteen battleships, comprising the
Atlantic fleet, will assemble in Hamp-
ton Roads about November 1 for a Eu-
ropean cruise. Two English and two
French ports will be visited.
The population of Minneapolis,
Minn., as enumerated in the thir-
teenth census announced Saturday by
the census bureau, is 301,408, an in-
crease of 98,690, or 48.7 per cent wer
1900.
The first mine rescue car to be used
for the instruction of miners to pre-
vent loss of life in mine disasters,
started from Washington Monday
morning. Five other cars for the
same purpose will soon be sent out.
Hearing of oral argument in the two
cases of the Southwestern Shippers'
Traffic association vs. the Santa Fe
and other railroads before the Inter-
state commerce commission will be
bad in Washington on November 5.
DOMESTIC
The Rank of Jefferson, Okla., was
rntered by robbers Thursday and
$3,100 in bills taken.
Explorer Peary's records are being
examined by Prof. Andreas Galle, of
a Berlin institute, who has declared
them worthless.
Census reports show that the state
of Connecticut has a population of
1,141,756, an increase of 908,420 or
22.07 per cent.
Floor plans of different state build-
ings of the Oklahoma State capitol
have been received by the commis-
sioners.
There was a decrease of sixty-seven
wells dug in the Oklahoma oil field in
the month of September.
John D. Rockefeller's home in the
exclusive neighborhood of Cleveland
has been leased for an institute for
the cure of alcoholism.
President Ripley of the Santa Fe
railroad stated at Wichita, Kans.,
Thursday that the road was paying
only three per cent dividends.
All available United States soldiers
were Thursday ordered to southwest-
ern Mindanao, where two bands of
Manobos tribesmen are in revolt.
A move for the formation of a labor
union among teachers in the public
schools is again being agitated in New
York.
One of the greatest strikes ever
made in Colorado is reported from
Diamond Park, on the Upper Elk river,
where a body of ore averaging $150
per ton in sold, silver and copper has
been unearthed.
The second two weeks' payroll of
the mines of the McAlester, Okla.,
district, since the end of the strike
was turned loose Saturday and
amounted to $160,000, exclusive of
\iouse rent and company store bills.
Members of the Phoenix Investment
company of Oklahoma City have been
arrested for using the United States
mails to defraud. They have secured
profits to the amount of $40,000.
The Vitrified Urick and Tile Co., of
Enid, Okla., suffered a $10,000 fire
Thursday from the explosion of oil.
Eighty decisions are ready to be
handed down by the Oklahoma su-
preme court. Among the most impor-
tant is the case of John Hopkins, of
Lawton, charged with murdering his
wife.
The buffet car of the Golden State
limited was raided by Kansas officials
at Topeka Saturday and a uantity of
fancy liquors was seized.
The crew of tne balloon America
II have returned to civilization after
a week spent in the unexplored Can-
adian forest. The men broke all rec-
ords for long flights and distance cov-
ered.
700 Santa Fe freight cars, valued at
half a million dollars, burned at To-
peka, Kans., Saturday.
A cotton gin and $30,000 worth of
cotton was totally destroyed by fire
at Porum, Okla., Saturday nieht.
Broom corn la telling at $114 a ton j
In Woodward, Okla.
Three railroads have been charter-
ed in Oklahoma in the last month.
The combined capital stocks amount
to $300,000.
The election commissioners of
Tennessee have refused to call a bond
election to vote bonds to build a ne-
gro normal.
$4,929,342.68 worth of bonds have
been issued in Oklahoma since March
24. The bonds were for municipal
Improvements.
Late reports from the Oklahoma ;
corporation commission show that
great activity in railroad building will
be shown this fall.
Roy Buchanan was sentenced to life '
imprisonment Saturday at Pawnee, j
Okla., for the murder of J. M. Rob- i
inson last February.
A postal savings bank Is to be es-
tablished in each state and territory
in the union January 1. Guymon will |
get the Oklahoma office.
The St. Paul road's famous silk j
special was wrecked near Portage, |
Wis., Sunday night. There was $500,- |
000 worth of silk aboard the train.
National banks of Oklahoma with
combined capital and surplus of more
than $14,000,000 have resources of ap-
proximately $70,000,000.
Because of tLe shortage of pickers
and the coming on of cold weather, !
it is feared that the entire cotton crop '
of Oklahoma will not be picked this !
season .
In the Kickapoo land fraud hearing, !
which reconvened at Guthrie, Okla.,' I
Monday, the prosecution attempted to
show the defendants had bribed Mexi- |
can officials.
K. Rouke, former engineer on the
Panama canal, says that fortification
of the canal is the only means of sav- J
ing that property to the United States, j
A score of men were injured at
Pittsburg, Pa., Saturday night when
a bleacher stand collapsed while the !
men were witnessing a boxing exhibi- j
tion.
Five laborers were killed and twen- ;
ty-one injured by a runaway car on
the United Railway company's line
near Portland, Ore., Thursday.
Railroad and express companies of
Oklahoma have been granted the right !
to deliver shipments of liquor in the
state pending the hearing in the su-
preme court. The carriers made sup-
ersedeas bond in the sums of from
$10,000 to $25,000.
The federal government will dis-
pose of a million and a half acres of
land belonging to the give civilized
tribes beginning November 21. The
coal and oil lands are not included.
Each purchaser will be limited to 640
acres.
Five billion feet of timber is now
the estimated forest fire loss of this
year on federal reserves and private
holdings in Washington, Oregon and
Idaho. It now appears that the loss
in northern Idaho is greatest of all,
approximating 3,000,000,000 feet.
The metropolitan district ,of New
York City is still in the grip of the
express strike. Nine companies are
now affected; more than five thous-
and men are out and rioting con-
tinues. A force of 9,000 men are held
In reserve by the police force.
The "bath tub" trust, the exposures
of which by the New York American
was followed by a dissolution suit or-
dered by Attorney General Wicker-
sham, has defied the United States
government by secretly advancing itsr
prices throughout the country.
COOKING THE STEAK
A Mtfttocm of vIom ntrwr M u>7
m Into virtu*.
HERE 18 AN EXCELLENT METHOD
OF PREPARATION.
Black Bean Soup.
One pint of black beans soakad
over night In three quart* of water.
In the morning pour off the water
and add fresh three quarts. Boil
slowly four hours, When done there
should be one quart. Add a quart of
beef stock, four whole cloves, four
whole allspice, one stalk celery, one
good sized onion, one small carrot,
one small turnip, all cut fine and fried
In a little butter.
Add one tablespoonful flour, season
with salt and pepper and rub through
a fine sieve.
Serve with slices of lemon and egg
balls.
FOREIGN
General Michael Joseph Maunory
was Saturday appointed military gov-
ernor of Paris to replace General
Jules Dalstein, who retires because of
advanced age.
Five men who put into Acapulco
Saturday in a power boat from San
Francisco were arrested and are be-
ing held, pending an investigation
into their possible connection with
the Los Angeles Times dynamiting.
Seven banks in Shanghai, China, in-
cluding several large ones, have failed
and a financial panic has resulted.
The Duke of Veragua, a descendant
of Christopher Columbus, and former
minister of marine, died Sunlay at
Madrid, Spain. He was born in 1837,
Barrister Artheur Newton filed an
appeal Thursday for Dr. H. H. Crip-
pen, under death sentence for the mur-
der of his wife, Belle Elmore Crippen.
The case will be argued within a fort-
night.
A most interesting discovery is an-
nounced from Jerusalem, where an
entire church has been unearthed on
the summit of Mount Olive. The build-
ing dates from about 320 A. D.
Many American families from Okla-
homa and Kansas, who have located
on small tracts of land near Tampico,
Mexico, are said to be in destitute
circumstances.
Jacob M. Dickinson, American Sec-
retary of War, made a short aero-
plane flight at the Military aerodome
at Mourmelon, France, Thursday. On
reaching the earth again the secre-
tary expressed himself as delighted
with his trln.
Curry 8auce.
One tablespoon of butter, one of
flour, one teaspoon of curry powder,
one large onion, one large cup of
•tock; salt and pepper to taste. Cut
the onion fine, fry brown In the but-
ter and add the flour and curry pow-
der. Stir for one minute; add the
stock and season with the salt and
pepper. Simmer for five minutes,
then strain and serve. This sauce can
be served with a broil or saute of meat
or flsh.
Care of Pillow*.
Many housekeepers who are careful
to cover their mattresses with slips
which can be taken off and washed
from time to time, are not aware that
the same course is equally good with
pillows.
Old sheets or pillow cases can be
used to make these secondary slips,
changing (either washing or renew-
ing) when necessary. Not only does
this preserve the ticking, but the pll-
low cases look whiter, thaaka to the
white linen underneath.
Ifrs. WlMlowi BootMnf Rrrnp.
Ffcr^Vidrru toeitilog, aoft«nt tue gum*. r<*do©««1r
0—i■■ iimi ■ 11■ i ■ nhin mifTini nnlln afculUu
Broiled With Mushrooms It Makes a
Dish That Any One Will Appre-
ciate—Roast Loin of Lamb
With Green Peas.
Delmonlco Steak With Mushrooms.
—Steak la the most easily prepared of
all meats, but It may be utterly spoiled
with bad cooking. Never wash a
steak or season it before it la cooked,
as those two things make it tough
and tasteless. A Delmonlco steak,
which is the first cut before the por-
terhouse, Is a good choice for a little
home of two persons. It should be at
least an Inch thick, and preferably
an Inch and a half, for thickness Is
needed to retain the juices. Scrape it
with a sharp knife if some cleaning
Is necessary, and then lay it on tbo
broiler and prepare the mushrooms.
Peel these, take out the stems and
let them soak In cold salted water for
ten minutes. Then put them In a
porcelain vessel—the little earthen-
ware casseroles are excellent cookers
for these delicate vegetables—put In
a tablespoonful of butter, cover and
let them saute for twenty minutes.
If the butter is likely to cook away
lift the cover of the vessel and put In
a little more. After the mushrooms
have cooked fifteen minutes put In the
steak to broil, turning It quickly so
that both sides may b« seared at
once. This holds In tbe juices, and If
the rest of the cooking Is done more
slowly the steak will be fine. Medium
done, with a layer of pink in the cen-
ter—this Is the way the steak must
look when cooked. Lay It on a hot
dish, salt, pepper and set the dish In
the oven for three minutes for Juices
to draw. Pour the mushrooms around
It and serve at once.
From a pound and a half to two
pounds of steak will be needed by
two persons fond of meat A quar-
ter of a pound of mushrooms will
supply the good taste, but If there
are no other vegetables half a pound
Villi be needed.
Roast Loin of Lamb With Green
Peas.—Have the butcher leave the
kllney and fat on and skewer the
pl'tce daintily, A piece six chops long
will be required, for the bit dwindles
aviay with cooking. Dredge with a
little flour, salt and pepper and start
the roasting with brisk heat, mod-
erating it for the finish.
If canned peas are used open them
np and drain in a collander, flushing
them while there with cold water.
Drain and put In a saucepan with salt,
pepper and a big tablespoonful of but-
ter. Cook covered for five minutes,
and serve them in a trim border
around the lamb on a hot flat platter.
When the pulpit gets Into poetic
clouds It misses the man on the pave-
ment.
ARB Torn CLOTHES FADEDf
Use Red Cross Ball Blue and make them
white again. Large i oz. package, S cents
Same Old PolnL
Jack—I went gunnln* In the coun-
try one day last week.
Tom—Bag anything?
Jack—Nothing but my trousers.
Beautiful Christmas Post Cards Free.
Send 2c stamp for five samples of our
very hext Gold Embossed Christmas Flow-
er and Motto Post Cards; beautiful colors
and loveliest design*. Art Post Card Club,
731 Jackson St., Topeka, Kan.
"Off Day" of Favorite.
Chapley—How did she happen to
refuse you; I thought you were her
favorlteT
Washley—Well, the favorite didn't
win, that's alL
The Next War.
"Was a bomb dropped on the ship7"
"Yes, but it was counterbalanced by
a torpedo which exploded under her
at the same moment"—Judge.
Don't Penecuta
your Bowels
Gil ort TW
miD«c—■ ry» Try
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
Purdy TofcuU®. Afl
geotlr «* th«
cbnuoat* biU, •£
•ooth* thadeiiCAt*
■cmbniia oi
at thabowaL
Cara Co-
•feattta.
H-J„L «w hHi■■!<»■, » ™3E<a» kaow.
Small Pill, SmaO Dose, Small Prioa
Genuine nu«b<u Signatur©
CARTERS
SINGLE
■binder!
MIGHI&CIGAS
Ytu Nf 10o%
for Ci|srf
Kat so Good.
F,T. LEWI3 Peoria. Ill
trin or Ohio crrr o? Toledo, l
Lucas Oountt. f
Frank J Chenet makes oath that be (a •enlor
partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney A Co., doing
business In the City of Toledo. County snd Hta.e
aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every
ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by tbe use of
liall s Catarrh Cur*.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before ma and subscribed In my preseno*
this eth day of December. A. D.. 1884.
I —"— » A. W. QLEABON.
• **AL » Notajit Public.
Hall s Catarrh Cure ti taken Internally and acts
ttrectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces oX ths
tyatem. Send tor testimonials, free.
F J CHENEY A CO- Toledo a
■old br all DrurElsts. 7k*.
Take Hall's Family Fills tor oonstlpsttoa.
Hla Defense.
It was shortly after midnight, and
the colonel had caught Rastua red-
handed.
"Well, Itaatun, you old rascal, you,"
satd he, "I've caught you at last. What
are you doing In my henhouse?"
"Why, Marse Bill," said the old man,
"I—I done heerd such a cacklln' in dls
yere coop, dat I—I thought mebbe de
ole hen done gone lay dn aig, an' I—I
"wanted ter git It to' you' breakfas'
■while It was fresh, sub."—Harper's J
Weekly.
ROOSEVELT'S OWN BOOK
"African Game Trail®**
Wanted 1 by thousands for Christmas and New
Yem a. 1 A man In every place to take it
to the families in bis locality. Offered ! M' "°r>-
p!y nf field and high Commission lake the great
chance and write for prospectus now to CHARLES
SCRIBNER'S SONS, til (R. S.) Fifth Aveuue,
Now York.
JF YOl HAVE~
no appetite, Indigestion, f latulence, Sick
Headache, "all run down" or losing flesh, you
will find
Tilt's Pills
fast what you need. They tone up the weak
stomach and build up the flagging energies.
BILLIARDTABLES
POOL TABLES
UOWK8T PRICES. SASY PAYMENTS.
You cannot aflord to experiment wi<h
Bntried good* sold by commission
agents. Catalogues free.
The Brunswick-Balks-Collender Company
U7-&38 Oslswsrs St. Out.I.KANSAS CITY. HO,
Not Easy.
Pat was a married man—a very
much married man. He had married
no fewer than four times, and all his
wlvee were still In the fore. Accord-
ing to Pat's own account before the
court where he was tried for bigamy
and found guilty, his experiences were
not altogether satisfactory. The
Judge, In passing sentence, expressed
hla wonder that the prisoner could
be such a hardened villain as to de-
lude so many women.
"Yer honor," said Pat, apologetical-
ly, "I was only tryln' to get a good
one, an' it's not alsy!"—Llpplncott's
Magazine.
IONEY.hT
.. - t«ll yon how j and
best m»rket piio«a,
Vrite for refereae** acd
r»«kly price lUt.
II. SABEL & SONS*
LOCISTILL*, IT,
D**l»n la Kurt, Hld«a.
▼eoL Established I860.
THE BEST STOCK
SADDLES™:*
able prices, write for
Jyfl $ Illustrated catalogue.
A. H. HESS & CO.
305 Travis St- Houston, Tea.
your Ideas. 64-paije book and
adTlo«FHBH. Established l88Qs
rtUfaraUAC*. k. Wa*hi.lt«*,U.g,
PATENT
W. N. U, Oklahoma City, No. 45-1910.
NOT A PENNY TO PAY
MUNYON'S
EMINENT DOCTORS AT YOUR SERVICE FREE
We sweep away all doctor's charges. We put the best medical talent
within everybody's reach. We encourage everyone who ails or thinks
he ails to find out exactly what his state of health la. Yon can get our
remedies here, at your drug store, or not at all, as yon prefer; there is
positively no charge for examination. Professor Munyon has prepared
specifics for nearly every disease, which are sent prepaid on receipt of
price, and sold by all druggists.
Send to-day for a copy of our medical examination blank and Guide
to Health, which wo will mail you promptly, and if you will answer all
the questions, returning blank to us, our doctors will carefully diagnose
your caBe and advise you fully, without a Denny charge.
Address Munyon's Doctors, Munyon's laboratories, 63d & Jefferson
Streets, Philadelphia, Pa.
Frosted Currants.
Mix four tablespoons of water with !
the well-beaten whites of two eggs.
Select very fine bunches of currants
and dip them, a bunch at a time, into
the beaten egg; let them drain for a
few minutes, then roll them in finely
powdered sugar. Lay them to dry on
paper and the sugar will crystalize I
round each currant, giving them the
appearance of being frosted. When
served on a glass dish with a border
of fresh green currant leaves, the af-
fect la exceedingly pretty.
]
Cash Prizes
will be paid to winners of this contest
If the dressed hog weighs 300 Iba, what
does each part weigh? $10.00 will be
given for the nearest guess of tbe
weight of each piece; the whole head,
one shoulder, ono whole side with ribs,
4 «. . . , tme ham with hoot $5.00 will bo paid
for the second best gnecs and »j.oo for the third best Thirty-two ii oo crises
for the next thirty-two guessea A valu-
able book on bog diseases will be given
to every one sending in a guess. Get
busy today and win a cash priio. Address
FIGARO CO.
DALLAS TEXAS
Every Man Should Fence His Yard
r\rsr\r\r\r\f\r\/\f\ hjg gardon orchard or stock. It Insures a certain degree of
privacy and keeps out nndaslrablea The best fence to use
for this purpose and the most economical is the famous
Hodge Fenca, a combination of wood snd wire Insist 00
your lumber dealer showing it to 700 or write
THE HODGS FENCE & LUMBER CO, Lut
Ufa Oi,IIk 1A
HODGE
FENCE
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Marker, Jerry R. The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, November 4, 1910, newspaper, November 4, 1910; Orlando, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc305751/m1/2/: accessed May 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.