The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1910 Page: 2 of 10
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CHAS. E. HILL & SON'S, Ed. & Prop.
GRANITE.
, . The transfer of convicts between
Granite tnteronsc the ages of 16 and 25 from the McAl-
I ester penitentiary to the Granite r®-
formatory continues. The board of
prison control has now authorised the
OKLAHOMA | removal of another hundred, making
200 in all at Granite.
The transport Buford sailed from
Seattle for Alaska, with 800 officers
and men of the Sixteenth infantry.
The regiment will be stationed at
points in Alaska. The Buford will
bring from Alaska the Twerty second
infantry, which will be sent to San
Antonio, Tex.
Protection for employes from op-
pression Dy loan sharks and collection
agencies in Kansas has Jeen guaran-
teed by the state supreme court,
which has declared the garnishment
law constitutional.
A bill has been introduced in the
Louisiana state legislature by Rep-
lesentative Thomas C. Anderson of
New Orleans to legalize twenty-five
round boxing matches within the city
of New Orleans.
DICKINSON
WORLD TRIP
J
News of the World
Briefly Told
^
Moil Important Events of the P«»t Week
Boiled Down for the Buiy Readers
n r
WASHINGTON.
In accordance with recommenda- l
tions of Capt. Stone on bids opened
earlier in the month involving an ag- |
j;regate investment of $117,748, it is
announced tnat the government has i
awarded additional contracts for the
new post at Fort Sill.
Theodore Roosevelt called on Presi-
dent Taft at Beverly, Mass., Thursday j
for the first time in sixteen months. |
They spent two and a half hours to-
gether walking the veranda of the
Taft summer home, closing the meet-
ing with a tea served on the veranda.
In the case involving a reduction |
of class freight rates from the terri-
tory east of the Mississippi river to
Phoenix, Arizona, the interstate com-
merce commission held that the pres-
ent rates were unjust and unreason-
able. and ordered reductions of ap-
proximately thirty per cent of the
present rates.
STATE NEWS
NEW GAS WELLS AT MUSKOGEE
Two Wells Flowing 10,000.000 Cubic
Feet Per Day Brought In
Muskogee, Okla.—Within the last
few days two big gas wells, each
flowing 10,000,000'cubic feet of gas a
day, have been brought in within
three miles of Muskogee. The gas
from these two wells, added to other
wells that had been brought in before,
establishes a supply of natural gas
far in excess of the needs of the city.
This gas is being turned into the
killed, and robbed Thomas A. Land-
regan, a rich shoe manufacturer of
DOMESTIC
The Americans interested in the
long and bitter fight waged by rival
interests and German newspapers
against the Deutsche Vacuum Oil com-
pany, one of the branches of the
Standard Oil company, have just
scored a big victory, the public prose-
cutor, after a thorough investigation,
having decided that no necessity ex-
ists for action by his office against the
concern. An important part of the in-
vestigation was in connection with
the work of E. L. Quarles, American
manager of the German company's
sales department, and the prosecutor
declares no evidence of anything war-
ranting prosecution was found against
Mr. Quarles. The costs of the entire
inquiry will be borne by the state and
the result constitutes a notable tri-
umph for American interests in Ger-
many.
John W. Daniels, senior senator
from Virginia, died at the Lynchburg
sanitarium Wednesday night. His
death was due to a recurrence of par-
alysis.
With less than a minute to snare,
Arthur RoBe was saved from the elec-
tric chair at Trenton, N. J., by a stay
signed by Judge Minturn oil a mov-
ing train and thrown from the win-
dow to the condemned man's lawyer.
An injunction granted by District
Judge Cole on petition of Ed Sitteil, a
large property owner in a paving dis-
trict in the second ward at McAlester,
ties up a $200,000 contract for asphalt
pavement. The plaintiff claimed the
assessments meant confiscation of his
property.
The building permits of Oklahoma
City for the month of June show an
investment of $956,933, and 153 per-
mits, 116 of which were for residences
the remainder for business houses.
Jn comparison with last month there
is a marked increase, the total at that,
time being 159 permits and $315,909.
Edward S. Holmes, Jr., a former
associate statistician in the depart-
ment of agriculture, was indicted for
misconduct in conection with tre
"cotton statics leak" and pleaded s,ull-
ty. He was fined $5,000. which be
paid.
John Hart was shot and killed at j
Scipio, Okla,, and P. R. Williams, a !
merchant of that place, surrendered to J
the sheriff, is in Jail awnltirig prelim- j
lnary hearing.
' The city Council of Milwaukee has ,
tarried out the socialist policy of |
suppressing the disorderly saloons in
the city by denying licenses to 104 !
which had not been conducted prop- j
erly, and this includes two burlesque j
theaters.
Glenn H. Curtiss made several
flights in a biplane over Lake Keuka
and dropped 20 dummy bombs at
marks, scoring 18 hits. The flights
were made under the observation of
Admiral Kimball of the navy depart-
ment, the object being to demonstrate i
the practicability of the flying machine
in warfare. The admiral seemed great-
ly pleased with the results.
Increased passenger fares ranging j
from a minimum rate of one-fourth of j
a cent to one-half a cent per mile have
been put into effect on all of the j
divisions of the Boston and Maine j
railroads.
Joseph Thomas, 83 years old, an
inventor who. among otner unrigs, is
credited with originating the hoop-
skirt, which was popular from 1850
to 1870, is dying at his home in Ho-
bokon of disabilities incident to old
age.
Figures given out2 by the Berry
<;rowers' association at Springfield.
Mo., show that over 300 carloads of
berries were shipped this year from
the Ozark fields, bringing the grow
ers $350,000, or an average of $2.30 a
crate.
The record for the United States
navy recruitng station in Oklahoma
City for the first six nionths of 1910
Just closed is 324 men examined, 162
accepted and 105 enlisted.
Six deaths from heat occurred at
Philadelphia Thursday. Five were
children and the other an *jj«d worn-
pipes of the Caney River Gas com-
Twenty-five persons were injured, j pany, which has been supplying Mus-
two probably fatally, near Percy, la., I kogee and other large cities of the
in a passenger derailment and rear- state with gas piped from the Ra-
end collision on the Wabash. The I mona field in the Cherokee nation,
wreck was caused by a waterspout I There is plenty of evidence of the
which had undermined a portion of | efforts of one or two gas companies
the track. to get control of all the gas produc-
Three Russian bandits, after a few j tion in the state. Every time a big
weeks' planning, held up, shot and | well of this kind 's brought In, its
production is immediately purchased.
Small wells on leases owned by small
Lynn, Mass., and his guard, Police- j operators are ignored, as they could
not be of commercial importance
standing alone. The principal diffi-
culty the gas companies have is in
keeping up with the gas production
brought in in wild-cat fields. In many
cases, however, they simply make
deals with the operating oil compan-
ies to buy all their gas production
wherever found. This can usually be
done for little money, as few of the
oil companies care to handle the gas,
and a gas well to them is of little
more consequence than a dry hole.
man James H. Carroll, in the heart
of the Lynn business district Satur-
day.
The Louisiana senate has gone on
record as not only opposed to woman
suffrage, but refused to allow wom-
en to act as members of the board of
an educational or charitable nature,
even though they be elected or ap-
pointed to such boards.
Robert Wolfers is dead and his
father, E. C. Wolfers. a prcmineut
banker and merchant of Hot'.kirtS,
Mo., is in a critical condition as the
result of an accident near Des Moines,
la., when their automobile exoladed.
In order that Lewis W. Mulvehall
might die a free man, the board of
managers of the Hutchinson reform-
atory held a special meeting and par-
doned him. At the time he lay dying
in the Stewart hospital, as the result
of complications following an opera-
tion some months ago for appendic'tis.
WILL FOLLOW 1907-08 LAW
Names on State Ballots to Be Ar-
ranged Alphabetically
Oklahoma City—Names of state
candidates will be placed upon the
primary ballot alphabetically and
those of the county according to the
time of filing.
The election will be governed by
the 1907-08 election law, which leaves
the matter of arranging the names
upon the ballot to the discretion of
the election boards. The state elec-
tion board has placed the matter of
.arranging the names of county candi-
dates upon the ballot In the hands of
the county election boards.
Secretary vVill Linn of the state
election board said that he intended
to arrange the names alphabetically
upon the state and district ballots. He
saia he was going to follow the 1907-
08 election law. He gave no reason
for arranging the names alphabeti-
cally other than it would probably
be more convenient.
Secretary Levy of the county elec-
tion board says he does not believe it
fair to arrange the names alphabeti-
cally, but that they should be ar-
ranged according to the time of fil-
ing. By placing the names of those
who file first upon the ballot,"it tends
to encourage early filing, thereby as-
sisting materially the work of the
election boards.
Secretary of War Starts on Journey ,
Which Recalls Taft's "Cupid
voyage."
Washington.—Secretary of War
Dickinson is off on a trip that will I
take him around the world. Several
years ago William H. Taft, while the
head of the war department, made
such a voyage ami it came to be
known as the "Cupid voyage." At
least two weddings resulted from that
long jaunt, that of Miss Alice Roose-
velt and Representative Nicholas
Longworth being among them. In
this trip of Secretary Dickinson's.
I however, the party consists mostly of
married folk.
The objectlvs point of Secretary
Dickinson's- t'ip is the Philippine
islands, whero he will spend five
I weeks familiarizing himself with con-
ditions there.
On the steamer Siberia, on which
he sailed from San Francisco for the
Philippines via Honolulu and Japan.
1 the secr» tary was accompanied by
Carters
AWARDS ADDITIONAL CONTRACT
Government to Spend Large Sum in
Improvements at Fort Sill
Fort Sill, Okla.—Advices from the
department in the office of Capt. Da-
vid L. Stone, construction quarter-
master, announce that the government
has awarded additional contracts for
the new post at Sill in accordance
with recommendations of Capt. Stone
on bids opened earlier in the month
The republican territorial conven- j involving an aggregate investment of
tlon, in session at Juneau, Alaska. $117,748. The contracts include two
adopted a plank for its platform fa- ! fjeid officers' quarters, one double of-
voring home rule when the proper ficerg- quarters, and one four-set of-
time came. Resolutions were adopted fjoers' quarters at a cost of $62,000;
lauding the administration of Presi-
dent Taft and of Governor Clark.
With 6,000 already stricken and 40
per cent of the cases proving fatal.
wiring for the building, $1,550, and
plumbing, $5,948; water reservoir,
$26,600; sewerage purification plant,
$12,600; and a steel bridge across
the scourge is sweeping the land like Cache creek to cost $8,650.
wild fire as southern Russia is held 1 Original contracts for new buildings
in the grip of a cholera plague. j aggregated $750,000, including fifty-
Four bodies were recovered from four buildings. Eight new buildings
the Licking river in Kentucky follow- at a cost of $75,000 have been added
ing a cloudburst along the deadwaters and additional public improvernen
of the stream. It is reported that contracts have been awarded until the
many lives have been lost, and twen- i aggregate^ expenditure involved now
ty-six houses washed away.
The battleship Delaware was struck
by lightning in a storm at Norfolk.
Va., which will necessitate extensive
repairs. By a miracle the powder
magazine was not exploded. The
wireless telegraph mast was demol-
ished, and eight men shocked.
Bowling Green, Ky., gave a ma-
reaches $1,025,000.
KREBS COUNCIL
FIXES WAGES
All City Laborers to Receive $2.00 for
Eight-Hour Day
Guthrie, Okla.—State Labor Com-
missioner Charles Daugherty has been
furnished a copy of a new city ordi-
nance adopted by the city council of
Krebs which is unique in that it fixes
Constipation
Vanishes Foreve?
Prompt Relief--Permanent Cole
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS nc!
(ail. Purely veget-
able—oct surely
but gendy on
the liver.
Stop after.
din net
dislresr
cureindi-' - .
ration— improve th« complexion — bnahtas
ETeyes. Sauil Pill, Sawll Doso, Small Prise
GENUINE nut bear signature :
Complexion Soap
If yt /u want a soap that
cures pimples, chaps
chilblains, sunburn, ec-
zema and all cutaneou*
affections, use
Freckeleater
Soap
It is the SPECIAL soap
for the PARTICULAR
person. Price 25 cents.
All Dealers
Baker-Wheeler Mfg. Co., Dallas, Tex.
Try Gillette Shaving
NO STROPPING NO HONING
WORLD OVER
OLD SORES CURED
Allen stU-ertn..Halvponre»C hrmilrl lrer». nom
I U'„r*,S<T,if ulnua t lrera.yarl*'o*e t'lc-er*,! ii-
ilolent l'lror»,M«r<-url»l I Iryra.W hlt«iSwell-
ing Milk I.elc,FeverKorea,»ll•!<••»»•. ro«lll»-lj
h!*™. i,I.I'Al.l.KN.iH-ptA^.rtt.Paul.MtQn.
OIL CASE NEAR AN END
Stated That Attorney General Has
Decided to Compromise Matter
Guthrie, Okla—It is unofficially
stated that Attorney General West
has practically decided to offer the
Waters-Pierce Oil company certain
terms when the case Is taken up
again at Enid, which if agreed to,
he will dismiss the suit. The pro-
posed conditions are substantially as
follows:
That the Waters-Pierce company
be penalized for violations of terri-
torial law in the amount to be agreed
upon; discrimination in price agains'.
consumers to be expressly prohibited,
but nothing in this provision to be
construed as preventing the com-
pany from arranging just and reason-
able sliding scale of prices based up-
on the quantity consumed; the com-
pany to be restrained from entering
into or creating any trust relations
with any competing corporation; thac
a maximum price which the defend-
ant company may exact for oil or oil
products to be fixed from the time
of the settlement of this suit until
such time as the corporation commis-
sion can determine whether or not i*
has a constitutional right to fi ■:
prices.
Secretary Dickinson.
Mrs. Dickinson, his son, J. M. Dick-
inson. Jr., Gen. Clarence R. Edwards.
Mrs. Edwards and daughter, Miss Bes-
sie Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. Larz An-
derson, Lincoln R. Clark, confidential
clerk, and George I.ong, a messenger.
The secretary inspects Pearl Har-
bor and the fortifications at Honolulu
and is due to arrive at Yokohama
July 15. and will be in Japan until
July 20, going overland to Nagasaki,
where they will sail for Manila.
The party is scheduled to leave Ma-
nila on September C, returning via
Hongkong, Peking and the Trans-
Siberian railroad to Moscow, thence
to Warsaw and through to France,
taking the steamer at Cherbourg
about October 8 or 10. They will ar-
rive In New York about October 15.
Jority of 87 in favor of a return to ; m|nlmum wages which shall be
licensed saloons. Three years ago the tQ ,aborerB employed by the city,
city went dry by 228 votes. " u provWe, that eight hours shall
! constitute a day's work and that per-
FOREIGN j Bong empi0yed by the city of Krebs
Despite the fact that his salary as shall not receive less than $2 per day
King of Prussia was recently increaa- j for their services. All mechanics,
ed from $3,000,000 to $5,080,000 a year, ! tradesmen and other skilled laborers
Emperor Wilhelm is still relatively
the poorest monarch in Europe.
Excitement over the attempted
murder of Congressman Antonio San
Miguel in the lobby of congress
A. & M. TEACHERS ARE CHOSEN
Committee Finds Funds Left and
School in Good Shape
Stillwater. Okla—Dr. R. K. Francis
of the University of Missouri was
elected by the college committee of
the state board of agriculture as head
of the chemistry department of the
state agricultural and mechanical col-
lege. Prof. H. D. Strothers of the New
England Conservatory of Music in
Boston was elected to the head of
the violin department and band Iead-
FL0WERS CN LAMP POSTS
Kansas City Bank follows a European
Custom of Decoration
of Streets.
Kansas City, Mo.—Evaxv one who
passes the corner of Ninth and Walnut
notices the flowers and vines in the
urns on the ornamental lamp posts in
front of the Fidelity Trust bulling.
There are eight of the poles, four ot
the Walnut street side of the building
and four on the Ninth street side. The
urns are just underneath the lamps.
I Blooming geraniums, lantana, archa-
' nia and hibiscus fill the urns, and a
A rigid quarantine has been estab-
lished on all ports on account of chol-
era in South Russia. The German
government is also establishing quar-
antine stations at all frontier towns
to prevent the spread of the disease.
Walter Brookins, in a Wright ma-
chine, accompanied by Bertrand De
Lesseps, brother of the count, made a
flight lasting 23 1-2 minutes and rose
to a height of 1,140 feet at the avia-
tion meeting at Montreal, Canada. Fri-
day.
All Canada Friday joined in the
celebration of Dominion Day, the an-
niversary of the coming into effect
of the act of confederation in 1867.
Thirteen hundred natives were re-
ported killed In an engagement with
Citizens Want Shipping Station
Guthrie, Okla.—A complaint was re-
ceived Thursday by the corporation
commission from citizens of Comanche
county residing between Lawton and
Apache, asking that the Rock Island
be required to establish a shipping sta-
tion between those two points in the
vicinity of mile post No. 486.
Murderer Gets Life Sentence
Tulsa. Okla.—Will Bradley, charg
The committee found a considera-
ble surplus in the fund appropriated
provi
ment walks on the campus and the
erection of a $1,250 grand stand on
the athletic campus.
shall be paid the same wages as iB
usually paid for such labor in that
vicinity and the wage scales of labor
unions shall constitute prima facie
. ... v..~ — -—B evidence of what is the prevailing
Havana continues, and the bitterest ! wages in each of the crafts so organ-j for the last term of the school and
feeling Is manifested among the parti- j tzed. All contractors and subcon- made provision for the laying of ce-
sans of the men involved. Further ! tractors doing work for the city shall
developments In the feud are imml ! be governed by th/e terms of the ordl-
nent. j nance.
All Germany is in mourning over! —7 '
the total destruction of th* nnliongi Pioneer Takes Over Phone Company
latest and possibly on., of the great- j Altus, Okla.-The Pioneer Telephone
est prides, the palatial passenger air- company of Oklahoma City has
ship Deutschland, the highest devel- ! over the lines formerly operated y
oped of all Count Zeppelin's models. I the Leger and Chickasha Telephone
company and the Mangum and Quan-
r.ah Telephone company, which were
purchased for a lump sum of $60,000.
The property includes five exchanges
and 17 toll lines. It Is understood
many Improvements are to be made by
the Pioneer company.
FROM THE MOUTHS OF BABES
Johnny Probably Told the Truth, but
at a Dreadfully Inopportune
Time.
A teacher in one of the lower grade
schools was entertaining two visitors,
to the classroom. Several days pre-
viously the teacher had furnished
amusement and at the same time In-
creased the children's store of knowl-
edge by a series of questions of the-
following nature;
"What do we sit on that rhymes
■with hair?"
Some child would answer: "Chair."'
Today the visitors would be pleased;
to observe how readily the pupils-
could answer.
"What do I wear on my head that
rhymes with,cat?" asked the Instruct-
ress.
1'p went the hand of a boy with redi
hair.
"Well, Johnny," said she, "you may
1 tell us."
| Johnny arose and appeared frlght-
; ened.
"It's a rat," he blurted.
| And then the tableau.
Faster.
| Teacher—Children, nature Is supe-
rior to man in everything. For in-
! stance, there is- nothing that travels
1 so fast as the unseen wind.
I Willie—Huh! You ought to hear
! what my pa says about a sight draft!
A Serious Blunder.
"Yes," said the drug clerk, "I am.
called up occasionally to compound
prescriptions at night."
j "Isn't a man apt to make mistakes-
working in semi-darkness?"
j "You bet he is. I took a plugged"
quarter once."
6*.
Railroads Appeal Suits
Guthrie, Okla.—Two railroad dam-
age suits, both lost by the railroads, j
have been appealed to the supreme .
court. One is for a judgment of $1,-
199.99, given G. A. Nichols, an Okla- |
homa City dentist, for injuries suf-
fered on the Frisco wreck near Ce-
ment; the other a judgment of $1,500,
given C. H. Featherstone of Musko-
gee against the Midland Valley on a
contract for quarry stone.
French troops, June 23, in the Tadla I ed wllh Bhootlng Cora Roach here in
district. The soidiers were on their
1900,
was Tuesday sentenced to life
Former Marshal Killed at Tahlequah
Tahlequah, Okla.—The first killing
to mar the payment of the Cherokee
Indians here, occurred Thursday
morning when C. L. Pratt, cashier of
the Bank of Kansas, at Kansas, Okla.,
shot and fatally wounded Robert Ter-
ry, a former United StateB deputy
marshal.
There's a Reason.
"Paul. If I were to die, Bhould youi
marry Widow Muller?"
[ "Good heavens, no!"
I "Why not? Every one says how
like me she is."
| "Yes, that's just the reason."
way to suppress a reign of outlawry. lmpr|Bonment In the penitentiary by
The French losses are said to have j the ^jBtrlct court after the jury had
been light. Details of the fight are j returne(i a verdict of guilty of murder
meager. ln the flrgt degree.
Llaboeuf, the Apache who killed a j .
policeman several months ago, was
guillotined at Paris Friday. The so-
cialists had attempted to get a re-
prieve for the assassin, but this failed
and a violent manifestation by the
revolutionary socialists occurred at
the Bcene of the excutlon. At the
moment the blade fell several of the
rioters fired revolvers. The police
charged repeatedly with bayonets.
Reports received from Bucharest
say that Queen Elizabeth of Rouma-
nia, who Is known the world over as
Carmen Sylva, Is suffering from a s«-
tious attack of appendicitis.
Wheat Crop Is Fine
Bridgeport, Okla.—Threshing is
now in full progress. The yield per
acre will be on an average or twenty-
two bushels or better. Quite a num
ber of fares are making thirty tjush-
els per acre. The quality of the
wheat is fine, teBtlng on an average
of sixty-three and a half pounds per
bushel. The farmers are marketing
the wheat pretty freely, and the lot:.!
price being paid le 76 cents per bush
el. Dry, hot weather prevails, and
Uie corn is beginning to Buffer.
Summer Term at Claremore Opcni
Claremore, Okla.—The summer term
of the state university school opened
Monday, with an enrollment of 1 | ao"that two just fill each urn
representing eight counties In Okla-
homa and the states of Kansas and
Missouri.
Fail to Reach Mine Agreement
Kansas City—About 275 delegates
representing 35,000 miners of the
southwest, who convened here Thurs-
day to vote on an agreement as to a
wage scale to have been formulated
by Thomas I^ewis, head of the min-
ers' organization, and James Elliott,
representing the operators, adjourned,
after a short session, subject to the
call of Mr. Uewls. Lewis and Elliott
have failed to agree upon a plan of
settlement of the strike, which b.-is
btiwu iu progress for mouths.
trailing fringe of green and white-
leafed vlnca vine drapes down a foot
or more around the edges of each.
The flowers and vines are planted In
wire baskets, semicircular In shape,
When
the flowers In one lose their fragrance
It is to be replaced immediately by
another. A sufficient number of baB-
keta are being tended by a gardener so
that fresh flowers always will be in
the urns. The flowers were chosen be-
cause of their ability to withstand the
sun and winds, and It Is not expected
to be necessary to replace the baskets
more than three or four times In the
summer. The Insldes of the Iron urns
are lined with moss to protect the
roots from the heat of the metal.
The Idea to have the flowers on the
poles was obtained from public build-
ings In Europe by Henry O. Flower,
president of the Fidelity Trust com-
pany.
A "Corner"
In Comfort
For those who know the
pleasure and satisfaction
there is in a glass of
ICED
P0STUM
Make it as usual, dark
and rich-—boil it thoroughly
to bring out the distinctive
flavour and food value.
Cool with cracked icc, and
add sugar and lemon; also a
little cream if desired.
Postum is really a food-drink
with the nutritive elements
of the field grains. Ice it, and
you have a pleasant, safe,
cooling drink for summer
days—an agreeable surprise
for those who have never
tried iti
"There's
a Reason'
POSTUM
for
Postum Cereal Co., Limited.
Battle Creek, Mich.
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Charles E. Hill and Sons. The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 8, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1910, newspaper, July 8, 1910; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc403056/m1/2/?q=WAR+DEPARTMENT: accessed June 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.