Claremore Messenger., Vol. 20, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, February 12, 1915 Page: 5 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
W'
,*'• * ■ *
r-v
I * | -♦ * n ^ i^dfi
*•
''.1
Cl AKKMOIE
MESSKNOF. f»
b ^
WANTS, FIR SALE. ETC.
Uo Moor* attended to beelnese In
at the now guards at th# Jail.
On Bheeley, of Oolegeh. attended
to busies— In Claremore Wdaj.
Wanted — Man to build a poultry
tone*. Call M or Inquire at tbe
Meaaennger office.
J. R. Feland, of near Owaaao, ape’it
Tbuiaday of last weak In tbla clip.
Attya. T. L. Brown and Jack Reed
attended to 1*6 tl bualneaa at Tulsa
Saturday.
Raraeet M. Darla, of Inola. waa In
Tuaaday alcht to receive a decree In
Mrs. M. L. Coker, of Inola, visited
korr daughter, Mrs. F. McKVnnls
Tuesday.
Tbe young men of Claremore will
give a Valentine dance tonight at the
rtlppin hall.
Jim Brown baa bought, out Howard
Spoor, the sods specialist, at Bortle *
Drug Store.
Atty. T. L. Viles, of Chelsea, was
attending to legal business In Clare-
more Monday.
Janies Massey, county commission-
er, WM down from Chelsea, on bust-
neea Monday,
Mrs. W. C. Kates and Mrs. VV. I..
McClure left Saturday fot a visit at
Oklahoma City.
Dr. W. A. Howard, county health
officer,"was down from Chelsea on a
professional visit Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. D. Davis, both
of whom were quite 111 a week ago,
are able to be around again.
J. H, Knox attended the meeting
of Trinity Commandry, Knight Tem-
plar, at Tulsa Monday night.
Mrs. John ChaUant will leave about
March first to spend two or three
months visiting relatives In Texas.
Bert Sprangle and Floyd McKInnls
went to Chelsea Tuesday on business
connected with the light plant at that
place.
New Telephone directory goes to
press February 13th. Malye applica-
tion for service today and have your
name included.
The content between the Claremore
and Nowata Christian Sunday schools
came to a close last Sunday with No-
wata the winners.
Make apppllcatlon for service today
and have your name listed In the
new telephone directory. Goes to
press February ,13th.
Miss Joanna Merrill, of Welch, a
cousin of Mrs. F. M. McKInnls, Is
one of the new sales ladles at the
New York r. and l«c Store.
Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Saunders left
Saturday for Tulsa, where they ex-
pect to reside In the future, having
disposed of thelrr store at this place.
Mr. Townsend, ot Townsend and
Nixon, gas and Ail operators of Tulsa,
was In Claremore Monday looking af-
ter their holdings in the Claremore
gaa field.
The Northwestern Holiness Associa-
tion—Regular Services will be held
every Sunday at 11 a: m. and 7:30
p. m. In the Advent Church, by Rev.
Martin Bant.
John Stowe, of (lie I.yrlc, received
word last Thursday that hie father
had b*'en killed In a railroad wreck.
He left Immediately for Lebanon, Mo.,
where the accident occurred.
Etta Hensley was operated on the
first of the week for an abscess In
the aide, the result of a case of pneu-
monia. Shel s now getting4' along
nicely and Is expected to recover.
Arthur McConnell, of the New York
6 and 10c Store at Columbus, Kansas,
la vtsUIng friends in Claremore and
picking up a few points on the busi-
ness from the Big Roes, 8. B. North.
yijif on the assumption that the
Oklahoma. Legislature Is the supreme
authority In all matters of Import to
the state, Representative Udd of
Creek County Introduced a resolution
.asking that February tt|e Second be
fil'd by statute aa the official Ground
Hog Day of this State.
I have rested the wagoa yards of
Mrs. Battle Davie sad will board
horses at tbs regular price. I ask a
share of your patronage.
J. W. Job aeon.
For Bale—Mandy Lee 100 egg In-
cubator. ased two seaeoas. Coats 111
will sell for 97.50. Heaeoo for coll-
ing, have bought a larger machine.
Inquire at Maaaanger office.
1000 Ageata wanted to aell a self
heating sad Iron. Labor and fuel
saver. Pay salary or comm las Ion.
Imperial Bad Iron Co. Ft. Worth, Tex.
Ladies make good representatives.
Agents make 91B to 990 per dap
Box 115.
TWO WCLLB AT OAOBKVAH
R. Kellerstrass brought la a well
Sunday on the Sellers lease near
Sageeyah, good for fifty barrels.
On Tuesday Alexander Powell
brought in another twenty-five barrel
well about halt a mile from the Kel-
lerstrass wall. Bageeyah field looks
like oil business again, and the work
In that vicinity Is on the increase.
OO TO ORAMO LODGE
The Onuid Lodge of the Masonic
order for the state of Oklahoma Is in
session at Guthrie next week, be-
ginning Tuesday. A school of In-
struction Is held beginning Feb. 11th
Claremore Lodge will be represent-
ed by District Deputy F. S. Walker
Worshipful Master W.J Pointer and
Junior Warden, \V. H. Smith.
AGENTS— It’s aaw—your oppor-
tunity. Wo trust you to 93.60 worth.
Starr’s Powdered Knamel. Repairs
chipped and rusty spots on graalte-
ware. Stops all leaky metalware
without heat, aoldering Iron or tools.
Agents coining money. Sample with
particulars, 10c. Starr, 1910 Monroe
St., Toledo, O. V. 8. A.
A SUITABLE RECOGNITION
Tuesday night John T. Kzzard, on
behalf of the members of Claremore
Lodge A. F. ft A. M. presented the
outgoing Master, F. 8. Walker, with
a fine past master’s Jewel In recog-
nition of his good work for Masonry
durlnR his residence here lit Claremo •
Mr Walker is an enthusiastic Masonic
worker and devotes a great deal of
his time to the study and practice of
the science. He is at present Dis-
trict Deputy Grand Master, but has
been for three years past Worship-
ful Master of the Claremore Lodge.
FAMOUS RESORT IS PASSINtt
Jardia ds Parts. Landmark gf Gay
Capital, • Victim ef
The Jardin de Parle Is doomed.
After a gentle decadence of some tee
declining years It will perteh soon,
with no pain, when the Champs
Rlysees chestnuts are shedding their
first rusty leaves. I noticed a sad
change in It when, after many years,
I visited It a night or two ago. The
trail or the moving picture waa over It
all.
The Jardin de Parla was at Its beat
In the early nineties. It wna one of
the first, as it long remained one of
the most Parisian of open-air reserta.
The Jardin waa not solely or evea
mainly a music hall, though there
were turns from 11 onwarde for the
amusement of women, fools, boys and
tourists, Up almost to the very end
the dnnrlng was the thing. In Ite
palmy days such curiously nicknamed
dancers ns La Goutue, Grille d’Kgout,
and Valentin le Desosse—Valentine,
the boneless wonder—were the pen
tlculnr stars of the Jardin de Psrln
Untiringly they evolved In the tangos
of the day on the asphalt flood sur-
rounding the orchestral kiosk. In
comfortable fnuteulls—the chairs of
the Jardin de Parts were deservedly
famous— sunk In a gentle after-dinner
languor, literary, sporting, nnd dra
matic Parts watched their evolutions.
Thanks to Its chairs, the Jardtn de
Parts became a sort of open-air salon
in the summer months.—Exchange.
HAT ANb THE HABNAII0N
Hew the One Hag
Always Barn# Strang Relatlea
te the Other.
A well-known architect has pointed
eat that the form of the hat heart a
certain relation to buildings of o prim-
itive nature—butt Ha has lavtted at-
tenttoa to the curioua resemblance
that haa existed, and that Is still to bo
found la many countries between
headgear and habitations or other
buildings. It may be that the same
taste, or the lack of It, has given rise
to tha similarity of style, or In tbe be-
ginning the designer of the hst may
hava taken l ho hut aa a model.
la tha Hawaiian Islands, long before
the Inhabitants took the trouble to
clothe themselves, they built grass
housee, nnd at the present time the
characteristic Hawaiian hst Is remark-
bbly like the hut.
The turbans of the dignitaries of the
Eastern church are still of the shape
of those worn by the high priests
among tha Jews of olden times, and
they are extraordinarily like the char-
acteristic domes that surmount
mosques. Again, It is pointed out, the
high-pointed spires of Oothlc churches
were contemporaneous with the high
horn like headdress known ea the hen-
nln.
It Is believed, too, that like results
may be found after a comparison of
other atyles of architecture with the
headgear of the period wherein they
flourished.
OiCKlihbC.t ■ C ■,- —
R. Dickerson, who haa baea on* at
Rogeis County’s most prahrsaslva aad
well Informed farmers, hag gone to
Nowata to taka a position aa eouwty
farm demonstrator loadiag oat hia
goods today, Friday.
Mr. Dickersoa haa beau a resident
of Rogers county for several years,
and the Maasenger has personally
known him for about seven years, aad
knows nothing hut good ot him. For
two yearn he was superintendent at
the Claremore schools, but quit tho
teaching for farming, which la hie
first love In the way ot a profession,
and as a farmer he Is an unqualified
success. He and bis brother own 230
acres east of town, which they have
farmed for the past four years and
on their farm there has been no crop
failures, while farmers all over the
county have been hit bg the drouth.
The Dickersons made money every
year, and It is -more than likely that
If Mr. Dickerson had stayed on his
own farm he would make more money
than he can on a salary as a demon-
strator.
If he does lose by It, the farmers
of Nowata county will be gainer*,
and they are to be congratulated.
FREE TO FARMERS
SEEDS
By special arrangement the Ratckin
Seed Houie of Shenandoah, Iowa, one of
the oldest, best established seed firms in
the cqpntry will mail a copy of their Big
illustrated Seed Catalogue*. This book
is complete on all farm and garden seeds.
It tells how to grow big yields and all
about the best varieties of Corn for your
locality; also Seed Oats, Wheat Barley,
Spelts, Grasses, Clovers, Alfalfa, Pasture
and Lawn Mixtures, Seed Potatoes and
ail other farm and garden seeds. This
Book is worth dollars to all in want of
seeds of any kind. IT’S FREE to all
our readers. Write for it today and
mention this paper. The address is
RATEKIN’S SEED HOUSE,
Shenandoah, Iowa.
Your last chance for five months to
have your name listed In the tele-
phone directory. Goes to press Feb-
ruary 13th. .
September Morn Is hilling for Tulsa
this month. Ground hog weather may
agree with September Morn, but we
don’t know.
Gas In the stomach or bowels Is a
disagreeable symptom of a torpid live
To get rid of it quickly take Herblne.
It is a marvelous liver stimulant and
bowel purifier. Price 50c. Bold l»y
Hortle Drug Company.
The program at tho Christian
church next Sunday night will be
furnished by the Endeavor society.
Everyone Is Invited to attend. The
program promises to he something outl
of the ordinary.
Judge Klght, Court Clerk Tom Mc-
Clellan, Sheriff Leach and Sten-
ographer Addle Blair went to Col-
linsville Monday to open a session of
county court. They have had quite
a number of cases docketed there,
and are holding an extended term.
The new Ford for the use of the
city light and water department ar-
rived Tuesday and was at. once put In
commission. This will be a great
convenience and a dividend payer for
the city as they will be able to get
about twwlce as much work attended
to during the same hours.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas
County,, ss.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that
he is senior partner of the firm of
F. J. Cheney and Co., doing business
in the City of Toledo, County and
State aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay tho sum of ONE HUNDRED
DOLLARS for each and every case
of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
the use of HALL’S CATAH tH CURE
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this 6th day of De-
cember,, A. D. 1886.
(Seal) A. VV. GLEASON,
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken intern-
ally and acts directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney and Co.. Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for con-
stipation.
MEN ATTENTION!
Next Sunday, Feb. 14. Claronrce
will Lave a visit from Mr. \V. VV.
Goodwin, the Secretary of the Fed".-
ation of Gospel Teams. He will
speak at the service of the Baptist
chunk, Sunday morning; at tha First
M. 1J church at night, and to
A MEETING OF ALL MEN
at tho Ctrlstlan Church at 3 o'clock
P. ni.
WAR WILL HELP POTTERIES
American Industry Bound to Bonoflt
by Changes In tho Commerce
of tho World.
Tho American demand for several
minor mineral products will bo stimu-
lated by the changes In trade with Eu-
rope, with the result of increasing
materially the production for 1914 and
follow log years, says a bulletin of the
United States Geological Survey. In
the case of pottery this movement to-
ward a stronger hold of tho domestic
market Is already well under way.
Tho production In 1913 was the larg-
est tn th° history of the Industry. The
underlying cause of this prosperity
is no doubt the improvement In the
character of the American product In
texture, finish, color, decoration, and
the prevention of crazing, the higher
grades of American pottery equaling
If not surpassing some of the best Im-
ported ware. For many years the
value of the Imported pottery exceed-
ed the value of that made at home,
but about the close of the nineteenth
century domestic production caught
up with Imports, and since that time
It lias greatly exceeded them, the pro-
duction In 1913 being nearly four
times as great In value as the Im-
ports. There was, however, last year
a -considerable decrease In exports of
pottery, a record which should now
be reversed by reason of the changes
In the world’s commerce that hav*
become Inevitable.
Safety Hatch Incubators
Establishing a record for swift leg-
islation in an Oklahoma Legislature,
two bills Introduced by Tom Tester-
man of Noble County Thursday morn-
ing were passed by tho House to the
Senate Saturday afternoon. These
bills concerned the danger the north-
ern part of Oklahoma is now In
caused by the foot and mouth disease
In southern Kansas. One bill pro-
vided for payment at the full mar-
ket value for all animals slaughtered
on account of this disease and the
other bill made an appropriation to
be used In fighting and preventing
the spread of the disease.
A child that has intertlnal worms Is
handicapped In Its growth. A few
doses of White’* crpam Vermifuge de-
stroy* and expel* worm*; the child
immediately Improve* and thrive*
wonderfully. Price 85c per bottle.
Sold by Bortle Drug Company,
Hot water machines, made in Oklahoma by good
workmen and best of materials. Tested and tried.
6o to 240 egg sizes at prices from fn.oo to #20.00.
We also have a good line of
Hovers and Poultry Appliances.
Glasgow Hardware Co*
CAP BLOWS OFF GAS WELL
G. H. Linsenbigler Meets Instant
Death; Grayson Narowly Escapes
G. 11. Linsenblglpr, Dustin manager
for the Eastern Oklahoma Gas com-
pany was instantly killed and Jess
Grayson, his assistant was injured
when one of the cups on a ga* well
half a mile west of town blew off at
2 o'clock yesterday morning. The
men were engaged In regulating tiie
flow from the well, and it Is believed
that one cap was shut down too tight-
ly, causing the presure to blow the
cap and part of a joint of casing from
the well.
Linsenbigler was directly over tho
mouth of the hole, working with the
cap by which the was shutting in tho
flow. Grayson was at Ids isde. Th»
manager had nbout finished Ids task
when, without warning, the heavy
pressure from the well blew the cap
with part of the top joint of casing
into the air with terrific force. Lln-
3enbigler’s head was directly over tho
cap and he was terribly mangled.
Grayson was struck by some of the
flying Iron, hut is not seriously in-
jured.
The well which cause Linsenbigler s
death Is one of the two which supply
Dustin with natural gas. It Is the
property of the Eastern Oklahoma
Gas company of Sapulpa.
<- Linsenbigler leaves * widow and
one son.—Collinsville Times.
FIRST M. E. CHURCH
•All tegular services will be held at
the utual hours. The Sunday School
St 9:45 a. m. provides an Interesting
hout.
11 a. m. and 7:80 p . m. public
worship and preaching.
3 1. m. Junior League.
6:30 p. ra. Epworth League. Young
people and their friends are cordla ly
Invited to this service. They will bo
Interested. A cordial welcome in all
services.
LEWIS D. MOORE, Pastor.
PUBLIC LED BY CONVENTION
Fact Explains Why Reality In Any
Form of Art Comae as Some-
thing of a Shock,
Wo are all such-creatures of conven-
tion that the first lmpressslon made by
reality In any former art is sometimes
a distinct shock and we close the win-
dows ot our Intelligence and draw the
blinds, that the fresh air and the new
light may not enter It. Just as no
form of art la so strange as life, so
it may be the strangeness of reality
In books, in pictures, and in music that
makes our attitude one of resistance
rather than of welcome.
Virgin snow often looks blue, but it
took courage to paint It blue, because
people judge not by eyesight, but by
convention, and snow conventionally is
assuredly white. In reading books of
fiction we have become so accustomed
to conventions that we hardly notice
how often they contradict reality. In
many novels I have read I have been
introduced to respectable women with
scarlet lips, whereas tn life I never
saw a really good woman with
such labial curiosities. Conversations
are conventionally unnatural. A triv-
ial Illustration will suffice. Someone
in a group makes a proposition.
“Agreed!’’ cried they all. Did you
ever hear anyone say “Agreed? ’—
From “Essay on Books," by William
Lyon Phelps.
James-White
River Float
Map Folder
A
FLOAT trip down
the James and
White Rivers in the
Autumn season affords
one of the most delightful outings
It is possible to imagine—gorgeous
colorings—bracing air—tlshingjind
hunting at their best—a season
of real living.
Write today for our Float
Folder—it gives full details
Excellent service via th*
Missouri-Pacific
Iron Mountain
G. M. Reed, Agent
Blctckfish in Cap* Cod Bay.
A school of blackflsh which has
been In the waters of Cape Cod bay
lor several days, has become stranded
on the beach, near Provlncetown.
nlackflsh were very plentiful forty or
fifty year-s ngo, but after 1888 none
v ore seen until In the fall of 1911.
1 lackfish are also called ‘‘pilot
whales," deriving this name from the
fact that In a school one always acts
ns the guide. They are very valuable
for the oil they produce. Each mam-
moth fish contains about a berrel of
oil A blackflsh Is a sort of miniature
\yhale, varying In length from six to
twenty-two feet, and weighing from
400 pounds to a ton each. Their skin
<3 ba smooth aa satin and jet black.
Yenia ago each fishing shanty along
the capo shore was equipped with Its
whaling equipment—dory, harpoons,
try-pots and lances. Each time a
school of the mammals was sighted
there was a contest, In which the first
on the Hcene waa the winner.—Ex-
change
Conscription in Great Britain.
In the United Kingdom a form ot
conscription was created by the ballot
act of isso, which provided for all
males of over five feet two Inches in
height and between the ages of eigh-
teen and thirty being called on to
serve in the militia, but this law la
held in abeyance by act of parliament.
In May, 1901, a royal commission re-
lsorted In favor of the conscription, but
tbe suggestion did not survive tha
resultant severe criticism.
The use of the preaagang ha* al-
ways been legal, but Is not now taken
advantage of. Seafaring men and
other* were liable to be pressed Into
the king's service In times of emer*
gency without any notice.
Relieving Monotony on Train.
As a method of relieving the mo-
notony of a long Journey the obser-
v&ttoa of the distance post has a val-
ue. Calculated In this way, the high-
est speed I have achieved in thiB
country has been one mile in 46 sec-
onds, or at the rate of 78 miles per
hour, on the Midland railway com-
pany's system between Chesterfield
and Stockport—a most exciting run on
a down-grade five miles length of
track. The train swung frightfully,
but we survived. The next highest
speed has been observed on the Lon-
don and Northwestern railway com-
pany’s system between Penrith and
Carlisle; another down-grade run,
when a speed of 70 miles per hour can
often be observed. Speeds of be-
tween 60 and 70 miles an hour are.
however, quite commonly attained by
many of the main line express trains
In this country, and the amateur ob-
server need not trouble to record any
runs In which the quarter-mile takes
over 15 seconds to complete.—London
Mail.
Small Missouri Farm
Either 10. 20. 30 or 40 acres (you take your choice rni4
lets • f tizc) eftn 3 town lots and 300 shares i n succeed
in 3 town Iota and juu snare* i n tuccmdid
1.000 acre orchard company with two cannini factories IM
1.1 i ------.Hi----■- <300. $3 down and $3 moatt
' ‘ivayfan
* ,VW SilCUlUISIU LUVlIpifiy V
ful I equipment, all lor only $30
without interest or taxqf. Wi
ill pay round trip railway fi
without interest or taxqp. will pay round!
of buyers. Payments stop in case ot death.
Write for photographs and full information.
WILLIS R. MONGER.
N. T. Ufa. Km
iCNy.l
The last report from Mr. Knlgut
wlto was called to Texqs last weflk.
waa that hia mother was atilt alive,
but very low.
Mr*. Bray and little dnughter, of
Ham man, Arkansas, vlaltedlier neph-
ew, Carl Conway, and family on* dv
this week.
i i.
Religion and Dancing.
The dance, say* Anna Pavlowa, la a
major part of all primitive religion*,
and it Is on primitive religion* that
all the warring creeds of today are
built. Tn tills matter of religion and
the dance American* are, of course,
most familiar with the dance rituals
of the Red Indian. You must not scoff
kt the religion of Poor Lo, because the
Indians who yet survive still love the
dance.
Rare News, Indead. ,
The Hartford Courant, "the oldest
living newaaper on the continent,”
recall* with pride that “It published
the Declaration of Independence a*
new ■.’* Well, the Constitution of the
United State* would be new* to n
food many people, politicians lsolud-
*d, now.—New York Sun.
The Physician’* Life.
The study of medicine la an en-
trancing aubject; Its practice requires
an array of virtues whose mere con-
templation staggers the mind. One
must meet violence with gentleness,
Ingratitude with equanimity, Insult
with fortitude, slander with silence.
The physician’s life is a daily exempli-
fication of tho Golden Rule. The very
sensitiveness that Inspires sympathy
with pain and misery is a weapon la
the hands of ignorance and malice
wherewith they deal dreadful wounds,
wounds which must be endured silent-
ly. Resentment can have no place In
the physician’s mind. Equanimity
must be maintained In the face of mis-
apprehension and abuse.—From "Re-
creations of a Physician,’’ by A. Stuart
M. Chisholm, M. D.
KEEP IT HANDY FOR RHEUMA*
TI8M.
No use to squirm and wince and
try to wear out your Rheumatism.
It will wear you out Instead. Apply
some Sloan's Liniment. Need not
rub It In—just let It penetrate all
through the afftected part*, relieve
the soreness and draw the pain. You
get ease at once and feel ao much
better you want to go right out and
tell other sufferer* about Sloan'e
Get a bottle of Sloan's Liniment for
25 cents of any druggist and have
It In the house—against Cold*, Sore
and Swollen Joints, Lumbago, Scla*
tlca and like ailments. Your money,
back If not satisfied, hut It do«n
give almost Instant relief. Buy •
bottle today.
E. A. CHURCH
The Old Reliable
Jeweler
Hunting Eeheen With an Aro Light.
Locating echoes by light beams,
with subsequent correction of bad
acoustics, has bean developed Into an
exact science by experimenters In th*
University of Illinois. Beams rrom an
aro light are directed from the stage
to all parts of an auditorium and the
deflection ot light from walls and pil-
lars la noted. Results are checked up
by obser vine the sound ot the hissing
traveling In the same course as the
light.
Experience has shown just what
conditions produce the most trouble
some echpea and with the Information
given by the light beams th* condi-
tions nr* readily Improved by hang-
ing curtains at troublesome pplntav—
Saturday Evening Post »»
Is located in the Owl drug
store, where he will attend
to your repair work with
neatness and dispatch.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
Ezzard & Robson
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
epeclaltlss: Offices:
Civil Clarsmors, Okie
Criminal
Probate aad
OoUeotloM
Hid
Ch«lM*s Oklfts
H. JENNINGS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Claremore, - Okie.
U. B. Commissioner
Practices in nil Court#
lift
J
;rj .'f
; HI
■ .
M
V -SA.'
,7
:2’i
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View one place within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Claremore Messenger., Vol. 20, No. 9, Ed. 1 Friday, February 12, 1915, newspaper, February 12, 1915; Claremore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc405500/m1/5/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.