The Longdale News. (Longdale, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, March 1, 1907 Page: 2 of 4
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.
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GOOD PRESCRIPTION
ADMITS JAPANESE
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Roo«im Ay re• i. 'i b*- nboln thing”
In Artroilo. I boo* n>> rountry In
tho world wblrb I. m dominated by
Ita capital, wriles Allx-rl llnlo In Tho
Hofiln. |f tb« (nKclor come, from
(lie Interior After h at line behind tha
splendor* of And< .«u wbory nnd
crossing tho (40 mile* of prairie. bo
feol. like « swimmer who has been n
long Utuo under water and lakes Ills
first deep breath of civilization when
ho enters tho city. I srrlved st six
o'clock In the uoruiiiK. before tbs
busy life of the harbor awoke. As we
rolled alonic the broad water front and
up the Avenhla Mnyo, I said to myself.
“I must have taken the wroun steamer
or I am dreaming. Surely I uni In
Kurope." It was not that thlnics
seemed Eurofieiin or thnt It was easy
to detect an Imitation; It was Kurope.
No amount of sclf-urgumeut would
overcome this Illusion; Uio asphalt
smelt as It does In Kurope and wus
cleaned in the Kuropeau way; tho
little trees grew In the tradition of
European culture, the buildings were
French, the safes, the news-stands, all
the lazy life of the early morning was
continental. . . . No wonder a chatty
old French lady asked me at dejeuner,
“How do you like Buenos Ayres? It's
Little Paris, Isn't It?"
•»P"
•rliia
irnf
title
Physical Condition of the Poor.
It is an old saying that every inch
a man adds to his chest measure adds
to the measure of his days. America
can show twice as many physicians to
population as Great Britain, and four
times as many as Germany. We have
70 times as many physicians in pro-
portion to the general population as
physical directors. We permit this
disparity on the theory, perhaps, that
an ounce of prevention is worth a
pound of cure. Prevention needs more
numerical representation. I am, then,
pleading, contends Stickney Grant in
North American Review, that the fol-
lowing steps may be taken in public
school instruction: 1. An effective sys-
tem of physical education to be a rec-
ognized part of our public school sys-
tem. By ‘'effective" I mean one that
does for a boy, so far as his physique
is suscceptible, what the United States
army setting-up exercises do for a re-
cruit. The precise system to be es-
tablished by a committee of experts.
2. Athletic exercises in schools, using
gymnasiums, baths, etc. 3. Open-air
exercises and sports under official su-
pervision. 4. Summer camps, free of
cost and compulsory in attendance,
for boys of schooi age. 5. A noon
meal for poor children in elementary
nr., high schools.
via In the rri'.-k »ta<P
I out oa a tour of inin.-r.l.in, happen-
ed to v|*ll lb. »rboil, and discover
the fraud
Won Ml* Wager.—M T Young a
laborer wbo bad been employed for
a few day. at lb. Kri.ro coal rbulr.
fh Knld w»« found rb-nd In Ibe rear
of Ibe Monarch .aloon A abort
time before hi. death hr bad been
Iti tbo anlooti and wagered that he
could drink a pint of whisky In flf
teen minute Tho liquor wa. gi /-
en him and ha drank It In four min-
ute., nnd then left tho room, nnd
paB.ornby discovered the body u
few minute* afterward*.
Sold Town Lot* at Auction. —
Three thousand two hundred town
lot* In Walter. Itlngwood. llltchcoek
and l^iokelni, which belonged to the
defunct Itock Island 1>. v< lopmont
Company have been .old at public
auction by (he receiver. Frank
Wright. of l.iiwlon, and tin- niiioiiut j
realized for the creditors wus
113,00». The indchledm mm of 111*
company was $96.©oo. The
quarters of the company w.-re in St.
Ixruls. They sold chances upon
these lots to Kastern people. Mu-
sales reaching $96,000. The draw-
ing never materialized and .nils
were filed hut tho company could
not he found.
Can Recover the Stakes.—When a
conspiracy is entered Into by var-
ious parties to victimize a person,
the party so victimized, although
engaging himself in n wrongful pur-
pose, may recover whatever money
he has lost, nnd may recover, too,
from the stakeholder. This is the
opinion given by Chief Justice Bur-
ford in a foot race swindling case
from Grant county, wherein Jacob
H. Allen wbs victimized to tho ex-
tent of $4.i<> by a foot racing con-
spiracy. Allen in the lower court
got judgment .against l’eter Faiken
berg, as stakeholder, for flip amount
of Ills losses, and the decision is af-
firmed.
ball They w«r« rotumilted to the
Muabosr# jail.
Father and Mother Held. — ilwi
MciNtrteon. a negro, I. being held at
the federal Jail In Muskogee pend
lag an Int* allgat|«>n of the death of
two of bla children, supposed to
have hem burned in death la a fire
which destroyed the negro', hum**
I at an eatly hour. When the lire do
! pnrtnieiit arrlted Robinson and hie
j wife told the chief that the children
I were in a certain room, but the fire
wa* burning too fiercely at that
time to get them out. An cxamlna-
1 Mon of the IhhIUw, charred to an ex-
! tent (hat made It Impossible to die-
I linguist) their feature*, showed
j mark* on the head* of Loth the boy
and girl. The mark* cannot !>o ac-
| counted fur, no the wall where the
| children', bed stood did not fall in.
Tlie negro and his wife, according
to thtdr story, slept In an adjoining
room. Both suy they were awaken-
| cd by smoke and rau out of the
house.
Oklahoma Delegate*.—Gov. Frank
Frantz has named the follow-
heud I Ing delegates to attend a meeting
of the American Antl-Tubc-rculosIs
League nt Its next annual meeting
to be held In Atlantic City, N. J., on
June 1-1. 1»07: Dr. L. W. Palmer,
Guymon; l)r. J. W. Browning,
Geary; I)r. Charles H. Hume, Ana-
darko; lir. J. A. Hatchett, El Reno;
Dr. C. S. Bobo. Norman; Dr. W. M.
Turner, Lawton; Dr. W. E. Hemp-
stead, Arapaho; Dr. O. C. Newman,
Grand; Dr. D. C. Adams, Taloga: Dr.
G. A. Boyle, Knld; Dr. F. P. Hulen.
Pond Creek; Dr. Ney Hill, Man gum;
Dr. II. L. Wallace, Ponca; Dr. C. o.
Gose, Nennessey; Ur. H. ('. Loyd,
Hobart: Dr. W. H. Davis, Chandler;
Dr. O. K. Barker. Guthrie; Dr. W.
McKay Dougan, Perry; Dr. F. S.
Dewey, Oklahoma City; Dr. Ralph
E. Weller. Pawnee; Dr. D. J. Jane-
way, Stillwater; Dr. W. C. Bradford,
Shawnee: Dt. J. M. McComas,
Busch; Dr. William Tidball, Sen-
tinel: Dr. B. I). Kbright, Carmen;
Dr. O. A. Pierson. Woodward.
Meet*** MigMy Honor**
Mile Andie i uitkie abuse ps-eii in
the volume entitled "tientme* ei
If‘dm * hntre won high ptatae, ha*
beet* • h-MWR port laureate of Prance
fur the par past The honor te one
conferred annually by a vote of emi-
nent literary people on Ibe most dis-
tinguished poet of ibe >e*r. Uiie
Cortbis i* etui n young woman.
VERY 0AD FORM OF ECZEMA.
luktrtd Three Year*—Phyaicieee Did
No Good—Perfectly Well After
Using Cuticura R*m*d‘*e.
"I take gr<-at pleasure In Informing
you that I wa* a sufferer of eczema la
a very bad form for the past three
year*. I consulted and treated with
a number of physicians In Chicago,
but to no avail. I commenced uelng
the Cuticura Rr-medlc*. consisting of
Cuticura Soap. Ointment and Pllle,
three month* ago. and to-day I am
prefectly well, the disease having left
me entirely. 1 cannot recommend
the Cuticura Remedies too highly to
any one Buffering with the dlseese
that I havo had. Mr* Florence E.
Atwood. 18 Crllly Place. Chicago. 111.,
October 2, 1905. Wltnese: L. 8
Berger."
dwetrd la IUs CUM
O a f* nf flilf 11*
* Uand of nlkrzINi
|4n|>l«%| IP* t»
ovlMHon l#»* Uiluber
pfm ulldf fof l|
tr **** £ £ A * kx*l (4 lM
JllOllMr, r|ir|>l
i Huh (dull J*i<**r««
ihu or* lo pfltti
mrjt firad*-* mud tun
llf!Ur (C»
iIm> Oilcntal Khunlx
and t
• ill !■
Child!
\Y!>
hoard
it
»»
jrHR ftjl^df>'f| *4filler |<
l| lo rUftMf* O till unlit
If «»oti
uf tli*
«!• «J |«hm| |||l«|ft*ll is
SOME POINTS ABOUT NEEDLES.
How Roosevelt found time to write
that article on “The Ancient Irish
Sagas” is puzzling many persons. It
will be remembered that the presi-
dent announced that he would not
write any articles for magazines dur-
ing his term. Perhaps the Irish saga
essay was written at Harvard, and has
been lost in the shuffle at the maga-
zine office ever since.
In the charge that the Cherokee In-
dians make that there was graft in
the fee paid the lawyers engaged in
the settlement of their land claims
the Indians show that, though they
znay be backwoodsmen, they are not
back numbers.
If the Standard Oil company is
declared guilty it will have to pay
fines, it is said amounting to $60,000.-
©00, but If this is so there will be a
great deal of friction that oil cannc
reduce before they are lUmidated
Destroyed 4,000 Bottles. — Three
car loads of beer were tied up at
Muskogee as a result of legal pr.v
ceedings between the owners and
Special Agent William E. Johnson
The latter destroyed 4,000 bottles
when he was stopped by an attach-
ment in the hands of Chief of Po-
lice Kimsey. The attachment, ran
out at 0 o'clock when the work of
destruction again began. A second
attachment stopped further destruc-
tion. Every joint in the city was
cleaned out during the day. One
gambling house was broken into
with an axe. revealing a clever at-
tachment of ropes and pulleys
operated by one man to thwart tne
authorities.
Inspected 463,000 Gallons.—Frank
A. Ashton, territorial oil inspector,
has just filed his monthly report
with Gov. Frantz. covering the
amount of oil inspected during the
month. He shows 463.000 gallons of
coal oil and 189,554 gallons of gaso-
line inspected. More oil and gaso-
line were inspected than ever be-
fore in one month.
Four-Year-Old Boy Kills. — The
two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Adams, near Fav, was acci-
dentally shot and killed by his
brother, two years older. The
Adams family was visiting at Allen
Stinson's, three mixes south of Fay.
The two Adams children were play-
ing on a bed. The oldest boy found
a revolver under a pillow-. While
playing with the gun it was dis-
charged, the bal! striking the little
fellow in the breast. He lived
about an hour.
Acquitted of Murder Charge. —
In the federal court at Ardmore
John Northcutt. a farmer, was ac-
quitted of the charge of killing A. A.
Stratton, a citizen of Ravia, who
was found dead in his home after
having been robbed of a large sum
of money. The crime was commit-
ted last August.
Smallest Oklahoma Baby. — That
they are the parents of the smallest
live and active twenty-three days
old baby in Oklahoma is the claim
of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Collier, of
Fletcher. The baby was born Janu-
ary 27 and weighs hut a little over
two pounds, it measures 13 inches
in length.
Murderer Fled to Mexico. — Geo.
Freeman, wanted for the murder of
Frank Jones, a boy near Brule, in
Woodward county, and for seriously
injuring the hoy's father, I. C. Jones,
September 13, 1906. as a result of a
quarrel over politics, has been ar-
rested at Ohihauhau, Mexico, and is
being held for the Oklahoma offi-
cers.
Both of the Men Will Die. — Geo.
Calhaun and Sumter T. Thompson
shot and mortally wounded each oth-
er five miles east of Wilburton, I.
T. A feud existed between them for
two years and Calhoun had repeat-
edly declared his intention to kill
Thompson. They met in the public
road. Thompson was armed with a
shotgun and Calhoun with a revol-
ver. Thompson fired two shots,
both taking effect, and Calhoun, af-
ter falling, emptied his revolver at
Thompson, two shots taking effect. 1
The Evolved Product of Centurie* o?
Invention.
The point of a needle 1* a very Im
portent part of that useful little In-
strument, and there are many point*
about needles calculated to interest
the general public. The daily con-
sumption of needles all over the world
la something like 3,000.000, while
every year the women of the United
States break, lose and use some 300,-
000,000 of those tiny tools. Few peo-
ple while threading a needle have
ever given a thought to the various
processes through which the wire
must pass before It comes out a
needle. Yet the manufacture of
needles Includes some 21 different
processes from cutting the wire and
threading the double needles by the
eyes to separating the two needles on
the one length of wire, heading, hard-
ening in oil, cleaning out the sides of
the eye, point-setting, and final pol-
ishing. For wrapping purple paper is
used, since it prevents rusting. There
are many sorts of needles, for sur-
geons’. cooks’, glovemakers’, weavers’,
sailmakers’, broommakers', milliners’
and dressmakers’ use. The needle is
the evolved product of centuries of
invention. In its primitive form it
was made of bone, ivory, or wood.
Point by point its manufacture has
improved, until this little but not in-
significant instrument is now one of
the highly-finished products of twen-
tieth century machinery and skill.—
Zion's Herald.
*il»M 1.1»Hi.' li la frrWf admitted by
Major Krhmlti and hi. saaoctatre that
ilie meluik'N will apply only to the
Jai*m< xm‘ children aad that the change
In the wording wa. to make It plain lo
the Toklo government that no dlnerlm
InatIon naa intended against Ja|>ane*w
children.
A*at*iani City Attorney William* of
Run Ftaticj*eo. who lia. acted a* lo
cal ndilser lo Mayor Schmitz and the
have he* n pending, .aid Monday
night:
“To underwtaud the exact meaning
of the atuiement given out by Mayor
Schmitz Monday night It will tie no-
(.canary to read between the line*.
The only conceicdon we havo made
Is to udinit Japanese children to while
schools, while in return the udminls
tratlon lias brought about tho exclu-
sion of Japanese laborer* from this
country.”
Mayor Sohmltx said:
“This I* only a temporary agree-
ment. President Roosevelt ha* given
us direct und positive assurances that
he will at once begin negotiations with
Japanese for the purpose <>f bringing
about a new treaty thnt will cxeludo
Japanese laborer*, skilled and un-
skilled from coutlueutal United
States.
Big Presbyterian Gathering.
Omaha, Feb. 20.—Sixteen hundred
delegates from 15 states and one ter-
ritory of tho middle west were at the
Auditorium at 7:30 Tuesday evening
when the Inter-Synodical Missionary
convention of the men of the Presby-
terian church was called lo order by
Rev. Ini Landrith, D. D., of Nash-
ville, Tenn., ex-moderator of Uie
Cumberland Presbyterian churrn.
The convention will lust until Thurs-
day night. Admission was by ticket
and the capacity of the Auditorium
which seats 7,000 was taxed.
Shea Declared Not Guilty.
Chicago, Feb. 22.—President Cor-
nelius P. Shea of the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters, and his
fellow defendants, who have been on
trial on a charge of conspiracy coin
mitted during the teamsters’ strike
against, the department stores in Chi
cago two years ago, was found not
guilty by a jury in the criminal court
Thursday. The jury reported to the
court after being out nearly four
hours. This was tiie second trial, the
jury having disagreed the first time
A FRIEND'S TIP.
70-Year-Old Man Not too Old to Accept
a Food Pointer.
‘‘For the last 20 years,” writes a
Maine man, “I’ve been troubled with
Dyspepsia and liver complaint, and
have tried about every known remedy
without much in the way of results
until I took up the food question.
“A friend recommended Grape-Nuts
food, after I had taken ail sorts of
medicines with only occasional, tem-
porary relief.
“This was about nine months ago.
and I began the Grape-Nuts for break-
fast with cream and a little sugar.
Since then I have had the food for at
least one meal a day, usually for
breakfast.
“Words fail to express the benefit I
received from the use of Grape-Nuts.
My stomach is almost, entirely free
from pain and my liver complaint is
about cured, I have gained flesh, sleep
well can eat nearly any kind of food'
except greasy, starchy things and am
strong and healthy at the age of 70
years.
"If I can be the means of helping
any poor mortal who has been trou-
bled with dyspepsia as I have been, I
am willing to answer any letter enclos-
ing stamp.” Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the lit-
tle book, "The Road to Wellville," in
f kgs. “There's a Reason."
Great Northern Indicteo.
New York, Feb. 20.—The federal
grand jury Tuesday indicted the
Great Northern fiailway company on
a charge of violating the Elkins act
by paying rebates to Lowell F. Palm-
er, traffic agent of the American Su-
gar Refining company in this city.
There are two counts alleging thi-
payment in all of $14,599, in May and
June, 1905.
Violated Sa/ety Appliance Law.
Washington, Feb. 20.—Attorney
General Bonaparte has directed that
suits he instituted against a number
of railroad companies to recover
penalties for violation of the safety
appliance law. Information upon
which these prosecutions will be
based were reported to the Inter-
state Commerce Commission by its
safety appliance inspectors
Senator Bailey Belligerent.
Austin, Texas, Feb. 23.—Senator -T.
W. Bailey told the legislative investi-
gating committee Thursday he would
be glad to resign as senator if he
could arrange matters so that he could
meet all his enemies at one time and
“finish them then and there.” He
said he deserved great praise for not
having taken n shotgun and gone after
his political enemies.
1. S. DISCI VS AI OK Y
IniiNx
C M
|i« • « ileMUtf im >er>
tike* •• ikM N M I* M eiMiH*
i«a*ly M rtiMk Iteee •*
ikeeketi pn4 Um* tMew M R ml-
MV eol • ulMil lammlff *4 im
etoi It* tfeael Melee IkifMieiatf
mye *4 Ike fNMMpal MfietMU *4
Cmbm
|*|e, III le*l**««. Ike teftedMni
kfdemi i*M4**ev, m g*M— m*i
|W Hegel Hsin Pufmeiwy m»rm
el ini* kMlel mu I*, ikei N u letply
—yliyod 1* Ik* IfMetOMH ml 4*9**ee4
>M*»I >«><«»**. iktOK lUtW*
(Mtel eei*«tfc)( euek 4» iy*fii* <*
Uttk at IM i> rneeiit) , ckhak IZIMII
•el Mtoitk, uieitlel JeMlke.
laitk at im lit« **4 Ik 4>»*a>»4
kttoe* amltaw at IM f*4vt< mgama
)t i* *l«*t i*« <■■**!>4 iw IM Meal
ami at iwmi fwai at 4)**•**• $♦
caUar (a mamma.
AaoxMt I*(ie4i«ai at Pwotz, cary*
toll* l»ia*a. It i1«h4 la IM Uan*4
»ui*e t>i*|**«*ai<*«y ** a laalc. I* *$*•
l« CuMfc* (J*m*4 *• * •leaxezfcu .*4 t*
a leair ta* iM aiaxoak nwaltu**
C rdf (Ml IMdt I* IMlk*f iagf*4t«at at
Fefuaa, ea *#<«L*al 4tu( that Re*
M«* maty largely e*eiMi*4 Hr >ke
a»«4it*l |t.‘e(**kiaa lae iM p**i tfiy
year*, tie *««4k *»* la le I*«i4 la
veiy few drug Metre. The Unit*4
State* t)ly*eMt«y eey* el ib# ectiea
at (edroa that it I* ak*4 •• a biller
ionic end U> lb* ti ret stent of dyeoatery,
oad la IBlrratmokl dteeoeea o* o *«U-
omul* lor qalaioe.
Oil of copaiba, another Ingredient of
Peruao, le clooeed by tbe Vailed btoteo
Dtepeoeotory ao a mild ohnuloat end
diuretic. It octo on the etoaecb end
laieetioal tract. It octe ** e atlmu-
lant oa tbe genlto-urioory membrane*.
Ueefut to chronic cyetltle, chronic dye-
eatery and diarrbre, end tome chronic
dleretee of tbr liver nnd kidney*.
Send to ua for o free book of tretlmo-
nlali of what tbe people think of Pa-
rana ee a catarrh remedy. The beet
evidence ie tbe teatlmony of thoee wbo
have tried It.
It len i likely that Homer knew the
difference between heroic pentameter
and a milk wagon. Rafael probably
never gueased that there wa. eucn a
word a* ' genre. ' and the language of
the average musical critic would
doubt len* have been too technical for
tho understanding of Wagner.
Stimulate the Blood.
Rrandreth's Pill* are the great blood
purifier. They are a luxative and blood
tonic, they art equally on the bow
el*, kidneys and *kln. thus cleansing
the system bv the natural outlet of
the body. They stimulate the blood
so to enable nature to throw off ell
morbid humors and cure all trouble*
arising from <an Impure state of the
blood. One or two taken every night
will prove an invaluable remedy.
Each pill contains one grain of solid
extract of sarsaparilla, which, wltlx
other valuable vegetable product*
make it a blood purifier unexcelled
Rrandreth's Pills havo been In use-
for over a century, and are for sal*
everywhere, plain or sugar-cceted.
Disease Puzzles Doctors.
A mysterious disease is troubiln*
the Dutch medical profession. It has
broken out in the district of Ouddorp
not far from Utrecht, and Prof
Spronck. of Utrecht, after all tho best
efforts he ran devise, has had to con
fess himself perplexed. The dlsease<
is a contagious affection of the heart,
and the patients invariably develop
high fever. There have been more
than 100 cases. Prof. Spronck ha*
made a careful aniysis of blood taken
from patients, but has utterly failed
to find a cause or an origin for tho
epidemic.
Carry the News to Roosevelt.
Middlesboro, Ky., Feb. 22. — Mrs.
Zabrowski, wife of a Polish miner at
Forkridge, gave birth to five child-
ren. three girls and two boys. Ail the
children are doing well
AWFUL NEURALGIA
Pain Turned This Woman’s Malr
White but She Was Cured by
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.
Do not seek relief from suffering
simply, but free your system from the
disease which is the cause of your
suffering. That is the message which
a former victim of neuralgia sends to
those who are still in its grasp. Hot
applications, powders that deaden the
senses and others that reduce tue-
heart action may cause temporary re-
lief but the pain Is sure to return wita
greater intensity.
Mrs. Evelyn Creusere, who has a.
beautiful home at 811 Boulevard
West, Detroit, Mich., suffered for
years with neuralgia until she tried
this tonic treatment. She says:
“My trouble began about six years-
ago and I did not rest as I should,
have, but kept up about my many
duties. After a time I became so
weak I could not do any work at all.
I had severe backaches and such
dreadful headaches in the back part
and top of my head. My eyes were
easily tired and at times I saw black
spots before them. I consulted sev-
eraJ doctors but without the slightest
benefit. Tbe pains were so intense
that my hair turned white.
“I lost continually in weight and
strength and was almost in despair
when a friend recommended Dr. Wil-
liams’ Pink Pills. I tried them ac-
cording to directions and soon begaix
to feel relief. At the end of three-
months I had gained ten pounds in.
weight and had no more trouble with,
my nerves. I havo been in perfect
health ever since and can heartily'
commend Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by'
all druggists, or sent postpaid, on re-
ceipt of price, 50 cents per box, six
boxes for $2 50. by the Dr. William*
Medicine Co, Schenectady, N. Y.
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Doud, George H. The Longdale News. (Longdale, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, March 1, 1907, newspaper, March 1, 1907; Longdale, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc406474/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.