The Longdale News. (Longdale, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1909 Page: 3 of 4
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FOND Of ATHLETICS
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9 that on arrival at
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ii but hospitable por-
JimBfhlDI pP^>rl4Itl4ll
tala th*
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in typical of th* r*- 1
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t th
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r
Fending an
admitted ti
ronvlited of v
d*-r regarding I
8tu»c company of St. Lc
Tin* supreme court of
handi-l do* a it* dii isU>n In the ou*t
can* against the Standard. Water*
1’ii-r • and It’ , ift ( t>: J in , r i •■.
upholding the contentions of Attorney
General Hadley In every particular
Ouster from the state and fines of
fiO.uoo each are the penalties inflicted
upon • ,ich of the three companies The
opinion of the court was unanimous.
Frederick A llurnham. ex president
of the Mutual Reserve Life Insurance
company, was found dead in bed at
his home in New York of gas poison-
ing. Mr. Murnham was under Indict-
ment on charges of larceny and for-
gery In connection with the company.
The Crane company, elevator manu-
facturers of Chicago, will distrlbue
$350,000 among their workmen this
year. Each employe gets 10 per cant
of his yearly wages.
The hojise ways and means com-
mittee has completed Its hearings on
the proposed revision of the tarifT and
the work of drafting a bill has begun.
In moving the National City bank
of .\cw York from Its old to Its new
quarters, $570,000,000 was paraded
across Wall street while a platoon of
police held a curious crowd at bay.
The Interstate Commerce commis-
sion has decided that allowances for
the transfer of sugar from the re-
fineries to the trains are essentially
rebates and In variation of the law.
Figures gathered by the bureau of
statistics at Washington show that
the average American citizen con-
sumes 82.6 pounds of sugar every year
and that Uncle Sam’s sugar bill
amounts to $1,000,000 a day.
The Atlantic battleship fleet has left
Colombo, Ceylon, for Suez.
In the circuit court of Johnson
county Judge Thurmond has ieclded
that there is no law in Missouri which
prohibits the practice of healing by
Fr;
Si-
de v loped I
tie. Wash.
to
l>9 th
0 beginning
coat rut-
9 In China.
u Ti
(II Ilui died
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th* da> foil)
ipcroi
r Kwangxu.
wit
h an
iron band 1
Ru
Yl’a
stepmother.
a nl*
of thr
The
if petti-
ter Era-
u N
ring
She
for half a
the Dow;
fie <ii
had
Christian Scientists.
William R. Kelley, cashier of the
Union Pacific railroad at South Oma-
ha, is dead by his own hand in that
city. Overwork is given as the cause.
Because of low water in the Missis-
sippi river the packet line between
Memphis and St. Louis has been dis-
continued.
Vice President Gomez of Venezuela
has established a new government
since the departure of President Cas-
tro and has replaced the old ministry
with a new body.
The Chicago postofflee handled 250
tons of Christmas mail in one day re-
cently.
The battleship Maine and the
cruiser North Carolina have left Nor-
folk, Va., under sealed orders, it is
believed they are to visit Venezuelan
waters.
The International Smelting i'om-
panv, with a capital of $50,000,000,
has been incorporated in New Jersey.
mentioned in connection with th*
cabinet, is a former Kansan.
Col. Thomas Wentworth Higginson,
the well Known author, celebrated his
eighty-fifth birthday recently at his
home In Cambridge, Mass.
Charles S. Keown, of Kansas City,
traveling agent for the Brewers In-
surance exchange, has been locked up
in New York on a charge of Insanity.
Thomas F. Ryan, the New York
financier, has resigned from the di-
rectorate of 31 corporations on the ad-
vice of his physician.
MaJ. Samuel J. C. Moore, who served
during the Civil war on the staff of
Stonewall Jackson, is dead in Win-
chester, Va.
A. il. Stickney, president and one
of the receivers of the Chicago, Great
Western railway, has resigned his re-
ceivership.
E. E. Rittenhouse, insurance com-
missioner of Colorado, has been elect-
ed president of the Provident Savings
Life Assurance society of New Y'ork
succeeding Arthur G. Langham of
Louisville, Ky.
W. H. Newman has resigned as
president of the New York Central
Railway company.
Representatives Ellis of Kansas
City and Victor Murdock of Kansas,
with their wives, will accompany a
congressional party on a visit to the
Panama canal during the recess of
congress.
John G. Nelson, a banker, lias beer
appointed Swedish vice consul at St
Louis in succession to Charles A. Ek
stromcr, deceased.
Col. John D. Crawford, well known
in Republican political circles through-
out Missouri, is dead in Sedalia,
■where he was born 70 years ago. He
was for 30 years vice president of the
Citizens' National bank there.
President Castro of Venezuela has
been removed to a hospital in Berlin.
Maj. Orlando Jay Smith, president
and general manager of the Ameri-
can Press association, is dead at his
home in Dobbs’ Ferry, N. Y.
Joseph K. Harney, a well-to-do resi-
dent of Joliet, 111., died suddenly in
his room at a hotel in Pittsburg, Kan.
He was on his way home from Hot
Springs, Ark.
Francis P. Fleming, governor ol
Florida from 1SS9 to 1893, is dead at
his home in Jacksonville.
William B. McNutt, 7.3 years old,
said to have been the first man to en-
gage in the book bindery business in
Missouri, is dead in St. Joseph.
J. Pierpont Morgan is reported to
have paid $120,000 for the 15 Caxtons
he recently bought at the sale of Lord
Amherst's library.
Camp of Secretary Straus at Big
Island Pond, Me.
Straus and their yonng son, but also
for Secretary Loeb and several other
guests.
The most striking feature is the
central hail, with its stone chimney,
where on a wide open hearth spruce,
pine and maple logs blazed cheerily
and gave out needed warmth, especial-
ly in the mornings and evenings, while
in Washington people were seeking
the parks and housetops to get refuge
from the humid heat.
"'I feel that the head of this depart-
ment ought to know something about
fishing," said Secretary Straus, almost
naively, "as the bureau of fisheries is
under his jurisdiction, and in order to
learn about fishes you must iove the
sport of taking them.”
One would have to go far to find a
more ardent sportsman and outdoor
athlete than the postmaster general of
the United States, George von Len- |
gerke Meyer of Hamilton. Mass. With
him athletic exercise is little short of |
a religion, and with his 50 years sit- I
ting lightly on him he can outride and |
outwork most younger men. What he
goes through during his vacation j
would kill any man whose nerves were I
not in perfect trim, whose muscles [
were not like whip cords and whose j
digestion was not capable of assimilat-
ing the heartiest viands.
But the postmaster general does not
try to crowd into a brief vacation all
the exercise and open-air recreation of
an entire year. Every day he jumps
on his horse at seven o’clock in the
morning and takes a ride at a rattling
pace over country roads and ’cross
country in the bracing morning air.
He is an accomplished and daring
horseman.
James Wilson, secretary of agricul-
ture, is no sport. When he wants recre-
ation he exchanges one kind of work
for another, and even when at home
in the bosom of his family he is not
wont to indulge in cards or checkers
or chess or any other of the games
commonly resorted to for recreation
and amusement.
Victor Howard Metcalf, the recent
secretary of the navy, is as fond of
sport as when at Yale he led his boat
crew to victory, but he now finds
recreation in other ways. Fishing,
hunting and mountain climbing formed
j his chief amusements during his vaca-
j Uon last summer.
JAPANESE PAGODA HIS HOME.
Unique Building 75 Feet High to Be
Occupied as a Residence.
Readiug, Pa.—One of this city’s
latest at! factions is a Japanese pagoda
Japanese Pagoda at Reading, Pa.
which graces the summit of Mount
Penn, overlooking the city. The pa-
goda, which is built of stone, with
Spanish tile curved balconies, wes
erected by former Select Counciiman-
\\ illiam Abbot V itman, who proposes l
to occupy it as a private residence.
Mr. Witman admits he has never
been to Japan, and is too busy to go
for some years to come, but wishes to
live in a pagoda home. The home is
50 feet square at the base and is al-
most 75 feet in height, and is s «r-
mounted by a flagstaff and a sund.al.
A New Kind.
"Pa, what is the deadly parallel?"
"1 guess, son, it is somewhere abjtit
the one where work in the tropica is
1 located."—Baltimore American.
Imaenaxi to______
ItiiniM caMilljf ***ry Milt at
CANTOKlA a ttf* tt4 e*»« ma*4r tor
IklUll U4 e*>U4»«*, u4 to* IUI It
It**** <&*
i.B of |
III t’a* For Or*r ;M»
TU Kind Yofl liar* Alvifi IVmicM.
*iih ar IMm.
Small Wallace accepted aa ta«1ta
Hub to a part*, aa lalloat
"Itotr lotalto I vtll jnnt to poor
party If It don’t rain” I (too tfelaklac
that to night ha** to atay tom* to
that race) and If II dooa."—Tto Do
Iterator.
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I m w uwilk I —t n-
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r>»- u uitnta i<iu>m>> t
u» • «*•(•*» <7 a wTokitva
-»*f u. < *r» a lot! I* im» lai
h Of
u!**U
urv.
Em-
I press Yokonala, It Is reported, baa al-
I ready been made to understand that
j she would better keep her hands off
I affairs of state, and has quietly with-
I drawn into the background of the
I court. The horde of concubines who i
were attached to the suite of Kwangsu ;
I hare been pensioned and told to take
j themselves beyond the precincts of the
palace.
Pu Yi Is described as a healthy lump
of a youngster, who seems to under-
stand but one thing that has happened
in the tremendous change which has
come In his life, and that is that he
has been separated from his old nurse.
He made the palace ring with his
howls for the first few nights after he
had been removed from the custody of
his family. Being the emperor, he was
of course privileged to cry as loudly
as he could and keep everybody else
awake, if one of the imperial nurses
were caught spanking him it would
no doubt mean that her head would
answer for it in the next hour.
A new cook may bring th« beat of
r«*fcr» utca—- but you can’t cat them.
, a 1*011. voi’M rt.oTitica.
I •* Red l’rots Rail lllur and k<*p them
white aa mow. All grocers, Jc a package.
And It anrrmt tinea happens that a
man Is married to bis boon.
Lewis* Ringle Binder straight 3c. You
pr.y Inc for C igar* not so p«TT Y«ur deal-
er or Lewis’ Factory, 1‘coria, 111.
For what the mind wishes, that It
also believes.—Holiodorua.
“LiTciilUlJi.r .
At 94
SCHENCK S
Mandrake Pills
UHJl tAf* All! H|ht hfif
l r • . «
k0r,).H.S<*t*ct4$«a
PW^PS.
Dark
Hit. StelNTOtllt eelel.rwle.t
NATURAL UTERINE
SUPPORTER
jpTtoo i •nrncwti f*i • f, Hs.Ut bj *U !j
*».«*ot <i* Ali’fa %f»4 * 1149 •initfgl 4»in I oiisxt I
4' »R*i» I »t.i • \ i*r’•. »i• n *»|■ i*-____
1-1»: lUmi.Naii * M Till dflil
« tinat 9*.. I iRlftt)> !|>lii t l*n . Rianu(wibfv4«0
f99 .•## AL4 tost* totcfi uf tb« (rfiUlhg
- 4i lXTr^H 409p0fta f.
\V ichita Directory
WANTED lOUMU MEN TO l.EAIl!«
telegraphy and Railway Business
be west. iNyf iLioac
UTUaranti'^l all who learn the Uumneu. ( oaoiefd4
ratines ta H nil street ». mumita rnucuiurN ««*t------
atl rfuatb iUin 31.. w. 9. AJtof, ■ fr., Wlcbita. I
MAPLEINE
A flavoring that is nsed the same as lemon or
vamil t. Hr dissolving eranaUcvd sugar ia *»
ler and adding Mapleine, a delicious srruo «r
made and a ^yrup belter chan maple. MaoleiM
is sold by grocers. Send ac stamp for somote
and recipe book. Crescent Mfg. Co., Seaitto
Let Me Send You a Paekage of
Defiance Starch
with your next order of groceries and I will guarantee
—— that you will be better satisfied
with it than with any starch you
have ever used.
I claim that it has no superior
for hot or cold starching, and
It Will
Not
Stick
to th©
Iron
No cheap premiums are given
with DEFIANCE STARCH,
but YOU GET ONE-THTKD MORB
fob touh money than of pny
other brand.
DEFIANCE STARCH costs
10c for a 16-oz. package, and I
will refund your money if it
sticks to the iron.
Truly yours,
Honest John,
The Grocery man
WILL NOT
STICK TO
'*THE IRON
TORCH
-CHS-R’I
y&iWteZZ ELEOTROTYPES!
I In great variety for sale at the lowest prices by I
Iwt-tSKS >t«shar*it t.MoJ, tu* city, iim<’
W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 1, 190*.
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Doud, George H. The Longdale News. (Longdale, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1909, newspaper, January 1, 1909; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc406991/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.