The Medford Patriot-Star. (Medford, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 19, 1917 Page: 2 of 8
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KAZAN
James
Oliver
Curwood
Copyright.by the Bobbs-Merrill Company.
CHAPTER XVI.
—16-
Professor McGill.
Red Gold City was ripe for a night
of relaxation. There had been some
rambling, a few fights nnd enough
liquor to create excitement now nnd
then, but the presence of the mounted
police had served to keep things un-
usually tame compared with events n
lew hundred miles farther north, in the
Dawson country. The entertulnment
proposed by Sandy McTrigger and Jun
Darker met with excited favor. The
news spread for twenty miles about
Red Gold City and there had never
been greater excitement in the town
than on the afternoon and night of the
big fight. This was largely because
Kazan and the huge Dane had been
placed on exhibition, each dog in a
specially mnde cage of his own, nnd a
lever of betting began. Three hundred
men, each of whom was paying five
dollars to §ee the battle, viewed the
gladiators through the bars of their
cages. Hnrker’s dog was a combina-
tion of Great Dane and mastiff, born in
the north, and bred to the traces. Dot-
ting favored him by the odds of two to
one. Occasionally it ran three to one.
At these odds there was plenty of Ka-
zan money. Those who were risking
their money on him were the older
wilderness men—men who had spent
their lives among dogs, and who knew
what the red light in Kazan’s eyes
meant. An old Kootenay miner spoke
low in another’s ear:
“I’d bet on ’ira even. I'd give odds
If I had to. He'll fight all around the
Dane. The Dane won’t have no
method.”
“But he’s got the weight,” said the
other dubiously. “Look at his jaws,
an’ his shoulders—”
“An’ his big feet, an’ his soft throat,
en’ the clumsy thickness of his belly,”
Interrupted the Kootenay man. “For
heaven’s sake, man .take my word for
It, an’ don't put your money on the
Dane!”
Others thrust themselves between
them. At first Kazan hud snarled at
all these faces about him. But now
he lay back against the boarded side
of the cage and eyed them sullenly
irorn between his forepuws.
The fight was to he pulled off in Hnr-
ker's place, a combination of saloon
and cafe. The benches and tables had
been cleared out and iu the center of
the one big room a cage ten feet square
rested on a platform three and a half
feet from the floor. Seats for the three
hundred spectators were drawn closely
around this. Suspended just above the
opeu top of the cage were two big oil
lamps with glass reflectors.
It was eight o’clock when Ilarker,
McTrigger and two other men bore Ka-
zan to the arena by means of the wood-
en bars that projected from the bottom
of his cage. The big Dane was already
in the fighting cage. He stood blinking
Ids eyes in the brilliant light of the
reflecting lamps. He pricked up his
ears when he saw Kazan. Kazan did
not show his fangs. Neither revealed
the expected animosity. It was the first
they had seen of each other, and a mur-
mur of disappointment swept the ranks
of the three hundred men. The Dane
remained as motionless as a rock when
Kazan was prodded from his own cage
into the fighting cage. lie did not leap
or snarl. He regarded Kazan with a
dubious questioning poise to his splen-
did head, and then looked again to the
expectant and excited faces of the wait-
ing men. For a few moments Kazan
stood stiff-legged, facing the Dane,
milieu his shoulders dropped, and he,
too, coolly faced the crowd that had ex-
pected a tight to the death. A laugh of
derision swept through the closely seat-
ed rows. Catcalls, jeering, taunts Hung
at McTrigger and Darker, and angry
voices demanding their money back
mingled with a tumult of growing dis-
content. Sandy's face was red with
mortification and rage. The blue veins
In Barker's forsheud had swollen twice
their normal size. He shook his list in
the face of the crowd, uud shouted:
“Wait! Give ’em a chance, you
fools f"
At his words every voice was stilled.
Kazun had turned. He was facing the
Dane. The Dane had turned his eyes
to Kazan. Cautiously, prepared for a
luugc or n sidestep, Kazan advanced
* little. The Dane’s shoulders bristled.
He, too, advanced upon Kazan. Four
feet apart they stood rigid. One could
have heard a whisper in the room now.
Sandy and Harker, standing close to
the cage, scarcely breathed. Splendid
in every limb and muscle, warriors of
n hundred tights, and fearless to the
point of death, the two half-wolf vic-
tims of man stood facing each other.
None could see the questioning look in
their brute eyes. None knew that in
this thrilling moment the unseen hand
of the wonderful Spirit God of tho wil-
derness hovered between them, and
that one of Its miracles was descending
upon them. It was understanding.
Meeting in the open—rivnls in the
In the final moment, when only a step
separated them, und when men ex-
pected to see the first mad lunge, the
splendid Dune slowly raised his heud
and looked over Kazan’s hack through
the glure of the lights. Darker trem-
bled, and under his breath he cursed.
The Dane's throat was open to Kazan
But between the beasts hud passed the
voiceless pledge of peace. Kazan did
not leap. He turned. And shoulder to
shoulder—splendid In their contempt of
man—they stood and looked through
the bars of their prison into the one of
j human faces.
| A ronr burst from the crowd—a roar
of auger, of demand, of threat. In his
rage Harker drew a revolver und
leveled It ut the Dane. Above the tu-
mult of the crowd a single voice
stopped him.
“Hold 1” it demanded. “Hold—In the
name of the law 1”
For a moment there wns silence.
Every face turned In the direction of
the voice. Two men stood on chairs
behind the last row. One was Sergeant
Ilrokaw of the Royul Northwest
Mounted. It was he who had spoken,
lie was holding up a hand, command-
ing silence nnd attention. On the chair
beside him stood another man. He wns
thin, with drooping shoulders, und a
pule smooth face—a little man, whose
physique nnd hollow cheeks told noth-
ing of the years he hud spent close up
along the raw edge of the Arctic. It
was he who spoke now, while the ser-
geant held up his hand. His voice was
low and quiet:
“I’ll give the owners five hundred
dollars for those dogs,” he said.
Every man In the room heard the of-
fer. Harker looked at Sandy. For an
instant their heads were close together.
“They won't tight, and they’ll make
,»od team-mutes,’’ the little man went
on. ‘‘I’ll give the owners five hundred
dollars.”
Harker raised a hand.
“Make it six,” he said. “Make It six
and they’re yours.”
The little man hesitated. Then he
nodded.
“I'll give you six hundred,” he
agreed.
Murmurs of discontent rose through-
out the crowd. Harker climbed to the
edge of the platform.
“We ain’t to blame because they
wouldn’t fight,” he shouted, “but if
there’s any of you small enough to
She Had Faith That He Would Come.
want your money back you can git l|
as you go out. The dogs ’aid down on
us, that’s nil. We ain’t to blame.”
The little man was edging his way
between the chairs, accompanied by
the sergeant of police. With his pale
face close to the sapling burs of the
■ age he looked at Kazan and the big
Dune.
“I guess we’ll be good friends,” he
said, and be spoke so low that only the
•bigs beard bis voice. “It’s a big price,
but we’ll charge it to the Smithsonian,
Bids. I’m going to need a couple of
four-footed friends of your moral cali-
ber.”
And no one knew why Kazan nnd the
Dane drew nearer to the little scien- I
tist's side of tile cage ns he pulled out j
a big roll of bills and counted out six I
hundred dollnrs for Harker and Sandy
McTrigger.
night. Then she mnde herself a neat
under a bnnskinn shrub, und waited
until dawn.
Just how she knew when night blot-
ted out the lust glow of the sun, so
without seeing she knew when day
came. Not until she felt the warmth
of the sun on her hack did her anxiety
overcome her caution. Slowly she
moved toward the river, sniffing the
air and whining. There was no longer
the smell of smoke In the nlr, nnd she
could not catch the scent of man.
She followed her own trail back to
the sand-lmr, nnd In the fringe of
thick bush overhanging the white
shore of the stream she stopped and
listened. After a little she scrambled
down and went strulglit to the spot
where she and Kazuu were drinking
when the shot came. And there her
uose struck the sand still wet and
thick with Kazan’s blood.
She knew it was the blood of her
mate, for the scent of him was all
about her In the sand, mingled with
the man-smell of Sandy McTrigger.
She sniffed the trail of his body to
the edge of the stream, where Sandy
hud dragged him to the canoe. She
found the fallen tree to which he had
been tied. And then she came upon
one of the two clubs thnt Sandy had
used to beat Wounded Kazan Into sub-
missive® ess. It was covered with blood
and. hair, and all at once Gray Wolf
lay back on her haunches and turned
her blind face to the sky, And there
rose from her throat a cry for Kazan
that drifted for miles on the wings
of the south wind. Never had Gray
Wolf given quite that cry before. It
was not the “call” that comes with
the moonlit nights, nnd neither wns
it the hunt-cry, nor the she-wolf’s
yearning for matehood. It carried
with It the lament of death. And after
that one cry Gray Wolf slunk back to
the fringe of bush over the river, nnd
lay with her face turned to the stream.
A strange terror fell upon her. She
lmd grown accustomed to durkness,
but never before find she been alone
in that darkness. Always there had
been the guardianship of Kazan’s pres-
ence. She heard the clucking sound
of a spruce hen in the bysh a few
yards away, and now that sound came
to her as If from out of another world.
A ground-mouse rustled through the
grass close to her forepaws, and she
snapped at it, and closed her teeth
on a rock. The muscles of her shoul-
ders twitched tremulously and she
shivered ns if stricken by intense cold.
She was terrified by the darkness that
shut out the world from her, und she
pawed at her closed eyes, as if she
might open them to light.
Early In the afternoon she wandered
back on the plain. It was different.
It frightened her, and soon she re-
turned to the beach, and snuggled
down under the tree where Kazan had
lain. She was not so frightened here.
The smell of Kuzan was strong about
her. For an hour she lay motionless,
with her heud resting on the club clot-
ted with his hair und blood. Night
found her still there. And when the
tnoon and the stars came out she
crawled back into the pit in the white
sand that Kuzun’s body had mude un-
der the tree.
With dawn she went down to the
edge of the stream to drink. She
could not see that the dify was almost
us dark as night, and that the gray-
black £ky was u chaos of slumbering
storm. But she could smell the pres-
ence of It In the thick air, nnd could
feel the forked flashes of lightning
that rolled up with the dense pall
from the south and west. The distant
rumbling of thunder grew louder, and
she huddled herself ugaln under the
tree. For hours thy storm crashed
over her, nnd the rain fell in a deluge.
When It had finished she slunk out
from her shelter like a thing beaten.
Vainly she sought for one last scent
of Kazan. The club was washed clean.
Again the sand was white where
Kazan’s blood bad reddened it. Even
under the tree there was no sign of
him left.
Until now only the terror of being
alone in the pit of darkness that en'
veloped her had oppressed Gray Wolf.
With afternoon came hunger. It was
this huuger that drew her from the
sand-bar, and she wandered back Into
the plain. A dozen times she scented
game, and euch time it evaded her.
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE
FOR TAXES
Notice Is hereby given thnt the property
hereinafter described will b« sold at puli-
Mc luiethm lor cash, to the highest bidder
nt the treusurcr s office in the county court
v rw, !,\,h0 ci,f ,of Medford, Grunt Coun-
ty, Oklahoma, between the hours of one
i#Jd fo“r.9dock P. M. on Tuesday
the 1st day oi May, A. D., 1917, and in
case said real estate Is not sold lor the
want of bidders, slid sale will he ad-
journed from day to day for a period not
exceeding throe duys.
,„£h“* “ schedule of the real estate to he
sold Is hereunto annexed, and following
the description of Uio lot to he sold Is
a statement of the amount of the tuxes,
mterest, cost and penalties accrued there-
That each nnd all of said tracts of real
been sold to Grunt County, Ok-
lahoma, for delinquent taxes more than
two years prior to the dale or this notion
or sale, and that no part of said reul estate
has been redeemed for the period of two
from the dote of such sale.
r™»‘ % ,saKle of «wl estate within Grunt
f°r, delinquent taxes for
J5 yroe "as held at the' treasurer’s
Comber jun e,u"ly on tho 2»d day of No-
A.VDtnioi7my hand 0l1® 28th day °f March’
County Treasurer of Gnin? County,F'okla.
Lot 18, Block 10S.._
Lot 29, Block 104..
I-ot 34, Block 104..
Lot 3, o'"-1*
Lot 14,
3j IHock 105
Lot to! Jiiock loo.:;:::;;::;;:::;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:
Block 100..
1.78
3.49
2.49
1.50
1.59
1.59
1.32
Lot 30, Block 106..
Lot 3. Block 108..
Lot 14, Block 108................................... 1.33
Lot 19, Block 108......................... j ;i2
Lot 20, Block 108.
Lot 3, Block 108
Lot 3, Block 110.
Lot 19. Block 110...
1.32
1.33
1.32
1.32
Lot 20, Block 110..........................I.:...: IJta
21, Block 110..
1, Block 111
5, Block 111...
POND CREEK CITY
Lot 12, Block
Lot 13. I
Lot 14, Block 4
0, Block =
7, Block
8, Block
9, Block
10, Block
1, Block
2, Block
3, Block
4, Block
*, Block
0. Block 7
7. Block 7
Block 7
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
Lot
.5...................
Block 3.........
4..................
...........
—...»
3...................
5..................... ........
5...................
5...............
5..................
7...................
7..................
—
7...................
7...................
—
.......
Amount
12.93
1.30
15.90
1.43
1.43
1.43
1.43
8.80
UIO
2:3
L72
2:3
1.24
1.24
1.72
1.72
1.72
Lot
Lot
Lot 28, Block 111.............................. j.yl
Lot 4, Block 112....
Lot 4, Block 113....
Lot 1, Block 114....
Lot 1, Block- 115....
Lot 1, Block 110. ..
Lot 1, Block 117. ..
Lot 3, Block 117...
Lot 1, Block 118 ...
Lot 3, Block 118.....
1.32
1.32
1.32
1.32
1.32
23
?;3i
13
1.32
Block F....
SALT FORK VILLAGE
Amount
95
7, Block 2.........................................95
10, Block 2............ 95
2. Block 4.........................................90
Lot 5, Block1].......................................v
Lot 23, Block 1.........................................95
Lot 24, Block 1
Lot
Lot
Lot
Ul
Lot
Lot
L°{
Lot
Lot
3, Block 4.....
90
.99
.90
Block ................
Lot 10. Block 7.................
Lot 1, Block 10..............
Lot 2, Block 10.............
Lot 3, Block 10...................
Lot 4, Block io..............;;;;;
Lot 5, Block 10................
Lot o, Block io...............
Lot 7, Block 10...................
Lot 8, Block 10....................
Lot 9, Block 10....................
Lot 10, Block 10........
Lot 12. Block 17..................;:
Lot 14, Block 17...................
Lot 13, Block 17........„.........
Lot 7, Block 19
Lot 8, Block 19 .
I..,: is, Bio.-k nt.........
Lot 10, Block 23.........
Lot 2X, Block 24 .......... ......
Lot 4, Block 25...................
Lot 5, Block 25.........
Lot 6, Block 25...........
Lot 7, Block 25...........
Lot 8, Block 25.........
Lot 10, Block 25....................
Lot 1, Block 20.....................
Lot 2, Block 20..............
L1 j Lot 3, Block 20...........
'VCs Lot 10, Block 20...........
55 Lj Lot 12, Block 20...........
W'j Lot 15, Block 20.....
55’1 - Lot 10, Block 20..........
Lot 9, Block 28.....................
Lot 10, Block 28....................
Lot 9, Block 31..................
Lot 13, Block 31....................
Lot 1, Block 38....................
Lot 2. Block 38.....................
Lot 7, Block 39.....................
Lot 8, Block 39.............
Lot 1», Block 39 ...................
N'b Lot 16, Block 39...........
Lot 11, Block 35..........
Lot 12, Block 35....................
Lot 13, Block 35................
Lot 1 I, Block 35.............
Lot 15, Block 35................
Lot 10, Block 35..............
3V. 40 ft. Lot 1, Block 42 .
E. 80 ft. Lot 3. Block 42..
Lot 9, Block 48...............
Lot 1, Block 44................
Lot 2, Block 44.........« ’ ~
Lot 9. Block 40...........'...........
Lot 24, Block 4fi......................
Lot 25, Block 40......................
Lot 20, Block 46.................
E. 10 ft. Lot 10, Block 48..
Lot 6, Block 52......................
Lot 7, Block 52................
Lot 14, Block 52......................
b°‘ JJ, block 52................................... 20.99
Lot 10, Block 52.................... o 74
Lot 14, Block 55............... i*43
Lot 14, Block 03 ...........
Lot 2, Block 00.
Lot 3, Block 60
Lot 4, Block 00.
Lot 5, Block 06.
Lot 12, Bolck 00.
Lot 13, Block 00.
Lot 14, Block 00.
Lot 15, Block GO.
1.72
1.72
1.72
1.72
1.72
10.09
1.30
2.81
1.72
1.72
3.11
31.87
15.90
1.30
1.87
7.91
7.91
0.04
0.04
1.59
32.30
20.73
19.31
2.84
28.55
20.05
40.21
170.91
11.79
2.29
1.72
1 72
33.40
2.29
27.71
30.05
5.39
3.12
1.72
1.72
1.72
1.72
1.72
13.93
8.42
0.54
25.73
43.37
43.37
3.08
1.87
1.87
3.11
8.06
2.11
2.11
20.99
20.99
WALKER’S ADDITION
11. Block 3......................................V™!)0"!*
Lot 12, Block 3................... 9.39
PARK ADDITION
. . „ , . Amount
A Bl°ck 6...........a........................1 5.10
Lot 10, Block 8........................................ 5.55
JEFFERSON VILLAGE
, . „ . _ Amount
[ °1 J. g ock 3.............................g Ml
-° J. g ock 3...................... 10.09
Lot 13, Block ll...„................................... 15,87
Lot 14, Block 11........................................ 15,87
Lot 19, Block 12............ 3.09
Lot 20, Block 12....................................._ .98
Lot 21, Block 12.........................................98
U°* A Block 32—................................... 1.08
Lot 19, Block 32......... 1.08
L°t 21. Block 32........................................ 1.08
Lot 22, Block 32........................... 1.08
Lot 23, Block 32........................................ 1.08
Lot 24, Block 32........................................ 1.08
Lot 13. Block 35................... 1.19
Lot 14, Block 35—...................... 1.19
DAVIS ADDITION
Lot 4, Block 2........................................g 12.47
RENFROW VILLAGE
Lot 10, Block 4................................
Lot 1, Block 7........................................ 3.9«
Lot 2, Block 7........................................ 1.65
Lot 4, Block 7.............................
Lot C, Block 7...........................
Lot 8, Block 7.............................
Lot 10, Block 7...........................
4, Block 4.........................................90
5, Block 4.........................................90
0, Block 4.........................................90
7, Block 4
8, Block I
9, Block 4.......................................
i . }?’ ”!oc,k 4..............*........................90
Lot 11, Block 4..............
Lot 12, Block 4...................
Lot 29, Block 4
Lot -
Lot
Lot
2.55
2.55
*u* DIUIK **........................................ ,95
20, Block 5........................................ ..95
8. Block 0....................................... 2.27
9, Block (1....................................... 2.27
1.06
Lot 14, Block 0..
GIBBON VILLAGE
Lots 1-2-3-4-5-fl, Block 10—.....
Amount
....« 4.00
|SJO newspaper can succeed with-
out advertising, therefore we
lolicit the patronage of our readers
tor those who by their advertising
help to make this paper possible.
:988
.08
.... .08
PETERSON'S ADDITION
Lot 5; Block 11.....................................Amount
Lot 21, Block 7....................................... 1.1)
Lot 23, Block 7........................................ l.ll
WAKITA VILLAGE
Lot 3, Block 7....
Lot 13, Block 7....
Lot 14, Block 7 ...
Lot 1, Block 12 ...
Lot 2, Block 12....
Amount
::::* lit
.... 1.49
SOUTH SIDE ADDITION
Lot
5,
Block 5.............
Amount
..........................$ 50.09
'Lot
6,
Block 5.............
Block 7.............
..........................’ 50.09
Lot
1».
.....;................... 2.13
Lot
11.
Block 7.............
.......................... 22.83
Lot
12,
Block 7.............
.......................... 22.83
Lot
1.
EAST SIDE
Block 3.............
ADDITION
Amount
................... » 1.19
Lot
2,
Block 3..............
..........................' 1.19
•L
Ill ock 3.....
Lot
4,
Block 3..............
.......................... 1.19
Lot
•r>,
Block 3..............
........................ 1.19
Lot
0,
Block 3..............
Lot
Lot
Lot
COCHRAN’S ADDITION
Amount
Block 1...............—...................$ 28.72
Block 1....................................... 1.56
Block 1....................................... 9.44
W. 15 ft. Lot 4, Block
MANCHESTER
1.29
VILLAGE
Amount
....................g 20.71
0.54
M3
1.43
1.43
13.05
2.20
2.20
30.02
DARROUGH’S ADDITION
Amount
Lot 3, Block 1—...................................g 39.10
MEDFORD VILLAGE
Lot
Lot
Lot
Block
Block
Block
CHAPTER XVII. ~
Alone in Darkness.
Never had the terror and loneliness
°f blindness fallen upon Gray Wolf
as tin the days that followed the shoot-
ing of Kazan nnd his capture by Sandy
McTrigger. For hours after the shot
she crouched in the bush back from
the river, waiting for him to come to
her. She had faith that he would
come, as he had come a thousand
times before, and she lay close on her
belly, sniffing the air, and whining
when it brought no scent of her mate.
Day and night were alike an endless
chaos of darkness to her now,*tout she
knew when the sun went down. She
sensed the first deepening shndows of
eveuing, and she knew that the stars
were out, and that the river lay In
moonlight. It was a night to ronm,
and after a time she moved restless-
ly about in a small circle on the plain,
and sent out h^r first inquiring call
for Kazan. Up from the river came
the pungent odor of smoke, and In-
stinctively she knew that it was this
smoke, and the nearness of man, that
was keeping Kazan from her. But
she went no nearer than that first cir-
j made by her padded feet. Bllnd-
j ness bad taught her to wait. Since
I the day of the battle on the Sun Rock,
traces—they would have been rolling when the lynx had destroyed her eyes.
In the throes of terrific battle. But here Kazan had never failed her. Three
Came that mute appeal of brotherhood. 1 time she called for hiih la the early
Even a ground-mouse that she'” cor-
nered under a root, and dug out with
her paws, escaped her fangs.
Thirty-six hours before this Kazan
and Gray Wolf hud left a half of their
lust kill a mile or two farther back
on the plain. The kill was one of the
big barren rabbits, and Gray Wolf
turned in its direction. She did not
require sight to find It. In her was
developed to its finest point that sixth
sense of the animal kingdom, the sense
of orientation, and as straight as a
pigeon might have winged Us flight
she cut through the bush to the spot
where they had cached the rabbit.
A white fox had been there ahead of
her, and she found only scattered bits
of hair and fur. What the fox had
left the moose birds and bush jays
had carried away. Hungrily Gray Wolf
turned back to the river.
(TO BE CONTINUED.) .
Naming Cities for Dates.
What is, perhaps, the oddest of all
ways to select a namr for a city jr
street is to name it for a certain
date, and yet this has been done in
Brazil for hundreds of years. It wns
on January 1, 1531, that a Portuguese
captain, Alphonso de Souza by name,
entered the mouth of that marvelously
beautiful bay, on the shores of which
now stands the capital of the vast re-
public of Brazil. Thinking that ne was
sailing into a great river, he named
the stream Rio de Janiero, or January
river, and all through the centuries
the name has remained.
Lot 8, Block 11.
Lot 9. Block 11..
Lot 13, Block Ti..
Lot 1, Block 39..
Lot 2, Block 39 .
Lot 3, Block 39 .
Lot 4, Block 39-
Lot 5, Block 39..
Lot 0, Block 39..
Lot 8. Block 55-
Lot 7. Block 57 .
Lot 8, Block 57.
Lot ti, Block 58-
Lot 8, Block 59...
Lot 4, Block 60-
Lot 4, Block 61...
Lot 8, Block 61-
Lot 4, Block 02...
Lot 5, Block 02...
Lot 5, Block 03-
Lot 1, Block 64-
Lot 8, Block 64-
Lot 13, Block 64...
Lot 25, Block 01-
Lot 0, Block 05-
Lot 15, Block 05...
Lot 10, Block 65-
Lot 7, Block 06-
Lot 11, Block 66...
Lot 12, Block 60...
Lot 11. Block 07...
I.ot 15, Block 07-
Lot 10, Block 07 -
l.ot 15, Block 03 -
Lot 10. Block 09 ..
Lot 20, Block 73-
Lot 18, Block 74
Lot 0, Block 75-
Lot 18, Block 70-
l.ot 22, Block 70-
Lot 3, Block 77-
Lot 9, Block 77-
Lot 15, Block 77
Lot 18, Block 78
Lot 4, Block 79 -
Lot 15. Block 79-
Lot 22, Block 79.
Lot 14, Block 80-
Lot 17, Block 81 —
Lot 1. Block 82.
Lot 8. Block 83 -
Lot 15, Block 83 ...
Lot 16, Block 83-
Lot 22, Block 83 ...
Lot 0, Block 84—.
Lot 3, Block 85-
Lot 8, Block 85-
Lot 9. Block 85-
Lot 17, Block 85-
Lot 7, Block 86___
Lot 2, Block 90 ...
Lot 2t, Block 92-
Lot 2, Block 93-
Lot 6, Block 93-
Lot 10, Block 93—,
Ut 21, Block 93-
Lot 22, Block 93—.
Ut 2, Block 94.....
Lot 21, Block 94.....
Lot 4, Block 90.___
Ut 10, Block 96.....
Lot 21, Block 96.....
Lot 7, Block 97.....
Ut 9. Block 97 ...
Ut 19. Block 97 ...
Ut 20, Block 97....
Ut 12, Block 98____
Lot 21, Block 98___
Lot 28, Block 98.....
Lot 1, Block 99...„
Ut 2. Block 99.___
Ut 12. Block 99.—
Lot 18. Block »9_______
Lot 23 Block 100—
Ut 15, Block 101....
Ut 2. Block 102-
Amount
....« 9.45
... 41.77
... 9.45
i.. 22.40
... 22.40
9.80
... 4.08
... 4.08
... 4.08
... 4.08
... 3.64
... 1.49
1.32
3.65
3.65
... 2.00
... 1.78
... 1.56
1.50
1.56
.. 1.32
.. 1.32
1.32
.. 1.32
1.32
.. 1.32
1.32
... 1.32
.. 1.32
1.32
1.32
1.32
1.32
.. 1.32
.. 1.32
1.32
.. 2.00
.. 2.00
4.70
.. 10.10
.. 5.49
.. 3.19
.. 3.19
. 2.49
2.49
2.29
1.56
. 1.32
. 1.32
• H2
. 1.32
. ’ 1.32
:
;
. 1.50
. 1.56
• H6
: !:!S
1.78
1.56
2.30
. 4.36
2.00
2.00
2.06
. 2.00
2.00
2.06
L78
1.32
i:S
!:£
1.32
||
1.32
1.32
.1
Ut 4, Block 8—
SOUTH ADDITION
, , , Amount
Lot 11, Block 8.......................................$ 1.G5-
Lot 12, Block 8....................................... 1.05
Lot 13, Block 8-................................... 1.65
Lot 14, Block 8........................................ 1.05
Lot 15, Block 8..................................... 1.65
Lot 16| Block 8.—
Advertis-
ing a Sale!
m
”OU don't leave
your rig In the
middle of the
road and go to a fence-
post to read a sale bill
do you? Then don't
expect the other fel-
low to do It.
Put an ad In thli paper, then,
resardlce* of the weather,
the fellow you went to
reich reed* your announce-
ment! while eeated at his
fireside.
If he le a prospective buyer
you'll have him at your sale.
One extra buyer often pays
the entire expense of the
•d. end it*e a poor ad that
won't pull that buyer.
An ad In thle paper reaehee
the people you are after.
Bill* may be * necessity.but
the ad Is the thins that does
the business.
Don't think of having a
special sale without using
advertising apace In thia
paper.
OneExtraBuyer
at a sale often paya the
entire expense of the ad.
Get That Buyer
i' l'i 11 'HtHWtWHll
I :v
Lot 1,
Ut 3,
DEER CREEK VILLAGE
Block 3.._____________________
Block 3..........................
BRENHOLT’S ADDITION
BA9
Amount
—| 1.85
.... 4.77
Lot
SH
13, Block i............
Lot 14, Block 4..—
Amount
—♦ 5.51
.90
LAMONT VILLAGE
... , , Amount
J-0* 7. B ock 5......................................$ 1.85
Lot 8, Block 5....................................... 1.85
Lot 9, Block 5.............................L. 1.85
Lot 10, Block 5...................................— 22.17
Lot 11, Block 5....................................... 22.17
Lot 12, Block 5...................................... 1.85
Lot 1, Block 14........................................ 1.42
Lot 2, Block 14.................. 1.42
Lot 3, Block 14—---------- 3.11
Lot 4, Block 14—............................ 4.06
Lot 10, Block 24........................................ 1.22
Lot 3, Block 26..................................— 1.22
Lot 6, Block 28........... 1.00
Lot 3, Block 31....................................... 1,11
Lot 4, Block 31.................................. 4.74
Lot 4, Block 35.—.................................. 1.85
Lot 4, Block 38 -.............. 1.39
Ut 15, Block 41)........................................ 1.85
Lot 10, Block 40...................................
Lot 31, Block 45..................................
Tot 32! Block 43-
Lot 33, Block 43...
12.09
Lot 34. Block 43-
Lot 35, Block 43-
Lot 3, Block 47-
Lot 17, Block 47-
Lot 32, Block 49-
Lot 33, Block 49..
Lot 8. Block 50-
Lot 43, Block 50-
Lot 10, Block 53-
I.ot 22, Block 53-
Lot 27, Block 55-
Lot 1, Block 56-
Lot 2, Block 56„
Ut 3, Block 56........................... . ,
Lot 4, Block 50........................................ 1.59
Lot 6, Block 58____
Lot 23, Block 00-
Lot 2. Block 01-
Lot 36, Block 61-
Lot 40, Block 61-
Lot 24, Block 02—
Lot 45, Block 02-
Lot 13, Block 64-
Lot 12, Block 05—
12.09
1.85
1.85
1.85
28.37
1.85
1.22
1.22
1.22
1.22
1.85
2.65
1.59
1.59
1.59
1.59
£
I
YOUR
PRINTING
A Valuable Aaaet
ef Your Badness
d
i
I
i
i
I
§
jr;1 We Help Our Cus-
£: tomers to Success
With Presentable,
P Profitable
| PUBLICITY |
I'Hflf f»H' I1 ■!' II1 i f 444.44441
1
I
1
NASH VILLAGE
Lot 1, Block 1.____
Lot 21, Block 1—.
Lot 1, Block 2....
Lot 10. Block 2.....
Ut 18, Block 2..„
Lot 19, Block 2.,._
Lot 24, Block 6.....
Lot 13, Block 27.....
Lot 14, Block 27......
Ut f4. Block 32......
Lot 15, Block 32_____
Lot 16, Block 32.....
Lot 5, Block 40____
Ut 0, Block 40......
Lot 17, Block 40......
Lot 2, Block 47____
Lot 1, Block 48—.,
Lot 1, Block 52—
Lot 15, Block 53_____
Lot 15, Block 50______
Ut 3, Block 58____
Ut 4, Block 58_____
Ut 13, Block #7_____
Ut 28, Block 71_____
Ut 29. Block 71—
Ut 30, Block 71—
Ut 31, Block 71....
Ut 32, Block 71—
Ut 21, Block 76—
Ut 23, Block 76!—
Ut 1, Block 84-
Lot 1, Block 90____
Ut 2, Block 99-
Lot 3, Block 90—
Ut 4, Block 90-
Amount
...» 1.10
... 1.16
... 1.10
... 1.16
._ 1.16
- 1.16
_ .98
._ 1.65
_ 1.65
- 1.45
- 1.45
1.45
15.99
... 15.99
._ 1.22
_ 2.33
1.06
_ 9.86
88.22
1.16
2.48
2.48
1.07
1.18
1.16
1.18
1.10
1.16
1.08
1.08
.98
2.40
2.40
WANTED!
Your Job Printing Business
If We Can‘t Please You
Don’t Come Again
WEST SIDE ADDITION
|94
Block a.
Amount
..« 2.71
REMEMBER J
nnps
iilitiiiir
tilliiij.it
lip&il:
feiii;
iiiillilil!!
-,6-..............
m That we have every facility n
f for turning out neat print- A
V ing of all kinds. Letter 1
I heads, bill heads, office sta- J
I tionery, etc., furnished at I
I the lowest prices first I
I class work will permit. I
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The Medford Patriot-Star. (Medford, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 19, 1917, newspaper, April 19, 1917; Medford, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc826063/m1/2/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.