Seminole County News (Seminole, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 17, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
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13 ARE DEAD IN
- OIL FIELD FI
BIG GUSHER BURSTS INTO
FLAMES AS SPARK
IS STRUCK
'-i
\\ jL,k *
MANY MORE MAY BE VICTIMS
A Hammer or Rock Striking the Con-
trol Valve As It Was Being
Charged, Caused Spark
Which Started Fire.
Corsicana, Tex.—At least thirteen
workmen perished Instantly when the
monster producer of the Hughes Devel-
oping company’s No. 1 exploded ten
miles southeast of here.
A spark from a hammer or a rock
as the control valvue was being char-
ged at the well, ignited the oil and
gas from the gusher.
A crew of twenty men which came
from Mexla has not been accounted
for. The crew was working in the
near vicinity of the well when it
caught Are. The bodies of five men
have been recovered.
Leon K. Weise is American Red
Cross director for the Salonica dis-
trict In Greece. The American Red
Cross Is caring for the health of the
refugees from Smyrna and other Turk-
ish occupied territory who fled to
Greece, and is feedina half a million
of them a day.
Two Can’t Be Reached
Two other charred bodies nave been
located near the well but cannot be
reached, so intense is the heat from
the blazing inferno.
Those recovered are so badly char-
red that identification is impossible.
One man who was on the derrick
floor with the crew, escaped by run-
ning. His clothing, not being oil soak-
ed, did not ignite. A boy, 15 years
old, escaped with him.
One man said that the remains of
the dead men were where they fell
when the blast occurred, and with the
well still burning it would be impos-
sible for some time to remove them.
The fire started while hundreds
were in the vicinity of the well and it
is commonly commented that it is a
miracle that no more were killed in-
stantly.
A number of automobiles near the
well were reported to have been de-
stroyed by the fire.
MEXICANS HAVE SIX COURSES
RECOGNITION BY U. S. TO
BE NECESSARY
Return of National Railroads To Pri
vate Control Will Be Settled
Later it is Thought.
CAPTIVES FACING DANGER
Armed Ring Is Thrown About Bri-
gands' Stronghold In Hills.
Shanghai, China.—Report received
6a.vs the bandits who raided the Pe-
king express recently at Suchow, Pro-
vince of Kiangsu, capturing a large
party of passengers, including foreign-
ers, have demanded $2,000,000 (Mex.)
ransom for all of the captives.
Eight of the seventeen foreigners
held by the bandits in the mountains
of south Shantung, have been released
and are now on their way back to
Lincheng, the nearest railroad point
to Ichow, near which they have been
prisoners for the past week, accord-
ing to meager reports received.
The kidnapped Americans and other m^T'wdT not" permir'more" thftn 7c
Mexico City, Mex.—The instructions
which the Mexican commissioners
must unalterably follow during the
conference with the American dele
gates, which began May 14, on ques
tions at issue between the two eoun
tries, were given them recently al
meetings the commissioners Ramon
Ross and Fernando Gonzales Roa, had
with President Obregon and Albertc
Pani, minister of foreign relations
Under the instructions, the Mexican
commissioners must:
Insist upon absolute respect for Mex
lean sovereignty.
Agree to non-retroactivity in so fat
as it affects petroleum rights acquir
ed prior to May 1, 1917, or of article
27 of the present constitution nation
alizlng sub-soil mineral products.
Announce the administration’s sun
port of the newr oil law recently en
acted by the chamber of deputies and
now pending in the senate, which is
Intended to satisfy objections of for
eign interests against alleged retro
activity and confliscatory interprets
tions of article 27
Agree to a settlement of the Cha
mlzal dispute, granting the United
States land which the Rio Grande riv-
er has swept northward, but insisting
on indemnification of Mexico together
with an agreement to arrange some
method for settling disputes in the
future involved through changes of
the river's course.
Announce that the Mexican govern
consequences unless the troops sur- of { having full control of the
round,ng the brigands stronghold are bank the governmPnt.
^cording to a message I Propogp arbltratlon for the Bett,„
Which has been sen out by one of the | ment of a„ queBtions in d|pnu)p bp
captives, J. B. Powell American news- ■ tween the two c0llntrlPg aftPr the ques
apt r man, o . l.ing ia. tlon of recognition of Mexico is set
Negotiations for the release of the i ,]e(]
bandits’ prisoners are continuing and, | _______
it is reported, they are taking a fav-
orable turn. The negotiations are FARM WAGE TO BE HIGHER
being conducted on the spot by Ameri-! --
can, French and Italian consuls. 1 General Harvest Labor Will Be $4
IS DENIED SUGAR PETITION
Day, Labor Exchange Resolves.
Kansas City, Mo.—Indications are
Injunction to Prevent Dealing In Fu- that wages for general harvest labo,
tures Turned Down j will be at least $1 a day. according tr
-- | a resolution adopted here at the ninth
New York, N. Y.—Federal Judge annual Conference of the Nationa
Mayer announced that the govern- Farm Labor Exchange, Represents
ment's application for an injunction i tives were here from Iowa, Nebraska
to restrain the New York coffee and Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma,
sugar exchange and the New York General labor conditions, both on the
coffee and sugar association from deal- ^ farms and in the cities, were discussed
ing in sugar futures had been denied, i and it was decided that, in general
The temporarp injunction had been j farmers would be required to pay a
applied for pending final hearing on little higher wages to their workers
the charge that transactions in raw j this year than last. An upward trend
sugar futures, as operated by (he ex- ] in wages was noted in other, industries
change and its clearing association and It was declared the farmer must
constituted a conspiracy or agree- , meet this increase ,to some extent, in
ment in restraint of foreign and in-
terstate trade and commerce in viola-
tion of the Sherman law and Wilson
tariff act.
order to attract labor from the cities
Urges Export of Gold Surplus
New York, N. Y.—Exportation Of
! much of the gold that flowed to this
I country because of the war was urged
Bandits Rob Barnsdall Bank
Barnsdall, Oltla.—Posses are seour- by Secretary of Commerce Hoover t<-
ing the hills In search of two bandits stimulate loreign trade and prevent an
who robbed the First National Bank 1 era of unparalleled credit and price
of Barnsdall, securing about twenty- inflation in this country and aid stn
five hundred dollars In money and a blitzing of European currency by m.'ik
large maount of travelers’ checks. The Ing tlielr paper convertible into gold
bandits were unmasked and on enter-' The United States has a gold reserve
Ing the hank forced the assistant cash- 1 of $3.fin(',oon.nno. one billion of which
ier and five others who were in the is not only useless hut potentially d*-t
bank into the vault, then secured the gerous to it. lie told an audience of
cash and other valuables, making members of the United States chant
their get-away wtihout apprehension, i her of commerce.
Thirty Million Donated to Charity
New York, N. Y.—Thirty millott dol-
lars, an average of $1.43 for each of
the twenty-one million citizens of 129
\merican cities was given to charity
in the last year through 2,500 welfare
and philanthropic organizations which
have combined under the "community
chest” plan with only one fund raising
campaign in each city, it was shown
in the report of a nation-wide survey
Just completed by the national infor-
mation bureau.
Payroll Bandits Busy, One Killed.
New York. N. Y.— Payroll bandits
worked briskly in New York, attack
ing three carriers of money and es
raping with two of the payrolls. Our
bandit was shot dead by policemen
who pursued him and his companion
after they had snatched $4,700 front
two messengers and fled.
Price of Lead Reduced
New York, N. Y.—The American
Smelting and Refining company re
duced the price of lead from 7.50 tr
7.25 certs per pound.
RUSSIAN PEACE
DELEGATE SLAIN
TWO OTHERS ARE INJURED
IN THE SURPRISING
GUN FLAY
VOHOVSKY GODLY SHOT DOWN
Laur.tnne. M. Vcrovsky, an unbid-
den guest from Soviet Russia at tho
Lausanne, lies dead slain by a Swiss,
formerly nil uilKer in tlte Russian
service, and two of his lieutenants are
si riously wounded, each with two bul
I’l.s in his body.
One of the wounded men is Her-
mann Ahrens, a bolshevist from Ber-
lin, who was tire Russian press ageut
at both the firsi and seco, • I.aus&tmo
conferences; the other is J. Didwil-
kowski, Vorovsky’S young Russian
secretary.
The assassin, whose name is Mau-
rice Alexander Conrudi, and! whose
home was in the canton of Grisons,
was seized immediately after he shot
the three Russians while they were
dining at the hotel Cecil, headquarters
of the Russian delegation.
Conradi told the police that his un-
cle and brother had been tortured and
murdered by the boisheviki during the
terror in Russia. His act in shooting
the Russians, he declared, was one of
vengeance.
The assassin was seized as he at-
tempted to escape from the hotel.
Conradi is 38 years old and was born
at Anders. He expressed no regret
and admitted that he had formerly
served in the Russian army.
CHEMICAL IS UNDER LEVY
Tariff on Calcium Arsenate Not to
Be Lifted, Treasury Ruling.
Washington, May 9.- -Final announ-
cement was made at the treasury de-
partment by Assistant Secretary Moss
that the department would adhere to
its former ruling, that a duty of 25
percent ad valorem would be imposed
on calcium arsenate which the agri-
cultural departments has recommend-
ed to cotton planters for use in their
fight to exterminate the boll weevil.
Senator Harris, of Georgia, who had
taken a prominent part in the fight for
free arsenic, insisted with the treas-
ury officials that it had been the in-
tention of congress to place upon the
list the arsenic in the form in which
farmers would use it. The depart-
ment, however, found no special pro-
vision for calcium arsenate and de-
clared it must be classed in the, bas-
ket clause with those of chemicals up
or, which a 25 percent ad valorem
duty was imposed.
SMALLER GRAIN CROP SEEN
Bureau Bases Estimates on Condi-
tions Existing May 1.
Washington, D. C.—Smaller crops
than last year of winter wheat, rye,
and hay were forecast by the depart
n)ent of agriculture basing its esti-
mates on conditions existing May 1.
Production, however, will be larger
than the average of the last ten years.
Winter wheat, sown last autumn on
the second largest acreage ever plan-
ted to tha’ crop .suffered heavy aban-
donment and on May 1, the area re-
mained to be harvested was 14.3 per-
cent less than sown.
Firm’s Payroll Seized
St. Louis. Mo.—Louis Skrainka
president of the Skrainka Construction
company was robbed of $5,000 payroll
money by three masked and armed
bandits in St. Louis county recently.
Skrainka asserted he was carrying the
payroll in a satchel in his automobile
and was approaching tne company’s
plant when the bandits, riding in
another car, drove alongside. Two o'
the men held him up whlie tne third
pushed him out of the car and de-
manded the money.
Kansas Wheat Crop Below 1922
Topeka, Kan.—An 115,088,000 bushel
wheat crop in Kansas this year is pre-
dicted in the first production forecast
or the season made public by Edward
C. Paxton, statistician for (he United
States bureau of agricultural econo-
mies. This is slightly below the crop
harvested ihis year. Tlte report, made
on conditions up to May 1. estimated
the condition of the crop at 77 percent
of normal. This compares with a con-
dition ol 74 percent May 1. last year,
and a ten-year average May 1, condi-
tion of 85 perient.
German Given Death Penalty
Duesseldorf. May y —Albert Schlo-
getter one of the chiefs of the so-call-
ed "murder gaug ’ which itas been enr-
U ing on a campaign of terro ragainst
Fiencli occupation in the Ruhr, wan
convicted by a court martial and sen
fenced to death. He was charged with
espionage and,sabotage. Oqe of Schlo-
totters aides. Hans Badowsky was sen-
tenced for life at hard labor. Five
’tlier Germans of the "murder gang”
vere given tail sentences varying from
've to twenty years.
Youth Who was once Russian Soldier
Shot Fatal Shot r.s Vengence he
Said in a Statement After
Being Arrested.
Frank J. Irwin of New York hae
been made chairman of the rehabilita-
tion committee of the Disabled Amer-
ican Veterans to aid In speeding up
the relief of the war’s maimed. Mr.
Irwin is former state commander of
the D. V. A. for New York.
AVIATORS BODIES ARE FOUND
THOSE OF eOL. MARSHALL
AND LIEUT. WEBBER
Plane Is Thought to Have Hit Moun-
tain Side In Fog and Fell,
Wreckage of Ship Indicates.
San Diego, Cal.—Remains of two
men found on Cuyamaca mountain In
this county, near the engine and frag-
mants of an airplane, were postively
identified as those of Colonel Francis
H. Marshall and Lieutenant Charles
Webber, whose fate has been a mys-
tery since they left this city December
7, on a flight to Tucson, Ariz. Guided
by G. W. McCain, cattleman, who
found the bones and wreckage, two
reporters reached the spot after a
night lost on the mountain in a
dense fog and discovered a military
cap in which Lieutenant Webber’s
name was still legible.
The skulls of both officers were
crushed and other bone were broken,
indicating that both died instantly
after the fatal crash into the moun-
tain wilderness at an altitude of near-
ly 6,000 feet. As a heavy fog lay
in the mountains at that time, it is
supposed the aviators had lost their
way and crashed against the mountain
before they had time to realize their
danger.
An army revolver and saber and
three fire blackened silver dollars
were found with the remains. Cloth-
ing other than the cap, evidently had
been burned in the fire that followed
the crash among the pine trees, sev-
eral of which were broken off at tops.
TWO ARE BURNED IN FIRE
Entire Business Block Wiped Out As
Garage Is Lost In Blaze.
Ft. Worth, Texas.—Fire and Police
Commissioner John Alderman and
two firemen were injdred recently
when flames practically wiped out an
entire block in the business district,
the main buildings of which were oc-
cupied by the Gabert garage. When
the flames were placed under control
the loss was estimated to be between
$150,000 and $200,000.
The fire which originated on the
second floor of the building spread
to the paint department and in a few
moments the entire structure was a
flaming mass. The northwest resi-
dential sections of the city for a time
was threatened because of the strong
wind.
Livestock and Meats.
Chicago hog prices ranged front to
3(*c lower than a week ago. lieet steers
and butcher cows* and heifers largely -jc
to 50c higher, other classes genera.ly
steady, bat lambs 75c to $l-2o higher,
agetl sheep 50c to $1. lower.
On May 11’ all classes livestock around
steady with Friday s average. May l-
Chicago prices: hogs, top, $7.00; bulk or
v 1.1 -t~ V• in.-ilium i
Bites tfl.1V IV tfl- .............. .
bt t ! steers $S.I0 to $10; butcher cows and
. ...... i. . - r,.„lne at.-^ru .til
heifers tt no to $!'.80; feeder Steers $6 50
to »K.f. . light and medium weight veal
calves $*.25 to $10-60; fat lambs $14.25 to
$11: yearlings (!> to $12; fat ewes $4.2a
"stooker and feeder shipments from 12
Important markets during the week end-
ing May I were: cattle and calves, tw.bo,,
boga i:i,.lC6; sheep 0,306;
In eastern whqles.de fresh rneat ^rrian-
i ket- beef steady* te 50c higher: veal $1
to $2 higher: lamb firm to $3 higher amt
pork" loirs 50c to $2 up for the week.
May 12 prices good grade meats; beef
$13.50 to $15.50; veal $15 to $17; lamb -1-2
to $28; mutton $15 to $17: light pork loins
$18 to $21; heavy loins $12 to $17.
Hay.
Movement all hay continues very lighb
Higli quality hay very scare- and
price Arm. Demand of small volume but
rather active in most markets. All arri-
vals Ilf good hay readily taken. Bulk of
receipts however are lower grades which
are in less demand, tjuoted May ll-ho
1 Timothy—Boston #25.50, New A °rk $-7,
Philadelphia $25, Pittsburg $21.50. ( incln-
nati #20, Chicago $23, St. Lodis $-3, Min-
neapolis $18.50. . ,
No. 1 alfalfa Kansas $27, Memphis
$33 50.
No. 1 prairie Kansas City $19, St. Louis
$22, Minneapolis $1S.
Feed.
Mill feed markets generally easier. De-
mand very moderate. Supplies exceed
demand and prices have declined especi-
ally bran, both spring and winter wheat
bran Season bran sold at around $21. jO
Minneapolis and Kansas City jobbers bid
$19.60 in that market. Oil meals easier
and cottonseed meal declared $1 per ton.
Gluten feed and hominy feed fairly
steady but In light request. Receipts
and movement good. Production most
feeds fairly heavy. Quoted May 11—bran
$22.50, middlings $28.50. flour middlings
$29.75, Minneapolis; 32 per cent linseed
meal $40.50 Minneapolis, $40 Buffalo; glu-
ten feed $37.15 Chicago; white hominy
feed $32.50 St. Louis; $33.50 Chicago; 36
per cent cottonseed meal $38 Memphis,
$39 Atlanta.
Grain.
Grain prices trended downward during
the week with exception of 8th and 9th.
For the week Chicago July wheat de-
clined 2%c net; Chicago July corn -gc.
Bearish influences were lack of support
and weakness In stocks, cotton and corn
markets. Chicago July wheat declined
sharply on the 12th under heavy selling
credited to eastern account, but there
was a partial recovery toward the close.
Weakness in stocks and breaking of
drouth in wheat belt with forecast for
fair and warm weather were depressing
factors. Corn averaged lower with wheat
but showed good rallying power.
Closing prices in Chicago cash market:
No. red winter wheat $1.28: No. 2 hard
winter wheat $1.19; No. 2 mixed corn 80c,
No. 2 yellow corn 82c; No. 3 white oats
45c. Average farm prices: No. 2 mixed
corn in central Iowa 67c; No. 2 hard win-
ter wheat in central Kansas $1.03. Clos-
ing future prices: Chicago July wheat
$1.14%; Chicago July corn 18*4: Min-
neapolis July wheat $1.20%; Kansas City
July wheat $1.07%; Winnipeg July wheat
$1.18%.
Cotton.
Spot cotton prices declined 135 points
during the week. New York May future
contracts declined 139 points.
Spot cotton closed at 24.89c per pound,
New York May futures at 25.26c.
Fruit and Vegetables.
Spaulding Rose potatoes 50c to $1 high-
er eastern markets, weaker in Pittsburg
and Chicago. Texas stock lower. South-
ern cabbage declining under liberal sup-
plies. Texas onions nearly steady. Straw-
bery supplies generally liberal prices low-
er. Apple prices advancing.
Prices reported May 12; Florida Spaul -
ding Rose potatoes $7.25 to $S per barrel
in city markets, $6.25 f.o.b. Texas sacked
Bliss Triumphs, $6.50 per 100 pounds.
Eastern sacked round whites $1.50-$1.85
per 100 pounds in eastern markets. Maine
Green Mountains $2.25-$2.35. Northern
round whites $1.10 in Chicago, $1.25-92
other markets, 80c-$l at shipping points.
South Carolina and Mississippi pointed
cabbage mostly $2.75-$3.50 per barrel
crate. Alabama fiat $3-$3.50. Virginia
wakefields $3-$3.25 in Boston. Texas
mixed Nos. 1 and 2 yellow bermuda oni-
ons $2-$2.75 per standard crate in lead-
ing cities, $2 f.o.b. cash track. No. 1
stock $2.25 f.o.b, North Carolina Klondike
strawberries $3.50-$7 per 32 quart crate,
ara 2 fir*-.'4 T.e
I. w. W. Strike Is Failure.
San Francisco, Cal.—The general
strike of the industrial workers of the
world, called April 25, has ended in
Oregon and Washington, but is con-
tinuing at San Pedro, Cal. The strike
was called by two branches ol the I.
W. W., the lumber workers and the
marine transport workers.
wagonloads cash to growers. 20c-35c
quart basis in eastern cities. Missionary
15c-23c, Tennessee and Arkansas Klon-
dikes $4-4.75 per 24-quart crate f.o.b.
cash track. $4.50-$6 in city markets. Ala-
bama berries $4-$6.25. Mississippi KI mi-
di kes $4-4.50. New York Baldwin apples
$6.50-$7.50 per barrel. Northwestern ex-
tra fancy winesaps $2.75-$3.50 per box.
Dairy Products.
Butter market continued firm during
the week due to an unexpected shortage
of supplies. The undertone has been
nervous,. however, in expectation of a
break in prices accompanying the usual
spring Increase in production and at the
close the New York market showed some
weakness and declined to. Continued ar-
rivals of Canadian and Danish butter and
the reports of negotiation and butter
from other countries have caused some
uneasiness. Buyers for the most part
have continued to purchase only for their
immediate need.
Closing wholesale prices. 62 score but-
ter today, New York 43c; Chicago 42Co;
rhi'adelphia 43}tc; Boston 44 tfec.
Cheese markets fairly steady with held
cheese more active and firmer than fresh
goods. While dealers are not purchasing
much beyond their Immediate require-
ments the volume of cheese moved show
some increase over the previous week.
Wisconsin primary markets displayed
a w-eaker tone at tile close, prices declin-
ing 14c on daisies and double daisies and
Nc on square prints. Wholesale prices
at Wisconsin primary markets on May
11: single daisies 2144c; double daisies
21'jc. young Americas 21c; longhorn 21c:
square print 21»-4c.
Oil Price Cut In Three States.
Dallas. Texas.—The Magnolia Petro-
leum company announced a reduction
of lo cents t er barrel for Kansas, Ok-
lahoma ant? Texas crude oils for
grades over 31 degrees gravity, the
new rates ranging from $1.30 for 21 to
32.9 degrees to $2.20 for 41 degrees
and over.
Sioux City Gets Moose Convention
Topeka, Kan.—Sioux City, Iowa, was
selected for the next annual regional
conclave of the Loyal Order of Moose,
at the final business session of the
conclave in session here.
Horse That Bore Noted Chief Found,
Paris, France.—Napoleon's bay
mare which he is supposed to have
ridden during the battle of Waterloo,
has just been discovered among the
miscellaneous odds and ends of ihe
Louvre museum. After the final fall
of Napoleon the mare was bought by
an Englishman named Cleaves, who
kept it until it died and then had it,
stuffed and presented to the Manches-
ter natural history museum iq. 1842.
From Manchester, the stuffed animal
found its way to the Louvre, no one
quite knows how. when or why. ami
was relegated to a dusty corner,
where it was forgotten
Cutlcura for Sore Hands.
Sunk hands on retiring in the hot suds
of Cutlcura Soup, dry and rub In Cu-
tioura Ointment. Remove surplus
Ointment with tissue paper. Tills is
only one of the things Cutlcura will do
If Soap. Ointment and Talcum nre used
for all toilet purposes.—Advertisement*
Rust Takes Huge Toll.
Of the world’s output of iron and
steel during the 60 years from 1SG0 to
1020, approximately about 600,000,000
tons were lost by rusting. Taking the
average yearly output for that period
as 31,000,000 tons, and the average
yearly wastage as 11,000,000 tons, the
depreciation due to rust was more
than one-third of the output.—Ex-
change.
CATARRH
Catarrh la a Local disease greatly in*
fluenced by Constitutional conditions
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE con-
sists of an Ointment which gives Quick
Relief by local application, and Tha
Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts
through the Blood on the Mucoua Sur-
faces and assists in ridding your Bystem
of Catarrh.
Sold by druggists for over 40 Years
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Important to Chorus Girls.
“And what does the story of the
prodigal son teach us?” asked the su-
perintendent.
“It teaches how to get the fatted
calf," answered a boy at the foot of the
class.—Boston Evening Transcript.
No ugly, grimy streaks on the
clothes when Red Cross Ball Rlue is
used. Good bluing gets good results.
All grocers carry It.—Advertisement.
Time Will Tell.
He—“Why at this theater is the or-
chestra concealed?” She—"Why? Just
wnlt until you hear it play!’’
CORNS
Lift Off with Fingers
Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little
“Freezone” on an aching corn, instant-
ly that corn stops hurting, then short-
ly you lift it right off with fingers.
Truly!
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
"Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient
to remove every hard com, soft corn,
or com between the toes, and the cal-
luses, without soreness or irritation.
HOBO
"Blanchard, La.
Oct. 8. 1922.
You ask me to write and
tell you what the Hobo has
done for my son. It sure has
cured him of Brights disease
but he took 3 or 4 bottles be-
fore we could tell It was doing
him any good.
Now he Is as well as he
ever was tho he still takes a
little, along about one or two.
bottles during the year. Ho
took about 30 bottles of the.
Hobo medicine.
R. M. Flowers.”
Late in the winter of 1918
Homer Flowers was suffering
from what the family doctor
said was “Brights Disease."
The story of his taking Hobo
and the complete recovery
that followed has been told
in our advertising since that
time. The letter above was
written in answer to an in-
quiry of another sufferer ad-
dressed to Homer Flowers*
father.
Hobo Kidney and Bladder
Remedy is an herb remedy
—it contains no alcohol or
habit-forming drugs—gets re-
sults and leaves no bad after
effects. Druggists sell Hobo
for $1.20 per bottle. *
FOm OWNER!
Fruit Steamer Is Burned.
New York, N. Y.—An estimated loss
of $1,000,000 was entailed by the de-
struction by Are of Uip Santa Marta
of the United Fruit Line's fleet of
streamers at a Brooklyn dock recent-
ly.
Ford, Consul Is Transferred.
Washington, I), <?.— IUohHrd Ford,
of Oklahoma, recently appointed a
consul of the United States of class
3, has been assigned as vice-consul at
Colombo, Oevlon.
Child Expert To Be At O. U.
Norman, Okla.—Alma Binzel, na-
tionally known writer and lecturer on
child welfare and child educator, wil,
deliver an address at the University
of Oklahoma May 26 on "Mental
Health of the Child,” according to
Mrs. Vera I. Moore, acting director
of (he school of home economics.
Don’t throw away pitted and grooved timer shell*
Install a Positive Timer Roller
| am! double life of shell. It will run like new.
I Can't miss, improves starting, mileage ami
j power Introductory PRIC1£ 50c, postpaid.
POSITIVE TIMER ROLLER CO.
363 East 1 55th St. New York, N. Y.
Live a^eiit wanted for this locality
Trolley Car Kills Miami Man.
Miami, Okla.—Richard Gordon, 43
years old of Quapaw, was struck and
fatal'; injured recently by a trolley
;ar as he was driving an automobile
ils in the
treatment of ITCH. ECZEMA,
R1 N< J W O R M ,T ETT K R or o t h er
Itching skin di*eaat s. Price
75c at drngflrtwtft or direct from
A 1 Richard* Med'C-ne Co Shf'tron.Tei.
Gray Hair
iJe by using Q-Ban Hair Color R
water — » r it At all good drugg
dirert from HEMIC. - F.LIiS flwsmti
Is out or fash tea;
It unnecessary —
for you can have
abundant hair
of the origlu* »
gists,
» eer
a. T<
nts*
• I
I f f . S' ;v -l' t
•« r '•>
J\ ,'i (r •’ ,
, • W /. •? -f '
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Hoffman, J. W. Seminole County News (Seminole, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 17, 1923, newspaper, May 17, 1923; Seminole, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc859955/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.