The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 322, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 9, 1910 Page: 3 of 8
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THE NEWS, THREE MONTHS, $1.00.
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/
SAVED FROM AWFUL DEATH.
How an appalling calamity In his
family was prevented Is told by A. D.
McDonald of Fayettevllle, N. C., R.
1 ^1 ^*°- 8. "My sister had consump-
tion," he writes; "she was very thin
and pale, had no appetite and seemed
to grow weaker every day, as all
remedies failed, till Dr. King's New
Discovery was tried, and so com-
pletely cured her, that she has not
been troubled with a cough since. Its
the best medicine I ever saw or
beard f." For coughs, colds, lagrip,
asthma, croup, hemorrage—all bron-
chial troubles, it has no equa1. 60c,
$1. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by
all druggists.
THE SHAWNEE NEWS, THURSDAY. JUNE 9, 1810.
THE TEXAS WONDER.
Cures all Kidney, Bladder and
Rheumatic troubles; sold by Shawnee
Drug Co., or two months' treatment
by mail, for $1. Dr. E. W. Hall, 2926
Olive street, St. Louis, Mo. Seud for
testimonilas.
CASTLE HALL SHAWNEE LODGE
No. 20, KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
Every Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock
visiting brothers cordially invited to
be present
Third floor, Postoffice Building.
F. W. Haifley, K. of R. and S
W. Madden, C. C.
RODEGKER'S
Vienna Bakery
Broadway Airdome
Tonight and all week
The Beery &
Wells Co
"In Repertoire"
Complete orchestra. Ttckets on
sale at threatre.
lO 20 30
Uhawnee Lodge No. S3, I. o. O. F
Meets every Thursday night.
Visiting Brethren welcome.
over 65 years'
experience
Trade M#ms
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
lalckly ascertain our opinion free whether an
CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE
STOPS A FORM OF GAMBLING
•lames J Hill, the noted railroad
magnet and chairman of the Great
Northern Railway Company, who is
one of the few influential railroad
men to sccff at the importance of the
goevrnments present action against
the wholesale advance of freight rates
by the roads. Hill declares that "the
business of the United States is too
big for a little matter like this to
disturb It."
Courts Can't See Any Difference Be-
tween Puts and Calls, Ups and
Down* and "In-
demnities."
Chicago, June 9.—Directors of the
Chicago Board of Trade have gone on
record as opposed lo trading In what
are known as indemnities, which for-
merly were known as puts and calls.
The directors adopted a resolution
to abolish trading in Indemnities and
recommending an amendment making
It against the rules for any member
to engage In such transactions. The
proposed amendment was posted
for ballot and after tea days the
members will vote on the proposition.
Recently the decision of the appel-
late court startled the members in re-
gard to trading in "ups" and "downs,"
and it was recognized that some ac-
tion must be taken at once. Judge
Mack upheld the verdict of the munici-
pal court in the case of Nash & Wright
against Daniel C. Wright, in which the
defendant pleaded the gambling act
as a defense in an action brought to
recover money owing to the plaintiffs
on grain transactions.
While the transactions which gave
rise to the case grew out of opera-
tions in the old puts and calls, many
members were of the belief that the
difference between puts and oalls and
ups" and "downs," as they are now
called, were so small that no court
would recognize the difference.
patentable. C<
!i«l. HANDBOOK
ilona strictly confident
sent free. Oldest atrenry for seruriafr patents.
Patents taken through Atunn St Co. receive
tpecial notice, without charge, In the
Machine Made Bread
try ourl
10c loaf|
116 North Broadway
TIMRAND
Scientific American.
a handsomely lllnstrated weekly. Largest elr.
filiation of any si'lentldc Journal. Terms, f.'i a
roar; four months, |L tioldbyall newsdealers.
MUNN & Co.361Bro dwa"- New York
Branch Office. G25 P 8C. Wnnhlnirton. D. C.
SO
Visiting
Cards
50 Cents.
DBS. WILSON & GALUER
SPECIALISTS.
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Third Floor Mammoth Building.
Rooms 113-114. /no- 764.
SHAWNSj OKLA
SOCIETY
$
M r« MM4 tOMBdlO
**coowM.ofao«].tr erant*. orMlejihow
When you select me monument 01
headstone from our samples!
Up-to-date, appropriate designs at
lttle money—Just what yet r tasts
will most approve—at our yard.
Let us give prices.
BUGLASS A COLLINS.
POTTAMATOMIE COUNTY MONU
MKNT WORKS
132 N. Ben St. Phoie |
mnamlbl.. VsKitxm* IttoM
News, tu. ur Mod MtOH. Hftur «f
Mata .nO PMladeliMa.
is. Con Bur., HIGHEST AWARD* WAl.-VV • /J
4 Pnif l&oid ItaUl Wu, iw St U
1 'Cute*.**n jh 1 c
POTT AW ATOMIll COUNTY
MONUMENT WORKS
112 N. Bell St. Telephone >11
Buglass k Collins, Proprietors.
! Carpets Cleaned
j At Your Home
| No dust; do not have to
J move furniture, etc. By
Standard Vacuun Cleaner
M. R. MILE
Residence 633 North Bell]
Pbone 676 Red
trkvuers
mmrn' GOIBS
315 Dearborn St., Chicago. *
| Jockey Fred Langan, R. F. Car-
man s lightweight rider, who was kill-
ed at the Graveaend track in a spill
ot three horses during a race. The
first hor3e stumbled and fell and
those following crashed Into the
struggling ainmal. Langan's skull
was crushed, by a flying hoof. The
other Jockeys escaped with painful
bruises.
millions for richard parr
Government Will Turn Over Part ol
Sum Recovered to Man Who Un-
earthed 8ugar Frauds.
Washington, June 9.—Attorney Gen-
eral YVIckersham has rendered a de-
cision in which he holds that Richard
1'arr Is entitled to recover from the
government the amount of his claim
for information given against the so-
called sugar trust.
Parr's information brought about the
recovery of between J3,000,000 and $4,-
000,000. The question of how much
money will be paid him is within the
discretion of the secretary of the treas-
ury.
Under the lav Parr could be allowed
as much as 50 per cent of the amount
recovered, bnt there Is lltte probability
he -will receive any such sum. The
usual reward has been 30 per cent.
house ado; ts special rule
The Postal Savings Bank Bill Will
Now Probably be Pushed
to Passage.
Washington, June 9.—With but ten
Insurgents votes on It the cloture rule
on the postal savings banks bill was
put through the house passing by a
vote of 169 to 144. The rule is one
that permits eight hours debate on
the measure, four hours to each side
and prohibits all amendments except
one in the nature of a substitute foi
the whole bill. Working under that
rule the house will take the bill uc
Thursday.
PAOE |
Si
Hangwell
* Trousers
Ho*d Their Shape and "Sii Easy."
Made in 105 Sizes: 400 Patterns
Ash for them at your dealer's
C. KE.NYON COMPANY
23 Union Square \cw ^ or*
-WB PRINT—
Note Head*, BUI
Letter Head*, I
Envelopes, Vlaiting Caida
Wedding Ii
Pamphlet*, Porter*,
ike shawnee news
301 BA8T MAIN ST.
hi01- Rrr"some American
Hall. his beautiful and historic old' Indian]' * £
residence. Northclilfe's m>n T-,luf , Introduce you to
ference to the Guild Hall speech was 1 you'to^Mak'''018 I"° "0t "Sk
a statement he made while showing selves." " Bpeech them"
Electric
Bitters
Succeed when everything else fails.
In nervous prostration and female
weaknesses they are the supreme
remedy, as thousands have testified.
FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND
STOMACH TROUBLE
it is the best medicine ever sold
over a druggist's counter.
DR. G. H. TAYMAN
...DENTIST...
PHONE 92
Office over Shawnee National Bank
The climate of Oklahoma is like
this section, an equable overlap of
both the North and tne South. The
winters are mild, the thermometer
rarely reaching isro, and the cold
weather Is of short duration. Work
out In the open may be carried on
all the year around. The spring, or
planting season, begins about the 20th
of February, and autumn steals Its
way Into the winter months so per-
sistently that almost before a real
biting frost has been felt the warm
raya.of the sun and tne gentle spring
breezes from the Oulf of Uezloo
has been, and makes possible another
overwhelm what little winter there
planting
United States Senator Wm. Lorimer
of Illinois, who has just attracted re-
newed attention to the charges that
he was elected through bribery, by an
absoute denial of all such state-
ments. At the same time Senator
Lorlmer's position has been made
more unenviable by the indictment of
State Senator Broderclk, who Is
charged with having paid *2500 for a
vote for Lorimer.
Boston Teachers Pensioned.
Boston, June 9.—The Boston school
commltee has authorized the retire
ment on annual pensions of $180 of
17 veteran teachers of the Boston
schools, eight men and nine women,
whose terms of service vary from 32
years to more than 56 years, eight hav-
ing served more than half a century,
Edwin Gould Offers Prize.
New York, June 9.—At the Press
club's dinner in honor of Glenn Cur l
tiss, the aviator, J. Bernard Walker ol
the Scientific American announced
that Edwin Gould offers $15,000 as a
prize to the man who shall produce
the first aeroplane successfully em-
ploying two motors and two propellers
YOU WILL BE PROUD OF
A KENYON OVERCOAT
brcausr il never joy* in ihapr until you need a new
one Style and Fit—si well n wearing
uualily—air never larking in Coati that bear
the krnyon label They ate the
kind ol Overcoat* that not oaijr
reel comfortable and
cosy—but look
right all the
fc&aa
ma
ay 1
icie
It's the
* made in a factory
Kenyon Overcoat! air mat*
~nol a iweauhop—where the art or coat-
making hai reached perfection. Only tested
fabnri are u«ed and every part n carefully made by
on expert workman. Aik your dealer , _
C. KENYON CO., " HjWBffiv
Two of the smallest monkeys In
the world, which have Just been ac-
quired by H. Pfannebecker, a Brook-
lyn man, from friends In Brazil. The
little animals are of the marmoset
family and measure only four Inch
from the head to the base of the j
tall. They are unusually active llt-
tle beasts, being even greater jumpers I
and climbers than ordinary monkeys.
SHAWNEE LOCAL SOCIALIST
PARTY MEETS EVERY SUNDAY
AFTERNOON AT 2 O'CLOCK IN
MALL TRADES ASSEMBLY MALU
WHITTAKER BUILDING.
SHAWNEE TRANSFER S
8T0 RAGE
Do a general trans-
fer & storage business
a. Mcdonald, Prop
Office Phone 124 Night Phone 992
OHlce 203 South Union
WM. MABEN
Dean Jones Kicked by a Horse
Columbia, Mo., June 9.—J. c. Jones
dean of the college of arts and
sciences of the University of Missouri,
was kicked and dangerously injured by
a horse at his home on Kaiser avenue.
Dr. Jones will be kept from his uni-
versity duties several days, his phvsi-
clan says.
BASKS OX SURE THING NOW.
"I'll never be without Dr. King's
New Life Pills again," writes A.
Schingeck, 647 Elm St., Buffalo, N.
Y. "They cured me of chronic con-
stipation when all others failed." Un-
equaled for Biliousness. Jaundice, In-
digestion, Headache, Chills, Malaria
and Debility. 25c at all druggists. *
DAILY MARKtT REPORTS
Live Stock.
Kansas City, Juno S.-Cattle—Commoa
stems. (6.25^7.30; helfera, $5.10@7.*>0'
weetern Blockers and feeders, |6.00l<i U 3s'
Hogs—Bulk ot Hale's, 9.20«i0.30. Sheen—
Ljambs, coud to ohoice weth-
er., |5.25®5.76; ewes, $4.76®M0
Chicago, June 8 Beet -Steers. |7.75@
>.60; cows and heifers, *2.9U'(«7 10; stook-
ers and feeders, Rcw®M5. Hogs—Bulk
of sates, $9.30(19.40. sheep—Natives S3
to5.60; lambs, 5.2SV(8.90 ' 6
k°.u's; 'Iune •-—Beef— Steers, J6.40
®8.80; blockers and feeders. 6 25 ■
cows and heifers, $4.00@7.T5; Texas '
steers, $4.80®8.00. Hogs—I'lgs and lluhu 1
19.0009.45. Sheep -Native? H00®5
lambs, 17.6069.55. * •
Grain.
Kansas City, June 8.— close; Wheat-
May, 88%c; July, 8C',. , Sept., 80%c Corn
-May, 67Hc; July. 6**e; Sept., M*o
Chicago. June 8.—Close; Wheat-May
« 91Hc: Sopt" "07<4C Corn—
« *«• <">'• r,9'*'': "opt.. 57*0. Oats
^ a7^c; July, 3.<S,c; Sept., 86'jc.
8t Ivou.s, June 8.—Wheat—Cash hlirh-
•r; traok No. 2 red, M.lOftl.H; No. I
hard, 91.0161.10. Corn—Cash Metier-
track No. 2, 60186014c; No. 2 white 63®
6>J4c. Oats— Casli, lower; track No. I,
J7Hc; No. 2 white, 4004014c. Rye—7 c.
nominal. Close; Wheat ftutures lower;
July, 92%@'92%c; September, 9014©aoHe
Oorn—Futures lower; July. 59*o Sen-
ternber, 5914J>59*e. OaU-JPutures low-
er; July, 8694c; September, 3414c,
Produce.
Kansas City, June 8 —Eggs, 17c per
aoz. Poultry—Hens, 14c; springs, 19®26c:
turkeys, 16!4e. Butter—Creamery, extra.
J7c; packing stock, 1814c. Potatoes nam
#C®|1.00 per bushel ' "*"•
a aoQoaQQEaaeaoa i axaa aaa □ aa aoa
How to Vote On
| The Capital Question
■ There are two propositions to bo voted on June 11, as to the
capital—first, shall the capital be permanently located now, and,
second, If you want It located, where?
Shawnee is not a candidate under the present bill,but If you
want to vote No on the proposition and indicate that you favor
Shawnee, you may stamp an X In the second box on the of-
ficial ballot and then go down and stamp X opposite the name
Shawnee. This city aBks no one to vote for it. Guthrie and
Shawnee are a unit In not being candidates under this bill, de-
claring It a violation of the Irrevocable compact made between
the people of the state and the federal government, and wholly
illegal now. Here is the form of the ballot Just to Indicate to you
how to vote NO on the monstrous bill of the repudiators and
adventurers which, backed by the Oklahomi City laud sharks,
Is being pushed at the people now;
Shall the capital of the State of
Oklahoma be permanently located as
provided in State Question, N. 1, Ini-
tiative Petition:
1 I Yes
T. Q. CUTLIP
Maben & Cutlip
Attorneys at Law
Office rooms, Shawnee: Rooms Not.
1, 2, 3 and 4 Pottawatomie Building.
Also offices at Tecumseh.
HISS H. WEIBERG
2nd floor at The Mammoth.
Hair Dressing, Shamitooinif,
Bleaching and Dyeing,
BUectrlc, Scalp and Face Massage,
Manicuring, Chiropody.
Children's Hair Cutting
COMBINGS
Made Into Curls, Switches, Etc]
THB NEWS 3 MONTHS rOR |1.M
WITH
, KILLtke COUCH
I and cure the LUNCS
Dr. King's
if DLosovery
FOIICS-"8 ■ <
(FOR ;
Ilia, (little Free
MID_*LirHROA 1 INCHING THOUBIES.
3
"
■ 1
OC7AR.1 NTEE:> SATISFACTORY
OR MONEY KI. - L'NDED.
Sbtll the capital of the State of
Oklahoma be permanently located at:
Oklahoma City
Shawnee
Guthrie
□
□
□
Yes
'Kill it!" is the taxpayers slogan and you can do this by
stamping your X in the Becond square under the first question-
"Shall the capital of the Siate of Oklahoma be permanently lo-
cated as provided In State Question No. J, Initiated Petition." bj
acmtJL^aaDcmiemcEaxMJQEEl
MR. CHARLE8 FRANCOIS QIARD
TEACHER OF
PIANO AND THEORY
Kpworth University
in Shawnee Saturdays. For terms
inquire ot Miss Ulah Reed. 212 North
Market street. Phone 533.
meetI^AT
Joe Mosleh
Marmaduke Chili
Parlor
The Best Coffee
213 East Main Street
I've Been There and It's all Pioht
Bill. *
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The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 322, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 9, 1910, newspaper, June 9, 1910; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc90024/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.