The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, May 31, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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The Orlando Clipper
W. L LANTER, Ed. and Pub.
ORLANDO, OKLAHOMA
Oklahoma News Notes
A building Loom u In progress at
Bromide.
Na»h no longer Las any black in-
Labium ts.
' thinks it la to Lave a new
depot—aoon.
Washington oounty is spending $11,-
000 for bridges.
Hugo is dickering for the location
of a fence factory.
Logan county high school turned out
fifty-four graduates.
Wash Hudson of Lawton is a candi-
date for state senator.
' amp No. i. Sons of Veterans, has
been organized at Alva.
Eufaula is making arrangements for
a county fair In the fall.
A move to build a three-story brick
hotel is on at Duncan.
Wynnewood expects to ship out sixty
carloads of early peaches.
Teeumseh expects to ship out 100
carloads of peaches this season.
Canadian County Farmers’ Institute
will be held at El Reno June 19.
Damages to bridges from high water
In Logan county aggregate $30,000.
Baptists at Woodward have ar-
ranged to erect a $15,000 church edi-
fice.
J. S. Hale, of Muskogee, contem-
plates launching a new spaper at Paw-
Jjuska.
Checotah proposes to build the first
mile of state road in eastern Okla-
homa.
* News Notes
L: Epitome of the Most
important Happenings
at Home and Abroad jj
WASHINGTON
Citing the high cost of meat, a
treasury ruling is that government
money cannot be used to board cats
kept at various Eub-treasuries.
Six Washington embassies, Danish,
Swedish, Norwegian, Brinish, Greek
and Hussion—are in mourning for
King Frederick of Denmark, putting a
damper on diplomatic social func-
tions.
To guard trans-Atlantic steamers
from the dangers of ice in ths lanes
Secretary Meyer started a patrol ser-
vice, by ordering the scout cruiser
Birmingham to the southward grand
banks to notify steamers with her
powerful wireless system of the loca-
tion of the icebergs.
Hobart has a Yamparika club, but
nothing heats an elm at a woodshed
seance.
Dental societies in the state are urg-
ing legislation to rid the state of den-
tal ‘‘quacks.’’
The Pioneer Telephone company
how operates in 67 of the 76 counties
of Oklahoma.
Quinlan is planning to vote $20,000
in bonds for the installation of a wat-
erworks system.
Vith creditable enterprise Cheyenne
citizens purpose putting that town on
the railroad map.
R. W. Cline is Duncan’s new mayor,
the third under the commission form
of town government.
Eight men and boys at Alex were
assessed $64. prorated among them,
for dynamiting fish.
C. G. Vannest is out for the repub-
lican nomination for school superin-
tendent of Noble county.
Foraker Is sprucing up over the
prospect of another railroad—the Kan-
sas, Oklahoma & Southern.
W. S. Harris, first to market new
alfalfa in Kiowa county thiB season,
secured $18 a ton for the first cutting.
T bis is the season of the year when
the youth Is surprised to find it is
even easier to get a diploma than a
Job.
M. D. Losey, who was the first su-
perintendent of Logan county, died at
the old soldiers home at Marlon, Ind ,
May 7.
The interstate commerce commis-
s on granted to railroads operating in
the southwest permission to advance
by approximately 10 cents a hundred
pounds their transportation charges on
cotton and cotton linters from Texas
points to New Orleans. Orders previ-
ously issued by the commission sus-
pending the advance were vacated.
The new rates become effective June 1.
The senate passed without debate
the house bill changing the date of is-
suance of the cotton acreage report by
the department of agriculture to the
first Monday in July of each year.
Heretofore the law required that it be
issued in June. A section relating to
condition reports was eliminated in
the Benate committee and the bill
therefore must be agreed to in con-
ference and signed by the president
before it becomes a law.
Pending further investigation, the
Interstate commerce commission con-
tinued in suspension until December
14 next the proposed new classifica-
tion of freight rates in western terri-
tory. This new classification, known
as No. 61, through a re-rating of hun-
dreds of articles would provide for a
material increase in practically all
freight charges in the west.
Washington.—The first step towards
committing the government to an-
other great engineering work was tak-
en when Representative Sulzer, demo-
crat, New York, introduced a bill
providing for the organization of an
Alaskan commission. The measure
was drawn by the secretary of the in-
terior, and is an administration meas-
ure. Its chief purpose would be the
railroad and mineral development of
Alaska, and the bill provides for the
utilization of the equipment now being
used in completing the Panama canal.
DOMESTIC.
Recruiting offices in Oklahoma are
not doing much business at this time.
Crop prospects are too good in Okla-
ho m a.
A new ’’snake’’ car, Jointed in the
middle, is being experimented with to
solve the surface traffic problem of
Boston’s crooked downtown streets.
A terrapin, caught in Rockbridge
county, Lynchburg, Va., bears a cut
In its shell with the inscription H.
Mora Brant and Nellie S. Day, July,
1S21.
V» ilbur Wright, aeroplane inventor,
Is suffering with typhoid fever at his
home in Dayton, O. Attending physi-
cians state that his illness has not up
to this time assumed an acute form.
Two hundred miles of the Yukon,
Alaska, valley is a seething holocaust
from forest fires. Millions of feet of
lumber between Big Salmon and Stuart
City have been burned. So far the
fires have not threatened Dawanm.
Tates a man of strong character ic
avoid submtturg to hair tonic, iaveu-
der water, pomade and brilliantins
every use he climbs into barger t
chair.
Whiie a street piano played rag
time outside. Judge De Lacy suspend-
ed Juvenile court in Washington, to
teach six prisoners how to play “run
sheep run.' ,
By a rote or 223 to 64 the anthracite
miners assembled at Wilkestarre. Pa.,
Tcted to ratify the tentative agreement
offered by the operators and to return
to work at once.
Edith Davis, 17 years old. bride of
a year, suing Edward E. Davis. New
York, for divorce admitted on the
witness stand that she made the pro-
posal of marriage.
Christian Loogea returned to his 1
wife and baby in Newark after 15 !
months and said that he had suffered
a lapse of memory. Work on a Geor-
gia cotton gin revived his memory.
Countess Eugenia Holdegrade von
Boss, who is devoting her time and
persona! fortune to the spread of the
universal peace movement, both here
and abroad, Is a member of the old
German family of Boss zu Wildeck.
Minneapolis.—With a vote of 54S, Dr.
N. Luccock of Kansas City was elect-
ed bishop of the Methodist Episcopal
church on the fifteenth ballot. He is
the fourth of the eight to be elected
at this general conference.
Elden Frizt, 30, on Friday shot and
killed his divorced wife and then him-
self. The killing occurred at tjie
home of Fritz’s father near Lodie, O.,
where the couple had gone to divide
some of their possessions.
The Bcout cruiser Birmingham, the
first vessel of the ice patrol, arrived
at her station off the Grand Banks,
ana reported by Radio to Captain
Knapp, the naval hydrographer, an-
nouncing that she had spoken to the
liner Olympic in latitude 3S north and
that vessel had experienced fair
weather and sighted no ice.
United States Consul General Frank
D Hill, of Minnesota, was killed by
falling over the railing of the stair-
case of a big hotel at Frankfort on
the Main, Germany. He was found
on the ground floor with a broken
skull. It is assumed the fatal acci-
dent was caused by a spell of dizzi-
ness.
William W. Brown, 22 years old,
shot and killed his sweetheart, Miss
Jennie Kelly, 17 years old, when he
met her on the street at Havanan, 111.,
and then killed himself with the same
revolver. Brown had quarreled with
Miss Kelly because she had walked
with another young man. Brown was
a railroad telegraph operator.
Indiana University at Bloomington,
entertained the annual meeting of the
Mississippi Valiev association. Sev-
eral hundred members and a number
of invited guests were present at the
opening of the porceedings. Profes-
sor A. C. McLaughlin of the Univer-
sity of Chicago is the president of
the association.
Fred J. Southard, of Minneapolis, an
amateur aviator, fell 100 feet at the
bright aviation field, Xenia. 0., and
was instantly killed. Southard, who
was 40 years old, had just bought the
aeroplane from the Wright brothers.
He obtained keys to the hanger after
he bad been refused permission to
fly without further experience. He fell
Just six minutes after he had begun
the first flight alone.
Women are to rote in the presiden-
tial contest of this year in the States
of California, Colorado, Washington,
Wyoming, Idaho and Utah. The re-
publican presidential plurality in 1908
in California was 86,906, in Washing-
ton 47,351, in Wyoming 5.928, in Idaho
16.459, and in Utah 18,414. The re-
publican national campaigners are ar-
ranging to employ a staff of women
political speakers for these six states
this fall, and it is said the democratic
national campaigners contemplate a
similar step.
DOCTORS ADVISED
THE HOSPITAL
Mrs. Herberger, Who Would Not
Consent to Go There, finally
Relieved At Home.
St. Louis, Mo.—Mrs. Mary Herber-
ger, of this city, says: “I was sick in
bed for ten weeks, with womanly
troubles, and had four of the best
doctors waiting on me.
Every one of them said I would
have to go to the hospital and have
an operation, but I would not consent
to that.
I thought I would give Cardui a
trial. When I began to take the first
bottle, I could not turn over in bed,
but had to be lifted.
Before I finished the first bottle, my
pains were leaving me, slowly, and
soon I was out of bed and walking
around.
My pains have not come back,
since. I weigh 150 lbs. and feel tine.
Cardui saved me from an operation.
I am going to keep it in the house,
for I would not be without it.”
Cardui’s strengthening effects quick-
ly show themselves in many different
ways. This is because the ingredi-
ents, from which it is made, go to
the source of the trouble, and by act-
ing specifically on the cause, relieve
or cure and help bring back health
and strength.
In the past 50 years, more than a
million women have been benefited
by Cardui. Just try it.
X. B.—Write tot I.adles* Advisory
Dept., Chattnnootra Medicine Co., Chat-
tanooga, Tenn., for Special Inatruc-
tlona, and A4-pa«e book, “Horae Treat-
ment for Women,” aent In plain wrap-
per, on request.
When Caesar Crossed the Rubicon.
Julius Caesar was about to cross
the Rubicon.
“In an extreme case like this,” he
said, blithely, “I wouldn’t mind going
through the Hudson River Tube, even
if I had to pay seven cents for the
privilege.”
Garfield Tea is admittedly the simplest and
best remedy for constipation.
Fourteen per cent of the egg is al-
bumen.
DoVouNeedHelp
For your poor, tired
stomach ?
For your lazy and
sluggish liver ?
Tor your weak and
constipated bowels ?
For your general run-
down condition ?
1 hen by all means—
try
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH
BITTERS
IT DOES THE WORK
AT ALL DRUGGISTS
PREVENIION
bMlerthun cure. Tutt’s PHUlf taken In tint*
are not only u remedy lor, but will prevent
SICK HEADACHE,
biliousness, constipation and kindred diseases.
tuff's Pills
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Lanter, W. L. The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, May 31, 1912, newspaper, May 31, 1912; Orlando, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc913422/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.