Life (Anadarko, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 27, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 27, 1904 Page: 3 of 8
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TERRITORY TOPICS
Rich is Churches.—Kay county has
eight Presbyterian churches.
Gas Companies.—The organization
of gas companies at Ponca City is a
seemingly flourishing industry.
Farmers' Institute.—The Noble
County Farmers' Institute will hold its
meeting on the last Saturday in Feb.
Mexican Coins.—Muskogee is flooded
with small Mexican coins which are .
given in change at street stands after
dark.
Co a i. Mining Town.—Charley Hunt- 1
er, of Enid, is laying out a town in In-
dian Territory. It is to be a coal min-
ing town.
Rei.inqi isiimknt Transfers.—The
land office at Lawton in a decision
gives the right of a homesteader entry- 1
man to transfer his rcliliquishmeiit.
Enid Mule Market.—Local mule
buyers assert that no less than 2,000
mules have been sold out of Enid since
the first of lust November. Several
carloads each week is the usual num-
ber. and the prices are the very best.
Saxd-limi: Brick.—The Tulsa Sand-
Lime Brick plant lias been incorpora-
ted with a capital stock of 940,000.
The bricks are to be made of Arkansas
river sand And native lime. The com-
pany intends establishing litne kilns
along the lines of the A. V. & W. rail-
road as well as manufacturing brick.
Old Bo|»ks.—Within the. last few
years a number of vuluablo books, most
of them in a fair state of preservation, -
have been found in the book stores and
second holid(stores of towns in Indian
Territory. The latest reported is a
second edition of Dean Swift’s “Tale
of a Tub," printed in Dublin in 170ft.
INT>. Tel. Fruit Raisers.—The in-
itial movement towards the formation
of a horticultural society in Indian
Territory has been started and a ca'l
to ail interested to meet at. Vinita on
February ‘,'0 was issued. To the call
are signed the names of six prominent
fruit growers and horticulturists ot
the territory.
Amtiitious Ci.f.o.—The business men •
of Cleo have formally pledged them- :
selves that “if Woods county be divid-
ed and Cleo be made a county seat, to
build a stone or brick court house that
will compart; with the court house of
any county in the territory of Okla-
homa and donate the same to thecoun- '
tv free of charge.”
3Powerful Syndicate.—The mineral 1
prospectors in the vicinity of Granite i
O. T.. are considering a proposition to
dispose of all their holdings to a pow-
erful syndicate of capitalists whose in-
tention is to secure control of the on-j
tire Wichita mountain mining district.
The syndicate had made investigation 1
of the various properties which result-
ed in the proposition to purchase.
Chief Porter Warns.—Chief Porter
of the Creeks has issued this circular:
**l would earnestly warn the people
against signing any paper or making:
contract of whatever kind respecting j
their lands, either lease, rent or sale. !
unless they are fully conscious of its
contents. It would be infinitely bet-
ter for our people to retain their land,
even if not so much profit accrues to
them, until they become better ac-
quainted with the laws governing tin-
use of their land. It may he admis
sable in some instances for our people
to make a sale of a portion of their j
land, but as a rule the policy of re-
taining is by fur the safest course to
pursue.
To Compel Hitchcock. — Mayor Tnr
tier, of Lawton, and Colonel Slnper
have gone to Washington to bring in-
fluence to compel Secretary Hitchcock
to expend the money derived from
town lot sales as the law providing for
such sale intended. Representatives i
from Anadarko and Hobart joined the
Lawton men at Chickasha to go with
them to Washington on the same busi
ness.
Water Supply.—-A water system
has been finished at lied Rock. The
source of supply is a 300-barrel tank.
To Ignore. Suit.—The Indian agent -
at Muskogee has been notified by the .
interior department that he need pay
no attention to the suit which is to be
tiled by the M. K. & T. railway for the
possession of every alternate section of
land ten miles on each side of the rigid j
of way through Indian Territory.
Chautauqua Assembly.—Rev. A. V
Knepper is to conduct another assem-
bly at Shawnee this year. The sue-1
cess of the assembly in 1003 wrFrants j
him in not asking for utiy bonus this ;
year.
Expenses Itemized.—E. P. Burling
nine, as commander-in-chief of the Ok-
lahoma National guard, acting upon
t he instruction of Governor Ferguson,
has issued an order that hereafter all
personal expense accounts of officers
and others connected with the guard
must he itemized in detail if payment
is made by the territory.
Instructive Letters. Blackwell!
students are corresponding with school •
children in England. The letters from
the British isles are said to he ve^y in-
structive.
More Diamonds in South Africa.
The frequent discovery of new diam-
ond mines iu the Transvaal and Or
ange River Colony is resulting in im
portant orders being placed with
British manufacturers for diamond
washing machinery.
School Monies.—Attorney General i Turk * it.o the Bolls.—»*. 1*. Price
Simons holds that a county superin- I had several hundred acres in cotton
tendeut, in order to have the schools about Mangum, a large part of which
in his jurisdiction participate iu the j was rented on shares. The renters
annual apportionment of the common picked the open bolls and left the bolls
school fund, must file his report of the which had not opened on the stalks,
scholastic population of his county by Mr. Price gathered the unopened bolls
the fifteenth of October, annually, ae- ami ran them through a thresher and
cording to the Oklahoma statute. The j secured by that process about 25 bales.
auditor had already made the appor-
tionment submitted to him on October
It took the thresher about 30 minutes
to thresh enough bolls to make a bale
15, and the attorney general holds that ; of cotton.
this must stand good. \ Will Get a Slice.—Oklahoma, so it
Fiftieth Anniversary.—Mr. and ’ is announced, is to have h .lice out of
Mrs. J. W. Stull, of Alva have cele- ! thnt appropriation, now before
brated their fiftieth wedding anniver- j <'onSrcss for the establishment by the
surv. They were married at Keosauqua, | agricultural department of weather
Iowa, and' have lived in Oklahoma the 1 burc‘“> -"‘tions. The money is to I*
, used for the purchase of grounds and
I the erection of the proper buildings
i thereon. An effort will be made by
past year. The only article in their
possession now which they had when
they commenced housekeeping is the
old family Bible, which was given to
them by Mrs. Stull’s father.
Creek Coai. Lands.—The Dawes
commission has received notice from
the Secretary of the interior that the
increase in the appraisement of lands
, .. . , dam is 20 feet high. 120 feet long and
in the Creek nation on account of the * *
20 feet thiek at the base with a curved
front. It is estimated that when com-
I pleted it will hold bach 25,000,000 gal-
Oklahoiua City, Stillwater and Gutliric
to secure the building.
Hold 25,000,000Gallons -The Santa
Fe is constructing a dam across a creek
near Perry for the purpose of catching
water for use in the engines. The
existence of coal in large quantities,
which was recommended by the com-
mission, has been disapproved by the
department.
W ant Rates Redui kd.—The cham-
ber of commerce of Muskogee expects
to make an effort to have freight rates
Ions of water.
Franchise Day.—The Pawhuska
Capital says: “The pupils of the
Osage Indian schools celebrated “Fran-
on the railroads entering the town re- • t-’bise Day.' 1 he holiday is in honor
dueed. The present rates from Kan- 1 *hc passage of the Dawes bill on
sas City are higher to Muskogee than J February 8, 1897. which provided that
to Fort Smith Ark., though the dls- any selecting an allotment
tances are nearly the same. i cou,tl thereby become a citizen of the
Question of Interest. A question * Statis.
of interest in Indian Territory is, Differ ox Statehood.-Senator
whether the pending statehood legis- Q«aJ wiu demand that statehood be-
lation wnieh now seems certain to he , come effective March 4. 1006, instead of
adopted by congress will provide that ! January. Robinson bill pro-
the new state will have a constitutional vide* that the seats of the federal
provision relative to prohibition. courts shall he in Guthrie and South
., ..... „ MeAlester, while the Quay bill fixes
l-or Senator Hanna. -A mass meet- ... . ;
......... ... ,, them in Oklahomu City and Muskogee.
ing was held at \ mita on February ID, *
and memorial services were held for
the late Senator llanra. The call for
Cotton Receipts.—Up to the middle
of February there had been received at
the meeting was signed by the mayor , Hobart more than 941,000 bales of oot-
and the presidents of the Republican ton. and the season is not closed. The
and Democratic clubs. j high price received will induce the
Negroes to New Mexico.—F. h. ! farmers to plant all the cotton they
Duke, land agent from Albuquerque. can f°r ^,u ncx^ croP
N. M., lias boi-n in the Creek nation j Marchant Sitckkus Wknnkh. - Gov-
for several days and is working up a ernor Ferguson has appointed Ed
plan to colonize the public lands of
the southwest with negroes from In-
dian Territory.
Found Gold Coin.—Louis Lolla. a
hoy 18 years old. discovered an earthen
oven on the farm of Edward Gilmore,
15 miles south of TIoldenville. I. T., in
which the was $5,000 in gold, all of it
in tens and twenties.
Marchant, of Aline. Woods county, to
succeed Fred L. Wcnnor, who has re-
signed as secretary of the Oklahoma
commission to the Louisiana Purchase
exposition.
For Oil at Four Gidson.—The suc-
cess of the Muskogee oil boomers in
finding oil has encouraged the people
| of Fort Gibson to drill for it. A com-
More Phones.—It is expected that puny has been formed and has secured
within a couple of months twenty rural 1 a number of leases on town property,
telephone line* will be running *ntof J ,, R commission -It 1, announced
There are two gangs of j that the board of railroad commission-
! “rs for the territorv will meet on Mon-
'SANSAlS COMMENT. FnnKAwRivF.il. I’he Stiokney re-
- , port is known t«»recommend the widen-
Chant.inc H and-* There U a fovet ing of the mouth of the Kaw and the
on to buy and sell lloegcinan county removing of all kinds of obstruction,
lands. the piles and debris of the old bridges
Guano honor Tin Masonic grand corn polling the building of new
lodge is holding its annual meeting
at Topeka this week.
In Hard Links.—A man at Farming-
ton whose wife is dead, has eight chll
dren down with measles.
Ottawa Pastor Dies.—Rev. W. R
Wood, of the Ottawa Baptist church,
is dead. He was a native of Canada.
Syndicate Banks.—It is published
at Wellington that a syndicate is ac-
quiring a large number of Southern
Kansas hanks.
At Woolen Mill.—One of the
woolen mills of Topeka gives employ
ment to 54 men and boys and 28 women
and girls working full time.
Eurek a’s Park—That city is to have
a beautiful park of about nine acres
which is well wooded, with a small
stream and u natural ampitheatre.
Dewey Trial.—After more than n
week spent in securing a jury the trial teams,
of Millionaire Dewey and his cowboys ington
for killing settlers is now on at Nor-
ton.
Knights ok Pythias.—The annual
meeting of the Twelfth district of the
bridges with only two piers in the
river. An important feature of the re-
port is the question raised by the en-
gineers whether these duties are with-
in the province of the state or the gen-
eral government.
Diphtheria in Geary.—Diphtheria
of a most malignant nature has broken
out in the community along (’lark’s
creek near the southern boundary line
of Geary county A large number of
children are afflicted with the disease
and several of them have died from
two it in the past few weeks. The schools
for many miles around have been closed
and every precaution is being taken to
keep the disease from spreading.
To PAsti're Teams.—A railroad con-
tractor has bought from the Union Pa-
cific 1,280 acres of land in Thomas
county where he will raise feed for
his working stock, and also graze his
A contracting firm of Bloom-
Indiana, has bought 11.500
acres in Logan county for ranch and
farming purposes. This firm uses sev-
eral hundred tcums.
Kansas’ Great Loss. -The death of
Knights of Pythias of Kansas holds its Carl Swensson. president of Bethany
college at Lindsliorg, takes from Kan-
sas one of her most worthy and most
able of college men. He died of pneu-
Bluckwell
workmen putting up the lines.
Burned to Death.—At Basin.,Paw-
nee county. Miss Syl vesta Mitchell
was burned to death by her dress
catching fire by being drawn into a
stove's open draft.
Foundry Burned.—The Jordon iron
foundry at Oklahoma City is burned.
This is the third fire the plant lias had.
The pattern room is all that is left of
the plant.
Cold For Bananas.—A carload of
bananas was sold out of the car at
Ponca City as the shipper was afraid
to go farther north on account of the
weather.
Gets a Clerkship.—Frank P. Tseher-
ncr, of Muskogee. 1. T., has been ap-
pointed clerk iu tin* postoftice depart-
ment at $1,000 a year.
Arbor Day.—Gov. Ferguson lias is-
sued an Arbor day proclamation fixing
the ante for it on March 18.
Postmaster Named. Win. F. Noble
has been nominated for postmaster at
houth MeAlester. I. T
From Hotel Fire. James Lovett, of
Philadelphia, may die from burns re-
ceived in a fire at Muskogee, which de-
stroyed the Commercial hotel. He was
in an upper room and jumped from a
second story window. Smoke awak-
ened him. Ilis clothing caught tire
before he could get out of his room.
Indians in Need.—A Muskogee
special says that at no time in the past
thirty years have the Indians of jthe
territory been in such extreme need of
the necessities of life as during the
past winter.
For Lone Wolf.—The interior de-
partment has recommended compensa-
tion to lx>ne Wolf for the value of cer-
tain improvements owned by him and
situated upon the lands formerly occu-
pied by him, but now included within
the limits of the lands reserved for the
Kiowa agency, Oklahoma.
Langston Celebrates.—The stu-
dents and faculty of the territorial col-
ored university at. Langston celebrated
Lincoln's birthday on a big scale. The
principal speaker was Governor Fer-
guson.
Fire at Waurika.—Fire has de-
stroyed Harry S. Grundy & Co.'s dry
goods and clothing house at Waurika
and the two story building containing
it. and scorched Ilalliday it Walcott’s
general merchandise store. Loss $13,-
000. Some insurance. Cause acci-
dental.
W. C. 1'. U.—Amanda B. Ritchey,
aged 51 years, died at Vinita from a
lingering illness. She was at the time
of her death president of the Colored
Indian Territory W. C. T. U. and a di-
rcctor of the National W. C’. T. U.
day, March 7th. The Aboard is com-
posed of the governor the secretary and
the auditor.
Bixby’b Bill.—Tams Bixby has
placed before Secretary Hitchcock for
his action thereon a bill which sets
July 1, 1905, for the expiration of the
life of the commission.
Mjexo Wants Orient.— Meno, which
is an important trading point on the
Rock Island, will offer inducements
for the Orient to connect the town with
its line at Carmen.
annual meeting at Wichita on Febru-
ary 19.
Was a Wrestler.- L L. Dayhoff,
State superintendent of public instruc-
tion.formerly was the champion catch- !
os-you-can wrestler of Jasper county,
Missouri.
Dead in Bed. -At Wellington Ben-
jamin S. Hood, an old Illinois news-
paper man, was found dead in hitched
at the residence of his son. Charles
Hood, one of the publishers of the
Monitor-Press. Death was due to
heart disease He was 72 years of age.
Enlarging Packing Houses.—It. was
given out that the packers in Wichita
do not want so many hogs for ten days
as they have been getting lately. Cud-
ahy has had an open order for the
last two months, and his buyer has
been taking everything in sight. Su-
perintendent. Brown of the Cudahy
plant informed the commission men at
the yards that he would want only
from 400 to 500 hogs daily for a week
or ten days.
Track h Danger Signal.—-Judge
Madden threw out of court at Emporia
i $10,000 damage suit against the Santa
fe railroad. The suit lyas brought by
5rs. A. T. Hoopcs, whose husband was
tilled last April by a Santa Fe passen-
ger train Judge Madden held that
Hoopoe* death was brought about by
his own carelessness, lie said a rail-
road truck is in itself a danger signal,
and that a man should take the neces-
sary precautions when standing on or
vsing over one.
obt the Suit.—The farmers’ grain
trust has lost its suit against the Santa
Fc railway company before the state
board of railway commissioners. Tlio
trust made application to the company
for elevator sites at a number of towns.
Some of the sites were granted and
others were not. The ground for re-
fusing some was that that the towns
already have good enough elevator
facilities. The hoard decided that it.
Peach OuciiAunr.- Oii an area of
h;ul power neit
icr to order the rood to
lodges. About 15 orde
rs hold regular
county, was killed by
less than a township northeast of Ed-
grant sites nor
o refill ire it to build
sessions there.
loft on liis farm near
mond, there are 15 orchards of Elberta
elevators. The
case wili be appealed
Co-operative Siorf
— An organizer
Has Crazy Mother
peaches with au aggregate of 8.500
to the supreme
court.
is working among tin*
railroad men of
boy whose mother ha
trees.
Want Citir:.:
sliu. —The Mcnnonitcs
Emporia io organize
u no-operative
asylum six times has
Against Sai.e.--At Calumet, near
in Kansas, who
are all Russians, have
.st ore.
; anc and sent to an i
El Reno, the Lyceum discussed the sale
never taken citi
/.onship in this country
A Precaution. Tin
Santa Fe corn-
feeble minded.
of school lands and decided in the
blit on account
if the Russian war they
pany is wrapping its
steam pipes in
Mill and Depot
negative.
d c now besieging the district court at
the Newton station with asbestos.
flour mill oT Edward
Wants Promotion. J Flem Smith,
Hays city with
applications. The de-
More Houses Ship!
ED. -Four more
Frisco depi.t at Fredc
city clerk of Ponca City, wants to be
register of deeds of Kay county.
Rough Riders.—Lon Muxlow, an
Oklahoma Rough Rider, who was with
Col. Roosevelt at San Juan will depart
for Japan immediately, taking with
him as many of his comrades and ad-
ditional rough riders as laay desire to
enter the Japanese army.
Schools of Stroud.—The public
schools of Stroud now have an enroll-
ment of 520 pupils. Roth school build-
ings are filled to their utmost capacity,
and before long the erection of another
school building w:l! become an im-
perative necessity.
Fifty Miles Shorter.—The Katy is
working three big crushers for ballast-
ing its roadbed and that line soon will
establish passenger trains between
Kansas City and Oklahoma City. The
Ivaty’s new line is the shortest by 50
miles between those two cities.
Surveying the Link.—-There is a
corps of surveyors at work in the neigh-
borhood of Dibble. I. T.. surveying a
line that is projected to run from
Shawnee to Chickusha via Norman. It
is not definitely known what company
is backing it.
Hob and Burn.— After robbing the
residence and store of F. B. Blow, lo-
cated in the heart of Guthrie, a bur-
glar set fire to the house and the de-
struction of the property was almost
complete. Dut a small sum of money
was secured from the cash drawer
Want to See Him. - The recent ac-
tions af the Snake Indians has renewed
interest in these people and an effort is
to be made to have Chitto Harjo, head
of this faction in the Creek nation, ex-
hibit himself at the St. Louis world’s
fair.
mouia at Los Angeles California.
Allen Recoups- —Jacob Allen, of
Winfield, who paid $10,000 for a “gold
brick” has just realized $9.non on u
wheat deal on the Chicago hoard of
trade. He seems to have the habit of
tuking chances.
Bui let in Lung. Win. Coggswell. a
10-year-old hoy of Greenwich, shot him-
self. the hall remaining in his lung.
He is steadily improving and his phy-
sicians say he will recover.
3.6,000 Cathedrai. -The Episcopa-
lian church of Topeka has let the con-
tract for drawing the plans for the
proposed cathedral in Topeka, which
is to cost $90,000.
Si es Harkkli County.—Goo I!
liolzbog, of Indiana, has tiled suit
against Haskell county for bonds val-
ued at $33,000 with interest from Jan
1, 1903.
More IIotki Rooms.- One of the
large hotels in Wichita is having an
addition erected which gives the hotel
101 rooms, all provided with fire es-
capes.
No Night Study—No pupils in the
Abilene schools arc required to study
at nignt. The object of the rule is for
the benefit of the health of the pupils.
Carried $85,000.—One insurance,
agency in Topeka carried 885.000 on
the Fark hurst-Davis property. The
agency has eight companies. .
Horses Burned.—At Miltonvale,
fire destroyed the large livery barn of
Thus. McNeill. Sixteen hors* vs and
many vehicles were burned.
A Large Mortgage.—The Topeka
Street Railway company has issued a
mortgage for $? ,250,000 to secure the
payment of new bonds.
Hayfn’b Lodges Haven claims to
lead the towns of its size in the wav of
sire to avoid any
polled to return to
ed into the arm v.
i* of being coni-
i:i mid be draft-
Diekinsoi:
Fib* a
if horses wore
eouuty lor the
t Gai.lna. The
ippe(
:ist.
home
Mission a r
v Sucre.i
•ary.—Rev. J.
n.
Thomas Murphy is burned
. The
Jos*
Franklin the
; new di:
strict secretary
cf
is $.'.000. The insurance i*
$1,000.
(Kv
the America:
n Rapti.s
t Honii Mis.si
ion
ing to a low pressure of
wate r
the
society ir»
tourirg
hi.-- district.
He
flames spread to the two st
ory di
mbit;
preached i*.i
W ichi.a (
jii Sunday.
apartment residence of W.
A P
otter
In Federal Court.—Heirs of the
Frenchman who made the De Boissiere
Odd Fellows home property have
brought suit in the federal court ask-
ing that the property be sold, and to
recover the property claimed by Trout-
man and Stone as a part of the prop-
erty, and that the proceeds, after pay-
ment of the Odd Fellows’ claim, be
turned over to the heirs.
Liquor hy Express. In the United
States district court in Kansan City. M.
Kirsehinan, one of the Kansas City
liquor dealers who has been sending
out packages of liquor to express
agents in Kansas under fictitious names
and allowing any one who lias the
price to take them, was fined $100 and
costs. The costs amounted to about
us much as tin* tine.
Mutual Telephones. Mutual tele-
phone companies are increasing over
j Central Kansas. Three such cornpan
ies have already been formed in Dick-
inson county, each with 40 or 50 mem
hers. The farmers do all the work of
building the line and some country
storekeeper usually conduct! the switch
hoard free in order to get the farmers’
t rade.
For New Railroad.—An election
voting $2,000 bonds per mile to aid the
Arkansas Valley & Denver Railroad
company was carried in all the town-
ships in Edwards county from Kinsley
to the east line of the county. This
will amount to about $50,000. Most of
the right of way has also been promised
through these townships
Sleet in Geary. -Sleet fell nearly
all day in Geary county with a cold
east wind. The wheat growing farm-
ers are greatly concerned about the
continued lack of moisture. There
has been practically no moisture on
tin* fields since November Wheat will
he badly damaged unless there is a fall
of rain or snow soon.
Fear Spring Rains.— M J. Wells, ot
Woodston, writing to the board of
railroad commissioners, says there still
is a lot of wheat piled on the ground
in his section. The farmers are unable
to get ears, he says. He expresses feat
that if the wheat is not shipped by
April 1. the spring rains will destroy
it.
For Auditorium. -Cottonwood Falls
has voted $8,000 in bonds to build an
auditorium. An enabling net of the
legislature gave the women the right
to vote, and they were out en masse.
A large vote was polled and the bonds
carried by a majority of fifty.
2.076 Ballots.—W. S. Fitzpatrick, of
Chautauqua county, was re-nominated
for state senator on the 2,076th ballot,
his opponent, Mr. llawkins, of Elk
county, having withdrawn from the
contest. The convention was at work
for a week.
Where is Ai.i.kx.—The Wichita po-
lice are trying to find John Martin
| Allen to tell him that he has inherited
; property in Moundsville. W. Va. It is
i believed in Moundsville that Allen
1 lives in Wichita.
Hotel Man Dead,—C. C. Coltrane,
1 proprietor of the Windsor hotel at
; Garden < ity, is dead after a brief ill-
! ness. Grief caused hy the recent death
1 of a daughter hastened his death.
Killed nv a Fall. —O. Johnson, one
j of the first sett lers of Kansas and for
thirty-four Years a resident of Miami
:. A Rice county
s been sent to t he
been adjudgedin-
ugtitution for the
Burn. - The new
(iuhlner and the
i ick arc destroyed
by lire. The loss is $1,400; the insur-
ance, 81.000.
Stock Train Derailed. A Missouri
Pacific stock train was derailed be-
tween Reese and Rosalia. Untie
tv. The ears that left the titn
l tallied ore and salt, and tin* st(
uninjured. Passenger traffic
Brown
Gun
•ctcd
police
nds ns
which
r.Niid b
Davo
old re-
ntal ion
relics,”
•icd by
Jerry
he be-
,• John
Has J<
Leahy has for years co
volvers at the Wichita
and sent them to hi ', frit
explaining that they v.i
noted men of the early
Black has one of them
lieves was carried r- mi
Brown.
Not Taia Year.—It is the purpose
of the war department to have the
maneuvers next fail in the Atlantic and
1 acific divisions and in 1005 at Fort
Ililcy and West Point, Kv.
M ATII EM A'll( , TEAf DEI
being taken l y the t **chf
to organize a Ivun.ui; A
Teachers of Mathematic.*,
of tiie association i, to
deeper interest in allqm •
damaged. The fire
i defect ive flue.
Sentence.- Miss
ho has served a sen
in jail on the first of
smashing in To-
similar sentence
e».— Steps are
rs in the ->tate
‘••ocir.tion of
'The object
stimulate a
tions relating
which is bad I,
originated from
Served One
Blanche Boise, who 1
fence of 30 days iu
five cases of window
peka, has received a
or tin; second case.
Prairie Chicken Pest. The fire
that swept over the Fort Riley reserva
t.ioii drove the prairie eld.-kens onto
t.he surrounding farms The reserva-
tion has been a game preserve for ye ars
and tin* chickens have become a pest
to the farmers who want to kill them,
but they are prohibited by law from
doing so.
Jury Six i red.- After nine davs the
con n-
W cou-
:»k was
,vuh de-
out the
to tha improvement o! mntr.ematical
teaching in the sclioqjs of Kansas.
Smelting V. i]*!'. Uu»..\.;n. -One of
the rine zinc s.iml i.ig works at loia of
the Chamber; Lanyon company is de-
stroye.t by fire. Lgv.. S^loug. Thu
pll ut had r. capacity of ferry tons »
day and employed 2GO men.
Women study to please the men.
Men are pleased to study the women
—but they never learn their lesson.
After all, man represents the mag
nanlmous sex. He finds much less
fault with women for her recourse to
tea and tears than she does with bit-
champagne and cigars.
district court >•{ Norton -
a jury fpr the Pewey t
-•< unity
se
me:
1 the
1 Todd A Co
j diabetes at !
taking of testimony no;
the jurors a. . a; met*.
iniuenc
Clt.
Ali
j man was a i
- -
1 1st HOP AT IT" :.f • • ,n .
ED.- T
he
state
j NoNomin
board of medical :e;.*istr
d e \-
Republican
ami nation has claimed '
patbic colleges we-*; ;
! hat tl.
>;gi
ifsteo-
ular,”
j Troy idjor
1 iiominfvtioi)
but Dr. C. K. Mulctt. of
dent . f the Ksusas A-.s«
Topidt
eiati- i
jrtsi-
,r <>h-
1.226 ballot?
' °te.‘
laved a few hours which was r'c
only harm done.
Goodland Ba nk Sold.—Secretary ot
State Burrows, of Smith Center, and
E. E. Ames. Charles Sawyer and 0. J
ShVmeall, of Norton, have bought the
First National bank of Goodland. It
has a capital of $25.000.
Ness City Mill.-—An electric light
company has been organized at Ness
city and will begin at. once installing
machinery in the Hour mill, and will
furbish power by the dynamos. The
plant is expected to be in full operation
| iu two months.
U. M. Butman
| Bittmuu senior
1 wholesale grocery
if Lei
home
native of
1.
Dead.—George M
member of the
firm of Pittman,
Niven worth, died cf
there. Mr. Hit * -
f Germany and was
The first senatorial
. convention held at
without making a
March 14. 'there
Doniphan
| Iii
Ho
> pu
i fai
i sting
n and
he vvh
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Wilson, A. L. Life (Anadarko, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 27, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 27, 1904, newspaper, February 27, 1904; Anadarko, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc937533/m1/3/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.