New-State Tribune (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 13, 1910 Page: 7 of 8
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NEW-STATE TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1910.
PAGE SEVEN
t
fi
w *
Fire at Foss
Foss, Okla.—Six business houses
on Main street were destroyed by tin
that originated from an unknown
cause in the Texus store Sunday
night. The loss is estimated at $30,-
OOu with light insurance. Following
are the heaviest losses: Bhaeffer's
cafe, Abetter's drug store, TexaB gen
eral merchandise store, Cox's furni-
ture Btore, Williams Bros' meat mar
ket, Velvln Bros, barber shop.
Louis Haux, 15 years old, living near
the town of Copan, was accidentally
killed by his brother, Willie, wllh a
shotgun.
« Succeed when everything else fails.
< In nervous prostration and female
1 weaknesses they are the supreme
4 remedy, as thousands have testified.
i for kidney,liver and
J stomach trouble
1 it is the best medicine ever sold
I over a druggist's counter.
| Gov. Hadley of Missouri has paroled
John F. Baker, 21 years old. front the
I state penitentiary that he may go to
' work for William Mosely of St. Joseph.
Mo., from whom he stole a team of
I horses. Four dollars a week are to be
j withheld from Ilaker's wages until he
'w pays Mosely the $87 expended in cup-
J turing him.
j Oscar Haniniersteln Is to become an
Englishman and make his home in
j London. Mr. Hammerstein is to build
a grand opera house there similar to
the one in New York City.
FOOD FOR A YEAH
Meat
Milk
Mutter...
300 Bn
. 240 yts.
. 100 lb*.
. 274m.
. 500 It*.
EPILEPSY
FALLING
SICKNESS
Jt.r L«irrt.«le ml
jnd r. O.
, r.D.. « L«u r St.
!• « hundred* of «
JR.COE'S
SANITARIUM
A ten-million dollar merger of all
the powder companies In Canada, with
the exception of the (Slant Powder
company, branch factory at Telegraph
Bay, has just been effected at Vancou-
ver, B. C. Ownership will be vested in
the British-Canadian Explosives, Ltd.,
recently incorporated under letters
patent issued by the dominion govern-
on, tno e n. ment deaj marks the advent
m«w %orfc the L)Upont people in Canada. It is
| understood that the interests of the
Nobels and the Duponts in the hold-
ing company will be equal.
GIVEN UP TO TRADE
This reHicsents a fair ra-
tion for a man for a year.
But some people eat and
eat and grow thinner. This
means a defective digestion
and unsuitable food. A large
size bottle of
Donald P. Stubbs, general agent of.
the Union Pacific railroad at Cleve-1
hind. Ohio, was taken from the -Union |
Pacific office with probably a fatal j
bullet wound over his heart. At the i
hospital where he was taken, Mr. |
Stubbs declared his wound was the
result of an accident. He >\as alone at
(the time.
A dispatch to the London News says
that the Herman torpedo boats S t 7
i and S 69 were sunk in the roadstead at
Kiel. Each boat carried a crew of 10
men.
Ay ers Hair Vig or
Inoicjorates
Only the Old Guard Holds Forth
on Fifth Avenue, N. Y.
Scott's Emulsion
Johnson in the precincts of St. Clem
; ent Danes church was performed the
—————— I other night with nothing of the parade
Germany to Produce a New 50,- ;rndn.tll8p",y cus,on"ir>' on auch OCC11
000-Ton Steamship.
STATUE OF DOC. OR JOHNSON Safe Blown Up By Yeggs
Wellston, Okla.—Marshall R. L.
Unveiled at Night and Said to Be 'iault was Friday at the head of a
the Worst In a City of Bad posse of officers who are searching
Statues. for yeggnten who blew the safe in the
I Frisco depot here, Thursday night. The
London.—Postponed on account of interior of the ticket agent's room is
the death of the Into King. th« cere- a mass of debris, as a result of the
mony of unveiling a statue of I)r. j explosion.
Marshall Gleckler had tuken $200 to
the hank early In the evening and the
robbers got nothing.
slons.
Recently the Rev. J. J. H. S. Pen-
nington, rector of St. Clement Danes,
where Johnson had his pew, and who
Fashionable Thoroughfare Ha. Been equals in nourishing proper- The « Ton Liner, of the Whit. I I.he
26th & Wfanootte St*.
lUiottUKMfe
The Call of the Blood
for purification, finds voice in pimples,
boils, sallow complexion, a Jaundiced
look, moth patches and blotches on the
I skin—all signs of liver trouble. But
I Dr. King's New Life Pills make rich
| red blood; give clear skin, rosy cheeks,
fine complexion, health. Try them. 25c
Best INVALID'S HOWIE In the West at An Druggists.
Difficult Surgical Operation* Performed with
Skill and Suaooaa whan Surgery la Neceaeary
DISEASES OF WOKEN Information.
PILES Hon of Captain Ferguson of the Unlt-
IfADIftfirri r *«d c«Uv Curod In Ton ed States engineer corps, who has a
DI I BTII npyjf.LKfaW jBOjrtj., force of American divers and drillers
RUPTURE Cured b imDroied«iethodV at Havana at work examining the bot-
le* Rostorativo Treatment for Lost •! VITAL POWER tom jn j^e Immediate vicinity of the
wreck. From the result of borings
! already made, it appears that the
Preliminary work on the wreck of
the Maine continues under the dlrec-
•ssfulty treated at home by
jn F"roo and coi
at office or by letter Thirty yoars ' exptr
ience. Trained attendants. Best of care.
170 pa no Illustrated Booh t roe,
fiving much vsltaH'r .nlormation. Call at office
or write to
lit-
tle since the night of the disaster.
Day life is completely stagnated in
nn A II'AAr •fflCfcunWHartJl the cholera ridden city of Naplei. rif
UK.U.iVl.tUL, Kisses Lin. mo I teen deaths and 35 new cases of the
plague were announced Saturday, the
~~ ~~ total for the past twenty-four hours.
BAKER &. PURSEL j The authorities have ordered all
! stores save a few closed. Navigation
j is suspended and only a few railroad
trains now enter the city. All strang-
lawyers
PROBATE AND DEPARTMENTAL
COURTS SPECIAL
Office Over Postoffice. Muskogee,Okla.
S. J. Holladay
Attorney and Counselor-At-Law
ers have departed.
I
Office. 321-23 American National
Bank Building. Phone 274.
Ross N. Lillard
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Organization of Corporations and
Corporation Law a Specialty
Pbooe 5004. Rooms 409-10-11,
Chairman Knapp of the Interstate
Commerce Commission has been re-
quested to name a third arbiter in
a dispute between the Denver and Rio
Grande railroad and the Brotherhood
of Locomotive Firemen and Engine-
men. The request is unique In the his-
tory of negotiations under the Erdman
act.
National Bank Bldg. OKLAHOMA CITY
Biggest Range Horse Sale on EARTH
at Miles City, Mont., October 10-11-12-
and 13, 1910. Twenty-five hundred
horses will be sold at Auction. We
furnish the horses. You make the
American' price. We will have 500 unbranded
Almost Completely Sold Out to In-
vading Mercenaries—Only Few
Prominent Families Remain,
New York—Imperious old Fifth
avenue haH gone—not Into clay, but
Into trade. At Fifty-second street the
Vanderbllts, the Sloanes and the Shep-
ard8, buttressed behind their massive
mansions, have been making the last
stand of the old guard against the in-
vasion of mercenaries. Hut now, un-
like the old guard, they have surren-
dered, and within a >iear Mrs. Cor-
nelius Vanderbllt will have for third
door neighbor a French modiste with
fine, big electric signs to enliven the
famous mansion at Fifty-seventh
street, where for years and years the
destinies of social America have been
swayed.
It is well within the memory of
lies ten pounds of meat.
Your physician can tell you
how it does it.
ron sale nr *tx liKrooisis
Bond llr.. nam* ft pnp«'r nnd this ad. for oar
bw.ul.tul Bavins* d Child's Sketch-Bout
Etich bank contains a Good Luck Penny.
SCOTT &. BOWNE, 409 Pearl St. New York
8tar Line, Now Being Built, to Be
Eclipsed—How the 8truggle
Goes Forward.
Hamburg.—Much Is heard today
about the race for naval supremacy.
But the race Is no less keen In the
commercial contest and just now most
of the great steamship lines are pre-
paring fresh giants for the ocean strug-
gle Here again the rivalry is between
the Germans and the Brltsh, both be-
ing eager to hold the blue ribbon of
Atlantic transport, the chief shipping
route In all the world.
When the Lusltania and Mauretanla
relegated the German Deutschlaud to
a subordinate place as an ocean flyer
Contractor Shot From Ambush
Durant, Okla.—Charles Slssal, a
Frisco bridge carpenter, was shot
from ambush near Bennington Sat-
urday night while en route to Join I the "challenge" was ienewed.and"today
his wife at her fathers home. A on both sides of the North sea there is
charge of buckshot was fired Into his a gtrenuous endeavor to create new
body at close range as ho was passing , recorja jn tonnage and speed. The
the cornfield. He lived but a few , white Star line Is well advanced with
most New Yorkers when Fifth avenue ralnuteB< The killing occasioned con
from Fiftieth to Fifty-ninth_«treet was BMerable indignation. No arrests have I ,"ho Olympic and the Titanic, the Ham-
me niiiLaci* , l „ mnHo s>!rr:i1 wrk rne# ntlv ri>- . . .. ,.i
the construction of two new monsters.
so exclusive that only
bockers • could live there, whatever
their wealth Then policemen frowned j serving 'two years 'for'"a'"killing
creaseless trousers off the street. Now mltted durlnK a drunken light,
folks of all classes mingle freely, and
there is only one block in all the ten
where trade has not intruded. In this
block within six months an apartment
house with a promised height of some
hundreds of feet will crown the neigh-
borhood.
I been made. Sissal was recently re-1 burg-Ainericau line answers with
| leased from the penitentiary after 8tm bigger vessel, the Hansa, to the
| great delight of the kaiser, and now
J the Cunard line gives hints of plans
far beyond anything yet designed.
The Boston route must be consid-
ered first, because the latest ship to
take the water Is the Franconia, a new
twin-screw vessel of the Cunard fleet,
which will be the largest liner that
has ever entered Boston harbor. It Is
just 70 years since the first Cunarder,
the Brltania, opened up that route, and
though the Franconia Is far below the
Mauretanla In speed and tonnage. It
demonstrates well enough the ship-
State Wants Government Land
Guthrie, Okla.—Acting In behalf o?
the state, ABBlstant General E. G. Spill-
man has filed with various land offices
in the state a formal application for
The'whole story of It all Is that the | «•? CfWjf? «°™rJ;™"1,,
old Firth avenue" has sold out. It has
I died suddenly
While tho Kev
The front of the safe was blown by
a charge of nttro-glycerine. The door
was hurled across the room and half
buried in the wall. The fixtures of the
office were scattered lu various direc-
tions.
To Build Court House
Cordell, Okla.—The county commis-
sioners are having the ruins of the old
court house removed so the contrac-
tors can begin work on our new $75,-
000 court house next week.
Worse Than Bullets.
Bullets have often caused less suf-
fering to soldiers than the eczema
L. M. Harrlman, Burlington, Me , got
in tho army, and Buffered with, forty
years. "But Bucklen's Arnica Salve
cured me when all else failed," he
writes. Greatest healer for Sores,
Ulcers, Boils, Bimuk tints, Wounds,
Bruises and Pll^, 7!w fft All Druggists.
lahoma to apply on the 210,000 acres
which the state claims under the grant
to states made in 1864
The Pittsburg county fair, under the
received more mone.v consideration
from trade for moving up town Into
the new Fifth avenue than the senti-
mental satisfaction of preserving Its
ancestral homes was worth. It has ; auspices of the farmers'
emigrated northward—or to Europe, opened last Friday. There was a fine
therefore, leaving only the three Van- ! exhibit and a good attendance.
derbllti, the fHoanei, the Shepards, |
the Huntlngtons and William Kocke-
institute I P*ng advance that has been made in
the span of a single human life.
For the Britannia was 207 feet long,
its tonnage was 1,154, speed eight and
Poland China Pigs of all ages and
both sex for sale. Best in the coun-
try.
ROBERT ROUNDS.
R. 1, Box 13, Hennessey, Okla.
fat Draft-bred weanling Colts, besides
j big yearlings, matured Fat Horses
and Ponies. In fact all classes to
choose from, besides 1,000 Cattle and
3,000 Feeding Sheep that must be
sold. Don't miss this sale. We will
also have a small sale, 500 horses on
October 28 and 29. Write for Infor
mation.
A. B. CLARK HORSE SALES CO.
Miles City, Mont.
Tin
For Over Fifty Years
MRS. WMSLOW'8 SOOTHING SYRUP
Has been used for over FIFTY YEARS I
by Mil.I.KINS of MOTHKKS for their j
CHILDREN WHILE TEETHING, with |
PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the
CHILI', SOFTENS the GUMS. ALLAYS,
all I • AIN ; Ct'RES W INI; «"«>LIC, and Is
the beet remedy for D1ARRHOJBA. Sold j
by Druggists in every part of the w;>rld.
Re aur« and ask for "Mrs. Wlnslow's
Soothing Syrup," and take no other kind.
25c. a bottle.
Kevfoot-Miller &
Company
Wholesale
Dry Goods, Fur-
nishings, Notions
9 and 11 West Main St.
Uklahoma City : : : Okla
The dispute between the cotton
manufacturers and the employers at
Manchester, England, is now In a fair
way of settlement. At a meeting of
the card room amalgamation, It was
decided to submit for arbitration the
questions at issue, which threatened
a lockout In the entire cotton trade
by October 1.
The Vanderbilt Home.
Teller as representatives to battle at
the last ditch or make the surrender
complete.
Take that stroll down Fifth avenue
from Fifty-ninth street, for the fun of
it. Then it was one fine long row of
mansions—granite and marble and
brownstone—every one a palace and
every one inhabited by an aristocracy
as great as America can ever furnish.
But now, walking down the street
from the park entrance, you meet few-
er mansions than shops even for the
Although suffering from a slight fev- lirst three blocks. A count shows five
er, the condition of Chavez, the Peru- brokers, three real estat
vian aviator who was injured after a j corset concerns and a French modiste
flight across the Alps, is good. He re- between the Plaza and the residence
ceives friends in Domodosilla, Italy, ] of Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt to the
and is in gay spirits for a man who ! south. And in Fifty-tipventh street,
had so recently come through such a t not far from the Vanderbilt mansion
LESSEES GET PAYNE CO. LAND
But Half of Tracts Advertised Are
Sold in One Day
Stillwater, Okla.—The state school I
land commission Monday opened its j
second series of sales of grazing and
agricultural lands, with tracts approx-
imating a total acreage of 1,600,000 to
be disposed of. Only half of the four-
teen tracts offered were sold and lea-
thrilling experience
Marquette Hotel
Eighteenth and Washington Ave
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Most Conveniently Located Hotel in St. Louis
RATES:
$ 1.00 up without bath
$2.00 up with bath
LAYTON. WEMYSS-SMITH & HAWK
majestic building
OKLAHOMA CITY
and just west of the Harry Payne
Whitney, residence, the famous old Oli-
ver Harrlman mansion is to be made
over into a store for a dressmaker. The
fact that this new neighbor is said to
have been a Virginia beauty before she
entered the trade, however, may ap-
peal to the social taste of the Whit-
neys and Vanderbllts.
Just below, the famous old Andrew
Zabriskie house has gone into
hands of Schumann's sons, who are
making it over into fine business quar-
ters. with apartments above. And
right there, also, Is the Collls P Hunt-
ington mansion, with a new gilded art
shop across the way.
This little Jaunt down Fifth avenue
shows, in addition, an amazing display
of glittering signs, with stately back-
grounds of brownstone and marble, ad-
vertising trade where New York's real
society us^d to hold levee. Signs are
everywhere. One of them even adver-
tises coal from the basement of ar old j
mansion that wreckers are destroying j
overhead.
Saved from the Grave.
"I had about given up hope, after
nearly four years of suffering from a
severe lung trouble," writes Mrs. M. L.
Dix, of Clarksville, Tenn. "Often the
pain In my chest would be almost un-
bearable and I could not do any work,
but Dr. King's New Discovery has
made me feel like a new person. Its
offices, two the begt me(jicine made for the throat
; ;tnd lungs." Obstinate coughs, stub-
. born colds, hay fever, la grippe, asthma
| Croup, bronchitis and hemorrhages,
i hoarseness and whooping cough, yield
I quickly to this wonderful medicine.
i Try it. 60c and 1.00. Trial bottles free,
(iuaranteed by All Druggists.
Statue of Dr. Johnson.
Pennington wns lying In state In his
church, the stntue was unveiled at
night by the donor and sculptor, Percy
Fitzgerald.
Today the bronze Image of the
worthy doctor may bo seen looking
down his beloved Fleet street. The
strongly-marked features and burly
form, from the full bottomed wig to
the firmly-planted shoes, have bui-n
faintly suggested by Mr. Fitzgerald,
with tho air of Sir. Joshua Reynolds's
portrait and the bust by Nollekens.
Boswell and Mtb. Thrale have their
place In the bas-reliefs on the pedestal.
What Dr. Johnson would have said
about this statue of him can be Imag
Ined by any one who I "" seen It. As
a work of art the statue Is an ntroclty;
nnd it seems most appropriate that It
Rhould have been unveiled at night.
Furthermore, even tho best examples
of the sculptor's art. Johnson was apt
to disparage. The labor consumed In
painting, he once said, was not dls
proportionate to the result; but a fol-
low might hack half a year at a block
of marble and only produce something
that hardly resembled a man. The
value of statuary, he argued, depend-
ed solely on Its difficulty.
On the other hand, It might have
pleased Johnson to know that poster
ity would In a special way associate
his name with a place of worship that
he so regularly attended.
Oklahoma Taxes Due December 1
One-half of tho 1910 tuxes becomes
due on December 1, 1910, and the last
half becomes delinquent on the 15th
day of June thereafter, provided said
lirst half shall have been paid on or
before December 31, 1910, otherwise
the whole amount become delinquent
January 31, 1911, and bears interest at
the rate of 18 per cent per annum.
Friday was the time set for the exe-
cution of John Hopkins at I^awton,
sentenced to be hanged for the murder
of his wife. An appeal pending in the
criminal court of upeals, however,
served iib a Btay of execution, as the
court has not been able as yet to
reach the case. Governor Haskell this
morning also extended the time by e«-
ecutlve order to the second Friday in
December.
STRONG MEN WIN!
' • ...4 \
11. I . . WJM.ikuii V
wiNoVtr S
4)0 KIMLUT (0 b0*7b ||.JUAREZ.CMINiMlMCO tr
Farmer 45 Years In Bed.
Clay City, Ind.—Joseph F. Adams, a
native of Parke county, born In 1841
I and who Is now In Ills 70th year, has | rcl horse out of tin
been forty-five years in bed nnd con
tlnuously In bed thirty-five years, or
since 1875. During all this time he
has managed and directed his affairs,
Ftirst Bismnrck. W>-91 Dcutschland, I i)Uying a farm of two hundred acres,
D; Kaiser Wllhelm II., 1901; Muuretaniu
Arrangements have been made ?cr
the immediate rebuilding of the cot
ton gin which burned at McCoinb iast
week. The engine and boilers were
not ruined by the fire, nnd It is ex
pected to have new machinery in and
the ulant ready to run again within
two or three weeks.
Fred Mulholland with Jockey Roiilg
up, took the honors in the great Okla-
homa Derby, which was the feature
of the largest day's attendance ;it the
State Fair at Oklahoma City Thurs-
day. Orbicular, the other starter,
closed a favorite, and seemed to justify*
the faith of his backers for he held
the lead until the stretch. A fine spurt
on the part of the winner, put the sor-
runnlng, and Mul-
holland
by two lengths.
Showing the Evolution of Steamer
id the Han
Gotebo oas Co. Must Not Close Plant
Guthrie, Okla.—The corporation
commission Friday night received a
telegram from Chambers & Deise, a
law lirm at Gotebo, protesting against
shutting off of natural gas in that
the | town by a gas supply company, hold-
ing that such action would leave the
( one-half knots an hour and the cabins
i accommodated only 115 passengers,
j Now the Franconia's length Is (525
• feet. Its gross tonnage 18,000 tons,
displacement 25,000 tons; it can carry
| 2,600 passengers and Its power Is
twenty times as great as that of the
I Britannia.
• More than three thousand workmen
! labored on the liner for 12 months up
I to the launching at Wallsend-on Tyne
The sister ship, the Laconla, has just
been laid down in the same shipyard
and will be launched next year. Next
In point of readiness are the White
Star liners, Titanic and Olympic, two
ocean giants under construction at
Belfast. Already they are immense
In bulk and when they arp completed
! which, he says, ran not be bought for
less than $20,000. He has eaten regu-
larly three times a day. Not at any
time since 1875 has he called a phy
slclan fo prescribe for him, nor to
diagnose his case, nor taken a dose
of medicine.
Until the state capital inatti i is set-
tled it is probablo that there will be
no more business meetings of the state
board of agriculture. The board mot
Friday at Guthrie and adjourned with-
out transacting business.
BY
US is
bons."
"Ind
Store <
Rather Vague.
oung man you see Just before
expert in handling the rib-
town without heat and light,
man Love Saturday wired
POLICEMAN A CORN EATER
New York Officer
61 Ears in 3
Gets Away
Hours and 5
FARM AND CITY LOANS
YOU GET ALL YOU BORROW
EASY TERMS -PROMPT ATTENTION
CALL OR WRl'l E US
LONQ TIME
Rooms I and 2 Homestead Bldg.
Muskogee, Okla,
203 Baltimore Building
Oklahoma City, Okla.
THE DEMING INVESTMENT COMPANY
Minutes.
New York.—policeman Willlaru !
Ornstein won the $10 purse and the
corn eating championship of the world
when he disposed of sixty-one ears of
the succulent "roasters." "Red" Du-
gan, former champion, who has been
driving a horse and was out of form,
did not much more than run half way
to Ornstein s figure. William Schwartz,
who has always been a rival of Du-
gan, was merely an "also ran."
Ornstein la a newcomer In the corn
eating field. After the feat he ^an-
nounced that he had "saved" some
room If any contestants came late."
The corn eating contest was the
event of the season on the East side
Edward Rozensteln, known all over
the East side as "Rosy," had ar-
ranged the event. It was In celebra-
tion of his forty-eighth birthday, and
took place In his saloon at Broome
and Clinton streets.
Ornstein la ready to recelr* chal-
lenges from all corners.
Pierce, manager of the gas company,
that the company would be held in
contempt if the plant were closed
without permission of the commis-
sion.
Hen Doctor on Salary.
St. l uis.—Dr .1 J Zellers of Clay-
ton, an expert In fowl and animal ail-
ments. has been retained by Edwin A
Lemp to keep a constant watch over
three white Orpington chickens which
he purchased for $1,300. Doctor Zel-
lers was retained as staff physician
after he and L>r G C. Eggers had
raced from Clayton to the Lemp coun
try place near Clayton In Doctor Kg
ger's automobile to attend the chick-
ens, which had contracted a cold In
transit from Kansas Citv.
Chair- they will be 45,000 tons each, or more j llon nf the field where the depreda-
M. S. | than 13,000 tons bigger than the Mau i tions have been most frequent he lib-
erally dosed a number of tempting
ears with croton oil. Early the other
morning Doctor Gearhart, who lives
near by, was awakened by terrible
groans which Issued from his front
porch. He Investigated and found
three young men rolling about in
great pain.
PILES CURED AT HOME
NEW ABSORPTION METHOD.
If you sufTer from bleeding, Itching,
blind or portrudlng Piles, send me
>our address, and I will tell you how
to cure yours* f at home by the new
absorption treatment; and will also
! send some of this tome treatment f- w
Horseman or department for trial, with reference from >our
'own locality If requested. Immediate
| relief and permanent cure assured.
Medicated Corn a Trap. Send no nnn. j, but tell other-, of thi«
Danville. Ha. A unique but effective1 Sor- Wrlle to Mrs' M W
method of finding out who was steal- j
ing his choice sweet corn was era- <
ployed by W. V Oglesby At the por-
So Tired
It may be from overwork, but
ihe chances are its from an in-
active LIVER. —
With a well conducted LIVER
one can do mountains of tabor
without fatigue.
It adds a hundred per cent to
ones earning capacity.
It can be kept In healthfulaction
by, and only by
Tutt'sPills
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
Tetania They are each 850 feet long
and It is understood they will be fitted
with turbine engines.
The Mersey dock and harbor board
has commenced the construction of a
huge new dock at Liverpool, but as It
will not be fully completed for three
years. It may be guessed that the pro
vision Is mainly Intended for the still
bigger Cunarder, that, report says,
j will run to 00,000 tons. Definite Infor
mat Ion Is not forthcoming at the Cu-
nard offices on tills latest plan, hut It
1 is not denied that the news that has
fome from Germany of the new Ham
burg-American liner Hansa has roused
the Cunard directors to a determina
tlon to produce something that will
lick creation for some years to come
The big German liner Hansa's ton
nage will be almost 50,000, or 18.000
more than the Mauretanla and 5,000
more than the Titanic. The Hansa
will not, according to present ac
counts, aim at ocean speeding. It will
have turbine engines designed to run
It at 22 knots an hour, but the cargo
and passenger accommodation will be
Immense So carefully Is It to be con
ptructed that It will not be In commls
slon before the beginning 1913.
Apart from the natural rivalry of
j two great maritime nations In tho
American passenger and freight trade
j there Is another Influence on the Amer-
ican aide of the Atlantic that has made
| for shipping developments. Since the
j Armbose channel and other New York
harbor improvements were carried out
shipping men have found the llmlta
J tlons to the dimensions of their ves
i hcis removed. The biggest liners they
: have ever dreamed of can now gain
ready access to New York, and the
difficulties at present lie more lu the
harbors of the old world than the
| new.
All departments of Harvard uni
verslty have opened for the two hun-
dred and seventy fifth year of the in
stitution. Without actual registration
figures It was estimated that the in
stitution would include about 5,000
students this year.
Hubert Latham made 60 to 70 miles
an hour in a trial of his new aeroplane
driven by a 100-horse power engine
at Paris, France.
Box P, South Rend, Ind
Although the alleged Injury occurred
in Oklahoma City, F. A. Hart of that
place filed suit against the Frisco at
Tulsa, asking $25,000 for personal in-
juries. Hart claims that he was struck
by a train at Hudson street and one
of his feet maimed.
Assistant Attorney General Moore,
bond attorney for the state, last week
approved bonds of the city of law-
ton, which were voted to the amount
of $280,000. Of the issue $200,000 is
for water works, $40,000 for water
works mains extension and $40,000 for
sewer extensions.
George T. Searcy ad J. C Thomas,
of Coal county, Okla., were two prom-
inent visitors who attended the good
roads convention at Oklahoma City.
Both men are live wires and have been
leaders In the upbuilding of Coal
county.
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Showing 34 Styles for Men and Women
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—something new
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in.hng wear 1<
better than an
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Haskell, Charles N. New-State Tribune (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 13, 1910, newspaper, October 13, 1910; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc97541/m1/7/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.