The Marshall Tribune. (Marshall, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, August 12, 1904 Page: 2 of 12
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MARSHALL TRIBUNE.
W. A. KELLET.
MARSHALL,
OKLA
~a
NEW STATE NEWS
ftoff is now in the midst of a big
f*viM l. Bev. Crouch of Bristol,
Tenu., is conducting ihe services.
Prague lias tiiis season shipped
■ bout fifteen car loads of potatoes,
bringing into the section nearly $.">,•
llOO.
The farmers' insitute meeting an-
nounced for Chandler August 9th and
10th lias been indefinitely postponed
on account of I he busy season.
The rains of last week have great-
ly benefited the cotton crop in both
territories. At soma points the crop
would have been a failure but for the
showers.
Pryor Cre.k has raised a $25.00
bonus for the Oklahoma ik Cherokee
Central railroad.
The Western Negro Press associ-
ation met in Cuthrie. The member-
ship comprises all negro newspaer
men west of the Mississippi.
The Oklahoma millers met at El
Keno last week. Tiie question of bet-
ter seed wheat was discussed.
lb' .1. Bushyhead lias been ap-
pointed a pension examining surgeon
at Claremore.
The postoftice at Boyer, Pottawato-
mie county, has been discontinued.
Mail has been ordered sent to Wa-
il et te
Muskogee streets are to be paved
with brick. A (luthrie contractor lias
the work.
Max Miiliins of Lexington. who
killed a negro on the streets of that
town last week, has been acquitted
by the coroner's jury returning a ver-
dict of justifiable homicide.
ROSE HAS MANY COLOf.3.
Peculiar Flower the Production cf
Eastern Gardeners.
The Chinese, Japanese and Siamese
are peculiarly skillful at botanical
feats. One of their wonderful achieve-
ments Is known as the "changeable
rose." The bloom is white in the
shade and red in the sunlight. After
night or in-a dark room this curiosity
3f the rose family is a pure waxy-white
blossom. When transferred to the
apen air the transformation immedi-
ately steps in, the time of the entire
change of the flower from white to
red depending on the degree of sun-
light and warmth. First the petals
take on a kind of washed or faded blue
:olor, and rapidly change to a faint
blush of pink. The pink gradually
deepens in hue until you find that
your lily-white rose of an hour before
is as red as tho reddest peony that
ever bloomed.
J
Still More Evidence.
Bay City. Ill,, August S (Special).—
Mr. K. F. Henley of this city adds his
evidence to that published almost
daily that a sure cure for Rheuma*
(ism is now before the American peo-
ple and that that cure is Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills. Mr. Henley had Acute
Rheumatism. He has used Dodd's
Kidney Pills, lie says of tlie result:
"After suffering for sixteen years
with Rheumatism and using numer-
ous medicines for Rheumatism and
more medicines prescribed by doc-
tors, I at last tried Dodd's Kidney
Pills with the result that i got more
bentflt from them than all the others
put together.
"Dodd's Kidney Pills were the only
thing to give me relief, and 1 recom-
mend them to all suffering from
Acute Rheumatism."
Rheumatism is caused by Uric Acid
in the blood. Healthy kidneys take
ill the Uric Acid out of the blood.
Dodd's Kidney Pills make healthy kid
[leys.
v OIJU
[NMSNnQN
Paint and Cleaning Machine.
Out in the country, where the
smoke and du.t from factories anc
paved utreets is unknown, it is com
paratively easy to keep a house look-
ing bright and clean on the outside,
even when it has been standing sev
eral years. But in the city, where
all is dust and smoke, a newly erect
ed s^one building or a freshly paint-
ed frame structure soon shows the
effects of the dirt-laden atmosphere
A Canadian inventor has just de
signed an apparatus intended for use
on frame structures, where the paint
lias become dingy and in case the
owner does not feel that he can stand
I he retail butchers and grocers of
Anadarko have perfected an organ-
ization.
'I he gypsum plaster manufacturing
"plant near Watonga has been sold to
an Oklahoma City tirm for $-18,000.
1 be franchise of tlit? Southwestern
base ball league has been transferred
from Shawnee to El Keno.
Enid announces that there will be
no gambling on the streets during the
street fair at that place.
Old soldiers' day at Prague, which
lias been advertised to be on the 20th
of August, has been changed to the
- !rd on account of the governor being
present on that day.
Muskogee is to have an artificial
gas piant. A local company is to in-
stall a $00,000 plant.
Work on Anadarko's $:; ;,000 water
works plant has begun and the con-
struction will be pushed rapidly. The
contract calls for completion within
three months.
The Lion Store at Oklahoma City
ofiers $15 in cash for the best six
e..rs ol ro.n r.vsii". by any farmc ti
Oklahoma and Indian Territory. Also
a cash prize of $5 for tli<> best halt
dozen ears of corn raised by any farm-
er in Oklahoma. Ixjgan, Pottawato-
mie, Cleveland, Canatffan and Lincoln
counties, in Oklahoma. A prize of $3
tor the second best, and one of S2 for
tlie third best Corn must be de-
livered at the Liou Store in Oklahoma
City free.
Difference in Bacilli.
In consequence of the discovery by
Prof. Schroen that the bacillus of
consumption is not the same as that
of tuberculosis. It is held in German
medical circles that the present treat-
ment of consumption will be radically
changed.
More Flexible and Lasting
*'on t shake out or blow out; by using
Defiance Starch you obtain better re-
itilts than possible with any other
)rand, and one-third more for sam?
noney.
Harsh Bankruptcy Laws.
A merchant In Russia can de-
clared bankrupt if his liabilities ex-
ceed $1,000 and he has not the .ready
cash to meet them. He can be ar-
rested. and iiis detention depends op
the will of his creditors.
A Trip to Colorado, Utah or California
is not complete unless it embraces
the most beautiful resorts and grand-
est scenery in Colorado, which are
found on the Colorado Midland Rail-
way, the highest standard gauge line
in the world. Exceptionally low sum-
met lound trip rates to Colorado in-
terior state points, Utah, California
and the Northwest are offered by this
line. For information address Mr. C.
H. Speers, General Passenger Agent,
Denver, Colo.
Inhabitants of Claro.
The Inhabitants of Claro, a Swiss
tillage, met in general assembly and
passed a resolution informing the ec-
clesiastical authorities that they (the
villagers) would become free-think-
ers unless the village cure, who was
unpopular, should be removed.
$10.00 per M. Lewis' "Single Bind-
?r," straight 5c cigar, costs more than
Jther brands, but this price gives the
iealer a fair profit—and the smoker
i better cigar. Lewis' Factory Pe<
)ria, ill.
Midget Japanese Soldiers,
The average Japanese soldier Va
uvi inure tfean 5 feet 4 iccijys falglf
Combines the Coap and Water.
the cost of fresh painting. This ma-
chine, which is here illustrated, has
a water reservoir, an air compressor
and a soap-containing chamber, to-
gether with lines of hose and scrub-
bing brushes. The idea is to mix the
soap and water while under pressure
and before it is discharged into tlie
bristles that it shall be of the proper
consistency to scrub the painted sur-
face to which it is applied. This
treatment would seem to necessitate
first-class waterproof paint, though
perhaps even poor paint would stand
against a weak mixture and light
scrubbing with the brush. In the
t'ase of stone work the laborer need
have no scruples about exerting his
strength, as it is impossible to injure
the hard face. There is obviously no
necessity for transporting a bucket of
cleansing liquid around on ladders
and scaffolding, as heretofore, the
cleaning fluid being pumped directly
into the brush where it is to be ap-
plied. The pressure is easily con-
trolled by means of the valves ir_ the
handle of the brush, as is also the
proportion of soap and water.
The inventor is Emile Wegland dit
Uibonte of Montreal, Quebec.
New Polar Current Theory.
Die latest word in meteorology is
brought from the international mete-
orological committee, which will ren-
der it necessary, it is said, to abandon
once tor all the theory hitherto
adopted of a vertical circulation of
the atmosphere between the tropics
and the poles. Dr. H. 11. Hildebras-
son, who makes a report, expressed
the hope that the terms "polar" and
"equatorial" currents, which have
hitherto caused so much confusion in
dynomical meteorology, will disap-
pear completely from meteorological
science.
He shows that in all parts of the
temnerate zone of the northern hemi-
sphere an upper current from west to
east prevails in all months of the
year, while in the tropical zone the
currents at all heights are almost
without, exception from east to west
New Variable Stars.
During an examination of photo-
graphic plates taken by M. Blojko at
the Moscow university, M. Ceraski
detected three new variable stars.
The first, Cassiopeiae, varies from the
ninth to the eleventh magnitude; the
second, Lyrae. viiVies from the tenth
to the twelfth; and the third, Lacer-
tae varies from the ninth to the
tenth and probably is ..f short period.
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The Marshall Tribune. (Marshall, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, August 12, 1904, newspaper, August 12, 1904; Marshall, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth349748/m1/2/?rotate=90: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.