The Texhoma Times. (Texhoma, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, December 24, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
IXFO.HER TO GET $1,003,000
PICH ARD PARR DISCOVERED
OOLRCE Or SUGAR TRAILS.
SPEAKING OF NATURAL RESOURCES—
According to Statutes He C n Get "Hat
Exceeding !r.e-Hal# of Npt
Proceeds.' ■*
Jury in •{,
paty lad
g n«y. Au
4
*
Ins?
SHEEP jiND CATTLE SUFFERING
With tfc« t.'trc^ry 35 Degrees Belo*
in wlo-rirg Live Stsck Lcsses
I Will be Heavy.
e?
by ti
ti-
of
I1-
rf in
: An, i
irk W<
luieaa sy 1
-:o k on the
blusandi ia
el.
Bivr. Wyo
point bet*
Sao franc!ico and
Vroale; are exper
terrible de?ree 0f
Wyo., rfjerti 25 d<
Cheyenne, with a •
degree* beloar, Is the war
th< s-'iie. Out cn :' <• =
plateau 'He mercury has
to the bottom of t!.e tab*
Laramie,
* be'.ow, and
i-ra:t:re of 12
rmst point in
imply gone
City
at, not
00 1 T
lso on
palliy.
MUNICIPAL GRAFT IN CHICAGO
A Commission Firds That City Paid
Too Much for Inferior Coal
and Oil.
Chicago, Illinois.—Information glean-
ed by the Merriam Commission,
which wag appointed by the city coun-
cil to prAbe municipal flnanc;;il affairs,
reveal, that the Ciilcago Kir Appara-
tus Company, of which Harry Saiith,
private secretary to Mayor liu.;se, is
pre-sid "tit, and a brother of
Treasurer Connery, vice-preside!
only roI| coal to the "cliy at a
cent profit, but "clear,e<t up" a
, oil transactions with the munlcl
For oil the company received from
five to ten cents a gallon moro than
the marjtet price, and the Investigat-
ing commissioner karns that the oil
delivered rarely met the specifications.
Oldest Auciior.eer is Dead.
Sallnmf Kansas.—Col. Ci<c,o Post
Hurlnjr. jrho had the dia'Jucilon of
being lie oldest, auctioneer in Kan-
sas. havftjg cried sales for 40 years,
and soldttbe Shlpton to—October
20, died at a JjWbliii js.'iloi W the farm
of A. Mf* Steward, 1 ne n i! east of
Salina, from heart disease. As he
raided Mf :hnnd to knock down the sale
of a cai^ he saidj -''W iti a minute,'
boys," irid be?an to sink to tho
ground. He died almost instantly.
The St?fj(lard Oil Company Appeals.
St. Lolls, Missouri.—Judge William
C. Ho< kFind Jml.-<■ Elmer R; Adams
of the I Billed States circuit court or
Ut-'n d an orler inting the
:<£(!!! (*u pi v'« ^AJWI'IO the'
e Mouit from the recent feder-
Ration here, ordering it to'
e.clThi- n^si-nment of error?,
wWj the $rO noti bond wag lilted
nrtakex Iti !h Vnitr's
appe:: I
Stands
supren
a I Inv
diss.lv
which
a
W'M
•NANSEN REJECTS COOK'S CLAIM
He Has Faith in the Claims of Peary-
University H:s Sat Announced
Verdict.
?.rk.—'"ri«Jctf
>r tne men wbo in :
v| the feat that be
:la:m to have mad
sensation. While 1
:-ia! 1 art as it stand
>' Copehagen, it h
:helesi,..done miif!
jpiniOB against Coc
ippc Bring on his s'
t is one of the mos
r, ..a reacted
5 claim 10 the
>ofe< Nmseu'a
[est blows that
His
mmander Rob-
, once the ree-
'ained farthest
e best known
it years essay-
sok and Peaiy
is caused a
1 have no ofU-
tnc caBsidera-
the University
ilread y, nevfr-
swing public
The comments
ient show that
o.tant factors
GOONTRY WHOSE SOIL SPELLS
WHEAT AND 00T OF WHOSE
FARMS THOOSANOS ARE
GROWING RICH.
' grown successfully up to the sixtieth
parallel and In the years to come you*
vacant land will bo taken at a rat*
of which you have at present no eoa-
' ception. We hare enough people la
the United States alone, who want
homes, to take up this land.
"What you must do In Wester* Ca .
ada is to raise more live stock. Whea
you are doing what you ought to do
! In this regard, the land which Is now
selling for $20 per acre will be worth
WHAT PRESIDENT TAFT AND jrom jr0 t0 j100 pr# jt ^ ^
OTHERS THINK OF CANADA.
Anrther Fat Year for the Canadian
West.
sei who
for
UNCLE SAM—IF I COULD ONLY APPLY ALL OJMT TO PRACTICAL
SERVICE! . V
KING OF BELGIUM IS DEAD so farmeries MAY KNOW
THE END WAS UNEXPECTED BY t Tbe„ T£^n«H^|P0meStic Sc;en"
PHYSICIANS. ^ r? '*n "P b" the
GovernKnt.
No Dir^-t Heir and Crcwn Wil
to Brother's Son, Prince
A'bert.
Pass
Dec.
the doc
est ho)
Soon
t<9
d the great-
eem'ngly
bis recovery.
the end had come the
ministers were notified. The first
official to arrive at the death chamber
was the royal chaplain. The ministers
remained in the chamber for a cos-
Ei if ra':/- time, discussiag in subdued
tones the death and matters of state.
I^e'i>old II was (he son of the late
King Leo-.old I, upon whose death, In
I860, he succeeded to the throne. He
was born in Brussc-lls, April 9, 1837.
His father was the former Prince, of
Saxe-Coburg-Cetha and hh m.ithbr.
Princes# Louis", was a daughter of
King Louis PftBJippe of Fran'*
Augii.0* 22. 1*-,:'. Klnfc Le<r>poM mar-
rk-d Archduchess Marie H ietia,
daughte r of Archduke Joseph of Aus-
tria. She died September 19, 1902.
There were ihree daughters born of
this union—Louise, Stephanie and
Clementine. The two older princesses
have beeti estranged from their father,
but Clementine remained in his affec-
tions.
There is no direct hereditary heir,
hence the crown will pass to Prince
Albert, the only son of Leopold's broth-
er. the late Phlllippe, Count of Fland-
ers. The new monarch was born
April 8. IS75, and October 2, 1900, he
married Eiliz:;th of Bavaria. They
have three children—Prince Leopold,
8 years obi: Prince Charles, fi years
old. and Prlnccss Marie Jose, 3 years
old.
Washington,^^rC.—The teaching
of ^doiW- tc .fi-tfatu-t/u a broad scale
mw oe uudorfl > if by the federal
, government as -jwg' It of repre-
■ "tita ions thaL been made t•>
congress by tdt~*WBcnal Pure Food
. assor iation. inis organization wishes
tbe gov^rninent V> ifc^ Iuct investiga-
' :oas of the best-ffifctbods of food
I reparations ant' dispense Informa-
: jn and Instrucftbu4,, n the subject
as done on matters pertaining to crop
: cultivation. '/:•
> Emma C. Sieieiis, secretary of
i the association, appeared before the
• < mmittee on a^ricitfture and asked
: :r at an apprpriation be made to pro
I vide for such investigations and th
j dissemination of the information ob-
S tained. The senate committee al-
j ready has voted money for such an
1 appropriation.
j Miss Sickells pointed out that the
I government is doing much for the
j farmers through the department ol
; agriculture, but practically nothing
j lor the farmers' wives. The lattei
! need instruction in the selection and
| preparation of foods quite as much as
their husbands do in the handling of
soils and crops.
illMUing frftpi Cdok
;ei?f upheld him?
V.'hf6 ;tr.e Unix - y of Copenhagen
rlttf- is fri :iu fc.i'C'. '■()*}#
reco-<|Sllhis latent attack, coming on
top of ih-- accitsa ions madg, by J.'«pt.
Georee H. Dunkle of New
York. K turned much of the popular
syn. agair. cook. Nansi
_ nt many over to Ite Pcpry
side. _
tement is stralghtfor-
himself. and little more than
itaflt dec!a:a:i h^ doubts of
Cook,® faith in Iv.it;..
■ ■ —. .
THE BLUM6IA CASE TO COURT
good land as that which is selling for
more than $100 per acre In the cor*
belt
"1 would rather raise cattle la West
ern Canada than in the corn belt ol
the United States. Tou can get your
food cheaper and the climate is bet-
Our Canadian neighbors to the north ter for the purpose. We hare a bet
are again rejoicing over an abundant ter market, but your market will lm-
harvest, and report* from reliable prove faster than your farmers will
sources go to show that the total yield produce the supplies. Winter wheat
of 1909 will be far above that of any can be grown in one-half of the coun-
other year try through which I hare passed, and
It is c-timated that $100,000,000 alfalfa and one of the varieties ol
will this year go into the pockets of clover In three-fourths of it. Th
the Western farmers from wheat farmers do not believe this, but it Is
alone, another $60,000,000 from oats true."
and barley, while ret .irns from other j Keeping pt^co with wheat produ -
crops and fro® gtpek wIU add $40r . tlotu tft$ gr^-th of railways us been
quite as wonderful, and —"
NntMfc's
*?>rd,9e 1
oOO.OOO more, fs It any wonder then
that the farmers of the Canadian
{ tVoht are haj>>jr?'
Thousands of American farmers
have sfettled ip the. above mentioned
provinces during the past year; men
1 who know the West and its possibili-
ties, and who also know perhaps bet-
the whole
country from Winnipeg to th^,Ro<£y
Mouitains; will soA be a net-'«wk of
trunk and branch lines. Three great
transcontinental lines are pushlna
construction In every direction, ane
at each siding the gr&ln elevator is
to be found. Manitoba being the
ter than any, .other peuiie, the-be^t Srst settled province, has now an el
methods for frorhSbm rarmlng. va
alng.
President Taft said recently ^n
speaking of Canada: ) f 11 r
"We have been going ahead so rap-
idly in our own country that our heads
have been soipewhat yelled with the
id^ft U** ^t> cftf^lng'Jn oijr fch0td-
Hc
Suits Hove Eeen Fi'ed Against O^la-
norrKjank Commissioner by Two
fc Surety Companies.
City, OiUahoma.—Suits
were flled in the i,..-::. : court by the
L'nite43t$tates Fidelty and Gjaraiity
conipa^jf and the Southern Surety
compaB against the state bank c m-
missiolfe, Jlr. Youhg, asking that the
comait^loner be restrained from mak-
ing the-itate a preferre.i cr. '.itor i*
set-ling the affairs of the Colu:nl|ta
L'ank and Trust company.
They a! 0 ask that he be resttaiotfil
from reimbursing the state guaranty
fund or the state banks from which
that fund was repleted after the failure
of the Columbia, and demanding that!
he be retained within the jurisdiction j
of the court. The petition also de-
manded that Jhe commissioner should
file with, the courts a full statement
showing the liabilities and assets of
the bank at this time.
Judge Clark hoard arguments and
took the case under advisement 1
ator capacity of upwards of 26,000,0M
bushels, Saskatchewan 20,000,00, and
Alberta about 7,000,000, while the c
paclty of elevators at Fort William
and Port Arthur, on the Great Lakes,
is upwards of 20,000,000 more.
^ ^ ^ JjWWn provinces of Manitoba,
ders all the'progress there is in the SasKatchewafi and Alberta there ar
woi^d. V.'ej have npt been coas^pqs; jfiour and joatmeal mills with a coe
that them ie on Ui j iimh a^-bliiig ;bh|eia f capacity, of 25,009 barrels pet
country and a young nation ftat is day, and situated along some famous
lookiDg forward,-as It well'may, to a' water powers in N>w Ontarlp,, thf r
great national future. They have are larger mills thAn will be foUni
7,000,000 people, but the country Is | anywhere in the Prairie Provinces,
still hardly scratched." Last year the wheat crop totaled
Jas. J. Hill sp -:.yiig Jupfore the over 100,600,000 bushels. This yeai
Canadian Clifb of Widfiipcgfa few days the crop will yield 30,000,000 more. A
ago said: ' recent summary shows that on the 1st
"I go back for 53 years, when I ' of January, 1909, the surveyed lands
came West from Canada. At that time ' of the three western provinces, totaled
Canada had no North-West. A young 134.000,000 acres, of which about 32/
boy or man who desired to earve his 000.ooo have been given as subsidies to
ZALAYA'S MESSAGE TO TAFT -
FIRE IN A NEWSPAPER PLANT
THEIR EMPLOYES OWN STOCK
United States Steel Corporation De-
pends Upon That Fact to Prevent
Threatened Strike.
Pi:tsburg, Pennsylvania.—Pittsburg
will be the cMef battle ground of the
war declared by the labor tiulons of
this country and Canada asaiust the
United States Steel corporation. There
is unusual activity among the captains
and lieutenants of the industry and a
number of secret conferences were
held.
It was held Uiat the corporation
bases its hope of preventing the strike
on the fact that 40,000 employed own
stock In the corporation, which is pay-
ing them guod dividend* and tidily
increasing in value.
There are 17,1.000 st«tl ^nmLoj'es In
and around Pittsburg who have never
taken advantage of this opportunity to
.purchase the compaft)tf* VbttAt. * Vet
the steel magnates believe if the 40.-
edt) rftWKtitJldmr" 'm ploy es remain
steadfast no strike will be ordered.
on.
New VWK Ovter 'a UtfWfi.
New Yorii. N. Y —The bdhdrd
del ; 1 f ,N( \v Yq^ Vllv ' an ««*••
reached a. tyu^ jfiuouutii.y to, S^.wftO,-
000,000, according to a Report Ju^t is-
sued by rf'<< i^Uptrolb r. Tb.'s amount,
howevi r, Uleiodi s mdre thnh $i00,000,-
itoo whleii is 4w)ld by the city sinking
frjpfl'i
A Nobel Prize to* the Poor.
1' is, Fiiur-.--- H'1 ron I.) li tourielles
d • ConsU.it; W^io v. is awarded one of
She Nobel prlw-s n ntly. |:an given
the an:o.:nt of thu prize, $10,000, to the
poor.
Shot Thr:ufh H- " 11 Cut Llv«v
St. Joseph, Missouri—Francis Drys-
dale shot through the heart while
handling Ms revolver three weeks
ago, is able to set up in bed at St.
Joseph's bestial and his complete
recovery Is expf.etpd.
A Brakeman Fell Between Cars.
Garnett) Kansas.—A. f. Jehnsoft,
32 years old, a brakeman on the Mis-
souri Pacific Tallro.id, fell between
freight ears nine miles west of here.
One leg was cut off and the other wau
mangled.
Were tJbnfce*! Iff P'rl«fc4' '
i Otbqwi- e\-teller or the
.or Columbus. Ohio, ajid Daniel C.
Abbot'- ei-MOl&c*; +<oz fite First Na-
f tlonal Bank of Columbus, arrived at
r the federal prison to begin serving
'(their iviif'is ofiyi-a^s lot eubeif
I zlamont and false entries. .
TAK-fe i
Office cf Fort Scott Tribune and
Monitor Destroyed by Early
Morning Glaze.
Fort Scott. Kansas. — The plants
of the baily and Weekly Trib-
une and Monitor and the Monitor
Binding and Printing company were
ruined by fire at 3::;o o'clock in the
morning. The loss will approximate
$20,000, The buildinc, a five-story
brick, known as th.- HicUards Block,
was not badly damaged. The upper
two floors are useJ as apartments and
In the panic anion g the residents loss
of life was uf.rro\yly averted by the
firemen, u rci-'U ftisl.sr.eil on jumping
from upper wM|)#s.All were finally
brought down^MB Ere escapies pf the
building. Bv* ' 1
The ^lonitor plant was established
In 185^ and was the largest printing
plant i| southeastern Kansas, employ-
. ins W> i>erso^fc, tjeArge ^V. Aiarbk- is
.the ,mjfcai.'eraairtl -nrr^gt srm?Wfo!de#
and edjtor of the publications. Robert
B. Banv-is a s ciate editor and a heavy
'stockholder in the concern.
Muft Use Government Bonds.
U? ^KE BIG STRIKE • c-After Jan-
j uar'y ifonly United States bonds will
j bo acijfcted by t'ne treasury depart
'rtitthf ®posits in national banks. An
l-es<6i r tto this effect was issued by
j FsijjUtlwi MacVeagh, secretary of the
I The purpose of the order is
[ to stimulate the demand for Panama
In Order That His Country Might Re-
sume Friendly Relations With
United States He Quits.
Managua. Nicaragua.—President Ze-
laya cabled a conciliatory message to
President Taft saying that he had
shown bis goad faith by reskmtng In
order that Nicaragua might resume
friendly relations with the United
States, The message read:
On December 4 I cabled Washing-
ton this message:
"Secretary Kiiox: I believe that the
sources of your Information are prej-
udiced and request that the United
States send a commission of Investiga-
tion. If Its findings show my adminis-
tration to be detrimental to Central
I America I will resign."
1 have received no reply. To avoid
harm to my country and desiring that
jit sl«ll renew friendly relations with
| the Bnited States/ I have sent my
t esiittatjt,# u> copses. As.-my ©p.
]>oii<«ts eooslde^ my presence 3, dis
I turbftg factor I propose to s^iow my
goodMalth 'by leaving Nicaragua. I
stanBready to weesunt '[4? my ttcts.'
Raltifiad Employes' Department of
"fie American Federation of
gLibdr Wilts' Vn'-'Srr'Wdf.
Will Evaporate Kansas Milk,
I Wellington, Kaunas.—Adolph Meyer
j and Fritz Ivrager, representatives of a
: cream evaporating company at Hlgh-
I Innd, 111., are here with a view to
| establishing a branch. They desire
I the farmers to furnish 5,000 cows for
j dairy purposes.
• St.lEI'mJ, iMinnes®ia.-+Pursuant to
the 111 of Cbaimian H. U Periiajai,
the BilKuid employes' department, of
the Aerlcan Federation of Labor met
herein special-' ^sitJh. Tails' TtiVef-
IWlWBikes the place of the one Set
i |>or. t «?v month, by the t> doraition to
at Twontp. , and Chairman
' ViVWVn said the change gf date was
j occasioned by the switchmen's strike,
j The department, wWch' lias a tothl
] strength of nearly WO,000 men, will
| aud, cooperate with the
j $\nVc4tmen,, and it is understood that
j.iVWill prepare Itself for action 111 case
a general railway strike should result.
| Citizenship to Porto Ricans.
| Washington. IX C.—Rxeiision of
I American cttiaenshlp to Porto Ricans
j is recommended by Gen. Ckireflee R.
| Ldwards, chief of the bureau of insular
; affairs, lu his annual report to the
■cretary of war.
2 T^erilent bonds, which have been
selling nrounc
for souJt time^l
own way had to cross the line, and
to-day It may surprise you—one out
of every five children born in Canada
' lives in the United States. Now you
are playing the return match, and the
North-West is getting people from the
United States very rapidly. We
I brought 100 land-seekers, mainly from
Iowa and Southern Minnesota, last
night out of St. Paul, going to the
North-West. Now, these people have
all the way from five, ten to twenty
thousand dollars each, and they will
make as much progress on the land In
one year as any one man coming from
the Continent of Europe can make, do-
: ing the best he can, in ten, fifteen, or
twenty years."
It is evident from the welcome
given American settlers in Canada
that the Canadian people appreciate
I them. Writing from Southern Alberta
recently an American farmer says:—
"We are giving them some new
ideas about being good farmers, and
they are giving us some new ideas
about being good citizens. They have
a law against taking liquor into the
Indian Reservation. One of our fel-
lows was caught on a reservation with
a bottle on him, and it cost him $50.
One of the Canadian Mounted Police
found him, and let me tell you, they
: find everyone who tries to go up
against tho law# of the country.
"On Saturday Bight, every bar-room
is closed, at exactly 7 o'clock. Whyjp
j Because itfis the law,■< and it's tha
same with every other law. There
isn't a bad man in the whole district,
and a woman can come home from
f town to the farm at midnight if the
*' wtrnts-'tdrrC'-Tie. That's Canada's Idea
how to run a frontier; they have cer-
tainly taught us a lot.
"On the other hand, we are running
, their farms for tkeat fetter than any
; other class "ffr ^rMsj I gae^a^I
can say this wftfiom TJOTWting, "Snd tne
| Caandlans appreciate us. We turn
out to celebrate DomfiSwif Day; they
are glad to have us help to farm the ,
V>w t(
AMjher. farmer^, from
w,ho Wtjllgd i^Anttal si*ka,tjcii
'f* an"'
Vome years ago, has the Toftowlng tof^e
railways, 11,000,000 disposed of in oth-
pt ways and 38,C00,00 given by the
Canadian Government as free hom
steads, being 236,000 homesteads ol
160 acres each. Of this enormous tei^
rltory, there Is probably under crot
At the present time less than 11,000,-
000 acres; what the results will be
when wide awake settlers have takei
advantage of Canada'* offer and are
cultivating the fertile prairie landa,
one can scarcely imagine.
After all, the kind of world one car
ries about within one's self is the im-
portant thing, and the world outside
takes all Its grace, color, and value
from that.—Lowell.
A Rare Good Thing,
"Am using Allen'* Foot-Eas«, and ru
truly say I would not hav been without
It po lonp, had I knows th* rtilef It wouH
Rive my achln? feet. I think It a rare goo4
thing for anyone- havinf lore or tired feet.
—Mis Holtwert, Providence, R
L" Sold by all DrugcUtk, lie. aik to-dajr.
You can't blame the man who has
got bis winter's coal In for feeling
just a little better than the rest ol
the neighborhood.
If you wi=h beautiful, elea*, white elothee
use Red ( ross Ball Bias. La.-gi 1 cm.
package, 5 cents.
We don't blame a man for growling
if his wife treats him like a dog.
Guar*11
:-***"
>j}"o Texas for Evidence.
Topnka, Kansas.—John Dawson, at-
tbrr.i'.v for !'.•> railroad boar,',, lias gone
to Galviesion Tev., where he
vestltra^- express rates in Texas. Tie
is dlggmg up some evidence to back
.him i|r |his suit filed b"fore the Kan
sas railroad board to reduce express
rates Kansas. i
"'■i nUftf cojtnt^y,:— , . ; f, Salts and Castor
"My wife and i have done well enough bad stuff—never cure,
since we came from the States; we can iVll , . u , .
live anyway. We came In the spring of only make, boweb move be-
1901 With the first carload of settlers' < use it irritates and sweats them,
effects unloaded in these parts and like poking finger in your eye. The best
built the first shanty between Sas- Bowel Medicine ia Casraret*.
katoon and Lumeden. We brought DOWel meaiCine IS cascarcts.
with our car of settlers' effects the ^ve!7 and Castor Oil user should
sum of $1800 in cash, to-day we are get a box of CASCARETS and try
worth $■ '■-.• w. We proved up' one them just once. You'll see
of t#ie farpajip We^t£rn Canada
and fcdught 320 acres at $3 per acre. c .. U1.3 otT- msll_lt wtth your aidrea* m
Harrlman Lines to Seattle.
Chicago, Illinois.—The railroads of
the Harrlman system wiin invade the
lerritory long considered as the
private domain of James J. Hill, Jan-
uary 1, by running passenger trains for
the first time through to Tacoma and
Seattle and terminals of the Northern
Pacillc find Great Northern railways,
under the new traffic agreement,
Nebraska Colleges to Merge.
Kearney, Nebraska —The Presbyter-
ian Synod of Nebraska has voted to
consolidate the college at Bellevue
with that at Hastings. The combined
institution Is to be called Bellevue col-
lege and will have an endowment of
$200,000.
Moro than 25,000,000 deposit ac-
counts are carried by banks in
tha United States.
An Old Reiident of Lawrence Dead.
Lawrence . Kansas.—(,coi ye F. Sox-
man, one of the old<residents of
Douglas county, who has held several
county offices, died after an lllnesa of
some mootha
i OlffrSM Pinchot Will Not Qt.it, - ■
1 Washjti--'V IX C.—While Gifford
, Pinchoti. chief fcrester, is not in Wash
I ington t# speak for himself, his friends
. are confident he has no intention to re
sign f.-<}m the government's service
! and accept the pr< sidency of the Unl-
I versify Of Michigan.
Five Sugar Men are Found Guilty.
New York, N. Y —The jury found j
guilty five of the ? x employes of tho
Ame: lean Sugar Re:!nin« company,
who have been on trial the last three
weeks charged w;t>. criminal con-
spiracy to defraud the government ol
customs dues on Imported raw su^ar.
Ora Turner Convicted.
Lyotis, Kansas.- -(iuilty of murder in
the fir-: Wesrree was tne verdict"return-
ed by the Jury which 'r>U Ora Tumor
for the killing of Roy Snider uear Ray-
mond on the night of July 14, last
We fnnl.- irfJll ^ SK-rliug lleniedy «jo., Chicago, fll., and recelTe
■ V\ e took f?QO%l crops off the land for' n w-it.u or.- air ^oli Uja Xs„i, i'lie*.
four years, at the end of which we
had $S000 worth of improvements In
the way of buildings, etc., and had
planted three acres of trees. Two
years ago wc got such a good offer
that we sold our lend at $45 per acre.
From the above you will see that we
have not done badly since our ar-
rival."
Prof. Thomas Shaw of St. Paul, Min-
nesota, with a number of other well
known editors of American farm jour-
nals, toured Western Canada recently, •
and in an interview at Winnipeg said
in part: —
"With regard to the settlement of
the West I should say that it is only j
well begun. I have estimated that In
Manitoba one-tenth of the land has
been broken, in Saskatchewan one- 1
thirtieth ard In Alberta, one-hundred
and seventy-fifth. I am satisfied that
in all three provlnceg irrain can be
PARKER'S
; hair balsam
M aod betotlfltt the hai*.
■ •«* * Hi IVUVUlb,
I CaretI «*lp diMMM ft h«„
ff^aadll.tqtt drugfato
A DOSE OF
1
Piso's
> CURE ^
xwt mi m
is as safe as it is effective. Guar- 1
antecd to contain no opiates. It ia 1
very palatable too—children like it I
All Drannlnta. 23 Ccnla J
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Fischer, J. S. The Texhoma Times. (Texhoma, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, December 24, 1909, newspaper, December 24, 1909; Texhoma, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth351926/m1/2/: accessed April 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.