The Denison Daily Herald. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 243, Ed. 1 Monday, April 23, 1906 Page: 7 of 9
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1
I Recant On Strike in Thie Field Prov-
ed to Be Only a Pocket.
Territory Notes.
It Costs
^HorepH
Prepare the Surface £££
£r£2f ™'Ste5?a“LS;t5i: *“■»«« •«» >°
Pure.Linseed Oil. This is the only paint : l°P of the derrick. Saturday Glenn
which is elastic enough and tough enough, j well No. 3 came in in a similar way.
fnspiteofdimaticchanges, to wear smoothly Gaiey well No. 2 is gushing at the rate
and evenly right down to the surface, leas, of from 500 to 750 barrels per day,
fi>g it free and uniform, all ready for the ; and Glenn well No. 3 Is doing almost
pawter to begin his work when repainting I as much. This now makes four gush-
is nnallynecessary. Ors in the Mounds oil field, five miles
A parnt adulterated with barytes, yellow northeast of here, which will safely
-average 500 barrels of oil each daily.
2Si££ to K£5 ™e 8“ recently struck In Brook
crick and oed Lonr before o„h nxHt i Wf>11 No- 2, where the gas exploded
has worn aSTy, r^ttofb^ome, ane- ! f* ^rned the derrick injuring the
ceisity, on account of the many places left dr‘,ler- Proved ,0 b' «“* The
exposed. Yet. before repainting can be derrick was rebuilt and drilling was
End of Knlghta-Templar Conclave.
Ada. I. T„ April 23.—The Grand
Commandry of Knlghta-Templar of
Indian Territory has concluded a three
days’ session here. The next conclave
will be held at Chickasha in April,
1507.
_ :=
HEALDTON.
done, the blotchy, uneven surface mutt be
scraped or burned till the smooth surface at
the wood itself is reached. This requires
much of the painter’s valuable time, and is
attended with no little risk from fire.
Avoid this expensive process and the
danger which it always involves, by insist*
Inst »n Pore White Lead in the first place.
TXm’tleave any loophole; specify the brandi
COLLIER
Pure Whits Load
Of *4* by tbe Old Dutch f*rnr*Ml
Sad tm a >ntW wuUUUf xml hsadwat rayr*.
«kt»M 1 actual feaaM, .Stria* ralaaMa <*fp*MM
im a Mbr ■*—i la yaw have, siaifec
Salat fanty O alaa glrca.
RATIONAL LEAD CO.
<“»SXT --4
1PUREJ
For Balo by All poalsrs.
For prompt and cour-
teous messenger serv-
ice try the American
District -;i Telegraph
Company, Our charges on errands
have been reduced to 10 cents Inside
of city limits. Office with Western
Union Telegraph Company. 212 West
Main street. Both phones Na 4.
continued for oil. and within but a
few feet of the lower oil sand the
tools became fastened, and although
oil was struck In this well In the up-
per sand, it now stands some 1,200
feet In this well and a gusher Is ex-
pected when the Glenn sand Is reach-
ed. Besides these wells there are two
others In this field which are being
pumped and which are averaging from
50 to 100 barrels per day.
Much excitement prevails and the
livery stables are scarcely able to fur-
nish sufficient rigs to take the people
out to see the oil wells. The town of
Mounds has raised over $500 to fix
the roads leading from here to the
oil fjeid and work thereon has been
begun and will be pushed forward
until all kinds of heavy loads, such
as machinery, etc., can be hauled
over it.
Healdton. Tex, April 21.—The week
has been one of clouds, mist and rain,
and all farm work is at a standstill.
Wbat com is up Is looking badly for
want of sunshine.
The W. O. W. hall Is about ready
for occupancy.
Mr. and Mrs. George Lewis rejoice
In the arrival of a son at their home.
Mike Sneed was on our streets this
week.
Mrs. Ed Henson of Ardmore passed
through on her way home from Low,
I. T.
Health is fairly good.
TRIAL OF OLD SOLDIER.
Enry Woman
. li interested and ehooM know, .
MARVEL *MWrHBf°Spf«r
~l» S«W Veftael Syria*,, birr.
Utmtmd .ywfbmrii«t- sef.
~Mott CmtmImI.
IKIhhh ieaie.Ur.
A.k rmr InnW k, N.
Tf h* rennet nupplr tb*
laVKU accept no
MEM":
Pleads Stlf-Defense in Killing Which
Occurred Last Year.
Ardmore, I. T, April 23.—In the
United Statea Court here the case of
E. W. Lester, charged with the killing
of Dave Frazier, is on trial. During
the examination of Jurors Judge Town-
send sent a man to jail for contempt
of court, because he refused to tell
whether he had conscientious scruples
regarding the infliction of a death
penalty. Later he was released.
A special venire of thirty talesmen
was ordered by the court. Lester, who
Is an old soldier, shot Frazier in a
difficulty last year. Self-defense is al-
leged.
Fatal Stabbing at Cansy.
Caney, l. T., April 23.—Robert Brew-
er, living two mile# east of Caney, was
TERRITORY NOTES.
The old Capital Hotel, one of the
landmarks of Okmulgee, Was burned
last week, supposed to be the work of
an incendiary. This hotel was built
In 1877 and since that time has been
burned a number of times. It was
headquarters for the Indians when
they attended council meetings and
ha8 been the scene of many an Im-
portant Indian conference. It will be
replaced with a modern business
block.
At a special election held at Wetum-
ka $14,000 was voted for school bonds.
There were but 156 votes cast In the
election, but there was not one against
the bond issue. The bonds will be sold
and the school bouses built this sum-
mer Id order to be ready to open the
first of next September.
Twenty employes of the Dawes com-
mission who were furloughed seven
weeks ago. will be put to work again
In a few days. The employes were In
the division making patents and were
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas
County, **.:
Frank J.-Cheney makes oath that
he t* senior partner In the firm of
F. J. Cheney A Co., doing bustneee In the
Ctty of Toledo, County and State afore-
said. and that said firm will pay the sum
of ONE HUNDRED DOLLAR8 for each
and every case of catarrh that cannot be
cured by the use of Halls Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY, '
Sworn to before mo and subscribed In
my presence, this the 8th day of Decem-
ber, A. D. 188*. A. W. GLEASON.
(Seal) Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally,
and acts directly on the blood and mu-
cous surfaces of the system. Sent for
testimonials free.
F. J. CHENEY A CO, Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggist*. 78c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipa-
tion.
let out until it should be decided who
shall deliver tby'a. Work will be re-
sumed getting patents ready to deliv-
er in the Choctaw, Chickasaw and
Cherokee nations.
A big 500-barrel oil well was brought
in the first of the week on the
Phillips lease 1-21-12,8 miles west of
Collinsville. . » ,
Messrs Galt and Barnes, of Pauls |
Valley, will at once begin the con-
it ruction of a monster auditorium at
Sulphur to have a seating capacity of
four thonsand and to be finished with-
in thirty days. It will be used for con-
vent Ions, public speakings, theatricals,
etc.
A joint meeting of the Indian Terri-
tory and Oklahoma Press Associations
will be held at Shawnee May 17 and
19. An interesting program has been
prepared.
G. W. Huckins, deputy United States
timber inspector, made a trip down to
Rvl river near Harris’ Ferry last week
and seized a large supply of walnut
logs that bad been cut on the public
domain and were ready for shipment.
He estimates the timber to approxi-
mate not less than $1,200 in value and
will be sold according to law. The
money derived from the seizures re-
verts to the tribal funds.
In a ease decided in the United
States District Court at Chickasha
Judge J. T. Dickerson held that a
bank, as such, can not lawfully make
a donation for a railroad bonus or for
any other purpose not directly con-
nected with its own business as a
bank. The decision grew out of a suit
for the collection of a note given by a
bank for a railroad bonus.
WOMEN
TFf-
—
: r!
This Statement Has Been U
, Evade
Modest Women
Mai* Physicians/ ^
RUN OVER BY TRAIN.
J. F.
Near
Wilson, Farmer Living
Whltesboro, le Killed.
Whitesboro, Tex, April 23.—J. F.
Wilson, a. prominent farmer, who# liv-
ed two miles west of this place, was
killed by the Missouri, Kansas and
Texas local train between here and
Gainesville Saturday morning about
10:30 o'clock. When Engineer Smart
first saw him he was lying across the
track, but it was too late to stop his
train till the engine had passed over
him, cutting him nearly in two. He
lived about thirty minutes, but never
spoke. He left home that morning to
walk to town and that was the last
seen of him till the engineer dis-
covered him on the track. He had
been in bad health for some time and
It is supposed that he was overcome
with a fainting fit and fell, where the
train struck him.
Airs. J.H.Farmer gJMrs. Ella Lee
An eminent physician says that
“Women are not truthful; they will He
to their physician." This statement
ahould be qualified; women do tell the
truth, but not the whole truth, to a
male physician, but this ia only in re-
gard to those painful and troublesome
disorders peculiar to their sex.
It is a terrible ordeal to a delicate,
aensitive, rt-fined woman to be obliged
to answer certain questions when those
questions are asked even by her family
physician. This is especially the caae
with unmarried women.
Is it any wonder, then, that women
i frest of my Ilfs. I bad given up In dem*if i
one evening I cam* across one of vo£»h
tteemeuto and (tedded to write you fw Jhte
improve at once, and to-day I uTj
continue to suffer and that doctors
fail to cure female diseases when they
cannot get the proper information to
work on ?
If your piano needs work yon should
investigate my reliability, prices and
references. Twenty years experience,
nine years a Denlsonian. Yours to be
called on. AH work guaranteed. Both
phones. P. C. Preston.
This is the reason why thousands and
thousands of women are now corre-
sponding with Mrs. Pinkham. To her
they can and do give every symptom,
so that she really knows more about
the true condition of her patients,
through her correspondence with them,
than the physician who personally
them.
questions
will advise you free of charge.
The faet that this great boon, which
ia extended freely to women by Mrs.
Pinkham, is appreciated, the thou-
sands of letters received by her prove.
Many such grateful letters as the fol-
lowing are constantly pouring in.
c:,cs£Sfsr,b,w‘“’«'
Mrs. J.H. Farmer, of 2808’]
Avenue, SL Louis, Mo, writes;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-
I could ’
...____7-js,ut
different woman of roe. I am in
work;
ham’s
» prostration, and could no
•• x** imq, j. cun in nwrg
No other medicine in the world 1
received such widespread and
fied endorsement.
Mrs. Pinkham Invites nil sick \
to write her for advice. She"
-- ------ ——- * !VO| DIM
guided thousands to health. Adi
Lynn, Maas. 8he is the dsught
law of Lydia IL Pinkham, her
for many years before her decease, i
for twenty-five years since her a'
has been freely given to sick wo
lM$yifii • Wont
A Public Duty and It
Performance
If you personally owned the entire equipment
*nd personally controlled the entire organization of
the American Cigar Co.—
And if you used this equipment and knowl-
edge to produce cigars exclusively for your own
smoking—
\ ou could make no better cigars nor make
them more carefully than we are now making them
for you.
We believe that the possession of the largest
equipment, organization, resources and business
ever known in the cigar industry, binds us to a
public duty to give the public the best cigar possi-
ble to make. Furthermore,
THE “TRIANGLE A
„1
*
old, crude haphazard methods which have bea
followed with blind devotion since the days of Sil
Walter Raleigh.
These scientific processes have improved
domestic cigar at least 100 per cent., giving
“mellowness," mildness, freedom from bitteme
and a developed fragrance to our 5c. cigars, forexj
ample, which were by no means common even i||
the ioc. cigar a few years ago.
An Unbroken Line of Successes
This improvement has been demonstrated to
the smoking public with ever-increasing emph?**
by the appearance of brand after brand of cif
selling at 5c. possessing a superiority which
made them instantly popular and permanently su«
cessful. These are of different,brand-names
different characteristics, but are all marked with
“A” (Triangle A) merit-mark and possess
fundamental qualities of fragrance ana “ripene
for which the “A” (Triangle A) stands unerring!
This "A" merit-mark appears on the front
every box containing such cigars, and may
accepted implicitly as a guarantee of mellowne
“smoothness," quality, fragrance and uniformity
character. .
MERIT
MARK
It is Good Business Policy
We are good enough judges of human nature
to appreciate the fact that meritorious service is the
best and most permanent foundation for commercial
success.
If we give better cigars at lower cost than can
be given by any other manufacturer, we shall se-
cure, by perfectly logical and common-sense meth-
ods, what is virtually a franchise from the public
to supply it with its cigars.
A franchise based upon public preference is
Stands for Honest Cigar Values
‘All-Around” Production
Stromrpr and mntv» pn^iirinr. „_ ,1/ , . 1 he prOQUCtS OI OUr V3
secured by legislative enaament, aJ it is thTsort *27 ^etyofdgars-fro.
of franchise, obtained in this way, that we areafte" % 10 & h‘gheSt ^ of
The products of our various factories include
.. —- from the little cigar such
lavana.
Gaining Success by Deserving It
An important advantage in this comprehen-
— siveness of output lies in the power it gives us to
Cigar smokers know what they want. Taste grade our tobacco very accurately. This assures un-
is constantly improving, demanding better goods varying uniformity-^a feature much appreciated by
all the time. There is no way of forcing people to the discriminating smoker,
purchase any brand of cigar which does not appeal The tremendous improvement in quality, due
to our new and exclusive processes of curing,
The latest “A” (Triangle A) production
44 The New Cretno" in Victoria size at 5c.
to them on its own merits.^® w nx-w «*«« vAuU»w Ui curing,
From the beginning, weIhaveTdevoted "the1 blending and ripening American grown leaf, ex-
entire force of this organization;and equipment to! tends through our entire line,
the problem of improving cigar ^quality, and lower-1 These processes are performed in our own
mar r.crar gigantic “stemmeries.” They have superseded the
perhaps better than all that have preceded it, ex<
pli6es the immense improvement that has been
fected by our experiments and equipment.
mg cigar cost.
T
soarce, shall tlwtn ben,M
ment of cigar quality end to
CM
e§Mt
amerieuvneigar comp
UManufa
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The Denison Daily Herald. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 243, Ed. 1 Monday, April 23, 1906, newspaper, April 23, 1906; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth571234/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .