Muskogee Cimeter
Thursday, May 25, 1905
Muskogee, Oklahoma
Page text (machine-generated)
The Muskogee Cimeter.
Muskogee, I T., Thursday, May 25. 1905.
WE ALWAYS PLEASE
For four years we have always endeavored to make your wants and wishes our particular business and today we have the largest assortment of Ladies and Gent's furnishings in the city.
WE BUY FOR CASH AND SELL FOR CASH. Why should our prices not be the lowest and quality the best for the money?
One trial and you will always be a customer. The New York Store The House that never disappoints
Vol 6.
Muskogee's Dudes Duel Lives.
Society's Darlings by Day and the Consorts of Immoral Women by Night.
The temptation to lead a double life is not as strongly resisted by men and women as it should be. By double life, we mean that the men and women of today very easily acquire the habit of appearing to be one thing in public, while in private they are entirely different. Many of us, in fact, too many assume the garb of decency and morality, and use it as a cloak to cover a life which in reality is vile and rotten to the very core. It is not always the man or woman that says, "Be as you ought to be," that lives up, especially in religious and moral deeds, to what she desires to teach. It is only by pulling aside the curtain that hides our private and personal vices, that the wickedness and vile worldliness of God's creatures are disclosed.
The habit of appearing to be all that is good and true is wide spread. and developes early in our lives. The goody good youngster around home is often the untamed broncho buster at school. The demure and prim lassie at Sabbath school may be making gray hairs for her fond parents at home. The bashful young man who runs from a party of girls is often the most skillful crap-shooter at night and the favorite of that class of girls he ought to shun as the devil does holy water. The young man who smokes, chews and drinks strives to his utmost to keep thes habits unknown to his best girl, and she, with the usual deceits of women from wig wearing on down to greater vices, is constantly hiding out her characteristic faults.
The story of "Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde" tells of the terrible sequel that usually follows a double life. Dr. Jekyl was a widely beloved physician and in his daily life, he was the personification of everything high, noble and true. But "Dr. Jekyl" was transformed into "Mr. Hyde" at night, and in this life he was a demon of the vilest and most horrible habits. The fact that "Mr. Hyde" was discovered in a terrible crime disclosed the double identity of "Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde." Many of Muskogee's young society men are trying to play the Dr. Jekyl
and Mr. Hyde act. During the past winter the ball rooms frequented by the city's most notorious prostitutes were visited by our young men, and on the following day, these dudes could be seen locked arms with our best and most lady like girls, parading up the South Second boulevard. Not a few of our young business men who pose aa model young men are known to be keeping company at night with immoral and half decent women, and in the day time with Muskogee's choices society buds. Some daring devils in swell clothes have had the affrontery to pass down Second Street with questionable women, and the precious jewels of Muskogee's leading Negro families. Any Sabbath day at our churches and elsewhere, this double shuffling of life's cards from virtue to vice may be seen without the use of spy glasses,
Parents of Muskogee had better busy themselves watching the company their girls and boys are keeping. The young girls who consent to keep company wlth these men are preparing a slick toboggan down which they will slide to perdition. The parents who will keep up a friendship with men who have such slight regard for the decencies of life, may just as well purchase coffins for them and mark them to "Hades" for that is their destination.
CLARKSVILL—Mr. Editior, I wish to congratulate your stand against immoral men and women. It is as it should be, Hew to the line Bro. Twine we are with you.
A Reader. WANTED PUPILS—Mrs. L. C. Clark will give lessons on the piano at her place of business. 310 South Second Street.
EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME.
CAN BE FOUND AT
The Street Furniture Compa
CAN BE FOUND AT The Street Furniture Company.
The Street Furniture Company.
Cash or Easy Payments
Get a Challenge for Ice Bill. The last
The prices below will come to trade at
A CAS
Here are the prices below:
High patent flour per 100, Meal, per bushel, Best Eating Potatoes Coin Special Hams, per lb. " " Lard " " " Breakfast bacon Smoked bacon, per lb., 10 t Dry Salt Meat, per lb., Canned Apricots, " Peaches " Pears - 2 f
EVERYTHING THAT I HAVE, AND ARE ALL F
Phone your orders or let orders. A Warm Imitator Only. Yours f
TEXAS G
The prices below will convince the most sceptical that it pays to trade at
High patent flour per 100, §2.90
Meal, per bushel, - - - 60
Best Eating Potatoes - - 90
Coin Special Hams, per lb., 15
“ “ Lard “ “ 10
“ “ Breakfast bacon 20
Smoked bacon, per lb., 10 to 12½
Dry Salt Meat, per lb., - 8½
Canned Apricots, - - 2 for 35
“ Peaches - - 2 for 35
“ Pears - - 2 for 35
Sac City and Waterloo corn
3 for - - - 25
Canned Peas, 3 for - - - 25
“ String beans, 3 for 25
“ Hominy, 3 for - - - 25
“ Kraut, 3 for - - - 25
“ Sweet Potatoes - - 25
“ Blackberries - - 10
“ Gooseberries 2 for - 25
“ Pumpkins, 3 for - - 25
“ Tomatoes, 3 for - - 25
EVERYTHING THAT IS CARRIED IN A GROCERY WE HAVE, AND ARE ALL FRESH, CLEAN GOODS.
Phone your orders or let us know and we will call for your orders. A Warm Imitator of Close Prices, These Prices are Cash Only. Yours for business,
COR. MAIN & DENISON Why bu LUMBER =: and =:
Why buy Your
LUMBER =: and =: BUILDING =: MATERIA
From a company you do not know. Keep your money at home buy buying from the
They live here and will treat you right. Yard located west of Jones' Building, near Masonic Hall.
---
No. 33
LIVING TO0 HASTILY
AMERICAN WOMEN BREAK DOWN
Irregularities and Femalo Derange-
nents Kesult— Cured by Lydia B.
Pinkham's \'egetuble Vorgound.,
Owing to our mode and manner of
living, and the nervous haste of every
woman to accomplish just so much
each day, it is said that there is not
KGa
’ WS es
‘Mrs Chester Curry
ope woman in twenty-five but what
suffers with some derangement of the
female organism, and this is the secret
of so many unhappy homes.
No woman can be amiable, light-
hearted and happy, a joy to her hus-
band and children, and perform the
duties incumbent upon her, ween she is
sufferkag with backache. headache,
nervousness, sleeplessness, bearing.
down pains, displacement of the womb,
spinal weakness or ovarian troubles.
Irritability and snappy retorts take
the place of pleasantness, and al sun-
shine is driven out of the home, and
lives are wrecked by woman's great
enemy—womb trouble.
Read this letter: ~
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“ Twas troubled for eight years with irregu
larities which broke down my health and
brought on extreme nervousness and despon-
dency, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound proved to be the only medicine which
helped me. Day by day I improved in health
while taking it antil T was entirely cured, 1
can attend to my social and household duties
anid thoroughty enjoy life ace more, as Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has made
tnaa wall womaat withowsan Wiss Ok pate”
—Mrs. Choster Curry, 42 Saratoga Street,
East Boston, Mass.
At the first indication of ill health
painful or irregular menstruation,
pain in the side, headache, backache,
bearing-down pains, nervousness or
“the blues,” secure at once a bottle of
Lydia KE. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Com-
pound and begin its use,
Te ea ae
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LW L DOUGLAS)
Ve le J
Unton For
Mute’ $3.50 SHOES 32.
W. LT. Douglas makes and sells moro
Men's B3.50 shos than aay other
Manufacturer in the world. 10,00)
REWARD toany ono who can disprove this stateinent,
W. LE. Donglos 85.50 shoes are the
Kreatest sellers in the world beenuse of
their excetlent sty'o, easy fitting and
superior wearing qualities, They aro
dust as good as those that cost from
$5.00 to $7.00. The only difference is
the price. W. L. Douglas $5.50 shoes
cost more to make, Rote their shape
better, wear longer, and are of greater
Value than any other 83.50 shoe on the
market to-day, W. LL. Douglas guar-
antees thetr value’ by stamping his
name And price on the bottom of each
koe, Look for it, Tnke no substitute,
W. Le Douglas @3.50 shoes are sold
through hisown retail storgs in the prin-
Sipat cities, and by shoe devlers every.
where, No matter where you live, W.L,
Dougias shoes aro within your reach,
| | EQUAL $5.00 SHOES.
“7 have worn W. 4. Douglas $3.50 shoes for
ears, and Contr then ud ttainy $00 shoe
Battafaction. We H andersom, Beat Losute
| “Agent, Aunsas City, Ato.
Boys wear W. L. Douglos $2.50 and $2.00
shoes because they fit better, hoid thet>
shape and wear longer than other makes,
W. 1. Douglas uses Corona Coltshin in his
£%, thors. Corona Colt és conceded to
the Anest patent leather produced,
Fast Color Eyelets will not wear Brassy.
| |W... Douglas has the largest shoe mailorder
Dustness in the World. No trouble to get a at
Dy pane geuhentrapropnadeliverye
jesire further inturmation, write fo
aE Detalssae ey Sor nnten, write for
|W, L, DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
LW. DOUGLAS, Brock
NERVE SAVED STEVE BRODIE.
Charley Mitchell Thought Better of
Intended Chastisement.
breccia ai hy. steal
The presence in New York of Mitch-
ell, once boxing champion of England,
recalls an incident in the strenuous
career of the late “Steve” Brodie,
who jumped from the Brooklyn bridge
nearly a score of years ago to glory,
prosperity and histrionic fame. Brodie
visited London in the early nineties,
where Mitchell, playing the part of
cleerone one night, introduced the
Bowery boy at the Spooferies club, a
resort for prize fighters, horse jockies,
and their kind, where the festivities
are seldom concluded before daylight
and the police have more than once
been called upon to restrain merri-
ment.
In the course of a general conversa-
tion the English fighter happened to
make some adverse comment upon the
‘then mighty John L, Sullivan, which
called forth a sarcastic remark from
Brodie with reference to’ Mitchell's
abilities as a sprinter while in the ring
with the American champion.
With an oath the Englishman gave
the smaller man a push that sent him
reeling ten feet backward, and then
rushed upon him to administer correc-
tion for the other's temerity. Brodie
was due for a fearful bruising, but the
Bowery boy was equal to the occasion.
He was erect on his feet wth a pistol
in his hand when the prize fighter
reached him. Putting the weapon un-
der the other's nose, he remarked
calmly:
“You t'ink you're goin’ to make a
reputation off lickin’ Steve Brodie,
don't yer? Well, you just hit me once
and there'll be a lot in the papers
about it, but you won't read it.”
Fu¥y appreciating the inutility of
post-mortem notoriety, Mitchell ex-
plained that he was only joking, and
the incident was closed—New York
Times.
Banks as Public Benefits.
Many people who deal with banks
every day do not really understand
the yeoper object and purpose of bank
ing. Banks can not create money,
but they can gather small sums
which are distributed among the peo-
ple and thus create an aggregate
which can be made available for im-
portant business operations that pre-
viousy would have been impossible.
Individuals, each possessing a few
hundreds or a few thousands, invest
‘it in stock in a bank, and thus a fund
of $50,000 or $100,000 is established
in a town or community as a great
aid to the business activity and pros-
perity of its people. There is no
more money in the community than
there was previously, but it is in a
form where it can be made to assist
in the successful conduct of five times
or ten times the amount of business
than its actual sum stands for.—New
Orleans Picayune.
Now and Then.
The sap ts climbing up the tree,
And, dear, on every bough
Pink ‘blooms are bursting from thelr
sheathes,
‘Tis nearly summer now;
I see the glint of your blue eyes,
Of your enmeshing halr,
Though you are there and I am here,
IT love you here and there.
The old rock in the canon, dear,
I know it as of yore;
But this year, dear, heart of my heart,
You'll pereh on it no more;
I loved you, dear one, on that perch,
You know that's not a con,
I loved you when I'd helped you down,
I love you off and on
And, dear, my. love is strong to-day
As it was yesterday,
It fs the same love that you knew
Mn each remembered way;
The love you knew in yesteryear
‘This year Is yours again;
Know, heart o' mine, it ne'er will change.
{love you now and then,
—J. M, Lewis in Houston Post.
Cruel to the Old Man.
De Style—Why did that Pennsyl-
vania banker want to kill the editor
of the Society Screecher?
Gunbusta—On account of an abbre-
viation in his paper, You see, when
the rich man’s wife left for Europe
an item appeared reading: “Mrs.
Goldust has locked up her old Pa.
Rome until she returns from abroad.”
Les Hs /
32 A)
5 A Man Who Invests
Sah MOE Se are Wate sta
@ Big Profit Will Say He Can't Supply
é wt ViALWAYS JUST CORRECT”
Clover Brand Shoes
Werthrimer-Swarts Shoe Co.
| : ‘When buying loose coffee or anything your grocer happens
to have in his bin, how do you know what you are
getting ? Some queer stories about coffee that is sold in bulk,
could be told, if the people who handle it (grocers), cared to
speak out,
Could any amount of mere talk have persuaded millions of
housekeepers to use
Lion Coffee,
the leader of all package coffees for over a quarter
of a century, if they had not found it superior to all other brands in
Purity, Strength, Flavor and Uniformity ?
‘This popular success of LION COFFEE :
can be due only to inherent merit. There
fs no stronger proof of merit than con- ~
tinued and increasing popularity. [Se
If the verdict of MILLIONS OF fs bi {Gas
HOUSEKEEPERS does not convince oem 4 3/ ,
you of the merits of LION COFFEE, W pcg NY ian)
it costs you but a trifle to buy a KPT NG Aa
Package. It is the easiest way to Reh One HN) Oa)
convince yourself, and to make LOR MG CY Oy hy
you a PERMANENT PURCHASER. [apres] 3)
LION COVIFEE Is sold only in 1 1b. sealod packages, Le, Ui ht AD 4 a
gnd reaches you as pure and clean as who {t left out FE Gy) TT ly A
Lion-head on every package. % Ue vir] Ve
Save these Lion-ieads for Valuable premiums, te STN 'V
SOLD BY GRCCERS Ree,
EVERYWHERE a epee A
WOOLSON SPICE CO., ‘Toledo, Ohio, ABET y
A 5 ar na WOMEN'S °7 44s an
we (PATRIOT — MAVFLOWER SS
ITOK AGE Sey 0) = EP ELD (0 ee ee
na x
ry These Shoes were Awarded ¥ I
° 4 Grand Prize at St. Louis World’s Fair Ri
i: i The PATRIOT SHOE for Men is made from all leathers, nd
Ne*\ ovor stylish yet comfortable lasts, to fit any foot. They aro
Va Goodyear welis, which moans flexible soles, with no wax ortacks [AZ
5 to irritate the foot. The MAYFLOWER SHOK for Women /
ln is made In welts and hand turns, Is stylish, durable and comfortable.
iy Aa eee dealer for them, If he does not handle theso shoes,
write us direct, ‘They will Please. you and you will save trom 06
am cents to $1.60 per pair in prices usually charged for shoes of
j this character,
> STAR BRAND SHOES ARE BETTER *'
enemy et om, Postal oP cele
SRE NOEL ECD ET RE Pe
Pa "i ST. Lovis, a
The tin pedier, strange to say,| WASHDAY
looks for customers who have the tin,
T.do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption | means a day of hard labor to house
has an equal for coughs and colds,—Joun F.| keepers, But there is great satisfactior
Boru, Trinity Springs “nd., Feb. 15,1900 | in seeing the Hne full of clean clothes
— | You can always rest assured that the
The artificial foot manufacturer 18) clothes will be snowy white if you use
responsible for many false steps. |
Pr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remody te
Adapted to both sexes and all ages. Cures Kidney and
Liver complaint, and purifies the blood. ¢Lall drugglste
The man in the moon isn’t mad at
Ol4 Sol for making light of hii,
DON'T FORGET
A large 2-07. package Red Cross Ball Blue, onl,
foeuts, ‘The Russ Company, South Bend, 1nd,
Would you say that the weaver ot
woollen cloth was caught napping?
WASHDAY
means a day of hard labor to house
keepers. But there is great satisfaction
in seeing the line full of clean clothes.
You can always rest assured that the
clothes will be snowy white if you use
RED CROSS
D) »
BALL BLUE
It is pure and is guaranteed not to
injure the most delicate fabrics. Good
housekeepers everywhere endorse it
and one trial will be sufficient to con-
vince you of its merits. Sold by grocere
everywhere, Large package 5c,
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MISS. A
‘MILDRED & 8
‘KELLER. be
RESTORED TO HEALTH.
THANKS TO PE-RU-NA
Friends Were Alarmed—
Advised Change of Climate.
Miss Mildred Keller, 718 13th street,
N. W., Washington, D. C., writes:
“T can safely recommend Peruna for
eatarrh. I had it for years and it would
wvespond to no kind of treatment, or if it
did it was only temporary, and on the
slightest pores the trouble would
come back.
“I was in such a state that my
friends were alarmed about me, and |
was advised to leave this climate.
Then I tried Peruna, and to my great
joy found it helped me from the first
dose I took, and a few bottles cured me.
“It built up my constitution, I re-
gained my appetite, and I feel that I
am perfectly well and strong.”—
Mildred Keller.
We have on file many thousand testi-
monials like the above. We can x
our readers only a slight glimpse of the
vast array of unsolicited endorsements
Dr. Hartman is receiving.
poate, Va wake ee ee
paths Bong! =
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W. FP. GIESECKB
A shoe manufacturer who has been
“everlastingly at it”
fornearly forty years, GIESESKe.
ought to be “onto his @Aey BRAND shots
job.” That’stherecord a
of our senior member, ST.LOUIS :”
Mr. Giesecke. ALL WAYS BEST
_ .
MG \. Lowe .
29 Sweep Food Galvanized
S102 2ciece.'*| $14 Fa aetaint ‘)
peagp We manufacture ail sizes and fl })
ee "3
Pema vesticate. Write | —— |
g 2a. re
GURRIE WIND MILL OO., iy
Topeka, Kensee, |
W.N.U.—Oklahoma Gity—No. 21, 1906
SEES GHOSTLY TRIO
GOVERNMENT CLERK IN REMIN-
ISCENT MOOD.
Memories of Departed Personal
Friends With Whom He Worked
Crowd Memory of Old-Timer in His
Noonday Strolis,
Strolling along the corridors of the
treasury building in an apparently
dreamy and meditative mood, an cld
clerk, who admits that he has passe)
the time of life allotted to man by Dr.
Osler, was accosted by a representa-
tive of the Washington Star, who
proffered the traditional penny for
his thoughts,
“Well,” said he, “I am thinking of
the many men I have met in this
building in my long career, and par-
ticularly of three that I knew very
well, and of whom almost every other
person, at least everybody in Wash-
ington, knew all about; but I knew
them well, knew them personally.
“The first of these,” he continued,
“was Nathan Sargent. His nom de
plume was ‘Oliver Oldschool.’ ot
course you know that. His office when
he was commissioner of customs
was on the floor above to the right of
the center of the building from Fif-
teenth street. One of the courtliest of
men, a thorough gentleman of the
old school, as the term is—kind and
genial to all his subordinates, I can
see him now,” he said, “‘In my mind’s
eye, Horatio,” he quoted, as the Star
man, evinced a disposition to get a
glimpse of the old author himself.
“Right here where we are standing,”
the old clerk said, pointing at one of
the rooms in the main corridor, “was
Gen. Spinner’s office. I knew him
personally also, and recollect when
his office was moved into its more
spacious quarters in the new north-
ern wing of the building. That old
guardian of the public moneys was
everybody’s friend. Visitors to Wash-
ington were always anxious to greet
him, and they were gratified, for he
was glad to meet strangers all the
time. Lord, how the women in his
bureau loved him, and the men also,
for that matter. I was here when he
came and here when he went.
“There is another man that I met in
a spiritual sense, as I take this pedes-
trian exercise at almost every noon
hour after I have disposed of my bread
and cheese luncheon, and that was
Walt Whitman, the poet. He was,
like the others, my personal friend.
He was not in this part of the build-
ing, but In that section of the new
southern wing allotted in those days
to the attorney-general, when the de-
partment of justice had its local habt-
tation under this roof. I remember
when Whitman's ‘Leaves of Grass’
grated too harshly upon the sensibili-
ties of certain people, and he lost hig
place in one of the other departments,
“There {s no use in describing him
to you. Everybody in the city knew
Walt Whitman, but I only mention
him as the third in the trio of ghosts
I fancy I see in my little round of ex-
ercise in these passages.
“There are men in this department
older than I am,” he concluded, “but
I doubt if any of them enjoyed the
close personal friendship of the three
I have mentioned to you.
“In those days we worked only
until 3 o’clock in the afternoon,” he
said with a sigh. “Now we peg away
an hour and a half later. Things have
changed in a hundred ways; but
time’s up—I must go back to my
desk.” And thus’ the old employe of
the reminiscent mood bade the Star
Want United States Farmers.
Canadian emigration agents in tho
United States expect a great increase
In the number of American farmers
who will migrate to the Canadian
Northwest this year, Fully 60,000 per-
sons from the United States are ex-
pected to settle in the Dominion, Last
year the number was 45,000.
eS Se ee ets a. eee DER ae a eT ak Re TT as oh Ok eT ae Ge eee SP
7
’ (
THE DENVER, ENID & GULF RAILROAD CO. |
does dilapidated hveai tiaapateedainadobeiped taaaieaenicenl oer aciern ee
“THE ALFALFA ROUTE”
siThe Alfalfe Limited.” the fast train betwoon Guthrie and Coldwater, Oklahoma, ‘
| carrion free reclining chair ear and coach, modern in every way and perfectly venti: ‘
Inted throughout, running over the amoothest and best track in the Southweat. In|
| traveling over tho D., K. & G. you are offered Sarety, Comfort and other advant- ‘
| ages which yon cannot afford to overlook. ‘The following new schedule makes it‘
. gonvenfent for all t travel over this new and short line: Leave Gathrie at 0:304.m.
arrive at Enid at 11:30 a.m. ; leave Enid at 1:0) p.m. arrive at Coldwater atl:4ip m. {
. Returning leave Coldwater at 8:00 p. m., arrive at Enid at 3:30 p.m, leave Eaidat {
| 5300p. m., arrive at Guthrie at 7:09 p.m, Local leaves Eaid at7:35a.m.and return: ‘|
. ing leayes Guthrie at $:00 p. m. ‘
160Z. 1OCTS.
er RR Teale nr ee ne PON ee ee eT
It is the purest, cleanest starch made.
It is free of injurious chemicals,
It can be used where ordinarily you would be afraid
to use starch of any kind,
That's Defiance. Your grocer sells it.
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.,
OMAHA, NEB.
&
11}
¥\ 4 ~
(4
i cha
RS adrian
RTD
The Young Physician.
In the early sixties it was usually the
duty of a practicing physleian to ride
many milo¥ every ay on his regular
round of visits upon his patients. In
those cave a young man who had received
a splendid medical training In ono of tho
best medical colleges of that day was ac-
customed to ride ten, twenty or pe
miles or more visiting the sick an¢
afflicted, His success was soon Phenom.
enal. Doctors and families called him for
consultation to towns at considerable dis-
tances by rail, One of his specialties was
the cure of those distressing diseases of
women, He had early discovered that
by combining the yearrstiae extract of
the following medicinal plants In just the
right Pe reeeen without the use of alco-
hol —his preseription invariably cured
such cases, Later, in order to place this
remedy before the public in a shape easily
to be procured, he established a labora-
tory at Buffalo, N. Y., where regularly
qualified chemists were put in charge to
fecurately prepare his prescription and
put it in shape for a to all parts
of the United States. This remedy, which
he named Dr. Pierce's Favorite Preserip-
tion, is not a “patent medicine” in the
common avceptance of the term, but a
tonic for women, and a regular physi-
clan's ee ohh and contains the fok
lowing hon-aleoholle Ingredients :
Lady's Slipper (Cypripedium Pubescena),
Black hos (Uttara ‘Racemon
Unicorn root ference rlum Lutewm
Blue Cohosh(Cau fo is ag Thalictrotdes)
Golden Seal (Tydrastis Cancdensta),
Setentifically preretga nt experienced
chemists at the Laboratory of the
World's Dispensary Medical, Assocla-
tion, Buffalo, N.Y.
Dr, Pierce does not claint for his *Pa-
yorlte Preseription” that it is a “cure-all.”
It is recommended as a most perfect
Speci for woman's pecullar ailments,
» uniform are the results which follow
the use of this remarkable remedy, that
it can be truly aflirmed of "Favorite Pree
scription” that italways helps and almost
always curce, eet atoy Be cent, of
the women who give this medicine a fair
and faithful trial are cured and remain
cured,
It ts a powerful Invigorating tonic, {m-
parting health and strength in particular
to the womb and {ts appendages. ‘The
local, womanly health is so {htimately
related to the general health that when
diseases of the delleate womanly organs
are cured the whole body gains fn health
and. strongth.. For weak. and. sickly
women who are “worn-out,” “run-down”
or debilitated, Sapeclally for women who
work fn store, ofice or schoolroom, who
sit at the typewriter or sewing machine,
or bear heavy household burdens, Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription will prove
a priceless benefit because of its health-
restoring and strength-giving power,
Tue Proor,
*T want to tell you of the great mprove-
ment in my bealth stace taking your’ Favor-
ite Bresertption "says Mrs. Hf. S. Jones, of
Forest, N.C. “When T began its use | was a
pee wreck and had despaired of ever
having good health again, Could not sit up
all day. I noted a great improvement before
the first bottle was all used. Was suffering
with almost PT pain that a woman Is sub-
Ject to; had inflammation of the ovaries,
painful and suppressed periods, and other
8 peas of female disease. After feng
six bottles of “Favorite Prescription. f telt
like a new mater Can ride horseback and
take all kinds of exercise aad not feel tired.”
Feet Cranky ?—Caso of constipation.
A man or woman who neglects constipa-
tion suffers from slow ere Doctor
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipa-
tion, One little “Pellet” is a gentle
laxative, and two a mild cathartic
PUBLISHED EVERY WEEK IN THE INTEREST OF THE NEGRO BY CIMETER PUB. CO ENTERED AT THE POST OFFICE AT MUSKOEE, I. T., AS SECOND CLASS MAIL MATTER.
For Delegate to the Constitutional Convention:
A. G. W. SANGO of Muskogee.
Clarence Douglas forgot to name any Negro as a prominent possibility for Congress. He even left out his man Friday.
Doug is certainly the friend of the "nigger" as he put it in Sunday's issue of the Phoenix, and we say d-n such friends as the lion tamer.
Down South the white men mob Negro men and then like "Richard the Third make love to the women." In a great many instances the women spurn them with contempt; a few are so weak as to accept their proposals and these are not worth their room in hell.
Mr. E. E. McDaniel the famed R. R. contractor and builder, is building 100 miles of railway on the Midland Valley. Mc. is the only Negro R. R. contractor in the world. he is up-to-date and is giving work to hundreds of Negroes in various parts of the country. He is a member of the "Stand Pat Club."
"I know of the bravery and character of the Negro soldier. He saved my life at Santiago, and I have had occasion to say so in many articles and speeches. The rough riders were in a bad position when the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry came rushing up the hill carry everything before them. The Negro soldier has the faculty of coming to the front-when he is needed most. In the Civil war he came 400,-000 strong, and I believe he saved the Union"—President Roosevelt.
Probably the first building ever given by a railroad to its colored employes has been donated to the Colored Railroad Men's Protective Association recently organized in Nashville, Tenn. The building at 930 Cedar street, at the corner of Ninth avenue has been given by Superintendent W. P. Bruce of the Nashville Terminals to the above organization, and is being repaired and remodled by the Terminalal company at a cost of about $400. It is proposed by General Manager Thomas of the N. C. & St. L. Ry., to donate all old furniture, books and periodicals in the possession of the
railroad to the association for use in their building. In this way the quarters will be nicely furnished and stocked with reading matter. The association is composed of colored employes of the Nashville terminals, N. C. & St. L. Ry., and L. & N. Ry., residing in Davidson county, and already there is a gratifying membership. Several of the officials and employes have subscribed money toward a fund for maintaining and equipping the building.
VENGENCE OF PROVIDENCE.
The people of Snyder learned last week what it is to be forced against one's will. "Chickens will come home to roost" "We must do unto others as we we would that others do unto us."
Langston forbid whites to settle there and a cyclone visited them, one year later the people of Norman got gay and said no Negro should stop not inNorman over night, and the Lord got on the wind and clouds, passed through Norman dealing out destruction.
Nearly two years ago a contractor at Guthrie, got a contract at Cordell to build a brick building, he carried one Negro along, the people there got on their tip-toes, to avoid trouble the contractor put this colored man on the first train to pass and it was going the wrong way, sent him to Snyder to wait until the train come, these Cordell people wired his coming and the Snider people would not let him get off. Thus he had to go hun dreds of miles to get home. It is said in the Holy Book, "The mete you measure will be measured to you again." God works in a mysterious way his wonders to perform. He plants his footsteps on the seas and rides upon the storms.
("All men up, None down.")— Guthrie Guide.
FOR SALE—Some cheap lots. The following lots for sale inside the corporate limits of Muskogee: Lot 4, Block $600; 4 lots 50 foot front at $200 per lot; 1 room house and lot $200; one lot on west side 140 foot front $500; House and lot for $175. For bargains write us. 80 acre farm for $1200. These are all bargains, Call on or write W. H Twine, 211 S. 2nd St Muskogee.
FOUND—Have taken up anp have in my possession one Bay Mare, 16 hands high. No brands Hind feet white. Owner please call at my farm 21-2 miles west of Muskogee, prove and redeem same. Douglass McIntosh.
From a company you do not know. Keep your money at home buy buying from the They live here and will treat you right. Yard located west of Jones' Building, near Masonic Hall.
"HONEST GOODS AT HONEST PRICES."
I am now in my new store with everything brand new and up-to-date. My line of jewelry is a complete one, staple and trustworthy in every respect; in fact I do a first-class jewelry business having 15 years experience and can give you bankers, jewelers and manufactures' references who will bear me out in this statement. I fear no branch of the jeweler's trade, it is all easy to me People who are particular about what they buy or have repaired should make my store their headquarters.
228 North Second street.
Now is The Time For you to bny a new buggy and harness. We handle the best make and stand back of any defects in them.
The image shows a vintage carriage with a large, open-top canopy and large wheels. The carriage appears to be designed for transporting goods or passengers. The wheels are large and have a wide, flat tire. The canopy is supported by a framework of metal beams and rods, providing a sheltered space for the occupants. The carriage is likely from the 19th century, given its design and materials.
Stands the wear and always looks stylish. You can't buy a better and we have the most complete line of up-to-date Buggies and Harness in the Indian Territory. Come in and see for yourself and get our prices which are the lowest. PLANTER'S IMPLEMENT CO.. Wall Street Muskogee, I. T.
FARM LOANS.
LOANS MADE TO FREEDMEN ON THEIR ALLOTMENTS Long Time. Easy Payments. Low Interest. Easy Payments. You can pay small amounts anytime after one year and stop interest. If you sell the land you can pay the entire loan any time after one year. JAMES L. LOMBARD, Financial Agent, Union Central Life Insurance Company. ADDRESS: CHAS. H. LOMBARD, Manager, No. 207 N. Second St. Muskogee, I. T.
MUSKOGEE TITLE & TRUST CO. GENERAL BANKING
LOCAL & PERSONAL WANTED PUPILS—Mrs. L. C. Clark will give lessons on the piano at her place of business. 310 South Second Street
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Room 14, Jones Building. Benevolent Reliif Association, headquarters Room 14, Jones Building, agents wanted.
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WANSED-To buy old timber on east side of M. K. & T. railway in Creek Nation. H. R. PIERSON. 211 S. Second St., Muskogee, I. T.
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Bollinger Music House, 307 West Broadway in the Evans block has the largest stock of pianos in the city. You will do well to get our prices before buying.
J, S. Brownlow Manager.
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Planter's Implement Co. have just received a car load of up-to date buggies and harness, call and see them when you come to town. See their "ad" elsewhere in this paper.
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WANTED-People to borrow money on furniture. Room 14, Jones Building.
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Money to loan on Furniture. SHARPE & THOMPSON,
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Now is the time to buy lumber from Geo, D. Hope Lumber Co.
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If you need a brass band this summer write J. T. Trimble 211 So. Second St., Muskogee, I. T.
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The Creek Undertaking Co. is the official undertakers for the Burial League of the U. S. for the Negroes of Muskoge and vicinity and will take up contracts for all Negroes whether their name appear thereon or not. Should a policy holder die bring the contract to us. We will do the rest. 5-18, 1m.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.
A dead shot and sure cure on rheumatism I have just discovered and if you dont get relieved your money refunded. Hixsons X Ray Oil is a sure cure and I am the only one in town that handles it. Come to the Red Front Barber Shop and get a bath with X Ray Oil in it and rub down afterwards. This kind of treatment with X Ray Oil is a sure shot on rheumatism D. Richardson, Red Front Barber Shop.
STUDY LAW AT HOME
Prepare for success as the bar in business or public life, by mail, in the ORIGINAL SCHOOL, Founded in 1890. Successful graduates everywhere. Approved by bar and law colleges. Regular College Law Course and Business Law Course. Liberal Terms. Special Offer New. Catalogue Free.
Sprague Correspondence School of Law,
9733 Majestic Ridge, Detroit, Mich.
E. C. Washington, THE TAILOR Has move in the rear of Jones building, and has just got in a new line of samples. He is prepared to make your suits. Clean ing and pressing done on short notice Suits cleaned $1.50 to $2.
VICTORIA HOTEL
When at Claremore stop at the Victoria Hotel, Modern, Upto-date, Elegant Rooms, Table Unsurpassed.
MRS. IDELLA ROBINSON, PROP. Claremore, I. T.
Dr. R. H. Waterford.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. Diseases of Women and Men successfully Treated. Chronic Disease of Men a Specialty.
A. S. McREA,
LAWYER.
20 1-2 OKMULGEE AVENUE.
WHERE?
FOR THAT
SUMMER TRIP?
BE SURE IT IS
VIA
THE
MK AND T
MISS SQUARE KANSAS & TEXAS HOLLYWOOD
We may be able to assist you in deciding. There are any number of desirable trips—cheap too—which you can make this summer to the Mountains of Colorado, the Lakes of Michigan and Wisconsin or to the Portland Exposition. Let us send you rates and particulars. Free.
ADDRESS
GEORGE MORTON
B. P. and T. A., M. K. & T. Ry., ST. LOUIS, MO.
FOR FAST TIME TAKE "THE KATY FLYER."
FRISCO
SYSTEM.
COMPLETELY AND COMFORTABLY
SERVE WESTERN MISSOURI
AND EASTERN KANSAS TO
THE PRINCIPAL CITIES
EAST,
WEST,
NORTH,
SOUTH.
PULLMAN SLEEPERS,
RECLINING CHAIR CARS.
TRAINS LIGHTED AND
VENTILATED BY ELECTRICITY.
The Direct Route to the
"WORLD'S FAIR CITY"
SAINT LOUIS
For detailed information, call
on nearest representative FRISCO
SYSTEM, or address
L. W. PRICE,
Dirksen Passenger Agent,
JOPLIN, MO.
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GEO. D. HOPE LUMBER COMPANY DEALER IN Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Sash, Doors, Lime. Cement, Etc. EAST OKMULGEE AVE.
KIRSH
GENTS FURNISH
OF ALL DESCRIPT
Shirts, Hats, Under
W. E. Mc
Knox Agency, English Block.
Muskogee - -
ANSWER YE
KIRSHBAUM GENTS FURNISHING GOODS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
ANSWER YES, OR NO?
Can you frame a business letter?
Can you make out a bill of sale?
Can you write shorthand?
Can you operate a typewriter?
Can you do D. E. book-keeping?
Are you an accomplished penman?
Do you understand commission and brokerage?
Do you understand Commercial Law?
Do you know Commercial Arithmetic?
In the above questions satisfactorly, you
But if these questions perplex and trouble
at for training either day or night, o
CORRESPONENCE SCHOOL of STENOGRAPHY,
Cox 121, C. A. BIGGERS, Instructor
CIGARS.
Boxes of cigars to your stand or store and
for sales. We can furnish you Owls, Cap-
ley George, Little Tom, Agent, 305, Cre-
kers, and several other popular brands be-
x and sell them to you at wholesalers
not much to invest, and they are sure to
and have a falk with us.
Druggist.
Corner Main & Okmulgee Streets.
NUMBER COMPANY.
"The King of Typewriters." Do you know if you can answer all the above are ready for business. But if they le you, make arrangement for tra thru mail, 20TH CENTURY CORRESPONDENT Jones Building. P. O. box 121,
SELL O
Add a few boxes of cigar Increase your sales, durers, Henry George, mo, Pathfinders, and s the single box and sell prices. It is not much sell. Come and have
BEN ESTES, Drugg Corner
GLOYD LUMBE TAKING THE STUMP.
If you can answer all the above questions satisfactorly, you are ready for business. But if these questions perplex and trouble you, make arrangement for training either day or night, or thru mail, 20TH CENTURY CORRESPONENCE SCHOOL of STENOGRAPHY, Jones Building, P. O. box 121, C. A. BIGGERS, Instructor
Add a few boxes of cigars to your stand or store and Increase your sales. We can furnish you Owls, Capdurers, Henry George, Little Tom, Agent, 305, Cremo, Pathfinders, and several other popular brands by the single box and sell them to you at wholesale prices. It is not much to invest, and they are sure to sell. Come and have a falk with us. BEN ESTES, Druggist Corner Main & Okmulgee Streets.
GLOYD LUMBER COMPANY. TAKING THE STUMP.
To tell about our lumber. It is put forward to win the approval of the lumber users of this section and when its good points are appreciated it will certainly do so.
We see no satisfaction or profit in handling low grade stock. Neither will consumers when they learn that the finest lumber does not piece by the foot but by the inches.
When you need stat
d stationery call on us.
When you need stationery call on us.
Loans and Discounts Overdrafts, cotton, Bonds and Preuiums Furniture and Fixtures Cash and Exchange
The above statement is correct
OUR GEM
The Neatmore
$200,000 00
21,572 39
150,000 00
759,530 25
A man standing on a tree stump, holding a large log and a tool, with a stack of logs in front of him.
WORTH REMEMBERING.
There are three entirely different kinds of ingredients used in making the three different varieties of baking powders on the market, viz:—(1) Mineral-Acid or Alum, (2) Bone-Acid or Phosphate, and (3) Cream of Tartar made from grapes. It is important, from the standpoint of health, to know something about these ingredients, and which kind is used in your baking powder.
(1) Mineral-Acid, or Alum, is made from a kind of clay. This is mixed with diluted oil of vitriol and from this solution a product is obtained which is alum. Alum is cheap; costs about two cents a pound, and baking powder made with this Mineral-Acid sells from 10 to 25c. a pound.
(2) Bone-Acid, or Phosphate, is the basis of phosphate baking powders and the process is fully described in the patents issued to a large manufacturer of a phosphate powder. The U S. Patent Office Report gives a full and exact description, but the following extract is enough:
"Burned bones, after being ground, are put into freshly diluted oil of vitriol and with continual stirring and in the following proportion," etc. From this Bone-Acid phosphate baking powders are made; such powders sell from 20 to 30 cents a pound.
(3) Cream of Tartar exists in all ripe grapes, and flows with the juice from the press in the manufacture of wine. After the wine is drawn off the tartar is scraped from the cask, boiled with water, and crystals of Cream of Tartar, white and very pure, separate and are collected. It differs in no respect from the form in which it originally existed in the grape. Cream of Tartar, then, while the most expensive, is the only ingredient that should be used in a baking powder to act upon the soda, as its wholesomeness is beyond question. Cream of Tartar baking powders sell at about 40 to 50 cents a pound.
Such are the facts, and every one, careful of the health of the family, should remember this rule:—Baking powders selling from 10 to 25 cents a pound are made of Mineral-Acids; those selling from 20 to 30 cents of Bone-Acid; and those from 40 to 50 cents of Cream of Tartar made from grapes.
The woman who knows Greek will still spend an hour and a half in dressing her hair for a party. I calculate that if women wore their hair short a million unemployed hours would be thrown daily upon the world.
Forbid Use of Monocles.
If one belongs to the German army he can not wear a monocle. The single eyeglass has been forbidden to officers and men as foppish and savoring too strongly of Anglomania.
When a bachelor wants to jolly a married woman he tells her he is sorry he didn't meet her before it was too late.
The King of blood purifiers is Dr. Simmons' Sarsaparilla. It rids the system of the winter's accumulation of impurities. It makes the young feel well—the old feel young. Now is the time to renovate yourself. Simmons' Sarsaparilla cannot be excelled.
e a l r T d a e N a r T O G N a o
Price 50 cents and $1.00.
"Tall oaks from little acorns grow,' and big aches from little corns, you know.
Cleanliness is said to be next to godliness, yet one seldom sees a laundry next door to a church.
Those Who Have Triled
will use no other. Deflance Cold Water Starch has no equal in Quantity or Quality—16 oz. for 10 cents. Other brands contain only 12 oz.
No use to yearn for the wisdom of Solomon. If you're wise enough to keep from being chilled by your own shadow you'll be doing well enough.
Muskogee Cimeter.
W. H. TWINE, Editor.
MUSKOGEE, . . IND. TER
NEW STATE NEWS
Chickasha has granted a street railway franchise.
Miami land and zinc properties are being developed.
Hugo voted in favor of a bond issue for $15,000 for a public school building.
A rich bed of asbestos is said to have been discovered near Tahlequah.
The eighth annual meeting of the grain dealers of the two territories was held at Enid last week. The meeting was the best ever held by the association.
Muskogee's fire department is to be reorganized, new apparatus purchased, additional firemen employed and placed on a high standard.
Preparations are being made at Ardmore for the entertainment of Leslie M. Shaw, secretary of the treasury, who will visit that town on May 24. The commercial club will give a reception in honor of Mr. Shaw.
John Walker, forty years old, who had been confined in the federal jail at Ardmore since March 24 on a charge of introducing and selling liquor, died last week. His relatives reside at Allen.
A. C. Seeley of Watonga has been appointed bookkeeper in the office of the territorial auditor. The position was created by the last legislature. Seeley is from Governor Ferguson's home and is one of his political appointees.
Since the arrival of the herd of Montana buffalo at the 101 ranch at Bliss four calves have been born, and all died. One of the cows also died. The baby buffalo born at Argentine, Kas., en route to Oklahoma, is alive and thriving.
Abe Niccum, a farmer near Rossville, Payne county, committed suicide by shooting himself. His wife became alarmed at his actions several days ago and took their five children to live with relatives at Chandler.
The Hugo National Bank at Hugo has been authorized to begin business with a capital stock of $50,000.
Major Edward P. Champlin, of the intruder division of the Indian agency, claims the distinction of being the oldest official in point of service in the Territory. He has been continually in the government service for thirty-six years.
Van A. Potter, president of the Spaulding female seminary, at Muskogee, has resigned and has left for Washington, where he will continue his studies in music.
Governor Ferguson has called a meeting of the trustees of the new insane asylum at Fort Supply to consider plans for the building. It is expected that work will soon begin on the structure.
The infant child of Lon Poole, living eight miles southeast of Elk City, is reported to have been burned to death. The mother left the child on the bed while she went to the cellar; when she returned the bed was on fire and the child so badly burned that it lived only a short time.
---
RAILROADS AND PROGRESS
In his testimony before the senate committee on interstate commerce at Washington on May 4, Prof. Hugo R. Meyer of the Chicago university, an expert on railroad management, made this statement:
"Let us look at what might have happened if we had heeded the protests of the farmers of New York and Ohio and Pennsylvania (in the 70's, when grain from the west began pouring to the Atlantic seaboard), and acted upon the doctrine which the interstate commerce commission has enunciated time and again, that no man may be deprived of the advantages accruing to him by virtue of his geographical position. We could not have west of the Mississippi a population of millions of people who are prosperous and are great consumers. We never should have seen the years when we built 10,000 and 12,000 miles of railway, for there would have been no farmers west of the Mississippi river who could have used the land that would have been opened up by the building of those railways. And if we had not seen the years when we could build 10,000 and 12,000 miles of railway a year, we should not have to-day east of the Mississippi a steel and iron producing center, which is at once the marvel and the despair of Europe, because we could not have built up a steel and iron industry if there had been no market for its product.
We could not have in New England a great boot and shoe industry; we could not have in New England a great cotton milling industry; we could not have spread throughout New York and Pennsylvania and Ohio manufacturing industries of the most diversified kinds, because those industries would have no market among the farmers west of the Mississippi river.
And while the progress of this country, while the development of the agricultural west of this country, did mean the impairment of the agricultural value east of the Mississippi river, that ran up into hundreds of millions of dollars, it meant incidentally the building up of great manufacturing industries that added to the value of this land by thousands of millions of dollars. And, gentlemen, those things were not foreseen in the '70's. The statesmen and the public men of this country did not see what part the agricultural development of the west was going to play in the industrial development of the east. And you may read the decisions of the interstate commerce commission from the first to the last, and what is one of the greatest characteristics of those decisions? The continued inability to see the question in this large way.
The interstate commerce commission never can see anything more than that the farm land of some farmer is decreasing in value, or that some man who has a flour mill with a production of fifty barrels a day is being crowded out. It never can see that the destruction or impairment of farm values in this place means the building up of farm values in that place, and that that shifting of values is a necessary incident to the industrial and manufacturing development of this country. And if we shall give to the interstate commerce commission power to regulate rates, we shall no longer have our rates regulated on the statesmanlike basis on which they have been regulated in the past by the railway men, who really have been great statesmen, who really have been great builders of empires, who have had an imagination that rivals the imagination of the greatest poet and of the greatest inventor, and who have operated with a courage and daring that rivals the courage and daring of the greatest military general. But we shall have our rates regulated by a body of civil servants, bureaucrats, whose besetting sin the world over is that they never can grasp a situation in a large way and with the grasp of the statesman; that they never can see the fact that they are confronted with a small evil; that
it cannot be corrected except by the creation of evils and abuses which are infinitely greater than the one that is to be corrected.
Too many bills are apt to make a man feel billious.
STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, 188.
LUGAR COUNTY.
FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURRE.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886.
Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testinations. L. CHENYE & CO. Toiled O.
If you try to whisper to a girl she acts like she was afraid she might try to kiss you against her will.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the Signature of
Chad H. Hitchin.
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Umbrellas and self-respect, when lost, are seldom regained.
FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restor. Bond for FREE $2.00 trial bottle and treatie. Dr. K. H. KLINE, Ltd., 611 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
It's as cowardly to speak ill of a man behind his back as it is dangerous to say it to his face.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces in
immotion, allays pain, cures wind colds. 25c a bottle.
Ice sometimes gets short in this old
world, and there's no hope of ice in
the next one.
Clean House To-day.
Don't wait till to-morrow, but clean house to-day, with Dr. Caldwell's (laxative) Syrup Pepsin. Of course we mean your house of flesh and bone—your body. This is the best house you own, and should get the most care. Yet most people neglect it in a dreadful manner. As a result, stomach, liver and bowels soon get out of order, and cause great pain, distress and dangerous internal diseases. The only safe, sure cure is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It clears out all causes of sickness, cures constipation and indigestion, cleans house, and makes you well. Try it. Sold by all druggists at 50c and $1.00. Money back if it fails.
Sunday School Teacher—Wouldn't you like to dwell in heaven, Johnny? Johnny—No, ma'am. We've moved three times already this year and I'm getting tired of helpin' pack up.
"Won't Turn Loose."
I insist on saying that Hunt's Lightning Oil takes hold quicker and lets go slower of aches, pains and sore places than any liniment I ever saw. It just won't turn loose till you're well.
I never have a little ache but what I slosh it on, and ere I get the bottle corked that little ache is gone.
C. W. JACKSON,
Marble Hill, Mo.
There is something about a circus that carries a man back so far he almost forgets he is married.
USE THE FAMOUS
Red Cross Ball Blue. Large 2-oz, package 5 cents. The Russ Company, South Bend, Ind.
Happiness isn't confined to the hilltops, but is often found in the violets of the valleys.—Atlanta Constitution.
Superior quality and extra quantity must win. This is why Defiance Starch is taking the place of all others.
A man passes for what he is worth. What he is engraves itself on his face, on his form, on his fortunes, in letters of light which all men may read but himself. Concealment avails nothing.—Emerson.
No chromos or cheap premiums, but a better quality and one-third more of Defiance Starch for the same price of other starches.
Calumet Baking Powder
Health- Economy
Jake Shinn's "Dress Reform" Jake Shinn is urging a new departure in women's garb for wear on windy days. "I got the idea while driving on the east side this morning," he told a reporter. "I saw a woman hoeing in her garden. The wind was blowing in the old fashioned Kansas style, but it didn't annoy her a bit. She had fastened an iron barrel hoop around the bottom of her dress. Every woman who has occasion to go out on the street on windy days ought to follow her example. It is an idea in dress reform that I am proud to help further."
Mr. Shinn, who is best known as a chronic bachelor, was asked if he would marry the first single woman who would adopt his style of dress reform, but he side-stepped from habit. The Republic is in a position to assure any good looking girl that if she will wear the new hoop skirt down Main street and past the office of Mr. Shinn that he will come to time, all right. Mr. Shinn owns several acres of fine land, has money in bank and is good looking. Now is some enterprising girl's opportunity. —Ottawa, Kansas, Republic.
Back at Work Again.
Buffalo, N. Y., May 22nd.—(Special)—Crippled by Kidney Disease till he could not stand on his feet for the hours required at his trade, F. R. McLean, 90 East Ferry St., this city, had to quit work entirely. Now he's back at work again and he does not hesitate to give the credit to Dodd's Kidney Pllls.
"Yes," Mr. McLean says "I was too bad, I had to quit. I could not stand on my feet for the necessary hours. It was Kidney Disease I had, and a friend advised me to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. I did so and after using six boxes am completely cured and am working as steadily as before I was sick. I recommend Dodd's Pills to any one afflicted with Kidney trouble."
There is no form of Kidney Disease Dodd's Kidney-Pills will not cure. They always cure Bright's Disease, the most most advanced and deadly stage of Kidney Disease.
Bobby (in the country)—What has that cow got a bell around her neck for?
Sadie—Why, that's what she rings when she wants to tell the calf that dinner is ready.—Harper's Bazar.
It is better to have too little confidence in yourself than too much in others.
"It's Value."
Find inclosed money order for 50 cents, for which please mail one box of Hunt's Cure. It is worth its weight in gold to me.
C. M. JOHNSON,
8 Adams street,
July 17, 1904. Memphis, Tenn.
We have many similar letters. Hunt's Cure is for skin trouble of all kinds, and to those afflicted, is worth its weight in gold, as Mr. Johnson says.
Fine sensibilities are like woodbines, delightful luxuries of beauty to twine round a solid, upright stem of understanding; but very poor things, if unsustained by strength, they are left to creep along the ground.—John Foster.
FARM MISCHEANL
Some readers of the Farmers' Review may have noticed queer bright small blossomed plants growing on other plants. Some of these are the dodders. Awhile ago a lady found one of these growing on dogwood and brought it to the writer for analysis.
1. Flower
2. Flower
3. Flower
4. Flower
It was pronounced to be dodder. There is one variety of this plant that thrives on clover. The little plants twine about the clover plant and kill it. They resemble tangles of yellow fibers without leaves or conspicuous blossoms. Some seed of dodder has been at times introduced into the fields of clover in the clover seed. In such a case they always prove to be a great nuisance. They should be exterminated ruthlessly, but we as yet know little about exterminating this plant when it attacks a field numerously.—Farmers' Review.
An Oat Experiment.
In a test in England, an unmanured plot produced oats at the rate of 27 bushels and 1,904 pounds of straw per acre. The application of 336 pounds of superphosphate per acre brought up the yield to 34 bushels of oats and 2,350 pounds of straw. When the same amount of superphosphate and 112 pounds of nitrate of soda were added the yield was 41 bushels of oats and 2,688 pounds of straw. When superphosphate was applied and 224 pounds of nitrate of soda in two dressings the yield was 47 bushels of oats and 3,136 pounds of straw. In each case the gain was double in value the cost of the fertilizers used.
Value of Corn Silage.
A great deal of the value of corn silage comes from the fact that it is succulent. This succulence is preserved in the silage and makes it easily digestible. No amount of soaking or adding water to it in any way can make the dry corn stalk like the fresh one. Nature puts the water into the stalk in a sort of combination that it cannot make except when put in by the help of active and developing cells. When the cells dry out and become hard, the water can never again penetrate them, and that is why water cannot make the dried stalk fresh again, no matter at what season it is cu
New Yorkers Dying Fast Dr. John H. Girdner of New York says of that city: "At the present time New York is not reproducing itself. We are all living swiftly and dying swiftly. Were it not for the influx from out of town the decrease would soon be noted. But as it is, for one New Yorker that dies two strangers take up their abode in the city, and thus the loss is not noticed. New Yorkers are driving themselves and are being driven like beasts of burden. They are working like dynamos all day, playing like idiots all night."
Annual Passes for Employees
The Frisco Railway company, in consideration of long service of the conductors and engineers, has arranged to grant annual passes over the division to those who have been working continuously for the road for fifteen years. An annual pass over the entire system will be given to those who have been employed for twenty years, and for twenty-five years' service an annual pass for the employee and his wife is given. Granting passes under these conditions becomes effective at once.
Grows Six Inches a Day.
Catalpa grows at the rate of a third of an inch in diameter a year on good soil, says a writer in Country Life in America. There are fine summer days when the sprouts on a stump of sturdy root growth will grow six inches in the twenty-four hours. You can see catalpa grow, you can hear it grow.
A woman's tongue is mightier than a man's strong right arm.
GREAT CHANGE
From Change In Food.
The brain depends much more on the stomach than we are apt to suppose until we take thought in the matter. Feed the stomach on proper food easy to digest and containing the proper amount of phosphates and the healthy brain will respond to all demands. A notable housewife in Buffalo writes:
"The doctor diagnosed my trouble as a 'nervous affection of the stomach.' I was actually so nervous that I could not sit still for five minutes to read the newspaper, and to attend to my household duties was simply impossible. I doctored all the time with remedies, but medicine did no good.
"My physician put me on all sorts of diet, and I tried many kinds of cereal foods, but none of them agreed with me. I was almost discouraged, and when I tried Grape-Nuts I did so with many misgivings—I had no faith that it would succeed where everything else had failed.
"But it did succeed, and you don't know how glad I am that I tried it. I feel like a new person, I have galned in weight and I don't have that terrible burning sensation in my stomach any more. I feel so strong again that I am surprised at myself. The street noises that used to irritate me so, I never notice now, and my mind is so clear that my household duties are a real pleasure."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
There's a reason.
Now why was this great change made in this woman?
The stomach and the brain had not been supplied with the right kind of food to rebuild and strengthen the nerve centers in these organs. It is absolute folly to try to do this with medicine. There is but one sure way and that is to quit the old food that has failed and take on Grape-Nuts food which is more than half digested in the process of manufacture and is rich in the phosphate of potash contained in the natural grain, which unites with albumen and water—the only three substances that will make up the soft gray filling in the thousands of delicate nerve centres in the brain and body. Grape-Nuts food is a sure road back to health in all such cases.
Alabastine .... Your Walls
Alabastine produces exquisitely beautiful effects on walls and ceilings. Easy to apply, simply mix with cold water. Better than kalsomine, paint or wall paper. It is not a kalsomine, it is a sanitary, permanent, cement coating, which hardens on the walls, destroying disease germs and vermin, never rubbing or scaling. Kalsomines mixed with either hot or cold water soon rub and scale off, spoiling walls, clothing and furniture. They contain glue, which decays and nourishes the germs of deadly disease.
If your druggist or hardware dealer will not get Alabistine, refuse substitutes and imitations and order of us. Send for free sample of tints and information about decorating.
ALABASTINE COMPANY
Grant Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. New York Office, 105 Water St. It takes a woman to jam into an inch of space on a street car seat and then look as if you were trying to sit close to her to insult her.—New York Press.
BABY CAME NEAR DYING.
From an Awful Skin Humor—
—Scratched Till Blood Ran—
Wasted to a Skeleton—
Speedily Cured by
Cuticura.
"When three months old my boy broke out with an itching, watery rash all over his body, and he would scratch till the blood ran. We tried nearly everything, but he grew worse, wasting to a skeleton, and we feared he would die. He slept only when in our arms. The first application of Cuticura soothed him so that he slept in his cradle for the first time in many weeks. One set of Cuticura made a complete and permanent cure. (Signed) Mrs. M. C. Maitland, Jasper, Ontario."
The shoplifter is careful how he goes in a store and takes a notion.
WHERE?
FOR THAT
SUMMER TRIP?
BE SURE IT IS
VIA
THE
MK AND
T
MISSISSippi, Kansas & Texas Holiday
We may be able to assist you in deciding. There are any number of desirable trips—cheap too—which you can make this summer to the Mountains of Colorado, the Lakes of Michigan and Wisconsin or to the Portland Exposition. Let us send you rates and particulars. Free.
ADDRESS
GEORGE MORTON
G. P. and T. A., M. K. & T. Ry., ST. LOUIS, MO.
FOR FAST TIME TAKE "THE KATY FLYER."
When writing advertisers kindly mention this paper.
WANTED.—For the U. S. Army, able-bodied unmarried men, between ages of 21 and 35; citizens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For information apply to Recruiting Officer, Postoffice building, Oklahoma City, Okla. or Tulsa, Ind. Ter., Enid, Shawnee or Guthrie, Okla.
PISO'S CURE FOR
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION
The 30th of May is decoration day. We wonder how many of our people will remember that there were 200,000 black heroes in the war of the rebellion and we wonder if any of them will have sufficient patriotism to journey to the National cemetery and place a few flowers as tokens of respect upon the graves of the black heroes the, the last resting place of the black batallions of the Rgpublic who followed the flag of the Republic during the great fratricidal strife and upon a hundred battle fields proved themselves heroes and patriots.
DUTY OF THE CHURCH
From the Washington Bee:
There is a great deal that the church can do if it will in improving the condition of the masses. The pulpit seems to have but one object in view, and that is to see who can build the largest church and make the greatest outside display. Another object which was about to pass our notice, the pulpit has in view is to increase its salary. The pulpit as well as the press can do a great deal in uplifting the dignity of the people. The Bee makes no criticism on dress. Everybody should look well, should dress well, and at the same time cultivate good morals. The church should do all in its power to persuade the people to keep out of trouble and observe strictly the laws. There are some sad scenes in our courts. The daily processions that match in review of the judges of both branches of the Police Court in this city are enough to convince anyone that there is something wrong. If the pulpit would exert the same influence in reforming the masses as it does in lifting collections to build more churches and larger churches, the community would be better off. The pulpit is not doing its duty. -Clipped from Texas Freedman
There are a few of these old heroes still living and some of them are in and around Muskogee; and we think that on the 30th the entire populace should join in with these old fellows who saved the Union and go with them to the "City of the dead," the last resting place of their comrades and show the love and respect we have for their heroism and patriotism. The white people of the locality have taken proper steps to observe the aay in proper form. It is not too late for our ministers and other leaders to take this matter up at once and other leaders to take this matter up at once and see that that day is properly observed and that due respect is paid and our dead heroes are remembered by the race in a fitting way. The Cimeter hopes that our leaders will take the matter up at once and act promptly. The Cimeter outfit will do their part and if no one responds then we will go it alone and see that the black defenders of the Republic who are sleeping in thid quietude of the quietude of the National Cemetery at Ft. Gibson shall have at least a few floral emblems placed upon their graves. Who will join us. Ministers speak of this in your pulpits on Sunday, the day and time is appropriate.
To some extent the above article is applicable in Muskogee. If the pulpit will join the press we can clean out a great part of loafing immoral reprobates who sit on the front seats in some churches and who parade the streets at night for immoral purposes. If our ministers will take a firm stand against this evil as they ought to do there will be an improvement in the personell of the various congregations.
THE ST. LOUIS FURNITURE CO.
128 South Second Street.
Offer a fine line of New and Second Hand Furniture Iron Beds, Matt.ess. Springs, Rocking Chairs, Bowls, Pitchers, and Slop Jars
BIG EAST SIDE LUMBER YARD. GEO. D. HOPE LUMBER @OMPANY DEALER IN Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Sash, Doors, Lime. Cement, Etc. EAST OKMULGEE AVE.
When you need stationery call on us.
WE CAN
RENT
YOUR
HOUSES
The Canadian Valley Trust
Company
Has a number of applicants who desire
to rent houses. Owners of three, four,
five and six room houses can secure de-
sirable tenants by listing their property
with us.
REAL ESTATE DEPARTMENT
Canadian Valley Trust Co.
THE MODEL
Dress Making Parlor.
Miss Rosa Drake & Miss Lillian Turner,
PROPRIETORS.
PHONE 320 612 S. 3RD ST.. MUSKOGEE.
TO THE LADIES!
LADIES you can't afford to miss this, this week. We will sell nice long WIGS for $2.75; SWITCHES 25c to 50c; HALF WIGS $1.25; PRIME FRIZZLES, 15c to 25c.
WALL STREET. MURKOGEE, INDIAN TERRITORY DURFEY HARDWARE COMPANY.
Shelf and Heavy Hardware, Tinware, and Celebrated Monarc Ranges. Every one Guaranteed, Builders' Tools, etc. All kinds of Tin Work and Plumbing, Refrigerators and Ice Coolers. PHONE 205. ROWSY BLOCK. 111 N. SECOND STREET
BEAUTIFUL TEETH
BRIDGE WORK
PROJECTING WORK
BEAUTIFUL TEETH
BUILDING CARE
Crown and Bridge work a specialty at lowest possible price. All work guaranteed. My Gold Crowns never tarnish. I use the best material.
Gas administered. Don't fail to give me a trial.
EXAMINATION FREE.
Room 213-14, - Illinois Building Next to Bank of Muskogee, Muskogee, I. T. Pioneer Abstract Co. IOWA BUILDING In rear of Bank of Muskogee
M. SIMON Sample Hats, Shoes, Clothing, and Furnishing Goods, Trunks and Bags at less than half price. 135 SOUTH SECOND STREET.