Muskogee Cimeter
Thursday, December 14, 1905
Muskogee, Oklahoma
Page text (machine-generated)
The Muskogee Cimeter.
THE BOSTON STORE BLUE FLAG
MILL & FACTORY SALE
A grand success. Crowds have thronged our store since the opening, Saturday morning Thousands of dollars worth of goods have gone from our store into as many homes : : : :
THIS GREAT SALE STILL CONTINUES
Thursday, Friday and Saturday we propose to make the three best days of the week and have marked many lines lower than ever for these three days.
If you have not visited this sale: come, If you have visited this sale; come again Every single article just as advertised
Saturday morning. Dec. 16, from 9 to 9:30 o'clock we will sell 10 yards of Calico for 25C. ONLY 10 YARDS TO A CUSTOMER.
216 THE BOSTON STORE'S BLUE FLAG SALE MUSKOGEE, WEST OKMULGEE INDIAN TERRITORY
Vol 7
T E
RED BIRD,
During the past week many prominent persons from the Southland have called at our office and made inquiries about Red Bird, the colored town located on the M. K. & O. R. R., about 20 miles from this city. Among the many was S. W. Crump of Pine Bluff, Ark., he had been to the town and investigated for himself and he reports that the location is an ideal one, and that the prospects for the future growth of the town is a bright one, that the land surrounding is feriile and productive, and it only needs the progressive farmer to make it indeed a paradise, that splendid coal has been discovered in the vicinity and that the people who own the lands are colored people and invite our people to come and locate with them and that the town offers splendid inducements from a business stand point Mr. Crump is one of
Muskogee, I. T., Thursday, December 14, 1905.
the most prominent and wealthy citizens of Arkansas.
Congressman Murphy has introduced a bill appropriating $250,000 for a public building in Muskogee. We hope this bill will become a law at this session of Congress. The builping ss much needed. Our Post Office building is too small as is the U. S. Court house. We should have a Federal building in which all of the government could be transacted. This would be a saving to the govern ment and a credit to the city.
Dr. Jossie C. Dickerson whose card appears elsewhere in this issue reports a growing practice. Besides having done some excellent work in the line of her specialty, diseases of women and children, she has been very successful in handling her other cases. She also gives vibratory treatments which is the latest method of treating any deep seated disease. Dr. Dickerson is a physician of considerable expience, having practised medicine in Cleveland, Ohio for the past six or seven years.
JEWELRY! JEWELRY!
5000 different designs, all new, modern, absolutely reliable goods the kind that send our customers away satisfied. Going at less than manufacturesr' cost from now until January 1, 1906. Don't put off you visit. Come today while you can pick just what you want for XMAS at less than MANUFACTURERS' COST. When I say sale I mean anything in stock is yours for just a little monep. I have 700 gold rings for you to select from; and everything else in watches and jewelry line. I have established a great business by doing exactly what I say. Call and be convinced. R. A. GIVENS, 228 NORTH 2ND, ST., MUSKOGEE
Holiday Rates
Holiday Rates
Cheap rates for those desirous of spending Christmas at the old home, for visiting friends.
EXCEPTIONALLY
LOW RATES.
VIA MISSOURI, KANSAS & TEX. RY
Tickets on sale at all stations,
Dececember 22, 23, 24, 25, 30,
31, 1905, and Jan. 1, 1906, for
return.
ASK THE AGENT
for the rates and about the train
No 9
YY
ALE MUSKOGEE,
INDIAN TERRITORY
JEWELRY!
modern, absolutely reliable goods
ers away satisfied. Going at less
now until January 1, 1906. Don't
while you can pick just what you
MANUFACTURERS' COST. When
rock is yours for just a little monu
to select from; and everything
I have established a great busi-
ry. Call and be convinced.
IVENS,
ST., MUSKOGEE
service. The excellent train service will make your Holiday Trip nominal in cost and comfortable and convenient if via M. K. & T. Ry. Plan your trip now.
W. S. ST. GEORGE,
General Pass. and Ticket Agent
St. Louis, Mo.
DR. JESSIE C. DICKERSON,
Special attention to diseases of women and children.
Suite 17, Jones Building
OFFICE HOURS
9 to 10 a. m. PHONE 747
2 to 4 p. m.
7 to 9 p. m.
---
Concerning Rewards
"Every once in a while" said a travelling man at the Albany hotel this morning, "I hear or read of somebody who refused a reward for returning some article which had been lost, because the amount offered was small. The finder was usually insulted. That doesn't seem right to me. Why should anybody sneer at a reward? What right have we to expect any reward at all for our honesty? A few days ago, while walking down an Omaha street, I saw a man ahead of me drop a pocketbook. A messenger boy picked it up Just then the man missed it and the boy returned it to him without looking inside. The man gave the boy a quarter. The boy accepted it but was disgusted.
" 'Is dat all I git for bein' honest?"
he asked. 'Yer a pretty cheap guy.'
" 'There's just $3 in the pocketbook.' said the man.
" 'Well, you oughter gimme a dollar, anyway,' the boy replied.
"Had I been that man I'd have been sorely tempted to add a kick to the quarter," concluded the traveling man,
"and there are lots and lots of people just like that boy in the world."—Denver Post.
Tennessee Praise
Dayton, Tenn., Dec. 11th (Special) Among many prominent residents to praise Dodd's Kidney Pills is Mr. N. R. Roberts of this place. He tells of what they have done for him, and his words will go deep into the hearts of all who are suffering in the same way. He says:
"I was a martyr to Kidney Trouble, but Dodd's Kidney Pills completely cured me. I shall always keep them on hand in case there should be any return of the old trouble, but I am thankful to say they did their work so well there has not been the slightest sign of my old complaint coming back. The pain in my back used to be terrible. If I got down I had a hard job to get straight again. But my back is like a new one now and I can stoop as much as I please. I don't believe there ever was any medicine half so good as Dodd's Kidney Pills."
Would Need No Lawyers
One of the lawyers who spoke at a recent meeting in London of the Royal Courts of Justice Temperance Solcety said that if England were to turn sober the legal profession would be ruined.
Instantaneous Action.
"I was almost distracted by a terrible itching which defied all treatment until I obtained a box of Hunt's Cure. The first application afforded instant and absolute relief. The one box effected a complete cure.
"It is simply wonderful in its instantaneous action."
Geo. Gilliland.
Manitou, O. T.
Almost any woman will agree with you that She Made Her Husband What He Is, but often she cannot tell you what line of work her husband is engaged upon at present.
The Best Results in Starching can be obtained only by using Defiance Starch, besides getting 4 oz. more for same money-no cooking required.
Spending your money as fast as you make it is foolish. Spending it faster than you make it is financial genius.
When You Buy Starch
buy Defiance and get the best, 16 oz. for 10 cents. Once used, always used.
We may make the best of life, or we may make the worst of it, and it depends very much upon ourselves
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quintine Tablets. Drugists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box. 25c.
A married woman says it's still a debatable question whether it is better to be a man's first love or his last.
Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounces in a package. 10 cents. One-third more starch for the same money.
WORK BEGNS IN EARNEST.
Several Hundred Bills and Resolutions Introduced in the Senate.
Washington,--The Senate began business in earnest today. The session was only a little more thad two hours' duration, but in that time several hundred bills and resolutions were introduced and referred to committees. There were resolutions dealing with the question of national regulation of insurance companies, incorporation of interstate railroad companies and the contribution of funds to political parties by national banks.
Senator Eoraker presented his railroad rate regulation bill, Gallinger his merchant marine subsidy bill, Lodge a bill providing for maximum and minimum tariff rate schedule in interest of reciprocity and Culberson a bill making it a penal offence to use the money of insurance companies in politics.
Territory Cattle Sale.
Pryor Creek, I. T...The big sale of territory cattle demonstrates that the Indian Territory is a profitable field for cattle raising. Aside from the abundance and good quality of grass and water in this locality it is in close proximity to the greatest cattle market in the world.
Denied Allotment.
Washington,----Justice Duel has rendered a decision affirming the judgement of the district supreme court in the case of Willis C. West, against Secretary Hitchcock. West, having married an Indian woman, claimed he thereby became "by adoption" a member of the Choctaw tribe to which the woman belonged and was entitled to an allotment of land in the Indian Territory. The secretary denied West's application for allotment on the ground that the alleged adoption plan had never received the approval of the interior department. West then sought by madamus proceedings to compel the secretary to recognize the adoption
Taylor Denies Report Needs Revising.
Oklahoma City O. T.-J. Z. Taylor, president of the National Ginners' Association, who was in this city today when shown a dispatch from Dallas, showing that he had ordered a delay in making the ginners' report, made the following statement, "That dispatch was wholly incorrect. I wired Mr. Blackwell a complete report last night aud it needed no revising.
STRIKE THREATENED.
Street Car Lines of South McAlester
May Be Tied Up.
South McAlester, I. T.,—Trouble is brewing among the employees of the street car company here, and there is a possibility of a strike. The employees organized a local union about two weeks ago, since which time three of the promotet members of the union have deen discharged, including W. A. Cox, the president. The union has formulated a proposed contract demanding a ten-hour day, 20c an hour and recognition of the union. A committee from the union is in conference with officials of the road. Vice-President Cummings of the International Street Car is here from New Orleans to participate in the negotiations.
Will Drill For Oil at Hugo.
Hugo, I. T.---The Hugo improvement and development company was incorporated here with a capital of $10,0000.
AILING WOMEN.
Keep the Kidneys Well and the Kidneys Will Keep You Well.
Sick, suffering, languid women are learning the true cause of bad backs and how to cure them. Mrs. W. G. Davis of Groesbeck, Texas, says: "Backaches hurt me so I could hardly stand. Spells of dizziness and sick headaches were frequent and the action of the kidneys was irregular.
and how to cure them. Mrs. W. G. Davis of Groesbeck, Texas, says: "Backaches hurt me so I could hardly stand. Spells of dizziness and sick headaches were frequent and the action of the kidneys was irregular. Soon after I began taking Doan's Kidney Pills I passed several gravel stones. I got well and the trouble has not returned. My back is good and strong and my general health better." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
AMERICAN GIRLS TOO RESTLESS
Artists Pained at Their Unnecessary Gestures and Fidgeting
It no longer is considered fascinating for women to go to the extreme of vivacity in behavior. Perhaps this is due to the criticism of an artist who recently visited these shores and who was much distressed at the way in which American women fidgeted and gesticulated.
"As most of the athletic women of today have large hands," he said, "if they emphasize every utterance with a gesture the effect is bound to be unpleasant. The defects are made more conspicuous. Nervousness is often the cause of this restless motion of the hands. It is bound to bore the observer, even when the woman is pretty. Indeed, it would torture one who was compelled to look at it for a long time."—New York Press.
Woman Oil Operator
Mrs. Mae O. H. Russell, of Bloomington, Ill., is the only woman oil operator in Kentucky, and, perhaps, in the United States. Since the discovery of oil there have been but one o two women who ventured into the business on a large scale, and so far as is known this young woman of some 28 years old is today rated among the largest operators in the country.
A BRAIN WORKER.
Must Have the Kind of Food That Nourishes Brain.
"I am a literary man whose nervous energy is a great part of my stock in trade, and ordinarily I have little patience with breakfast foods and the extravagant claims made of them. But I cannot withhold my acknowledgment of the debt that I owe to Grape-Nuts food.
"I discovered long ago that the very bulkiness of the ordinary diet was not calculated to give one a clear head, the power of sustained, accurate thinking. I always felt heavy and sluggish in mind as well as body after eating the ordinary meal, which diverted the blood from the brain to the digestive apparatus.
"I tried foods easy of digestion, but found them usually deficient in nutriment. I experimented with many breakfast foods and they, too, proved unsatisfactory, till I reached Grape-Nuts. And then the problem was solved.
"Grape-Nuts agreed with me perfectly from the beginning, satisfying my hunger and supplying the nutriment that so many other prepared foods lack.
"I had not been using it very long before I found that I was turning out an unusual quantity and quality of work. Continued use has demonstrated to my entire satisfaction that Grape-Nuts food contains all the elements needed by the brain and nervous system of the hard working public writer." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
There's a reason. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs.
California's Famous Sheriff
Benjamin K. Thorne, a native of New York, nephew of United Senator T. C. Platt, aged 75, and classed as the most fearless sheriff in California, died recently. As sheriff of Calaveras county he was leader in the most famous man hunts in the state's history. No chance was too desperate for him to take and he took many desperate chances in his fifty years of service.
AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR.
Covered Head, Neck and Shoulders Suffered Agony for Twenty-five Years Until Cured by Cuticura.
"For twenty-five years I suffered agony from a terrible humor, completely covering my head, neck and shoulders, discharging matter of such offensiveness to sight and smell that I became an object of dread. I consulted the most able doctors far and near, to no avail. Then I got Cuticura, and in a surprisingly short time I was completely cured. For this I thank Cuticura, and advise all those suffering from skin humors to get it and end their misery at once. S. P. Keyes, 149 Congress Street, Boston, Mass."
Largest Man in Paris
Michael Beudin, the largest man in Paris, who was known as the "King of the Draymen," has died from the effects of being knocked down by a street car. He was six feet six and three-fourths inches tall and weighed 392 pounds. His strength was so great that he could lift easily and carry a barrel containing a pipe (126 gallons) of wine.
No Others.
It is in a class to itself. It has no rivals. It cures where others merely relieve. For aches, pains, stiff joints, cuts, burns, bites, etc., it is the quickest and surest remedy ever devised. We mean Hunt's Lightning Oll. Little drops of water, little grains of sand, increase the grocer's profits to beat the village band.
THE OLD-MONK-CURE
TRADE MARK.
St. Jacobs Oil
has traveled round the world,
and everywhere human
Aches and Pains
have welcomed it and blest
it for a cure.
Price, 25c. and 50c.
WE DON'T HAVE TO SPEAK FOR COUNCIL HILL
BECAUSE
COUNCIL HILL SPEAKS FOR ITSELF!
COJNCIL HILL is a new town, but a few months old, located on the M.,O. & G. railroad, 25 miles from Muskogee. It is surrounded by a vast area of the best agricultural land in the Creek Nation. A brick railroad station with cement platforms, a two-story modern school house, 12-foot granitoid sidewalks with curbing through the business section are but a few of the substantial improvements. Never has there been such an opportunity for a business location or a profitable investment. For particulars address
Union Townsite Company,
union Townsite Company, Muskogee, Indian Territory.
JUDGE LAWRENCE SUCCEEDS RAYMOND.
Lawrence, Parker, Townsend and Clayton Were Appointed by the President.
Washington,—The president yesterday appointed Judge W. R. Lawrence of the Northern district to succeed Raymond in the Western district and Hon. L. F. Parker Jr., was named to succeed Judge Lawrence. As if to add to the sting of the defeat of Judge Raymond, the president at the same time re-appointed Judge W. H H. Clayton of the Central district and Judge Hosea Townsend of the Southdistrict, and after the 17th inst., at which time Judge Raymond's term expires, Judge Townsend will become chief justice.
The result is a clean cut victory for the opposition to Judge Raymond and a bitter defeat for him, as he was an active candidate for re-appointment and his friends have been busy for the past year been busy getting their indorsements for him.
Judge Lawrence, who comes to the bench of this district, has made a popular and successful judge in the Northern district and will meet with a warm reception on his arrival from the bar.
Judge Lawrence is a native of Indiana, but has lived in Illinois since his father settled there in 1849. He was admitted to the bar of Danville in 1873 and was successful in the practice of his profession. He was chairman of his county central committee and was secretary of the congressional committee in Speaker Cannon's district, and is a great favorite with the speaker.
Parker is the son of L F. Parker general solicitor of the Frisco system, with headquarters at St. Louis. His rise has been remarkable. With only a common school education as a basis for his professional career, he started out as a stenographer for a construction company in Mexico and afterward spent several years as a stenographer in Oklahoma. Parker's appointment was backed by the entire Kansas and Misssuri delegation.
Hon. Hosea Townsend of the South em district was first appointed from Colorado by President McKinley, with whom he served in Congress and was reappointed four years ago next January, this new commission being his third term as United States judge. Judge Clayton is also a third termer and was appointed in 1897 from Arkanand re-appointed four years ago on the 17th., inst. There has been no opposition to either of these two gentlemen, both of them being indorsed by the bar and the people of their respective districts.
Seminole Council Has Meeting.
Wewoka, I. T. The Seminole council which met here for the purpose of taking action against joint statehood, adjourned without undertaking any business. The council was called to meet by Chief John R. Brown, for the purpose of adopting a resolution protesting to Congress against admission to statehood with Oklahoma. When the council met it was discovered that both the chief and the second chief were absent and an adjournment was taken until such time as the chief might be present.
A bridge to cost $3,845 will be built across the Salt Fork of Red river at Olustee, Greer county.
Was "No Account Boy" Horace E. Burt, president of the Union Pacific railroad, has been visiting the home of his childhood, Raccoon, Ind. Forty years ago he was a barefoot urchin and was known as "boy no account," because he seemed to have an unconquerable aversion to hard work. At last he got a job at railroading, prospered and now comes back in a private car to visit friends whom he knew in the long ago.
Rest and Sleep.
Few escape those miseries of winter—a bad cold, a distressing cough. Many remedies are recommended, but the one quickest and best of all is Simmon's Cough Syrup. Soothing and healing to the lungs and bronchial passages, it stops the cough at once and gives you welcome rest and peaceful sleep.
It rather takes the edge off the doctor's bill to be able to tell the neighbors how many nights you had to sit up with the sick child.
Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz.—one full pound—while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in 4/8-pound packages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chemicals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large letters and figures "16 ozs." Demand Defiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron sticking. Defiance never sticks.
A Clerical Error
Scene—A recruiting depot under the shadow of Table Mountain.
Time—Sunday morning parade.
Sergeant addressing the men in response to a request for a clerk for the Quartermaster's stores:
"Any men here that are used to clerical work, two paces to the front.
No response.
Recruit in rank: "Well, I'm blowed!
I thought we joined for fighting, and not to be blooming parsons!"
Cures Blood, Skin Troubles, Cancer, Blood Poison. Greatest Blood Purifier Free.
If your blood is impure, thin, diseased, hot or full of humors, if you have blood poison, cancer, carbuncles, eating sores, scrofula, eczema, itching, risings and lumps, scabby, pimply skin, bone pains, catarrh, rheumatism, or any blood or skin disease, take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) according to directions. Soon all sores heal, aches and pains stop, the blood is made pure and rich, leaving the skin free from every eruption, and giving the rich glow of perfect health to the skin. At the same time, B. B. B. improves the digestion, cures dyspepsia, strengthens weak kidneys. Just the medicine for old people, as it gives them new, vigorous blood. Druggists, $1 per large bottle, with directions for home cure. Sample free and prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and special free medical advice also sent in sealed letter. B. B. B. is especially advised for chronic, deep-seated cases of impure blood and skin disease, and cures after all else fails.
Life is a problem. If you stay at home all summer you envy those who went away; if you go away you envy those who staid at home.
Ask Your Druggist for Allen's Foot-Ease.
"I tried ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE recently and have just bought another supply. It has cured my corns, and the hot, burning and itching sensation in my feet which was almost unbearable, and I would not be without it now."—Mrs. W. J. Walker, Camden, N. J." Sold by all Druggists, 250.
A sermon is the longest distance between two points—namely, the point at which it begins and at which it leaves off.—Punch.
Sensible Housekeepers
will have Defiance Starch, not alone because they get one-third more for the same money, but also because of superior quality.
900 DROPS
CASTORIA
A Vegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of
INFANTS & CHIEDREN
Promoies Digestion, Cheerfulness and Rest. Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC.
Triage of Old Dr. SAMUEL PITCHER
Pumpkin Seed
Aix Senna
Rockelle Salix
Anise Seed
Peppermint
Di Carbonate Salix
Worm Seed
Clavified Sugar
Wintergreen Flavor
Aperfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms, Convulsions, Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Fac Simile Signature of
Char. H. Flitcher.
NEW YORK.
A 16 months old
35 DOSES - 35 CENTS
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
Char. H. Flitcher.
In Use
For Over Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE GENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.
The Home
of the
Wave Circle
is the home where good cooking is
loved, where the family enjoy the
finest of biscuits, doughnuts, cakes,
and pies and other good things every
day. The baking is always delicious
and wholesome because
K C Baking Powder
—the baking powder of the wave
circle, is used.
Get K C to-day! 25 ounces for
25c. If it isn't all that we claim,
your grocer refunds your money.
Send for "Book of Presents."
JAQUES MFG. CO.
Chicago.
PILES NO MONEY TILL CURED SEND FOR FREE ILLUS. TREATISE OR RECEAL DISEASES, WITH NAMES OF PROMINENT NEW CURED DRS. THORNTON & MINOR 1031 OAK ST. KANSAS CITY, MO. (BRANCH OF FIRST ST. LOUIS.)
IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. I won't sell Anti-Gripine to a dealer who won't Guarantee It. Call for your MONEY BACK IF IT DON'T CURE. F. W. Diemer, M. D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Mo.
WANTED FOR UNITED NATES 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, Post-Office Building Oklahoma, Guthrie, Shawnee, Enid, O. J., or Tulsa, I. T.
$10.00 Sweep Feed Grinder. | $14.00 Galvanized Steel Wind Mill.
We manufacture all sizes and styles. It will pay you to investigate.Write for catalog and price list.
CURRIE WIND MILL CO.,
607 Seventh St., Topeka, Kansas
(continued from page 1)
boomers were traversing the territory writing, speaking, scheming and setting political traps trying to deliver us in the hands of our enemies, they argued, they plead, they persuaded and produced every feeble reason that human soul could device trying to dray us down into the filthy slums of the solid column, they claim we ar too wealthy to unite with Oklahoma and that our undeveloped resources, our beautiful situations and boundaries the fertility of our soil and the rapidity of emigrants assured us a great future and entitled us to a large representation in the National Congress. The diabolical greed of southern democracy raised it's malignant head, opened wide it's infernal jaws and made ready to receive the future state of Sequoyah down it's tyranical throat but heaven frowned, earth groaned and the wise people of Indian Territory voted no, NO; NEVER, NEVER! It is strange that the Sequoyah boomers offered every inducement but protection. They spoke of large representation, wealth, financial advantages, and natural resources, but not one word about protection. Indeed, the leaders must to have been democrats. When Oklahoma extended a hand of welcome and cordially invited us to join her in her rapid march up the ragged hill of progress, then there was our chance, our privilege and our duty to adorn oid glory with another star decorated with liberty's dearest bouquet. To refuse was treason, to accept was patriotic. Not at any time since the puritans first looked upon America's shores, not since our Colonial days, not since our country was made an independent wretch by the Decaration of Independence, nor since we were made independent free people by the Emancipation. No, not in all the history of the world have a people proven themselves more worthy than did the people of Indian Territory by disregarding, ignoring and refusing to notice the Sequoyah boomers.
During this great crisis, when a heavy cloud over-hung the views of each and all, when a dense fog mystified our pathway, when our duties were overshadowed with perplexities, when the real truth was sub-
merged in obscurity, when every argument was confused with doubt, when everybody was guessing as to what was most conducive to the welfare of our future state, Twine saw the light, anchored his ship and for a while he sat quietly in wisdom's chair, weighed calmly every argument, simultaneously feeling the pulse of every political ambition that beat, and then he rendered an irrevocable decision; after which he appealed to the people, to the country, to the territory, to take a stand with him. He did not say with me you will get a large representation in Congress, a rich state by yourself, nor an unparalleled natural resources, but he appealed, he plead, he took his stand for the sake of a "square deal," and he knew from what source a "square deal" always comes when it comes at all. The people were depending on the press for their information; they were in the dark, wanting light, they were in doubt, wanting substantiation; they stood waiting and wishing for exactness.
Some were writing for political prominence, some for popularity, some for a price, but Twine stood firm for the sake of humanity, for the sake of our liberties and future happiness. He constantly warned us of the danger of falling into the clutches of Arkansas and Texas, which fall would be detrimental, destructive, and outrageously miserable to every Negro in the territory. At last when the storm was over, when wisdom's sun had dispersed the fogs of doubt, when the clouds of argument had sunk into oblivion, when the star of reality sparkled in the element, when we became able to detect the wolves from the sheep, patriots from the demagogues, then Sequoyah died; but it has the nature of a turtle with it's head severed from it's body. It still wriggles, crawls, grumbles and complains, but many of it's defenders are seeking refuge under the prudent wings of Twine and his kind. Many of our Negro papers fought, criticised and denounced Twine's argument, but when the end came they had to droop their feathers, tuck their heads, bend their knees, raise their hats and recognize Twine as their superior and leader. They said every hard thing about him that language was flexible enough to utter, but
[continued in next issue]
Offers Better Sick, Accident and Death Benefit Policies than any company in the Territory. Reliable agents wanted. Good pay. Call on J H Ellis, Supt., Room 10 Jones Building MUSKOGEE, I. T. Or write C. B. King, Gen'l Man., O. G. Miller, Gen l Supt. J. H. McCohico, Ass t Sec y, 500 Center St., Little Rock, Ark.
Sadler Hardware Co
Has just received a New Stock of
HARNESS
and has a PRACTICAL HARNESS REPAIRER
In their store. Bring your work and have it done both
NEAT AND CHEAP.
218 WEST OKMULGEE AVENUE
DURFEY HARDWARE COMPANY.
INCORPORATED 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.
HARDING MEMORIAL CEMETERY
Best Improved Rural Property in the Indian Territory.
Family lots in this beautiful cemetery, 20 by 20 feet, at Ten (10) Dollars each, for the next thirty days. Warrantee deeds.
See or write either the Creek or Home Undertaking Co.
THE
CREEK : GROCERY
On Okmulgee Avenue
IS THE PLACE to buy your groceries. They can duplicate any price of their competitors and they also give you the very best goods. They carry everything in the grocery line. And can be found—
In The Estes Building on Okmulgee Avenue
Near the M. K. and T. R. R.
AS LONG AS THEY LAST
We will positively sell at cost. All of our Musical Instruments, Solid Gold Rings, Watches, and Jewelry. Don't Wait. Come now.
BEN ESTES. Cor Main & Okmug ee.
Pioneer Abstract Co. IOWA BUILDING
This Company makes absolutely correct abstracts of title. Go there for correct information.
Next to Bank of Muskogee, Muskogee, I. T.
BIG EAST SIDE LUMBER YARD. GEO. D. HOPE LUMBER COMPANY DEALER IN Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Sash, Doors, Lime. Cement, Etc. EAST OKMULGEE AVE.
---
“RG 4s
Muskogee Cimeter.
‘W. B. TWINE, Kaditor.
MUSKOGEE, - - IND. TER.
—
NEW STATE NEWS
The commercial club of Comanche
has signed 9 contract for another gin.
This makes four gins for this hustling
Indian Territory town.
Dora Fitzgerald, colored, was found
dead in a well in the east part of Ard-
more last week. It is not known
whether she accidentally fell into the
well or whether she committed sut-
cide.
F. H. White, doing a general mer-
chandise business at Duke, in Greer
county, made a voluntary assignment
in favor of his creditors. Mr. White
states his assets are sufficient to cover
all Mabilities,
Burglars entered the store of Jones
& New at Dougherty last week and se-
cured between six and seven hundred
dollara in money. Two suspicious
characters had been hanging around
the place for a few days and they are
believed to be the thieves.
The Choctaw council has adjourned
until January 29th. Just before ad-
journment a bill was passed provid-
ing for a commission of three to wind
up the affairs of the nation.
A babe, of less than two years, of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Taylor of Mangum
was burned to death while the parents
were away from home. Their four-
year-old son got hold of a box of
matches from which the clothes of the
Nttle one were ignited.
The Muskogee Vitrified Brick com-
pany has decided to close down for
three months because as the manage-
ment says, “the home people will not
support a home institution.” The
company has been employing fifty men
and as, while in operation, a pay-
roll of $900 a week.
The laundrymen of Kansas, Oklaho-
ma and Indian Territory will hold
their annual meeting in Oklahoma City
January 8th and 9th.
An estimate of the population of
Muskogee, as given by a man who
has charge of the work of compiling
a directory, is 22,000.
The Rock Island has placed the town
of Cherokee, Woods county, on its
map, and has also given it a space in
its time card. Heretofore this road
has not recognized the town, but here-
after wil give it as good service as
‘most of its stations.
Oklahoma City has an ordinance re-
quiring each automobile to Nave a num-
ber displayed in a conspicuous place
and a driver {s not allowed to exceed
a certain speed Iimit. The number of
acidents that have occurred recently
caused the council to take steps to
prevent them in the future.
An interurban line connecting Okla-
‘thoma City and Tecumseh is being
talked of. Dennis Flynn, ex-delegate
to congress from Oklahoma, is one of
the most interested parties in consid-
ering the road,
The postoffice at Lone Wolf, in
Kiowa county, together with a jewelry
store, occupying the same building,
was robbed by unknown parties, From
the post office $20 cash, $50 in stamps
‘and a big bunch of registered letters,
tke value of which is not known, were
taken, and from the jewelry store a
number of watches and razors were
atolen.
To Preserve Indian Music.
| Washington,— The neccessity for
preserving Indian music, the establish-
ment of an Indian reform school and
the erection of a sanitarium for tuber-
cular Indians are new features of the
annual report of the commissioner of
Indian affairs, Francis E. Leupp. The
commissioner says that in pursuance of
the general idea of saving instead of
crushing what is generally character-
istic in the Indian, steps have been
taken by him for the preservation thru
the schools of what is best in Indian
music,
“The children should be instructed
in the music of their own race side by
side with ours,” he states. With this
| end in view he has made an experi-
mental start by the appointment of a
supervisor of native music,
Commissioner Leupp believes that
the best way to handle Indian pupils
whom the teachers find unmanageable
is to put them in a reform school for
Indians only. He also believes that
much good can be done in checking
the spread of tuberculosis among Indi-
aus which exists to an alarming extent
by the erection, somewhere in the South-
west, of an [ndian sanitarium, ‘This
sanitarium, the commissioner suggests,
should be in itself a school for children
infected with the disease. This would
obviate their being sent home to serve
as centers of infection.
The destruction of prehistoric ruins
by relic hunters and others is particul-
ary referred to, and the commissioner
quotes from a former letter of instruct-
ions to Indian agents warning them
them that unless protective legislation
shall be secured everything practicable
must be done to prevent these depredat-
ions,
$10,000 In Improvements.
Duncan, I, T.—The citizens had a
mass meeting this week and organized
a ten thousand dollar club to make
Duncan ten thousand people here inside
of five years, Committees were ap-
pointed to get manufacturers here and
they have made a good start—they
have a brick plant on the string. a
broom factory and one railroad and
one more in view. We are on a direct
line for the railroad that comes from
Oklahoma City to Wichita Falls and
will have one of the railroads inside of
six months.
Railroad Mortgage Filed.
Lawton O. T.---At Chickasaw a $10-
000,000 mortgage in pamplet form,cov-
ering thirty-four pages, was filed by
the Oklahoma Central railway company
given to the Western Trust and Sav-
ings bank, of Chicago- Of the total
amount, $2,640, 0C0 will be used to build
a railroad from Chickasaw to Lehigh,
$7,360,000 to buy rolling stock and ter-
minal facilities.
Good Places Open.
Muskogee, I, T.—Since the appoint-
ment of Judge Lawrence to succeed
Judge Raymond, considerable interest
has been manifested over the clerkship.
‘The chief clerk will be W. P. Harrison,
whose appointment has already been
scheduled and whose salary is fixed at
$4,000.00 a year,
The judge of the western district has
many appointees besides a clerk of the
court at a salary of $4,000 a year, and
an assistant af $2,500, and half a dozen
assistants at smaller salaries, half a
dozen United States commissioners and
a deputy clerk to each of the recording
towns, and in addition to all these there
are court criers, bailiffs and other
attendants. It remains to be seen
whether the new appointees will make
a clean sweep of the Raymond appoint:
ees, or will retain many of the old men
in office. %
CHARGES AGAINST
FIRM WERE VOID.
Firm of Mansfield, McMurray &
Cornish Are Completely
Exonerated,
| Washington;—A statement given out
by the department of justice today re-
cites that last Summer members of
the law firm of Mansfield MeMurray
& Cornish Governor Johnson and ex-
Governor Mosley, of the Chickasaw
tribe of Indians, were incicted for con-
spiracy to embezzle funds of the tribe.
An investigation was demaeded by the
accused the statement says, this shows
that they were entlrely innocent.
“‘A first examination, ‘‘ says the state-
ment, ‘‘was made by Assistant Attor-
ney General Russell, who was fully
convinced of the innocence of all ac-
cused, it was examined into by the at-
torney general at the request of the
president, and he also was fully con-
vinced,’’
At the time the gentlemen were in-
diced there were several sensational
events connected with the affair, not in
the least was the circular sent out from
Washington two days before the indict-
ments were returned, saying they had
been indicted for being connected with
the fraudulent Chickasaw school war-
rant deal.
Since the indictments were retnrned
Inspector Jenkins, of the Interior De-
partment has made a thorough investi-
gation of their buslhess transactions in
both nations, during which he went
over all the records, and his report,
judging from the action taken. failed
to show a shadow of guilt.
Mansfield, McMurray & Cornish rep-
resent both the Choctaw and Chicka-
saw nations as national attorneys and
and were last winter awarded a fee of
$650,000 by the citizenship court for
professional services, which sum they
collected over the protest of high gov-
ernment officials, Thecitizenshipcourt
records show that they saved the two
million dollars from illegal claimants,
and it was for this that the big fee was
patd them, it being based on a percent
equal to about 4 1-2 percent, The ac-
tion of the department clears them of
any suspicion of wrong doing.
Temperance Crank Shoots Saloon Man.
Shawnee, O. T.---F. M Grundy, a
well known advocate of temperance,
today shot ane killed Ed Tomilson at
Keokuk Falls, as a result of an enmity
which has existed for months. Grundy
fled to a barn where he is now beseiged
and successfully resists arrest. The
sheriff and deputies from here have sur-
rounded the barn, but Grundy is be-
lieved to be armed and the officers can
not take him by force without endang-
ering their lives. Tomilnson was a dis-
tiller and Grundy has been leading a
crusade against the liquor traffic.
Smallpox in the Indian Territory.
Muskogee, I. T.---Smallpox has made
its appearance in the Indian Terrritory
a case having been reported from Taft,
& small town eleven miles west of here.
A case also came co the attention of
the authorities in Muskogee a few days
ago. The people of Taft appealed to
the United States marshall to establish
& quarantine in that town but the mar-
shall informed them that there is no
law in the Territory authorizing him to
do this, He then referved the case to
Dr. Rogers, a member of the Muskogee
board of health. Dr. Rogers was unable
to take any action,
A Valuable Agent. '
The glycerine pmployed in Dr, Pierce’s
ae greatly enhances the medi-
cinal Prone which it extracts and
holds {n solution much better than alco-
hol would. It also possesses medicinal
fore of its own, being a valuable
lemulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and anti-
ferment. It adds greatly to the Sftescy
of the Black Cherrybark, Golden Seal
root, Stone root and Queen’s root, con-
tained in "Golden Medica] Discovery” in
poe chronic, or lingering coughs,
bronchial, throat and lung affections,
for all of which these ae are recom-
mended by standard medical authorities.
In all cases where there is a Maen |
oan of flesh, loss of evga wit
weak stomach, as in the early stages of
consumption, there can be no doubt that
glycerine acts as a valuable nutritive and
alds the Golden Seal root, Stone foot,
Queen’s root and Black Cherry bark in
Rromoting digestion and building up the
lesh and strength, controlling the cough
and bringing about a healthy condition
of the whole bean Of course, it must
not be expected to work miracles. It will
not cure consumption except in {ts earlier
stages. It will cure very severe, obstin-
ate, chronic coughs, bronchial and laryn-
geal troubles, and chronic sore or
with hoarseness. In acute Soutna it is
not soeffective. It is in the lingering
coughs, or those of long standing, even
when accompanied by bleeding from
lungs, that it has performed its most
marvelous cures. Send for and read the
little book of extracts, treating of the
pode and uses of the several med-
icinal roots that enter into Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery and learn a
this medicine has such a wide range o!
application in the cure of diseases, It Is
sent ree Address Dr. R. V. Pierce,
Buffalo, N. Y. The “Discovery” con-
tains no alcohol or harnful, habit-form-
ing drug. Ingredients ail peineed on each
bottle wrapper in plain English.
Sick people, especially those suffering
from diseases of long standing, are invited
to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, ow All
correspondence is heid as pees private
and sacredly confidential. Address Dr.
R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
‘Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser is sent free
on receipt of stamps to pay expense of
mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stam
for paper-covered, or 31 stamps for clothe
bound copy.
©
Originator of the Tin Foil Smoker Pack
age. The man who has made Lewis
Single Binder Straight Sc Cigar famow
among smokers throughout the West
rar In Western
Np iy NN | Canada is the
) 3 eR amount many
$1. pA farmers wil
we nA [A realize from
Chia thelr wheat
crop this year.
25 Bushels to the Acre Will be the
Average Yield of Wheat.
‘The land that this was grown on cost many @
the farmers absolutely nothing, while thom
‘who wished to add to the 160 acres the Govern
ment grants, can buy land adjoining at from @
to $10 an acre.
Climate splendid, schoo! convenient, railway
close at hand, taxes low,
Send for pamphlet “20th Century Canada’
and full particulars regarding rate, etc, t
Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa
Canada, or to the following authorized
Canadian Government Agent—J. S. Crawford,
No. 125 W. Ninth Street, Kansas City, Missourt.
(Mention this paper.)
DEFIANCE Cold Water Starch
makes laundry vuck @ pleasure. 16 oz. pkg. 10a
WILL RETAIN INDIAN CHIEFS.
To Remain In Office to Sign Deeds
Washington,—The committee which Secretary Hitchcock named to report on the legislation desired by the Creek tribe of Indians informed the delegation yesterday that it would recommend a detention of the chiefs in office for the purpose of signing and delivering the remaining deeds to allottments. The other tribes have asked for similar legislation. It is also understood that the committee will recommend an act providing that the money obtained from the sale of surplus lands shall be used first to be distributed among the citizens.
The Creeks are opposed to having the restrictions removed from the allotments of any of the full-bloods. D. M. Hodge, of Tulsa, who has been prominent in the councils of the Creeks for more than thirty years, says it would be almost equivalent to robbing the fullbloods of their patrimony to remove the restrictions from their allotmeets. Under existing iaws the allotments will not be alienable wholly for five years, and the homesteads for twenty-one years. During these periods none of these lands will be subject to taxation, and that has been one of the considerations which have induced many to urge a contrary course, for it has been felt that the taxation of these lands would be necessary for a state government, whether the state be made of one or both Territories.
TULSA GIRL DIES IN KANSAS CITY.
Strange Death of Indian Territory
Kansas City,—The correct name of the woman who died at the Blossom house Saturday eveuing under suspicious circumstances was Mary B. Waful her age 30 years and her home at Lathrop, Mo. She was a teacher in a public school at Tulsa, since last fall, going there from Lathrop, where she taught school in that vicinity for a number of years. Dr. A. L. Porter, with offices in the Rialto building, had known her from childhood when they were playmates. On reading the news papers yesterday morning, of the death of "Pet" Waful, Dr. Porter immediately associated the story with Mary B. Waful, who had been nicknamed 'Pet.' He at once ephoned to Dr. M. W. Waful, a brother of of the dead woman and last night the brother arrived. Preparations for the removal of the body to Lathrop for burial were made.
An autopsy of the body revealed a congested condition of the lungs, and a number of physicians present gave as their opinion that death was due directly to asphyxiation, from all appearances due to an indiscreet use of some powerful drug.
Insane Woman Defies the Law.
Girard, Kansas. Mrs Irene Berry, believed to be from Spokane, Wash., who, while a passenger from Washington to Tulsa, became insane and with a pistol drove the passengers from a car on the Frisco "Metoer," which was subsequently sidetracked here, is still in possession of the car. She refuses to surrender saying she will die in the car.
University Student Kiiled.
Norman, O. T.---Clyde Mahan, a student at Oklahoma University, was struck and fatally injured by a train at midnight last night.
Joy is not in things, it is in us.— Charles Wagner, from 'Underneath the Bough."
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullen is Nature's great remedy—Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lung troubles. At drug- gists, 25c., 50c. and $1.00 per bottle.
The happiness of life depends less upon what befalls us than upon the way in which we take it.—Lavatar.
A GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILES. Itching, Blind, Bleeding, Protruding Piles. Drug- gists are authorized to refund money if PAZO OINTMENT falls to cure in 6 to 14 days. 50c.
Happiness grows at our own firesides, and is not to be picked up in strangers' galleries.—Douglas Jarrold.
Do Your Clothes Look Yellow?
Then use Defiance Starch, it will keep them white—16 oz. for 10 cents.
Some people are always grumbling because roses have thorns. I am thankful that thorns have roses.—Alphonse Karr.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure.—J. W. O'BRIEN. 322 Third Ave. N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900.
A lost fortune grows in proportion to the passage of time.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces in
damnation. allays pain. cures wind colic. 25c a bottle.
You can make people believe in you
by pretending to believe in them.
Try One Package.
If "Defiance Starch" does not please you, return it to your dealer. If it does you get one-third more for the same money. It will give you satisfaction, and will not stick to the iron.
Every heart that has beat strong and cheerfully has left a hopeful impulse behind it in the world, and bettered the tradition of mankind.—R. L. Stevenson.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children.
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse in the Children's Home in New York, cure Constipation, Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 30,000 testimonials. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.
Soldier's Narrow Escape
Augustin Poole, a veteran trainer, who fought in the Crimea in 1854-56, was thrown into a burial trench while wounded after the battle of Tchernava, but made a slight movement that was noticed and was pulled out again, died in England the other day. He lived just fifty years after his first funeral.
Saved Him.
"It didn't kill me, but I think it would if it had not been for Hunt's Cure. I was tired, miserable and well nigh used up when I commenced using it for an old and severe case of Eczema. One application relieved and one box cured me.
"I believe Hunt's Cure will cure any form of itching known to mankind."
Clifton Lawrence,
Helena, O. T.
Carl Heinrich Horix, of Eeilbronn, Germany, has a noble ambition. Accompanied by a band of Alpine guides, he has gone to India, bent on playing "Die Wacht am Rhine" on his piccolo on the summit of Mount Everest, the highest peak of the Himalayas.
STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, 88.
LUCAS 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 CURE.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886.
SEAL
A. W. GLEASON.
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Drugglers, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
We are tired of hearing the busy bee and the bustling ant mentioned as shining examples of industry and perseverance. There is nothing that shows such aggressiveness and determination as a mosquito.
LYDIA E. PINKHAM
A BRIEF SKETCH OF HER LIFE
How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of '73" Caused it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores.
THE STORY READS LIKE A ROMANCE
Yours for Health
Lydia E. Pinkham
This remarkable woman, whose malden name was Estes, was born in Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, coming from a good old Quaker family. For many years she taught school, and during her career as a teacher she became known as a woman of an alert and investigating mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all, she was possessed with a wonderfully sympathetic nature. In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham, a builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by prosperity and happiness. They had four children, three sons and a daughter.
In those good old-fashioned days few drugs were used in medicines; people relied upon nature's remedies, roots and herbs, which are to-day recognized as more potent and efficacious in controlling diseases than any combination of drugs.
Mrs. Pinkham from her youth took a deep interest in medicine, in botany—the study of roots and herbs, their characteristics, and power over disease; she believed that as nature so bountifully provides food for the body so she also provides medicine for the ills and weaknesses of the body, in the roots and herbs of the field, and as a wife, mother and sympathetic friend, she often made use of her knowledge of roots and herbs in preparing medicines for her family and friends.
Knowing of so much suffering among her sex, after much study and research, Mrs. Pinkham believed that the diseases of women have a common cause, and she set to work to find a common remedy—not at that time as a source of profit, but simply that she might aid the suffering. How her efforts have been rewarded the women of the world know to-day. In 1873 the financial crisis struck Lynn. Its length and severity was too much for the large real estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of business suffered most from this fearful depression, so when the Centennial year dawned it found their property swept away.
At this point the history of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound commences:
The three sons and daughter, with their mother, combined forces to restore the family fortune. They resolved to give to the world the vegetable compound that Mrs. Pinkham
Is afflicted with Thompson's Eye Water core eyes. use
DEFIANCE STARCH—16 ounces to the package
other starches only 12 ounces—same price and
"DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY.
had so often made from roots and herbs for such of her women neighbors and friends who were sick and ailing. Its success in those cases had been wonderful—its fame had spread, and calls were coming from miles around for this efficacious vegetable compound.
They had no money, and little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling a gross of bottles. Then came the question of selling it, for always before they had given it away free. They hired a job printer to run off some pamphlets setting forth the merits of the medicine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and these pamphlets were distributed by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New York and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties of the medicine were, to a great extent, self-advertising, for whoever used it recommended it to others, and the demand gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts, the family had saved enough money to commence newspaper advertising on a small scale, and from that time the growth and success of the enterprise was assured, until to-day Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound have become household words everywhere, and thousands of pounds of roots and herbs are used annually in making this great remedy for woman's ills.
Although Lydia E. Pinkham passed to her reward some years ago, the perpetuation of her great work was guarded by her foresight.
During her long and eventful experience she was ever methodical in her work and was careful to preserve a record of every case that came to her attention. The case of every sick woman who applied to her for advice—and there were thousands—received careful study, and the details, including symptoms, treatment and results, were recorded for future reference, and to-day these records, together with thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and represent a vast collaboration of information regarding the treatment of woman's ills which, for authenticity and accuracy, can hardly be equaled in any library in the world.
Another act of foresight on the part of Lydia E. Pinkham was to see that some one of her family was trained to carry on her work, and with that end in view, for years before her death, had as her chief assistant her daughter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pinkham. Therefore, under the guidance and careful training of Lydia E. Pinkham, and a vast experience of her own, covering twenty-five years, the present Mrs. Pinkham is exceptionally well equipped to advise sick women, which she is always glad to do free of charge.
The record of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made of simple herbs and roots, is a proud and peerless one. It is a record of constant conquest over the obstinate ills of women, greater than that of any other one medicine of its kind in the world, and will ever stand as a monument to that noble woman whose name its bears.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No 50, 1905
PISO'S CURE FOR
GREETS WHERE ALL LOVE FAILS
Best Cough byrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION
THE CIMETER
- - acne ennnneenseevepsicnma Pome
PUBLISHED EVERY WEEK IN THE INTER-
OT OF THE NEGRO BY CIMETER PUB. CO
ENTERED AT THE POST OFFICE AT MUS-
re 1., AS SECOND CLASS MAIL MAT
W. HH. TWINE - + «+ «+ Editor.
R WOOD, - + + + Ass’t Editor.
J. T. TRIMBLE - + Gen'l Solicitor
E D. NICKENS, Advertising Manager.
a
The banquet that was to be
given by the ‘‘hords of Crea-
tion’ was for some unknown
reason called off | wonder what
meat these ‘Caesars’? feed on,
Help us to put the Cimeter
in every home in’ the Indian
‘Territory by giving us your sub-
scription for the ensuing year;
one dollar.
If you want to keep posted on
Tndian Territory affairs espee-
jally, read the Cimeter. Dont
borrow from your neighbor, just
si in one dollar for a year and
it willcome each week.
Republicans who join in with
democrats to aecomplish the de-
feat of a republican, are not re-
publicans, but democrats in dis-
guise and when they want office
should ask for a nomination
from the democratic party, We
would support a real outspoken
democrat before we would this
brand of republican,
Dir. MSL. lynn, the general
agent for the Cimeter is having
wonderful success © in adding
names toourlist ‘The subserip
tion list is forging ahead at sucli
rapid strides we will soomreach
the 2,000 mark, We intend to
reach évery part of the BOLT.
before March, 1906.
Dennis, Fiyn. is reported as
siying the statehood bill will
hot passvand Sid Clark the Dem-
ecratic Moses of Oklahoma says
ditto aud Bill Cross, the former
democratic candidate for Con-
#ress chimes in acquessence,
Wonder if Byrd) MeGuire has
given all these fellows the dolts.
The boys sccm: to be jealous of
the wondeaful success of the as-
tute and britiant congressman
from Oklahoma,
This paper is republican to the
bickbone and partisan to. the
core, We have no respect: for
the weak-kneed spindleshanked
spineless individual who parades
asa stalwart and is shaken by
every passing breeze, We have
afew of these fellows here who
have deluded themselves into
the belief that they are some
kind of a republican, when in
fact they are nothing but spin-
lossanisfits and parasites on the
on the Republican party. ,
We don’t blame the democrats
for kicking all the h—they can
into the republican camp. — It’s
their business to create all the
dissention possible and when
they can get afew measley re-
publicans to make damphools
of themselves, they sometimes
claim a great victory; and it is
a sort of a victory with the dam-
phoolg. f 4 La
+ The Muskogee bar (not each
meniber) are “amusing cusses”
they have now arrogated to
themselves the authority to tell
Judge Lawrence whom he shall
shall select as court stenograph-
er. Wonder if there is any-
thing lef that these self appoint
de custodians cannot appropri-
ate?
The Phoenix's editorial on
Thursday, December 14th, is an
arraignment of the Republican
leaders and officials throughout
the Indian Territory for appoint:
ing democrats to office. Nota
single big official escaped. This
being true, there is no disposi
tion of the office holders to build
up the party. Can) the rank
and file be blamed with the par-
ty’s defeat? Ls not our position
correct that there should be a
reorganization of the party and
new men at the helm? We
fellows in the trenches demand
a reform in conditions. Will
we get it¢ We think so,
ALL IS WELL THAT ENDS WELL.
Uniler the agreement to ke ep
po.ities: to -keep -polities out of
the school-board, the democrats
have nominated Ry PL DeGraf-
fenried to succeed himself, Ma,
DeGratfenried has made a splen
did vecord as a member of the
board and deserves. re-election;
While he is a democrat, he has
stood for a stsquare deal? for
the colored childven asshas othe
er menibers of the board. The
reputicans’ will name a candi-
date Thursday night, ard the
two men selected will be elected
The republican member niist
come from the Kast side, and
we presume the — republicans
‘on that side will select the man.
GUPEDD Ds bahsititset oe
PNA etic ysl oo
eee ciiece Free.
RAO MIe echo taut"*
Go to ;
CREEK
LIVERY BARN,
Now located at new quarters
No. $19 South trd Streeé:
Phone 70 Gryona,? user”
Official Statement of the Condition of the
@ocm me reia ation’ Ban!
~~. = i
Muskogee. Indian Territory,
RESOURCES | LIABILITIES
Louis and Discounts * $712,008 95 | Capital . ‘ +, $200,000 00
Overdrafts, cotton, 25,089 61) Surplus and Profit 21,572 39
Bonds and Pyuwiums, 206:080 49 | Circulation ie 150,000 00
Furniture ghd Fixtures 7,985 11| Deposits ‘ 759,580 25
Cash and Bethinnge 189,093 cf . ;
$1,141,152 64! ; $1,141, #2 64
‘The abot’ statement isfeorgeor™ D N FINK, Cashier, °“"3,
XTREMELY LOW RATES
<~ MAS ‘HOLIDAYS -
Exeursions North, East, and
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== SOUTHEAST ==
| WDeeember 21, 22,and 23, 1005
| lull Tnformation From Your Nearest Ticket Agent |
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Muskogee Lumber Company
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.. AIRSHBAUM ..
GENTS FURNISHING GOODS. ~.
OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. :
Shirts, Hats, Underwear, Suit Cases
W.E. MicCLURE, |
Knox Agency, English Block. ;
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THE COLONEL'S WIFE BY
COPYRIGHTED 1996 BY STREET & SMITH
Held by the Enemy.
The misty moonbeams, filtered through the latticed branches of the pines, fell upon the figure of a man in blue who followed a well-worn path leading to a mansion situated on debatable ground near Atlanta. Fierce and sanguinary battles had been fought all the way from Chattanooga, and the doom of the Gate City was sealed. Presently Atlanta and its envirous must fall into the hands of the victorious Sherman. Those were troublous times for the Confederacy, and many a heart grew cold with a vague fear while facing the approaching disaster.
Close behind this advancing figure a second might have been seen—a tall, lean fellow who wore the chevrons of a sergeant, though it would be impossible to tell whether his dusty well-worn garments stamped him a member of the blue or gray.
Emerging from the pines the house lay before the leader, bathed in the flood of lunar light.
He came to a stand and gazed upon the scene as though certain emotions long since dead had been aroused to a new life. While he thus stood, the lanky sergeant joined him.
"There it is, Shanks. I was a boy when last I looked on the old home, and it would hardly do to tell how many years ago that was. Great changes have taken place here in that time. No doubt some of my old neighbors would think it rough that Fletcher Ridgeway's son should be with the army of invasion, but they know little of my life, and could never guess the powerful motives that bring me here. Let's advance, sergeant. I believe the house is deserted. Indeed, I am surprised to see it standing, with so many bands of plundering jayhawkers and guerrillas running through the country."
"Just as ye say, sir," replied the other, his manner affectionate rather than obsequious.
"Remember my caution—guard your tongue. To you for the present I am only a fellow-soldier, plain John Emmett."
The sergeant saluted in a formal way.
"Sergeant, you're a Tennesseean, I believe?"
"From near Knoxville, sir. My people lived in the mountains. Some of my kin wear the gray—others the blue."
"How came you to go with the North? I've known you a year, and never asked that before."
"The jayhawkers murdered my father before my eyes. They wore the butternut—that settled the matter with me. I've paid back the debt, I reckon," and the mountaineer ground his teeth at the recollection.
They were now near the house, one of those rambling Southern structures so well adapted to the country, a picturesque building that would have delighted the eye of an artist.
John seemed deeply interested. Memory awoke within him, and a strange thrill passed over his frame.
"Yes, many happy days I spent here at the old home before that wretched affair made me an exile. See, there is the same well—how often have I slaked my thirst from its mossy bucket. And yonder ancient oak served me as a hiding-place from the little black imps who were my boy companions. The impulse to again test the cool water far below the well-remembered curb is irresistible. How do you feel about it, sergeant?"
"Dry, sir, pesky dry. Shall I raise a bucket?"
"If you will. Then we will try to
CHAPTER I.
enter the house. My night mission concerns the interior, and the old hearth of the great sitting room in particular. Please heaven they may be there."
The windlass sent forth many a dreary creak, as if displeased at being compelled to again enter the field of labor; but the bucket of sparkling well-water, better than the nectar of the gods, was soon tilted upon the curb, and after an absence of many years John quenched his thirst at the same fountain that had served him in boyhood.
This pleasant duty finished, he advanced to the building. Whatever recollections were rioting through his mind—and they must have been legion—he did not allow them to appear upon the surface. Evidently this same John was capable of controlling his feelings to a remarkable extent.
Of course the door was fast—he expected that. A window would grant the desired ingress.
There was something repugnant about this mode of entrance, but during the stormy war times men who were soldiers met with so many strange adventures that these feelings
THE MEN IN THE RAIN
Wissel
had to be stifled to a greater or less extent. So John passed from one window to another, trying each in turn. Success did not come immediately, but he was not discouraged. A man's character crops out even in such small things of life, and John possessed pertinacity to a certainty. Finally he discovered a window that offered no resistance to his onslaught, and thus after the long lapse of years he once more entered the house that had been his boyhood's home. Like a man walking in his sleep, he passed from one room to another.
The moonlight found an entrance through the many windows, though they were festooned with cobwebs after the manner of deserted mansions. It served to reveal various objects in the rooms, and John's mind went back through the vista of years as each familiar scene aroused memories of the past.
At length he stood in the room that seemed to be his goal. Here was the wide-throated chimney, the generous hearth with its old-fashioned andirons. In front of a roaring fire how many times in the long ago had he sat with his boy companions, cracking nuts and chattering like a lot of magpies, or listening to grandfather's weird stories of early life in the South. John was an intensely practical
---
"You are a Yankee?" he asked curtly.
man, and quickly swept aside this halo of romance that threatened to overwhelm him.
"Now to see whether the papers have lain there during these years, or been discovered. Come, my dear fellow, brace up and put the matter to a test."
Just as he was bending down to remove one of the stones that formed the hearth, he heard the hoot of an owl from the outside. This was the signal arranged with the sergeant—it meant sudden danger.
John wheeled and stepped to a window, but the dust was too thick on the glass to allow him a chance to see.
The report of a gun sounded on the night air.
This meant business beyond a per-adventure, for in war times the discharge of fire-arms is significant.
Whatever his mission to this home of his boyhood, it must for the present be postponed. He again traversed the rooms, aiming for the open window.
Shouts were heard from the outside, proclaiming the presence of the enemy in force. John's bravery had been tested ere now on many a hard-fought field, and it was with impatience at being interrupted rather than alarm that he scrambled through the small pantry window.
No sooner had he dropped upon the ground than violent hands were laid on him. A muscular man, John set about persuading his assailants that they could not thus act with impunity. Though three to one, they might have met their match in this desperate soldier, but for the coming of rein-
Wiseman
forcements. Under the combined assault John was soon made a prisoner, and panting for breath awaited the next move of his enemies.
To his surprise only two of them seemed to wear any uniform. The others were civilians or blacks, and evidently belonged to some plantation. He looked in vain for signs of the sergeant, and would have believed the other must have made his escape only for the haunting memory of the single shot.
What would they do with him? John gave no sign of alarm, and yet under the peculiar circumstances he knew they might be disposed to treat him as a spy. Exasperated by the march of Sherman and the fate of Atlanta, which hung trembling in the balance, the Georgians were not in a mood for philosophy or mercy. Cruel war brings out the most intense passions of men.
Under these circumstances, therefore, he kept his ears on the alert to catch what was said, when the man wearing a Confederate captain's uniform advanced and looked closely into his face.
"You are a Yankee?" he asked, curtly.
"I am," replied John, boldly, desir-
ous of avoiding the charge of being called a spy.
"Married or single?" was the next astonishing question.
"A bachelor," returned the Federal, proudly.
"Then I reckon you'll do. Men, bring him along, and if he tries to escape, a charge of buckshot must finish him. To Lyndhurst."
As he marched along in their midst, the prisoner found himself wondering what astonishing adventure was about to overwhelm him.
A Grim Alternative.
Not a word was said as they tramped along the road. John's curiosity had been aroused, however, and he wondered whether his confession as to being a bachelor would have any bearing one way or another upon his possible fate as a spy.
The growl of heavy guns could be heard in the distance, telling that Sherman's grip was hourly growing more tenacious, and the time close at hand when the Gate City must surrender to superior force.
These sounds were unpleasant music in the ears of those whose sympathies rested with the distressed Southland, and it promised to be an unfortunate time for any Federal whom the fortune of war might throw into their grasp. Lyndhurst—the name was familiar to John, and he remembered that in the days of his youth the Grangers lived there. Perhaps officers were quartered there, for the squire had always been a most ardent patriot, and no doubt from his vast resources had contributed much to help on the cause of the Confederacy.
Under such circumstances, therefore, it was possible that a drum-head court-martial might be held, and a speedy execution take place. John hardly liked the thought of dying upon the scene of boyhood's pleasures, but the stern lessons of campaign life make light of even such a ghastly possibility.
So he trudged along in the midst of his silent captors. Now and then his thoughts turned in the direction of the sergeant, but on each occasion the remembrance of that shot caused him to shrug his shoulders and mentally decide that poor Shanks had already gone upon the road that awaited him.
They passed through a gate and entered upon well-kept grounds. Lyndhurst was considered the finest estate near Atlanta. Its peculiar position had thus far saved the historic old mansion with its delightful grounds from the bombarding guns of the enemy, but once the city fell into the hands of the conquering Federals, Lyndhurst would feel the blighting influence, and, possibly, be left in ruins.
Lights gleamed through the trees, showing that the mansion was far from being deserted. Straight up to the door they led the prisoner, and presently John found himself locked in a room. Voices in earnest conversation could be heard near by. Finally the door opened and some one entered. It was a man of about fifty whom John faced, a man with a most determined countenance. In spite of the passage of years he recognized the other as his father's neighbor and friend, Squire Granger.
(To be Continued.)
"Yes, lady," said the man at the back door, "I am one of the leaders in a great reform movement."
"Ah! I am glad to hear you say so. What is the nature of the reform which you are endeavoring to bring about?"
'We want to put an end to de iniquitous practice dey have in saloons or limitin' de privileges of de free lunch to dem wot buys drinks.'
A Difference.
"Who is young Mrs. Oldboy in mourning for?" "I don't know but she is in black for her husband."
Act Drawn By Buford Now Before Congress---Has Moody's
Approval.
Washington,—Delegate McGuire introduced a bill to provide a method of selecting jurymen in oklahoma. Oklahoma has a law for that purpose now but it seems to be so intricate as to make it practically impossible to satisy the requirments. The attorney general in his annual report, called the attention of congress to this matter and the blll which Mr McGuire introduced and which was drawn by Chief Justice Burford has the approval of the department of justice.
Explained briefly, the bill creates a board of jury commissioners in every composed of the clerk of the district court, or his resident deputy in the county, and as the bill expresses it, "two discreet, honorable and reputable persons of opposite politics, having the qualificatiogs of jurors, as described by the laws of said Territory and not interested in any case civil or criminal, pending in the district court of the county for which he is appointed
Carnegie Library For Muskogee.
Muskogee, I, T.—Muskogee has received a library proposition from Andrew Carnagie and it will be accepted. Mr. Carnagie offers to give Muskogee all the money it wants for a library building, provided the city sets aside a permanent fund of 10 percent of the amount he gives to be paid annually for the support of the institution The conference committees have decided they will accept the proposition on a $15,000 basis. Toe city will set aside $1,5000 annually for the support of the library.
Tulsa To Have New Union Station.
Tulsa, I. T.—A Franchise was granted by the city council last night to the Manufacturers Belt Line company to operate a standard guage single track railroad over north First street, running east and west through the entire city, for belt transportation facilities. A union station will be erected in the center of the city and the belt line will be used jointly by the Santa Fe, the Midland Valley in the event it is not absorbed by he former, and the Kansas City, Tulsa and Southwestern.
Daughtery Bank IS Robbed.
Ada, I. T.—The latest addition to the calender of crimes in this part of the country, is a bank robbery at Daughtery, en'the santa Fe, about ten miles south of Sulphur. The bank at that place was wrecked and about $750 were stolen, so it is reported. The intelligence was first received at the United States marshal's office which was requested to send thither the bloodhounds at once. Trainer Smith left with the dogs on the Frisco to Mill Creek; thence he will travel overland to thesceene of the crime.
Fattally Hurt on Railroad Crossing.
Shawnee, O T.-W. H. Walker residing ten miles north of Shawnee, was fatally hurt by being struck by a Rock Island passenger hrain. He was crossing the road at Broadway, watching an engine on a switch track when the passenger train ran into him, demolishing the wogon and injuring him about the head and legs
Ever the Same
King Solomon walked a thousand times
Forth of his garden-close;
And saw there spring no goodlier thing.
Be sure, than the same little rose.
Under the sun was nothing new,
Or now, I will suppose.
But what new thing could you find to
sing
More rare than the same little rose?
Nothing is new; save I, save you.
And every new heart that grows.
On the same Earth met, that nurtures
yet
Breath of the same little rose.
—Josephine Preston Peabody, "The singing Leaves."
HER TW
HER TWIN SOUL BY D.C. CLYBOURNE
(Copyright, 1905, by Daily Story Pub. Co.)
"Oh, Peter, isn't it just grand?" cried the girl with sparkling eyes.
"I reckon so, but I don't seem to understand what it's all about," replied the young man dismally.
"You will some time, Peter, when your soul is sufficiently clarified," responded the girl, "and your spirit escapes the fetters of your carnal mind which now holds it. Some day some other soul will signal yours and you will know you have found your true affinity."
"I've found it now," replied Peter doggedly. "It's you, Jennie, that is my affinity, and I know it, and I want to marry you, and you half promised a while back—"
"Hush, hush, Peter," interrupted the girl. "That was all boy and girl talk and before I learned of the great spirit world and of the psychic communion of souls. I like you very well as a friend, but the fates have me in their hands and I know not whither they are taking me."
"Well, I'm getting eighty a month now," rejoined Peter, "and after next month I will get a hundred. You ain't takin' no great chances on that."
"Oh, Peter, Peter, you cannot understand," rejoined the girl. "Your mind runs only to material things. I am waiting to find my twin soul."
"Where d'ye expect to find it?" asked Peter desperately.
"Out yonder, in the great universal ether," replied the girl, closing her eyes and clutching wildly at the air. "Sometimes when conditions are favor-
Zanco
"Out yonder, in the great universal ether."
able I seem almost able to recognize the presence of my soul-mate, but I have not progressed far enough to expect perfection as yet."
"Well, all I know is that I love you more'n any old twin soul floatin' about in the air and I kin prove it if you can show me the soul," and Peter bit his brown mustache savagely.
"Peter," said the girl severely. "If
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মূল্য
you talk like that I must refuse to converse with you."
Whereupon Peter of course succumbed and the result was that he went along with Jennie to a meeting of the Soul Culture Society to hear a lecture by a brown-skinned apostle from India or some other far away land of which Peter had but a vague idea. During the meeting many experiences were given by the elect, all of which befuddled poor Peter as much as they exalted the lady of his heart's desire. That is, all excepting the testimony of one ethereal damsel who related a most wonderful story of her pursuit after her affinity wherein she told of many trials and struggles, all in vain until she had hit upon the modern theory of advertising. Then it was that she accomplished her great purpose. By the insertion of a little adlet in a newspaper in which she set forth her longing she had achieved her great purpose, for verily the adlet brought forth an answer and the answer led to the union of her own soul with that of her twin and now she was about to be united in body as well as in spirit to her affinity. To which statement the assembled company responded with enthusiastic applause.
Then it was that Peter sat up and began to take notice of things in general and the vernacular of the cult in particular. Peter Martin was not a very imaginative person, nor was he what might be called resourceful, but he had a grand capacity for following the path once it was blazed for him and he had a persistence which already had won for him praise and advancement in business. Now he seemed to see the way blazed clear and plain for him and he struck cut into the path with confidence and joy. In the next issue of The Universe—which he knew to be the paper taken at Matilda's home—there appeared the following advertisement:
"PERSONAL—A young man with spiritual longings is groping for his soul's mate. He knows she is near and has responded to him in the spirit. If this should reach the eye of the possessor of the responsive soul let her use her utmost spiritual powers at fourteen minutes past 12 to-morrow (Tuesday) night, and if she feels the divine thrill answer in these columns, addressing Leonidas."
Tuesday evening Peter called on Jennie, but found her so preoccupied and feverishly excited that he departed early. He did not complain, however, as usual, of her pet fad. On the contrary, he said, solemnly, upon leaving:
"I don't know when I will see you again, Jennie, and I want to thank you for arousing my spiritual powers."
"Are you going away?" she asked.
"What do you mean?"
"No, I am not going away," he replied. "But at last my true self has awakened. under your instruction, and I have had a wonderful experience."
"Oh, I am so glad." she exclaimed
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"But why should that prevent your coming to see me."
"I have had a communication with my soul's mate," he replied, "and I am impelled to follow it, where'er it leads."
Jennie did not seem so enthusiastic as might have been expected, but wished him well in his quest.
"I think I, too, have found my twin soul," she said. "I will know for sure to-night."
She glanced involuntarily at the table, and Peter's eyes, following hers rested upon the Universe of the previous day, opened to the very page containing the advertisement before referred to.
And Peter, I set it down in sadness and shame, departed chuckling audibly.
Sure enough on the following day an answer to the advertisement appeared in the paper, signed Muriel, and admitting that her soul had felt the divine thrill at exactly 12:14 on the previous night. Then followed a campaign of correspondence through the advertising columns of The Universe, which sadly depleted the purses of two young persons and strained Peter's last resources in the matter of psychic phraseology.
At last Muriel asked to meet her soul mate in the flesh, and an appointment was duly made in a secluded
C. M.
"Peter!" gasped Jennie aghast. nook in the park in the early hours of a certain evening, a proper code of signals being arranged. Then it was that Peter trembled in body and spirit and verily did his knees quake beneath him. At the appointed time two shadowy figures approached the nook from opposite directions. The girl wore a long cloak and a heavy veil. The man was enveloped in a great coat, the collar of which was turned up about his face. The signals were duly given and responded to, and at the appointed signal both, as agreed, simultaneously uncovered his face.
"Peter!" gasped Jennie, aghast.
"Jennie!" exclaimed Peter in tones of surprise.
Then Peter, whose program had been most carefully thought out, clasped Jennie in his arms and shouted:
"Why, it's all right, after all. I couldn't see how I could have a soul mate when I loved Jennie so dearly. Now, see, you are my soul mate, and it's all right."
"Yes, but you are not Leonidas," expostulated Jennie.
"Yes, I am, in the spirit world," replied Peter soberly.
"And how did you know my name was Muriel?" asked Jennie.
"I didn't until I saw you, just now," replied Peter unblushingly.
And Jennie yielded, not altogether unwillingly.
But an occasional suspicion would cross her mind and she never could understand why Peter lost his interest in soul culture so early in the honeymoon.
Muskogee Cimeter.
W. H. TWINE, Editor.
Thursday December, 14, 1905.
Convention of Pipe Smokers.
At a convention of pipe smokers, held in Brussels the other day, the president, M. Kos, informed his hearers that it took him three hours and seven minutes to get through one pipe. A pipe, he said, would outlast three hours if filled in a particular way—loose at the bottom, firmly in the middle, and again loosely at the top. "Further," said he, "you must give up your whole mind to the process. Patience and determination make the true smoker."
Chinese Silverware.
One of the oddities of our nomenclature is that the combination of metals known as German silver contains no silver in its composition and is of Chinese and not of German origin. It was first introduced into Europe by the Germans, and for some time it was not generally known that they had simply borrowed it from the Chinese.
Paris Picture Case.
One of the courts in Paris is occupied with a case against a picture dealer who sold what he asserted was a genuine Raphael for $16,000. The buyer paid $2,000 down, then discovered that the dealer had bought the picture for twenty francs. He wants his $2,000 back. But three experts have pronounced the painting genuine.
Source of Supreme Court Law.
The Hon. Henry W. Paine, lecturer at the Boston University law school, was once in the law library, and as he glanced down the shelves he noticed several blocks of wood shaped like law books, which had been put in to fill out the shelves. "Ah," said Mr. Paine, "now I see where the supreme court gets its law."
Grizzly Losing Aggressiveness.
It is said in California that even the grizzly is changing his character; that he has lost his aggressiveness, and will seek cover on the approach of man, whereas formerly he would voluntarily give battle, and at times had been known to charge a company of men when her had not been even provoked to battle.
Actors Copy Irving.
Sir Henry Irving furnished the model for the typical actor of the comic papers. No actor was ever so much imitated by other actors and in their attempt to look like Irving there was developed such exaggeration of his manner and appearance that irresistibly called for caricature as a type.
Strength of Cheerfulness.
Carlyle says: "Wondrous is the strength of cheerfulness, altogether past calculation its power of endurance. Efforts to be permanently useful must be uniformly joyous—a spirit all sunshine, graceful from very gladness, beautiful because bright." Who could resist such a nature?
Education and Humility.
In the outdoor, as in the indoor world, one of the first things that can be said for education is that it teaches humility. There's nothing like an increasing acquaintance with the things that you can't do right off for reducing a swelled head.—C. B. Fry.
Reading Through Salt.
In San Domingo there is a remarkable salt mountain, a mass of crystalline salt almost four miles long, said to contain nearly 90,000,000 tons, and to be so clear that medium-sized print can be read with ease through a block foot thick.
AND MADE HERSELF UNPLEASANT GENERALLY.
Result, Red-Eyed and Red-Nosed Bride and Very Angry Husband— Moral in This Story for Those Who Have a Disagreeable Habit.
The bride had been entertaining a caller in her little new home.
After her visitor had gone she locked the door and wept.
And red-eyed and red-nosed her husband found her.
"Maude was here this afternoon," she announced, as they sat down to dinner.
"Was she? And how did Maudie like our little home?" genially asked the bridegroom.
"She said it was real nice," said the bride, faintly.
"And acted like she thought it was a chickencoop, eh?" answered the bridegroom, showing a deep acquaintance with Maudie's little peculiarities.
"Well, she didn't care for the parlor paper."
"Didn't she." the bridegroom forbore to say more, but his tone spoke volumes.
"She didn't like the Morris chair much, either. She thought it clashed with everything."
"It don't clash with me," remarked the bridegroom, calmly. "How'd she like the kitchen?"
"She said it was a little matchbox. I believe she remarked that it was fortunate we couldn't afford but a tiny little maid. She said we should be careful not to buy rugs that cried aloud to heaven."
The man across the table made no answer, but mentally vowed to purchase rugs with a brass band effect. "She agreed with you about that picture in the parlor, dear," said the bride, in a mollifying tone. "She said it was too hideous for any place but the storeroom. You know, you said—" "It looks very well there," remarked the bridegroom, with decision, squinting across at the picture on the parlor wall.
"I thought she might admire the back view," went on the bride, plainly, "but she thought it dreadfully sordid. She asked me to pull the curtain down. She said the dining room looked terribly bare, and the bath room gave her the horrors. She was surprised that we had such a tiny hall. She said really we were paying twice as much rent as the place was worth. She said she hoped we could stand the neighborhood. She said why under the heavens did we get green curtains? She said—" And here the bride wept.
"I don't care to hear any more that she said," shouted the bridegroom. "This is our house, and thank the good Lord, Maude isn't going to live in it!" "I don't think Maude meant to be unkind," apologized the bride after a while, when her tears were dry. "It's just her way to pick out the flaws first."
"Well, it's a deucedly disagreeable way," responded the man of the house, returning to the head of the table. 'And you can just tell Maude for me that we live here, and we pay the rent, and we're going to buy the things we like, and do exactly as we choose; and we shan't feel at all offended if she doesn't come around again until she learns better ways."
And this is written that Maudie may take warning, and think up a lot of nice things to say about that little dovecote before she calls there again.—Philadelphia Bulletin.
Rise of Newspaper Man.
Lawrence H. Grahame, of New York City, who has just been appointed Commissioner of the Interior for Porto Rico, was formerly a newspaper man, and last year was the secretary of the government commission for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition.
WOES OF BLOCKADE RUNNER
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LITTLE MAN'S LONG SILENCE
GRIZZLY BEAR A MONUMENT
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THE FATE OF SENNACHERIB
THE FATE OF SENNACHERIB
The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold,
And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold;
And the sheen of their spears was like stars on the sea.
When the blue wave rolls night on deep Galilee.
Like the leaves of the forest when summer is green.
That host with their banners at sunset were seen;
Like the leaves of the forest when autumn hath flown.
That host on the morrow lay withered and strown.
For the Angel of Death spread his wings on the blast,
And breathed in the face of the foe as he passed;
And the eyes of the sleepers waxed deadly and chill,
And their hearts but once heaved, and forever grew still!
And there lay the steed with his nostril all wide.
But through it there rolled not the breath of his pride;
And the foam of his gasping lay white on the turf.
And cold as the spray of the rock-beating surf
And there lay the rider distorted and pale,
With the dew on his brow and the rust on his mail;
And the tents were all silent, the banners alone.
The lances unlifted, the trumpet unblown.
And the widows of Ashur are loud in their wall;
And the idols are broken in the temple of Baal;
And the might of the Gentile, unsmote by the sword.
Hath melted like snow in the glance of of the Lord.
—Lord Byron.
Here is a tale of adventurous blockade running during the Russo-Japanese war: In December of last year the steamer Carlisle, Capt. Jessen, 1,035 tons, belonging to Leith, Scotland, left Vladivostok with arms and ammunition worth over $4,500,000 on board, destined for Port Arthur. Before that port was reached, however, it had surrendered to the Japanese. Capt. Jessen altered his course while he had yet time and stood out to the open sea. All went well until the steamer was 300 miles to the eastward of Yokohama when the Carlisle lost all her propeller blades. The captain rigged up sails on the steamer's stumpy masts, and navigated his vessel 2,000 miles southward, ultimately dropping anchor in San Miguel bay, Caramines, in the Philippines, on Feb. 13.
Japanese in the vicinity had heard of the vessel's arrival and disguised as fishermen set out in four sampans to attack and if possible sink the ship.
A little man of 12 years, already a qualified practician in silence and obedience, whose father owns a large rubber plantation in Central America, and who not long ago secured options on two plantations adjoining his own, went to New Orleans to raise the money to purchase them.
In a short time his wife secured an option on a third plantation, which he very much desired, but which he had not been able to get before leaving for New Orleans. With a wife's caution, she was afraid to trust the option to the mails, so she sewed it carefully in the lining of her small son's jacket, and sent him north by the next steamer.
"Mind, you are not to talk to anybody!" was her parting injunction.
The boy obeyed her so literally that half the passengers thought him dumb. Several persons took a kindly interest in him, and tried to make the voyage pleasanter for him; but he refused to make friends, and except for
A stone carving of a grizzly bear in the attitude of defending her cubs has been carved by Andrew Chester Thompson of Seattle, and will be immediately shipped to Alaska to be placed over the grave of R. Shadesty, one of the most prominent Indians in the north when alive, says the Seattle Times. He died Dec. 17, 1903, leaving $600 to defray the cost of the monument.
The big piece of stone carving, weighing 3,000 pounds, will be shipped from Seattle to Wrangel, and from that point will be carried about 150 miles overland to the home of the Bear family Indians. The Indians themselves will transport the grizzly on its overland journey according to their own primitive methods of transportation. Mr. Thompson has been carving im
With the assistance of the customs officers on board the crew managed to beat off the repeated attack of the Japanese, but not before many shots had been exchanged. An American warship ultimately arrived on the scene and towed the Carlisle round to Manila, where she was interned by the American authorities. At Manila the Carlisle was provided with a new propeller, but watched by the American warships within the port and by a Japanese cruiser which kept continually appearing in the offing. The Carlisle one night disappeared from Manila at the time of the passing of Singapore by Admiral Rojestvensky's fleet.
But again fortune frowned; the Carlisle could not find the Russian fleet, and after many days' fruitless search the captain had again to turn south. At the end of May the vessel steamed innocently into Saigon, where she is at the present moment with her valuable but dangerous cargo on board.
brief thanks, no word could be got out of him.
As soon as the boat docked he found his way to the office of the broker where he knew his father made his headquarters. His father turned pale at the sight of him, and tremblingly asked if anything had happened at home.
"No, father."
The father then asked, somewhat sternly, what had brought him there.
The boy answered by shaking his head. "I can't tell till we are alone," he whispered.
When his father took him into a private office, he shut the door and locked it. Taking off his coat he showed his dazed father where to rip it—and the option was in safe hands. Then he spoke with a sigh of relief. "Mother told me not to talk with anybody," he said, "and I haven't." Of course his father was proud of him, but one hopes that the faithful little chap had a good time after that.—New Orleans Picayune.
ages for Alaska Indians for the last twenty-five years, but this is the largest monument he has shipped to Alaska carved from a single piece of marble. The stone carving provided for Shadesty is the first to be ordered in a defensive attitude. For the Black Bear tribe Mr. Thompson has carved several statues of bears, but they have all been on all fours. The Wolf tribe and others taking their name from wild animals have ordered carvings, but the work done for Shadesty is novel in its conception.
It is customary among the Alaska Indians to leave money to pay for their own tombstone, and Shadesty saved for a lifetime to give himself a suitable piece for his grave. He was wealthy enough, though, to leave his kinsmen considerable money.
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With the greatest of pleasure, the rarest of priviliges, and the most sublime duty that ever pleased my lofty ambition, I will call the attention of my many readers to the man who is now lionizing himself in the west. W. H. Twine, the daring writer who has the courage, the zeal, the manhood and the boldness to write and speak the truth regardless to whom it offends, whose crimes it exposes, whose popularity it discredits or what thief he drags to justice. There are some aristocrats who think their names so great, their fame so high, their popularity so extensive and their influence so broad that it is a crime for any one to mention their faults, their errors, their transgressions or their vanities. But none have sown so high, none have grown so wealthy, none have gained so much authority that this daring young writer has refused to condemn every wrong deed or act of injustice that have been perpretrated by the combined forces of wealth, might and authority. And on the other hand none have fallen so low, become so insigificant, oppressed so hard, or abused so roughly that he refused to defend them when they were standing upon the rock of truth and justice. Wherever you find justice there you find Twine. Unjust criticisms, accusations, denunciations are but spurs to him. As editor of the Cimeter his writings have made every just, upright, pure and honest man his friend and made every rascal, thief, national plunderer and every demogogue his enemy. But he never seeks to make enemies nor friends; he simply seeks the right, the just and the truth and whatever there is in these for him he contents himself. His write ups on the outrageous, brutish and inhuman treatment of the Negro in the south has brought the wails, the
J. S. BROWNLOW, MANAGER.
cries, the denunciations and the threats of all those guilty of these savageous crimes, but the more they fret and threat the harner he has thrown the stones.
He never defends a Negro because he is a Negro, nor condemns a man because he is white; but he is a splendid type of the modern and improved man who knows men by their inward principles and not by the color of the skin. To him a man is a man, a thief is a thief, a robber is a robber, a villian is a villian. Eevery one who comes to him must expect to be weighed in the scales of justice, as he knows no other. Like nature, he never bows, like death, he serves all alike, like life, he crowns every one with fame who deserves the crowning. He knows the truth and is not afraid of it. As a writer he always boldly, daringly, courageously and bravely attacks the wrongs and insults inflicted upon the Negro, not because he is a member of the Negro race but because the Negro is generally ignored, oppressed, downtrodden and unjustly slandered in the south. This sagacious man is broad enough, deep enough, and wise enough to look beneath the skins of men into their souls, their hearts and their principles and know them as they are; not as they are colored. Every Negro in the west, every Negro in the east, north and south ought to be proud of W. H. Twine. As a member of our race and a defender of our cause, he has crowned us with glory and honor. Standing high above his critics, holding himself aloft from his accusers, a beautiful contrast to cowardice, with an unparalleled record of bravery he writes to each and all through the columns of the Cimeter and tells them what they are and what they ought to be. When others are seeking fame he is seeking truth,
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when others are seeking popularity by sacrificing their honesty, he is sacrificing his popularity by maintaining his honesiy. While others are making friends by courting harmony, he, is making enemies condemning the wrong.
So vile, so wicked, so unjust and so degrading are the executions of the laws in the southern states that the executors try to stop the press from giving the public the news. Some they bribe, some they bluff and some they influence; but the bribing, the bluffing and the influencing of W. H. Twine have been in vain. Committees and individuals have waited on him asking on what conditions would he cease to inform the public of their atrocious crimes, he manly, courageously and invariably replies, "On condition that you cease to perpetrate them." They have even attempted to stop the circulation of his papers through the mails, but this proved to be futile, as he is an experienced lawyer and knows how to stay within the bounds of the law. He feels and knows that he owes his services to his people, his country and his God. He knows his country and his race is best served, when served at all, by defending the right and opposing the wrong. He claims to be a member and friend of the Negro race, and if there is nothing else in creation's sphere that make a Negro proud of the lone privilege of calling this courageous and patriotic man our friend is enough to fill our bosom with joy and gratitude. He is a tiger in the throat of tyranny and a lamb in the bosom of peace when accompanied by justice. Politically, he was, is, and forever will be a republican as long as the party waves it,s banner in the perfumed atmosphere of freepom and calls for a square deal, but when it bows if ever it does bow to injustice, to disfranchisement, separate car laws or inferior public accommodations, then it is sure to lose the support, friendship and membership of W. H. Twine. When the Sequoyah statehood
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307 W. Broadway WARNING ORDER.
In the United States Court for Western District Indian Territory at Muskogee.
Earnest Battle. plaintifflff, vs. Lucile Battle, Defendant, No. 6267, Equity. Divorce.
The defendant Lucile Battle is hereby warned to appear in this court within thirty days and answer the complaint of the plaintiff Earnest Battle.
Witnes the Honorable Charles W. Raymond, Judge of said Court and seal thereof at Muskogee, Indian Territory, this the 13th day of November, 1905. R. P. Harrison, clerk. By Chas, F. Runyan A. S. McRea, Att'y for plaintiff A. E. Patterson, Att'y for non resident defendant. (1st publication Nov. 16.)
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