Muskogee Cimeter

Friday, May 3, 1907

Muskogee, Oklahoma

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The Muskogee Cimeter. Muskogee, I. T., Resolved that we unqualified ly condemn the present constitution, and urge Negro citizens throughout Oklahoma and Ind. Territory to oppose the same and to use every honest endeav to secure and bring about its defeat. Resolved further, that we or ganize solidly from township to state and prepare ourselves to Vol 8 Resolutions Adodted By The Negro Protective League. Whereas the Negro Protective League, now in conference assembled for the purpose of defending their manhood rights under the constitution of the United States, and that of the prospective state of Oklahoma, and: Whereas, the constitutional convention of said prospective state, now in session at Guthrie, O. T., has been throughout its deliberation, wholly against the public rights of said Negroes, having shown in its deliberations a narrow and unprecedented determination to so hamper the rights of the whole people as to excite the timidity of capital and to discourage the investments thereof; to prostrate agricultural and commercial business, and: whereas the Negro people of said prospective state are legally in actual ownership of more than three million acres of land, they are determined in all honorable ways, legal and other wise, to protect their Constitutional rights without wavering, to the end that the constitution and laws governing the new state shall be turned down at the ballot box. Whereas, it does not provide a government, republican in form and is in conflict with the Enabling Act, and is contrary to the spirit of Ameaican institutions and the fundamehtal government of the United States, therefore be it go into the coming campaign as American citizens, and that the President and the Executive committee are herby authorized to draft necessary rules and laws. Mr. Phillip Lewis of Inola, Indian Territory, one of the most able and prominent Creek citizens was in our sanctum the other day and he stated that in his community, and in fact, his whole people were a unit against the Haskell constitution and that they will not vote for a single officer who runs under the disfranchising pretense for a constitution. If there ever was a time when the Negroes should get together, it is now. We have one common cause that means everything to us and we can afford to drop our little local differences and join hands in this great battle which is now on. We have been reliably informed that Mr. Tony E. Proctor, a Creek Indian who has held many positions of honor and trust under the Creek government and who is now Postmaster at Trenton, Indian Territory, is unalterably opposed to the Haskell constitution and will vote against it as will all of his people. Mr. Proctor has been Town King of one Wewo kofkee town and a member of the Wagoner Towship Committee. He is a power among his people, which means a hundred votes against the infernal thing called a constitution. The Negoes of Muskogee know nothing about Doug's circular letters nor do they care anything about them. They do know that he published the resolutions that report says is the major part of the much cussed letter. We would not give three whoops in h-1 for the renegade Republican who says I,m for the constitution as it is and will amend it afterwards. We know that the cuss is in favor of disfranchising our people and restoring the ballot afterwards, which is as impossible as suing the Devil, trying the case in hell and hoping for a verdict against the Devil. Such pretended Republicans are fit subjects for the place that has a surplus of brimstone. Lew Betts, the Democratic labor man, wishes to make Negro the issue in this campaign and swears by the eternal gods that he will run for office on that issue. Lew is for Haskell and the Negroes will bury him so deep that neither the blasts from Gabriel's horn nor the quiet still call of his boss' voice will be sufficient to awaken him. Doug is having bad dreams and chronic indigestion over the imaginary Black Hand. We don't wonder at Doug's seeing ghosts when we remember the resolutions for which he stands pater, which appear in this issue and which appeared last fall and many times since. Official Statement of Commercial Muskogee, Inc. RESOURCES Loans and Discounts $712,003 95 Overdrafts, cotton, 25,989 61 Bonds and Preuujums. 206,080 49 Furniture and Fixtures 7,985 11 Cash and Exchange 189,093 48 $1,141,152 64 The above statement correct Creek Creek Is the to get anything Number 304 South 2nd Creek Grocery eo. Martin's Meat Market A First Class Market in the chance. He will Satisfy You the market at Living Prices. PHONE 1204. : : A First Class Market in the down town district. Give him a chance. He will Satisfy You The Finest and Best Meats on the market at Living Prices. Call at 308 South 2nd St. PHONE 1204. : : : FELIX MARTIN, Prop. The majority of the Creek Indians are against the Haskell constitution and will work and vote against it. The same is true of the other Nations. RIGHT. In the last issue of the PLAIN- DEALER the Masons of Kansas are taken to task for not showing the proper respect to the memory of Col, Beck. The Praindeler is right for even away down here in the Indian Territory where Col. Beck was widely known, the members of Trinity Lodge, when they heard the sad news of Col. Beck's death, got up a hurry up call and about twenty of the lodge members under the leadership of Barnett, W. M. and J. T. Trimble as marshalls took charge of the remains at the Home Undertaking Company and conveyed to the waiting train at the M. K. & T. depot. Even great Kansas can learn some things from her younger sister, Oklahoma. Of the Condition of the Nation'l Bank, Indian Territory, LIABILITIES Capital $200,000 00 Surplus and Profit 21,572 38 Circulation 150,000 00 Deposits 759,530 25 $1,141,152 6 D N FINK Cashier, Gooery eo. ing in the Groceries line 1 St. Phone 912 the down town district. Give him The Finest and Best Meats or Call at 308 South 2nd St. FELIX MARTIN, Prop No 31 Muskogee Cimeter. w. f. ‘ewine, Editor, MUSKOGEE, ae Loy IND. TER. TS WEIS OF Man Ge Hires. If the discovery of independent evo- lutions of human music all tending in the same direction indicates the exist ence of an ideal standard toward which progress leads, how much stronger is the evidence afforded by the fact that bird music is developing along the same lines? It seems a far cry from a Beethoven symphony or a Wagnerian opera to the simple lay of 4 sparrow, but as we trace the course of the mighty river of music back to- ward its source, the stream becomes narrower and narrower, until it is con- tracted to a point whera it is no broader than the little rill of bird music, says Henry Oldys in Harper's Magazine, Nor does the decrease stop there; for, remarkable as it may seem, there was a time when the musie from which ours has been evolved was inferior to some of that which floats to our eurs from the woods of spring. This is not to say merely that the songs of certain of the birds involve more intervals and greater variety, but that they are of a higher order judged by our own mod- ern standards. The Automobile and Better Roads. Automobiling has given the good roads movement a great impetus. It has brought into it men from the cities who were never far from a paved street until they began to travel around in their autos. They are now the backbone of the movement. The farmers have learned a lot on the sub- ject and they are joining hands with the men who once had their most cor- dial enmity. They are not only with them on the road question, but they are even recognizing the fact that the automolile is a very useful vehicle. With good roads connecting the mar- kets and the farms there is no reason why automobile transportation for the produce of the land may not soon fol- low, says Pittsburg Leader, Auto- trucks are in use in all large cities for heavy hauling and if farmers have roads with bottoms to them they will soon begin to take advantage of that very efficient means of transportation, A short time ago there was organ ized in Nebraska a society composed of women who pledged themselves not to marry men who were without whis: kers. Now another society composed of Nebraska girls has adopted resolu tions in which the members pledge themselves not to receive Sunday even: ing visils from men who are unshaved. It looks as if the men of Nebraska were going to be caught either coming or going. A woman in a tyrewriting contest ‘n Paris recently won a victory over more than 150 competitors by writ: ing 16,500 words in four hours, A man wrote 17,000 words, but he made so many mistakes that he was ruled out. An American woman has sur passed the Frenchwoman's — record, for in the ordinary course of business she once wrote 10,500 words in two and a half hours, and made three copies as she went along. ' Boston experts are to cure tubercu: losis by vaccination. Soon science may get so far along that a man will have a scar on bis arm for every possible disease to which flesh is either heir or second cousin. “The world is just as you take It,” says the Atlanta Constitution, Mr. Rockefeller, who took a liberal slice of it some time ago, says it is good. Bo let everybody be happy, ~ ee BIG QUESTIONS THE wena OBLIGATION” AND SHOULD BE CONSIDERED An Honest dah at These Will Keep the Trade with the Home Merchant Every Time. Maio—with the mai order cataiogue and its temptations, there are two, and only two, points to be taken into consideration. One of these is moral obligation, and the chances are that that will be dismissed as sentimental nonsense. The other is—Will it pay? and to that the thrifty person will be in- clined to interpret an answer from the prices quoted in black-faced figures in the catalogue, Neither of these questions should be lightly dismissed. Moral obliga- tion is not sentimental nonsense, and black-taced figures sometimes lie. The duty a man owes to his own community and his obligation to trade at home are so often reiterated in the country press that, possibly like some of the preaching, it has a tendency to harden the hearts of the sinners, Nevertheless, the principle is true as gospel. What has your neighboring town given you, Mr. Farmer? A market for your produce, What has made 25 to 50 per cent. of the present value of “your farm? The accessibility of a market. You know what your grand- father did on that same farm? Drove his hogs and hauled his grain 30, 50, maybe 75 miles to the nearest market town, and received prices for them that would make you howl about the trusts. And he hauled back the fam- ily supplies for which he paid what you would consider monopolistic prices. Do you happen to know what the old farm was worth then? Well, it lacked a good deal of being $75 or $100 an acre, Yes, the home town, with its handy market, has advanced the value of your property and made you worth several thousand dollars more than your grandfather was worth. The home town affords schooling for your children, and perhaps social and church privileges which your family would not otherwise enjoy. The rural mail routes and telephone systems, radiating from the home town, as spokes from a hub, bring to your home the greatest conveniences of modern times. What would your farm be worth and how many of these advantages would you be enjoying now, if the eity from which that mail order cata logue came were your nearest market, your most accessible trading point, your only post office and social center, the only place to which you could look to connect you with the outside world? Have you ever noticed that the first thing the settlers of a newly-opened reservation do is to send for a wagon load of mail order catalogues? Well, | haven't. ‘They lay out a town site every six or eight miles, start two or three general stores, build a school house, a church, a blacksmith shop, a grain elevator, petition the depart- ment for a post office, and start a newspaper. They know, from former expérience that, with these things close by, life will be endurable, what- ever hardships may come, They know, also, that without them they must live live’ of isolation and endure an exist- ence that is contrary to all natural human instincts, On the other hand, it goes without saying, that the average country town cannot exist without the support of its tributary territory, Then, if that Ie.) §= CLT 7? s FR ON ie BEINGS ‘ Soe ( e) 2 Wiese h V2 / PAs, a if ° Vu t (\ Ye A ‘ A re \ = \ < 7) By oO WA SSSY¢$-' FF} / Te /, . =A Y <S iP (t VN ai <SBLICIT y& ia 3 Ss oo Y The fire of publicity is the medium the mail-order houses are using to destroy this commugity. It is up to you, Mr. Merchant, to fight the devil with fire. By the aid of the local press you can.hold him over the scorching flames, and put a stop to his devastating competition so far as this com- munity is concerned. Will you not assist in the good fight? town affords the advantages for the rural citizen that have been enumerat- ed, there exists what we may call an interdependence and a moral obliga- tion between the two. Are you, Mr. Thrifty Farmer, living up to that ob- ligation when you do your trading with the mail order house? To this line of argument the farmer may answer that his greatest obliga- tion, his first duty, is to his immediate household, and that among the duties to his family and to the heirs of his estate is that of practicing judicious economy—buying where he can buy the cheapest and to the best advan- tage. And this brings us to the sec- ond point in the argument—the para- mount question in this commercial age—"Will it pay?” By most people an affirmative an- swer to that question is accepted as the call of duty. As a matter of fact, “Will it pay?” is a good test to apply to any project or proposition. There are commercial, as well as_ political, demagogues, and the man who is ap- pealed to on the score of patriotism or profit, duty or dollars, can scarcely do better than to sit down by himself and submit that question—“Will it pay?"—to his own best judgment. Provided always, that he goes to the very bottom of it. What are the relative advantages of buying at the local store and ordering from a catalogue house? Advantages, understand, that figure in the ques- tion, “Will it pay?” Don't get away from that question. It certainly is very comfortable to sit down by your own fireside and select a dress pattern or a sulky plow from a printed des- cription and a picture of the article; much more comfortable, in fact, than hitching up and driving to town on a raw day, A consideration more important, perhaps, is that the printed price in the catalogue seems, in some cases at least, to be lower than the price quoted at the local store. Isn't that conclusive? Let's see. The catalogue describes the goods and quotes a price; maybe it gives a picture of the article also, but you don’t see the goods. The local merchant shows you the goods; you may examine them critically; he may allow you to test them or to call in an expert to advise you. Is it fair to conclude that the catalogue article is the cheaper just because the price is lower? An element that must enter into the comparison of goods and prices is, that in any attempt to fool the cus- tomer, the local merchant is decided- ly at a disadvantage. He must show the goods, not merely describe them. His business depends wholly upon the limited trading area of his town and his ability to inspire confidence within that circle. He cannot afford to make a practice of misrepresenting his goods. The mail order house is not so tied down to the maxim that “Honesty is the best policy.” It has no neighbors, no fellow citizens, no mutual interests with its patrons, Its trade area is wide and always shifting. Naturally these conditions do not demand extra- ordinary vigilance in supplying hon- est-made goods. And where Vigilance is not a needed employe in the busi- ness he is generally taken off the pay roll, which makes a saving in expense, as well as in the cost of the goods. It lower prices are quoted by the cata- logue house, may not this account for it? “Will it pay?” Is it a matter of economy to buy inferior and damaged goods when the same money, or even a little more, will pay for goods of the best quality? Which course does a man’s first duty to his own household dictate? But to get at the bottom of that question, we must consider the far- reaching general effect of mail order trading. If single catalogue houses are to be capitalized at $40,000,000, they must be reckoned with along with Standard Oil, the beef trust and railroad mergers. If they are allowed to suck the blod from our country towns, your grandchildren will find conditions much the same as those of your grandfather's time. Their mar- kets will be 30, 50 or 75 miles away. The towns and villages will be de- serted, and the “hubs” will be too dis- tant to send the radiating spokes of rural mail, telephone lines and other modern conveniences far into the country. CHARLES BRADSHAW Burden We Would All Assume. Rich may be a burden, but few of us are willing to kick at a burden of that kind. —— Ladies Like It Wine of Cardui You Look Prematurely Old Because of those ugly, grizzlv, gray hairs. Use "LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER. Price, $1.00, retail. The men and women nurses in the Paris hospitals have issued a notice demanding better pay and treatment, and indicating that they will strike if their demands are not met. Aches, Pains, Burns, Cuts, Sprains, and all similar afflictions are always instantly relieved; often entirely cured by an application of that unequaled remedy, Hunt's Lightning Oil. Don't suffer. Don't delay. What's the use? The United States cereal crop of 1906 aggregated 5,000,000,000 bushels, valued at $2,000,000,000. Is your appetite on a vacation, your energy absent, and everything else out of "Whack?" If so, you had better take something and take it now. Simmons' Sarsaparilla is the King of Tonics. It will make you eat all you want to pay for. Try it and hear yourself laugh again. A really good complexion doesn't come out in the wash. you will like Cardul, for the Made from purely tains nothing injurious to Acting especially up medicine for women, not Girls and women ne of the ailments peculiar to It acts gently and n tress, builds up weaker catamenia. When Sick you will like Cardui, for the good it does you. Made from purely vegetable ingredients, it contains nothing injurious to young or old. Acting especially upon the womanly organs, it is a medicine for women, not men. Girls and women need it, when suffering from any of the ailments peculiar to their sex. It acts gently and naturally, relieves pain and distress, builds up weakened organs, regulates irregular catamenia. Kite control within certain prescribed limits has been accomplished in France by means of a "deviator," and this makes the kite available for life saving purposes. A severe test was given to the device some time ago at Royan, on the east coast of France, and wonderful things were accomplished. There is more Catartr in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catartr to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Have Catartr Cure, manufactured by F.J. Cheney Co. To Market. It is manufactured for the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Prince Waldemar of Denmark is a capital boxer and is ever ready to put on the gloves. You L Because of the What's the Use? Good for the Blues. Kite Control. Prince Fond of Boxing. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color more goods, per package, than others, and the colors are brighter and faster. A fast young man is seldom able to keep up with his running expenses. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c. Many smokers prefer them to 10c cigars. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, Ill. A pretty girl is as fond of drawing attention as a political officeholder is of drawing a salary. Itching Piles is instantly relieved and promptly cured by Hunt's Cure. Usually a woman of uncertain age remains at a certain age for a long time. It is a pity to be ill! Take Garfield Tea, the laxative exactly suited to the needs of men, women and children; it is made wholly of herbs; it purifies the blood, eradicates disease, overcomes constipation, brings Good Health. Ape no greatness. Be willing to pass for what you are. A good farthing is better than a bad sovereign.—Sterne. dies the good it does you. Vegetable ingredients, it con- young or old. On the womanly organs, it is a men. Used it, when suffering from any to their sex. Naturally, relieves pain and dis- ed organs, regulates irregular ine of Queen Alexandra, after a residence of 45 years in England, has visited the tower of London. She is said to have been "much interested in what she saw." Promptly and permanently—Itching Piles—when Hunt's Cure is used. They do. Most Difficult of Artist's Studies. B. W. Leader, R. A., considers that to an artist clouds are the most difficult of all studies. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, Ill. The deepest sympathy man can show to man is to help him do his duty.—Mulock. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures what colic. 25c a bottle There are lots of people in the so- cial scale who do not weigh much. Look Pre ose ugly, grizzlv, gray haire. Use " They Go. Mrs. Nevada Hensley, of Lorenzo, Tenn., writes: I have been using Wine of Cardui for sixteen (16) months, and have received much relief. I had suffered from womanly weakness and the doctors were unable to help me. Finally I wrote you for advice and took Cardui with the result mentioned. I can heartily indorse Cardui for the good it has done me, and wish you every success in manufacturing and selling such a good medicine for the relief of suffering women." FREE BOOK FOR LADIES Write today for a free copy of valnable 64-page illustrated Book for Women. If you need Medical Advice, describe your symptoms, stating age, and reply will be sent in plain sealed envelope. Address: Ladies Advisory Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. PILES • NO MONEY TILL CURED • SEND FOR FREE ILLUS. TREATISE ON BECTAL BUKASSES. WITH NAMES OF PROPRIETN NET CURED DRS. THORNTON & MINOR • 1030 OAK ST. KANSAS CITY. MO. (BRANCH OF FACE AT 37 LOUIS.) Life, misfortune, abandonment, poverty are the fields of battle which have their heroes—obscure heroes, who are sometimes grander than those who win renown.—Victor Hugo. DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS FOR ALL KIDNEY DISEASES CURES RHEUMATISM BRIGHT'S DISEASE DIABETES BACKACHE discontinued the use of package. The public may rely on of limitations, sold only in buisness WE WANT YOU IN EVERY TOWN, Men and Women, To Start Your Own Paying Business Soliciting Orders For Large Mail Order House. Liberal Commission; Good Income; Household Goods and Novelties. Should You Be a National CO-OPERATIVE Co. Washington, D. C. Like Mrs. Nevada Hensley, of Lore 'I have been using Wine of Cardui for sixteen received much relief. I had suffered from wom doctors were unable to help me. Finally I wrote Cardui with the result mentioned. I can heart good it has done me, and wish you every succe selling such a good medicine for the relief of su Sold everywhere in $1.00 bottles. Try it. FREE BOOK FOR LADIES Write today for a free copy of Book for Women. If you need your symptoms, stating age, and sealed envelope. Address: Chattanooga Medicine Co., SICK HEADACHE CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. CARTERS LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature Brew Good REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. W. N. U., MUSKOGEE, NO. 18, 1907. PILES: NO MONEY TILL CURE DRS. THORNTON & MINOR • 1030 OAK ST. maturely LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER. Price, $1.00 Hooper's Tetter Cure Is sold by all druggists on a positive guarantee to cure Tetter, Eczema, Itch of all kinds, Skin Eruptions, Ring Worm, Dew Poison, Chapped Face and Hands, Pimples, Dandruff and all Scalp Troubles, Corns, Bunions, Sore and Sweaty Feet, Etc. Sold everywhere, two sizes, 50c and $1.00 Bottles. I Mail this ad. to us and we will send you a trial bottle free. HOOPER MEDICINE CO.. Dallas. Texas. THE DAISY FLY KILLER destroys all the flies and affords comfort to every home. It lasts the entire season. Harmless to pets, home, Clean, neat and will not soil or injure anything. Try them once and you will never be without them. If not kept by ideal care, we will not repaid. If afflicted with { Thompson's Eye Water sore eyes, use It Lorenzo, Tenn., writes: sixteen (16) months, and have from womanly weakness and the I wrote you for advice and took in heartily indorse Cardui for the y success in manufacturing and ief of suffering women." Try it. copy of valuable 64-page illustrated you need Medical Advice, describe age, and reply will be sent in plain address: Ladies Advisory Dept., The Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. lui ©107 G107 THE CANADIAN WEST IS THE BEST WEST THE CANADIAN WEST IS THE BEST WEST The testimony of thousands during the past year is that the Canadian West is the best West. Year by year the agriculture returns have increased in value, and still the Canadian Government offers 160 acres FREE to every bona fide settler. FARMS IN WESTERN CANADA Some of the Advantages The phenomenal increase in railway mileage—main lines and branches—has put almost every portion of the country within easy reach of churches, schools, markets, cheap fuel and every modern convenience. The NINETY MILLION BUSHEL WHEAT CROP of this year means $900,000,000 to the farmers of Western Canada, apart from the results of other grazing and cattle. For advice and information address the SUPER-INTENDENT OF IMMIGRATION, Ottawa, Canada, or any authorized Government Agent. J. S. CRAWFORD, No. 125 W. Ninth Street, Kansas City, Missouri. CURED. SEND FOR FREE ILLUS. TREATISE OR RECTAL DISEASES. WITH NAMES OF PROMINENT NEW CURED BO OAK ST. KANSAS CITY, MO. (BRAKK OFICE AT ST. LOUIS.) ly Old $1.00, retail. HE @C1IMEPER, PUBLISHED EVERY WEEK IN THE INTER- EST OF THE NEGRO BY CIMETER SF. “3 ENTEREO AT THE POST orFice ‘A MUS- KOGEE,/. T., AS SECOND CLASS wmeye. MAT TER ' ty WH. TWINE;. «- + Editor, 4 ‘ 4u 1 E D. NICKENS, Advertising Manager. CEES For Governor of the Stateof Ok- Jahoma, : Hon, John D. Benedict, of Muskogee, 1 T. CEREREEEEEE HEE EEE Vote ’er down, is the slogan of the boys in the trenches and the majority of the Republicans is for it. Henry Robbins of South Me Alester, says that the Republi- can party of Indian Territory will vote for the con. This is absolutely wrong, but it shows why the attorney Guess and the barber Washington were for the con at the Negro convention. Robbins and the last named cusses are in the same boat, but they can’t fool the common or- dinary fellows, At this writing it looks as if there will be a Republican state convention, at which it will be decided whether or not the Republicans should put out a state ticket. The rank and file of the Republican party are against a ticket, and will not vote for a single person for any office, The 50,000 Negvo voters of the hew stace will refuse to vote for any officer and will vote against the con, * Tf this be treason then miuke the most of if? Me battle ison and will be a fight to the finish, POLITICAL = PLAT- FORM OF C. B. DOUGLASS Editor of the Muskogee Phoenix, an al- leged Republican paper. CLIPPPED FROM PHOENIX OF SEPTEMBER, 25, 1906, The Resolutions Were Written by C. B. Douglass. We, the members of the Re publican Press Association of the Third Congressional distyict declare as follows: Whereas there is an apparent misunderstanding existing among the voters of the distriet as to the position of the party on the so-called race question, an : TA bcs ue Repriblican pht- ty has DISCHARGED its ‘OB: LIGATIONS'to the NEGRO, itv that it gives him full civil rights, equal, with every other citizen and _ still stands for that poliey. Therefore, be it resolved by this assocjation that the Repub- lican party of the Thivd Gon- gressional district is OPPOSED to NEGRO, DOMINATION in any sense, That it stands for separate schools, SEPARATE, COACH ES, and SEPARATE WATT- ING ROOMS for NEGROES which shall have equal facilities jand comforts of those furnished lother races. | That itis opposed and WILL )USE KVERY MEANS at its [command to PREVENT the jHomination ot Negroes on any lelective ticket, seeking the suf- | frage of othes races. | On this declaration of princi- |ples all classes and all ational ities of citizenship are earnestly | invited toallign thomselves with [the party of progress and pros: | pevity. ; | C. B. Douglass, Muskogee Phoenix. | Now Doug is a member of the Hamilton Club and we presume that his brother members ave in aerigaitby with him and_ his fideas. If such is the case, car any self respecting Colored mar jor any white man who believes (in a ‘square deal? support: this | silk stocking club and its princi | ples? We regret very much tha! ei Good Men have linkec {themselves , to — this corpse | because as a political factor it i not worth a tinker’s d—n by : d——n and half, The recent) vietory for ow _| party in Muskogee was won by the common ordinary fellow: | awhen all of the big ducks it c jeach faction, said it could not b done. The boys in the trenches lDurfey Hardware DON’T FORGET THE Big Sale At DURFEY’S HARDWARE SATURDAY APRIL 27 Also TUES- DAY The 30th Speeial Sales Days Tuesday of each Week. Watch the a Windows MUSKOGEE TITLE & TRUST CO. : “GENERAL BANKING ABSTRACTS of: FAILE;/ INSURANGE,;SURETY BONDS and IREAL ESTATE «it. o' Ferm Loang.a Specialty i Second and Broadwoy. : iy tLe MUSKOGEE, IND. TEB. If our party believes Doug and his traitors were right in their, vegolutions then , We, bow our heads in grief and shame but we dont give up the fight, “We will, stay. inthe church and whip the devil out.” Kither we are right and Doug is wrong or Doug is right and we are wrong. , If weare wrong we will take a back seat and beg tobe forgiven, and if Doug is wrong he should follow a sim: ilar course. Aud we’ will for- give him and his fellow traitors but d——n them, we canaever forget them, This may not be according to christian ethics but it is human nature all the same, $500 REWARD The New State Anti-Lynch- Law Bureau offers and will pay the sum of $500,to any person, or persons, for the apprehen sion and conviction of the leader or leaders of the mob that mur- dered James Williams at Du rant, Indian Ter, W. H. Twine, President, Muskogee, I. 'T. ik. 1. Saddler, Secretary, Guthrie, O. Ty. Address all communidations to E. 1. Saddler, Guthrie, Okla. Ter. General office. q p ' Q — » Compuerety aANO conventacy SERVE WESTERN MISSOURI AND EASTERN KANSAS TO ‘THE PRINCIPAL CITIES | EAST, WEST, ‘NORTH, SOUTH. PULLMAN SLEEPERS, RECLINING CHAIR CARS. TRAINS LIGHTED AND VENTILATED BY ELECTRICITY. The Direct Route to the “WORLD'S FAIR CITY" For detailed information, enll on nearest representative FRISCO SYSTEM, or address L. W. PRICE, Division Passenger Agent, JOPLIN, Mo, Notice, Let me build you a house on smail installments, thereby, saving your rent money, and living in your own house @&i the time. See Rev. J. M. Dade, Miner London, Susie London, Fannie Tucker and Nancy Lynch, as to the way 1 treat my customers. Will loan money for 5, 7 and 10 years on farm lands and city prop- erty, in any amount where it is well secured. Make short loans also, No W. P. FIELDS, 1 English Block. Muskogee, I, T. In the United States Court for the Western District of Indian Territory, Muskogee. No. 7408. In Re Incorporation of the town cf Taft, Indian Territory. Notice is hereby given that on the 8th, day of May 1907, or as soon thereafter as the matter may be heard, the undersigned agent in the above entitled cause, will call up for hearing in the United States Court for the Western District of Indian Territory, at Muskogee, the petition filed herein, asking that the town of Taft, Indian Territory be incorporated as a town under the laws now in force in the Indian Territory and setting forth in substance that the said town of Taft is located in the Western District of the Indian Territory, on the Midland Valley railroad; that there are nearly 400 persons residing permanently within the limits of the said town and that it will be to the best interests of the said residents to allow said petition incorporating the town of Taft. A. Cole, Agent of petitioners. Patterson & Lilley, Attorneys for petitioners. ALABABA Clairvoyant & Palmist HINDUS SEERS I hereby solemnly agree and guaranree to make no charge if I fail to call you by name in full names of your friends, enemies or rivals. I promise to tell you whether your husband, wife or sweetheart is true or false, tell you how to gain the love of the one you most desire, even though miles away. How to succeed in business, speculation lawsuits: how to marry the one of your choice: how to regain youth, health and vitality. Removes all evil influences, cures drink habit, locates treasures, cures all nervous diseases. How can I have good luck? How can I succeed in business? How can I make my home happy? How can I conquer my enemies? How can I marry the one I choose? How can I marry well? How soon can I marry? How can I conquer my rival? How can I make any one love me? How soon will my love propose? How can I get a letter? How can I get a good position? How can I remove bad influences? How can I control any one? How make distant ones think of me? of me? How can I settle my quarrei? How can I hold my husband's love? How can I keep my wife's love? Sheldon never asks questions. FRISCO Low Rates West and Northwest On Sale Daily. California — San Francisco, Los Angeles, Sacramento, San Diego, San Jose, $25. Oregon — Portland and various others, $29.30. Washington—Tacoma, Seattle, Everett, $29.30. Mexico City, Mexico. $24.00. F. A. STILLMAN, Trs. & Pas. Agt. THE JONES HOTEL. Rates: $1.00 per day. Room and board, $4.00 per week. Short orders a specialty. Service the best. R. A. LAMBERT, Prop. 306 South 2nd St., Muskogee, I. T. Diseases of Women and Children a Specialty. DR. R. H. WATERFORD, Estes Building, Rooms 3 and 4. Phone 461; residence phone 462. Muskogee, I. T. R. A. GIVENS Watchmaker and Jeweler I will please you when others fail. Leave your X-ray at home, and call at 228 N. 2nd St. You will find me with an up-to-date line of Jewelry and Holiday goods. Repairing a specialty. AGENTS WANTED We want energetic hustling agents for this paper and will pay iberly for good work. If you want to make money, write at once to—W. H. Twine. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS & C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion from literature and invention in probably practicable Communities and possibly confidential. MANOBOOK on Patents gets free. Oddest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circulation of any scientific journal. Terms, $8 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newadmen. MUNN & Co. 361Broadway. New York Branch Office 65 F St., Washington, D. C. W. T. Escoe, Pres. W. H. Sims, Secretary J. B. McCulloch, Vice Pres. J. E. Johnson, Treasurer-Cashier. PEOPLE'S BANK AND TRUST COMPANY General Banking, Capital Stock, $50,000 We conduct a safe and conservative banking business in all lines of banking, make bond, act administrator of estate, buy and sell lands, rent and collect rentals, and maintain an "Easy Saving" department. We expect your co-operation anc patronage. Muskogee, : : : : Ind. Ter. E. A. Estes For your Drugs, Shool B00ks and STATIONERY. 106 Main Street. 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. BOSS-14 K. 51620 R. A. C 228 North Second St : Kirsh ENTS EURNISHING GOO Shirts, Hats, Und W. E. M A. Giver North Second Street, Muskogee, Opposite Kirshbaum FINISHING GOODS CF ALL D s, Hats, Underwear, Suit E. E. McCLURF R. A. Givens 228 North Second Street, Muskogee, I. T. Opposite Court House : Kirshbaum : GENTS EURNISHING GOODS CF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Shirts, Hats, Underwear, Suit Cases Knox Agency, English Block. SKOGEE : : : : : : T F E F T H Copus, Dentist OKLAHOMA BUILDING 51620 Seventeen Years Experience. Knows the People's wants. High grade line of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, China, Cut Glass and Silver Ware Prices as cheap as any body's else Make me prove it. Givens et, Muskogee, I. T. Opposite Court House baum : S CF ALL DESCRIPTION wear, Suit Cases cCLURE I. See SS = 2 ~_ are SSR oP S&S eee Oa PS» { A, (Se Se mad Bey ZA SE Io Vn ‘ : ise ? e SSE o Ny Q\\ I WER, Fr Xs (4 3/ PERSONAL KNOWL NEN ; q i a“ i knowledge is the winning factor in the EDG . vee Ee/ ae ctor in tI Iminati Q WY hae te st oe of ample character et eae a ; | UY Anatase ell Informed of the World. ae iy highest excellence i jowledge is really essential Va Y 4 st excelence in any field fa eon to the actienement of the Vig 4) GY edgc ot powiatge of Forms, Knowled f i oe AY fox: or ae lige of Functions and Knowl oS “ =n te tod whakome cua aes wera k aeestos of life and health a eee : i 1 i 10ul a6 Fr Rica wh ret ake Catone Sree tM Ne sera wc poe i byt ¢ the most eminent physi ian aad 0% Ga” ty Parts and has Guy, Known Excellence and Kn | ny ‘ nh ) eee eee en ||| ope Rand best of family laxatives, for hich owledge and from actual use that it i ft H/ Wpecs Weegee 7 s ao ¢ of —Syrup of Figs— nined. Yo world: MAS \} wide acceptance as th igs— and has attained t - i | (A eon jt fs CoN arthe Wal Informed of the ry gy va WHEY S30GN pted the more elaborate name: of oon Of Fre ad yi 2 i ON Elixir of Senna— as more fully ee cee s f o - a: pean but doubtless it will or ae Tete | ‘a 44 é F ie i cy name of —Syrup of Bisvand - a . me i Oi ff s 4 eres effects, always_note, whi ee A { ¢ rt a So soa aes » when purchasing the full / | \ eS a EX oe h Company — California Fi: H] | \, YW il Wass rant sey Ww —printed on the front tas a | ' | \ A te wheter you cal for—Syrup of Fass fH \\ NY Neh RN or by the full name—Syry; ‘at i 4 | t oA ICS Rel ira st “1 a pes SSS ee ee ah ) 1 I Se = Ls LE 3 SSS , f eS eS SSS ae Hy 1G RU y p SAN FRAN CA \ W LOUISVILLE, KY. en a es reas LONDON, ENGL, | E.KY. onpdiemétano. NEW YORK,NY. V Se TED om} “Tam an engineer,”’ writes Mr. W. H. McCormick, of Easton, Pa., ‘running a local freight, and some days I have been on the engine for 19 hours. 1 had al- ways been troubled with sore kidneys and a tired, worn-out feeling, but since taking 9 Thedford’s BLACK-DRAUGHT I do not know what a lame back is. I have also been suffering with gastritis (inflammation of the stomach) and Indigestion, with much pain and poor appe- tite, but now my appetite has improved and My stomach has goyn stronger.’’ Sold by dealers, everywhere. Price 25 cents and $1.00. Try it. CC e IN WESTERN CANADA, Delicate In the Old Home; Better Health in the New. Churehbridge, Sask., December Ist, 1906. To the Editor. Dear Sir, I came to this country from the Btate of Wisconsin three years ago, and must say that I am greatly pleased with the outlook in this western coun- try. For my own part I am entirely satisfied with the progress I have made since coming here. I have raised excellent crops of grain of all varie- ties. Last season my wheat averaged 23 bushels of wheat to the acre, oats 60 and barley 40. We had a splendid garden this year, ripening successfully tomatoes, musk- melons, water melons, sweet corn and kindred sorts. The country is well adapted to wheat growing and mixed farming, and to my mind it is the best country un- der the sun for a man with a family and small means, as it is possible for @ man to commence farming opera- tions with much less capital than is required in the older settled countries. The climate is all that could be de- sired, being very healthy and invigor- ating. My wife came out about six months ago, and although inclined to be deli- cate in the old home, she has enjoyed the best of health since coming here. In short, I am more than satisfied with the land of my adoption, and I am also satisfied with the laws of the country. Yours very truly, (Signed) JOHN LANGDON. Write to any Canadian Government Agent for literature and full particu- lars. Puritans No Longer in Control. The changed character of Boston's population could not be more typically illustrated than in the reading of the names of the committees of the Bos- ton common council. As the Patriots’ day committee, for example, President Barrett selects Councilmen Rach- kowsky, Santosuosso and Purcell.— Boston Traveler. BABY IN TERRIBLE STATE. Awful Humor Eating Away Face— Body a Mass of Sores—Cuticura Cures in Two Weeks. “My little daughter broke out all over her body with a humor, and we used everything recommended, but without results. I called in three doc- tors, but she continued to grow worse. Her body was a mass of sores, and her little face was being eaten away. Her ears looked as if they would drop off. Neighbors advised me to get Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and before I had used half of the cake of Soap and box of Ointment the sores had all healed, and my little one's face and body were as clear as a new-born babe's. I would not be without it again if it cost five dollars, instead of seventy-five cents. Mrs. George J. Steese, 701 Coburn St., Akron, O., Aug. 30, 1905.” Nature makes occupation a neces- sity to us; society makes ita duty; habit may mako it a pleasure.—Ca- pelle. ‘What Mac Said Youthful Head of State, The Hon. Richard McBride, premier of British Columbia, whose govern- ment has emerged successfully from a general election, is the youngest prime minister in King Edward's do- minions. He is only 36, and he achieved the premiership four years ago, after having held a subordinate office as minister of mines. The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great {m- portance. Defiance Starch, being free from all injurious chemicals, is the only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics. Its great strength as a stiff- ener makes half the usual quantity of Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that when the goods were new. The reward for a good deed done is in having done it.—Emerson. The archdiocese of Cologne, Ger- many, is the largest in the world, with a Catholic population of more than 2,000,000. For more reasons than one, Garfield Tea is the best choice when a laxative is needed: it is Pure, Pleasant to take, Mild and Potent, Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Law. He who is always hearing and an- Swering the call of life to be thought- ful, and brave and self-sacrificing—he alone can safely hear the other cry of life, tempting him to be happy and enjoy.—Phillips Brooks. Shake Into Your Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease. It cures painful,swollen, smarting, sweat ing feet. Makes new shoes easy, Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores. Don't accept any substitute. SampleFREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Work of Cupid in Germany. The number of marriages in the German empire in 1905 was 485,906. Would Grow Tobacco In Ireland. An effort {s being bade under direc- tion of William Redmond to repeal the law which prohibits the growing of tobacco in Ireland. It is held that soi) and climatic conditions in Ireland ate favorable to the production of & good quality of tobacco, and that its cultivation cam be made profitable. No Need of Scratching. Other afflictions may be more pain- ful, but none more annoying than many forms of itching trouble. The quickest and most reliable remedy for itching diseases of any character is Hunt's Cure. One application relieves—one’ box guaranteed to cure. Good words do more than hard speeches; as the sunbeam without any noise will make the traveler cast off his cloak, which all the blustering wind could not do, but only make him bind it closer to him.—Leighton. _ Pe-ru-na Relieves Spring Catarrh. THE NEW YORK TIMES MISS DORA HAYDEN. "Without hesitation I write to thank you for the great relief I have found in your valuable medicine, Peruna, and will call the attention of all my friends suffering with catarrh to that fact. Besides I cheerfully recommend it to all suffering with catarrh in any form."—Miss Dora Hayden, 819 6th St., S. W., Washington, D. C. A Case of Spring Catarrh. Mrs. N. P. Lawler, 423½ N.Broadway, Pittsburg, Kas., writes: "Last spring I caught a severe cold, which developed into a serious case of catarrh. I felt weak and sick, and could neither eat nor sleep well. "A member of our club who had been cured of catarrh through the use of Peruna advised me to try it, and I did so at once. I expected help, but nothing like the wonderful change for the better I observed almost as soon as I started taking it. In three days I felt much better, and within two weeks I was in fine health. Peruna is a wonderful medicine." WET? You may be able to get along without a TOWER'S FISH BRAND WATERPROOF SUIT OR SLICKER But can you afford to? THESE GARMENTS ARE GUARANTEED WATERPROOF LIGHT-COMFORTABLE-DURABLE LOW IN PRICE SOLD BY ALL RELIABLE DEALERS A.J. TOWER CO. BOSTON, U.S.A. TOWER CANADIAN CO. LIMITED, TORONTO CAN English Ribbon Trade Flourishing. The English ribbon trade is said to be now in a more flourishing condition than it has been in many years, ewing to the huge demands the dressmakers and milliners are making upon the output of the manufacturers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Drew Copious Floods of Tears. A physician in Portland, Ore., estimated that 2,048 teaspoonfuls of tears, or two gallons in all, were shed in one night by the audience that heard Savage's "Madam Butterfly" in that city recently. LIVE STOCK A SWINE STORY. One Farmer's Hogs That Made a Great Profit. The Irish cottager who says that the pig "pays the rint" tells a no more patent truth than is contained in the statements made by Theo. Louis, John Cownie, and other great hog growers, that hog growing is one of the most surely profitable of all The Shelter That Housed 36 Hogs. branches of farming. Many people seem to think, however, that hogs pay well only in the "corn belt." This I know to be a mistake, writes a correspondent of Farming. My farm is not in the corn belt: on the contrary it is in one of the old states, and we never make any great surplus of corn. Nevertheless, I can make hogs pay well even when prices are down to four or five cents. When up to six cents, profits are a 100 per cent. or more. Corn is great feed for hogs; for fattening there is nothing better, but it is not wise to depend on corn, except where it makes big yields every year. I cannot do this and here is my method of making cheap pork, and getting good profits: I have three fields well fenced, adjoining each other. They have from eight to ten acres in each, and in each there is a good supply of running water. My hogs, in the latitude of Washington city, spend ten months of the year in these fields. At this writing there is in No. 1 a crop of late cowpeas on half and clover and orchard grass on the rest; in No. 2 there were oats and Canada field peas which have been eaten off; in No. 3 there are only early cowpeas. The hogs ran in No. 1 in spring and early summer, then in No. 2 till they ate the oats and peas, and now they are in No. 3 and will remain till the peas are gone. Then they will spend a large part of the winter in No. 1 on the late cowpeas. There is no kind of forage better adapted to making pork than these. Last fall I bought among a lot of hogs some half-bred Jersey and "razor-back" sows that had together 36 pigs. I fed the pigs two tons of tankage at a cost of $76, and $20 worth of corn, and let them run in good weather in a potato field that had been dug. They rooted up and ate all the potatoes that had been left. As soon as the clover and grass got up enough in the spring in pasture No. 1, I turned in the pigs. They stayed there till they were six months old and weighed 200 pounds each and the market price was $6.10. This made them average a little more than $12 a head. The money cost of these pigs when sold had been only $4.75 each, showing a gain of $7.90 a head. The Garden. Plant garden seeds as early in the spring as possible, so they will sprout and begin to develop plants before the sun gets too hot for them, in which case they will never collect enough moisture to sprout. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is an honest, tried and true remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value. This medicine made from native roots and herbs contains no narcotics or other harmful drugs and today holds the record for the largest number of actual cures of female diseases of any medicine the world has ever known, and thousands of voluntary testimonials are on file in the laboratory at Lynn. Mass., which testify to its wonderful value. Mrs. C. E. Fink, of Carnegie, Pa., writes:—Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—"I wish every suffering woman would take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and write to you for advice. It has done me a world of good and what it has accomplished for me I know it will do for others." When women are troubled with Irregularities, Displacements, Ulceration, Inflammation, Backache, Nervous Prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Out of her vast volume of experience she probably has the very knowledge that will help your case. "THE MARRYING SQUIRE." Justice Geo. E. Law, of Brazil, Ind., Has Married 1400 Couples. Justice Geo. E. Law, of Brazil, Ind., has fairly earned the title "The Marrying Squire," by which he is known far and wide, having already married some 1400 couples. Ten years ago he was Deputy County Treasurer. "At that time," said Justice Law, "I was suffering from an annoying kidney trouble. My back ached, my rest lar and wide, having already married some 1400 couples. Ten years ago he was Deputy County Treasurer. "At that time," said Justice Law, "I was suffering from an annoying kidney trouble. My back ached, my rest was broken at night, and the passages of the kidney secretions were too frequent and contained sediment. Three boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills cured me in 1897, and for the past nine years I have been free from kidney complaint and backache." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. THE DIFFERENCE IN TASTE. Dogs Prized as Edible in China Are Here Fashion's Pets. "He is the real thing in the way of a chow," said she. "Father bought him for me in Shanghai. Did you know they ate them there?" "I had heard that the Chinese ate dogs, but I thought it was a fake, like the story of their eating rats." "No; it is the truth. They do eat dogs, but only the chow variety. 'Chow,' you know, means 'edible.' Yes, they eat chows. In every butcher shop you see chows' carcasses hung up, the same as we hang up the carcasses of pigs. The flesh is white." "White?" "Yes; like veal. The Chinese raise chows for food and feed them only soft, washy stuff, mashed vegetables and bread and milk. No meat whatever. Hence the white flesh. "Notice Wu's black tongue. Well, chow tongue is a Chinese delicacy. They make soup of it. But it is very expensive, like our turtle soup, and it is only eaten by the rich. "Isn't it strange that a dog so fashionable with us should be only an article of food in China?" As daylight can be seen through very small holes, so little things will illustrate a person's character. Indeed, character consists in little acts well and honorably performed, daily life being the quarry from which we build it up, and round-hew the habits which form it.—Ruskin. I 9 EVEN IF DISCOURAGED TRY DR. WILLIAMS' PINK PILLS FOR YOUR RHEUMATISM. The Pills Have Cured the Disease in Almost Every Form and Even In Advanced Stages. Rheumatism is a painful inflammation of the muscles or of the coverings of the joints and is sometimes accompanied by swelling. The pain is sharp and shooting and does not confine itself to any one part of the body, but after settling in one joint or muscle for a time, leaves it and passes on to another. The most dangerous tendency of the disease is to attack the heart. External applications may give relief from pain for a time but the disease cannot be cured until the blood is purified. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are the best medicine for this purpose as their action is directly on the blood, making it rich, red and healthy. When the blood is pure there can be no rheumatism. Mrs. Ellen A. Russell, of South Goff St., Auburn, Me., says: "I had been sick for fifteen years from impure blood, brought on by overwork. My heart was weak and my hands colorless. I was troubled with indigestion and vomiting spells, which came on every few months. I had no appetite and used to have awful fainting spells, falling down when at my work. I frequently felt numb all over. My head ached continuously for five years. "About two years ago I began to feel rheumatism in my joints, which became so lame I could hardly walk. My joints were swollen and pained me terribly. "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills were recommended to me by a friend, after I had failed to get well from the doctor's treatment. When I began taking the pills, the rheumatism was at its worst. I had taken only a few boxes, when the headaches stopped and not long afterward I felt the pain in my joints becoming less and less, until there was none at all. The stiffness was gone and I have never had any return of the rheumatism." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have cured such diseases as nervous and general debility, indigestion, nervous headache, neuralgia and even partial paralysis and locomotor ataxia. As a tonic for the blood and nerves they are unequalled. A pamphlet on "Diseases of the Blood" and a copy of our diet book will be sent free on request to anyone interested. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all druggists, or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. DEFIANCE STARCH easiest to work with and starches clothes nicest. HEALTH OF WOMEN HEALTH OF WOMEN In this nineteenth century to keep up with the march of progress every power of woman is strained to its utmost, and the tax upon her physical system is far greater than ever. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers few drugs were used in medicines. They relied upon roots and herbs to cure weaknesses and disease, and their knowledge of roots and herbs was far greater than that of women today. It was in this study of roots and herbs that Lydia E. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass, discovered and gave to the women of the world a remedy more potent and efficacious than any combination of drugs. 1% r, This Pretty Addition, which joins Muskogee on the Northwest. is selling rapidly and if you 7. > want one of the CHOICE LOTS, you better hurry! iS x The Shiloh Baptist Church has been removed from the Lreland Rentie place onto Lincoln Park and ¢ ‘ will be weather boarded and painted white, thus giving the people in that vicinity a nice place to hold . c Ineebings. . We have sold 140 lots in this addition during the last two weeks and it will not take you long to ‘ e& to fizave how long 400 lots will last at this rate. : RC ET OT TERN OW r We are selling these lots from : e $25 TO $50 EACH AND YOU CAN | MPTP HEE SES PAY $10 DOWN AND THE BALANCE Cormeoces oesee em Wr veeeeeee rere IN MONTHLY PAYMENTS Pete eee reeeee E : : 1¥ ¥ That will suit You. No’ interest on ; payments. ie os 4 SEA AE) eS aa eT a aa . y Furthermore, “We Will Build a House for you, the way you want it and you con pay for it in the 3 same way : ‘ Why Pay Rent When You @an Buy a Home Phis Way? If you want a nice place to live, where you have no City Taxes, and where ycu can have all ( ‘ kinds of live stock andlivean INDEPENDENT LIFE, Lincoln Park is the place for Y OU. 7 Lincoln Park is situated on the Dave Fulsom Allotment and is platted with the STRETS and | 4 ALLEYS laid off with each block staked and marked, 4 DRIVE OUT AND SEE MUSKOGEE’S PRETTIEST ADDITION gg - > o- ~ 7 Lincoln Park Company B. F. WOOD, President, CARL B. WOOD, Secretary, Room 211 Mlinois Bldg, (Over Graham Sykes & Co.'s store.)