Tulsa Star

Saturday, January 10, 1914

Tulsa, Oklahoma

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Mrs. Lafollette Denounces Race Discrimination National Ass'n for Advancement of Colored People Holds Session In N. Y. A FEARLESS EXPONENT OF RIGHT AND JUSTICE Mrs. Lafollette Discrim National Ass'n for ored People Hold New York, Jan. 6.—Discrimination against the negro was the topic at the annual meeting of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People held here. Oswald G. Vallard, chairman of the board of directors of the organization, presided and was one of the principal speakers. He protested against the recent discharge of colored employees in the federal service at Atlanta, Ga., and quoted the collector there as saying that "there was no place for a colored office holder in the South." He put the organization on record as demand ing that Secretary McAdoo declare himself on this question. Mrs. Bell C. LaFollette, wife of Senator LaFollette, spoke against the segregation of negroes in the federal office at Washington, D. C. Charles E. Russell dwelt on similar problems said to confront the negor race. $200,000 Santa's Gift TO A WidOW Mortgaged Farm Saved By Bringing in of Producing Oil Well OKMULGEE, Okla., Dec. 27.—(Special.)—An eighty acre farm in Okmulgee county with five producing wells and others being drilled was the best Christmas gift that Mrs. Lottie Hammock, a widow and seven little children found in her Christmas stocking. E. W. Kimbley, known to the oil fraternity as "Dry Hole" Kimbley, was the Santa Clause who brought Mrs. Hammock this present which is valued now at $200,000 and is constantly increasing in value. Mrs. Hammock's husband died some time ago leaving her an eighty acre farm heavily mortgaged. The buildings on the farm are of the poorest and the land was not good farming land. The widow struggled with the mortgage for a time but three months ago the little farm was advertised for sale under the mortgage foreclosure. Mr. Kimbley heard of the woman's plight and talked with several other wealthy oil men. They decided to drill a test well on the land in hopes that they might strike oil and lift the family out of poverty. An injunction against the foreclosure sale was secured and the oil men who had interested themselves in the case assumed the mortgage indebtedness and put up the money to drill a test well. The first well resulted in the discovery of the now famous Booch sand pool northeast of Morris and made a fortune not only for the widow but for many other people who have oil interests in that district. There are now five producing wells on the little farm and others are being drilled. The mortgage on the farm was paid weeks ago and when the deeds were made and given Mrs. Hammock Christmas eve she was also given a bank book with the nice little fortune of $200,000 to her credit. Mr. Kimbley is one of the oil men of Oklahoma who has known what it meant to rise to riches after a long siege of hard luck. He drilled well af- SUCCESSOR TO THE MUSKOGEE STAR TULSA, OKLAHOMA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 1914 ter well, took lease after lease and for years failed to get a producing well. His friends in the oil fraternity finally dubbed him "Dry Hole" Kimbley and considered him a hoodoo. But "Dry Hole" Kimbley set his teeth and fought fate. And some time ago he brought in a test well that was one of the largest in the Morris field. From that time on his luck changed and he began piling up money in a phenomenal manner. He is almost a millionaire now and everything that he touches seems to turn to gold. But with his sudden rise to wealth he has not forgotten to give a helping hand to the needy. Medical Inspection of Schools. "Medical inspection of schools has rendered the school nurse inevitable," declares Dr. Ernest Bryant Hoag in a bulleton on "Organized Health Work" just issued by the United States bureau of education. "Without an effective follow-up service conducted by visiting nurses, medical inspection is ineffective. Until 1908 New York City relied upon postal cards sent to parents of defective children, and was able to secure action in only 6 per cent of the cases where treatment was recommended, immediately upon placing the follow-up service in the hands of the school nurses the percentage increased to 84. "The nurse effects what no other agency could accomplish. She not only secures action in the case at hand, but she becomes a permanent advisory influence in the homes where the visits "By virtue of her room-to-room visitation, and her opportunities for observation, the school nurse also becomes the ideal sanitary inspector she notes temperatures, ventilation, seating cleanliness of rooms, toilers, blackboards and the clothes of children. Her hospital standards of sanitation tend to follow her fint, the schools. "The school nurse is first and lastiant, but fon* mothers in the best methods of feeding, clothing, and caring for their children. She is received in their homes as no other official visitor could possibly be. Dr. Osler does not overstate the case when he says that the visiting nurse is 'a ministering arm everywhere.' That the trained nurse is a good economic investment is evidenced by the fact that some of the large insurance companies find it to their interest to employ a number of them to visit the homes of policy holders, and give instructions in matters pertaining to hygiene. Department stores and fastories also find it good business to employ nurses to look after the health of thei employees and to teach them personal hygiene. "The number of school nurses needed varies somewhat according to social conditions and according to the range of duties expected of them. We find all the way from 1,000 to 10,000 children under the care of one nurse. In New York City each nurse has from two to seven schools with a total attendance of about 4,000 children. In Philadelphia five schools and about 5,000 children are usually allotted to one nurse, while in Boston the pro- Sayes He Dynamited portion of nurses is almost twice as great. "It is not improbable that the ratio will be increased until it reaches an average of one nurse for each -,000 of the school enrollment. If there were one nurse for every 2,000 pupils, about 10,000 nurses would be required in the entire United States. A nurse's room completely equipped is coming to be regarded as one of the essentials in every school building of eight or more rooms." NOTICE! The public will please take notice that Wm. McClain is no longer connected with this paper in any capacity, whatever. This step is taken for purely business reasons. A. J. SMITHERMAN, Editor and Pub. FIELD MGR. I. L. U. IN TOWN J. H. Hamilton of Bristow Oklahoma was a visitor in the city today and while here called at the Star office. Mr. Hamilton is a great fraternity man and is now actively engaged in promoting the I. L. U. which order he will set up in this city in the near future. He is state Field Marshall for the order and secured about 1000 members in this state. Sayes He Dyn Oil Production Breaks Record Oil Production Breaks Record PRODUCTION FOR 1913 WILL TOTAL 63,842,250 BARRELS OF OIL State Geological Survey Figures Show the Year Now Ending to Be a Banner One. NORMAN, Okla., Dec. 18.—(Special.)—According to figures in the office of the Oklahoma geological survey here, the production of oil in Oklahoma during 1913 will far exceed that of any other year. While the returns are not final, they are regarded as sufficiently accurate to give a close approximation for the year. They are based largely on the returns of pipe line companies and consumption by refineries, supplemented by close estimates for the present month. Writers for the several oil and gas journals who are always close to actual facts of production are in substantial accord, with the following figures for year by months. Barrels. January.....5,046,.196 February.....4,802,513 March.....5,398,885 April.....5,374,263 May.....5,417,057 June.....5,168,817 July.....5,240,917 August.....5,335,794 September.....5,868,619 October.....5,715,000 November.....5,473,200 December.....5,500,000 Total.....63,842,259 The figures show that the output for the year will exceed by 7,772,622 barrels the previous record of 1911, which was 56,969,637 barrels. Thus the output exceeded by far the most Minister Advised Colored Men to Buy Guns. SOCIAL EQUALITY CONFERENCE HEARS AN OUT-BREAK FROM A NE GRO PREACHER. Washington, Jan. 8.—Negroes were tonight urged to stop buying musical instruments and sending their children to dancing schools, and advised to spend their money for guns and military education by the Rev. I. N. Ross, pastor of a Washington negro church, speaking to a large crowd assembled to celebrate the birthday of Charles Sumner. The preacher pleaded with the audience to prepare for war for their social, political and industrial rights: "Prepare for war in times of peace is the policy of this nation," he shouted. "It should be your policy, if you wish to break from the oppression, from the fetters of this era of new slavery." Cries of "We are with you: that's right," greeted the speaker and the audience rose waving handkerchiefs and urging Ross to "go on." When Oswald Garrison Villard of New York vigerously dissented from Ross's advice, the preacher again rose and repeated his decision, drawing another enthusiastic outburst of approval. P. O. at Tulsa. Springfield, Ill., Jan. 6.—In the arrest here of Samuel Turner, colored, of Denison, Texas, the police believe they have apprehended a violator of the federal patrol law. Turner was taken by officers Henry Kramer and Foster with James Robinson, colored of this city on the charge of stealing coal in the B. & O. railroad yards. When taken to police headquarters, the prisoner admitted that he had served eighteen months at Boonville, Oklahoma, for blowing a postoffice safe at Tulsa, Oklahoma a few years ago and the police say that he had not lived up to the government parol law after being released by pardon from the federal prison. sanguine hopes of the operators at the beginning of the year. Sufficient returns are not yet at hand to give accurately the average price of oil for the year, but it will probably be not far from 95 cents a barrel. Assuming this average price the total value of oil for the year was about 60,560,146. This amount is greater than the value of the state's total value of all our mineral products amounted to about $53,000,000 and will swell to the total value of our mineral values for 1913 enough to make Oklahoma one of the leaders in mineral production. The total value of gas, coal, cement and other mineral products will be at least as great as for last year, and therefore the total value of all our mineral products for the present year will approximate $80,000,000—Tulsa World, December 19 1913. Eugene Foss, governor of Masachusetts, has been everlastingly right on one big proposition—the utter assinity, as well as cruelty of sending folks to jail be cause they are poor. OUR SUBSCRIPTION LIST MAKES A VALUABLE MEDIUM FOR ADVERTISING Subscription $1.00 Per Year vised Colored Buy Guns. Romance of Great pacific oil well New Regulation Miled to All of The Postmasters. By far the most spectacular oil well in the world, is the Lakeview. This wonderful well "gushed" steadily for eighteen months at the rate of 30,000 barrels a day. The story of the "coming in" of the Lakeview is very vividly told by one the owners in the January Wide World. At midnight on March 15, he states, the oil sand was entered in well No. 1, which started to "gush," but choked up in a few minutes, following which nothing was done until 7 o'clock Tuesday morning when the bailer was dropped down the hole to loosen the sand. Suddenly, during the progress of the churning, the bridge was broken up and the bailer shot up out of the hole with terrific force, lodging half way through the crown block at the top of the derrick. Until 8 o'clock on Tuesday evening when it again surged up "twenty-four gravity" oil shot out of the hole at the rate of 30,000 barrels a day. Then after being quiet for an hour and a half, the well again broke loose with greater force than ever, shooting stones the size of doubled fists, mixed with sand and oil, up through the casing, which was over six inches and a half in thickness. These missils literally wore out and cut loose the crown block and cap timbers, releasing the bailer. The well next spotted rapidly, but with a geyser-like action, through the opening, hurling the oil about 200 feet high. The spectacle on Wednesday morning was plainly visible to passengers on the train twenty-three miles east of Maricopa. During a windstorm on Wednesday afternoon the spray ruined all wearing apparel exposed at Maricopa, two miles away. The following day the flow was measured both by the standard and independent gages, and between the hours of 11 a. m. and 3 p. m. 32,000 barrels were pumped through one six-inch and one four-inch pipe into the tanks, the oil being caught in a series of reservoirs, the last of which is of 1,000,000 barrel capacity. On June 22, 100 days after the well was "brought in," the estimate was made that 4,000,000 barrels of oil had been produced, worth about $2,500,000. The flow had not diminished at the end of this period, and the well went on "gushing" for eighteen months. This was two years ago. At last they succeeded in capping the well, and it then went on producing in a steady and dignified manner. Last year, in that proud and cultured New England state, which is too high-toned to think except with contempt, of such devices as the I. and R., the recall of judges, or the taking over of public utilities in furtherance of the public welfare, more than a third of the sentences to prison were of folks who hadn't the money to pay small fines. The rich lawbreaker hired polished lawyers—if, indeed he had to go to that expense and bother of defending himself at all. But the poor devil down at the bottom of the ladder, when assessed a fine he couldn't pay, was railroaded to a musty cell and kept in the moral rot of a dungeon. Prison reform surely needs stirring up in Massachusetts. WHY GRIP IS DANGEROUS. It is an Epidemic Catarrhal Fever Caused by a Bacillus that Generally Leaves the Patient Weak After the Acute Stage Has Passed. Grip Patients Grateful to Peruna, the Expectorant Tonic. Grip Patients Grateful to Peruna, the Expectorant Tonic. Do not make the error of regarding grip as an exaggerated cold. There is a big difference between the two. Grip is an epidemic disease that poisons the vital organs. When a person has grip, the air passages are alive with millions of bacilli poisoning the blood. The infected person feels tired and exhausted. Peruna is a Tonic Laxative. It requires a good tonic laxative to keep the body of the patient as strong as possible to counteract the effect of the poisons created by the grip bacillus. An expectant tonic with some laxative qualities is the safest remedy. Such is Peruna. Beware especially of coal tar powders or tablets because they lessen the vitality of the patient. There is no specific for the grip. Peruna has been used with good success in former grip epidemics. Indications point to the return of grip this winter. Do not fall to read the experience of former grip patients with Peruna. Mrs. Gentry Gates, 8219 First Ave., East Lake, Ala., writes: "I had a bad case of grip. I tried Peruna and it cured me. I can safely say it is a fine medicine." Mrs. Charles E. Wells, Sr., 230 South St., Delaware, Ohio, writes: "After a severe attack of la gripe I took Peruna and found it a good tonic." Ask Your Druggist for Free Perunus Lucky Day Almanac for 1914. EVEN IN PRESENCE OF DEATH Feminine Curiosity as to Another Woman's Wearing Apparel Had to Be Satisfied. "Over death itself fashion rules supreme," said the woman. "I went to a funeral last week in Riverdale. I wore a new coat. I was not exactly one of the mourners, but somehow I got mixed up with the relatives and walked pretty well up toward the head of the procession. A cousin of the deceased walked just behind me. On the way into the church she leaned forward and whispered: "Where did you get that coat?" "I turned my head half way and told her. "How much did you pay for it? she asked. "Forty-five dollars,' said I. "I thought it cost more than that, said' she "Then we walked on as if nothing had happened. That is what I call discussing the fashions under difficult tles." IS CHILD CROSS FEVERISH, SICK Look, Mother! If tongue is coated, give "California Syrup of Figs." Children love this "fruit laxative," and nothing else cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowels so nicely. A child simply will not stop playing to empty the bowels, and the result is they become tightly clogged with waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach sours, then your little one becomes cross, half-sick, feverish, don't eat, sleep or act naturally, breath is bad, system full of cold, has sore throat, stomach-ache or diarrhoea. Listen, Mother! See if tongue is coated, then give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the system, and you have a well child again. Millions of mothers give "California Syrug of Figs" because it is perfectly harmless; children love it, and it never falls to act on the stomach, liver and bowels. Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Adv. Suffragettes will march seven times around the White House. Hope it's better built than Jericho was. Stop that cough, the source of Pneumonia, etc. Prompt use of Dean's Mentholated Cough Drops gives relief—5c at Druggists. Most of the public benefactors you read about are making money. Some married men act as if they had been disappointed in love. POULTRY DESTROY ALL AILING FOWLS Disease Generally Attacks Most Susceptible of Flock and They Should Be Killed at Once. Most ailing or diseased chickens or hens had better be killed than doctored. In the first place it is by far the quickest way. Again, it at once does away with any risk from contagion. Moreover a once sick hen, even if she does seem entirely recovered, seldom develops into a first class layer, and second class layers seldom pay. There is another point, often overlooked. Disease generally attacks the weakest or most susceptible of the flock, and no flock was ever benefited by keeping in it birds of this kind when it is known they are such. It is true that now and then some trivial thing may all an otherwise strong bird, and it would be a mistake to give her no opportunity to recover. We have had cases of limberneck, humble foot or slight lameness or cold, that yielded promptly to treatment. A few drops of pain killer or other hot drink seems to work on limberneck even more quickly than on a cold, and opening the swelling and applying some cleansing healing wash has been about all we have ever found necessary for bumble foot. WHY SOME POULTRYMEN FAIL Lack of Thorough Investigation Before Taking Up Industry Has Been Usual Cause of Failure. While there is a great profit in raising poultry, failure of special poultry farms is frequently reported. Lack of proper investigation before going into the enterprise has been the usual cause of lack of success. Then, too, perhaps, bad locations, lack of the necessary amount of capital, careless investment, improper choice of breeds and character of buildings had a great deal to do with the trouble. Some of the essential features in the successful handling of a poultry farm are the development of the young stock, proper feeding, proper marketing, the right kind of labor, etc. Specialization in poultry is just A Profitable Type. as profitable as specialization in any other branch of agriculture. A careful account of expenses and receipts must be kept, so that a check can be made from time to time on the business. Moreover, poultry in small lots are very adaptable to people not in the best of health and particularly to women, who are adapted to the raising of farm fowls. GRAIN NEEDED FOR POULTRY Corn May Be Used as Food to Advantage, but It Must Be Supplemented With Something Else. Grain is the staple food for poultry, and will be used for that purpose as long as fowls are kept on farms; but hens cannot give good results on grain alone. It is beneficial to them, says the Fruit Grower, and will be at all times relished, but the demand of the hens is such as will call for variety. In the shells of eggs, as well as their composition, are several forms of mineral matter and nitrogen, which can only be partially obtained from grain. Even grains vary in composition and when fowls are fed on one kind for a long time, they begin to refuse it, as they may be oversupplied with the elements in the food partaken and lack the elements that are best supplied from some other source. For this reason they will accept a change of food, which is of itself an evidence that the best results from hens can only be obtained by a variety of food. Corn and wheat may be used as food with advantage, but it must be given as portion of the ration only, and not made exclusive articles of diet. Dishonest persons are wrapping rank imitations to look like the clean, pure, healthful WRIGLEY'S. These will be offered principally by street fakirs, peddlers and candy departments of some.5 and 10 cent stores. Refuse them! Be SURE it's WRIGLEY'S. BUY IT BY THE BOX of most dealers-for 85 cents. Each box contains twenty 5 cent packages. Chew it after every meal TULSA. OKLA., STAR WRIGLEY SPEARM soothes you FAIL Be seen THE F WRIGLEY CAUTION! Dishonest persons a wrapping rank imitate look like the clear healthful WRIGLE be offered principally b and candy department stores. Refuse them BUY of m Each box Chew Enjoy Being Miserable. There are people so pitably constituted, who, as Carlyle terms it, are "rich in the power to be miserable." Some people are never happy unless they are miserable and make others miserable. They never enjoy anything—except poor health—that's their specialty. ECZEMA ITCHED AND BURNED R. F. D. No. 8, Maryville, Tenn. "My baby, when three months old, took eczema on his face and head. His head and one side of his face were almost in a solid sore. The eczema at first was kind of a rash and then it broke out in water pimples and they would burst and looked very badly. It would itch and burn so badly that he could not rest at all and his hair just all fell out at once till his head was perfectly bald. He could not sleep at night and was very cross. "I tried remedies without any relief at all; he only got worse all the time until I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. He had great relief the first application. He was soon cured and his hair began to grow back and now he has just beautiful fine hair and has no sign of eczema." (Signed) Mrs. H. D. Clabough, Jan. 28, 1913. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 82-p. Skin Book. Address postcard, "Cuticura, De. L. Boston." --Adv. "My, but that woman's got money to throw away!" Be SURE it's WRIGLEY'S EY'S MINT UM LASTS THE FLAVOR 2 IE BOX 85 cents. cent packages. very meal re's es great Variety 1913 RECORD Magnificent Crops in all Western Canada All parts of the Provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, have produced won- derful yields of Wheat, Oats, Barley and Flax. Wheat graded GILT EDGE the only ladies she dresses that positively contains OIL, Blacks and polished ladies and children's boots and shoes, shines without rubbing, 25c, "French Gloss," 10c. STAR combination for cleaning and pelibing all kinds of russet or tan shoes, 10c, "Dandy" size 25c. BABY ELITE combination for gentlemen who take pride in having their shoes look A1. Restores color and lustre to all black shoes. Polish with a brush or cloth, 10c. "Elite" size 25c. G. A. COOK 125 W. 9th Street Kansas City, Mo. Canadian Government Agent THE BEST STOCK SADDLES on earth able prices, write for free illustrated catalogue. A. H. HESS & SON 305 Travis St. Houston, Tex. Money to Loan I want representatives ever If your dealer does not keep the kind you want, send us the price in stamps for a full size package, charges paid. WHITEMORE BROS. & CO. 20-26 Albany St. Cambridge, Mass. The Oldest and Largest Manufacturers of Shoe Polishes in the World FREE TREATISE The Leach Sanatorium, Indianapolis, Ind. has made a special gives interesting facts about the cause of Cancer; also tells what to do for pain, bleeding, odor, etc. Write for it today, mentioning this paper. BUILT MORE'S WHO CALLED THE KIL AND PATENT LEATHER WHITE MORE'S BABY THE POLISI WHITE MORE'S GILT EDGE DRESSING WHO CALLED THE FINE SHOES WHITE MORE'S COLORS WHO CALLED THE GILT EDGE BLACKSPOT COLOR WHO CALLED THE CLEANER WHITE MORE'S COLORS WHO CALLED THE GILT EDGE BLACKSPOT COLOR WHO CALLED THE CLEANER Albany St. Cambridge, Mass The Crown and Largest Manufacturers of Shoes in the World in the W W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 2-1914. PISO'S REMEDY Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by Drugstores. FOR COUCHS AND COLDS After smoking it cools your mouth-makes it moist and refreshed. Heartburn and flatulence disappear. Enjoy smoking more by enjoying this goody that improves your breath, teeth, appetite, and digestion. weighed heavy and yielded from 20 to 45 bushels per acre; 22 bushels was about the total average. Mixed Farming may be considered fully as profitable an industry as grain raising. The excellent grasses full of nutrition, are the only food required either for beef or dairy purposes. In 1912, and again in 1913 Chicago, Amontone carried off the Chicago school, marketed convenient, climate-cellent. For the homesteader, the man who wishes to farm extensively, or the investor, Canada offers the biggest opportunity of any place on the continent. Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to WESTERN CANADA FREE aa ‘2 cece lO A OMe) — FP NORTH CAROLINA GOOD ROADS Improved Tie ushtiee Tend to Prosperity of Farmers and Saving of Time Is Considerable. § oak PEM Wide ae icetnnd teed Throughout the mountain region of western North Carolina the good roads sentimept has attained propor- tions and gathered such impetus as to sweep aside objections to expendi- tures for good roads, which is usually the case in all progressive movements of great moment. ‘The movement had its inception in Asheville, North Caro- ina, when the Asheville and Bun- combe County Good Roads association was organized by a few public spir- ited men who realized the loss to this beautiful mountain country by reason of lack of good roads which made it impossible for not only the people of this section, but the tourists and visitors from going from one point to another, Immediately after the organization of this association, it raised $5,000 by subscription and regraded and macadamized the road from Asheville to Biltmore, a distance of a little more than two miles, This one piece of work in itself demonstrated to the ORR Od 2 ami a wee ests 1k oes eee i ee - mae PP RO a ox epee mie! yet yet Oe SB es me aces ne 5 eet, ce: oe ee ae Pc ae Re eae ee te : EME cree TET ay ps eee 8 Bh See te ee a ean eae ut ASP Pe ee Oe be Oe RS, ae ots eee ee Pe a ee ig ea ene ; Hee é ie ee age Pah ees Chie aire es. ae se oe Mae aaa Pag ce 8 Cees ee Bad Road in North Carolina. citizens that good roads could be built in the mountains and {t stimu- ‘ated all thinking citizens to further effort. At the present time, macadam and sand clay roads have been and are be- ing actively constructed throughout the entire “Land of the Sky” region in western North Carolina, there al- ready being hundreds of miles of splendid hard surfaced roads winding about the mountains, across hills and valleys from one section to another. The immediate territory surrounding Asheville is covered with a veritable network of good roads which are of the greatest benefit to the farmers of the country and to the business peo- ple of the city, and of especial delight to the throngs of visitors both winter and summer to this most delightful all the year around resort. Adjoining counties have caught the epirit and forces may be found bulld- ing macadam and sand clay roads tn all sections, To the south Bun- combe county has just completed ma- cadamizing the highway to the Hen- derson county line, connecting at that point with a most splendidly graded road to Hendersonville, a Ce ed avd a “ye eee Lo Ki *s Fe Aas, Ms aati een Pi aN ‘4 OP eh 8 ROE 5 aya ge Ret Se gehen oe o< wo Mebce ose F * ee 3 Fe are a se oe Le Same Road After Improvement. WONDERFUL GROWTH OF THE GANADIAN WEST The Cities of Western Canada Reflect the Growth of the Country. As one passes through Western Canada, taking the City of Winnipeg as 6 starting point, and then keeping tab on the varlous cities and towns that line the network of railways that cover the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, and cover- ing the eyes as the gaze is bent on these it is felt that there must be “something of acountry” behind It all. Then gaze any direction you like and the same view is presented, Field after fleld of waving grain, thousands and hundreds of thousands of them. Farm hands and laborers are at work converting the virgin prairie with more fields. Pasture land in every di. rection on which cattle are feeding, thriving and fattening on the grasses that are rich n both milk and beet properties, but it is unfortunate that more cattle are not seen. That, how- ever, {8 correcting itself. Here wo have in a large measure, the evidence of the wealth that helps to build up the cities, and {t should not be forgot- ten that the cities themselves have as citizens, young men who have come fron. other parts, and brought with them the experience that has taught them to avoid the mistakes of eastern and southern cities. They also are imbued with the western spirit of en- terprise, energy and push, and s0 Western Canada has {ts cities. At a banquet recently given in Chicago, a number of prominent citizens of Win- nipeg were guests. Among the speak- ers was Mayor Deacon of Winnipeg. In speaking of the remarkable growth of that city, which tn thirty years has risen from a population of 2,000 to one of 200,000, he spoke of it as being the gateway of commerce and continued: “Now, how great that tide of com- merce is you will have some concep- tion of when I tell you that the wheat alone grown in the three prairie prov- inces this year !s sufficient to keep a steady stream of one thousand bush- els per minute continuously night and day going to the head of the lakes for three and one-half months, and in ad- dition to that the oats and barley would supply this stream for another four months. — “The value of the grain crop alone grown in the three prairle provinces would be sufficient to build any of our great transcontinental railroads and all their equipment, everything con- nected with them, from ocean to ocean, “Now, if we are able to do this with only ten per cent. of our arablo land under cultivation what will our possibilities be when 288,000,000 of acres of the best land that the sun shines on fs brought under the plow? | Do you not see the portent of a great, vigorous, populous nation ving under those sunny skies north of the 49th parallel? And if with our present de- velopment we are able to do as we are doing now, to purchase a million dollars’ worth of goods from you every day of the year, what will our trade be worth when we have fully develop: ed the country? “Now, who shall assist us to devel- op this great empire that is there? | Shall tt be the allen races of southern | Burope or shall it be men of our own | blood and language? In the last three fiscal years no less than 358,000 Amer- ican farmers have come into Western Canada, bringing with them goods and cash to the value of $350,000,000. And I want to say here that no man who sets foot on our shores is more en- tirely and heartily welcome than the agriculturist from the south. “So long as these conditions remain I consider that this 1s the best guar anty that the sword will never again be drawn in anger between the twc great branches of the Anglé-Saxon race, The grain crops of Western Canada in 1913 have well upheld the reputation that country has for abun. dant ylelds of all small grains.—Ad vertisement. Out of Date. Muggins—She's such an old-fash- Joned girl. Buggins—How do you mean old fashioned? Muggine—She is positively effem!- nate. Natural Result. “I saw stars in that collision,” “No wonder, when the train was telescoped.” Putnam Fadeless Dyes color in cold water, Ady. A henpecked man has about as much liberty as a five-year-old boy with a stepmother. hes, ee L.-W. Sodas for Supper? Rl ot aldo fr" ae F She SS ge Good! ie oy ‘ ioe >. i — hi ee ss a 1 auld SO, : ACTING IS Pog > B. = JB | ¥ eo Ae) Ae (LW SODA EY ree 4 Cham arith \ o W We a . BMF 2k mA pi aghe’ Mee 27 f au) «|)|UCRACKERS a Shisy ON oe The men-folks like em because they're , Ri ee ee so crisp and taste so good. They’re a wel- wa Ny - Ny come change from bread and always handy ‘ Se \ 2... i to have. No fuss to fix them—always F sis OS by eee ae ‘ ready to set right on the table. ee B If you think the boys eat too many of them, TO remember that L.-W. Sodas are good, wholesome "foe we hb nourishment at very low cost and easily digested, Ns, & Joose-Wres Biscurr (mpavy BB Bakers of Sunshine Biscuits “AN Sy Always fresh and fla- ~ ALE \ poryin this big, econom- <e ween ical, air-tight, family NO : KG package “ SSS ASS ¢ “ Sha Ads Oe Seas A Nk eee ere ee SSS i Ne HY FT x MP ees & SGM (ENN EC GT a OTS Z NN Tae ean aN ALS CS enc ST Pre crt er tala TEES 4 Ne [Base CL sienna oss aa a?) fn rs a peas \ SL sen te AMOR TG 0-55 ae pap TULEOGA, ORLA, STAR AS GREEK UNDERSTANDS IT Student's Rendering of Shakespearean Phrase Somewhat Literal, But He Had the Idea. A young Greek merchant of Wash- ington, who has been taking lessons in English from a private tutor, has so far advanced that his teacher recently Introduced him to the beauties—and perplexities—of Shakespeare, He was Instructed to read a passage several times until he had the ideas firmly fixed in his mind and then, closing the book, to put these ideas into his own English, following as closely as his memory permitted the author's text. He had read over a soliloquy of Othello’s several times and was re- producing the Moor's somber thoughts with pretty fair approximation to the poet's words, but when he reached the last line: “Farewell, Othello’s occupa- tion's gone!” he stopped short, utterly at a loss. ‘The original phrasing had quite escaped him. However, he had ‘grasped the idea, for after a few sec- onds of frowning perplexity his brow cleared, “Ah, I haf eet!” he exclaimed, “Eet ees this: ‘So long! Othello’s lost hees jop!’""—New York Evening Post. 18 EPILEPSY CONQUERED? New Jersey Physician Sald to Have Many Cures to His Credit. ee ae oe ee ee ao. Red Bank, N. J. (Special) —Advices from every direction fully confirm previous reports that tne remarkable treatment for epilepsy being admin- istered by Dr. Perkins of this city, is achieving wonderful results. Old and stubborn cases have been greatly benefitted and many patients claim to have been entirely cured. Persons suffering from epilepsy should write at once to Dr. H. W. Perkins, Branch 49, Red Bank, N. J. for a supply of the remedy which is being distributed gratuitously.—Adv. One More, and His Last. The living skeleton wished another engagement at the museum, but the manager demurred. “Perhaps I can work in something new,” suggested the thin one. “Well,” observed the manager, “I've given you three engagements as a liv- ing skeleton; I reckon I can use you for one more !f you will agree to go as a dead one.”—Pulitzer's Magazine. | Gushing Fountain, Patrice—What makes his letters ¢o gushing? Patience—Uses a fountain pen, 1 guess. Paw Knows Everything. A as| Willle—Paw, what is the greatest | vali boy | common divisor? but Paw—Divorce, my son, une thoee ugly, grizzly, gray haire. Use “LA CR relieves rheumatism quickly. It stimulates the circulation —in- stantly relieves stiffness and soreness of muscles and joints. Don't rub —it penetrates, Rheumatiom Never Returned “Lam a travelling man and about one year ago I was laid up with rheumatism and Soed ley enge as ah DK ane nas mane elie ae ane Se epee Hue famnmpent ine hours aid Carty 1 wits tne on te Youd ws: Mame Mase Rh ti N Igi Stiffness Vanished a! eotered, cone t adioall yep a PabSe ith Sloseat fatioent weet ete yg Piva base peated citeretionic. eats Ra a a eee re eet . Ls Sprained Ankle Relieved Wr ‘i “'T was {ll for along time with aseverely goriucd ankle: Tapes boltia of oleae’ \ Liniment and now I am able to be about bacnune 1 think you deserve atot oferede ae iarpecunpreceaanetinimenteats (A 2g Renna aeaace ts (age ry recommend Dr. Sloan's Linjment.""—Mra VV » Charles Rouse of Balimore, Bd. Luu YY Sloan's Liniment gives grateful {t) aaMD 17 yj sensation of comfort. Good for ll Vian oP vy) sprains, neuralgia, sore throat and HWA iF le as toothache. Use it now. ee 5 y At all Dealors, 25c., 50c. and $1.00 G é Send for Sloan's free book on horses. and Address ys Ley, Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, Inc. <<@gg/ BOSTON, MASS, Willing to Learn. Pauline motored to the station to meet her dearest friend, who was com- ing down for a week-end, “Oh, Belle,” cried Pauline enthust- asilcally, “do you know, Mr. Barnum, the young millionaire, is going to teach me to swim.” “Vo swim!” exclaimed the guest, wonderingly. “Why, Pauline, f thought you had been taught already.” “Yes, 60 I have, dear,” said Pauline, “but not by him." Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children Ueething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma- tlou,allays pata,cures wind colle,25e a bottleda Different. “Did she smile upon your suit?” “No, but she laughed at the bow in the back of my fuzzy hat.” An exchange says: “Silver Is less ‘Valuable than eggs.” Perhaps tt 1s, but @ pocket full of silver causes less uneasiness. Why Scratch? > “Hunt’sCure”is guare PTR anteed to stop and Be) permanently cure that a Bs MY terrible itching. It is ) compounded for that fi id yor CH fp stot ice DAP, A) WITHOUT QUESTION A if Hunt's Cure fails to cure ff C Itch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring Mil Worm or any other Skis Disease. 50c at your druggist’s, or by malB direct ifhe hasn't it. Manufactured onl: by {6 RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Shorman, Texug IF YOU HAVE ——engggg— no appetite, Indigestion, Flatulence, Sic Headache, ‘all run down" or losing flesh, you will find Tutt’s Pill fuse whet yon nose. ‘Ther tone ap tive wealy Published Every Saturday at 501 North Greenwood Street. Elected as second-class matter April 11, 1913, at the Post Office at Tulsa Oklahoma, under the Act of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES On. years $1.00 Mix Month .60 Three Month .35 Now is a good time to begin cleaning up your premises for Spring. Let we forget—the streets in the East End are simply horrible. What are you doing to make them better Mr. Property Owner? And now since Chief Sam has been exposed, maybe his easy victims will heed the advice of the Tulsa STAR and other race papers and let him and his scheme alone. There is a strong under current in the municipal political whirlpool which will spring a suprise a surprise on the fathers of the game this spring. Watch the prediction. The fellow who digs a pitfall for his benefactor finally fall therein himself. There is anold saying that truth crushed to earth will rise again. Just watch developments. Lest some be misled by impostors we desire to inform the public, that no one has ever invested one penny in this paper, as an investment, save A. J., SMITHERMAN. "Nuff Sed" For the first time since the Mexican revolution a colored man was recently killed in Mexico, but even this one was killed by one of his countrymen, another colored man, a sentry in the rebel army. We thank all of our friends and patrons for their kind interest and patronage during the year just closed, and we respectfully solicit your good will and continued patronage for the new year. Gov. Cruce has issued a statement defending the democratic party for its acts during the present administration and shrewed politicians take it to mean that the governor will be a candidate for reelection next fall. It's bad enough for a fellow to be inveterate liar, but when a fellow is a liar and a theif "too boot" and tries to hide his helish faults by unjustly assailing the character of his benefactor he is base indeed. It's not good policy always to condemn a fellow on what "they" say about him. Give him the benefit of the doubt. Suspend judgment until you learn for yourself and you will some day be glad that you did. Mr. Strafod D. Brodie, president of the State University at Norman, addressed the white teachers Association here last month and took up some of the same subjects discussed in the J. B. S. article which previously appeared in this paper. What do you know about that? There is a growing demand in Tulsa for rent houses and he is a wise man who is able and will take advantage of this opportunity. 1000 houses could be rented in less than a week. People are active 1000 houses could be rented in less than a week. People are actually living in houses built with refused lumber, dry goods boxes, etc., for lack of something better. According to reports a new paper is about to be launched. It will be strictly a religious paper devoted to the betterment of the community. Rev. J. F. Kersh will be the editor and Rev. F. E. White will be his associate. With these two War Horses behind the pen, the new paper should be a complete success. The STAR wishes its prospective contemporary smooth-sailing all along the line. A story is told in the Bible of a lot of fellows who one day took a woman to Christ, accusing her of a certain crime, and condemning her to death. But when the Savior had heard the testimony, he said: "Ye who are without sin, let him cast the first stone." When he looked up the women's acquiers had vanished. Every one of the rascals were guilty of the crime they wanted the woman put to death for Some of the same tribe of cussas are living in Tulsa today. THE TULSA STAR Printing and Publishing Co., is an enterprise of Tulsa colored people having for its chief aim the betterment of our people in this community. To scaredly guard the best interest of our own people and at the same time conserve our own interest. We are here working for the people of this community and we are entitled to your support whether we get it or not; and you are entitled to as good service, quality and quantity, as the same money will affrod elsewhere. Look about you now and see if the people we are working for (and you are one of these) and see if you think they are doing their duty by us. There are many kinds and styles of lies and various ways of telling them, but the blackest, meanest, vilest and most contemptable lie of all of them is that lie which is partially substantiated by certain circumstances or in a way corroberated by some few apparent facts. In other words, a screwed liar can take one or two admitted facts and ad to them certain circumstances, and weave a net of lies so conclusive, so convincing that he can make almost any man believe him, even against his will. Such li is the blackest of lies and they are usually told by the lowest, meanest, and most cowardly of liars. THE BLACKEST LIE. TULSA. OKLA. STAR Right in the H The American C. P. ALEXANDER, Vice President. R. J. DANIEL, Vice President MAX MADANEXY, Vice President No. 1 CAPITAL AND SUPP An New Bank Always A Your Business Corner Third and Main Negro School Every teacher and farm scribe immediately for the will keep you informed as to tem. Each issue will contain ture, domestic science and our common schools by the these professions in our sta- ods employed. Subscribe now, price $1 Order. JOURNAL Box 25. News Aro J. S. KIRBY, City Circulator RESIDENCE,--215 E. Cameron --- wood Street. Post Office at Tulsa PUBLISHER associate Editor SocietyEditor The American National Bank C. P. ALEXANDER, Vice President. J. W. MENEAL, President. R. T. DANIEL, Vice President. T. A. PENNEY, Vice President. MAX MADANSKY, Vice President. L. W. BAXTER, Chairman. C. A. STACY, Assistant Cashier. No. 10342 CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $110,000.00 An New Bank Always Alert to Serve Customers Your Business Solicited Negro School Journal Every teacher and farmer in this state should subscribe immediately for the Negro School Journal. It will keep you informed as to changes in our school system. Each issue will contain articles discussing agriculture, domestic science and all other subjects taught in our common schools by the ablest men and women of these professions in our state, showing the latest methods employed. Subscribe now, price $1.00 Send P. O. Money Order. JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. Langston, Okla. Around Town News Around Town Mrs. J. S. Wilhite is still on the sick list. Mr. Earnest Gray who has been ill for some time is improving. Mr. John Fielder, who has been seriously ill, is now able to resume his work. Mrs. B. S. Cleaver, wife of deputy sheriff Cleaver is visiting friends in Oklahoma City. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Brant returned from a visit to Arkansas where they spent the holidays with the doctor's parents. Mrs J F. Kersh wife of Rev Kersh pastor of the First Baptist Church of this city is visiting friends in Muskgo,ee. Mr. and Mrs. Walton of Lenapah Okla, are in Tulsa visiting Mr. Walton's mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Walton. Miss Etta Kidd who was on the sick list for three weeks is up again. She returned to the school room Monday morning. Mrs. Maudha Freeman accompanied by her daughter Miss Josie Freeman spent the holidays with her nephew and his wife Mr. and Mrs. Bob Rogers Mrs. T. D. Jackson, 313 N. Elgin A.E., is verry critically ill. Capt. Jackson her dutiful husband has for aken his business to be at his wife's badside Mrs M. C Walker of the rural district is in the city attending her sister Mrs. Smitherman who took critically ill about a week ago. She is much better at this writing. Rev. Kersh pastor of the First Baptist Church of this city is contemplating launching a religious paper some time soon. The first issue will probably appear this month. Mrs. Capt. Jackson has been critically ill for several days and at this time she is still a serious state of health and rei s the constant attention and quir e of her husband. Our hope her is a speedy recover. LOST --- Box 25. Rev. Johnson, pastor of the Vernon Chap I. A. M. E. Church is closing his 20th, year in the ministry and begins the year by presenting the members of his church with a souvenir New Years gift, giving a historic synopsis of his church work. Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Gilmore, of Indiana, daughter and son-in-law of police Williams of this city arrived in town Sunday morning. Mr. Gilmoe resided a position as city detective at Garry to come to Fulsa. He is also an embalmer and undert. ker by profession, and there is some likelihood of his going into that business here. Rev W. T. Kidd, preiding elder of the Oklahoma Conference District, was a welcome caller at the Star office this week. He reports his district in a splendid condition with the future looking hopeful. Itev. Kidd is one among the progressive and aggressive ministers of the state, and will one day rise to prominence in the A. M. I. Connection. Messies, W. P. McAlpin and J. B. Harris, of Muskogee, were pleasant callers Wednesday. Mr. Harris is engaged in the grocery business and Mr. McAlpin is a prominent citizen of Muskogee. Both gentlemen have the reputation of being expert checker players, and while here they engaged in a lively contest with our champion player, J. B. Stradford. Last Sunday Mr. Henry was called to investigate the course of a young girl said to be about 14 year old and coming from Handon Oklahoma, and on her way to Eufaula to the home of her mother. She is said to be the daughter of a Prof. Wm. O. White. Mr. Henry after careful investigation purchased a ticket for the girl and put her on the train for her destination. She was found on Archer near Boston, stopping with a family who said they knew the girl and her family. LOST A Fur Collar some where on Greewood Ave., from Roggers Theatre. Anyone finding same return to the Star Office and receive reward. The St. Paul Billiard Parlor Choice Cigars and Cold Pop Open Day and Night to 12 p.m. Gas, Coal & Wood Ranges and Heaters $1 DOWN, & $1 A WEEK Will take your Old Stoves and 2nd Hand Furniture at a Reasonable Price. THE TULSA STOVE CO. 20 West 2nd St. Phone 2374 For Good Things to Eat And Then Some CALL William's Grocery K. and L. of H. Of The World. Grand Officers Directory Grand Protector—Dr. W. H. Umphrey, Box 667, Sapulac, Okla. Grand Past Protector—W. M. Harry, Box 101, Ft. Gibson, Okla. Grand Vice Protector—W. W. Taxey, Okmulgee, Okla. Grand Secretary—Rev. W. H. Jachman, Wagner, Okla. Grand Treasurer—Mrs. M. M. umphrey, Box 667, Sapulpa, Okla. Grand Chaplain—C. W. Henry, 18 N. Greenwood, Tulsa, Okla. Grand Guide—Mrs. Chanie Grand Guardian—Mrs. Alice Smith, Wagoner, Okla. Smith 554 So. Main St.. Muskogee, Oklahoma. Grand Sentinel—J. W. Griffith, Box 126, Depew, Okla. Grand Sec. Treas. of Endowment—H. T. Hutton, Box 478, Sapulpa, Okla. Grand Medical Register—Dr. G. W. Haynes, Box 251, Wagoner, Okla. Grand Matron—Mrs. H. Williams, 310 N. frankfort, Tulsa, Okla. Grand Lecturer—Rev. T W. Kidd, Tulsa, Okla. Grand Trustees—Rev. A. Turner, Box 531, Okmulge; Rev. E. D. Willkens, Sapulga, and Mrs. F. P. Alexander, Wagoner. Grand Attorney—Freeman L. Martin, Tulsa, Okla. Grand Auditing Committee—S. E. Wiggins, Chairman, Wagoner; W. L. Nall, Sapulpa, and A. J. Smitherman, Tulsa, Okla. Every lodge in the state will be expected to send in their reports for publication in the Star at least once a month. Such reports should reach this office not later than Wednesday of each week. The above directory is to keep each lodge member posted as to the Grand officers and should any member of any lodge desire to communicate with any Grand officer this directory will give the deserved information. Send all communications to The Tulsa Star, Tulsa, Okla. A reception was given at the Huff Hotel on East Archer St. New Years night in honor of Miss Beatrice Hughes of Hot Springs Ark, who is here visiting her mother. Those present at the reception were: Misses Irma Rollerson, Inola Riley, Cleo Calvert, Etta Kidd, Jesie Freeman, Addie B. Stewart, Eurn Rollerson, Lucy Ress, Sussie Gleen Beatr ce Hughes, Daisy Hughes. Messers; Bethel Boyde, Maurice Walker, H. Dickson, Jasper Cherry, Alfred Hicks, Edward Walker, Dr. Hiro Hughes, John H. Moton. ```markdown ``` see RAE : = es Sa EE ESS maaeoesae ; S . fe pe Saco crm GN mene Sea SSS ee OT “~ I When you think of . yA NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY " you naturaliy think of Biscuit. | When vou think of Biscuit you naturally think of v ( Y a By BH ie a Ra eee ee es SESE WN <a” ad i ee Se Rah, Vegi rae HS eae Bea mi The only Soda Cracker pessessing Z iY. Suen NY Reis hare « National- Agen, Biscuit- Vag a Goodness As, Sy SA. SENG i only in bee a SS Cy 4% Sar Ok ? Moisture v Va tag 2 7 bane Packages ae : Vie? ae yy factor: Sh a omens Gera aS, sebastien Sc) Sco SSS <A —— Te LETTUCE WHILE You wan Dinner Guests May Seo It Crow the Table for The Salad, When kt a dinner in Rome 4 toyriet was rcrved with strawberrios, still Krowing on the parent vine, ty 6 com jon earthen pot which was concerted ty @ Bash of wide risbon, sho thourht (his Was (he Inst word with regard to sorving food at the dinaer table. It temains, however, for 2 Now Yor floriet to Work what seoms like a mtr acle. Ho clatras to be able io # Jottuce while you watt--eriep icttuco for dinner to ext with your brotled apring chteken. When asked fo reveal Ms ¥ceret t faid: “I take a handful of lettuces goeds that have icon ‘soaked eves hight In alcoho! and 1 plant them t a box containing three tnehes of teat and quickitmo. I water this woll, and to ten minutes the seedy burst. tm twenty minutos two tiny leaves pod through the earth, ‘Tha leaves grow ond inuitiply. In an hour tey are ¢ big as dollors, ‘Vhen you may plu and cat them. ‘hoy are delfcious—n fairy salad. Sometimes when I givo a dinner party 1 have one ef these lit He prepared loituco beds in the center of tho table ‘The guesis see the let tuee grow, und when the tne comes for the salad course tire ts their falnd blooming before them all rendy for them to plac.” Considering what marvels In the AY Of CooldnK are accomplished with the chafing dish and denatured alcobo! stoves, uid gelentific marvels Hike thls We may reasonably expect to sco tue tarab dviven tn alive, slaughtered, and wwoled boiote gur very eyes. FRED PNR Wteteeeeeaen, Bike a... WIRSY BAPTIST CHURCH SOTES - (Bye CG, W. Henry) One cold December night a tcl hoy was waiking down the street. fe was attracted by a mi Whooping and yelling in the terest of a moving picture show The hey stead and looked ‘as though he thought the man was soing mad. After recovering: his thotirhis he said to the than, “1 Know of a better place than that ‘The bis ian looked down on the “mall boy and asked, “where is ent?” "The Tuy answered, “the ehorch, of courge.”. "Che writer say that (he bubble blower was isturined and hadn't words to re- iply. He said to the man, “the litle follow is going for you.” “Oh,” he id, “the Yeason the litte bay lspoke of the church was because his mother was near.” May God Wiaaton the time when more moth Yeo will he nesr their hoya and fis, that will cause them to peal of tho church instead of movine nittuves ehawse every vight, the caase af whiich is a sii leadiny many bovs and gitk to: Poin. The Pivst Baptist church car. [vied out the followinw program Tanvaty 4th: | Sunday achool at 9:30 2. m., \gonducted by R. H. “Middletan | Less was taught briefly th {ime being limited to 20 minutes jon account of holding annual eles tion of officers. After poins TULSA ORDA, 6 TAR through the usual routine of bus iness, the election resulted as fol- lowe! — GOW. Heney, superintendent; J, Holiness, Asst, Supt.; Surre tha Holt, Secy; A. Werren, res ; J W. Hughes, Teacher Senior retass; J. Vaughn, Teacher Ad- vaneed class; 1. Mivans, Teacher Primary class, | We are expertiig such yond ito be accomplished this year through the noble work of those Gotaent officers | “At-T1 100". i. our noble i |strittton, Revi JF. Kessh, )). 1 jstated that time would not alos jhim to preach, this beine sacve- iment day. fle reed the covenant jand expliined its application. Hitaa you heard his wonderfal ox oe vou would agree that as Baptist we are not keeping [between right and wrom in. + strong and expressive way de fending the cause of God, State Evangelist H. M. MoMil jlian preached at 8:00 p.m, dug jtook for his text—Jonn 9: 4 | You should have heard igia, & he eried as did John in the wild lerness, “Repent, ropent, for th thigtom of God is at hand,” Maj Cod blaas this old gospel voldic ito do move for the cause o (Chirst. > | Searemens was taken, hand ‘vstaising and be vediction, and th eo ywregation departed for thei i nes in the name of the Lerc Collection for the day, $26.60, independant Wan Will jake @ bride. + : Chaages fa The baa i parcel Post dow Reguiotionn Mailed to All of Tho Pontrsasters Wastingtva, Dec, 27-—The. office of tho third assistant, pystwiaster koneré at has thio week forwarded to nearly 60,000 postmaylors Information as, lo changes In poreets post rates amd reg, ulutions, efeckiys January 1, by ardor of Postmaster Gentral Burlesoa, The orders: provide for & redaetion of rates itt the Utd, fourth and teen and Sixth gonna, and for an “Increase of the weight limit’ {o ditty pounds of par. pcos mailed for de livery inthe firet and laecond ‘Hanes. | After Marci 19, next, books shall be embraced in the tourth clade of wat), ferwlay zone reles botng apptied to lparcels of hooks welghing over elghe Jounces. Parceia of eigit ounces of ters {will be reqhited to pay one ‘cot for jene h two ounces or fraction thereof, SUBSCRIBE: FOR "THE. STAR wena Vhe aneuncement of the mare vinge of B. M. Stvaford, of Inde- pendence, Kansas, has been re+ ived by his brother J. B. Stra- ovd of this city who will Ieave next Wednesday with his wile to witness thé ceremony which will take place-on the 15th, inst, ur. B. Mo Steaford visited hig brother a identh or so ago, but at that.time did not intimate ‘that he had any: intentions of jtaking unto himself a bride. | Toled dias one moge Colored | Physician and Surgeon. He ig {Dr. TI Ilanghton-Jame a> na- [ove famacian, And graduate of hs ward University at Washing- tion D.C. Mr. Huoghton-James | considered a Valuable addi- jtion to. the prefession in Tulsa. | Bihsa” bauifour was a great disap t haavould-be.” * Dut you gave bimea letter of recom mendation.” de course, And T advise you to do the same. It's tho only way to get Bima ‘© wo peaceably.” i o ‘ SAINT FOR THE JOURNALISTS Pope Plus IX. Fifty, Years Ago, Se lected St. Frangla De Sales as Their Patron, it will be news to many Journalists to learn that they have an officially tected patron saint But the Maa choster Guardian points out that they bave, and have had for the last titty ¢ Hus IX, at tho request of a pumber of continental Journalists, t3- wel a deeree onthe point, He res ommended Journalists to seek the help of St. Francis de, Sales, whose body hoe M80 lately Degpedggnsterred, with great pomp and amidst popular re foieing, to & new cbureh at Annecy, in Sayoy, his native placa. (he choice, our contemporary thinks, Was an apt oug, for St. Prancts wn a’ man of let- (ors, His tamous work, “The Devout Lit (01 popular, “no doubt be- in No Ughtness of touch with 1 written and the unerring f instinct (one may put 1 (‘ing of the work cf a an which bo compels atten- tt nis questions by the ekilt- ‘ reedcte and Mustration,”— We r Gazette, Chenen Dinerory Mo. Zion Baptist Churety Servicgs avery Sunday 9:30 A.M. Mrs. dohnnie Adaws Supt. 8,8. reaching 1:50 a.m 3 P.M. service HY. BU. OP. Ms Pricnohing 8 PM, Weekly Serviees Mion 2 PML. Wy HL, Mission, Suos. 8 PM, Choir recital, Metoka and Galeda classes Wod. 8 P, M. Prayor meeting Fei. SPM. Teachers meeting and Choir yehearsel, Rey. 8K. White D. D, Pastor, Mv, Johnnio Adams C, Clerk, Agents for Maxonanst ftansou, Chica ding M. and Hontington Patloring. Wholesdic Mevehant Catlors of Chigago W. 1 MeKee and M,C. Baldtrip, Mg Wesley Chapel M. E. Church TO ee a es ee am eC Cor. Kasten aft Frankfort St. Sunday Servieos anday School at 9:20-A, M, Preaghing at 100° A, Me Junior League 30 PM, Preaching :00 P.M, Monday night Oficial Board Fuesday at 3:0 P.M. Ladies sowing Circles Wednesday night, Home Mission Thursday night, Prayer & Class Mevting. “ Ruy, T. J. Jones, Py O. BROWN'S C, M. EB, CRURCH a Sunday Sehool 0:30 Preaching 1:00 A, My Proaching 8:00 P.M, Rov. H.G, Grin, 2.0, Suuday School at 9:80, A.M, Progeliing at 1200 Av M. & 8 P.M. Cheistinn Badeavor, W002, M. Love Feast, Sacrement and Rellow- shiping of'members the tirst Sunday tm each month. i Olllcial Board every Monday night. Teachers meeting Tuesday BENS Chole practice, Wednesday night. Class Meeting, Thursday night. STOMACH MISERY GAS. INDIGESTION "Pape's Diapepsin" fixes sick, sour, gassy stomachs in five minutes. Time it! In five minutes all stomach distress will go. No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of gas, acid, or eructations of undigested food, no dizziness, bloating, or foul breath. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in regulating upset stomachs. It is the surest, quickest and most certain indigestion remedy in the whole world, and besides it is harmless. Please for your sake, get a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any store and put your stomach right. Don't keep on being miserable—life is too short—you are not here long, so make your stay agreeable. Eat what you like and digest it; enjoy it, without dread of rebellion in the stomach. Pape's Diapepsin belongs in your home anyway. Should one of the family eat something which don't agree with them, or in case of an attack of indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis or stomach derangement at daytime or during the night, it is handy to give the quickest relief known. Adv. Was It Force of Habit? An amused smile fluttered over the features of Congressman Samuel J. Tribble of Georgia the other night when the talk topic in the lobby of a Washington hotel turned to the wonderful sayings of the kiddies. He said he was reminded of a recent incident. A fond father was taking his little six-year-old daughter to town in a motor car, and on stopping in front of a store he noticed that the drive against the strong wind had made the youngster's eyes water. "Just a minute, Jessie," said father, wrapping a corner of his handkerchief around one finger and dabbing the little girl's eye. "Let me wipe that tear away." "Say," was the rather amazing exclamation of Jessie, "what do you think that is—a push button?" A GRATEFUL OLD MAN. Mr. W. D. Smith, Ethel, Ky., writes: I have been using Dodd's Kidney Pills for ten or twelve years and they have done me a great deal of good. I do not think I would be alive today if it were not for Dodd's Kidney Pills. I strained my back about forty years ago, which left it very weak. I was troubled with inflammation of the blad- W. D. Smith. der. Dodd's Kidney not think I would be alive today if it were not for Dodd's Kidney Pills. I strained my back about forty years ago, which left it very weak. I was troubled with inflammation of the bladder. Dodd's Kidney Pills cured me of that and the Kidney Trouble. I take Dodd's Kidney Pills now to keep from having Backache. I am 77 years old and a farmer. You are at liberty to publish this testimonial, and you may use my picture in connection with it." Correspond with Mr. Smith about this wonderful remedy. Dodd's Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at your dealer or Dodd's Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household Hints, also music of National Anthem (English and German words) and recipes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free. Adv. Enemies of Household Pest. Among the enemies of the house fly, including fungus diseases, protozoa, nematodes, mites, spiders, the house centipede, parasitic insects, birds, and fly-catching rats, Mr. H. E. Ewing of Corvallis, Ore., describes in Entomological News a strange parasite which attaches itself to the ventral body wall of the fly. It belongs to the gamasid family, and as it feeds it hangs on in a manner nicely calculated not to throw the fly out of balance in flying. A Soldier Friend. "I saw your father taking you to the woodshed yesterday morning. Willie. What had you been doing?" "Nothing. He just took me out there to meet a soldier friend of his." "A soldier. Who was he?" "That feller Corporal Punishment he's always talking about." Important to Mothers Important to mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of Charl H. Fletcher In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Deadly Insult. "You and Mr. Puffins don't speak?" "No. He referred to my automobile as antique rolling stock." Our idea of a promoter is a chap who buys a gold brick at a bargain and unloads it on some other chap at a profit. The microbe never worries the man who is not aware of its existence. MAKE HOUSEHOLD WORK EASY Main Thing Is to Have the Articles Most Required Always Conven- Sometimes it is the very little things, the things that appear most insignificant, that count for most in the making of household duties easy. To have things handy, right where they are within easy reach, is one of the things that should be the aim of every woman who must use certain utensils at every meal time. A clever woman has devised a plan by which she avoids drying the plates. Over the sink rack, high enough so it will not interfere with anyone, has been built a plate cage, just a skeleton affair of chestnut, that has been stained to match the woodwork in the kitchen. The plates are slipped in between bars that permit them to stand upright, and as soon as they are washed and rinsed, they are placed in the cage where they drain and dry. This shortens the time of "doing" the dishes considerably. She tells me that other "cages" are to be made for other pieces of china that will help in the dish-washing problem. If you have a rack in which the knives, forks, and spoons that are in SHELVES Plate Cage and Knife Rack. daily use can be slipped, and place up over the kitchen table, you will wonder how you ever could get along when they were stowed away in the dresser drawer. Three strips of one-half inch chestnut lumber, have square holes cut in them at intervals, and then they are glued together so that the holes will be opposite. These are screwed to shaped ends that in turn are fastened to the wall, and the knives, etc., are slipped in their place as soon as they come from the dish pan. One one-half inch chestnut or oak board with auger holes bored into it will do as well. MAKE THE KITCHEN PRETTY No Reason Why Most-Used Room In House Should Be Allowed to Look Neglected. A woman who believes that a kitchen should be a pretty room wonders why most people do not hold the same opinion. Of original tastes, she has devised this scheme of color and decoration for her kitchen. The walls she has had painted a bright sunshiny yellow, the woodwork and chairs a deep Prussian blue, the color of the pattern in her kitchen crockery and the cornflower pattern of her white tiled stove, which has a shining metal top. "We are slaves to the view that a stove must be black and ugly," she says. "I got rid of this view in a visit to Holland, where I bought my pretty stove." The windows of her kitchen are hung with sash curtains made of glass toweling barred in blue. At the center of their sills a little square bracket shelf has been attached, upon which stands a gay geranium. Frozen Custard With Almonds. Heat one quart of milk in double boiler. Add to this four well-beaten eggs. Stir constantly with wire egg beater until this thickens. Sweeten to taste and set aside to cool. Take one pound of almonds, shell and blanch. Spread over a pan, add one teaspoonful of olive oil, place in a hot oven and allow them to get very brown. Cool and then put through a meat chopper. Add to custard also one-half teaspoonful of almond extract. When the custard is quite cold, freeze. To Crisp Cereals. I find an easy way to crisp the uncooked, ready-to-eat cereals is to place the amount required for one serving in an ordinary cornpopper and shake for a few minutes over a hot stove or lighted oil stove. Enjoying His Power. "Don't try to contradict me!" said Mr. Cumrox. "You're not angry, are you?" You're not angry, are you? "No. I'm just warning you. This is no time of year to contradict the man who writes the Christmas gift checks." TULSA. OKLA.. STAR Quite "Nifty" That's the way you should look and feel all the time. Nature never intended you to be sickly and run down, with poor appetite, imperfect digestion, clogged bowels and a lazy liver. Stir these organs to healthy action by the daily use of HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters There are occasions when it is better to wear thick-soled shoes when you toe the mark. Natural Leanings. "Did you get the florist to put up those elephants' ears for transportation?" "No. I thought they would feel more at home in a trunk." Red Cross Ball Blue gives double value for your money, goes twice as far as any other. Don't put your money into any other. Adv. Convenience in Sick Room. A convenience for a sick person is a good-sized shoe bag with ample pockets fastened with safety pins to the mattress at the side of the bed. In the pockets may be stored books, papers, fancy work, handkerchiefs and various articles that are needed. Thoughtful Wife. A woman who had gone to a hospital to be operated upon wrote two postcards. "Please send whichever one is appropriate afterwards," she told the nurse. These were the cards: "My Dear Husband: I have had the operation and am doing nicely. Will be at home in a week or two." "My Dear Husband: I have had the operation, and am sorry to tell you that I did not survive."—New York Evening Post. Theory and Practice. Little Beatrice was taking piano lessons and learning at the same time something of theory. Like many other children, she disliked practicing her finger exercises. One day her mother, who was working in an upstairs room, noticed a sudden lull in the playing. She looked down and saw Beatrice sitting perfectly motionless. "Beatrice, why don't you practice?" she called down sharply. "I am practicing, mother," replied the child with perfect self-assurance; "I'm practicing my theory."—New York Evening Post. SELF DELUSION. Many People Decelved by Coffee. We like to defend our indulgencies and habits even though we may be convinced of their actual harmfulness. A man can convince himself that whiskey is good for him on a cold morning, or beer on a hot summer day—when he wants the whiskey or beer. It's the same with coffee. Thousands of people suffer headache and nervousness year after year but try to persuade themselves the cause is not coffee—because they like coffee. "While yet a child I commenced using coffee and continued it," writes a Wis. man, "until I was a regular coffee fiend. I drank it every morning and in consequence had a blinding headache nearly every afternoon. "My folks thought it was coffee that ailed me, but I liked it and would not admit it was the cause of my trouble, so I stuck to coffee and the headaches stuck to me. "Finally, the folks stopped buying coffee and brought home some Postum. They made it right (directions on pkg.) and told me to see what difference it would make with my head, and during that first week on Postum my old affliction did not bother me once. From that day to this we have used nothing but Postum in place of coffee — headaches are a thing of the past and the whole family is in fine health." "Postum looks good, smells good, tastes good, is good, and does good to the whole body." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Well-ville," in pkgs. Postum now comes in two forms: Regular Postum—must be well boiled. Instant Postum—is a soluble powder. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. Grocers sell both kinds. "There's a Reason" for Postum. EAGLE LOAN CO. CORNER FIRST AND BOSTON We Make Loans on Anything of Value. Lowest Rate of Interest Fire Proof Vault Strictly Confidential Oklahoma Auction Furniture Highest Prices Paid for New and Second Hand Furniture of All Kinds. The Cheapest Place to Buy New and Second Hand Household Goods. HOPPER BROS. PEANUTS, 10 CENTS PER POUND 307 South Main St. Phone 474 Tulsa, Oklahoma The Blue Front Everything The Market Affords in The Grocery Line Country Produce A Specialty When You Think of Groceries Think of Money to Loan on Everything of Value Big Stock of Unredeemed Watches, Guns, Clothing and Shoes for Sale at one-half Price. The Mystle-Toe Billiard Parlor Choice Cigars, Cold Drinks and First Class Lunch OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 12 P. M. Thomas & Vaden, Proprietors. CINCINNATI DRUG STORE Boston Drug Store Boston Drug Store REGISTERED PHARMACIST Toilet Articles, Perfumes, Cigars and Tobacco 8 North Boston Tulsa, Oklahoma W. C. Farmer W. C. Farmer No Bill Too Large for this House to Tackle; No Bill Too Small For Our Attention WE SELL ON TERMS AND OUR PRICES ARE NOT HIGH 24 West First Street Tulsa, Oklahoma Caver's French Dry Cleaners and Hat Works Headquarters for all kinds of ladies 'and gents' high class work. Both wet and dry cleaning. Steam cleaning, dying and pressing. When you think of fall think of CAVER, who cleans everything, who has a complete outfit of sanitary dry cleaning machinery. One trial and we convince. Our wagon will call and deliver to all parts of the city. All work guaranteed. Office and works 8 North Cincinnati, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Phone 3132. H. J. CAVER, Prop. Telephone and our our Representative Will Call With Sample Line Phone 3129 THE CITY SUPPLY CO. LADIES READY TO WEAR Diamonds Watches, Jewelry and Cut Glass Cash or Credit 112 East Second Street TULSA, OKLAHOMA 207 E. Second St. HOF C PEAR 307 South Main St The Everything When Cor. 1st-Cincinnati Phone 1721 Grocery Tulsa, Oklahoma “CASCARETS” FOR “SLUGGISH LIVER Turn the rascals out—the headache, billousness, indigestion, the sick, sour stomach and foul gases—tarn them out to-night and keep them out with Cascarets. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never know the misery caused by a lazy liver, clogged bowels or an upset stom- ach, Don’t put in another day of distress, Let Cascarets cleanse your stomach; remove the sour, fermenting food; take the excess bile from your liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter and poison in the bowels. Then you will feel great, A Cascaret to-night straightene you out by morning. They work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from any drug store means a clear head, sweet stomach and clean, healthy liver and bowel action for months. Chil- dren love Cascarets because they never gripe or sicken. Adv. CHANCE FOR OBJECT LESSON Bivalves Would Have Little Prospect of Escape if Karl Really Got Started Romancing. “Talk of opening oysters,” said old Hurricane, “why, nothing's easier, ‘If you only know how.” “And how's how?" inquired Star- light. “Scotch snuff,” answered old Hurri- cane, very sententiously. “Scotch snuff, Bring a little of it ever so near thelr noses, and they'll sneeze thelr lds off.” “I know a genius,” observed Karl, “who has a better plan. He spreads the bivalves in a circle, seats himself in the center, and begins spinning a yarn. Sometimes it's an adventure in Mexico, sometimes a marvelous stock operation on the exchange. “As he proceeds, the ‘natives’ get interested—one by one they gape with astonishment at the tremendous whoppers which are poured forth, and as they gape my friend whips them out, peppers ‘em, and swallows them.” “Tha ll do,” said Starlight, with a long sign. “I wish we had a bushel of the bivalves here now; they'd open easy.” TAKES OFF DANDRUFF HAIR STOPS FALLING Within ten minutes after an appl!- cation of Danderine you cannot find a ingle trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair—growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately dou- bles the beauty of your hair. No dif- ference how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The effect is amaz- ing—your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an incomparable luster, softness and luxuriance, Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from any store, and prove ‘that your hair is as pretty and soft fa any—that it has been neglected or Injured by careless treatment—that's all--you surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just try a lit- tle Danderine. Adv. id ae Tan te Commissioner Howard, chief of staff to General Bramwell Booth of the Salvation Army, tells a story with charming frankness against himself. Traveling in a country district, he had one night, with his secretary, to accept the hospitality of a peasant friend. She endeavored to make up for the narrowness of the bed by piac- ing two boxes alongside, and on taking her visitors into the guest chamber, showed that in her mind the primitive condition of things was capable of philosophic consideration, for she pointedly remarked, “There you are. If you belong to God, you will be all right, while, if you belong to the devil, it 1s too good for you. Good night.” Be thrifty on Tittle things Ike bluing, Don't scoept water fur blulng, Ask for Ked Cross Bull Blue. Adv. It 1s easy to see why a woman thinks she has a pretty ank VARIOUS FOOD VALUES Sere fate UNDERESTE MATED BY HOUSEKEEPER, Dishes Served at Family Table Should Be Constitution Guilders as Well as Palatable—Sweets Have Definite Purpose. The average housekeeper selects ‘her food in a very careless manner, She buys coal and wood for the heat they provide and fabrics for their dur- ability, but she gives very little thought to the efficiency of foodstufts, She merely gets what 1s liked and what happens to be in the market and is eastly prepared. It {8 certain that in years to come, when housekeeping, or “domestic sct- ence,” has taken the high position toward which {t is gradually moving, each housekeeper will be compelled to have her little volume on “Food Vaiues” on the shelf with her book of recipes, and rhe will consult it even more frequently than she does the other books, because she will have been taught that the importance of food lies in its energy-giving proper- tles. But until that time comes we must struggle along ourselves and look at the buying and cooking of foods from a readjust«d point of view--ona which includes the value they have as con- stitution builders as well as thelr pal- atable qualifications. We> must teach ourselves to choose foods wisely, regarding rather the es- sentials than the nonessentials, and to use discrimination in the processes of preparing them. — Say that we need so many thousand units to live and work. Well, then, our food, properly chosen and pre- pared, should help ‘0 supply the nec- eseary units. You casnot make bricks without straw or bread without flour or energy without the fuel to provide It. It would be {mpossible to go deeply Into the food-value question {n a short talk, but there is one essential which must be mentioned because of the change of view regarding It. When we were all children we were given sweets only as a sort of reward for having eaten the plainer foods. Sweets were not looked upon as nec- essary, but rather as verging on the injurious, Now we have learned that sweets, far from being harmful, are beneficial and productive of energy. There are so inany health-giving constituents In the ordinary pudding that {t 1s far more advisable for the dessert of the average child than rich ples or pastries, Almost all puddings require eggs and milk, and these add a goodly number of units to the col- umn. There are also many delicious frult -putatngs which contain many more strengthening elements than the plain fruit itself. And yet a decade of years ago the pudding would have been dealt out to the younger members of the family with a sparing and grudg- ‘ing hand, while they might have par- taken freely of the frutt itself. Mothers are now beginning to real- ize the possibilities of desserts as strength-giving factors in their chil dren's lives. d Fruit Glace, Phepare sections of orange free from all white skin, stem grapes, pare and quarter peaches and stick a little skewer or wooden toothpick Into each, Rub butter over a large platter, using fust as little as possible and make it oily, or use a little olive ofl. Cook one cup each of sugar and water to- gether for five minutes, add one-quar- ter teaspoonful of cream tartar and cook half an hour, or until tested in cold water, It becomes brittle, Set the saucer into a larger one of hot wa- ter and dip the pieces in until covered with the sirup. Spread on the plat- ter and after hardening a little take out the skewers, Benn Mecak, Set a soft sponge at night as for white bread; in the morning take two cups of bran, moisten well with cold water, and let {t boil for twenty min- utes, When luke-warm add this to two cups of the white sponge; also add one-half cup of molasses, one cup of raisins, two tablespoonfuls of lard, and salt unless the white sponge has already been salted. Mix stiff with white flour and knead as you would white bread. When light place in pans and raise to double its bulk; bake one hour. Dark Nut Cake. One cupful sugar, one-half cupful butter, one and one-half cupfuls milk, two cupfuls flour, one teaspoonful cream of tartar, one-half teaspoonful soda, two spoonfuls molasses, two eggs, cinnamon, nutmeg and one cup- ful chopped walnuts. Sallie Lunn. One-half cup butter, two tablespoons sugar, (Wo eggs, an even teaspoon of salt, two cups flour, one cup milk, two teaspoons baking powder. Bake 20 minutes in loaf, in bread pan. | TULSA, ORLA, STAR A ES | : & t . 1 | outs) CR SY ell e a | First in ° ec Everything .. ner, et Firat in Quality - dur First in Results little First in Purity tufts. First in Economy Lead and for these reasons poee Calumet Baking Powder is first inthe oy hearts of the millions itton of housewives who ving, use it and know it. elled GHEST AWARDS Food Hertls tere food Hspestion, ok of PorisEnpocitna, France, March | *° aan i i , 7 Economy Drug Store Dealers in Fresh Drugs, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, and Other Sundries. Cold Drinks and Ice Cream a Specialty, DR. A. F. BRYANT, Prop. te8 N. GREENWOOD ST. TULSA, OKLA) For Nice Things to Eat We Lead—and Others Follow Meals and Short Orders. Courteous Treatment and Prompt Service to All MRS. SUSIE BELL, PROP. sor N. GREENWOOD ST. TULSA, OKLA, es ROWS: S (i MADE BY THE iW my | Rees fis sy ce eee 12 wy, , ay Need Ng pow”, ver oth powoe® / CHICAGO BOSTON CAFE REGULAR MEALS, 25 CENTS. Short Orders at All Hours. The Best Place to Eat on Boston Street 20 S. BOSTON. b TULSA, OKLA, Bn hn SBS CIO FOR REAL ESTATE, LOANS AND INVESTMENTS SEE J. B. STRADFORD. PHONE 3386. gor N. GREENWOOD Directory of the Ministerial Alliance TULSA, OKLAHOMA, 1913. Rev. C. L. Netherland, Pres., Res. 806 E. Archer. Phone 1864 Rey. J. F. Kersh, Vice-Pres., Res. East Archer and Jackson, Rev. H. G. Griffin, Treasurer, Res. 307 North Frankford. Rev. T. J. Jones, Chaplain, Res. 509 N. Greenwood Ave. Rev, F. K. White, Critic of Outlines, Res. 313 Exter. . Jas. A. Johnson, Secretary, Rea. 305 N. Greenwood. Phone 248% Sa ena Notary Public, Phone 3337 Lawyer (Ten Years’ Continuous Practice. Civil and Probate Matters a Specialty. ROOM 10 ROSENFIELD BLDG. a TULSA, OKLA. Easy. Small Boy (pleading for more me t6 stay out and play)—I'll cowe right in when the twelve o'clock whistle blows Mother—But I want you in the house at twelve o'clock. Small Boy—Then I'll start in a lt- tle before the whistle blows SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIR Look Years Younger! Try Grandma's Recipe of Sage and Sulphur land Nobody Will Know. deans in inant il Laelia di lin tha, tik At Dot 8 BO pS igs The Anderson Grocery We are dealers in first-class line of Groceries and’ Market Meats. We cater to our customers. We give Special Attention to all Orders and Deliver Promptly, Try Us when you Order again, C. L. ANDERSON, Proprietor PHONE 2473. gar N. GREENWOOD 8T, Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound: ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray; also ends dandruff, itching scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome, Nowadays we simply ask at any drug store for™Wyeth’s Sage and Sul- phur Hair Remedy.” You will get a large bottle for about 50 cents. Every- body uses this old, famous recipe, be- cause no one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, ae it does {t £0 naturally and evenly. You dampen @ sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your halr, taking one small strand at a time; by morn ing the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick and glossy and you look years younger, —Adv. ’T FORGET DON | | To see us before you have that print- | ing done. Remember weare in thé bus- iness to stay, and it is our purpose to make money by saving money for you. We own our own plant and do our own work. We print EVERYTHING and we gurantee to save you money. SATISFACTION OR NO PAY Star Printing G The Tulsa Star Printing Go. Office, 301 North Greenwood. Plant, 501 Norh Greenwood Phone 3386 TULSA, OKLAHOMA Old One. “Johnny, why did Washington cross the Delaware?" “Aw, why did de chicken cross de street?” Best Laxative Ladies, give little chocolate coated IIOT SPRINGS LIVER BUTTONS a chance to drive out constipation forever. They never fail, They are so wonde fully good, safe and fentie that the famous physicians in Hot Springs, Ark., pre- scribe them regularly. They speedily put the liver, stomach and bowels in the finest of condition, drive out the decomposed matter, and purify the blood, Thousands upon thousands use them for headache, nervousvess, lack of appe- tite, and that lack of ambition Goaline: They are great foreclearing the complex- jon of prmples and blotches. All ¢ ae gists sell th oT SPRINGS LIVER BUT. TONS on money back if not satisfied plan for 25 cents, For free sample write Kiet Springs Chemical Co., Hot Springs, Ari. J. H. McBIRNEY, President S. P. McBIRNEY, Cashier. LEE CLINTON, V. Pres. LEA McBIRNEY, Ast. Cashier. CONDENCED STATEMENT OF THE The National Bank of Commerce OF TULSA, OKLAHOMA. at the close of Business October 21, 1913. RESOURCES Loans and discounts..... $515,970.10 Overdrafts..... 905.97 U. S. Bonds..... 25,000.00 Warrants..... 2,405.46 Real Estate..... 24,000.00 Furniture and Fixtures..... 4,000.00 Five Per Cent Fund..... 1,250.00 Cash and Sight Exchange..... 492,544.62 Total..... $1,066,076.15 LIABILITIES Capital Stock paid in..... $100,000.00 Surplus and Profits..... 18,940.31 Circulation..... 25,000.00 Deposits..... 922,135.84 Total..... $1,066,076.15 The above statement is correct.—S. P. Mc BIRNEY, Cashier. Deposits are guaranteed against loss by careful, conservative management and strict adherence to sound banking principles. Dr. A. C. Jackson Physician & Surgeon Corner Archer and Greenwood Traders 106 East Second Street. If a Judas kisses you on the cheek do not get EXCITED. 20 lbs. Sugar is too much for one cent. Figure OUR PRICES, WEIGHTS, and MEASURES and compare with what is offered for $10.00 in a MAKE BELIEVE store and see if he is not charging FULL price for every except HOT AIR. He ADMITS that if you buy less than $10.00 that he OVER CHARGES you 10 cents on each dollar. FIGURE THIS for YOURSELVES!! Christ said: "The poor will always have with you." We do not want to take from the poor to give to the rich. A man with 10 cents can buy as cheap of us as the man with 10 dollars. We give every body FULL VALUE for their money. One prosperous merchant advertises that PROSPEROUS people can not afford to make DRAYS of THEMSELVES in order to save PENNIES and NICK LEE. He thereby ADMITS that it costs money to keep up TEAMS and AUTO MOBILES and that HIS CUSTOMERS must pay this expense. HE IS RIGHT. IF a man is rich and can AFFORD to give a porter a dollar to SCRATCH his back rather than get a PADDLE and seratch is own back, he can not afford to figure on saving in expenses. But if he has to earn his living by hard labor then he should save every penny he can lay away for PROTECTION in OLD age. 5 1-2 lbs. Sugar ..... 25c 24 lbs. Best Flour ..... 55c BEST (new crop) Michigan Navy 1 can No. 3 Hand Packed Tomatoes 9c Beans. per lb ..... 5c 1 peck Best Potatoes ..... 22c 1 peck Best Sweet Potatoes ..... 28c 1 lb. Best Head Rice ..... 8c 2 pkgs. Macaroni ..... 15c 10 bars Yellow Soap ..... 25c 7 bars White Soap ..... 25c 8 bars Diamond C. Soap ..... 25c 1 lb. Star Tobacco ..... 42c 1 cut Star Tobacco ..... 09c 6 Granger Twist ..... 25c 2 boxes Best Matches ..... 5c 5 lb. Package Best Oats ..... 18c 1 large can Baking Powder ..... 19c All 15s cans of Gooseberries, Straw berries will now go at per can ..... 10 1 gal. White Karo Syrup ..... 43c 1 gal. Best Peeled Apricots ..... 38c 1 gal. Best Peeled Peaches ..... 35c 1 gal. Best Apples ..... 29c 1 Gal. Good Cherries ..... 50c Heavy Fat Backs ..... 9c Good Breakfast Bacon ..... 20c 3 tail cans Milk ..... 20c 6 baby cans Milk ..... 26c All 10 cent articles Sell at 9 cents or less. You can not JUDGE a store by ADVERTISING PRICES. Advertising is like the "Shool Boys" "By Gosh." If it is used for EVERY THING and means NOTHING. Go through our entire line. If we do not save you money we will not ask your trade. You must be pleased or your money back. We must close out our clothing. We have a new line of Star Brand shoes. Our prices are right. Remember our FLOUR MUST be as good as any flour in Tulsa or bring it back. Traders 106 EAST SECOND. Caver's French Dry Cleaning Hatters and Dvers We will save you money and save your clothes, if you will only send them to Gaver, who has the Best Process of Dry and Wet CLEANING. We will make your furs white as snow. We have Had 15 years experience and we know how to CLEAN EVERY THING! One trial and be convinced. All Work Guaranteed! Wagen will call and deliver. Phone 3132 You have been to homes that had a piano; you enjoyed the visit, too; enjoyed the pleasant atmosphere that the piano music threw over the entire household. Why is Your Home Without a Piano? We know that if you desire one, our piano sale opens the way----LOWER PRICES THAN WE ARE GIVING WILL NOT BE OFFERED AGAIN. At least you can take a few moments' time to come in and look over our assortment of standard makes. We will save you money and save your clothes, if you will only send them to Gaver, who has the Best Process of Dry and Wet CLEANING. We will make your furs white as snow. We have Had 15 years experience and w THING! One trial and be con All Work Guarantee deliver. Phone 3132 H. R. LOLIS. DEALER IN.... STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, FRESH AND CURED MEATS. ALL KINDS OF COUNTRY PRODUCE BOUGHT AND SOLD. GIVE HIM A CALL 508 N. Frankford St. This is Not But a Barga 400 of the best from $4.85 to $10 100 Dress Coats, $1.00 to $3.75 00 Suits, from $4.00 to $10.00 Select Your Overcoat NOW Let Us Lay It Awa For You Bardon's Lo Main Near F TULSA, C. O. WINTERRINGER NURSE REG MOWBRAY UNDER Phone 329 36 9H 125 Second St. The Star Clean Up-to-date sanitay cleaning r terations a specialty. Let us do Suits made to your measure of stylish made-to-measure clothing ery color, every weave, every pat prices to suit your pocket book. Hats cleaned and blocked. VISIT US Phone 817 C.O. WINTERRINGER NURSE REGISTER Gor W McCrae MOWBRAY UNDERT...ING CO. Dry Cleaning and Dvers know how to CLEAN EVERY vinced. Wagen will call and MONEY Phone 329 36 9H The Star Cleaning Parlor The Star Cleaning Parlor Up-to-date sanitay cleaning methods. Ladies' work and alterations a specialty. Let us do your cleaning. Suits made to your measure. Come in and see our line of stylish made-to-measure clothing. We have every fabric, every color, every weave, every pattern and make every style at prices to suit your pocket book. patterns to select from. New & Second Hand Furniture Store ALSO STOVY YOU a Sale of Bargain in Sale of High G gain Pianos, Grade In- 1 48 lb Sack Red Star Flour.....$1.40 1 48 lb Sack K. D'Flour.....$1.30 4 lbs N. Beans.....25c 1 Gal. Peaches.....40c 1 Gal. Apricots.....45c 1 Gal. Blackberries.....50c 1 Gal. Gooseberries.....55c 1 Gal. Cherries.....$1.00 3 Cans good Corn.....25c 2 Cans fancy Corn.....25c 2 cans Early June Peas.....25c 2 cans No. 3 Tomatoes.....25c 1 can Carnation Tomatoes.....15c 2 qts. Cranberries.....25c 1 5-lb pail Lard.....65c 1 10-lb pail Lard.....$1.25 We give coupons that are good for Rogers Silverware. They are valuable. We carry a complete line of fresh vegetables and fruits of all kinds at prices that are right. V. A. and L. Bumgarner PROPRIETORS. TO LOAN-On Household Goods, Watches, Diamonds Live Stock, Real Estate, Chattels etc. Room 406 Bliss Bldg. Phone 438 SUBSCRIBE TO DAY OVER-COATS Bardon's Loan Office Main Near First Street THE MILITARY VEHICLE BRALEY'S ALSO NEW and SECOND STOVES. WILL SELL YOU at a LOW PRICE. Come and see.... 206 East First St. Loan Officee First Street OKLAHOMA REGISTER GOT W. McCUSSEY DERTLING CO. Phone 329 56 911 TULSA, OKLA. cleaning Parlor ing methods. Ladies' work and al do your cleaning. sure. Come in and see our line ning. We have every fabric, ev- pattern and make every style at patterns to select from. N. F. LYRTLE, Proprietor. Wreck Sale We bought out two car loads of merchandise at a railroad wreck & we will try to satisfy every customer with the goods. This sale will include a big lot of clothing. Calverl's Barber Shop 107 N. GREENOOD STREET TULSA, OKLAHOMA Strictly First-class in every respect. Shaving and Hair-cutting in every Style. Massages and Sea Foam. Call and see me. H. C. CALVERT Fron [Picture of a man with a mustache and a suit]. The above is the likeness of Bob Rogers, manager of the People's Theatre, who has done much to popularize the vaudeville business in Tulsa. Mr. Rogers is surpassing any of his predecessors in the business here in giving his patrons high-class entertainment, both in the picture features and in vaudeville. Mrs. Rogers, his wife, who, he admits, is the life of the business, with her smiles and kindness is ever ready to note the pleasure and displeasure of their patrons, and this accounts for their continued success.