Tulsa Star

Saturday, March 14, 1914

Tulsa, Oklahoma

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HISTORY A FEARLESS EXPONENT OF RIGHT AND JUSTICE THE TULSA STAR OUR SUBSCRIPTION LIST MAKES A VALUABLE MEDIUM FOR ADVERTISING "Principles, Not Parties," Should Be The Watchword of Every Negro Voter Political Complexion . Of City Campaign Great Elimination Process Comes Tuesday. Vol.2, No.21 "Principles, No. Political Con . Of City Great Elimina t Comes T BIG BATTLE IS NOW ON The People to Settle With Their Vote The Great Questions At Issue "There be politics and then there be politicians," each with a sacred (?) duty to their constituents. And we are about to have some politics in Tulsa which will, in a large measure, decide whether Tulsa shall make good as a strictly modern city or a stopping place along the frontier. Let the people understand what the demands of the Future Tulsa will be not in the appeal of the politician, but in the correct understanding of the people—the unselfish view. Tulsa will need more schools, better schools; more paving (as the politician will tell the people, late on); an extended sewer system, parks, better streets in places and a lot of other expensive embellishments and necessities for which the people—the tax payer—must pay. Tulsa must have them. Tulsa will have them. We have to say for the present administration of the city t): they have Tulsa in beautiful shape to turn over to successors in they are defeated for re-elect. And one thing the people should understand: We can all star and criticize the man in office, cuss him for what we think are his mistakes and fail to encourage him for his good service; but when a fellow gets in harness himself, why, things are so different! Always giving credit to the fellow who has done the best he could we are about to ask, who can take up where the present, administration has made? Who can improve where they have failed? Who will? Trust the people, they are always right and their decision will soon be known. The stamp of approval on one hand and disapproval on the other will be dealt out in no uncertain measure on next Tuesday by the people of this city. Every intelligent citizen of Tulsa who has the best interest of his home and its future at heart should go to the polls Tuesday and do his full duty as he sees it. Every man has his faults, and the same holds true with political parties. In deciding the questions at issue in this campaign we should be reasonable and place credit where credit is due. Campaigns of this kind are always waged and pitred one party against the other with the hope of success uppermost in the minds of both sides. Taken seriously, it's a game of honor; taken as we usually meet it, it's a game of politics with honors in favor of the shrewdest politician, SUCCESSOR TO THE MUSKOGEE STAR TULSA, OKLAHOMA, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1914 --- Ladies S. M. T. Holds Meeting Ca. Jackson Divers An Address At a stated meeting by the ladies of the S. M. T., of which Mrs. Callen is the princess, Capt. Jackson was invited to be present. He was called upon to address these sisters of S. M. and T. He responded in his usual way and said. "Sisters and Friends of this Pilgrimess Lodge No. 67 of S. M. and T.: As you are called, you are representatives of one of the noblest orders of the world. I am always glad to be a member of the C. B. F. because the movements of this order under the leadership of your Grand Master and Brother Evans, the master of our lodge, in Tulsa, always has for its one and aim the betterment of woman mankind. This number of and T. is deserving of more a passing consideration by people of Tulsa. They are trying to be a greater factor in the activities of American life, and a larger contributor to its growth and prosperity is the hope of our members as citizens, and was as B. F. shall be pleased to have good will and hearty cooperation of all who are in sympathy with a race struggling against heat odds, endeavoring to reach a higher sphere in man's civilization by thrift, honesty, industry, economy, intelligence and good deportment, coupled with greater awareness for law and the responsibilities of citizenship. We as U. B. F. of Oklahoma hope to win and hold the respect and confidence of the American people. Now, my sisters, if you will have your husbands consider the political conditions of us as a race in Tulsa and induce them to lose sight of partisanship and look for the man of the hour, vote independent of any party; you will find the order will become a great factor and will command more consideration as taxpayers and citizens than ever in Oklahoma. We as good citizens ought to help The Tulsa Star and keep the reputation of our noble order before the people through the columns of this great paper we need so much. It is fact which the public should know, that Negroes in Tulsa own more good, clean, substantial homes than in any other town in the state. Where to Vote Where to Vote A primary election will be held in the city of Tulsa, at the places named below, on Tuesday, March 17th., 1914, for the purpose of nominating candidates for the city offices to be elected on the first Tuesday in April, 1914. Precinct 1:—Brick building, at rear of Roy's restaurant, on Cincinnati. Precinct 2:—At garage on N. Boulder. Precinct 3:—Central Fire station, on West Second street. Precinct 4:—Oxford Hotel building, East Third street. Precinct 5:—Oakland Garage, corner Fenth and Main streets. Precinct 6:—Office of the County Election Board, court house. Precinct 7:—West Side Grocery, on West Fifth street. Precinct 8:—Owen School. Precinct 9:—Rogers, store, Duluth st. Precinct 10:—Northside Fire station. Precinct 11:—Smittle Grocery, East lodge street. Precinct 12:—Davis & Walter's mule Barn, East Fourth street. Precinct 13:—Southeast corner Oaklawn cemetery. Precinct 14:...Robertson grocery, corner 15th and Main streets. Precinct 15:...Corner 10th and Main. Precinct 16:...Lindsey School. Precinct 15:...Went Tables. Precinct 17:... West Tulsa. All persons who shall be qualified to vote April 7, 1914, may vote in the primary election, March 17th. The Square Deal Policy Unless the "square deal" for all citizens meets the approval of the best people who make up a community, there are chances that in any unfair plan of development that at a time when the interests of that community need support from the community generally, they will fail to respond to the call. Muskogee was a great little city once; Guthrie was a promising little city once; Oklahoma City has had her day among the prosperous communities of the state. Why are they not keeping their interests along with the cities with which they were once classed? Why is it they cannot interest capital and investments? Why their empty houses and cheap rent? The citizens of each of these cities will tell you, "We went down with the boom." The fact is, they had no boom. They had every opportunity, each of them, in its time, to make a constant growth in population and business—but the leaders deceived the people. Tulsa might learn profitable lessons by astudy of the fates of cities and in the campaign we are putting on for a greater Tulsa, and a better commercial center, it should be borne in mind that the people are with the movement—heart, soul and purse. As long as the affairs of the city are managed in the interest of Tulsa and Tulsa people, the people will be with the officials who are responsible for the progress of the city and county. Negroes not excepted. A Race Man of Some Distinction Prof. Wood Has Made Good As An Educator, Lecturer and Orator 五 There are many great and noble men now upon the stage of action leveting their best energies and talents to the uplift and advancement of our race, and helping in every conceivable way to inspire high ideals, lofty sentiments and new additions into the hearts and lives of all within the reach of their grasp and influence, whose work, devotion and sacrifice is insuring and unwritten. Such men are content to know they are performing a God-sent mission to their fellow man, and laboring quietly, but valiantly, for the salvation of a people who so much care such services. Much is the prototype and character of Prof. W. G. Wood, Jr., of whom it is a pleasure to present to our readers in this sketch. Born near Pleasant Hill, Mo., he was the son of one of the leading farmers of Cass county. His early life was spent on his father's farm imbibing the innocent environments of a country life, being trained by his simple surroundings to look hopefully into the future before him with a longing ambition to be useful and serviceable, and to follow in the wake of the example his good father set before him. His first educational training was in the public schools of his native county, gradually adding to his store of knowledge by self effort, until he had reached the age of his majority. Not being satisfied with the educational training he had received up to this age, he decided to go to Oberlin (Ohio) College. By his industrious efforts he succeeded in his cherished desire, and entered Oberlin, finishing with the degree of A.M. Prof. Wood, in his career, has engaged in many kinds of employment, and refers with pride to the times when he was a book agent, a cigar salesman, a freight handle and a checking clerk for the Santa Fe railroad. From these positions he turned to the teaching profession, and for the past several years has taught in the public schools of Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma, and in 1908 was under the employment of the U. S. government as a teacher in the Philippine Islands, remaining there for 18 months. After quitting the employment of the government he made a tour through several of the foreign countries. Among those he visited and in which he spent some time in study and pleasure-seeking were Germany, Austria-Hungary, China, Japan, South Africa and the South American countries. On his return to the United States he took the lecture field, and delivered lectures in many of the principal cities of the four sections of the U. S. He has clippings from newspapers where he lectured paving the highest com PROF. G. W. WOOD, JR. Educator, Lecturer and Prominent Race Devotee and Leader mandatory notice to his lectures. His lecture subjects consist of "Camping on Higher Ground." "The Moral, Intellectual and Financial Advancement of the Afro-American Checked by Shortsightedness," "Man in Place," together with narrations of his extended trip abroad. While on his tour he gave over 500 lectures to audiences covering the territory from ocean to ocean. In Oklahoma he has delivered as many as 189, several times before white audiences exclusively. These lectures have never failed to impress his hearts and to stamp indelibly upon their minds the vital points brought out in them. Aside from educator and lecturer, Prof. Wood has conducted commercial colleges at Oklahoma City, Boiley and Fort Smith, Ark. He is an expert in shortland and stenography, and has established his record as such in the cities mentioned. The race should be proud and grateful for men of Prof. Wood's ability, usefulness and devotion, and though his name should never be recorded on the pages of history, those with whom he has come in contact and touched with his life and labor, will bless and honor his memory. It is reported that the property holders who were losers in the recent fire at Boley will be rebuild during the summer with brick houses of modern architecture. As soon as the weather gets warm the foundation work will begin. PLEASE PUBLISH THIS LETTER Writes Lady Who can Now Walk Four Miles a Day Without Feeling Tired. Boydton, Va.—Mrs. Fannie Boyd, of this town, says: "I am sure I would have been in my grave, had it not been for Cardul, the woman's tonic, and I certainly cannot praise it enough, for it is worth its weight in gold. I am, today, a walking advertisement for Cardul. Before taking Cardul, I could hardly walk across the floor, I was so weak. I underwent an operation last spring for womanly trouble, but felt no better. After using 8 bottles of Cardul, the woman's tonic, my ulcers were all gone, I can eat hearty without suffering any pain, feel fine in every way, work all day, and can walk four miles a day without feeling tired. Please publish this letter, as I would like for every woman to know what Cardul did for me." Many letters, similar to the above, come to us, unsolicited, every day. This one should surely convince you of the merit of Cardul, as it expresses the earnest sentiment of a lady who has tried it. If you suffer from any of the numerous alliments so common to women, such as headache, backache, nervousness, weakness, pains in sides and limbs, sleeplessness, etc., begin taking Cardul today. It will help you, as it has helped so many others, in the past half century N. B.—Write to: Ladies' Advisory Dept., Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., for Special Instructions, and 64-page book, "Home Treatment for Women," sent in plain wrapper, on request. Adv. His Attitude. "The street car strap-hanger—" "Oh, he's a standing joke."—Baltimore American. Children seldom realize how well off they are until they grow up—and then the circus parade has passed. Keep Your Digestion Normal and you will have the secret of continued good health—allow it. to become impaired and you weaken the entire system. For any disturbance of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels try PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merik. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. $60, and $1.00 at Druggists. Oklahoma Directory PATENTS THAT SECURE, BARNACLO THE PATENT MAN. BASSETT BLDG., 115% NO. BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA. SAVE YOUR HOGS FROM CHOLERA by use of Anti Hog Cholera Serum manufactured under Government Inspection. Write today for free particulars. Wichita-Oklahoma Serum Co., Stock Yards, Okla. City. My Free Book on Chronicle Diseases of Men, 98 pages mailed to any address on receipt of two cent stamp. 15 years in Oklahoma City. All correspond- ence confidential, and solicited. Dr G. P. Mehl, Specialist, 118½ W. Main St., Okla. City, Okla. Serum Will Save Your Hogs From Cholera Write for free booklet. We manufacture our Serum at our plant at Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. State Veterinary in charge, OKLAHOMA STOCK YARDS SERUM COMPANY. PHONE WAL- NUT 5562, OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA PILES Cures guaranteed. No knife - Serum treatment. Twenty-five years' experience. Call or write, enclosing stamp for book on Recital Diseases. Dr. SHEWY 1147 N. Broadway, Oklahoma City, Okla. ALL MADE FROM CORN ALL MADE FROM CORN LONG LIST OF DAINTIES WITH THAT FOUNDATION. If Canned Product Is Used, Baking is an Excellent Method of Using It—Souffle Easy to Prepare and Appetizing. Baked Canned Corn.—Pour can of corn into buttered baking dish, season with salt and pepper. Add one cup of boiling milk or half a cup of cream, and dot with two tablespoonfuls of butter broken into small bits. Bake for 45 minutes in a moderate oven, and eerve in the same dish. Scalloped Corn.—Run a can of corn through a sieve. Season it with salt, pepper and sugar, add two tablespoons of flour, blended with three tablespoonfuls of cream and half a cup of the liquid drained from the corn. Put into a buttered baking dish, cover with crumbs, dot with butter and bake for twenty minutes. Corn Dainty.—Rub a can of corn through the meat chopper. Season the pulp with salt, pepper and sugar and heat thoroughly with two tablespoonfuls of butter. Add three eggs well beaten, and bake in the oven until puffed and brown. Fold in the stiffly beaten whitte last. Corn Fritters.—Beat two eggs, add one cup of milk and one can of corn. Season with salt, pepper and sugar and add a tablespoonful of butter and enough flour to make a stiff batter. Stir in a teaspoonful of baking powder, mix thoroughly and fry in deep fat or on a griddle. Corn Drops.—Mix together one can of corn, three eggs well beaten, a tablespoonful each of sugar, flour and butter, and pepper and salt to season highly. Drop into well-buttered gem pans and bake in a moderate oven for half an hour. Corn Souffle.—Add to each cupful of corn one cupful of cream or the top of the milk, a tablespoonful of butter, salt and pepper to season, and the yolks of three eggs well beaten. Cook in a double boiler until smooth and creamy, stirring constantly. Take from the fire, cool, fold in the stiffly beaten whites of four eggs, turn into a buttered baking dish and bake for twenty minutes in a hot oven. Corn Croquettes.—Take two cups of canned corn. Add one cup of cream or milk and cook for twenty minutes in the double boiler. Add one tablespoonful of butter and one of grated cheese, salt and pepper to season highly, and one well-beaten egg. Cool and shape into croquettes, adding cracker crumbs if it will not shape easily. Dip in egg and crumbs and fry in deep fat. Fried Corn.—Add half a cup of milk to two cups of canned corn and a tablespoonful of butter, with pepper and salt to season. Put into a frying pan and cook until tender, then fry until golden brown. Scalloped Corn With Tomatoes. Mix together two cups each of canned tomatoes and canned corn. Season with salt, pepper, butter and sugar and pour into a buttered baking dish. Cover with crumbs, dot with butter and bake for half an hour in a moderate oven. Keeping Vegetables. Keep onions and shallots hanging up by strings, away from the other food. Keep parsley and mint with the stalks in water and change the water every day. Keep potatoes and artichokes in a dry, dark cellar, and cover them with straw. Keep carrots, beetroots and parsnips in dry sand. Keep herbs in an afr-tight bottle or box, after you have stripped off the leaves and rubbed them through a fine sieve. Maryland Spoon Corn Bread. Put one quart of milk on the fire in a double boiler. When it comes to $ \mathbf{b} $ boil stir in four large kitchen spoonfuls of cornmeal and cook five minutes, stirring all the time. Remove from the fire and stir once or twice as it cools. When cool add three egg well beaten, with two tablespoonfuls of flour, one tablespoonful of butter, one scant teaspoonful of salt. Pour in a greased dish and bake 35 minutes. Serve immediately with a napkin around the dish. Virginia Waffles. One and one-half cups boiling water, one-half cup white cornmeal, one and one-half cups milk, three cups flour, three tablespoonfuls sugar, one and one-fourth tablespoonfuls baking powder, one and one-half teaspoonfuls salt, yolks two eggs, whites two eggs and two tablespoonfuls melted butter. Cook meal in boiling water 20 minutes; add milk, dry ingredients mixed and sifted, yolks of eggs well beaten, butter and whites of eggs beaten stiff. Cook same as waffles. TULSA. OKLA.. STAR MOTHER! LOOK AT CHILD'S TONGUE If cross, feverish, constipated give "California Syrup of Figs" A laxative today saves a sick child tomorrow. Children simply will not take the time from play to empty their bowels, which become clogged up with waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach sour. Look at the tongue, mother! If coated, or your child is listless, cross, feverish, breath bad, restless, doesn't eat heartily, full of cold or has sore throat or any other children's ailment, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," then don't worry, because it is perfectly harmless, and in a few hours all this constipation poison, sour bile and fermenting waste will gently move out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. A thorough "inside cleansing" is oftimes all that is necessary. It should be the first treatment given in any sickness Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. 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. It is seldom that a man can look with admiration upon an old photo graph of himself. Only One "BROMO OUININE" To get the genuine, call for tail name, LAXA- To E. W. GROVE, Curea Cold To W. GROVE, Curea Cold The Net Result. "Jinks says he is a self-made, man." "Then he made a fool job of the work."—Baltimore American. What He Did. Grace—I told him he must not see me any more. Her Brother—Well, what did he do? Grace—Turned out the light!—Dartmouth Jack o' Lantern. Satisfied with Entertainment A little boy was watching certain adult visitors to a city amusement park ride donkeys. An exceedingly fat woman hired a donkey and was about to mount when she noticed the boy's eager gaze. "Little boy," she called, pleasantly, "don't you want me to hire a donkey for you, too?" "No, thank you," he replied, chuckling, "I'd rather sit here and laugh." Wanted a Change. Mrs. Simpson-Jones wanted to become a suffragette, but her husband objected. "But," she pleaded, "if you only knew what a lot one learns at their meetings. All about referendums, and recalls and—" "I've said no, and that ends it!" snapped Mr. Simpson-Jones. "If you women want to find things out why don't you follow the advice of St. Paul and ask your husbands? You women are such fools." This was too much for Mrs. Simpson-Jones' long humbled spirit. "That's just the trouble," she returned. "Women have been 'asking their husbands' for the last 2,000 years, and they're still fools."—Exchange. LIFE'S ROAD Smoothed by Change of Food. Worry is a big load to carry and an unnecessary one. When accompanied by indigestion it certainly is cause for the blues. But the whole trouble may be easily thrown off and life's road be made easy and comfortable by proper eating and the cultivation of good cheer Read what a Troy woman says: "Two years ago I made the acquaintance of Grape-Nuts and have used the food once a day and sometimes twice, ever since. "At the time I began to use it, life was a burden. I was for years afflicted with billious sick headache, caused by indigestion, and nothing seemed to relieve me. "The trouble became so severe I had to leave my work for days at a time. "My nerves were in such a state I could not sleep and the doctor said I was on the verge of nervous prostration. I saw an adv. concerning Grape-Nuts and bought a package for trial. "What Grape-Nuts has done for me is certainly marvelous. I can now sleep like a child, am entirely free from the old trouble and have not had a headache in over a year. I feel like a new person. I have recommended it to others. One man I knew ate principally Grape-Nuts while working on the ice all winter, and said he never felt better in his life." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. MAKES AN UNEQUALED CAKE Recipe Is an Old One, but Years Have Passed Without an Improvement Being Made in it. A woman who for years has made and sold cakes always uses the same recipe for all kinds of festivities, for wedding cakes, special cakes, holiday cakes, party cakes, and everyday cakes, simply because the cake which she made was so delicious that all the guests wanted one like it, and this desire has been passed on to their children and friends. She keeps many cakes on hand, so that customers may have their cake a day, a week, or a month old, as they like. Each cake weighs about one and one-half pounds, and is labeled with the date of its baking. They are kept in stone jars wrapped in waxed paper. Here is the recipe: One cupful each of sugar, butter and molasses; one cupful home-made jelly or strawberry preserves; one cupful buttermilk; one-half cupful strong coffee; two eggs; one grated nutmeg, two teaspoonfuls clinnamon, one teaspoonful cloves; two teaspoonfuls saleratus (dissolved in one-half cup boiling water); two pounds ralsins; one pound cleaned currants; one pound chopped candied fruit (lemon, orange, citron); six cupfuls flour (measured before sifting). Mix the fruit thoroughly in the flour. Cream butter and sugar, add the eggs, milk and coffee, then the flour containing the fruit. Beat thoroughly and add the spices. Turn into well-buttered pans, and bake at least one hour in a slow oven. ALL AROUND the HOUSE The kitchen will take on a new atmosphere of cheer if it is given a blue and white tile pattern paper and blue oilcloth for floor and table. On the emergency shelf there should be some canned milk with the cans of vegetables and fruit, as there may come a time when oysters will have to be cooked at night or something else cooked for which there is not cream or milk enough. A woman who likes nice things always makes her own lavender water. She takes a bottle of white vinegar and into it puts a handful of lavender flowers. It is allowed to stand five days in a warm place and when strained is ready for use. Handkerchiefs or other articles of wear that have ink spots on them may be washed better if the spot is smeared with mutton tallow before sending it to the laundry. A weak solution of turpentine poured down the water pipes once a week will drive the water bugs away. Half a lemon dipped in salt is excellent for cleaning copper articles. Oxalic acid, too, is equally successful both for copper and brass. Handy Window Pole. Take an old broom-handle. Paint it to harmonize with your room and insert at one end a screw-hook. Screw into the upper sash of each window in the room a ring-screw for the hook on the pole and your window pole is ready for immediate use. This will save you from having to run up and down and through the house looking for a window pole, or climbing on chairs to reach the sashes every time you wish to raise or lower a window. Iron More Easily. An easy way to keep clothes damp for ironing is to sew up a bag from an old sheet and dip in water and do not wring dry. After clothes are dampened place in bag and tie. Clothes treated in this way will iron more easily and stay damp longer than if placed in a basket and covered in the usual way. Laundry Lists. When counting the wash make out two lists, one for the washerwoman and one for yourself. A book may be purchased with carbon paper in it, such as clerks use in the stores. Write the list once and the other will be traced. Baked Pork Chops Take as many thick slices as are needed for the meal, place in a pan with a little water, lay a thin slice of onion on each, season with salt and pepper and bake till done. For Your Oilcloth. A very good and inexpensive polish for oilcloth and linoleum is made by melting bits of candle and adding common turpentine to the grease. Apply the mixture with a soft rag and polish with a clean cloth. Fruit Salad. One pineapple, sliced, peeled, chopped; two oranges, peeled and cut up; three bananas sliced, juice of half a lemon, two tablespoonfuls grape juice, $1 \frac{1}{2}$ cups sugar. Stir and blend. Prepare $1 \frac{1}{2}$ hours before using. The Baking Powder Question Solved —solved once for all by Calumet For daily use in millions of kitchens has proved that Calumet is highest not only in quality but in leavening power as well—unfailing in results—pure to the extreme—and wonderfully economical in use. Ask your grocer. And try Calumet next bake day. World's Pure Food Exposition, Chicago, Ill. Paris Exposition, France, March, 1912. BAKING POWDER NOT MADE BY THE TRUST CALUMET BAKING POWDER CALUMET BAKING POWDER CO. CHICAGO You don't save money when you buy cheap or big-can baking powder. Don't be misled. Buy Calumet. It's more economical—more wholesome—gives best results. Calumet is far superior to sour milk and soda. "Mind your own business and never get mixed up in the troubles of other people," advised the Sage. "If I followed that advice I'd starve to death," replied the Visitor. "I'm a lawyer." Constipation causes many serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative, three for cathartic. Adv. Natural Conclusion. "Trouble is brewing." "Not a beer famine?"—Baltimore American. Anybody can dye successfully with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. Adv. A man who is good chiefly on the surface is no good. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely vegeta- ble — act surely but gently on the liver. Stop after dinner distress—cure indigestion, improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Brent Good PISO'S REMEDY Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by Druggists. FOR COUGHS AND COLDS PO Cee oe ek EAGLE LOAN CoO. CORNER FIRST AND BOSTON We Make Loans on Anything of Value. Lowest Rate of Interest Fire Proof Vault Strictly Confidential STRIKING A GUSHER When Jared Bliss took sick and the reports from the doctor looked gloomy and foreboding, his friends and rela- Uves called once or twice and then left him to die, It had been ascertained that he was “all in,” not only physical- y but in a financial sense, “He's simply reaping the folly he sowed,” saplently observed his nephew, Walter Pope, forgetting that it was the liberality of the good old man that had originally started him in business. Other selfish and ungrateful rela- tives echoed the sentiments of the in- grate, Pope. The man upon whom they had counted to enrich them when he was through with life had “wanton- ly thrown away his fortune!” He had given about half of it to charity. He had a hobby for antiques and became the victim of every unprincipled curto huckster, He was credulous, benevo- lent, unsophisticated. ‘The stock job- ber and the promoter had worked him to a finish, Netta Lysle was an orphan and daughter of a halfsister of Bliss. The old man knew her, and when her mother died had seen to it that her child was be- stowed in the care of the Pope fam- fly. They had made Netta work for what they gave her, One Christmas Jared Bliss had given her a pretty watch and chain. Its inner case bore a photograph of her mother, and she had always cherished the gift. Feeling kindly as she always did towards all humanity, Netta was shocked at the petty meanness of the Pope family when sickness and ill for- tune overtook the artless kind hearted old man, She realized that ho was practically deserted. One morning she appeared down stairs with her few possessions packed in a satchel. “I am going away, Aunt Martha,” she said simply. “When? Where? Why?” challenged Mrs. Vope. “Right now, to Mr. Bliss, because he must need ¢ome one to take care of him in his sickness,” “Folly! Why, he has no money! Do you want to starve to death with him?" “I won't let him starve while I am able to work,” declared Netta. “This is simpie nonsense!” insisted Aunt Martha. "So, Netta, if you leave Oklahoma Auction Furniture Company Highest Prices Paid for New and Second Hand Furniture of All Kinds. The Cheapest Place to Buy New and Second Hand Household Goods. 207 E. Second St, Phone 236 Tulsa, Oklahoma FOR REAL ESTATE, LOANS AND SEE J. B. STRADFORD. PHONE 3386. 301 N. GREENWOOD —eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaeeeeeeeeeeee” Directory of the Ministerial Alliance TULSA, OKLAHOMA, 1913. Rev. C. L. Netherland, Pres., Res. 806 E. Archer. Phone 1864, Rev. 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, Res. 305 N. Greenwood. Phone 248% eee Ec yD conomy Drug Store Dealers in Fresh Drugs, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, and Other eundta Cold Drinks and Ice Cream a Specialty, DR. A. F. BRYANT, Prop. #08 N. GREENWOOD ST. TULSA, OKLA) eee eee a OTTO T TTT TTT Notary Public, Phone 3337 H. AUGUSTUS GUESS Lawyer ‘Ten Years’ Continuous Practice. Civil and Probate Matters a Specialty, ROOM 10 ROSENFIELD BLDG. =i _TULSA, OKLA Telephone and our our Representative Will Call With Sample Line Phone 3129 LADIES READY TO WEAR Diamonds Watches, Jewelry and Cut Glass Cash or Credit 112 East Second Street TULSA, OKLAHOMA : Wyle : 9 DON’T FORGET ' To see us before you have that print- ing done. Be iamict oe spain ts ae iness to stay, and it is our purpose to make money by saving money ie 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 The Tulsa Star Printing Go. Office, 301 North Greenwood. Plant, 501 Norh Greenwood Phone 3386 i. TULSA, OKLAHOMA “| Found This Among the Rubbish.” this house on any foolhardy errand you need not come back again.” “You have been very kind to. me, Aunt Martha,” replied Netta, “but | feel it my duty to go to Uncle Jared.” Netta found Mr. Bliss hobbling about his home scarcely able to get around. He listened gravely as she told him ‘she had come to be his housekeeper until he got well, The place was in a state of great neglect and disorder. ‘The piano, the books and some of the furniture had been seized and carted away to satisfy a debt and most of the rooms were bare and cheerless look- ing. Before night the industrious Netta had Uncle Jared 80 comfortable and well fed that he began to cheer up magically. “You are going to get well very fast,” she declared the next morning. “Now I am going to clean house.” It was when she had removed all the rubbish that littered the place, swept it into one room and dusted and put in order the rest of the house, that she told Uncle Jared that he must look over the mass of papers and sort out what was of value, “You'll find nothing amounting to anything,” he observed. “They've ta- ken all the books, old coins and pic- tures that would sell. I'll go over the mess, though, to please you,” but he soon got tired of sorting out the stuff. ‘Then Netta took a hand. She came to the old man somewhat later with a legal looking document. “Uncle Jared,” she said, “I found this amongst the rubbish. It is a deed, The Anderson Grocery We are dealers in first-class line of Groceries and Marte? (Meats. We cater to our customers, We give Special Attention ta gall Orders and Deliver Promptly. Try Us when you Order agaim, C. L. ANDERSON, Proprietor PHONE save 91 N, GREENWOOD 8T, {t seems, It tells about some land that you bought.” “Well! Well!" exclaimed the old man, as he glanced at the document, “l had actually forgotten all about it. 1 remember now, I bought the land, some forty acres, from a friend who paid a large price for ® thinking it was oll land. He spent a fortune sinking wells but never found any oil. I took {i off his hands to help him out.” A few days later Netta came to him again “I've been thinking about that land, Uncle Jared,” she said, “It is right over the state line, It must have some value. Why, it would make a nice It- tle farm. You say there is a houge on ft. Why couldn't we make a living there?” “We? repeated the old man, “You don't mean to say you'd bury yourself in that desolate spot?” “Uncle Jared,” replied Netta, “I am going to help take care of you just as Jong as you will let me.” It was just a month later when Mr. Bliss and Netta found themselves lo- cated in their new home. It was in the midst of an oil producing district and the landscape was not very Invit: ing. Tho enterprising Netta found, how- ever, that they could ratse enough on the land to live comfortably and the outdoor life was Just the thing for the old man. And then there came a new element into the lonely life of the loyal girl—love, As handsome and manly a young fellow as one would meet in a day's journey came upon the scene, He was superintendent at one of the refineries. He met Netta in the little village near by and It was a case of real love at firet sight. Ned Burton was a cheery helpful sort of a fellow. Saturdays he would come to the little farm and help Netta and her uncle in all kinds of work. There was no well and they had to have their drinking water brought in barrels from a spring two miles away. To remedy this, one eventful Satur day Ned arrived with a boring outfit to tap the ground for water. They had gone down about forty feet and were still boring, when the man at the drill ran back, overcome by an explosion and then a spray that showered up high into the air. “It's oll!" he yelled to Ned. “Say, we've struck {t rich!” “A gusher!” shouted his excited companion. “Why, what does he mean?" faltered the surprised Netta. “Brom what I know of oil wells,” re- plied Ned enthusiastically, “I should say that Mr, Bliss has accidentally come into a big fortune.” ‘They were sure of that when word that a new big strike had been made brought experts and @peculators flock- Ing to the scene. Before the week was out an opera- tive company in the fleld made Mr. Bliss an offer of a fabulous amount for his forty acres, Uncle Jared did two things right away. The first was to purchase a lovely home in the vil- lage, the next to settle on his faithful little housekeeper one-half of his for- tune, And then—a wedding. They called the new home “Heart's Delight,” he- cause it sheltered three loving spirits who had known adversity and apprect- ated the new dawning prosperity with humble, grateful souls, First Davy Safety Lamp. January 9, 1816, saw in the deeps of an English coal mine near Newcastle a little drama in which there were but two actors, the one a clergyman, the other a miner. The latter was busily picking out the coal by the light of a “steel-mill” when he saw approaching him a light. The miner knew the gassy nature of the pit and shouted, “Put out the light:" but no notice was taken even when prayers took the place of oaths. The neweomer was Rev. John Hodgson, rector of Jarrow, and he had in his hand the first Davy safety lamp, now safely housed in the Museum of Practical Geology in Jer- myn street, London. Sir Humphrey Davy, when urged to patent it, replied: “It might undoubtedly enable me to put four horses in my carriage, but what could it avail me to have It said that Sir Humphrey drives his carriage and four bought at the expense of mt ners’ lives?” Titled Rounders. Eva Tanguay, the actress, was con- gratulated at Jack's in New York upon her recent marriage, “It's a love match, too,” sald Miss Tanguay. “It's not the sort of match that our young heiresses make with titled bounders. The average titled bounder, if he told the truth, would, when he proposed to a young heiress, make a speech like this: “Miss Golde—Lotta—I love you for your pelf alone.’” Second Sight. Miss Candor—What a splendid world {t would be {f we could only see ourselves as others see us? Miss Hardhead—I kn6w something better than that. Miss Candor—What? Miss Hardhead—To see others as we see ourselves.—London Life, “CASCARETS” FOR A BILOUS LE No odds how bad your liver, stomach or bowels; how much your head Aches, how miserable and uncomfort- able you are from constipation, indiges- tion, biliousness and sluggish bowels —you always get the desired results with Cascarets, Don’t let your stomach, iver and bowels make you miserable. Take Cascarets to-night; put -n ond to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nery- ousness, sick, sour, — 38y stomach, backache and all other distress; cleanse your inside organs of all the bile, gases and constipated matter which is producing the misery, . A 10-cent box means health, happt- ness and a clear head for months. No more days of gloom and distress if you will take a Cascaret now and then. All stores sell Cascarets, Don't forget the children—their little in sides need a cleansing, too. Ady. Muscular Rellaten. Bishop Cross said the other day of a clergyman who advocated a stand- ign army: “Muscular Christanity 1s all very well in its way, no doubt, but when- ever I see an ebulition of it I think of the revivalist “A revivalist on a street corner was & good deal annoyed by a group of rough young men. Glaring at these young men, he said: “‘Let us now kneel in prayer, and {f that young fellow with the hare Up interferes with me again while I'm praying I'll break his jaw, if I do seven years’ hard labor for it."—New Orleans States. TAKE A GLASS OF SALTS WHEN BLADDER BOTHERS Harmless to Flush Kidneys and Neu- tralize Irritating Acids—Splendid for the System. | Kidney and Bladder weakness result ‘from uric acid, says a noted authority, |The kidneys filter this acid from the blood and pass {t on to the bladder, where it often remains to irritate and inflame, causing a burning, scalding sensation, or setting up an Irritation at the neck of the bladder, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. The sufferer is in constant dread, the water passes sometimes with a scalding sensation and is very profuse; again, there is difficulty in avoiding it. Bladder weakness, most folks call it, because they can't control urlaa tion. While it is extremely annoying and sometimes very painful, this is really one of the most simple ailments to overcome. Get about four ounces of Jad Salts from your pharmacist and take a tablespoonful in a glass of “water before breakfast, continue this ‘for two or three days. This will neu- tralize the acids in the urine 60 {t no longer is a source of Irritation to the bladder and urinary organs which then act normally again, Jad Salts 1s inexpensive, harmless, and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with Iithia, and 1s used by thousands of folks who are subject to urinary disorders caused by uric acid {rritation. Jad Salts {9 splendid for kidneys and causes no bad effects whatever. Here you have a pleasant, efferves cent lithia-water drink, which quickly relieves bladder trouble.—Adv. Personal Viewpoint. _ “What's your objection to strikes?” asked Mr. Rafferty. “Well,” replied Mr. Dolan, “the way I feel about strikes is that If you're rich enough to be able to afford them you don't feel like taking the trouble.” Important to Moth: Exam/ne caretully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of _In Use For Over 30 Years, Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria The-Natural Ones. “Are they making any changes ip that broom factory?” “Oh, yes; sweeping ones.” No thougitfu? person uses tiquid blue, It's @ ploch of blue in « large bottle of water, Saki tor Red Cross Ball Blue, “Ady. Naturally. “There 1s an astronomer who has a role in this play.” “Does he play the star part?” Your family Doctor can't do more for jour cough than Dean's Mentholated [isch Deepa; “iting sanetneat tetoaae, A woman seldom accepts her hus- band’s excuses at par. THE TULSA STAR Printingand Publishing CO, Published Every Saturday at 501 North Greenwood Street. i a Haterod as second-class metioe Apel! 11, 11 lo Post Offive at Tulsa Oklahoma, under the Act of Mareh i, (979. a A. J. SMITHERMAN EDITOR AND PUBLISHER H, R, GRAHAM Associate Editor Mrs, 0. B. Smitherman Society Editor —— SUBSCRIPTION RATES One vaar - é ‘ $1.00 Six Month . : : . 60 ‘Three Mouth “ . ‘ 85 Wonder how the Chief Sam adherents in Oklahoma are taking to the latest stunts of their pious Chief? There are far ny big “1 Tulsa. If we had fewer leaders and more gor 1 rs our future would be much brighter. Will Mr. Russell of the Chief Sam delegation who wrote to Tue Srar a few weeks ago praising Sam, please let us hear from him again? When the Negroes of America forget partisanship and vote for men and measures on their respective merits only, then will dawn the political salvation of the race in this country, : < ie , Capt. Jackson in in roceiptof a letter from a_ relative of whom he had received no word for thirty years, saying she read in THe Tusa Srar about the death of his wife. She lives vin Tennessee and she reads Tau Svar. ‘“Nuf Sed.” —— —--O-— — A number of of people are inquiring of W. L, McKee, the land man and astute politician, just where he stands in the po- litical triangle now betore the pcople of Tulsa for solution. But the big fellow so far has been unable te find the bypothenuse, and toall inquirles he simply replies: ‘‘Like sn inflated balloon, Tam in the air and don't know where I will land.’? However, it will pay us all to watch Mc., because he is a wise pullar as well as a hair puller in political scrimages and he might slip one over on us any old time, NUYAKA NOTES. } o Our school is progressing nicely, the atiendance is good. Prof. P. L. Garrett is giving perfect satisfaction and js loved and honored by both pu pils and parents, Hurrah! !the school board has made several improve: ments at the sehool Louse this week: Mrs. Kitty Moston has returned aft er an extended visit. with her mother and other relatives in Southern Texas We all join Mr, Boston in weleons tng her home, for sho was missed in both church and Sunday school, ay well as at home. The Wanza brothers’ sister cam: up from Texas and spent a few daye with them. Mr. Simon Wanza and Mr. Nick White have decided that Texas is 2 yetter place than Oklahoma, hence they have departed for Texas to make their future home, Their wives wil Join them tater. Master Adam Rucker and hitth: Wil ma Lee are on the sick list, Bound Over Special to The Tulsa Star CLAREMORE Okla Maret u The case of Jim Nash, the tramp ne Kro who cut to death B. J. Jage st Saturday p for pr the murdered wa mind ov i district court without boy I u and threats of lynehin, were froely made during th rin A sirong force the man from th wrath of the dead man’s friends Nash had cut some wood for Jag gers for which he charged 25 cents Because Jaggers did not quit bi work to’ pay this small amount upon de mand, he was cut to death. Muskogee Lawyer Wins Land Case A. 8. MeRea, a prominent lawyer of Muskogee, was in the eity Thursday trying an important land case in the matter of Luyand Chambers, plain tiff, vs. Steve Grayson, defendant The case was decided in favor of Grayson, Se ie at , tit = aN |Fis aeemes Sy ea a a ae ~~ ee 2 eae | ep oni | Ps 3 ts i Rey Eat Tn here Re Bien ré | SS are and - £ NSS. E, B. CLINE I pular City Auditor, whe caadidate before the pri- maries for re-election WHEATLEY OUT FOR COMMISSIONER The annoancement of Mr. J. H. Wheatley as candidate for commis: ner No. 2 appears in this issue of The q The told-timers will reeail Mr, Wheatley has served the city ommissioner and is familiar with «© office and duties. He is the v ho pat water on Greenwood, od being of Irish blood he hopes to elebrate he 17th as the people's ho! as nominee for one of the com: missionerships of this city. : Evans Cafe Opeuing The Byans Cafe, which opened for business in the Martin building about a week ago, is rapidly advane- tng (o the front ranks among the eat- ing houses in the East end, On the eth of this month Mr. and Mra, Bv- ans will give a regular opening. At that time everything will be free and the person holding the ticket with the most holes punched in it, which tickets are being given out at the Ev- ans now, will receive a premium of $3.00 or @ free meal ticket for that amount, TULSA, OKLA, STAR a a I . AN ELECTION IS NEAR Tulsa is planuing for a eity elgetion which Will mean mich ve every citizen, regardless of race ar condition, since the future of Tulsa is the issue. ‘The men who have made Talsa and the mien who recard ful as their home will see that good men and thoe wit placed upon the tieket and an intelligent vote will be expec. + n those whe care enough about home affaira to go to the polls ond cas: thelr vot ‘The Star stands, at all times, for the best | fs of the town and is pledged to no party or candidate. We hoje to ee repre ent tive men in office, capable men, who will go vate ¢ olices: with the confidence of the people behind them. 4 i: inht before election Will always save a long complain’ alte Vatates have been selected aud elected, There are many things which we ean do to help this mov meut of the good people of Tulsa to make a Greater Pulsa, wich will cost us bot a stall effort We have, at the same time, an opportunity to make feieuds for us ip the matier of seutiment against laws whieh deny ue tie righ to vote, I® we are able to convince our fiicnds (iat ean ' intelligent vote, in the tmterest of the boo6 pulioes 4 je cw ity, we will wake friends for the future who will stand byw no reason more than that we stood by them in an fun hie: 9 We do not take the liberty to auggesi, at Uiis WY qat lax candidate of any particular party, Pvery citizen bas hi We love the voter who stays with his fricuds. Bat wo would ‘ that we go inty this campaign in earnesi, with a view taking 9 fair aud square demonstration of our ahility to solve + Ws fe) ical problems ian a way which reflects credit to u We call attention of our readers to the fact thay peoy Tulsa bave shown a disposition io treai us wore tan a towns in he state and we have not done our dary ifs Abt vocate in kind, ‘The list of candidates already announord are sunicient (a pio 4 aby wan or any party aud we earnestly hope that ony fea take this matter seriously, study the issues carefully and yore iit ligently. The fate of Tulsa does not rest with any politienl par | but with individuals who forget party liues in their dicire ww | their community. | ° ° | Anniversary Exercises Held at The First Baptist Church, of Red Bird, Oklahonia | March 19 to 22, inclusive Reverend R. N, Holt, DD, AB, Pastor Thursday Night—7:20. Music by Fires Bapust Choir Invocation by Rev. Jeinsen ef Red Bird Song by Choir.--Select : Remarks by Master of Ceremonies Paper, “The Pastor and His Relation to the Church @hd Its Auxillaries”— Mrs. H. L. Johnson. Ten Minute Response by Rev. GH | Burton. Song by Choir. pera nom Goldy Walker and Bur. | ough. Friday Night. Song by the Shoir | m¥ocation by Kev. Duvis of Red Bird (“Phe Sunday Schoo! as a Factor iw | “the Material Uplift of Young Peo | ple”—Mire Mary €ilis. |Remarks by Mrs. Barns ef Sbiloah |__ Baptist Chured, “The Home Mission as au arm of the Church—Mre. M. Bilis. Respouse by Mrs Lena Braunen Song by the Choir Paper, “The Study of the Scriptures by the Laity of the @hurch the Need of the Hour’—-Miss Balsy Jackson of City School Response by Mr. Fred Murphey. Instrumental Solo, Mrs, Burougn Paper, “Efficient Service the Requi- site of Discipleship in the N. T. Chureh’—Mrs, Thurman. Song by Shiloah Choir Historical Oration “Unmarked Graves of Mustrious Heroes'’'—by Prot Alonzo Williams, Red Bird json by Choir. Saturday Night. | Song by Shiloah €boir. Invocation wy Rev. Asderson, Red | Bird. | Song | Greetings trem the AM. B. Church Mrs. Bessie Sueed | From Bhiloan B. Church, Bro. Barns. Greetings from Firat Baptiar Church, Porter, Mies Mattie Minter “Our Pastoral Relationship’—by Rev it is certainly a pitiful sight to see an old delapidated baci number trying to bold a place in the front ranks €andidates for the municipal plums are busy “announcing” Meanwhile the common fellows are trying to decide who is really the | eat maa . T. A? Hale, Rev. BE. L. Barbe, Rev. @. B. Burton Welcome address, Miss Gertrucs Wal _ Hams: ‘Response, Miss Surretha Mol! of _ Tule Paper “To What Extent Has the Administration Helped in the M terial Uplift of the Citizensiip Our Town?"—Mre. Reed Chureh Prophesy, Bro. H. L, John Sunday Morning—9 o'Clock. ‘Model Sunday School, conducte: | Prof. P. B. J. Hudson and | Maggie Minter of Porter, Okla Music will ve farniehed by the a | choirs alternately | Solo, Sirs Lewis, Red Bid | 10:15 A.M. | Paper, ‘Progress of the Chure}, | der the Present Administratio | Bro. 1. W. Lane | it AM, | avuiversary Sermon by Key. J. } | Kerah, D, D., of Tulsa, Ohla | After sermon, general collection anc | raily, Hope to raive $100. | 12 to 1:40. Dinner on the Ground 1 2PM. {Annual Address of the Pastor ; Rasponded to by Profs. Hoon and M: | Gowan, Red Bird 3:20 P.M. jWoman's Home Mission Sermon Pastor. Followed by Singing Contest by Che kie, Fou on, Shiloah, Mt, Bethe and Pir, i aie. Tholr Paper by Mes, Or ot L jub ject, “The Miu y Wife aad | ®acrifice.” 7:30 P.M. Sermon by Rev. Wiasion of Porter. | We hope to make this the greatc:’ | aftair of the season, All are expect: to be there. You will not repret hey ing come to Red Bird, This is ts place where associations like to meer REV. R.N. HOLT, D. D,, Past» M. BLLIS, Chureh Clerk Announcements Ylis column is open to any candi- date irrespective of party who desires fo announee his candidacy for elective joftien it the approaching elity cam- | J announce myself as a candidate ‘for reelection as mayor of Tulsa, subs ject to tue Demoeratic primaries. | PRANK M. WOODEN. 1 announce myself as a candidate | ot reclection as commissioner from Distric to. 1, subject to the Demo- JAY PORSYTHE 1 announce myself as a candidate for rool ou to the position of city auditor, subject lo the Democratic nar task your support on my E. B. CLINE. Lhe suounce wyselt as candi date t winissioner Nd, 1, gubject a evatic: primaries. W. BE. HANCOCK. he inounce myself a candi- die t fection as comfilssioner No. 3 1 to the demoeradic pri- maric fF. COLLEY Lan > tyselt a candidate for comma in’ District No. 2, sab- ject to «democratic primaries.-~ THOS QUINN I here ainounee inyself as a cand! date tor amicsioner No, 8, eubject to the 1 of the democratic prt- mary. CARL GREGG. 1 hereby aiuownce my candidacy tr commissioner No, 2, subject to the democratic primary.-JAMBS ¥, BRAND. T hevel nounce + elf a candi- cite for +” calssloner from District ay ” oO-sthe democratic pri- Y sith, 1914.—TOM DIL Li Tee suaounce myself a eaudi- at oulssioner of the third we of to the democratic pri- i. FREEMAN, plumber, announce iyselt candidate ioner tor No, 2, subject ‘mocratic primaries, —J. BY a) ounee my e&ndidacy for com r No. 8, subject to the dect 1 of the democratic primary.—cC, M- DOWNING. | | hereby announce myself as can- for conmisstoner in District 2, . cf to the democratic primaries lareh lith.—W. L. BRITTON. lereby ausonee my candidacy for issioner No, % sibject to the Kean primar'r i. M. LATE hereby announce 1° candidacy ty hi rot Tula, subject to the re bolton primaries.-E. bk. Lauder# bach : I te.cby annownee myself a candi. jate for city auditor, subject to the republican primaries —LERGY BURN BROCK I hereby anncance mysel! a came date for commissioner No. 4, gsadjeet to the repubiiian primaries—-J. W. HIsky, ! hereby anuouvee niyself a candi: or commisgioncr No 2 subject wo te renabte lea—-E, My LATTIMER. T hereby announes mys: 1 eandi- date for commissioner No, 4 subjact to the republican primavies,-R. F SCHOPLELD. | Thereby announce myeclt a candt- dete for commissioner No. +, sudject to the republican prinartes.—R. W. scorn, | [hereby announce myself a candi ite for commissioner No. 4, subjéct to the republicin primaries--J. D. WYNN, UNE eat a | WASHINGTON, Feb. 23 — While President Zamore, head of the Hay- ‘lea army, bas been more than tri- ‘umphant through the ‘north against ‘Theodore’s rebel forces and occupy: in the seat of the revolution, Capo Muyten, @ spirit of unrest, bas broke ‘4 Out in Port Au Prince, the capital, News Around the City J. 5. KIRBY, City Circulator Resipenck,--215 E.Cameron Mia. Lena Charleston is on the)“ sich fot cus week. 1 eee My DON’T FORGET to tell us the! 4 news, Phone 2386, la eas i Capt, vackson was the Sunday q after-dinner speaker at the Library | D. S.- \inburn, of Boley, hay opened a restaurant on Greanwood, | Ui Remember A. Carr Place iu the Gurley Building, uh aes ‘d Lawyer Roberts, Prot. Hughes | fi and Dr McKeever, spent Sundays in Okmulgee ii paar) |! Why have KINKY hair when, 1 “PRESTO” will make the neces~!q gary improvements? See ad in this {i paper. +; Mr. JP. Porter was called to Waco, Texas. to the bedside of a sick father BE. ©, Stirh, of 318 Brady St.. accompanied by his younget daugh- ter, lonia, spent a few days taat week ia Muskogee visiting relatives of the family, Those of our subseribers to the Stak ave urgently requested to pay lp as we need the money to meet cour current expenses, — Please pay at once Crry CrrecLaTor Hello, friend! where is Carr’s place? in the Gurley building, 114 N. Greenwood, St., and its the best iu town, boy. Onr assistant humane officer. Mr. Cornelius Quarles, who looks alter the peace and dignity of the canine family in Tulsa, reports goad busi negs for ‘this season of the yea with better prospects after bus.er tide During the weck Lawyer Pree- ma i. Martin closed a deal for Dr G.K Litdejobn transfering low 4 in blue. 4, Tulsa, in the 690 block con Elgin. io J. He Goodwin anc wifs of Water Valley, Miee. Mr oodwin will arrivein Tulsa about abo 23rd inst. preparatory to mak tog his home here Mr Goodwin isa successful busin ss mao in his home :ow1i is sippi and will embark at Tulsa. THe Pu ac ts Unaeny Nov rigp, That Geo W. Griffin is a¢ longer in the employ of the Quality Tuiloring Shop and is not authorized to solicit or transacc anv business forus, P.O. FRANKIIN, Prop. Rey. H, R. Rincku y. who has charge of the Cougreg tional chureh at Boley, passed chrough the city ‘Tuesday earoute to his home in Kansas Cicy. Dr. Pinekney is one ‘of those stalwart, intellectual, weil balanced christian ministers, who- daily life and work are ia eons!s tent barmony with his exemplary impress wherover he !yhors Being an old friend of ye associate we ar indeed proud of his record, anc wish him every success eee eka ae ee! A aha as ae GAS HEATERS at half price; GAS RANGBS, cheap |i the very best inthe city. I pay CASH for good second hand goods lf YOU are good, your Credit is geod. JOE FRANCIS FURNITURE STORE 115 N. Main Phone 3901 I'm Bound For the Peoples 2) Theatre To-night! The atiention of a sympathetic public is eniled to the precariots condition of Mra. Hatue Laflora and two little orphan childten, one -hree years and the other fifteen months old, at 505 N. Hartford Mrs, Laflora is quite an old tady ir eapsble of daily labor, aul having the care of these two helpless chit drew, needs the assistance of the Henerots public, Who will be the first to lend a beldiog handj Tf you want “something good toeat stop at A, Carr’s place. In the case of the State ef Okia homa va. Senia Jobngen, fur mur der, the defense was handled by the firm of Mortin & Roberts; and con sideriug the circumstances surround. ing the affair the sentence given ‘the Johnson woman ¥ as as hight as might be expected, due more than ‘anything else to the careful manne: io which the case was bandled by [her attorneys. Many compliment: have been beard upon the able ar pice both members of the | law firm of Martio & Roberts it | the case. Gas heaters at half price. Gas) ranges very cheap, but the best, in the city. I pay cash for good second hand goods. Ii yon are good your credit is good. J@E FRANCIS Furniture Store, i115 N- Main Phene 3901, THE PENNY SAVINGS AND INVESTMENT CO, ‘The Tulsa Penny Savings and Tnvestment Co., a home product. ‘is now open for business in the Williams Building. and Tax Sra. ‘thanks the management for their |patrouage to our Job Departirent | which is turming out their printing jand stutiovery. Easter Suits! Easter Suits! 31 SPRING and SUMMER WOOLEN FABRICS to select from at the Old Retiable “Two WW” Situd, 518 E, Archer. Cleaning, Pressing, and Second Hand Clotbing of all descrip. tion. Mr. Brown Slaughter, for- merly of Oklahoma Wity, 1 /Polsa’s best Bushleman and I resser, Work called for and Ftctivered. Phone 2573 | 319 E. Archer Partee Bldg Wa. WALKER, Prop. | THEATRICAL NEWS. Whe thealres of the Sast end have inade a general all-round change this week and a a result Billy McCtatn, the former manager of the, Peopler theatre, is in Oklaboma City, seareh- ing for employment, and Jess Brown former manager of the new Gem thew ive is now manager of the Peoples, having surrendered bis place with the jem to “Grasshopper,” former come: tan at the Gem, Both houses are citing Kood crowds each night and i: s anid the vaudeville acts at bet slaces are above the ordinary* {tis fact which the public should knew, that Negroes in ‘Tulsa own more good, clean, substantial homes than in any other town in the state, TULSA OKLA, STAR eee <2 eee = eee | { air: AT TERLPON, OKLA Upon the tavitation vi an old| friend and sdimirer we [ve sssoriniel| Visited the little burg uf Teriton| Inst: Stindny and Monday. Oar trivia there we went at anes ta the Fhome of Rev and Mee Dison and reaktasted, and then to the ehutreb | where the Sunday School was io tesa. The superintendent. Ty iil. Henderson, gave us a cordial) lweteame, and after takine part in | the lesson. we were’ invited to say a few words of euecuragement, At |: ovelock we went again to ebarel: and listened fo a splendid sermon preached by Rev. WR. Little, of Maoford. ‘The Rev. is a little man in stature, but a mighty big gospel preacher, and his sermon was in Heed # spiritual treat After the services we repaired to ithe good home ci Me ind Mrs. Lewis Varuett, aud enjoyed ther apen hearted hospitality. Let us remark right here that Mr Barnert Lis one af the pioneer settlers oF the ‘state and. is now the possessor of 1200 acres of excellent. farm lands hand ocher veluahle holdings, He és Jrated te bs one of the weatibiest Negroesof iuat section, und being Jone of the old school knows how te shold on to his accimulations. Monday morning we visited the |publie school, taught by Prof (Wood. We found titis little band o “iefutures” bright, quiek-witted one alert, enger und anxion. to learn Mwhich inspiration is due to Uh ‘{splendid instractions given then jhy their teacher, — We witnesses ‘several class recitations that wer »| very interesting, and then spok ia few words of good cheer to th |ssboo!. Mrs. Barnett was also pres jent and complimented the hoc }upoa their good order and diseipline » We found those of our peopl q tiving in and around Terlion to b ., industrious, progressive apd on e tented, doing more by a consister Sud upriths life among their neigl ir thors, the whites, te solve the Ne are problem than an> hundre 2 jSbeeches made hy seaue of te bi © jbant, Jond-mouthed, meaningle would-be race leaders| ?) | Without persuasion or great ¢ fore weenrolied the following aa j\ed persons un’ our sibecripti * jist, —K. W. Pair, BM. Dixon, | RE. Foster, ‘fH. Henderson, Re ci] W. Re Little, Dennis Mehaney, vo} D. Davis, Lewis Barnete sud r, | Robinson Why dave KINKY pair ovhen “PRESTO” will make the neces sary iinprovement? See ad in thi paper Dr. Dearman Called rys oT. To ‘Texas Dr. ©, Dearman, scientist. was called to Longview, Texas, by spec- ial reqnest of Mr. Jess Isabel, who ix a brother-in-law of Pink Waticy of Tulsa. Mr. Tsabel is a wealthy citizen of Longview and is in a very low state of health On account of the confidence be has in Di. Dearimau ail hie system of treat ment he hns nade 9 special reques’ that ir, Doarman come to his Led side ar onee Dr Dearman is one of Tulsa's imost respected professions! citizens ‘and uses his own remedy, © Hotten- tot,” whieh he cfaims easily con querg more than 40 diseases of the ‘tuman family Dr Dearnan has ‘fully demonstrated the virtue of his ‘“Hottentot” remedies. which are lon sale at all leading drug stores, R. EDWARDS e Piano Tuner pie - , Instructor of Music-- on All Instruments Terms Reasonable East End Cate FELEPHONE 283s TULSA, OKLA Mme. Z. E- Hotderness, vA 1 HAR GROWER 7 Cures Telter, Fos2ma, and i i Dandruff, 316 North Frankfort Stree Becks TUL eal LA Caver’s French Dry Cleaning Hatters and Dyers : We will -\\0 }OU Dpgepeieimmmeaimammemecrss ST Oe money vn d ave SMe Reees OR H cour clothes, if you | inne Syn rae hae Sew fe ye Mae ef willonly send them [iggy dic Reine Pe “vit am 4 to Caver, who bas } a 8 a, eG che Gest Process of Agama LOT 4 ite sien a4 Dry and We |e Pe Pees Me ac: “4 4 ~ opgee Dn thee a } We will mike ieee ee your Buss white as ere @ if snow We have Cites 7 aes Had 15 years experience and we krow Low to CLEAN LVERY THING!§ One trial and be convinced \ All Work Guaranteed! Wagon will call for land deliver, Phone 3132 “My wife and I: 220 smead Dr. Miles’ Nervine for Tits aia spaume Wa eho ie nine -yeara old now, aud fad Sbasme gitce he was two sears od, We Rnd tried everything We Kuew und ales took him to different doctors whe said it would only Ge a short time until there fits would Kill hin. Thes, would hot allow him. to-wo to aehoul;, finally Ty wife commenced (o give tit Dr, Miles’ Nervine Now le’ seems completely qured and kocs to school reguinriy aud” las not fad. ayusmn for montis Steplion a Morick. Ambridge, Pa Spasms, fits, convulsions, St. Vitas lance and epilepsy frequently. atlhet children” Tf you have a child sui fering from any of these diseases fo tiot hesitate to give Dr. Miles! Nervine a trial Bold ‘Under a guarantee assuring he return of the price of the first bottle if It fails to benefit. At all druggists. Why Have Kinky Hair? “PRESTO” STRATCHTENS the most Obstinate Stublorn KINKY HAIR PRESTO" destroys Dandrat, Tesre ane ther Diseases of the SOCAL “PRESTO” grows HAIR, °PRE* + . CLEAN, HARMLESS and LASTING CHEMISTS SAY that “PRESTO" is the tirestest Discovery in the WORLD today in this LINE, At LAST SOMETHING Is HERE TO SYPOP the burning of the Hate ated Sealp WITH HOP TRONS AND COMBS, “PRESTO” STRAIGHT ENS YOUR HAIR THE ‘FIRST AP. PLICATION, AND THE DALR ERE MAINS STRAIGHT POK MONTHS. Think of it YOU ONLY APPLY PRESTO" TWoOR CHEE TIMES A YEAR, THAT'S ALE A Package of “PRESTO.” seni with Full Directions, on receipt of One Dot Tar ($1.00, sitistaction Guaranteed o1 MONEY REFUNDED. LaFayette Mfg. Co. Edenton, N, C, “Presto! Talks For Ltselt, Agent: “Read the TULSA Stak We will s\v9o )ou SR | era bse j.| Money c save Tati | your clothes, if you bee ‘ v's! will only send them fates "Stig Caver, who has A jthe Best Process of A oa niDry and We: |i an} CLEANING ae 8) ye witl amie ae We will apake games) We ean }vour Puss white as eee lenow We have Rima oglu 15 years experience and ~ PHUNG!) One trial and be | All Work Guarani! Jand deliver, Phon Dr, J. J. McKeever, o DENTIST» AM Work Quaranteed fo Give Satisfaction Phone 2167 Office Williams Bldg. See our Advertisers For Bargains Wheu i W ail at A. Carr's place, in the Gurley Building tor something good to . é LOOK! Look! Look! When in Town And ye have a SORE PACK, ot if your Hair is elong and and needs cut- | r ‘Call at 606 E, Archer ; POR SMOOTH SHAY ING AND UP-TO-DATE HAIR COPTING 1 Also carries a Vine Line of Cigars | and Tobsee as, +R. LAWSON, Pieprietor NEW RUILDINGS FOR BOLEY It is reported that the prop. erty holders who were losers in the recent fire at Boley will re- build during the summer with brick houses of modern archi- ‘tecture, As soon as the weath- er gets warm the foundation work will begin, GAS, DYSPEPSIA ~ NO INDGESTION You don't want a slow remedy when your stomach is bad—or an uncertain pne—or a harmful one—your stomach ls too valuable; you mustn't injure tt Pape’s Diapepsin {s noted for its speed in giving relief; its harmless- ness; its certain unfailing action in regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs. Its millions of cures in indigestion, dyspepria, gastritis and other stomach trouble has made it famous the world over Keep this perfect stomach doctor in your home—keep it handy—get a large fty-cent case from any dealer and then if anyone should eat something which doesn't agree with them; if what they eat lays like lead, ferments and sours and forms gas; causes head- ache, dizziness and nausea; eructa- tons of aeid and undigested food— remember as soon as Pape'’s Diapepsin tomes in contact with the stomach all fuch distress vanishes, Its prompt. ness, certainty and ease in overcoming the worst stomach disorders is a reve lation to those who try it—Adv. Her Game. Affable Customer (to barmaid)—And you don’t go in for winter sports at all, miss? Barmaid—I? I should think so— aint I always mixin’ feed drinks? ECZEMA ON HEAD AND FACE Reedy, W. Va- “My baby boy when three weeks old took the ecze ma on the head and face. It broke out in pimples and first they looked lke blisters and a yellow water would run from them. His head was per- fectly raw and his hair was all gone. Everybody said he would never have any more hair. As the sores spread his hair came out. The breaking out {tched so badly that we had to keep gloves on his hands to keep him from scratching his head and face. It caused disfigurement. He couldn't rest at night it burned and itched #0 badly. “Ho was treated for eight months and he got worse all the time. So 1 decided to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment, In two months he was com- pletely cured after using the Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Oint- ment.” (Signed) G. A. Dye, Jan. 7 1gi2 Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p, Skin Book, Address post card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."”—Adv. has : Yes; so vociferous.” WHAT $10 DID FOR THIS WOMAN The Price She Paid for Lydia E.Pinkham’sVegetableCom- pound Which Brought Good Health, Danville, Va.—‘I have only spent ten dollars on your medicine and I feel so awe ewe Son © did when the doctor was treating me. I don't suffer any bearing dowr pains atall now and I sleep well. I cannot say enough for Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound and Liver Pills as they have done so much forme. I am enjoy- s | 8 Ke s) \\ ing good health now and owe it all to your remedies, I take pleasure in tell- ing my friends and neighbors about them.’"—Mrs, Martie HALEY, 601 Col- guhone Street, Danville, Va. No woman suffering from any form ‘of female troubles should lose hope un- til she has given Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which are derived from native roots and herbs, has for forty years proved to be a most valua- ble tonic and invigorator of the fe- male organism, Women everywhere bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- bie Compound will help you, write to Lydia FE. Pinkham MedicineCo, (confidential) Lynn, Mass,, for ad- vice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. Hf - FOR EVE OREM ATTIRED ciscascs AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS When Alonzo Steele died in Texas a year or two ago the last white man who fought In the battle of San Ja- cinto passed away, writes Frank Put- nam. A few days ago W. P. Zuber, who, as a boy of sixteen, was with the ‘Texas army at’San Jacinto, but did not bear arms in the fight, died at his Texas home. He was on hospital duty during the fighting. He was the last survivor of all the white men Present on that occaston, but it s not wholly clear that he was the last survivor, It is likely that honor belongs to an ancient darkey, believed to have been Sam Houston's body servant, who still lives in or near Houston. Tho old man’s story ts accepted by the oldest residents, sons, some of them, of men who fought at San Ja- cinto, and more familiar than any one else with the history of that af- fair. The passing of the last white sur- vivor of San Jacinto directs attention to one of the most extraordinary pages of all history. San Jacinto ranks next after the battle of Saratoga and Get- tysburg among the decisive battles fought on this continent. Saratoga proved the British could not subdue their revolting American colonists; Gettysburg determined the fate of the Confederacy; San Jaciato pushed the American rule southward from a vast region on the Pacific coast and from an inland region in- cluding all of Texas, with parts of New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and Wyoming. The battle of San Jacinto waaf in character unique. It was won with the bowie knife against odds of three to one; won by undisciplined plains- men opposing Santa Anna's best drilled and best equipped regiments. It was the only battle in which the lesser army lured the greater into a position from which there was no es- cape for either except by death or victory. Houston, retreating before Santa Anna, led him into a region bounded by swamps and marshes on two sides, with a wide, deep bayou on another and a narrow bayou, branch of the first, on the fourth side. Houston backed into his position and Santa Anna followed. Then Hous: ton burned the bridge across the nar- row bayou, the only entrance or exit of the theater of battle. A whirlwind campaign was carried ‘on by the colored people of Philadel- phia to raise enough of the money pledged last year toward a colored Y. M. C. A, to make the $15,000 originally asked of them, It was announced at a meeting of the board of directirs of the Y. M. C. A. that the choice of loca- tion had narrowed down to two lots, on both of which they have options. The money for the lot 1s already in bank, and when a decision is made it will be bought at once. An archi- tect accompanied a special committee to Indianapolis to study the new col- ored Y. M. C. A. that has recently been erected there and is considered one of the most complete in the coun- try. It ts expected the building will be well under way early In the sum- mer, ‘The building will contain a gym: nasium, swimming pool, ete, It will have educational features and be a social center for the colored men of the city. It will also provide a hotel for the better class of colored people who are passing through the elty and now have no accommodations, Of the 2,273,000 illiterates 617,000 are native whites, including both those of native, foreign and mixed parentage; 879,000 are negroes and 738,000 are immigrants, ‘There are interesting and encouraging points with regard to the two latter classes. The negro filiterates seem to be a large number. But {t represents a decrease of 157,999 during the dec- ade, while the total of that popula- tion shows an increase of 398,000. The illiterate negroes are almost wholly located in the south, where they are not permitted to vote and are decreasing there. In 1894 the total forest area of Switzerland was 2,091,000 acres, repre- senting 20.2 per cent. of the total surface area of the country. In 1911 the forest acreage was 2,258,000, equal to 21.86 per cent.-of the total area of the country, an inerease of 167,000 acres. Instead of being an expense, the forests of Switzerland are a source of profit to the government. Most of the widows of Paris are re- ‘married within 18 months of thelr eee bereavement. < TULSA, Oa a ean After a careful Investigation of the facts, | am convinced that every day in the year there are as many as 200,000 people of my race who are sick enough to be incapacitated for work, writes Booker 'T, Washington. Other persons have estimated the number of negroes who are sick all ‘the time to be as high as 450,000. If ‘these figures are correct, it means that on the average every member of sy race spends annually 18 days in bed, in the hospital, suffering pain for recuperating from sickness that might be spent in some form of wholesome enjoyment or in useful and efficient labor, It 1s safe to say, on the same basis, that every day in the year there are 112,009 negro workers idle, as result of sickness, who would otherwise be at work {n some form of useful employment. , This is a great loss not oly to the negro, but it is a great loss to the country. It has been estl- mated that in the south alone there is a net loss to the negro in earn- ings and to the community as a whole in productive labor of $40,000,- 000 a year, “This Immense loss is not due to the physical weakness of the negro race. I have frequently heard it said that the negro, as he lived in Africa, was more vigorous and more robust than any other race on earth. He had to be so to stand the climate. Even today one will seldom find among any race of people finer spect- mens of physical manhood than the sturdy, unspotled people of the negro race in the country districts of the south. These people are an asset to the country and to the south, and it seems to me that it is the duty of every patriotic citizen to do what he can to conserve the life and health of this portion of the population in the condition in which it now is. _ Boston people who are deeply in- ‘terested in the work that Dr, Booker 'T. Washington is doing at Tuskegee ‘turned out in numbers to hear him at Trinity church, where he told the tory of Tuskegee’s progress. during ‘the last year. Dr. Washington has just. come from the south on his an- ‘nuai visit to Boston. Owing to the ‘generosity of thousands of Tuskegee's friends Dr. Washington has been able ‘to give more of his time to the admin- ‘istrative work of the institution year after year. One of the great prob- lems now is that of training spectal- ists In varied lines of southern work, particularly those of education and ag- riculture. Just before Dr. Washing: ton left Tuskegee 26 county superin- tendents of education from various counties in Alabama spent a part of two days at Tuskegee with the idea of getting Information and plans for their work among the colored chil dren. ‘The influence which Tuskegee 1s exerting as a strictly educational force is rightly gratifying to the trus- tees, Furthermore, Tuskegee cannot begin to supply the demand for farm leaders. The bell weevil has con- vinced the southern planters that they must take up diversified farming in order to make their lands pay. Bank ers and merchants are also vitally tn- terested in the training of these agri- culturists and many prizes are being offered. Dr. Washington told his Bos- ton audience about the greatest year the institution ever had and the pos sibilities of splendid advances in the near future. Many a man punctures his tire or the road to wealth. The United Layman’s evangelistte campaign was one of the largest reli gious efforts that has been attemptec by the colored people of Indianapolis Re ~ L. Howard of Nashville, Tenn. conducted the meetings. Specta meetings for boys were held several afternoons‘ during the week. The series of meetings closed with a united chureh service under the direction 0! the Interdenominational Ministers’ as sociation, Sunday evening, March 1. The state of Hyderabad, located about midway between Madras anc Bombay, in the south central part o! India, with a population of about 13, 500,000 (about “equal to that of New York and Massachusetts combined) and with an area of 82,698 square miles (Just about the same area as Kansas) is, generally speaking, the most im portant native state in India in popu lation, wealth and potential resources Co-operative stores, owned and man aged by natives, are fostered wherever possible in Alaska by the United States bureau of education, which har charge of education for the natives o! Alaska, * “ ” « Banish the “Blues! wre have that Sepreseed feeling it’s more than likely that your’ is out of order—impoverished or poisoned. There is only one thing that will alter your present condition— that’s to restore your stomach to normal health and strength. For weak or diseased stomach cannot make et blood. If bard digestion is bad your food will not make the good blood which nourishes body, brain, heart and nerve. EN z ; : -Dr,:Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery helps the stomach to do its work naturally and properly. Stimulates the liver. The system is freed from poison. Fie blood is ren Every organ is rejuvenated, Instead of the ‘‘Blues,"’ you feel fit and strong, equal to any task or up to any pleasure, This great remedy has proved its worth year after year for over forty, years, Let it prove its worth to you. “Sold by medicine dealera in tablet or liquid form or send 60c for trial box by mail. Sodaoopaemtccerissstel ang sel cdc Pees. ) Bian = aa] me. s Lae am: ° Spare your as pA AM team and Se= EG) wagon “A ! iS Make THE PULL EASIER, and SSeS) prevent wear on the wagon by using ne “GOLDEN” “A little goes a long way’’ When put on it stays, and gives perfect lubrication to spindles and sens, cote the wagon in fine panies order. Perfectly clean—never gums— won't spoil in any climate. Adapted for the finest carriage or heaviest wagon. You will be highly pleased with it. Ask Your Dealer For It—It he hasn't it, kindly write us. Put up in barrels, half-barrels, 15-Ib. and SS] 2. hits $b. and Ib, metal boxes. ‘en socoeng PIERCE OIL. CORPORATION rt | Home Office 420 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo. Se Handreds of Agencies eRe JN ona ear esta ROSE MOEN]C'SCAI LOSES Fis Ni NN y BF MN A 0): Dhl CAT Panam A ee Sacer ae eed Sd ae Rev siting aang Team S oe, See Soni stitacta ment Sviats ati tn hee mae ow heges hr todas ect hee akcelcetepietsiee rane Of Joseph W. Vestal & Son, Box 856, Lith By ail means drop . Little Rock, Arkansas Now, Really? “Hilda,” said Mrs, Suburbs to her maid-ot.all-work, “that black hen is in the coal cellar again. Shoo her out. What do you suppose makes her neg: lect her nest to go poking in there all the time?” “I dunno, ma‘am,” came Hilda's Sn- nocent reply, “unless she’s seen them ads in the papers ‘Now is the time to lay in your coal.” Located. “I see you have recovered from the measles, Johnny,” said the primary teacher. “Yes'm,” replied Johnny, “but ma says that they are still In my cis- tern.” An Ill Wind. “Wouldn't it be great {f everybody tn the world paid their bills promptly 2” “It wouldn't be for me. I'm a bill collector.” GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA TO DARKEN HER GRAY HAIR She Made Up a Mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to Bring Back Color, Gloss, Thickness. 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 {t at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy,” you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe for about 50 cents. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as {t does {t so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your halr, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another ap plication or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick and glossy. Adv. If a woman marries the wrong man it is because the right one failed to ask her. Have you got hoarseness that continues? Or do you get hoarse once in a while, whenever you get the slightest cold? Hoarseness means a catarrhal condition of the vocal cords, The vocal cords are way down in the larynx and when affected by hoarseness should cause serious concern. Peruna has been found to be an excellent remedy for such cases. We have recelved testimonials from responsible people who have been relieved of hoarseness by Peruna, Should you want to read @ lot of excellent testimonials on all gubjects write for the ” ILLS OF LIFE’ sent free by the Peruna Co, Co- lumbus, Ohlo. Peruna can also bo obtained In tablet form. Ask your druggist, or send to us direct. Sag aks EAE ee ma was the yield of WHEAT Rix I Vee Es] on many farms in faery) 7 IN] Westerncanadain 7%) RN) isis tome yields} E: Px} beine reported as ff 7 WW AD: Kigh as 60 bushels | SO cf oe i 3 recorded in eome | | " ‘at : FFF 50 bushels for barley and fl [sgiap trom 10 to 20 bus. for tan, be } a 3.K ived in the BLY PR nt’? secede" ate Brae mark it ttle (oar a ea mean, ple shomesteade, \ ae Nee ow the ROR A owner of 300 acres of and, BY al SAF in 1913 had a crop of 200 VaR 1B acres, which will realize him GRP QgEAR about "$4,000. His wheat fas ZAM) weighed 68 Ibs, tothe bushel Vi WAY 200 averaged over 35 bushels | ZE# to the acre. BF I) Thousands of similar in- Bre 8 PR a WANA] homesteaders in Manitoba, Sas- EAA katchewan and Alberta, ITB, The crop of 1913 was an abun- Vi \ dant one everywhere in Western Neg) Canada. Y f] Ask for descriptive literature and Y/ reduced railway rates, Apply to W/ f] Superintendent of Immigration, | ‘Ottawa, Canada, oF \ y/ @. A. COOK, y O/ = 128 W, Oth STREET, Kansas crty, ma, \\) Canadian Government Agent Death Lurks In A Weak Heart If You're fluttering or weak, use RENOVINE." Made by Van Vieet-Mansfield Drug Co., Memphis, Tenn. Price $1.00 POULTRY FACTS COLONY HOUSES FOR WINTER Some Poultrymen Arrange Summer Coops in Suitable Manner for Use During the Cold Weather. When young birds are brought in from the range we often find ourselves in need of more house room to winter the increased flock. There are several ways in which the summer colony coops may be made to piece out the winter houses. If there is but one it may be placed close to the main house and used as an extra scratching and exercising room. The owls may then pass from the main room to the addition by means of a tube constructed of boards and set into the opening about 10 by 20 inches in size, cut near the floor of each building. A dry goods box with top and bottom removed will answer nicely as a connecting passageway. Some people fit up the summer colony coops as laying rooms, arranging all nests in them and thus leaving the whole space in the main building for use of the hens in the daytime. Still others use the coops as dusting rooms. Especially do the early brooder houses answer nicely for this, as there is usually plenty of sunlight. The dust may be kept moist and free from trash and so does not get into the food and water vessels, as it often does when nesting and feeding must be done in the same room. Sometimes two or three of these coops are used together for a small flock, one being used for a roosting room, one for a nest room and exercise. In each case they are joined by a wooden tube or passageway. Some make their summer colony coops of knockdown sections so arranged that some five or six of them may be set up together in one continuous shed for sheltering the birds in winter. Such a pen must either be banked with straw or covered with paper for the winter to make it windproof. By the time the young birds are ready for the colony houses another year the old ones are having free run of the farm. DRINKING PAN AND GRIT BOX Vessel Is Elevated to Prevent Litter Being Scratched Into It—Contrivance Is Easily Made. The accompanying illustration of a combination drinking pan and grit box appeared in a recent issue of Successful Farming. The idea of elevating the drinking pan is to keep the water clean and prevent litter being scratched into it. The birds soon learn to fly upon the perch in front of the pan, to get the clear water. The pan itself is made about three inches deep, so that when the water becomes frozen it can be easily dumped out. The small hopper or box under the grit, or be divided into compartments drinking pan is made on the self-feeding principle, and may be used for grit, or be divided into compartments END VIEW FRONT Drinking Pan and Hopper. for oyster shell and grit, or beef scrap. The frame on which the pan rest: is made to fit over the side of the hopper, the cross slats being firm on the top of the hopper. The whole contrivance can be easily made out of odds and ends of lumber found lying around most poultry or barn yards. The combination, when finished, is hung on the wall at a convenient height. PROFITABLE TO GRADE EGGS Better Prices Are Always Secured When Eggs Are Sorted According to Size and Color. Even buyers at the country store will appreciate your efforts if you will sort your eggs according to size and color. Graded eggs show up a great deal better than those that are piled in promiscuously, and should—and will—command a better price if the dealer's attention is called to the fact, and he is assured that your eggs will be furnished that way all the time. There are few, even of country stores, that would not be able to command a higher price for uniform, clean, fresh eggs, attractively picked, and one that produces that kind the year round can secure an advance in the market price. BUY IT BY THE BOX for 85 cents—at most dealers. Each box contains twenty-5 cent packages. They stay fresh until used. It's clean, pure, healthful if it's WRIGLEY'S. Look for the spear The Contrary Cause. Mrs. Capron saw old Uncle Timothy starting away on a fishing expedition, and knowing how hard his wife worked, thought it a good time to reprove him for his laziness. REMA!NED DEEP IN SLUMBER Porter Simply Associated Confusion of Wreck With the Usual Noise of Coupling. Kids and Goats. A newspaper man of Chicago is fond of greeting his children at night with the salutation: "Hello, kids." For some time past the girl, half past five has felt that this was too informal "Timothy," she said, "do you think it's right to leave your wife at the washtub while you pass your time fishing?" "Yassum, miss," replied the old colored man, "it's all right. Mah wife don' need any watching. She'll wukjes' as hard as if I was dah."—Lippincott's. THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Beautify Your Hair! Make It Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant—Try the Moist Cloth. Try as you will, after an application of Danderine, you cannot find a single 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 doubles the beauty of your hair. No difference 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 immediate and amazing—your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an incomparable luster, softness and luxuriance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any store and prove that your hair is as pretty and soft as any—that it has been neglected or injured by careless treatment—that's all. Adv. Tolled and Ringed. "How does she know she is a belle?" "A number of people have told her." "But no one has yet succeeded in ringing her." Death If You're fluttering or TULSA. OKLA.. STAR Seal is now Give regular aid to teeth, breath, appetite and digestion. It's the safe besides delicious and beneficial confection! IT BY THE at most dealers. Each beages. They stay fresh un REMAINED DEEP IN SLUMBER Porter Simply Associated Confusion of Wreck With the Usual Noise of Coupling. The limited express tore madly along through the midnight darkness. Suddenly the alert engineer sprang to the lever and set the brakes. The sparks flew from the rails as the locked wheels slid along as with a cry of pain. The lights were extinguished as car after car toppled from the rails. Then came a shuddering silence more terrible than the harsh grating of iron on steel. Some passengers made torches from fragments of wreckage and searched for dead and injured. A sound singularly like a snore issued from a pile of debris. Hastily removing several pieces of twisted iron, they dragged forth a slumbering porter. "Great heavens!" they exclaimed. "Didn't you know there had been a wreck?" "Well, gemmun, I sho' felt somethin', but I done thought we was couplin on de din仆e cah at Jackson." —Youth's Companion. It sometimes takes an Irishman with bis bull to bring out some of the flexible qualities of the English language. This was shown in the case of a son of Erin recently reported, who, upon being reproached by a former acquaintance with no longer knowing him, retorted: "Know yez? No, ol don't know yez, an' if whin ol did know yez ol'd known yez as well as of know yez now, whin I don't know yez at all, I'd niver have known yez!" Merely a Rehearsal. "Charley proposed to me last night and I accepted him." "Why, he proposed to me yesterday." "Indeed? Well, he did it so prettily that I was sure he had rehearsed several times." her." "Don't you believe in the death pen- alty for murder?" "Certainly, capital idea." h Lurks In g or weak, use RENOVINE." Made by Van is now electrically sealed with a "SEAL OF PURITY" so absolute that it is damp-proof, dust proof, impurity-proof—even air-proof! Flexible Tongue. Its Status. CHEW IT AFTER EVERY MEAL Is Equally Valuable as a General Strengthening Tonic. Because it Acts on the Liver, Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds Up the Whole System. You know what you are taking when you take Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic, as the formula is printed on every label, showing that it contains the well-known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It has no equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Weakness, General Debility and Loss of Appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. A True Tonic and Sure Appetizer. For grown people and children. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. 500 Kids and Goats. A newspaper man of Chicago is fond of greeting his children at night with the salutation: "Hello, kids." For some time past the girl, half past five, has felt that this was too informal to comport with her dignity. "Daddy," she said, a few nights ago, "were not kids. Kids are young goats." The father passed this off without comment. Next evening he made his usual greeting. The young lady had worked out the deduction by that time. "Daddy," she said, "if we're kids, you must be a goat. Are you?" He agreed that he was. Easy. "Bjones has an easy life." "Why, I heard him say he had his work cut out for him." "So he has. But he's a sculptor." It does not take much pressure to move a man who can be driven to drink. Liquid blue is a weak solution. Avoid it. Buy Red Cross Ball Blue, the blue that's all blue. Adv. The truest self-respect is not to think of self.—Beecher. Many a girl pretends to be just as proud of her big brother! THE BULLY Why Suffer From Headaches, Neuralgia, Rheumatism Hunt's Lightning Oil quickly relieves the pain. The Hurting and Aching stop almost instantly. A truly wonderful remedy for those who suffer. It is astonishing how the pain fades away the moment Hunt's Lightning Oil comes in contact with it. So many people are praising it, that you can no longer doubt. For Cuts, Burns, Bruises and Sprains it is simply fine. All dealers sell Hunt's Lightning Oil in 25 and 50 cent bottles or by mail from A. B. Richards Medicine Co. Sherman Texas If You Want the finest varieties of fruit and orchard trees, roses and shrubbery, write today for cash. Wholesale and Retail Nurseries, Tyler, Tex We carry a Full Line of Up-to-Date New and Second Hand Furniture at the very LOWEST PRICES. We Exchange New for Old Furniture. Fine line of Stoves. Call and give us a trial. We save you money! PHONR 515 J. McPHEARSON, PROP. ANY SUIT or OVERCOAT $12.50 IN OUR STORE CHOICE K. and L. of H. Of The World. Grand Officers Directory Grand Protector—Dr. W. B. Humphrey, Box 667, Sapulpa, Okla. Grand Past Protector—W. M. Henry, Box 101, Ft. Gibson, Okla. Grand Vice Protector—W W. Maxey, Okmulgee, Okla. Secretary—Rev. W. H. Buchanan, Wagoner, Okla. Grand Treasurer—Mrs. M. M. Humphrey, Box 667, Sapulpa, Okla. Grand Chaplain—C. W. Henry, 118 N. Greenwood, Tulsa, Okla. Grand Guide—Mrs. Chanie Smith, Wagoner, Okla. Grand Guardian—Mrs. Alice 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, Sap pulpa, 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, Okmulgee; Rev. E. D. Williams, Sapulpa, and Mrs. F. P. Alexander, Wagoner. Grand Attorney—Freeman L. Martin, Tulsa, Okla. Grand Auditing Committee—S. T. Wiggins, Chairman, Wagoner; W. L. Nall, Sapulpa, and A. J. Smithherman, 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 desired information. Send all communications to The Tulsa Star, Tulsa, Okla. The Lyric Dancing Hall will open Saturday Jan. 1st. Introducing all of the latest Dances. Dancing Lessons on TUESDAY THUESDAY AND FRIDAY afterncons. Regular dance nights on MONDAY, WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY. Refreshments of all kinds served in the building. Good order by special police. New Dancing Teacher. Music by John W. Allen's Five Piece Orchestra. JOHN W. ALLEN, MGR. Call at the Traders Traders 106 East Second Street When we commenced business 16 months ago other grocerymen said our manager did not know enough to run a successful business, etc.!!! We must confess that we do not know what to do. People come in such great numbers and our room is small and many of our BEST customers do not get proper attention. We hope they will forgive us and give us another chance to make good. We have NO ill will toward any merchant in Tulsa and we can see no REASON why any one should always be HOWLING at us. This is a FREE country and we should have a right to buy as we please and also have a right to SELL as we please Regardless of what others say or do. Our SYSTEM is DIFFERENT. We buy in carboard lots and pay cash. We buy for less. We do not credit—We lose nothing. We do not deliver. We save the expense of keeping up AUTOMOBILES and TEAMS. We CAN sell for less and we DO sell for less. We buy our flour DIRECT from the best mills in Kansas. We SAVE the JOBBERS profits and sell direct to the consumer for LESS than other grocerymen have to pay the jobbers for their flour. We sell a carload of flour each week. Our flour is BETTER than Polar Bear, Pride of Perry, North Pole and Main Line. It must be as good as Red Star or bring it back. We sell more groceries than any other store in Tulsa. Come and see for yourselves. Our stock is NEW and CLEAN, and the best in the city and why should a competitor LIE about our stock when so many people who trade with us know the faulty of his statements. You must be pleased with everything you buy of us or your money back. People are coming for miles to see our store and when they see the NEWEST and CLEANEST stock of groceries in Tulsa they are delighted and say they can NOW understand why so many LIES have been published and TOLD about the Trader's. 24 lbs best flour in Tulsa ..... 55c 6 lbs, Pure Granulated Sugar ..... 25c 23 lbs, Pure Cane Granul'd Sugar $1 1 Peck Best Burbank Potatoes ..... 24c Best Michigan Navy Beans, lb ..... 41½c Best Speckled Beans, lb ..... 5c Best Pink Beans, lb ..... 61¼c Heavy Fat Backs, lb ..... 10c Good Shoulder plates, lb ..... 10c Picnic Hams, lb ..... 19½c 7 bars Best White Soap ..... 25c 10 bars yellow Soap ..... 25c 8 bars Diamond C Soap ..... 25c 2 boxes best matches ..... 5c Good Cabbage, lb ..... 3c Best Northern Bliss or Triumph You can not JUDGE a store by ADVERTISED prices. Come, go through our entire line, if we can not save you money we will not ask your trade. We carry the Robert-Johnson-Rand Star Barnd Shoes. Our prices are right. We have the best shoe man in Tulsa—Mr. Jones—who has been with the Brady store for the past 10 years. Mr. Jones is honest and will treat you right. Remember, money back if not pleased with anything you buy of us. Do not fail to visit our store and PLEASE call for the Manager. Traders 106 EAST SECOND. Cornered. "That chauffeur was a great disappointment." "I thought he would be." "But you gave him a letter of recommendation." "Of course. And I advise you to do the same. It's the only way to get him to go peaceably." TULSA. OKLA. STAR WELDY Staple and Fancy and Cured Me Buy and Sell Cattle, Hogs, W Stock. We do our own kiln 21 E. 1ST ST. PHONE OVER-C WELDY BROS. and Fancy Groceries and Cured Meats and L Self Cattle, Hogs, Veal and APRT's We do our own killing. ST. PHONE 1158 OVER-COATS Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fresh and Cured Meats and Lard Buy and Sell Cattle, Hogs, Veal and All Types of Live Stock. We do our own killing. 21 E. 1ST ST. PHONE 1158 LA, OKLA OVER-COATS 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 Away For You. Bardon's Lo Main Near F TULSA. C. O. WINTERRINGER NURSE THE MOWBRAY UND Phone .329 86 9H ardon's Loan Office Main Near First Street WARNING NURSE REGISTER NEW VBRAY UNDERTAKING C. O. WINTERHINGER NURSE REGISTER MOWBRAY UNDERTAKING CO. Phone 329 86 911 125 Second St. TULSA, C The Star Clean Up-to-date sanitay cleaning 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 YES! YES! You will find the Blue At 212 E. 2nd. St. Nov : ALL NEW AND W. A. Weir is glad to meet the many new ones. PHONE 1751 Star Cleaning Pa- se-date sanitay cleaning methods. Ladies' especialty. Let us do your cleaning. Made to your measure. Come in and made-to-measure clothing. We have every weave, every pattern and make every pocket book. Patterns to select for cleaned and blocked. Phone 817 N. E. PYRTLE YES! YES! YES! YES! will find the Blue Front Grocery E. 2nd. St. Now ready for buy : ALL NEW AND UP-TO-DATE Weir is glad to meet his old customers and new ones. ONE 1751 212 E. 2nd. St. 085 Paul Billiard Pa- sect place for all the choice br s, Tobaccos, Cold Drinks and Amusemen's. You are welco The Star Cleaning Parlor Up-to-date sanitary 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. You will find the Blue Front Grocery Store At 212 E.2nd. St. Now ready for business W. A. Weir is glad to meet his old customers as well as the many new ones. PHONE 1751 212 E. 2nd. Street. St. Paul Bill A select place for all Cigars, Tobacco, Col time Amusemen's. Y St. Paul Billiard Parlor A select place for all the choice brands of Cigars, Tobacco, Cold Drinks and Past time Amusemen*s. You are welcome. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT 21 N. Cincinnati Street I'm Bound Theatre To It Will Be All New! Cincinnati Street BULLY SMITH, I m Bound For the B Theatre To-night! I Be All New! Lots of Fu 21 N. Cincinnati Street BULLY SMITH, Proprietor I'm Bound For the Peoples Theatre To-night! It Will Be All New! Lots of Fun! Phone Phone 4085 CORRECTION an Office rst Street OKLAHOMA ERTAKING CO. TULSA, OKLA running Parlor methods. Ladies' work and all your cleaning. Come in and see our line. We have every fabric even and make every style and patterns to select from. N. E. PYRTLE, Proprietor YES! YES! Front Grocery Store ready for business UP-TO-DATE is old customers as well as th 212 E. 2nd. Street. Hard Parlor the choice brands of Drinks and Past- you are welcome. ULLY SMITH, Proprietor For the People night! Lots of Fun! Hottentot Hottentot Will Kill That Pain! For Sale by The Tulsa Drug Stores. C. DEARMAN, Scientist. Manufacturer and Wholesale Di Ibertor. Poro Hair Parlor A young man's glory is his Strength! An old man's glory is his gray hair! A Woman's glory is in her youth and hair A Woman without hair is a woman without glory. Madam Swann Will put life and vigor into the most stubborn hair and give it a luxurious, brilliant growth. we use the PORO SYSTEM Res. 509 N. Greenwood St. TULSA OKLA H. R. LOLIS. DEALER IN.... STABLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, FRESH AND CURED MEATS. ALL KINDS OF COUNTRY PRODUCE BOUGHT AND SOLD. GIVE HIM A CALL 508 N. Frankford St. Gas, Cool & Wood Ranges and Heaters C1 DOVP & $1 A WEEK Will take your Old Stoves and 2nd floor Furniture at, a Beauty of the Price. THE LUCA STOVE CO 20 West 2nd St. Phone 2374 MONEY TO LOAN - On Household Goods, Watches, Diamonds, Live Stock, Real Estate, Chatt tels etc. Room 406 Bliss Bldg. Phone 438 Dr. A. C. Jackson Physician & Surgeon Corner Archer and Greenwood BRALEY'S New & Second Hand Furniture Store ALSO NEW and 2ND HAND STOVES. WILL SELL YOU at a LOW PRICE. Come and see.... 206 East First St. DR. H. H. JAMES Late of Freedmen's Hospital, Washington, D.C. 102 N. GREENW Office Phone 2157 Residence Phone, Black 1360 Solicits a part of your patronage Calvert's Barber Shop 107 N. GREENOOD STREET TULSA, OKLAHOMA Strictly First-class in every respect. Shaving and Haircutting in every Style. Massages and Sea Foam. Call and see me. H. C. CALVERT, Prop.