Tulsa Star
Saturday, February 27, 1915
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Page text (machine-generated)
A FEARLESS EXPONENT OF RIGHT AND JUSTICE THE TULSA STAR OUR SUBSCRIPTION LIST MAKES A VALUABLE MEDIUM FOR ADVERTISING
Official Organ of The Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, And The Knights And Ladies of Harmony of The World, Oklahoma Jurisdiction
Luther Harrison Ridicules Members of Legislture
Luther H
Representative
County Sou
SAYS TULSA STAR WAS E
TURE TO PRHSERVE U
OF THE GLORIOUS
Representative From Seminole County Sounds Alarm
SAYS TULSA STAR WAS EXCLUDED FROM LEGISLATURE TO PRHSERVE UNITIES AND DESTINIES OF THE GLORIOUS ANGLO-SAxON RACE
Without the least doubt or a single exception, the most sensible speech delivered in the halls of the State Legislature during the present session was that f Hon. Luther Harrison, member of the house of representatives from Seminole county, which was delivered recently in the house during the discussion of a proposed resolution memorializing the U. S. congress to pass the ship purchase bill. Mr. Harrison is well versed in the political entruge which enshrows the majority of the members of the legislature having acquired most of his knowledge by direct contact. During the session of the legislature two years ago, he was reading clerk in the house of representatives, and had many friends among both members and employees of the house.
He is also well versed in letters and has a wonderful power of delivery.
The speech which has attracted so much attention because of its truth, sarcastic humor, ridicule and logic follows:
"Some weeks ago we appropriated thousands of dollars for the capture of bank robbers, 'dead or alive'—with the emphasis n the 'dead.' Then we brought in a bill abolishing capital punishment in Oklahoma. If this latter bill is adopted, the only way to commit murder legally is to commit murder for pay. Our record on this issue reminds us of the humorist's description of the California trail:
"The windings in and the windings out
Left one's mind in serious doubt
Whether the man who planned this route
Was going to Hell or coming out."
"But in spite of the brazen assertion of Puritans that we should be consistent, let us proceed to the pleasant task of instructing the American senate, that cannot possibly avoid obedience. Although the president cannot control the senate, we must remember that President Wilson is not the Oklahoma legislature—where he falls we will not doubt succeed
days of Nero.
"Mr Speaker: If the house will pardon my pleasant drawl, I will lend emphatic endorsement to this sapient resolution. I really fear the American senate will fail to pass the ship purchase bill unless this house take some directive action. In my humble judgment, it is high time we have notice on the world, and all the inhabitants thereof, that we rae not only able to manage our own business, but also able to manage the business of everybody else.
"If we need any justification for adopting this resolution, we can surely find it in the record we have written in days gone by. On other measures of similar grave consequences, we have not hesitated to take affirmative action, although our action involved the necessity of making large and luminous spectacles of ourselves. We did not hesitate to exclude the Tulsa Star from this exclusive hall—we did it in order to preserve the unities and destinies of our glorious Anglo-Saxon race from the terrific onslaught of a negroid pica-plant at Tulsa.
"This resolution is of equal importance with the bill now pending providing treatment at state expense for diseased bumble bees. It is of kindred character to that matchless piece of statesmanship now illuminating our calendar and levying a tax on canines—the amount of the levy depending on the gender o the canine.
"Gentlemen: We must not hesitate in this crisis—we did not hesitate when confronted a few days since by the palmistry bill. When advised that certain frisky females were charging toll for holding hands, we rose to the supreme measure of our statesmanship and declared to the world that such pusillanimous practices must immediately cease and that the pleasant pastime of holding in Oklahoma must be henceforth and forever free.
"We must be brave, even if we are inconsistent. We have never paid over much attention to the virtue of consistency. Invoking the shade of every patron salt, we decentralized power by re-establishing school district treasurers throughout Oklahoma, and straightway through the medium of a so-called conservation measure, we conferred upon the corporation commission, power unsurpassed since the
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Vol. 3. No 15
What He Said.
single speech mission son,enta- which house closed S. phase and in clouds the list of Dur-two x in had bers letters relativ and so truth, logic will lend days of Nero. "Some weeks ago we appropriated thousands of dollars for the capture of bank robbers, 'dead or alive'—with the emphasis n the 'dead.' Then we brought in a bill abolishing capital punishment in Oklahoma. If this latter bill is adopted, the only way to commit murder legally is to commit murder for pay. Our record on this issue reminds us of the humorist's description of the California trail: "The windings in and the windings out Left one's mind in serious doubt Whether the man who planned this route Was going to Hell or coming out." "But in spite of the brazen assertion of Puritans that we should be consistent, let us proceed to the pleasant task of instructing the American senate, that cannot possibly avoid obedience. Although the president cannot control the senate, we must remember that President Wilson is not the Oklahoma legislature—where he falls, we will not doubt succeed. By all the saints that were ever stoned to death, that august body must hear and obey."
Paper Not Fit to Circulate
Paper Not Fit to Circulate
Tulsa Circulator of Muskogee Paper
So Refers to Last Weeks Issue, All
of which He Sent Back to Muskogee.
The Tulsa circulator of The Lantern
a fraternal paper published at Muskogee was hot in the collar last Monday morning when he was hailed and asked for a copy of his paper.
"No," he said, "I haven't a single copy. The damn things weren't fit to circulate, so I sent them back." Judging from the remarks made by a subscriber to this paper, who says he subscribed only because he is a member of the U. B. F.s, the circulator like the subscribed, was disgusted with its general appearance, and make up. "They can't beat the Star" said the subscribed to The Lantern, and they can't.
Pullen Burried Sunday
Man Kept in Morgue One Month Buried Sunday.
eHlryn Pullen, the young man who was shot and killed a month ago by Brad Cole, a few hurs after the formers marriage to a woman said to be the latter's old sweetheart, and whose remains have been held by the Home Undertaking company ever since pending word from his people, was buried last Sunday. The funeral expenses were borne by public subscription. G. W. Harrison taking a leading part in the work.
Brad Cole is now in jail awaiting on a charge of first degree murder. If convicted he will probably go to the electric chair.
The Leading Race Paper in The State of Oklahoma
TULSA, OKLAHOMA, SATURDAY, FEBUARY 27, 1915
SERVIAN WOMEN ACT AS STRETCHER BEARERS
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE
The Servians are admittedly putting up a splendid figt, and their women are giving the army invaluable aid. Some of them are here shown serving as stretcher bearers.
13 Night Riders Caught
Mount Zion Church Is On Move
The Mt. Zion Baptist church is still moving on. The meeting has closed and many new faces are in the corners of the Mt. Zion Baptist church. Among the new faces is Bro. John Stradford, the reporter of the Tulsa Star, and many other new faces. Bro. Stradford is a coming young man in the field of Christian religion. He was king of the boys, in vice and pool playing. He now joins in the sing of sweet accord, and thus around the throne.
Our meeting was felt far and near. He who by the plow would thrive, must either hold or drive. The meeting closed with 149 added and $489.60 collected. The church met and voted the pastor a 30 days' vacation, he and the baby, Miss Helen, will leave March 9 for the Pacific coast. We must say that our pastor, Rev. Whitaker, is a hard and earnest worker. He has played his part; has ever kept his eye open for the up-building of the church. We pray for him as he and Helen sojourn in the west. Four more were baptised last Sunday and nine more to be.
So you see we are still moving on. The banquet was simply fine. Many sick ones in our ranks: Bro. and Sister Smith, Bro. Durden, Sister Cora Smith, the Bible agent, Mrs. P. A. Folwell the Pres. of the B. Y. P. J., and Mrs. Williams, Meiton, Stovele, Holderness and Mrs. Williams all members of the Mt. Zion Baptist church, they all have our prayers.
Tulsans Registered At Lee Huckins
The following named Tulsans have registered at the Lee Huckinc Hotel at Oklahoma City since the last issue of the Star. F. E. Perkins, B. Gullins, S. S. Hunnecutt.
Many Negroes Had Been Driven From Their Homes
Hickman, Ky., Feb. 22.—Thirteen white men charged with being members of a night riding band which has terrorized negroes in this vicinity were sent to jail here late today after completion<sup>n</sup> of their preliminary hearings. All were held under $500 bond, which none could supply.
The activities of the night riders threaten to deprive the plantations of ali negro labor. Between Hickman and Tiptonville many negroes have been driven from the farms after notices had been posted warning them to leave the country, and a number of cabins were riddled with bullets.
Visits Uncle After 20 Years
Mrs. Lizzie Davis of Pine Bluff, Ark is here visiting her uncle Mr. Benj. Lofton at 29 N. Cheyenne, who she has not seen since he left their old home in Mississippi about 20 years ago. She is expecting to return home Wednesday. Mr. Lofton is one of the oldest and most respected citizens of Tulsa.
Williams Paid Off Old Debt
Williams Paid Off Old Debt
J. W. Williams, proprietor of the East End Garage, and the Dreamland Theatre, had to cough up $90 last Tuesday according to reports, in order to further hold a car which he had bought some time ago and for which he had paid all but said $90.
It appears that the original owner of the car could not persuade Williams to finish paying the contracted debt, and finally sued for the amount. A default judgment was rendered against the garage man, but still Williams would not come across. The officers visited him Tuesday and it is said he at first defied them. However, he finally paid the $90 and kept the car.
New Editor For The Star
Little Fellow Arrives Monday Noon
If the paper is not up to the standard this week, if the news items r ad you sent in does not appear, do not blame the editor, because he is altogether irresponsible for anything and everything pertaining to the paper this week, his interest and attention being centered at home, where last Monday at high noon he had the pleasure of listening to the greatest George Washington oration he had ever heard, delivered in a lofty strain of infantile elquence, punctuated with vehement gestures, which positively entranced the editor and incapacitated him for any business this week.
Dr. L. H. Johnston of Coweta, a friend of the editor's was the attending physician, has already predicted a brilliant future for the boy.
The mother and babe are both getting along nicely.
The Philips Rooms
There is a number of rooming houses in the East End and all of them seem to be doing a thriving business. But perhaps the quietest and most desirable rooming house in the heart of the business district is that of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Phillips $115\frac{1}{2}$ N. Greenwood. This place was formerly conducted by Mrs. Lewis under the name of the Elite Rooms. Recently, however, Mr. and Mrs. Phillips decided to take charge of the place and a general renovation resulted. Now it is known as the Phillips rooms. Everything is scrumptiously clean there and nothing indecent is tolerated. No unmarried women are permitted to stay in the Phillips Rooms.
Notice to Readers
When you fail to get your paper, please call the office. Phone 931 and one will be sent to you immediately.
Subscription $1.00 Per Year
Ninty Days For Threatening
Ninty Days For Threatening
ROBERT JACE SENTENCED TO 90 DAYS IN JAIL WHEN CONVICTED OF VAGRANCY.
Robert Jace, 24 year old Negro hotel porter, was fined $100 and sentenced to ninety days in jail in police court Wednesday morning on a charge of vagrancy. It is very probable that he will be made to serve the entire time.
Jace's wife and mother-in-law, Mrs. Perry, of Boley, Okla., were present at the trial and testified as to his actions of the past which, according to the ordinance covering the vagrancy question, made him a vagabond beyond a question of a doubt.
Jace has been kept in the city jail for a week pending an investigation by federal authorities relative to a threatening letter sent through the mail by him to his wife. The girl's mother testified in court that he has threatened bth their lives since she took her daughter from him because he wouldn't support her in the manner in which he should.
Chief of Detectives Patton enlightened the court considerably with reference to the past record of Jace, telling the particulars of his arrest and confession for the theft of a valuable cornet while a porter at the Brady Hotel last fall and for which he was fined heavily in the justice court and sentenced to thirty days in the county jail.
His wife, said to be half white, said that she was through with him for all time to come, while his mother-in-law said she had come to his rescue for the last time. "He has cost me more than $500 since his marriage to my daughter and I cannot stand it any longer. He is worthless as he can be and spends his time and money around gambling resorts and other places where crime breeds," said Mrs. Perry to the court. Jace himself is part white. He cried aloud when the sentence was passed on him and said that it was a "put up job" to get rid of him.
Notice to Teachers
The Southeast Oklahoma Normal Institute for colored teachers will be held at McAlester, and will comprise Pittsburg, Atoka, Seminole, Hughes and other counties. It will be affiliated with Langston University and credits given.
A PROFITABLE BUSINESS.
Any farmer can make a good profit out of his milk cows if he will give a little of his time to the subject and go about the matter in the right way. Dairying is one of the most profitable branches of farming, and experts agree that it can be made to pay, even as a side issue, right in this neighborhood. If you want to increase your income from your cows read Klimball's Dairy Farmer for a year. It is published twice a month and sells for $1.00 per year. You don't need to consider the matter of cost, for we will send you this splendid journal with two other magazines and our own paper all for only $1.25 a year. This in the best bargain we have ever been able to offer, and we give you a list of forty magazines to select from—everyone of them high class and clean and fit to take into your home.
Read our big club offer on another page. You will find it interesting to elect a club. If you don't want a dairy paper you can take Farm Life, or a poultry journal, along with a fashion paper for your wife and a story paper for the whole family. You have your choice of any club. Pick out the one you want and send in your order right away.
On the Sick List.
The following people are reported on the skci lits cmfwyp khshrdlu cmfwy the sick list:
Mrs. Cordia Smith, Mrs. Cora Smith Mrs. Clara Etta Smith, W. M. Durden, Mrs. Hyder, Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Fowell.
Don't exaggerate or misrepresent an article advertised in this page.
When in Town Call at The Peep
First Class Meals So
Open Day and Night.
Dwn Call at The People's Cafe 29 B
First Class Meals Served at All Hours.
and Night. J. L. LOCE
First Class Meals Served at All Hours.
Open Day and Night. J. L. LOCKARD, Prop.
WELDY BROS.
STAPLE AND FANCY GR
CURED MEATS
Buy and Sell Cattle, Hogs, Veal
We Do Our C
21 E. First St. Phone
LE AND FANCY GROCERIES FRESH
CURED MEATS AND LARD.
I Sell Cattle, Hogs, Veal and all Kinds of Lice
We Do Our Own Killing.
First St. Phone 1158 Tulip
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES FRESH AND CURED MEATS AND LARD.
Buy and Sell Cattle, Hogs, Veal and all Kinds of Live Stock. We Do Our Own Killing.
H. AUGUSTUS GUESS Lawyer
A Years' Continuous Practice. Civil and Pro
Matters a Specialty.
er St. TU
onomy Drug
Ten Years' Continuous Practice. Civil and Probate Matters a Specialty.
216 E. Archer St. TULSA
Economy Drug Co
Dealers in Fresh Drugs, Toilet Articles,
Perfumes, and Other Sundries.
Cold Drinks and Ice Cream a Specialty.
DR. A. F. BRYANT, Prop.
enwood St. TU
the Anderson Grocer
dealers in first-class line of Groceries and N
our customers. We give Special Attention
Promptly. Try us when you Order again.
C. ANDERSON, Propriet
108 N. Greenwood St.
The Anders
We are dealers in first-class li
We cater to our customers. We g
and Deliver Promptly. Try us wh
L. C. ANDERSC
The Anderson Grocery
We are dealers in first-class line of Groceries and Market Meats We cater to our customers. We give Special Attention to all Orders and Deliver Promptly. Try us when you Order again.
L. C. ANDERSON, Proprietor
DON'T
DON'T FORGET
DON'T FORGET
To see us before you have that printing done. Remember we are in the business to stay, and it is our purpose to make money by saving money for you. We own our own plant and do our own work. We print EVERYTHING and we guarantee to save you money. Satisfaction or no pay.
The Tulsa Star Printing
Tulsa Star Printing
The Tulsa Star Printing Co.
The classified page throws out a drag net for your lost articles.
Out of many hundreds of these ads annually printed, scarcely ten per cent of the finders claim rewards.
There are many honest people in the world.
If the pr does not rin will not ac advertising.
If a want has been n an advertis page, we know about
We place
Don't mourn your loss until you have tried the one best chance for its recovery.
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PAGE TWO
Notary Public.
216 E. Archer St.
PHONE 2475.
PHONE 931.
Dr. J. J. McKeever
DENTIST
All Work Guaranteed
To Give Satisfaction
Phone 2157 Office, Williams Bldg
People's Cafe 29 North Boston
served at All Hours.
J. L. LOCKARD, Prop.
BROS.
PROCERIES FRESH AND
BIS AND LARD.
Real and all Kinds of Live Stock.
Own Killing.
Phone 1158 Tulsa, Okla.
Drug Co.
son Grocery
one of Groceries and Market Meats
give Special Attention to all Orders
when you Order again.
ON, Proprietor
321 N. GREENWOOD ST.
FORGET
r Printing Co.
th Greenwood
TULSA, OKLA.
If the proposition
does not ring true we
will not accept it for
advertising.
If a want ad reader
has been misused by
an advertiser in this
page, we want to
know about it.
We place this department on a high standard—and make special efforts to maintain it.
Phone 3337
TULSA, OKLA
TULSA, OKLA
AFRO-AMERICAN CULL
AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS
One of the very important phases of the work of the Manassas Industrial School for Colored Youth is a summer school, held for the rural school teachers during July of each year. To this come about a hundred teachers from the rural districts, men and women, who are heart and soul in the work. Some of these teachers are well trained and competent, but the greater number are wholly unfit to teach. Many have had no training above fifth grade, and often can only read and write with great difficulty. During the winter of teaching, they often have to travel many miles to their school houses, which are usually meager dilapidated frame buildings, neither wind nor rain-proof, where they are compelled to teach all grades and ages in one room. For this they receive pitifully small salaries, and if they want to add any special work over the regular curriculum, the pennies of the children, with a share of their own small income, are forced to meet the added expense.
They must find enough inspiration during this one short month at the summer school to carry them through their trying winter. The state of Virginia contributes to the work. Besides this summer school, there is held for these rural teachers of northern Virginia, a Teachers' institute during the Christmas holidays, where all questions relating to school life and work are discussed by prominent speakers, as well as general discussions on subjects of school hygiene and teaching methods.
There is no doubt that the work accomplished by the school, both in its training of the children and in the broader field of its community work, is of vital importance to the people of northern Virginia—not alone to the colored man, but to the white man as well. That the white man fully realizes this can be judged by the fact that the mayor of Manassas says that the colored community all love and work for the school, and forget to get drunk and get into jail. One mayor told a friend of the school, some years ago, that he attributed his empty jail to the influence of the Manassas Industrial school.
The great financial stress confronting this country on account of the European war, and the diverting into foreign channels of much of the support which in ordinary years goes to our own philanthropies, has forced Manassas, as well as other schools of this type, into a very difficult position. The vitality of this work is too strong to let it die, but if the struggle for existence becomes too great, the work must suffer. There is danger of the crippling of one of our most valuable institutions, which has only gained power for good through years of untiring effort and sacrifice.
White citizens of South Carolina have contributed $10,000 for a hospital for Negroes, to be erected at Columbia. There are 75,000 colored people in the state who are without hospitals where they can go for treatment, as the hospitals for white people do not admit them.
In Kansas 17 per cent of the women are married, 14 per cent separated, divorced or widowed, and 69 per cent are unmarried girls.
Fifty-four women have received medals and rewards for heroism from the Carnegie Hero Fund commission during the past ten years.
Although the most intelligent leaders of the race are proud of the folklore songs as the rhythmic cry of the slave, there are those who feel ashamed of them because they hark back to the days of ignorance, superstition and childlike trust. Doctor Du-Boils says of them: "They are the music of unhappy people, of the children of disappointment, they tell of the death and sufferings and unvoiced longings toward a truer world of misty wanderings and hidden ways. They are the most beautiful expression of human experience born this side of the seas."
Special emphasis is placed on these songs in all the southern colored schools, especially in Tuskegee, Hampton, Spellman and Fiske university, to which the Negro folk-lore will always be indebted for its revival. The Fiske jubilee singers sang the slave songs so deeply into the hearts of a half-credulous world that it can never wholly forget them again.
Fifty St. Louis women have formed a league with the object of cleaning up that city of rats.
Dead and diseased wood in the orchard should be removed and burned as soon as possible. The Nebraska College of Agriculture finds that if the orchard is kept clean of such refuse the problems of insect and fungus control are much easier.
Sheep Withstand Cold.
In housing sheep, it should be remembered that they suffer less from low temperature than any other class of live stock on the farm.
AN CULLINGS
The New Jersey state board of education decided that the Bordentown Industrial School for Colored Youths shall be made an industrial institution in fact and not merely a school for the academic training of Negro residents of the state.
Contemporaneously with this decision the board accepted the resignations of James M. Gregory, principal of the New Jersey school; Mrs. Gregory, the matron, or preceptress, and J. Francis Gregory, teacher of English. Mr. and Mrs. Gregory had been associated with the school for 18 years, or practically since its inception Both admitted that, although they had been trained to teach academic branches they did not feel equipped to care for the needs of a purely agricultural and mechanical arts school.
Attempts to choose a successor to Principal Gregory precipitated a wrangle in the board and the matter was laid over for a month. The committee on the Bordentown school recommended the selection of William R. Valentine, a Negro educator of Indianapolis, who was graduated from Harvard in 1904. He is now a supervising principal, having charge of a number of schools, and for three years has been vice-president of the National Education Association for Colored Teachers.
Former Senator Joseph S. Frelinghuysen and John P. Murray thought that more than one name should be presented for consideration. He also advocated making the selection from Tuskegee institute with a view of bringing the Bordentown school into closer touch with Booker T. Washington and his associate educators. The committee was disposed to resent the comment of the objecting members as a reflection upon its judgment.
The Bordentown school, as recently brought to public attention, has been an object of serious criticism for its seeming failure to accomplish the aims for which it was established. In short the industrial features, including agriculture and the mechanical arts, were subordinated to the teaching of academic subjects.
The situation is to be exactly reversed, according to the plans for the future outlined by the state board.
Never to have had instruction in art and yet ability to paint well enough to have a picture hung at the Charcoal club's exhibit in the Peabody institute at Baltimore, is the fortune of Ernest Atkinson, a Negro porter. "It must be natural instinct," said Atkinson, "for I never had any instruction and never saw an artist work. I just studied other paintings, and what I observed in other paintings I applied to my own work."
Atkinson is twenty-eight years old and was born in Kingston, Jamaica, where he lived until eight years ago. He then took to the sea and it is to his memory of those years that enabled him to reproduce his present work. His work is an ocean scene, showing the waves breaking against the shore and two boats in the background, one beating against the wind and the other running before it.
His talent was first discovered by Charles H. Webb, an instructor in the Maryland institute, when he was asked to criticize one of Atkinson's paintings. Mr. Webb was astonished at the skill shown, and suggested that it be submitted to the Charcoal club's exhibition. It was submitted without any name on it, and was one of the 82 selected out of the 210 offered.
Talk of cutting down next year's cotton acreage in the South—which may be an economic necessity—comes largely from white planters. What the mass of poor Negro tenant farmers will do is a distressing problem, as Booker T. Washington has said. They have never been taught to plant any crop but cotton, and the system under which they borrow money in the spring to carry them and their families until the harvest is based on cotton growing exclusively. If many of them cannot plant cotton in the coming year they will be idle and plung-d into the deepest poverty. The North now has its une-ployed; the South may have a horde of Negroes to look after before the end of 1915.—Springfield Republican.
Mrs. Mary S. Howarth of Chester, Pa., just admitted to practice in the supreme court of Pennsylvania, is the first woman in that state to be so honored.
Corsets worn by the women on the islands of Malayasia are made of telegraph wires.
If we should take an inventory of our live stock we might find that it would pay to get rid of the culls, and put the feed into those animals that pay for their keep. It is always possible to cull the herd early and get rid of the poor producers.
Business of Dairying.
Dairying is a business where raw material and machines are used in the production of a human food product for the market.
C. O. Winterbringer.
NUR
MOWBRAY
Pho
NURSE REGISTER MOWBRAY UNDERTAKING CO.
Home Undertaking
Funeral Directors and Em
We carry our own outfit a complete stock of high class goods.
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Bond Street Muskogee
if you want a nice quick lunch
yourself or family think of
BEN'S PLACE
quick lunch stand in rear of
Springs Depot
OPEN ALL HOURS
more, Okla., The Health
WASHINGTON BATH HOU
123 N. Second Street
When you want
yourself or
BEN'S
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Spring
OPEN
Claremore, Okla
WASHINGT
When you want a nice quick lunch for yourself or family think of
Claremore, Okla., The Health Resort WASHINGTON BATH HOUSE
For the Colored People MRS. NANCY WASHINGTON, Proprietor
Furnish the Best Accom-
Best Atten
The Raduim Water is
in its many forms, it o-
Eczema, Scrofula, Indi-
in its last stage, and is
to the Radium Water, a
RATES PER WEEK, $
Oklahoma Tr
TULS
Trunks, Traveling
Lea
Sample Trunks
We Make to Order
RETAIL STORE,
Half Block North Brady Hotel
SQUARE
O
F. Go
5 N. MAIN ST.
We Loan Money to
handle a Complete H
ings Goods, Jewelry,
Hand Bags, Trunks a
Goods S
Unredeemed
The Pal
For Confectionaries, Col
Goods. SCALP TR
516 East Archer S
MRS. GL
Home Unde
Open
The Best Accommodations for Lodging and
Best Attention Given Bathing
Dodium Water is unexcelled in curing Rha-
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Scrofula, Indigestion, Itch, Erysipelas
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ERS PER WEEK, $5.95, BOARD,BATHING and
Oklahoma Trunk & Case Fac-
TULSA, OKLAHOMA
Traveling Bags, Suit Cases,
Leather Goods
Simple Trunks and Cases a Speci-
take to Order, Exchange and
RETAIL STORE, 117 N MAIN, PHONE 17888
North Brady Hotel Factory, 117 North
SQUARE DEAL LOA-
OFFICE
F. Goodman, Prop.
MAIN ST. TULSA
Loan Money on all Goods of Valu-
a Complete Line of Clothing, Gents,
Goods, Jewelry, Watches and Guns. S
lags, Trunks and all kinds of Tools.
Goods Sold at Half Price
Unredeemed Goods Sold for Charge
GO TO
The Palace of Sweets
Sectionaries, Cold Drinks, Cigars, Tobacco
SCALP TREATMENT a Speciaty.
East Archer Street, Next door to Dr. Jac-
MRS. GEO. W. HUNT, Prop.
The Undertaking Co.
Furnish the Best Accommodations for Lodging and Board Best Attention Given Bathing The Raduim Water is unexcelled in curing Rheumatism in its many forms, it cures all kinds of skin diseases, Eczema, Scrofula, Indigestion, Itch, Erysipelas, Syphilis in its last stage, and all forms of stomach trouble yield to the Radium Water, also many other complaints. RATES PER WEEK. $5.95. BOARD.BATHING and ROOM
Oklahoma Trunk & Case Factory
TULSA, OKLAHOMA
Trunks, Traveling Bags, Suit Cases, and all Leather Goods
Sample Trunks and Cases a Specialty
We Make to Order, Exchange and Repair
RETAIL STORE, 117 N MAIN, PHONE 1788
Half Block North Brady Hotel Factory, 117 North Main Street
SQUARE DEAL LOAN OFFICE
SQUARE DEAL LOAN OFFICE
We Loan Money on all Goods of Value. We handle a Complete Line of Clothing, Gents Furnishings Goods, Jewelry, Watches and Guns. Suit Cases Hand Bags, Trunks and all kinds of Tools.
Goods Sold at Half Price
Unredeemed Goods Sold for Charges
For Confectionaries, Cold Drinks, Cigars, Tobacco and Hair Goods. SCALP TREATMENT a Speciaty. 516 East Archer Street, Next door to Dr. Jackson MRS. GEO. W. HUNT, Prop.
Home Undertaking Co. No.2
Open Day and Night
Remember us in your sorrow.
H. W. RAGDALES, Mgr
PHONE 4280
114 N. Gleenwood Tulsa, C
For Blacksmithing, Horse
ing and Plumbing
Gas and Steam Fi
Call The LONE STAR SH
SHAKESPEARE JOHNSON PROP.
ED. HYDER, Manager
For Blacksmithing, Horse
ing and Plumbing
Gas and Steam Fi
Call The LONE STAR SH
SHAKESPEARE JOHNSON PROP.
ED. HYDER, Manager
324 East Archer Street
---
125 Second St.
RSE REGISTER
Y UNDERTAKING CO.
KING CO.
Phone 329----86----911.
Home Undertaking Co. Funeral Directors and Embalmers We carry our own outfit and a full complete stock of high class funeral goods.
Bertaking Co. Nurses and Embalmers own outfit and a full high class funeral
We carry our own outfit and a full complete stock of high class funeral goods.
WM. RAGSDALE & SONS, Prop.
Day Phone 746 Night Phone 291
Muskogee, Oklahoma
ant a nice quick lunch for or family think of
N'S PLACE
each stand in rear of Sand Springs Depot
IN ALL HOURS
Okla., The Health Resort
BGTON BATH HOUSE
quick lunch for think of
ACE
rear of Sand
OURS
Health Resort
HOUSE
Commidations for Lodging and Board Attention Given Bathing
This is unexcelled in curing Rheumatism
It cures all kinds of skin diseases,
digestion, Itch, Erysipelas, Syphilis
and all forms of stomach trouble yield
also many other complaints.
$5.95, BOARD,BATHING and ROOM
Trunk & Case Factory
TULSA, OKLAHOMA
Bags, Suit Cases, and all
Weather Goods
Casks and Cases a Specialty
Order, Exchange and Repair
LRE, 117 N MAIN, PHONE 1788
Hotel Factory, 117 North Main Street
THE DEAL LOAN
OFFICE
Goodman, Prop.
TULSA, OKLAHOMA
Buy on all Goods of Value. We
The Line of Clothing, Gents Furnish,
Watches and Guns. Suit Cases
and all kinds of Tools.
Sold at Half Price
Goods Sold for Charges
GO TO
Palace of Sweets
Cold Drinks, Cigars, Tobacco and Hair
TREATMENT a Speciaty.
Or Street, Next door to Dr. Jackson
GEO. W. HUNT, Prop.
Hertaking Co. No. 2
Lodging and Board
thing
Securing Rheumatism
s of skin diseases,
Erysipelas, Syphilis
mach trouble yield
or complaints.
THING and ROOM
Case Factory
Cases, and all
a Specialty
age and Repair
PHONE 1788
, 117 North Main Street
LOAN
Prop.
TULSA, OKLA.
of Value. We
ng. Gents Furnish-
Guns. Suit Cases
of Tools.
Price
for Charges
Sweets
rss, Tobacco and Hair
Speciaty.
r to Dr. Jackson
Prop.
G Co. No. 2
ight
GO TO
Smithing, Horse Shoe
and Plumbing
Steam Fitting
LONE STAR SHOP
SPEARE JOHNSON PROP.
ED. HYDER, Manager
Phone 5082
Horse Shoe-
bing
On Fitting
CAR SHOP
IN PROP.
Phone 508>
Guy W. McCollogh,
TULSA, OKLA
Phone 508>
= A PAGE FOR LADIES OF FASHION =
Nellie Maxwell Tells A Department i Julia Bottomley’s
of things new and delicious Devoted to the Personal Latest Ideas on inter-
to tempt the Palate Interests of National Fashions
== =The Lady Friends of the Tulsa Star==
= ee JAI FA
> “
Z 2 Rb
CL ICR RI
ees fy — Amy)
gs VEL tm
Stolen sweets are always sweeter Light household duties, ever more in-
Btolon kisses much coniplet | arougne :
Stolen looks are nice In " With placid fanctes of one trusting
Stolen, stolon be your apples heart
tas From life's cold seeming and the
VALUE OF WATER AND FRUIT | busy mart
Ties | With ‘tendorneas, that heavenward
To be refreshed where one pure altar
Water is not a food, but a carrier of | urna Ms
food to all parts, and waste from all} Shut out from hence the mockery of
parts of the body,| ‘Thus liveth she content, the meek
we are taught. Too tho fond trusting. wife
ey) Iitde drinking | “Elizabeth O. Smith.
Poraae/. treet BUSS WHte SEASONABLE DISHES.
WS is the cause | debe
iy Y much physical dis-] Oysters are rather an expenaly
tN cpa ysters are rathe expensly
MW) wurdance, Overeat-| good, but they add variety to the dl
ing and little drink: | rat aa. Goakel i
ing of water ts Shs cp piasegageter
a)
said to be our greatest American fail-
ing in dietetics.
Water should not be iced, but cool
enough to be palatable, either sum-
‘mer or winter, and the amount each
individual should take depends large:
ly on the food eaten. If one eats large:
ly of fruit, less water is needed, and if
‘one drinks much milk, less is required,
but even the very young baby should
‘be given frequent drinks of cold water.
As children must suffer with their
teeth, when the little gums are in
flamed and swollen, a drink of cool
water will give much relief.
‘The acids in fruits play an impor
tant office in destroying those germs
which create gases and cause autoin
toxication. Fruit juices act on the
‘Kidmeys and quench thirst. At the
game time they are a natural laxa
tive,
A juicy, good flavored apple ts bet:
ter than medicine, and should be eat.
en many times a day. Scraped apple
‘may be given to young children.
‘The reason that fruit is dest eaten
‘either early or late in the day ts that
the stomach is empty and thus the
digestive julces have free access te
the fruit juices, stimulating them
action.
To keep in good condition, drink
freely of water before retiring, as thi:
flushes the system. The first thing ir
the morning rinse the stomach with
a good tonic of cold fresh water a hal
hour at least before eating,
Though fruit contains little nutri
tlon, it has a large amount of cel
Julose which adds bulk to the food anc
stimulates the activity of the juice:
‘on the digestive tract, thus aiding di
gestion.
APPLE, THE QUEEN OF FRUITS.
Raten from the hand unpeeled the
apple is indeed the queen of fruits, and
those who indulge often
Al, in the wholesome fruit
Givin, find it as good as a tonic.
La Apple Cream Pudding.
t) —Slice a dish for baking
[23 full of apples and pour
over it the following bat-
ter: Take a pint of sour
=> cream, add a teaspoonful
LI
fico
en
3
re
Of noga, and when it Is Cissolved beat
in one or two cups of flour, enough to
make a thin batter, add salt and pour
‘over the apples. Bake until brown
If the apples are not tart enough add
&@ nqueeze of lemon juice and serve
with sugar and cream or with a hard
sauce,
Apple and Almonds.—Core then
pare nice, well-flavored apples, which
will cook well without losing their
shape. Cook in a thin sirup until
nearly tender and fill with almonds
which have been blanched and cut
in quarters. Put the almonds sharp
end first into the apples until they look
like little porcupines. Dust with pow-
dered sugar and place them in the
sirup in a baking pan in the oven to
brown, When the almonds are brown
and the apples well cooked remove,
cool and serve with whipped cream
and sugar. The attractiveness of this
method must be tried to be apprect:
ated.
Apple Gelatin.—Pare, core and quar:
ter six tart apples, add the yellow rind
of haif a lemon, cover with a pint of
elder, boll and press throtigh a sieve.
Cover # half-box of gelatin with half
@ cupful of cold water and when soft.
ened add the juice of one lemon and
mix all together, When molded
serve with cider sauce or cream and
ugar. Grape juice may be used in
Place of cider when it is not obtain.
‘able or any canned fruit julce may be
used.
Apple Filling for Cake.—Grate one
or two good, juicy, well-flavored ap
ples, add a cupful of sugar and the
whites of one or two eggs, depending
upon the amount of apple pulp, Beat
until light and firm, then put betweer
layers of cake and on top. This filling
may be flavored with a drop of almond
‘and two or three of lemon extract
Cake filled with this mixture keeps
‘motst for days and 18 good to the inst
piece. -
Light household duties, ever more in-
With placid fancles of one trusting
‘That lives but In her smile, and tuna
From. ite's cold seeming and. the
With tenderness, that heavenward
To be refreshed where one pure altar
Shut out from hence the mockery of
ite
Thus liveth she content, the meek,
ue fond trusting wife
Elizabeth O, Smith.
SEASONABLE DISHES.
Oysters are rather an expensive
food, but they add variety to the diet
— and an occasional
Pe use of them may
BST be made mos!
BLE profitable.
Creamed Oysters
Be TS EY —Carefully handle
aay £) each oyster to re
aia move all shells, put
— in a colander anc
rinse in cold water, drain the liquid
from the oysters and strain it, adding
It to the oysters, Make a rich white
sauce of three tablespoonfuls each of
flour and butter, cooked together when
the butter is bubbling hot, then add
one and a half cupfuls of rich milk, a
half teaspoonful of salt and a few
dashes of celery salt and red pepper.
Cook a pint of oysters in boiling wa
ter and the liquor until plump and the
edges curl, pour into the white sauce
and serve hot with buttered toast.
Fish Hash.—Take equal parts of cold
flaked fish and cold boiled potatoes
chopped fine. Season with salt anc
pepper. Put butter in a saucepan, anc
when melted add the fish and pota
toes, stir until well warmed, then let
brown underneath. Turn as an ome
let.
Apple and Banana Salad.—Scoor
out two apple balls from peeled ap
ples, using a French vegetable cutter
‘and prepare banana balls in the sam
way, cover both with a generou:
sprinkling of lemon fulce to kee}
them from discoloring, and serve ot
lettuce leaves with French dressing
Asparagus Salad.—Place a cupful o
canned asparagus tips on lettuce
leaves. Cover with thin slices of red
and green peppers and serve with
well chilled French dressing.
Macaroons.--lieat the whites of fou
eggs until stiff, add a cupful of sugar
one cupful of cocoanut and one of nut
meats, then three cupfuls of corr
flakes, stir until well mixed and droy
by spoonfuls on a buttered sheet. Bake
in a moderate oven.
Know the true value of time; snatch,
seiae, and enjoy every moment of It
No idleness, no procrastination; never
put off Uil tomorrow what you can do
today.—Earl of Chesterfield,
DAINTY DISHES.
When serving cheese or cottage
cheese mold it into small balls, then
with a wooden skewer
dip each in grated cheese
and lightly coat each
ball, If the cheese 1s
yc) auite moist in the balls
Shite, the mixture will stick
L232) and make a most attrac
—," tive dish,
eae eaaneg apr Seer amar ae
VA
Ry
z
quart of milk add one onion, a sprig
of celery (both cut up), and heat,
strain over two tablespoonfuls each of
flour and butter which has been
cooked together. Cook until smooth.
Beat until thick and add one cupful
‘of cooked beets cut in small cubes,
Celery mixed with potato when
creaming potato adds to the dish,
Both should be cooked until tender.
Chocolate Nut Cake.—Soften a halt.
cupful of butter, add two cupfuls of
sugar, yolks of four eggs, one cupful
of milk alternately with 2 1-3 cupfuls
of flour that has been sifted with tour
teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Fold
in the whites of the eggs and add two
squares of melted chocolate and a half.
teaspoonful of vanilla,
Frosting —Take two cupfuls of su:
gar, one-half cupful of water, cook
until it threads, pour over beaten
whites of two eggs, add a fourth of
teaspoonful of cream of tartar and
nine marshmallows,
Rhubarb Shortcake.—Chop fine one
cupful of mixed dates and raisins, Add
to two cupfuls of rich, thick stewed
rhubarb, cook five minutes. Split a
shorteake and spread generously with
butter, then cover with the rhubart
mixture. Cover with whipped cream
Lettuce, Pepper and Egg Salad.—
Wash the tender leaves of lettuce and
arrange on a flat dish; chop fine two
green peppers and sprinkle over this
then add two hard cooked eggs, alse
chopped, cover with French dressing
and serve well chilled,
Ps oes ae ge
TULSA, OKLAy STAR
ST AS SET, TS TY
HES OF FASHI
rtment i Julia Bottor
‘he Personal Latest Ideas c
sts of National Fa
of the Tulsa Sta
PS CR RTE TENN RI WE
SKIRTS UF ALL KINDS| WALK
THE SEASON. |
lonable Effect—Iilustration Gives
Idea of Just What the New y
Gtyles Are Like.
Among the novel tendenctes whied
appear in the choice of styles offered
to the smart woman are an extensive
variety of skirts, or, to be more ex-
plicit, an extensive variety of full
skirts, They will continue to put a
note of fantasy in the toilets. The
plain ones are either circular, kilted,
or shirred, while others show a suc-
cession of short ruffies, plaited, gath-
ered, scalloped or plain, in materials
‘at match or do not match the dress.
Then, too, there 1s a craze for the full
tunic attached to a bip yoke.
The silhouette is entirely trans:
formed from that of last year, which
gave an undeniable appearance of
‘skimpiness. This marked change {s
comprehensively expressed in the tl
lustrated suit design,
It is carried out in bisque-colore¢
ratine with touches of light fur and
black trimmings.
‘The jacket {s especially modish
with its short-waisted top and flaring
hiplength skirt portion applied unde
a covered cord, The fastening
novel. A center panel across the fron
forms a sort of square bib, trimmes
with a close row of black ball button:
on either edge. Only one edge {a real
ly used for the opening.
‘The open space below discloses |
generous glimpse of the very wide
Ph
fi
Several Novel Features Are Exploited
Here.
handsome girdle of black and putty:
colored brocade that swathes the
waist. Oddly cut sleeves with close-
fitting undersleeves add another note
of the unusual.
The skirt is in two sections; the
deep circular yoke, and the gathered
lower part, joined a trifle below hip
line under a covered cord finish.
BABY COIFFURE IS POPULAR
|New Style of Hairdressing, Popular in
New York, Makes Women
Look Younger.
The newest thing in belfry decora-
tions Is called the baby coiffure. Th's |
style has suddenly hit the night life
district and New York ts “doing tt|
hard” in its New Yorkiest way. And |
no wonder. It makes women loc
from five to ten years younger. Ia
fact, everybody 18 back in the chicken
‘class, To get the effect the gorgeous
tresses are reduced to a frizzy fringe
arouad the ears, a bandeau {s worn to
hold {t in place. It looks like a Bus:
ter Brown hair cut, but fs called colf-
fure de ta bebe.
Here's the way to fix the hair so it
Jooks cut off but isn’t: First you divide
{t over the temples straight across
the herd, halt way back. You pin this
together In front to keep it out of the
way while you fix the rest of ft. A
little hair on each side you puff out
over the ears and then pin the ends to
‘tight little “foundation knot” in the
crook of the neck at the back, Then
you comb that front hair straight
back and Instead of twirling it up
you twirl {t under and fasten it to
your “foundation.” Then you fasten
your bandeau--and there you are.
‘There are new block printed crepe
de chines with tiny reproductions of
the dainty patterns of English
chintzes,
Se
* =
Ti Pat
‘ef
a nae i
Bl
\ =a
a
Of Blue Wool, With Sailor Collar;
Standing Collar of White Maline.
Sash of Black Silk With Frogs.
RED TOP COATS FOR GIRLS
Few More Durable or Becoming Gar
ments Have Been Produced
This Season.
A number of smart top coats in
vivid rust red have been noted on
girls of the school set. These are
necessarily quite severe in cut, usu-
ally with a belt to correspond and
large buttons down the front. Bands
of fur around the neck and sleeves
are sometimes found.
On the girls under twelve or thir-
teen these coats usually reach to the
bottom of the dress, but they may be
of three-quarter length. A jaunty little
hat with a red crown or a red wing 1s
the natural accompaniment to such @
coat.
Vivid colors are being used a great
deal for young children this year, es-
pecially in the little angora or knitted
sweater sult, which seems to be In-
dispensable to the outfit of all the
youngsters under seven. Hunter's
green, bright blue and a brilliant rose
red seem to be most in favor, but
there are also plenty of fawn and
brown to be found when the child has
rosy enough cheeks to look well tn
more somber tones. Cap, leggings
mitts and sweater to correspond make
the children look like little goblin
and not only are they snug and quaint
but they are fine for sledding, weat
under raincogts in bad weather, un
der top coats In extreme cold and for
open-air school use they have proved
excellent.
‘MAKES NEAT BOUDOIR CAP
Trifle of Ribbons and Lace That Will
Be Appreciated by the Fas-
/ tidious Woman,
A pretty boudoir cap can be made
of ribbons and short pieces of lace by
following this diagram
| Cut your ribbon © in half and
| feather-stitch in pink to either side of
[insertion D. Cut net through the cen:
ter (the long way) and baste each half
lover silkaline cut accordingly. Feath-
leratitch one of the B's to each out
!
we i
| vy .
| :
|} t
ll & 4
| a 3
|
| . 3
j . "3
| , 5
| we “ ay,
ete *,
|
it | side edge ofa flowered ribbon. This
iP} will form a square. Round corners
[and face under side to put. rubber
n | through. Sew lace A on edge as plaln-
ly as possible, draw rubber through
and tle ina bow, so that wearer may
| readjust if necessary. Cut baby rib:
of | bon in halves, making two pretty
jb | rosettes and attach each as shown in
cut.
il an ala ideal aman
Diagram to Follow.
| THEIR UWN REPORTS
ARE TRUE
WN BATTLE OF MAZURIAN LAKES
| Premier Asquith, in Speech to th
| Commons, Promises Dire Re
venge for the Submarine
i] Blockade.
London.—More than 100,000 Rus.
sans, including seven generals, and
150 pieces of cannon have been cap:
tured by the German in the Mazurian
Lakes district of East Prussia, accord:
ing to an official statement issued by
‘the Rerlin war office,
“During the clearing up of the oper-
ations to the northwest of Grondo,”
says the statement, “in the battles. re-
ported during the last few days in the
Robr and Navew istrict, one com-
manding general and four other gen-
erals and approximately 40,000 men
have been taken prisoners up to the
present. Seventy-five cannon and
some machine guns, the actual num-
ber of which has not yet been ascer-
tained, and other war materials have
been captured.
The wasp of modern warfare, the
submarine, by means of which Ger:
many has declared she will blockade
the British Isles, daily becomes a fac
tor of more and more importance in
the great war of Europe with respect
to its influence on the policies of the
nations engaged in connection with
the contraband question, so Vital to
noutral states,
Almost coincident with the unofficial
reports that Austria proposes to fol
low the example of her ally by making
war on merchant ships in the Adriatic
came the announcement by Premier
Asquith in the British house of com
mons that much discussed retaliatory
plan of Great Britain, though still ten
tative, was much broader In scopé
than had been previously suggested
in that it was a matter for the con
sideration of all the allies and that |
Joint note concerning it might be ex
pected from the allies.
‘The statement was likewise made 1
the house of commons that the Britis!
government might deem it necessar:
to alter its decision whereby cotton u
to the present has not been classe
| as contraband.
TAFT STANDS BY THE PRESIDENT
Says Loyal Americans Must Back Up
the Administration.
Morristown, N. J.—The United
States is threatened with a serious {n-
vasion of its rights as a neutral by the
warring nations of Europe and in pre-
Cccccccecccccccce
e “When the President shall @
@ act,” Mr. Taft declared, “we @
© must stand by him to the end. @
@ In this determination we may @
@ be sure that all will join, no @
@ matter what their previous @
@ views, no matter what their @
@ European origin. All will for- @
3 get their differences in com- @
me Ream’ lavaltyite Gur ooUnta st Le
Seeceeeeeeeoesees
serving its commerce with those na-
tions is face-to-face with a crisis, Is the
opinion of former President William
H. Taft, In the solution of that crisis,
should it arise, no Jingo spirit must be
allowed to prevail, Mr. Taft advised
Neither pride nor momentary passion
should inuence our Judgment.
CONGRESS RUSHING ITS LABORS
In An Effort to Wind Up and Quit
nrg
Washington. — Appropriations for
national defense occupied the atten:
tion of both houses of congress in the
general rush to clear up the supply
bills for the government before ad
journment, The senate discussed the
army appropriation bill, carrying ap-
proximately $103,000,000, while the
house continued debate on the fort!
fications bill.
| While progress was being made on
both these measures the senate com
mittee practically completed consid
eration of the naval appropriations
measure and the senate paused for
four minutes to pass without debate
the pension bill carrying $164,000,000,
Increases for submarines and avia
tion over provisions of the house bill
are proposed by the senate naval com:
mittee, its amendments including $1,
000,000 for aviation, instead of
$300,000 as authorized in the house
Dill, provision for six seagoing sub
marines instead of one, and sixteer
instead of eleven of the smaller type
submarines. Senator Smoot sough!
unsuccessfully to provide for fifty sea
going and twenty-five smaller coast de
fonse submarines.
Notwithstanding the progress being
made on appropriations in the senate
there are indications that not all th
bills could be passed even though
attempts were made to renew the shi
purchase bill fight. Several deme
eratic senators said they feared |
might be necessary to adopt som
emergency resolutions iu the closin
pours of tho session,
PAGE THREE
Catarrh of Kidneys
Cured By Peruna
“Thad Ca- / a
tarrh of the
Kidneys ri
Bladder.
Am Very >
Thankful r
For Peruna. p
1 Feel Well,
My tongue
is clear, I (
“Thad Ca- wT
tarrh of the
Kidneys and ff
nares 1 |
m Very
Thankful [bad |
For Peruna. } Wier i
Uh Well, fj ‘3
ytongue Gee y
is clear, I ib
have no bitter taste in my
mouth, I am glad to say I
do not need Peruna any
longer, I am perfectly well.
I have Peruna in the house
all the time, When I have
a cold or when I do not feel
well I take Peruna. We
were all sick with the grip
last winter. We took Peru-
naand it helped us. Peruna
is the best medicine for grip
or colds.”
Mre. Gus. TI. Carlson, Box 901, Ore
tonvilie, Mina.
Weare Many Crowns.
He-—-She’s a thoroughly queenly
“ghe--Yee; e¥en fier teeth have gold
crowns.—Town Toples.
MEAT CLOGS KIDNEYS
THEN YOUR BACK HURTS
re a Glass of Salts to Flush Kide
neys If Bladder Bothers You
Drink Lote of Water,
No man or woman Tyho eats meat
regularly can make a mistake by flush-
ing the kidneys occasionally, says @
well-known authority. Meat forms
uric acid which excites the kidneys,
they become overworked from the
strain, get sluggish and fail to filter
the waste and poisons from the blood,
then we get sick. Nearly all rheu-
matism, headaches, liver trouble, ner
vousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and
urinary disorders come from sluggish
kidneys.
‘The moment you feel a dull ache tn
the kidneys or your back hurts or if
tho urine is cloudy, offensive, full of
sediment, irregular of passage or at-
tended by a sensation of scalding, stop
eating meat and get about four ounces
of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take
@ tablespoonful in a glass of water
before breakfast and in a few days
your kidneys will act fine. ‘This fa-
mous salts {s mado from the acid of
grapes and lemon juice, combined
with lithia, and has been used for
generations to flush and stimulate the
Kidneys, also to neutralize the acids
in urine 90 it no longer causes irrita
tion, thus ending bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is Inexpensive and cannot
injure; makes a delightful efferves
cent lithia-water drink which everyone
should take now and then to keep the
kidneys clean and active and the blood
pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney
complications,—Ady.
It’s easier for a young man to raise
ey tiene aa
For Every ,
Kind of _.
Lameness
vughly
HANFORD’S
Balsam of Myrrh,
For Cuts, Burns,
Bruises, Sprains,
Strains, Stiff Neck,
SEN
0
acd all Haters! Exjarien
Made Since 1846, '%4,Antoey
Price 25¢, 50c and $1.00
AllDealers«.¢,is:2rtts.ce,
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
Can quickly be overcome b !
ae
Furey vena on
et rey TER
er oan We
Biliousness, IVER
Head- ‘PILLS.
Ba No- Sioe
ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.
‘SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE,
Genuine rust bear Signature
| ® HAIR BALSAM
Pe Aiiceteriarce™
Ae ND evens Gaaered
| Perth mide ec tstecre Fassia.
| eRea eats crkededl
| oe wanLme BE Toon @
renee gounblaen, & tare soetse cash
a a a a
THE Te a8
THE TULSA STAR
Pristingand Publishing CO.
Published Every Saturday at $91 North Greenwood Street.
a
Hatorod as second-class mattor April Il, 1913, at the Post Office at Tulsa
Oklahoma, under the Act of Mareb 3, 1879.
—————
A. J. SMITHRRM AN, . . Eprrom aNd PUBLISHEK
Mae. 0, B. SMITHERMAN ‘Sock. yY Evrton
JH, SMirienMan, BUSINeK® MANAGER
Albert SmitheTman, ‘Traveling Representative
iliac
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On vsar ‘ : . * : $1.00
Hix Month s : 0
Three Monte 36
er
WENBER : 5 Bo ‘
g NATIONAL NEGRO PRESS SURE RESULTS FOR HOME AND
ASSOCIATION. FOREIGN ADVERTISERS
———$—_—
‘The price of this paper is $1.00 per year. If you like it send us
your subscription and help us to continue our work for the race.
THE NEGRO FAIR at Muskogee next fall promises to be a
real success, The Fair Association is composed of a class of men
who are determined to make it a renown success,
THE WHITE COMMERCIAL CLUB of this city ought to be
the leading commercial organization in the southwest, because it
is in Tulsa, But we notice with regret that this organization is
making no noise about factories and ot her industries which would
perpetuate the Bucket Brigade, an absolute necessity to the per-
Ianent success of any metroplis. We trust the commercial club
Will get busy and bring things to bear for the betterment of our
city. THEY CAN DO IT.
LUTHER HARRISON AND THE LEGISLATURE
THE SPEECH OF REPRESENTATIVE LUTHER HARRISON
in the house of representatives recently should serve as a mirror
to members of this legislature. It is a notorious fact that, in
many instances, thousands of dollars have been spent in the sense-
less and useless discussion, in both the house and senate, of mat-
ters which meant absolutely nothing to the common people, the
tax payers of Oklahoma, Among the foolish things recorded in
the journals of this legislature, are the famous Ground Hog resolu-
tions, and others of equal importance, the exclusion of the Tulsa
Star because said paper dared to insult the false dignity of the
weak narrow minded members of the legislature, and the resolu-
tion urging U. S. Congress to pess the ship purchase bill, which
resolution brought forth the great speach of Luther Harrison,
which appears on another page in this paper.
Now that’ Luther has put this splendid mirror up before the
members of the legislature we trust the members will take a re-
trospective view of their own reflection and spend the remainder
of this session trying to improve themselves.
AT LITTLE ROCK, ARK., there is a Negro leader (?) who bas
succeeded in winning the commendation of a certain class of white
men, because he has advised his people to celebrate Emancipation
not out of appreciation of their freedom so much as out of appreci-
ation of the kindness and friendship of the southern white man.
In an article from the Associated press under the head “Emanci-
pation, Fatal Blow to Race”, ete., this great leader declares that
the emancipation celebration will be a farce until it is celebrated
by the colored people for the sole purpose of landing the white
man of the south for his great love and kindness to the Negro,
We believe in being just and appreciative, and God knows there
are no people more so than the Negro, but we can. not under-
stand why any colored man should take the position of this Dr.
Wilkins unless it be for sinister motives or selfish purposes.
Whatever the southern white man has done for the Negro (and
we admit he has done much) he has only repaid a very small part
of what the Negro has done for him. Emancipation should be
celebrated, if celebrated at all, for all that it means to the Negroe’s
freedom in this country, If the Negroes made any mistake during
reconstruction under the leadership of the “Carpet Baggers” as
this new leader claims, the “Carpet Baggers” and not the Ne-
groes were at fault, and if the southern white man knew and
loved the Negro so well he made the greatest mistake when he
turned against the former slavesman because the latter under
the blinding light of new conditions bowed to the Gods set up
before him by white men, The greatest trouble with both the
white man and the black man, north and south is, they do not
understand each other and they will never understand each other
as long as one is estranged from the other.
LOOK OVER the ads in this paper, the headlines, the general
make up, and then compare it with any other weekly you get and
you will find the contrast in favor of THE TULSA STAR.
IF THERE IS ANY ONE THING more than another needed in
the East End, it is a general “clean up” campaign, And the place
to begin is at home, “Cleanliness is next to Godliness.” This
being true the Star suggests that all the churches of Tulsa, especial
ly the East End, inaugerate a 30 days “CLEAN UP" revival
Seaniermemicomneet nin eee cea Dares
Youkman's Red Cross Pharmacy
PHONE 832 RRADY HOTEL, TULSA, OKLAHOMA
The Post Office Drug Store
IS THE PLACE TO HAVE YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS FILL.
ED CORRECTLY AND A THE RIGHT PRICE
Try Our Syrup of White Pine For
That Cough
?
The Yonkman’s
YOUR FRIENDS
ten one \ we
PAGE FOUR
= OT
NEW LEADER BOBS UP.
CLEAN UP.
THE TULSA STAR. TULSA, OKLAHOMA.
$e
mony and welcomed me
been in the library of
Brussels 1 am sorry,
UKE WATCHING «i=
you in this improvised 1
la guerre
And the cellar offere:
curious picture. Fourtee
around a makeshift table
A of which—on a barrel—o
presided. We had evi
PICTURE DRAMA i SSS
with planks and a fer
straw, took up one corn
oT knapsacks and some mor
Count de Beaufort Describes fieranene ana Ae
Trip Along the Battle Line Peete rescued fro
formed a conspicuous p
in West Flanders. ture, but the record:
he smashed. Still, one ¢
when time is long and te
HIGH PRAISE FOR BELGIANS | has been very slow aro
last days—so some of the
pasted together on a p
Courteous and Hospitable and Will Dc | board, and with the as
Anything for the English—Com. | helping finger, bridging
fortin the Trenches—Germans | @nd rents, the old’ mac
nates Bulbia give “Carmen,” “La
PE reeee shee | tome popular French ai
& ‘The first opportunity |
By COUNT MDE BEAUFORT. | send them much-needed
| Belgium.—A Helgian officer return
jing with his men from a week in the
trenches along the Yser was asked vy
fone of his colleagues, whom he met
on the road from Nieuport to Furnes
how things were going in front. “Ob,
he replied, “all right, but it ten’t ex
actly a plenic, you know.” That is ex
actly the answer I felt like giving
today when I returned from a few |
lays’ gypsying in West Flanders. It
diMcult to know where to start in
relating my Impressions. It seems as
f for four days | have sat in a huge
[moving picture theater and watched
“one film after another being reeled off,
at the same time listening to an wx:
remely eloquent lecturer. ‘
How and why I was able to wander
| trom village to trenci, and from
| trench to village, or whatever ts left
of them, fs a story which, perhaps
| with many others, will be told later~
| after the war. They are a courteous,
| open hearted, hospitable lot, these Rel
glans, and anybody who seems to be
| English, efther in appearance or ac
| cent, can have anything they own
| ‘Ah, England,” 1 hear from all sides,
‘why they have certainly stood by us.
| Les Anglais sons, chic” (“ehie" in this
sense of the word refers to character,
not to appearances)
‘The most interesting place in the
| Wine along the Yser these days has
| been the village of Styuvekenskerke.
| It Hes on the left bunk of the Ysor.
The main road from Dixmude to Per
|eyse rons about half a mile to tho
wost of it, and the railroad about an:
| other half mile farther. Roth lines
| are held by the Helgians. On Tnesday
| morning some of our advanced patrols
| ventured close to the village, and not
| seeing any life there, went in. ‘The
| Germans had retired to the other side
of the river. Promptly the village was
“retaken” by the Releians — Tut of
| what use is a practieatly razed village
| anyhow? It would have taken a great
| number of extra men to guard it at
night avainst surprise attacks, so the
| officer in charge retired at sunset Into
| his own lines along the railroad
| Enjoy Temporary Armistice.
1} On Wednesday morning the Ger.
*| mans were occupying the village again
| for the day, but this afternoon the
| Relglans might have had their tea
| there hut for the sudden interruption
of business of the only patisserie. The
-| English sign, “Tea served at all hours,
| was still Intact, We took it down, and
1} and now it ts heading the entrance
| to one of the sleeping trenches a mile
back. At certain potnts around this
| village the advance lines are not fur
5| ther than 1,200 feet from each other.
and T have seen soldiers on both sides
] walk about unconcerned without a
‘| shot being fired on elther side. Rut
_|in the distance, one hears from time
|| to time the roar of the guns.
My wanderings landed me near a
‘}Jonely Pelgian fleld gun, one of the
»| “75's,” in the neighborhood of Per
vyse, I knew the officer in charge,
| and was promptly invited to stay, and
»| take pot luck, an invitation which
{| needless to say, I accepted. Somehow
one seems to be always hungry, yet
r} one eats more and oftener than at
any other time. His underground
dwelling had been made quite habit
able, He insisted that 1 should take
|| the “tauteuit” in the shape of the only
{| soaphon present while he balanced
himself on a one-legged piano stool
Our meal was simple enough, but
plentiful. Dry biscuits, sardines, ap
ples and cold coffee, Fires of any
sort, elther inside or outside, are strict
, | f¥ forbidden in the lines A smoking
chimney is asking for shrapnel. Quite
P/ an amusing incident took place here
3] The Heutenant told me during lunch
1} eon that every time he fired a shot,
the Germans answered him In kind; if
he sent a shrapnel, they promptly
»| sent a shrapnel back: when he fired
a shell, a shell whistled back. After
luncheon he illustrated his story, and
Indeed the Germans seemed to be in
A joking mood, He fired a shrapnel
\J and a shell in turn; a few minutes
later a shrapnel and a shell whistled
back over our heads.
I asked for the commandant, and
expected to find him also in one of the
underground dwellings, but 1 was
“| directed to one of the houses on the
outskirts of the village, “His offices
there?” I asked, looking at the remains
of what had been a little villa. “Cer
*| tainly, monsieur, Follow me,” sald the
little soldier,
Ruins Everywhere.
‘On all sides we were surrounded by
blackened bricks and burnt wood, fall
en walls, and broken furniture, Finally,
we arrived near a cellar door aud the
mystery was soon solved ‘The com
mandant met me with all the cere
Mony And welcomed me as if he had
been in the library of his house tp
Brussels. “I am sorry,” he sald in ex
cellent English, “to have to receive
you in this improvised flat, but ‘c'est
Ia guerre.’ ”
And the cellar offered certainly a
carious picture. Fourteen soldiers sat
around a makeshift table, at the head
of which—on a barrel—our officer had
presided. We had evidently inter
Tupted a meal. An tron bedstead,
with planks and a few bunches of
straw, took up one corner; a tier of
Knapsacks and some more straw, lined
the opposite wall. An old-fashioned
gramophone rescued from the ruins,
formed a conspicuous piece of furnt
ture, but the records had beep
smashed. Still, one gets inventive
when time is long and tedious—and ft
has been very slow around here these
last days—so some of the records were
pasted together on a piece of card:
board, and with the assistance of a
helping finger, bridging over the gape
and rents, the old machine managed
to give “Carmen,” “La Boheme,” and
‘some popular French airs.
‘The first opportunity I have I shall
send them much-needed records and
needles, so that in future the inhab
{tants may have some decent muste
with their meals. The food consisted
of cold beef, brown bread and water,
the color of which did not look ap
Petizing at all. One of the soldiers
noticed me glancing ~* the water bot
‘le, and he remarked, especially tor
the benefit of the younger men, “Oh,
it's all right, this ‘Hau de I'Yser,’ there
may be a dead German or two in ft,
but that adds a sting to it, as they
say in the States.”
‘The cellar was lt by an improvised
little torch in a bottle, and the men
around the table with their two weeks’
growth of teard looked like pirates.
MODERN DISPATCH BEARERS
N Tat { |
au aR
2 ee
; 1M Pris i
se All
soe ie Sa ad
EIN } Pec i, sh)
fs Pre er eee
CNN
Ng an Ae
ee Soe
EE cea socod
A Belgian aviator handing a dis
CALLS FOR WAR ON THE WAR
Carl Liebknecht, German Socialist
Sends Plea to British Sym-
pathizers.
London—Carl Liebknecht, the So
clalist member of the German reich
stag who attracted considerable at
tention to himself by being the only
member of the relchstag who voted
against a new war credit, has sent
& message to British socialists, in
which he calls upon the workers of
the world to unite in a war against
the war.
Mr. Liebknecht declares that the
masses everywhere loathe this war
and he says that among German
workers there is a much greater de-
gree of opposition to it than generally
has been supposed.
PETROGRAD FOLK ARE SOBER
Lack of Arrests on Holidays Attrib:
buted to Ban on Sale of
Liquors.
Petrograd.—For the first time in
the history of Petrograd, four consecu:
tive days passed without an arrest
for drunkenness, —_ notwithstanding
these days included two Russian hol
days and Sunday. This is one of the
results of, the recent governmental
arder forbidding the sale of alcoholic
liquors,
TANGO WITH WIFE IS ORDER
New York Judge Declares “Woman's
Best Lover Is Her Hus-
band.”
New York.—Joseph Cyrus was sen:
tenced to dance the tango with his
wife by the magistrate when he was
arraigned for kicking her The trouble
arose because Mrs, Cyrus could tango
and Cyrus can't, she explained. “A
woman's best lover is her husband
You go out and learn to tango right,”
said the judge to Cyrus.
WORK BELGIAN RAIL LINES
Germany Gets Entire System in
Order and Employs 8,000 Men to
Run Traine.
Brussels.—The Germans have placed
the entire Belgian railroad system
in operation and are employing about
eight thousand railroad meu, of whom
eleven hundred are Bavarians, Many
of these men have just been brought
lto Belgium,
News Around Town
Goodwin and Srant
Fresh Meat and Grocery Merchants
“THE BEST OF EVERYTHING”
121 N. Greenwood
‘The great increase in our business has made it
necessary for us to move into larger quarters, and
we are now ready to give our patrons better service.
We thank the people of Tulsa for their liberal
patronage, and cordially invite all old and new cuso-
mers to visit us in our new quarters.
WE DELIVER
North Louisiana Oil Field
The best in the south where fortunes are made in
oil every twenty-four hours,
Nine wells Owned by Negroes
Oil Production 30,000 barrels daily, Developments
and Production constantly increasing.
Buy a Lot in Oil Park-- Only $15 Each
$3 cash and a small monthly payment and an inter-
est in the Developments and Production of two oil
wells without further cost than the price of the lot.
Agents Wanted————Good Commission
For further information write the DeSoto Oil and
Development Company, Mansfield, La.
H. N. JOHNSON, Secretary-Manager
Remember, it takes money te run
this paper, Please pay up
Hons, W. 1 Twine and P.R. Price
of Muskogee were the guests of Mr.
and Mrs, A.J, Sultherman last Sunday
Prof. J. KB Johiison a prominent
citizen of Muskogee was in the city
last week looking after some oll in:
terests and while here spent several
of his hours in the Star office
Lawyer A. W. Langor of Muskogee
was in the city several days Inst week
Dr. Ro H, Waterford a prominent
physician of Muskogee was in the
city Tuesday on oll business
Lawyer T. Calvin Brackeen, 1
young attorney of Memphis, was in
ine city this week visiting
SD. Douglas who has been very
(at 611 E Archer ts reported improv
ing
Miss Joss L. Walker, of Porter, Is
visiting Mrs. Middie'on and. friends
of this city
The public brary is a very pop
ular place for the young people.
The A. Mo R. church has installed
« Daptising pool
Tulsa Oklshoma, Feb, 26, 1915
Received from The American
National Insurance Company $61 00
in full settlement of Arthur Dillard
insuranee — Ady
JB Stradford is now engaged
in money loaning in connection with
his real estate and renal business
‘with headquarters in the STAR of-
fice, 11 N Greenwood
| The Odd Fellows and Householn
fof Rath organizetions of Tulsa: will
‘celeiira e Peter Ogden day at the
A.M FE. church Monday night. A
‘ver: interesting program has Wren
a ranged whieh will commence at
Sp. m.
3p. 4
The Cherry Grocery.
Staple, Fancy Groceries. We
ask a share of your trade.
Fresh, cured, and salt meats,
Country: butter and eggs. +:
Game in season: te8 Se8
Mrs. James Cherry
Mer. N. Greenwood.
PUBLICATION NOTICE.
In the Superior’ Court of Tulsa
nunty, State of Oklahoma.
NO. 2610,
Hattie May Miller, Plaintit
vs
James Miller, Defendant
To the above named Defendant
You will take notice that you have
been sued in the above named Court
by the above Plaintiff, for adivorce
on the grounds of abandonment and
hat untess you answer the petition
fled by this plaintiff in said Court by
rd day of April, 1915, said peti
tion will be taken as true and judg.
ment granting to the plaintif’ a di:
ree, annulling, cancelling, setting
aside and holding for naught the mar
contract with you, and for
There is a certain individual in
‘Tulsa who is putting forth every effort
possible soliciting printing and send-
ing ft out of town, Thus he is taking
away from us, or tryirg to, that which
rightfully should remain among us.
‘The money you spend with out-of town
enterprises will never do Tulsa any
good, whether it is for printing or any
thing else, Every true home lover
owes it to himself as well as those in
business here to patronize our home
industry. Be a home booster and
peed your money at home.
|
ERs .c4p Pesupeepemat ane oumne
pefaeala i pal |
Ge eeu ai
| Beet ibis ponitlen ety Peralty wanes’ Bears |
| Pr ihaed S cants for beets to tapaicy id eansha,
f NATIONAL NEGRO DOLL COMPANY,
| Don’t forget to read our big sub-
— offer on page five
Star Want Ads
Cur Tis Our For Luek ~ Senp
birth date and 10¢ for wonderful
horoscope of your entire life, Prof,
Raphael 499 Lexing Avenue, “New
York
FOR RENT: Two modern furn-
ished rooms; servant quarters
Inquire a 502 W. 7th street
TWENTY BOYS wanted to sell
THE TULSA STAR every Satur-
day. Apply at 115 N. Greenwood
FOR RENT: Two small houses
in Linvoln Park Addition
Phone No. 7
Vhe Public Library is in nved of
4 Bible, as well as other good books
Who will help us, Call 931
FOR SALE Furnished Room-
ing House on \. Greenwood
Phone 931 or see JB Stradford
STAR OFFICE
Wanted
Agents for ‘Tue Tunsa Stat in
every state in the Union. You ean
make a good salary by representing
one of the leading race papers if you
will work.
Write tod»y The Tulsa Star, 115
N. Greenwood Tulsa, Okla
Divorce rendered according to the
prayer thereof,
Witness my hand and the seal of
said Court this 16 day of Feb,, 1915,
FRANK INGRAHAM, Clerk
Mattie M. Purdy, Deputy,
Hy H. A. GUESS, Atty, for Plaintitr.
Sorneres.
“That chauffeur wis Kre-t tienp
potntment.”
“L thought he would be.”
“But you gave bim a letter nf recom
mendation.”
“Of course Axd | advise you to ¢e
he same It’s the only way to get him.
9 #0 peaoenbly ”
THE STAR S BIGGEST SUBSCRIPTION OFFER
Woueosg | = S 1 | ey | | Home LIFE
Ngee on! || Tedexs % | | | aaa ee sy gw
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Ne . vr VAAL ul her eats L£ S oy
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Sa TY | eee | ee
$1.25—Our Paper and Any One of These Clubs—$1.25
EVERAL leading publishers of magazines have joined with us in one of the greatest subscription bar-
gain offers ever put out in this country. Through this combination everybody will be able to get a
yearly subscription to three magazines in combination with our weekly paper at practically the price
of our paper alone. @ In this list you will find forty different Periodicals formed into thirty-five different
clubs. Each club has 3 magazines, except one Special Club which has four magazines; some of these maga-
zines sell for as much as $1 a year. They are all good and cover a large variety of choice reading matter,
including History, Music, Religion, Education, Fashions, Fancy Needlework, Ilustrated Current Events,
Home Decorations, Fiction, Literature, Drama, Art, Science, Inventions, General Farming, Dairy Farming,
Live Stock, Vegetables, Fruit and Poultry. e
On account of the splendid contract we have made with the publishers of these magazines, we are able to give cur readers a
choice of any one of the clube in combination with our paper one year for $1.25. Just 25¢ more than the price of our paper alone.
‘This offer is made to everybody. If you have never subscribed to our paper before, we ask you to take advantage of this offer.
If you are subscriber to our paper we ask you to renew so that you too, may get 3 magazines extra. Look over the list and seleet
the club you like best. Send your order today or give your order to our representative or call at our office when in town. Ifyou
ty sovr a subscriber to any of these magazines and want to renew just send yeur order to us end we will have your subscriptien
extendeu. It zou: sua2-“iption to our paper is past due, we advise you to pay up and take advantage of this bargain. Mf you are in
the hebit of buying your magasines through other channels, we ask you to justly compare our clubs and prices with thet of any
other offer you receive. You, no doubt, are now a subscriber to some of these periodicals. You can save money by sending your
renewal order to us. Here isa chance to get your home paper and a yearly supply of good reading at « real bargain. Uf you want
one or more of these magazines sent to different addresses, just mention it.
TELL ALL YOUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS ABOUT THIS BIG OFFER
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| CRCULATION OVE 160.000 = ae sldemotih2
meer i Poed ai Me ie ee
. e °
ie B Hawkins‘ urniture Co.
JNEW AND SECOND HAND
Easy terms. Cash or credit
J. B. Hawkins, Prop.
201 E. 2nd. St Tulsa, Okla.
ia ii a castiaameel ae |
When in SAPULPA Stop at
The Cotlage Rooming House
Meals Served in Family{Style
Modern And Up to Date Harry Johnson, Frop
Mme. Z. E, Holderness
oy HAFR GROWER
Cures Tetter Eczema, ana
Dandruff,
é A Trial will convince you. My spepially pre-
pared Hair Oil will be sent to any
on receipt of 50 cents a Box.
316 North Frankfort Street TULSA, OKLA.
fy es
Dees ao 5
COW HTORIES H
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Bo ae Dy |
PEL EAR easly
Kimpaits 7
Dairy 'armer
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Cara
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BS
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nt
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7 Oe aed
‘Cp
al
THE TULSA STAR, TULSA, OKLAHOMA.
ALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE
‘The Pal ‘af
, i he Palace Cafe
Our meals and short orders are prepared by experienced
hands and always give satisfaction,
TRY US
eee
In The Gnrley Buijuing, 112 North Greenwood
W B MIDDLEILON and E G. HOWA ED, Proprietor
New and Elegantly Furnished
Rooms
CAFE IN CONNECTION
OPEN AT ALL HOURS, SHORT ORDERS A SPECIALTY
When In Tulsa We Solisit Your Patronage. We Give First
Class Services
| A. CARK, PROPRIETOR
19 N-Greenwood : Tulsa, Oklahoma
PAGE FIVE
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2 Rn. ) te
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TWELVE YEARS EXPERIENCE MEANS, ‘‘WE KNOW
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Do Not Ask If We Can Clean Fancy Evening And Party
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Remember, We are the “BEST BY TEST”
WE DO WORK TO SUIT YOUR POCKET BOOK
Give Us Your Business. All Work Done By Steam, Both Wet
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Ladies’ work a Specialty
W. B. JOHNSON, Proprietor
14. N. Cincinnati, TULSA, OKLAHOMA
Easter Suits
Made to Measure
$15 to 20
SEND YOUR CLOTHES TO US TO BE CLEANED AND
PRESSED
We Guarantee All of Our Work
Little Tailoring Co.
403 E. Hobson Avenue Phone 279
| da A SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA ;
UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK! CLEAN LIVER AND BOWELS MY WAY
Just Once! Try "Dodson's Liver Tone" When Bilious, Constipated. Headachy—Don't Lose a Day's Work.
tch Your Colts
oids and plasterer, and at the first symptoms of any
give small doses of that wonderful remedy, now the
future.
Watch Your Colts
Watch Your Colts
For Conga, Colds and ptemper, and at the first symptoms of any such achment, give small doses of that wonderful remedy, now the most used in existence.
SPOHN'S DISTEMPER COMPOUND
$6 cents and $1 a bottle; $10 and $10 the dozen of any druggist, harbens
dealer, or delivered by NSDH MEDICAL CO.
$10 the dozen of any druggist, U. S. A.
---
PAGE SIX
UGH! CALOMEL MAKE
CLEAN LIVER AND
Just Once! Try "Dodson's Liver
pated, Headachy—Don't
Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel
fine and cheerful; make your work a
pleasure; be vigorous and full of am-
bition. But take no nasty, danger-
ous calomel, because it makes you
sick and you may lose a day's work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver,
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel crashes into sour bile like
dynamite, breaking it up. That's
when you feel that awful nausea and
cramping.
Listen to me! If you want to enjoy
the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel
cleansing you ever experienced just
take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's
Liver Tone. Your druggist or dealer
sells you a 50 cent bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone under my personal money.
Watch
For Congo, Golds and
such aliment, give sum
most used in existence.
SPOHN
60 cents and If a bottle
dealer, delivered by
Chemists and
The Female of the Species:
"I tell you, sir," said the sad-eyed passenger with the bargain-counte, tie, "all women are born gamblers."
"That's right," observed the button drummer. "And they nearly all always win when they play hearts to catch diamonds."
SYRUP OF FIGS FOR A CHILD'S BOWELS
It is cruel to force nauseating, harsh physic into a sick child.
Look back at your childhood days. Remember the "dose" mother insisted on — castor oil, calomel, cathartics. How you hated them, how you fought against taking them.
With our children it's different. Mothers who cling to the old form of physic simply don't realize what they do. The children's revolt is well-founded. Their tender little "insides" are injured by them.
If your child's stomach, liver and bowels need cleansing, give only delicious "California Syrup of Figs." Its action is positive, but gentle. Millions of mothers keep this harmless "fruit laxative" handy; they know children love to take it; that it never fails to clean the liver and bowels and sweeten the stomach, and that a teaspoonful given today saves a sick child tomorrow.
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 on each bottle. Adv.
She Went.
"See how I can count, mamma," said Kitty. "There's my right foot. That's one. There's my left foot. That's two. Two and one make three. Three feet make a yard, and I want to go out and play in it."
FALLING HAIR MEANS DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE
Save Your Hair! Get a 25 Cent Bottle
of Danderine Right Now—Also
Stops Itching Scalp.
Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy
hair is mute evidence of a neglected
scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf.
There is nothing so destructive to
the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair of
its lus'er, its strength and its very
life; eventually producing a feverishness and itching of the scalp, which
if not remedied causes the hair roots to shrink loosen and die—then the
hair falls out fast. A little Danderine
tonight—now—any time—will surely
save your hair.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any store, and after the first application your hair will take on that life, luster and luxuriance which is so beautiful. It will become wavy and fluffy and have the appearance of abundance; an incomparable gloss and softness, but what will please you most will be after just a few weeks' use, when you will actually see a lot of fine, downy hair—new hair—growing all over the scalp. Adv.
It doesn't take a woman long to get wise to a man's actions after marrying him—then she proceeds to call his bluff.
They stop the tickle. Dean's Mentholated Cough Drops stop coughs quickly. A pleasant remedy—5c at all good Druggists.
Once in a while a woman wears a hat that actually looks like one.
Always sure to please, Red Cross Ball Blue. All grocers sell it. Adv.
In Alaska women have full suffrage without opposition.
back guarantee that each spoonful will clean your sluggish liver better than a dose of nasty calomel and that it won't make you sick.
Dodson's Liver Tone is real liver medicine. You'll know it next morning, because you will wake up feeling fine, your liver will be working, your headache and dizziness gone, your stomach will be sweet and your bowels regular.
Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely vegetable, therefore harmless and cannot salivate. Give it to your children. Millions of people are using Dodson's Liver Tone instead of dangerous calomel now. Your druggist will tell you that the sale of calomel is almost stopped entirely here.
DIDN'T WANT TO MEET HIM
Colored Parson's Description of His Satanic Majesty Brought Converts to Mourner's Bench.
The late celebrated Peter Vinegar, who in days bone by used to make periodical visits to Danville, says the Advocate, for the purpose of delivering his sermons, remarkable on account of their startling texts, on one occasion spoke to a large assemblage of the colored population and a few whites at the old colored Methodist church on Walnut street. He arose, raised his spectacles from his eyes, and said:
"My beloved brederen and sisteren, I take my tex' dis evenin' in dat portion uv de Scriptur' whar de 'Postle Paul plints his pistol at de Phelsans, an' whar it says, 'Whar de hen scratches dar's de worm, 'ceptin' de case whar sum previens he hav bin dar.' He then proceeded to tell his hearers what a horrible personal appearance the devil presented, with the following description: "His eyes look like two balls uv fire, his teef like two skinned saplins, his ears hang down like a 'baccer leaf an' his brief smoke like a tar kittle." That night Peter made many converts.
IMPORTANT THAT PUBLIC SHOULD KNOW ABOUT GREAT KIDNEY REMEDY.
The testimonial I am to give you comes unsolicited. I have been suffering from lumbago for ten years and at times was unable to stand erect. A Mr. Dean of this city, saw me in my condition (bent over) and inquired the cause. I told him that I had the lumbago. He replied, "If you get what I tell you to, you need not have it." I said I would take anything for ease. He said, "You get two bottles of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root and take it, and if it does not fix you O. K. I will pay for the medicine myself." I did so and am a well man. For five months I have been as well as could be. Before I took your Swamp-Root was in constant pain day and night. This may look like advertising, but it seems to me most important that the public should be made familiar with this treatment as it is the only one I know which is an absolute cure. I owe a great deal to Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and am anxious that others situated as I was should know and take advantage of it. Hoping that this testimonial may be of benefit to some one. I am.
J. A. HOWLAND,
1734 Humboldt St.
Denver, Colo.
State of Colorado
State of Colorado
City and County of Denver
Personally appeared before me, a
Notary Public in and for the city and
county of Denver in the State of Colorado,
J. A. Howland, known to me as the person
whose name is subscribed to the above
statement and upon his oath declares that
it is a true and correct statement.
Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co. Binghamton, N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.
Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size
bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable
information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and
mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug
stores. Adv.
Reminiscence.
"I can remember when we could get an idea of how an election was going by taking a straw vote."
"We never depend on straw votes out our way. The only chance of learning which way the election was going was to discover which side had the most two-dollar bills."
When Your Eyes Need Care
Use Murine Ey Medicine. No Smarting—Feel Fine—Acta Quickly. Try it for Red, Weak, Sore Eyes and by treating Ey Medication companies by our Oculists—not a "Patent Medicine"—but made in successful Physiologists Practice for many years. Now dedicated to the Public and sold by Lruggists at $6e per book. Murine Ey Remedy in Asphalt Trees $6e and $6c. Write for Book of the Ey Free Murine Ey Remedy Company, Chicago. Adv
A self-made man is always satisfied with his architect.—Boston Tran script
TULSA. OKLA. STAR
INTERNATIONAL
SUNDAY SCHOOL
LESSON
(By E. O. SELLERS, Acting Director of Sunday School Course Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.)
LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 28
SAMUEL, THE VICTORIOUS LEADER.
LESSON TEXT I- Samuel 7:3-17.
GOLDEN TEXT I-Hitherto bath Jehoshah helped me.-I Samuel 7:12 R. V.
Having prepared a "guilt offering," 6:4-9, the Philistines started the ark back towards Shiloh. As a punishment for their sacrilege and perhaps for their boastful pride, God punishes the men of Beth-Shemesh and finally the ark finds rest in the house of Abinadab, 6:10-21, 7:1, 2. For 20 years Israel was under discipline in bondage, v. 2.
1. "And Samuel spake . . . saying," vv. 3-8. It is possible that at times Samuel was a fugitive, but that he was praying, teaching and preaching "the word of Jehovah" we are assured. At last Israel was "drawn together," v. 2 R. V. margin. Undoubtedly Samuel's pure life and his faithful witnessing had as much to do with this assembling as did the oppression of the Philistines. Samuel told the people plainly that in order to be delivered from the Philistines Israel must "return unto Jehovah with all your heart." The putting away (judging) of sin and all idols is the first step of any real, genuine repentance towards God, Isa. 55:7. When Israel adopted Asharoth and the "strange gods" they possibly did so with no thought of forsaking Jehovah, but rather with the idea of "enrinching" their worship. Such liberality, such a federation of religions is weakening to the cause of faith, Matt. 6:24, I John 2:15, James. 4:4. John might be called "narrow," but his exhortation to Israel that they return to the love and worship of Jehovah, to the obedience of his laws with whole-souled devotion, the first, and the most essential requisite to their freedom. Israel's response (v. 4) meant not alone self-denial, but a revolt against the Philistines. This meant also the giving up of amusements and profits which might accompany such worship. The word "heart" includes the will, affections, motives and powers of soul Not merely a surface emotion, but a deep change of heart and character. It is sad to recall that this was a reformation, not a regeneration (ch.8:8), but such is the history of an emotional reformation. One day, how ever, we shall see that we will last last, Rom. 11:26. Samuel is a type of Christ as a prophet and also as an intercessor, Heb. 7:25. Gathering the people at Mizpah ("a lookout") he caused the people to look to God Such a gathering was an evidence of that unity of the people of God which must ever precede prevailing prayer Ps. 99:6, Heb. 10:25. The meeting began by a prayer by Samuel who was nearest to God. They than poured out water upon the ground, a symbol of their utter helplessness, also of the pouring out of their hearts before God, II Sam. 14:14, Ps. 62:8. Israel also "fasted"—an expression of sorrow for sin which was so deep that they could not eat, and a sign of the humiliation of self and an earnest desire to find God, Dan. 9:3, Acts 13:2, 3
II. "And Samuel offered . . . a burnt offering," vv. 9-12. Twenty years of bondage bred a spirit of fear in the hearts of the Israelites and in their extremity they turned to Samuel to intercede for them. Christians have a better one as their intercessor, I John 2:1; Heb. 7:25; Rom. 8:34. Israel no longer places its trust in an outward symbol as when formerly they sent for the ark, ch. 4:3. All real prayer is preceded by sacrifice, and the only ground we have upon which to approach a holy God is to shed blood, Heb. 10:19, John 14:6. This is also a type of entire consecration. The lamb of Samuel's sacrifice is a type of our Christ who entered into God's presence for us "by his own blood," Heb. 9:11, 12. Having thus properly approached God, Samuel cried for Israel, and "the Lord heard him," John 17:9. In the midst of this the Philistines gave battle (v. 10) even as Satan often makes his fiercest assaults upon us in the midst of our hollest exercises. God "thundered with a great voice," v. 11, marq, bringing discomfiture and fear to the enemy, I John 5:14.
The Heart of the Lesson. This lesson is a great revelation of the power and effectiveness of intercessory prayer. "Moses and Aaron among his priests, and Samuel among them that call upon his name," Ps. 99:6, seems to place Samuel at the head of Israel's intercessors even as Moses and Aaron led the prophet priests. Prayer for others is not only a duty, but a privilege and joy as well.
Too few Christians are interceding for others. The sincere prayer for others is inevitably followed up by service for others, even as Samuel's prayer was followed by his service judging Israel. This lesson also emphasizes the need of appreciation of God's mercies. Abraham erected his altars; Jacob and Joshua erected memorial stones to recall signal blessings; Samuel calls the one he erected "Ebenezer," for "Hitherto hath Jehovah helped us."
Old Hound—Come, come! What are you shivering about?
The Pup—Why, I just heard the master say he'd have to put me through the mill.
Old Hound—Yes; he's going to train you for the hunting.
The Pup—Oh! I thought he meant the sausage mill—Pittsburgh Dispatch.
SELF SHAMPOOING
With Cuticura Soap is Most Comforting and Beneficial. Trial Free.
Especially if preceded by touches of Cuticura Ointment to spots of dandruff and itching on the scalp skin. These supercreamy emollients meet every skin want as well as every toilet and nursery want in caring for the skin, scalp, hair and hands.
*Sample each free by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XY, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Remark Hard to Explain.
Everyone had gathered in the drawing room after dinner, and all were feeling contented with themselves as well as at peace with the outside world, when it was suggested as a pastime that every lady should state the gift she most coveted, and the possession of which she would most prize. With prompt acquiescence each registered her choice. Mrs. Wellman wished for the most exquisite jewels extant, Mrs. King desired to be the best dressed woman in society, Mrs. Drayton preferred to own the handsomest turnouts, while Mrs. Smith craved popularity. Robinson, springing from his chair, exclaimed: "Heavens! don't any of you care for beauty?" Some of them still think it was intentional.
John Sharp Williams stepped out of the senate chamber in response to the card of Bob Gates, who is a Washington correspondent of distinguished appearance and much political sapiene. Bob asked him a number of ques-
Bob asked him a number of questions and then, in parting, he asked:
"By the way, Senator, have you got a good cigar about you?"—putting the request under the head of unfinished business.
"No, I haven't but one left—and I just now bit the end off it preparatory to lighting it," replied John Sharp.
"If I'd just been a minute or two sooner—" suggested Bob.
"Not exactly," said the senator. "The fact is, when I started out here I bit the end off the cigar just for fear you might ask for it."
His Point of View.
"What is your idea of matrimony?" asked the fair maid who was still occupying the anxious seat. "Well," rejoined the wise chap who had balked at the huddle, it's probably all right for those who haven't enough worry."
Pa's Vindictiveness
"That's just like him! I told you all along, darling, that he was going to do all he could to keep us from being married!"—Stray Stories.
Falmouth is probably the oldest port in England. It was used by the Phoenicians at least 2,500 years ago.
Wise
Said —
Said一
"A penny saved is a penny earned."
With the price wheat soaring higher the problem of economic causing many housewives sider food values meals.
For years many and others are now
With the price of beef and wheat soaring higher and higher, the problem of economic living is causing many housewives to consider food values in planning meals. For years many have known, and others are now finding out, the true economy in
Grape-Nuts
This food, the true meat of wheat and barley full of Nature's richest nourishment, builds nerve and muscle, bone and brain, in a way that has thoroughly commended it the world over.
A package of Grape-Nuts—fully cooked, ready to serve, and sealed in its weather-proof and germ-proof wrapping—can be had from any grocer. No rise in price!
Grape-Nuts, served with milk, cream or fruit, gives satisfaction, sustaining food value, true economy, and proves itself a family friend.
"There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts
Safety First
Wise Old Ben Franklin
LABOR PERIODICALS TO HELP
Campaign Against Tuberculosis Will Shortly Have a New and Important Ally. A new campaign for closer co-operation with labor unions and other groups of workingmen is announced by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis.
A. committee has been appointed with Dr. Theodore B. Sachs, president of the Chicago Tuberculosis institute, as chairman, to formulate plans for immediate and future action. Other members of the committee are Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, Washington; George W. Perkins, secretary of the International Cigarmakers' union, Chicago; John Mitchell of the New York state compensation commission, New York; Austin B. Garretson, president of the Brotherhood of Railway Conductors, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Dr. William Charles White, medical director of the Tuberculosis league of Pittsburgh, and Dr. David R. Lyman, superintendent of the Gaylord Farm sanatorium, Wallingford, Conn.
As the first step in the campaign a special health bulletin has been prepared for the labor papers and will be sent out monthly in co-operation with members of the International Labor Press bureau.
One of the men at the front has told us how he tried to milk a cow—without the expected result. This is not an easy task for an unpracticed hand. Leslie Stephen was once on a long tramp in Switzerland, accompanied by his friend, Doctor Morgan. They missed their way and found themselves, parched and hungry, far from any dwelling place. At length they came across a cow, from whom they determined to extract some nourishment, but after trying their best for an hour, each holding on to her horns in turn, they had to abandon all hopes of milk. This, remarks Doctor Morgan, is "one of the very few occasions on which I ever saw Stephen fairly thwarted."
The mother of thirteen-year-old Page has a gift for rhyming and a generous nature. The other day Page returned from school with the announcement that each member of her class was expected to turn in a poem on a certain given subject on the morrow.
"Well, that's a very nice subject," replied Page's mother.
"Yes, but, mother," the little girl asked, with innocent assurance, "what are you going to say about it?"
"Beauty," remarked the poetic youth, "may draw us with a single hair."
"During the courtship, yes," rejoined the bald-headed man with a sigh, "but after marriage she is more likely to grab a handful."
"Then look out you don't get the hook too."
The average man wastes a lot of energy in laughing at his own jokes.
of beef and and higher,amic living isives to conin planning have known, finding out.
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No Task for Tyros.
Up to Mother.
In After Years.
Its Accompaniment.
INDIGESTION, GAS OR SICK STOMACH
Time it! Pape's Diapepsin ends all Stomach misery in five minutes.
Do some foods you eat hit back—taste good, but work badly; ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's Diapepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how badly your stomach is disordered you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stomach so you can eat your favorite foods without fear.
You feel different as soon as "Pape's Diapepsin" comes in contact with the stomach—distress just vanishes—your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructations of undigested food.
Go now, make the best investment you ever made by getting a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia or bad stomach. Adv.
Ignorance Was Bliss.
A raid had been made on a negro gambling house and a dozen inmates arrested. In police court the next morning each of the accused was heard in turn. The last in the row was a large, scared-looking negro. "Well," asked the judge, "what do
"Well," asked the judge, "what do you know about this case?"
"Who? We?" asked the negro.
"Yes, you."
"Well, I just tell yo'. All I knows about dis case is dat I was dar!"—Green Bag.
Her Preference.
Young Mawks had decided to enlist and go to war, and his wife was objecting.
"But, darling," he argued, "even if I were killed, just think how fine it would be to be the widow of a hero."
"Oh, no, Wilfred," pleaded the young wife earnestly, her mind reverting to a familiar proverb: "I would rather be the wife of a live jackass than a dead lion."—Judge.
Smallnox Stamped Out
Of 3,164 deaths in the great epidemic in Montreal 85 per cent were of children under ten years. It is estimated that 60,000,000 persons died of smallpox in Europe in the eighteenth century. The disease is practically stamped out now in civilized countries. Doctor Rotch reports that in Boston in 15 years there has been no death from smallpox in children vaccinated.
Decidedly Unneutral.
Mrs. Knicker—Is your husband neutral?
Mrs. Bocker—No; he blows up every bridge I give.
The Reason.
"The man who uttered those forged notes made a very clumsy job of it." "Oh, but, you know, he stuttered."
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Arrangement of Roof Gives Most
Interesting Effect to the
Structure,
SHINGLE SIDING A FEATURE
Idea Has Been to Arrange Designs to
Carry Out the General Architec-
tural Effect—Lights Are Made
on the Multiple Win-
dow Plan.
A cobblestone trim with shingle sid-
ing gives this five room cottage house
@ distinguished appearance,
An interesting effect 1s produced by
giving different angles and pitches to
the roof, which effect is extended out
‘over the front steps by the level top
of the pergola. It is not often that a
Toof is designed commencing with a
level, then stepping up to square pitch,
The rubble stone wall piers und
chimney all help to produce an un-
usual front. The manner of shingling
the sides of the house is different from
the ordinary, but it helps to carry out
the architectural effect, as intended.
‘This manner of siding houses uses
Up just about as many shingles as it
‘does to space them evenly, but it gets
away from the ordinary way of laying
shingles and ft makes a distinction
between the sides of the house and the
Toot. The joints are broken the same
and the covering is just as thick and
valuable, the only difference is in the
appearance.
‘The windows are built on the mul-
tiple window plan, but they are so ar.
ranged as to produce the casement
window appearance. Because of the
double sash, any window may be
opened at the top or bottom in the
usual way. They may be screened,
curtained and shaded according to the
best custom, #o that the women have
no objections to offer. This probably
accounts for the use of so many win.
dows built in this way. Woodworking
factories make box frames any size
and to contain as many windows as
the plan calls for. There are weight
boxes between each two windows, $0
the sashes are hung by sash weights
in the usual way. The idea is new in
house lighting.
‘Twenty or thirty years ago the tad
was to make windows narrow. Some
‘of them were mere slits in the wall.
Sometimes the wall was beveled away
outside to admit slanting rays of light
into the darkened rooms. But people
‘soon tired of such dungeons, and the
fashion pendulum seems te have
swung clear over in the other direc-
tion and the style now demands as
much light and sunshine as possible.
‘Years ago windows were fitted with
outside blinds. It was eustomary for
the women to go around each morn-
ing and close the blinds to keep the
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Floor Plan.
sun from fading the carpets. Because
of the advantages of polished or var-
nished hardwood floors and numerous
Tugs, housekeepers are not so much
afraid of fading colors. Also manufac:
turers have learned how to use better
dyes, but in all probability the chief
reason is better education in regard
to health.
‘The world progresses slowly, but it
is evident that the different subjects
taught in schools are broadening the
minds of pupils so that as they grow
up the old ignorant notions of the
danger lurking in sunshine and some |
other back numbers are laughed out |
of existence. The improved micro-
‘scopes which have helped to broaden
the vtudy of bacteriology have done
more to eradicate disease and to in
stall sensible ideas, many of which
have really become fashions, than all
the preaching of old-time doctors.
A study of this cottage house plan
shows more window surface than a
$50,000 house built years ago. When
the window shades are rolled up to the
top the house is as light as a new
office building. There are no dark
corners for the harboring of dirt and
bacteria.
The plan shows that the front of the
cottage is giveu up entirely to com-
fort. There is a ving room 22 by 14
feet, with a sun parlor loggia 11 feet
by 7 feet 6 inches arranged in such a
manner that both rooms are comfort.
able in winter as well as in summer.
The large cobblestone chimney is
built especially to provide a fireplace
for one end of the fine living room.
The cobblestone finish may be repro
duced in the living room or not, as the
owner wishes,
Cobblestone for inside finish has nev-
er become very popular. However, it
the stones used aro carefully selected
for color, the finished chimney and
fireplaces may be made very attrac:
tive, The stones that are polished by
rain and snow and sunshine acquire
colors soft in tone and they may be
selected to blend together harmonious-
ly to build up a work of art. This
Part of the decoration belongs to the
owner. The stone mason will place
the cobblestone in any position re
quired, but the superintendence of the
owner will be necessary to bring about
the desired result.
‘The sliding door which connects the
dining room with the partor has a
rather wide opening. Wide doorways
are used in very small houses, In
fact, it would almost appear that the
widest doors are fitted into the small-
est houses. Wide doors are a neces-
sity to accommodate modern furniture,
‘The big upholstered chairs and daven-
ports require more than an ordinary
doorway to pass them through.
‘There is an extension built out from
the dining room to accommodate a
built-4n buffet or sideboard. This exten-
ston ts a study because of the manner
in which the builtin cabinet work is
made. Suck designs show the care
with which modern houses are put to-
gether. Several odd-shaped windows
built into this extension are intended
to admit plenty of ligkt to the dining
room and to merge with the built-in
cabinet work in such a way as to ere-
ate envy among the neighbors,
‘The two bedrooms and the bath-
Toom are connected by a short hall-
way with doors opening both fate the
dining room and kitchen. ‘The kiteh-
en, pantry, cellarway and back porch
of this little cottage house are ‘very
compastt and conveniently arranged for
doing the housework, In a cottage
more attention usually is paid to the
cellar than in houses, which is one
Teason (for designing # good stairway
to go down to the basement, Tho
basement in a cottage diouse often is
used for different kinds wf storage, and
there are a good many trips anade
down and up in the course of a evork
day.
Admitted to Lama Brotherhood.
Although a foreigner and a “devil,”
the privileges of a lamasery in Tibet
were accorded to Mr. Francis H. Nich-
ols, whose curious diary is published
in the current Bulletin of the Ameri-
can Geographical Society, It records
his conviction that more than a third
of the poputation of ‘Tibet are lamas,
ordained devotees of the state reil-
gion. In every family where there ano
five sons or more one is compelled by
law to be a lama, and in some parte
of Tibet there are lamaseries of won
en, The lamas’ vows of celftmcy and
chastity furnish one reason why the
population of Tibet is sparse. Chil-
dren possessing “sacred sigs of
Buddha,” consisting of ridges on the
back of thumb or finger between the
base and the first foint, are at once
resigned to the lama class, Mr. Nich-
ols was discovered to have fine ridges
on his thumbs, which admitted him
10 the lama brotherhood and material
y aided his studies.
‘Settee Ophebnahnd
The dyeing industry, now so much
under discussion, was once the subject
of a curious piece of muddled legisla-
tion, In the reign of George III @ bill
was introduced into parliament for
‘regulating the use of madder in dye
ing. In its passage through the house
it gathered some sixty sections of re-
strictions and enactments, but some-
how in the chopping and changing the
word “madder” became entirely de- |
leted, and accordingly the measure
was inoperative from the first, —Full
Mall Gazette.
Naturally.
Boarding House Mistress — What
part of the chicken do you wish?
Freshman — Some of th meat
Please —Pennsylvania Punch Dow!
TULSA, OKLA, STAR
ti
| GRANDMA USED SA
| TO DARKEN HER
lone Made Up a Mixtur
ON WHEAT and Sulphur to Bring
| Gloss, Thickn
—_—- | Almost everyone kno
Tea and Sulphur, prope
The United States Wheat Pro-| ed, brings back the nat
duction Admits of 100 Mil- | Wustte to the hair when
lion Bushels for Export. —| 8ealp_and stops falling
| The talk in the press some Httle
‘me back of placing an embargo on
Wheat, brought forcibly to the minds
of the people of the United States a
condition that may at some time in
‘the near future face them, 100 mil-
‘Mon bushels of an export of wheat
‘means a splendid revenue to the
country as well as to the farmer,
and If this were assured year after
-year, there would be reason for con:
‘siderable congratulation. Tut. Inst
year's magnificent and abundant
‘crop, which was estimated at 891
‘million bushels, cannot be expected
vevery year. With a home consump:
tion of 775 million bushels, and @
‘Production in many years of little
‘More than this, the fact is apparent
‘that at an early date the United
‘States will have to import wheat. It
“Will be then that the people of the
‘United States will be looking to other
‘markets for a supply, And it ts then
that the value of Western Canada
‘lands will be viewed with consider-
jable favor, ‘The great area of wheat
lands in Canada will then be called
upon to provide the greatest portion
Of the old world’s supply, and also, in
‘the opinion of the writer, that of the
United States as well. | At present
there are only about 12 million acres
of these lands producing wheat. There
are five times that many acres that
can be brought under successful cultl-
vation, Apart altogether from the
value of these lands as wheat pro-
ducers there is an increased value to
them from the fact that the soll Is
especlaliy adapted to the growing of
many other Kinds of grain ay well as
all “manner of cultivated grasses,
While the uiative grasses are a won-
derful asset in thomselves, ‘The cll:
tate Is especially favorable to the
raising of live stock, such as horses,
cattle, sheep and hogs. All these
bring mito the Nmoelixht the adapta:
bility of the soll, the climate and
All other necessary conditions, to the
carrying on of dairy farming, m a
most profitable way.
There is no question that high
prices for all thit the farmer can grow
or raise will continue for some years,
and this is the great opportune time
to take advwrtage of what Western
Canada offers. Lands may be had as
A free gram. ‘These are mostly lo-
cated some ‘little didkance trom rail
ways at the present time, Yrut sooner
[or later will be well served by rail-
ways that are projected into these
districts, ‘Land may also ‘be secured
by purchuse at reasonable price, and
on easy terms from holders of same.
In many cases farms partly Improved
may be rented. A Winnipeg paper
said recently: “Canada wants Amert-
can immigrants. They make gooé
Canadian citizens.” And then speak-
Ing of the erroneous tmpression thnt
has gained some publicity Ina portion
of the United States press, says: “tt
cannot 'be too foreitly impressed upon
‘tho American mind that in. comtus
‘to Canada they place themselves un-
‘der the 'freest democracy the wort
knows, No citizen of this country,
whether native or naturalized, can 'be
compelled to military service, ‘The
only compulsion is the compulsion ‘of
conscience and patriotic duty, That 18
the motive that has prompted thou-
sands of Canadians to offer their lives.
‘They are fighting as free men."—2d-
vertinement,
It 4s a whole fet better to how! 'be-
fore you are hurt than to howl im a
hospital.—Philadetphia Telegraph,
Memoy a man who knows his ewn
mind is not overburdened with knewl
| edge.
| The inconsistency of womankind Is
demoustrated by the society girl, who
| starts in when she comes out.
| An enthusiastic meeting és that of
two girl chums who haven't seen eadh
| other for nearly am hour.
Occasionally a man makes a great
hit by doing the wrong thing at the
right the.
a ee |
important to Methors.
Examixe carelully every bottio of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
mnfants asd children, and geo that It
Bears the
Signature of y
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
‘The school of experience has no
commencement. ‘It's a perpetual |
aeurea,
oe enenaeenees {euied It and are now among my best yearly customers, They know thatits yield of weed cot,
oink tens of Perticnlee women, now mae risa diee his roillna ton ncomgurton wih alloterhigr improved aie areaeor sets onde Kh
goers. Ady, 1 cgckt are ld ee fenepne ve: 6 Wee te-day for free catalog of highest class testimonials which also gives reasons
‘The girl who is self-possessed can | “T don't know, but a mucb more vital | sane ie predveus these wondertu Iresults and brings top market prices,
seually be induced to transfer the question ‘is whe Fo would nine out of | H. H. SUMMEROUR, Box 45, Duluth, Ga.
DEA eee aia th Lurks In A Weak Heart
If Youre |e fluttering or weak, use RENOVINE.” Made by Van Vivcet-Mansfield Drug Co., Memphis, Tenn. Price $1.00
GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA
TO DARKEN HER GRAY HAIR
Bhe 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 it at home, which is
mussy and troublesome, ‘Nowadays,
by asking at any store for “Wyeth'«
Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy,” you
will get a large bottle of the famous
old recipe for about 50 cents,
Don't stay gray! Try it! No one
can possibly tell that you darkened
your hair, as it does it so naturally
and evenly. You dampen a sponge or
soft brush with it and draw this
through your hatr, 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.—
Ady. anette anne
‘There would be more hermits if huts
could be fitted up with ol modern
conventences
Some girls become squint eyed from hosel st rulerceohitarhs AR « ots thge Voes Not stick to the trot
perusifig the magasine beauty hints 1 want to answer Gwendolyn’s let: | and it will not injure the finest fabric, Fo
ter and say something that means | laundry purposes it has no equal. 16 01
Anyway, we admire a cheerful idiot | nothing package 10¢, 1-3 more starch for same money
more than we do the other kind. “ “Tell her you love her.” “DEFIANCE STARCH CO., Omaha, Nebrask
‘ ;
A npell of cold, damp weather is WB I coy “Eterp Piceere JOmmended kidney remedy in th
always followed by a fine crop of kid mel ese 2 Fir Pie. | world, You'll decide it worth a trial
hey troubles and backache. ig) » when you read this enthusiastic testi
Colds and chills damage the kid-| age aS X mony
neys, Other troubles common to win-| <a Tp, 5
ter weather are justas bad. Grip, ton) ‘ii, WELTY From | After Intense Suffering
silitis, quinsy, preumonia or any other | 7) Msi) |
tatectioun disease hurts the Kidneys} { Atl: AS | Oklahoma Man Was Restors«
y overloading the blood with poisons. 5 7 »
The tate Sak ae | BUR DAU on ZY to Health by Doan’s
flamed trying to work {i off. = (] Gf Af Me John T Jones, carpenter, 212 8. Pine
Wt isn't hard to stretigthen weak | p/m Cd AMOI | veuie'vaicy Oka mayer wae often con
Kidneys though, if you act quickly i pose LONG pet} [inca ood oe dae trom "weak. kidney
At the first wign of backache, dizsy| G87) p> mae AM ED | vrovaiy trougnt on by the hardehine ten
ousness, depression and painful, Irreg- Yt 14 A ran from my kidneys down my limbs and
ular kidney action, start using Doan's iy Be bop fA) also suffered from a dull ache through m:
simple eating, avoidance of overwork | | fi 14 REMNTM, | soalcss tw colente nd wore trotees 1 ba
and worry, and getting more rest and i HES i STEIN, :|Sesidee fn ehtenie Ba. sere twetane.
sleep. A milk diet is fine, ra, ty BAAR) deni I tad about given up hope ot eve
This sensible treatment should| (amaenM AN Tc VAL BES | ketting rid of the trouble, as the doctor
bring quick benefit and prevent see! | gm ae LAPS medicine and everything leg T led he
ous “kidney diseases like dropsy, ) Doan'a Kidney Pilla and. at the end_of Uh
gravel and Bright's disease. & third day Thad much tems pain in my kid
Clip this advertisement and mail it neva 1 rapidly arew etter, my anpett
ib.tup euaigen vakev te a trea creat | do vw [gate back and! the tne haa tans
of Doan’s Kidney Pills, the best reo- I'd be all right only for my back. four boxes of Doan's Kidney Pilla 1 was
my *When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name" cm
enn) 7 TN
alata AKIDNEY.
ie Bold Uy at Deskers!_Arice $0 cents. FostenMilbuin Co. Bulfaios Ni¥s Proprietors Salen
ne, rc
“Experience is a great teacher.”
“Isn't it? There's Brown's case.”
“What about Mr. Brown?”
“He married ® widow."
“1 know.
“Well, Brown had an {dea that he
was a bundy man around the house
About the secmd week after his mar
riage she caught him with « monkey
wrench on hie way to fix seme of the
water gps."
“What did she do?”
“She stopped him."
why?”
“She said her first husbant! had the
notion ‘that be was a plumber, and she
had all the ‘trouble from that source
that #he wanted.”
SICK “CASCARETS”
Gently cleanse your fiver and
Skiggish bowels while
you sleep.
Get a ‘K-cent box.
Sick headache, biliowenese, dizzt
ness, eoated tongue, foul taste and fou
breath—always trace them to torpld
liver; éelayed, fermenting food in the
bowels or aur, grssy stomach,
Poisonous matter clogged inthe In:
testines, inaiead of being cast out
Of the eystem Is xo-absorbed imo the
blood. When this poison reaches the
delicate brain tissue {t causes con-
Gestion axd that dui!, throbbing, .sick-
ening headache.
| Casearets immedia'ely cleanse tho
‘stomach, remows the sour, uedigected
food and foul gases, cake the execs
Wle from the liver and carry out all
the constipated waste matier end
Polsons in the bowels,
A Cascaret tonight will surety
straighten you out by morning. They
work while you sleep—a 10-cet box
from your druggist means your head
clear, stomach sweet and your liver
and bowels regular for months, Adv.
There's Just No Telling.
“Where would the druggists be if
they didn’t sell cosmetics?"
“I don't know, but a mucb more vital
question is where would nine out of
ton amen hae
a La ee
BUY coop SIHMERURS cur acreacc
COTTON SEED ficuns\ INCREASE CROP
THIS year /j\ TING pecrease cost
wits
SUMPAEROUR’S HALF « HALF COTTON
Papo gail ow al nis oe
cut i it ag Bo rt the world hs ver som. a
BUY THE NEWEST IMPROVED SEED niREcT FROM ME
sionleluperin| ht th, enen | enna Men
gunvcplin aa imgorien! shat, the, cotton setise wont preatige tae eatin a hardy
sredineran buy. tt means economy, You | Yeloved er wNeen eS oc "Easiest ofeay
Tieleh SUR ator esr cs | falta sik, fave Mounds of coaa
Sogn ve cen Gy pgs
‘Ths cation created a sensation and has maintained is reputation throughout the cetion belt,
Tehasestabhished lself us standard ia the minds of progressive planters everywhere ates
tested it and are now among my best yearly customers, ‘They know thatits yield of seed cot.
{on a comparison whi all other highly improved vasetics sas superioe ae its wosderel Nob
per coat of lint, .
Wee tr-day for free catalog of highest class testimonials which also gtves reasons
it pradaccs tare wonder faci a etch olee store
H. H. SUMMEROUR, Box 45, Duluth, Ga.
GOOD FOR NATION'S HEALTH
Beneficial Results From Early Entry
of Spring Vegetables Into the
Markets of the Country.
One of the marvels of modern tite Is.
the early date when spring fruits and
vegetables appear in the markets.
Some years ago they almost always
went north In a wilted condition. With
modern facilities these products of
southern latitudes appear in northern
towns in marvelously fresh condition.
For the great majority of people pre-
maturely early food products are an
Impossible luxury, But the growing
wealth of the country is signified by
the number of people who today feel
that they ean afford to buy these early
garden products, For people of means
It is a healthful way of spending
money, which otherwise might go into
highly seasoned cooking and stimu:
lants.
Also the cost of these early products
has not increased as much as one
would expect. ‘They are raised in 80
nuch larger quantities that compet!
tion keeps prices somewhere within
reason, Regular markets have been
established and transportation costs
aire greatly reduced through volume
of traftle South Bend News-Times,
‘Sistimetinnity Gassilan
ills Bring |
| Ti 2 Bir Py.
ies
pie 4
MT NY Jamis
wal fos Nes
! ‘Sunday School Teacher—What is
the outward, visible sign of baptism?
Johnny—The baby, mum.
‘The mother tongue has the father
| wngue beaten,
who ibides hd'gay tel teeay ater
i SU UaL
sNotasias putea pon aver attainen
we hicking.
/ One little taste of defeat is dificult
lserebaiies
| ‘fhe young widow begins to talk
®bout her late husband rather early,
BUY coop SIME
COTTON SEED fia;
THIS Year {OM
ie
SUMPAEROUR’S HA
OR Lint 80% Se0d. ‘The most wonder
ition £0 high lint yickd tt wll produce SOK
BUY THE NEWEST IMPROVE
Sit aneoete agora! iin} the onion
poyertieties ihe year 1913 oniy ihe ‘pest
Beh nie custo arnt
Geew 4 layer cone bene oetenin
PAGE SEVEN
——$$$——$$ $$
Improvement in Lusiness since depres
tion reached low tide several months ago
Las been gradual, Confidence has been
restored and unless all signs fail, the coune
try i# schedule’ for a boom almost une
parallelied.
In order to overcome the depression that
attacks a person in poor health it im neces:
fury that partiewlar attention be paid to
the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, These or-
fans ate the controlling power in all mat-
ters pertaining to health and there is nothe
ing will make you feel “so blue” and dis-
couraged ax to be without appetite—to be
subject to epells of headache, indigestion,
dyspepsia and bitiousness—or to have con:
stipated bowels.
Nature never intended anyone to be in
such a condition and the only way to im:
prove matters is to give necessary aid
promptly, This euggests a trial of Hostet.
ter's Stomach Bitters, because it has an
establisiied reputation asa tonic and appes
Liver, ova will be found very helpful in any
Stomach, Liver or Bowel-ailment
Tt is well known as a real “first aid,” and
for over) years has held a permanent
plice in thousands of homes, | You. will
make no mistake in purchasing 9 bottle tox
day, but be careful to see that the Private
Stamp over the neck is unbroken, This is
your protection againet imitations.
DEFIANCE STARCH
is constantly growing in favor because it
Does Not Stick to the Iron
and it will not injure the finest fabric. For
laundry purposes it has no equal. 16 on
package 10¢, 1-3 more starch for same money,
DEFIANCE STARCH CO., Omaha, Nebraska
<idney Ill
ommended kidney remedy in the
world, You'll decide it worth a trial,
when you read this enthusiastic testi
mony
After Intense Suffering
Oklahoma Man Was Restored
to Health by Doan's
John T. Jones, carpenter, 213 8. Pine Mt,
Paula Valley, Okla paye: “l was often cone
fined. to. bed for aye. trom weak kidneys
Probably Drought on by the hardshipe t ene
| red. tothe Civil, War. A. terribie pain
ran trom my kidneys down my limbe and E
slso suffered from a dull ache through my
‘Kips and back, ‘The action of my kidneys,
wan (oo frequent. The kidney secretions
tealded In pasange and were prutuee. 1 bad
Jdeath. I had about given up hope of ever
Getting rid. of the trouble, ae the, doctors
medicine and. everything else T tried hed
trought no bencdt. Finally 1 began using
Doan'e Kidney Pilla and at the end. of the
third day 1 hea much tees pala, to my’ kid-
Berk <1 capiliy. ater Millen, we aneelee
came back and by the time 1 hed Golshed,
four bores of Don's Kidney Pille 1 was s
well man.” I'am now in the beat of health.”
> Name” cm
DOANS
Bi) Ae
NEY, Proprietors es
Awd
| Beware of false economy. ‘The man
who does not invest in garden seeds
| eaten. niche aad. eucesiineie
ped) A re
es) Suarantee
on roofing!
‘A. useless risk is to buy roofing
not guaranteed by a responsible con-
cern, When you Bey, our roofing ee
jet the written guarantee of the world’s
ft yest manufacturers of roofing and
building papers.
Buy materials that last
Certai teed|
PS AC SRA
Roofing
—our leading product—is guaranteed $
years for Tae 10 years for 2-ply and 15
years for 3-ply. We also make lower
priced roofing, slate surfaced shingles,
Paiiding parent, wall boards, utdocr
paints, plastic Cement, ete.
Ask your dealer for products made by ws,
Tivey’ave reasonable 4s price aud Wwe stand
Behl tense
General Roofing Manufacturing Co.
Worle baracat manufacturers of Reape
eng ob a et
New Yor en Chase
ee Se Ee
ScaFranince "Seattle Union’ Wenberg 'Sytoey
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No, 9-1915,
The Star Cleaning Parlor
Uy, o-date sanitay cleaning methods, Ladies’ work and al
terations u specialty. Let us do your cleaning.
Suits made to your measure. Come in and see our line
ot stylish made-to-measure clothing. We have every fabric ev
ary color, every weave, every pattern and make every style at
prices to suit your pocket book. patterns to select from
Hats cleaned and blocked
VISIT US Phone 817 N, k. PYRTLE, Proprietor
ea cea a eal
TheGem urniture Co.
YI OOF IIR IRE FOR FOR RIOR ARR FORE ARR
tog ast First St.
New and Second Hard Furniture
Your Credit Is Good
We buy and sell everything in the home furnishing line
Muskogee News Notes in Brief
PAGE EIGHT
Speaking of spelling in our colored
schools, let'y see? Who flung det
brick?
‘The sudden change in the weather
last Monday spoiled the opportunity
for the Frances Harper Club to give a
successful Martha Washington Party
for the Library
Miss Glenn, sister of Prof. W. 1
Glenn, and one of the able teachers «f
Dunbar School, has returned
The colored. citizens of Summit .
Taft and Wybark are xitting outon
the'r front verandas of evenings liste
ing to the plano in front @f the Pa
time That plano ts sone noise.
Honry Pack has recently come into
possession of some valuable land. 'n
the Cushing oil field. Henry's (rienc
are all hoping be will soon be in the
Sarah Rector class.
While the sisters and brothers «1
the Central Baptist Church were re
cently united in prayer and song some
sneak thief entered the cloak roo
and swiped a number of coats, cloaks
and hats. Thanks to the energy o
Roy. MeClendon everything exeept on
hat was recovered by noon next day
The Reverend assures every ove tha
thoy ean attend services without lea y
Ing their clothes and money at hom:
Fire Eecape at Carter.
It is sald that a prayer meeting was
actually held at the Carter Building.
recently which concluded without a
dance, While the reporter was chs:
ing this down to verify it, it wos
loarned that 4 fire escape is to be
placed om the west wall of this build
lng to enable Muskogee — preachers
and other religiously inclined persons
to get out of the hall after public en.
tertainments before — terpsichorean
couples whir by under their noses
dancing the “lame duck.” Old Anan.
fay may have told bigger Hes than
these to adorn a tale and point a
moral.
Southern Commercial Congress.
It develops that the promoters of
the Southern Commercial Congress
which is to be held here in April
have learned that quite a number of
colored business men from the south
ern states will be in attendance In
order t provide for thelr proper care
and entertainment while in the city
a number of Muskogee colored cit!
zens were called into consultation by
the president of the Rotarians, Mr
Dawson, and the necessary arrange:
ments are to be made.
Phin, taovtnns Maateal:
Prof. Richard Harrison, the well
known and highly talented dramatic
reader gave a recital during the week
for the benefit of the Doreas Hospiti,
one of the worthiest Negro enterpris:
ex in the city and which has been
advanced to its present condition of
Rreat usefulnese to the community
through the efforts of Mra Julia Nick-
eng amd. the ladies associated with
her in the Doreas Club
Big Baptist Audiences.
The various Maptist churches, the
lat, 2nd, Central and Antioch were
each and all attended during last
Sunday by their usual large audience.
es. The Rey 8. 8. Jones announced
important meetings for the week and
& coneert which Choirmaster Green
has in preparation. ‘The Rev. Arting:
ton Wilson delivered a sermon which
reached deeply into the hearts of his
congregatien, ‘The collections for the
day Were satisfactory.
‘ha Madan aba
The promoters of the proposed
great Independent Negro Fair which
i to be held in Muskogee from the
fith to the 11th of the coming” Sep:
tember are getting ready to launch an
energetic campaign to awaken — the
Negroes of Oklahoma in. the enter:
prise. President J. W, Kintz, one of
Muskogee’s leading citizens and mer:
chants is giving considerable atten.
tion to the work of the assoctation,
The premium list which is hoped to
interest and to inspire the egro agri:
culturiats of the state will be issued
noon,
Mr J. M. Love reports that his
whent crop is in fine condition and he
\s giving his time to the preparation
for early spring planting on his large
estate,
Mr. Jack oward and Mr. Jake Sim-
mons of Haskell were deeply Inter
ested listeners to the address deliv:
ered by Prof. kelly Miller. Mr, How:
ard is busy these days looking after
the Interests of his farm and ranch
Inndy,
The Mardames Gray and Gentry
vere among the society Indies who
turned out to assist the J, W. Adams
Co. in the great cotton sale put on
jest Saturday.
ation with Langston Institute there
will be four Normals held: At Mv
kogee, McAlester, Sapulpa and Ard.
more Prof, John W. Hogan, the well
Known educator of Langston, 1s sald
to be the leading spirit tn’ this a
rangement which is greatly to the
convenience and advantage of Eas
ern and Southern Oklahoma
The ¥. M. C, A. nesnions every Sun
Jay afternoon. at Carter Hall are us
ually attractive and well attended.
Home gardenecs are as usual wait
ing for the last cold snap, But this
is the time to get. busy.
Sic Semper.
Country He Served So Well Re-
members Lincoln's Work
With Gratitude.
A’ TWENTY minutes past ten
o'clock Friday evening, April: M4,
1865, Abraham Lincoln was shot by
John Wilkes Booth in the back of the
head behind the left ear and mortally
Injured. At 22 minutes past seven
o'clock the next morning, Saturday,
April 15, 1865, be died.
‘There have been many and vast
changes since that fateful day, and the
prayer which Lincoln prayed that the
country might be one again has bees
answered in @ way that would have re
joiced his great heart, Not an annul
versary of his birth and death has
passed since his cruel taking off oo
which some tribute has not been paid
to bis memory, and so it will be to the
end of time among generous Amort
cans, wherever their residence or n=
herited sentiments; for, however by
may have been misjudged in the con-
fusion and stress of antagonistic opin:
jon, there fs none now who does not
praise him for his courage and bis
faithfulness to his honest convictions:
He was born in Kentucky February
1%, 1809, and died in Washington April
16, 1865, in his fifty-seventh year at
the very zenith of his powers, The
books are full of the story of his life
‘and work, but there are still many in
teresting facts connected with him
that have not yet been noted notwith
standing the industry of these wi
have collected great musres of every
thing they could find in any way con
nected with his life and death
Mr. Lincoln as averyone knows
was shot by Rooth while be was at
fending theatrical performance ai
fords theater in Washington “Our
smerican Cousin” held the boards that
nent and Laura Keene was playing
the part of Florence Trenchard for
‘he last time, She had already per
lormed the same part for a thousand
nights Five vears before she nac
olayed the role at McVicker's theater
in Chicago the night of the day os
which Mr, Lincoln was nominated 10
president by the Republican conver
| ton, in May, 1860, and all uneonseiou
| of the terrible tragedy, she splayed wit
uncommon cleverness, and «bile se
the treater was ringing with laughte
and applause, came the erack of th
| pistol shot from the president’s 0
that plunged the country into mourn
, ing.
After Mr, Lincoln hed been shot hr
was removed across the street frou
the theater to the residence of Wii
Ham Petersen, a highly respected mer
chant tailor, who lived directly oppo
site the playhouse, at 516 Tenth street
‘This house is still standing, as is alse
_ the old Ford theater, and both are now
owned by the government, There have
been few changes in the Petersen
house,
For 40 years Osborn H. Oldroyd
has been devoting himself to the as
sembling together of an invaluable
collection, in which are Included more
"than three thousand relics, which con
stitute, as Elizabeth Porter Gould has
"said, “one of the most interesting an
-yaluable ever collected in behalf 0!
s human being.” The collection con
tains 250 funeral sermons, about sev
enty pieces of muse, a thousand vol
‘umes relating to Lincoln, 300 portraits
busts and medals, photographa o
Booth, pictures of the assassin, th
family cradle in which the Lingols
rULSA, OKLA, STAR
children were rocked, an original black
locust rail aplit by the young man,
then never dreaming of the place he
was to fill in the history of the world;
the family Mible from which Lincoln's
mother read to him when he was @
boy, and literally thousands of other
things in some sort associated with
he murdered president
Washington's Address to Troops
at Long island a Marvel
ot Eloquence.
From an addrers delivered before the bat
tle of Long leland, 11%.
THE time ts now
near at hand
which must prob
abiy determine
whether Ameri
cans are to be
freemen or slaves;
whether they are
to have any prop-
erty they can call
their own
whetner nett
houses and farms
are to be pillaged
and destroyed,
and themseives consignea (o a state
=o Wratehedness trom Which no human
efforts will deliver them, ‘The fate of
unborn millions will gow depend, un
der God, on the courage and cond ct
of this army, Our cruel and unre:
lenting enemy ieaves us only the
choice of a brave resistance, or the
most abject submission. We have,
therefore, to resolve to conquer oF to
die,
Our own, our country’s honor, calle
upon us for » vigorous and manly ex-
ertion; and i, we now shamefully fail,
we shall become infamous to the
whole world. Let us, then rely on the
goodnes” of our cause, and the aid
‘of (he supreme being, in whose hands
victory is, to animate and encourage
us lo great and noble actions, ‘he
eyes of all our countrymen are now
upon us; and we shall have their bles
sings ana praises, it happily we are
the instruments ot saving them from
the tyranny meditated against them,
Lat us, {herefore, animate and encour
age each other, and show the whole
world (hat a freeman, contending tor
Aberty on nis own ground, is superior
to any siavish mercenary on earth,
Liberty, property. iife and honor
are alt at stake Upon your courage
ana conduct rest the nopes of our
bleeding and insulted country, Our
wives, children and parents expect
satety from us only; and they have
every reason (o believe that heaven
will crown with success so just
cause ‘The enemy will endeavor tc
intimidate by show and appearance
but remember they have been repulse
op various occasions by a few bray
Americans, Their cause is bad—thel
men are conscious of tt; and, if o
posed with firmness and coolness of
their first onset, with our advanteg
of works, and knowledge of th
ground, the victory is most assuredl:
eure.
SOLD RELICS OF WASHINGTON
Two Authenticated Pistols and a Med
icine Chest of His Auctioned
In New York.
‘Two pistols which George Washing
ton carried through the Revolution,
medicine chest which belonged to him
and “Light Horse Harry” Lee's flag
were sold at auction at New York dur
ing the past year, ‘There are no
Washington pistols in Mount Vernon
or in the National museum at Wash
ington
‘The genuineness o: the offerings
was attested by a documentary. rec
ord of thelr sale in 1804, in Alexandria,
Va. at the disposal of the effects of
Washington's secretary, Hartholomew
Dandridge, to whom the general pre
sented the weapons, ‘Their presence
In 1898 at the partition of the Marstel-
ler estate 1s attested. Col. Philip G,
Marsteller, one of Washington's pall:
hearers, bouxht them at the Dandridge
sale for £6:38
‘The pistols are of the fiintlock type.
‘They were made by Hawkins of Lon:
don and bear the gunmaker’s guild
proof mark "G, P.” Silver hands across
the butts are engraved “General
George Washington,”
The medicine chest is of mahogany
and walnut, about one foot square,
with brass handles. Lee's flag is about
two feet square It had fallen apart
from age, but the pieces were saved
ind are held in place by thin netting.
Washington occupies & unique place,
aot only in the history of the United
States, but in the history of the world.
Nv man of such recent years enjoys
such @ splendid perspective. America
views him, not as a man but as a
Jemigod. He looms vast, « hero with
he awesome, inspiring splendor that
nvyests the deities of Greek mytholo-
sy. And yet, Washington the man is
rery real to us.
May his memory be cherished for-
ever
Ferm or Business
: Ni ee amen a |
an nelbatellindidhies bite ata
oo
2 e
We ; eS
Washington the Man.
Notice to he Colored
I will sell the choice of any lot in WASHINGTON
ADDITION, except corner lots for $150.00 each, $5.00
down and $5.00 per month. These lots have been
selling for $200.00 to $250.00. Make your select-
tions early and get the location you want.
U.S. HALL
Room 202 Frst Natl. Bldg. Office Phone 1991, Res 2242
United States Defenses, How
ever, Are Short of Men.
pregnable as Gibraltar or Helgoland
—Great Fortifications Which
Guard National Capital,
By EDWARD B. CLARK.
ees eee ee
(Btaf Correspondent Western, Newspaper
Washington. —Since the war broke
out in Europe much has been heard
about Helgoland as an impregnable
fortress. In some statements it has
been said that next to Gibraltar, Hel
goland is the iardest fortress nut te
erack in the whole world.
Now comes the United States to
maintain that it has a fortress that
is not only not second to Helgoland
in strength, but perhaps not even to
Gibraltar itself, ariny and navy men
seem to think that the fortress of
Corregidor which guards the entrance
to Manila in the Philippines can hold
off any of che world's foreos and ab:
solutely prevent any possibility of
successful attack on Manila by way of
its ‘mmediate front,
Corregidor only recently has been
put into trim. Now it is understood
that {ts big guns are all manned and
that soon it will have a trained force
of men equal to the occasion of
working the weapons of offease for
f period as protracted as any war is
likely to be in some respects it is
said Corregidor resembles Gibraltar.
Much has been written recently
about the fortifications on the sea
coasts of the continental United
States 1 uring the discussion: in the
committees of congress on the sub-
Ject of the military preparcduess of
the United States {t has been said
that our forts and our guns are ali
right. out that we have not men
enough to man them. From the re
port of the chlef of coast Artillery,
General Weaver, it is apparent that
what has been said just about sume
up the situation. Congress it is ex
pected will provide men enough to
man our guns, for otherwise we wi!
be in a position of having spent a lot
of money for *'s which we cannot
use.
In the year 1814 the British at
tacked Washington. In order to reach
this city today a foreign foe, unless
{t can land an army, will be competted
to run by the fortifications at the
mouth of Chesapeake bay and by oth:
er fortifications which protect the
reaches of the lower Potomac.
Fortress Monroe, which 1s one of the
guards to the entrance of the Chesa.
peake, 1s an old post and the layman
who looks at it and sees the old par-
apets with their granite facings can:
not conceive that it would withstand
the shots from modern guns, The
truth is that old Fortress Monroe 4s
oceupted only for show purposes and
for the uses of peaceful garrison life.
Connected with the old fort are the
hew fortifications with thelr big dis:
appearing guns — Fortress Monroe
commands not only the entrance to
the Chesapeake but the entrance to
the James river.
In Hampton Roads, whose waters
are at the mouth of the James and
mingle with those of the ocean, there
as a lowlying American fort with
powerful guns. It is an aid to For
tress Monroe, and between the two an)
fleet no matter how powerful, woul:
bave a hard time of it trying td
break an entrance elther {nto the
James river or Chesapeake bay,
Recentiy the Kovernment purchasec
fand on Cape Henry and there another
fort 16 to be built. Ships trying te
ket into Chesapeake or to the Jaine:
would find themselves under tire from
the Cape Henry guns betor» tney ge
within range of the Fortress Monroe
or the Hampton Roads guns It i
believed by military experts that m¢
fleet in the worid ever can force it
Way into Chesapeake vay or the Jame:
river thence to go with its Hehte
draft vessels by the water rout
either to Haitimore, Washington o
Richmond.
. 7
Let Us Save You Money!
cCrAe
“A WD)
bY
YESS
f
HN ei
Lal a a
We mean that we will save you money if you will
only send your old suits, siiks, satins, kid gloves,
furs, ete, to us, who have a Sanitary Dry Cleaning
Plant. We guarantee every garment that comes
in the house, why do we do it? Because we are pre-
pared to do the work. Old hats made New.
Suits made to your measure. 500 samples for you
to select from. Our wagon will call and deliver to
all parts of the city.
: si
Cavers French Cleaners
HATTERS AND DYERS
Phone 3132 Office and Works, 8 N. Ciacinnati
Muskogee, Oklahoma
Come and be a winner*
Remember The Date: SEPTEM-
BER 6, 7, 8,9, 10 and 11, °I5
NEGRO INDEPENDENT STATE FAIR AT MUS-
KOGEE, OKLAHOMA, SEPTEMBER 6, 7; 8, 9, 10 and 11,
1915, AT THE FAIR GRROUNDS. THIS WILL BE
FOR TWO PURPOSES. THIS ASSOCIATION FEELS
THAT IT HAS THE BEST FACILITIES !N THE STATE
FOR DISPLAYING OF AGRICULTURAL, INDUSTRIAL
LIVE STOCK RESOURCES OF OKLAHOMA. WE IN-
VITE EVERY COLORED PERSON IN THE STATE TO
PREPARE TO EXHIBIT AT THIS FAIR, .
een eg
Premiums will be paid on anything that is raised on the Farm,
also anything that you put on exhibit. Come and be a winner, Races
each day. Balloon ascension each day by a Negro, rising 2000 feet
in the air. Premiume paid on Baby show, Horses, Cows, Mules, Dogs,
Chickens and Fowls of any kind.
——$—$—$—$—$
J. W. Kintz, President; A. J. Turner, W. L. Wade, H. H.
Hardwick, Vice Presidents; G. H. Ambrose, Treasurer; D.
E, Woldridge, Assistant Manager,
Address all communications to S. T, Grimes, Secretary and
General Manager.
812 Hartford St., Muskogee, Oklahoma.
BOMBS HURLED LIKE A BALL
Hurry to H. Watson
The Populr ‘Tailor
French Devise Scheme Whereby Fuse
Is Set After the Grenade Is
Thrown,
Paris... hand grenade devised
by he French to throw into the en-
emy’s trenches when they are within
reach 1s about as large a® baseball,
A string, tied to the wrist of the throw-
er, pulls out a plug from the ball af-
ter it has left the hand. A spring is
released, which sets the fuse for the
explosive charge going, This fuse
may ve regulated from one second to
two or three seconds, or intermediate
fractions, and thus adjusted to explode
wher it reaches the hostile trench.
N. 2N. Cincinnati St. Nhone 4400
Where Suits of Clothes are being made to order, and Guaranteed
for fit and workmanship, by a Tailor with FIFTEEN YEARS OF
EXPERIENCE. You will save money on your Spring and Sum-
mer Suit by having him to make it for you TODAY and not be
misled by others.
DON'T FORGET HIS ARTISTIC SYSTEM FOR CLEANING,
PRESSING AND ALTERATIONS IS SUPERIOR TO ALL
OTHERS AT PRICES THAT CAN'T BE BEAT
H. WATSON, Prop,
HONOR GRANT'S SON-IN-LAW
Prince Cantacuzene Decorated by
Czar for Bravery in Cam-
paign in Galicia,
Washington. — Prince Cantacuzeng,
husband of Julia Dent Grant, has been
decorated by the ezar for heroism in
the Galictan campaign, and Wilhelm
yon Rath bas received the iron cross
for distinguished service on the
Freneh and Russian frontiers. Von
Rath, who is engaged to be married
to Ceetlia May, has been invalided to
his home in Frankfort, where Miss
May ds « guewt He was formerly at-
achead to the German embassy bere
Phone 2112. Phone 212
Northside Furniture Company
106 Nerth Main Sereer, 5
We Handle a Full Line of New and Second Hand Furniture ¢
and Stoves, Yes, We sell on Payments