The Tulsa Chief. (Tulsa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 29, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 19, 1905 Page: 3 of 10
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LIEUT. F. S. DAVIDSON.
PE-Mini simim
THE ENTIRE STSTEM.
F. S. Davidson, Ex-Lieut. U. S.
Army, Washington, D. C., care U. S.
E’ension Office, writes:
••To my mind there Is no remedy
for catarrh comparable to Peruna.
It not only strikes at the root of the \
malady, but It tones and strengthens <
the system In a truly wonderful |
way. That has been Its history In i
my case. I cheerfully and unliesi- '
ta'.inply recommend it to those ,
afflicted us I have been.”—F. S.
Davidson.
If you do not derive prompt and satis-
factory results from the use of Peruna,
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a
full statement of your case, and he will
be pleased to give you his valuable ad-
vice gratis.
Address Dr. S. B. Hartman, President
of The Hartman Sanitarium, Colum-
bus, Ohio.
A FEW
CUTTING * \
REMARKS\ «
The purpose of a taw ii to cut.
It should cut easily, cut cleanly,
and cut with every movement.
I prefer an Atkins Saw. its blade
Is “Silver Steel", recognized the
world over as the finest cruiclble
steel ever made iti ancient or modern
times. It is hard, close-grained and
tough. It holds a sharp cutting edge
longer than any other Saw. Its
blade tapers perfectly from thick to
thin, from handle to tip. Thus it
makes leeway for itself, runs easily
and does not buckle. Its temper is
perfect When bent by a crooked
thrust, it springs into shape without kinking.
The Atk insSawcutt—and does it best of an v.
We make nil types aud sizes cf saws, but only
one grade—the best.
Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor
Scrapers, etc., are sold by all good hardware
dealers. Catalogue on request.
E. C. ATKINS <0. CO.. Inc.
Largest Saw Manufacturer! in the World.
Factory and Executive Office*. Indianapolis, Indiana-
BRANCHES: New York, Chicago, Minneapolis,
Portland, (Oregon i, Seattle, San Francisco,
Memphis, Atlanta and Toronto, (Canada).
I Accept no Substitute—Insist on the Atkins Brand
r“S0LD BY GOOD DEALERS EVER'
tkin, Brud |
IywherTTi
uyaMMMiaam—AJ
Positive, Comparative, Superlative.
u I have used one of your Fish Brand
81ickera for five years, and now want
a new one, also one for a friend. I
would not be without one for twice the
cost. They are just as far ahead of a
common coat as a common ona Is
ahead of nothing."
(Nsme on application.)
HIGHEST AWARD WORID’S FAIR. 1904.
Be sure you don't got one of the com*
mon klnd-thls la the «C(JWQZS
nark of excellence. ■ *■ J
A. J. TOWER CO.,
BOSTON, U.S.A. 'OtylttJN'
TOWER CANADIAN CO., Limited,
TORONTO, CANADA, I5>
Makers of Wet Weather Clothing A Hats,
The World’s Standard
DE LAVAL
CREAM
SEPARATORS!
600,000 In Use.
Ten Timu
All Oth.n Combined.
Ira $10.- pw *•» i
inq Tnr if IlM
nir >11
Irorltj Mile, Ifituw ,
Ml $8.- ptr 0*w
mr ill
Imltitl.j Itptiitote.
I.itf for mow CmHlotmo.
THE DE LAVAL SEPAIATOR DO.
Canal A Randolph SU , • Carliaadt fMrasfc
' CHICAGO I NEW YORK
ovn ».cob ntinia sen uv*i io»aa
Toledo, St. Louis A Western R. R. Co.,
“Qover Leaf Route."
St Louis to all Point* East
Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York
R. J. McKAY, D. P. A. St. Lo«U.
BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION,
loft hands and plowing Akin Is the rights of
every woman. You can have these by using
DR. LYONS* BEAUTY BRUSH.
Clever Invention which every girl and woman
wants. Develops the form; fills hollow places;
removes wrinkles, ton and freckle,. Agents
wanted. Full Instructions and sample 36c.
Write to-day. Lyons Mfg. Co., 333 Dm SL, Pekin, III.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 37, 1905
EXCELLENT SPORT IN MOROCCO.
Every Kind of Amusement the Hunt-
er Can Desire.
No visitor to Morocco has ever
asked himself what he was to do for
entertainment declares William G.
Fitz-Gerald in Four-Track News.
There is sport of every kind, from
wild-boar hunting down to quail-shoot
Ing; and further south one may even
shoot panthers and hyenas. The lion
does not begin until the Atlas moun-
tains are reached. Horses may be
hired in Tangier for about a dollar
and a half a day, Including an Ameri-
can saddle; and for the ladies there
are always comfortable mules pro-
vided, with any number of Arab and
slave servants. The slave market, by
the way. is no longer one of the
"sights” of Tangier, since Christian
Influence long ago abolished it. This
does not mean, however, that the
slave trade Is not carried on. Indeed
the traveler "in the know” may fre-
quently see an old Arab merchant
leading round a negro boy and girl by
the ears from door to door, and ho
will learn that these are all that re-
main of an enormous slave caravan,
obtained by Arab raiders as far south
as the Niger and mysterious Timbuc-
too, in central Africa.
MARRIAGE A HARD PROBLEM.
How Long Should Man Wait for Psy-
chological Moment?
Marriage Is a never-ceasing prob-
lem; It is impossible to tell Just when
the moment of extreme regret will
come and the limit of human endur-
ance will be reached. Down in Mis-
souri there is a man who has filed
an application for divorce because his
wife “called him names” back in 1808.
Undoubtedly he has good reason for
his delaying taking determined meas-
ures. Possibly he felt that the psy-
chological moment had not arrived.
Perhaps the enormity of the offense
and the knowledge that the law gives
him recourse did not immediately pre-
sent themselves. And it may be that
the other woman did not come along
until 1905. The average husband is so
considerate and tender-hearted that
he shrinks from complaining of his
donlestic lot until the other woman
heaves in sight, and it does not take
her long to convince him how absurd
it is to continue to live with a wife
who called him names thlrty-seveD
years ago.—Exchange.
Cause of Ocean Tides.
Tides are caused by the gravita-
tional attraction or pull of the sun
and moon upon the water, and upon
the earth itself. The moon being so
much nearer than the sun, is, of
course, the principal cause. When
the moon is directly over a given
place it pulls the water under it, and
thus tends to keep up a tidal wave
just under the moon. At the same
time it is pulling the earth itself; but
it pulls the water more than the earth
underneath, simply because the moon
is nearer to the water on the surface
than it is to the solid earth behind it
Genius or Fool?
Many curious and slender causes
for divorce have been recorded. Here
is one of the latest and most curious.
During the honeymoon they were
walking along the street in Paris,
when in front of them they saw a
long-haired fellow whose trousers
were patched with a piece of news-
paper. The husband suggested that
the man must be a genius. The wife
wife remarked that she thought
rather he must be a fool, or he would
have used cloth instead of paper.
Whereupon they quarreled, and now
they are divorced.
Marie Antoinette Fond of Cards.
Marie Antoinette was a slave to
cards. On one occasion she played
for thirty-six hours at a sitting, with
but an intermission of a couple of
hours. “The play at the queen’s ta-
ble at Fontainebleau,” wrote the Em-
peror Joseph II, “was like that in a
common gambling-house; people of all
kinds were there, and mingled without
decorum; great scandal was caused by
the fact that several of the ladies
cheated.”
The Pity of It.
A certain lady of wealth, living
in the north of Ireland, was recover-
ing from a serious illness and one
morning called for an egg, which she
ate mith much enjoyment. As she
passed back the cup and plate to her
nurse, she said: "An egg is a delicious
thing.” Then with much melancholy,
“What a pity,” she added, “it is so
common among the poor.”—London
Globe.
information for Jerome Jones.
A carriage driver was taking Mr.
and Mrs. Jerome Jones through Cen-
tral park, New York city, pointing out
the features, and finally drove up to
the Art Museum, when Mr. Jones, to
test his descriptive powers, asked
him to explain about the Egyptian
obelisk, when the garrulous Hibern-
ian said, “That, sor, is Cleopatrick’s
Needle.”—Exchange.
Similarity of Day and Lifetime.
Life for a day Is but an epitome <n
a lifetime. We wake In the morning
with no knowledge of where our souls
have been wandering while the senses
slept; with fresh vigor and Interest
we enter upon the occupations of our
dally work and fulfil our duties with
an energy that begins to fail as the
evening shadows lengthen; as dark-
ness deepens weariness cornea upon
us and at last we are glad to lay aside
our work and cares and to surrender
ourselves to the sleep that spirits our
aouls back again Into the unknown
A WOMAN'S SUFFERINGS.
Weak, Irregular, Racked with Paine-
Made Well and 36 Pounds Htavlsr.
Mrs. E. W. Wright of 172 Main St,
Haverhill. Mass , says: “In 1898 I was
suffering so with sharp pains In the
small of the back
and had such fre-
quent dizzy spells
that I could
scarcely get
about the house.
The urinary pas-
sages were also
quite irregular.
Monthly periods
were so distress-
ing 1 dreaded
their approach. Thia was my condi-
tion for four years. Doan’s Kidney
Pills helped me right away when I
began with them, and three boxes
cured me permanently.”
*’oster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
For sale by all dealers. Price, SO
cents per box.
Some Sanitary Bosh
Sanitation sometimes stands on its
head and becomes insanity. This is a
phase of midsummer madness, one
may suspect, when a leading medical
journal warns us against the danger
of contracting disease from Imper-
fectly polished doorknobs. So many
germs in the householder’s hands, so
much for his knob. How many door
knobs are there in this happy island?
Give each citizen two doorknobs—a
very meager estimate, for he proTTfihly
touches a dozen a day—and they will
run into millions. Is there a record
anywhere of a disease caught from
one of those thousands of millions of
door knob turns in any single year?
To this writer the question is of
some interest; for, if door knobs are
unsanitary, there are other things that
should be fatal. Within the last week
his bare hand has been In contact
with omnlbffs rails, cab aprons, steam-
boat seats, balustrades in populous
city flats, postofflee counters, railway
carriage handles—you may complete
the list of the contacts of a busy life
with life. This has been going on for
some years now, with no hint of dis-
aster. Have you ever met anybody
suffering from doorknob poisoning?—
London Chronicle.
Cure to 8tay Cured,
Wapello, Iowa, Sept. 11th (Special)
—One of the most remarkable cures
ever recorded In Louisa County la
that of Mrs. Minnie Hart of this place.
Mrs. Hart was in bed for eight
months and when she was able to sit
up she was all drawn up oi^ one aide
and could not walk across the room.
Dodd's Kidney Pills cured her. Speak-
ing of her cure, Mrs. Hart says:
“Yes, Dodd’s Kidney Pills cured me
after I was in bed for eight months
and I know the cure was complete for
that was three years ago and I have
not been down since. In four weeks
from the time I started taking them
I was able to make my garden. No-
body can know how thankful I am to
be cured or how much I feel I owe
to Dodd’s Kidney Pills.”
This case again points out how
much the general health depends on
the Kidneys. Cure the Kidneys with
Dodd’s Kidney Pills and nine-tenths
of the suffering the human family la
heir to, will disappear.
How Foolish
A ’ woman who teaches a select
school for girls, In looking over the
copybook of little Fanny, aged eleven
years, discovered an envelope ad-
dressed to that young lady.
“I hope, Fanny,” said the teacher,
holding up the envelope, “that this
does not contain a love letter.”
"Why, what an Idea,” replied Fan-
ny; “I have outgrown all that fool-
ishness years and years ago.”—Chi-
cago Journal.
DISFIGURED BY ECZEMA.
Wonderful Change In a Night—In a
Month Face Wat Clear as Ever
—Another Cure by Cutlcura.
"I had eczema on the face for five
months, during which time I was In
the care of physicians. My face was
so disfigured I could not go out, and It
was going from bad to worse. A
friend recommended Cutlcura. The
first night after I washed my face
with Cutlcura Soap, and used Cutlcura
Ointment and Resolvent, it changed
wonderfully. From that day I was
able to go out, and in a month the
treatment had removed all scales and
scabs, and my face was as clear as
ever. (Signed) T. J. Soth, 317 Stagg
Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.”
Tremendous pressure is being put
on Governor Douglas of Massachus-
etts to wear out a pair of 33.50 shoes
by running again. The governor
says he will not—but he Is said to be
much moved by the unanimity of the
party.
A Maiden Philosopher
“I suppose you will marry when
you grow up?” said the visitor, pleas-
antly.
“No,” replied the thoughtful llttlo
girl, innocently. “Mamma says papa
is more care than the children, so 1
guess the care of my childre n will be
enough for me without the care of a
husband.”—Chicago Journal.
Get Your Money’* Worth.
Don't be beguiled Into paying good
money for poor medicine. Get the
best there is. If it’s a chill cure
you're looking for Cheatham's Chill
Tonic is the best. It’s been the best
for twenty years.
It makes cures while others make
promises.
One bottle guaranteed to cure any
one case.
A Diplomat
“Dear old Henry! 1 am glad bo Is
so fortunate!”
“How fortunate?”
“Why, he Just told me that mar-
riage was the grandest institution on
earth.”
"Yes, I heard him; but didn’t you
notice that his wife was present?”
Insist on Getting It.
Some grocers say they don’t keep
Defiance Starch. Thia is because they
have a stock on hand of other brands
containing only 12 ox in a package,
which they won't be able to sell first,
because Defiance contains 16 ox. for
the same money.
Do you want 16 ox. Instead of 12 OS.
for same money? Then buy Defiance
Starch. Require! no cooking.
On the Heaving Ocean
First Passenger—What was in that
stew wo had for supper?
Second Passenger—I give it up.
First Passenger—I believo I will,
too. Let me at that rail, please.—
Louisville Courier-Journal.
Important to Mothor*.
Examine carefully every bottle of CA8TORIA,
s t.fc and pure remedy for infant, aud children,
sod fro that it
Bear.the
Signature of
In Ueo For Over 30 Year..
The Kind You llave Always Bought.
His Idea of It
“I don’t think that new doctor
that’s jest moved in cures mumps or
anything like that,” said Tommy.
“Why not?” demanded Robbie.
My pa says he's a good family phy-
sician.”
"That’s jest It. A family physician
is jest one that supplies families to
people."—Philadelphia Press.
I »m sure Plso’s Cure for Consumption saved
toy life three years ago.—Mbs. Tnos. KonuiNs,
Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y.. Feb. 17. liWU.
A Canny Guid Wife
A very young Parliamentary candi-
date for a Scots borough, visiting a
shoemaker and his wife, took the lib-
erty of kissing the “guid wife” and
slipping a couple of sovereigns into
her hand. He was for a moment not
sure what effect would be produced.
Then the “guid wife” slowly smiled
upon him as she slipped (he gold into
her pocket. “Gin ye like, ye may kiss
my dochter too!” she said.
IMMENSE TOBACCO PURCHASE.
Forty-Eight Thousand Dollars Paid
for a Fancy Lot of Tobacco.
The biggest purchase of high grade
tobacco ever made In the West by
a cigar manufacturer was made last
Wednesday by Frank P. Lewis, Peo-
ria, 111., for his celebrated Single bind-
er cigar. A written guarantee was
given that the entire amount was to
be fancy selected tobacco. This, no
doubt, makes the Lewis factory the
largest holder In the United States
of tobacco of so high a grading.—
Berald-Transcript, Peoria.
Frankness is a refreshing and com-
mendable quality to possess or culti-
vate.
More Flexible and Lasting,
won’t ebake out or blow out; by using
Defiance Starch you obtain better re-
sults than possible with any other
brand and one-third more for same
money.
All Institutions dealing with the
public depend upon its confidence
for continued successful operation.
tJSB THIS FAMOUS
Red Cross Ball Hlue. Large 2 oz. package 6
cents. The Kush Company, South Heml, Ind.
"Jollying’’ Indicates a lack of sin-
cerity. He who Is not sincere with
himself is not so with others.
H* Smiled Twice.
There la a man living In the Brazos
Bottoms of whom it is said he only
smiled twice In his life—one, when
bis mother-in-law died, the other when
Cheatham's Chill Tonic cured his
ague.
It will cure any one’s ague, or any
other form of malaria. One bottle
guaranteed to do It.
If wishes were horses the majority
of them would be among the also
rans.
“It’s Oil Right.”
It may not smooth the waters, but
it surely soothes the pain. Use It
on cuts, burns, bruises, aches and
pains. It will make you happy, be-
cause it makes you well. Hunt’s
Lightning Oil.
If a woman takes a ride on a
ferry boat sho speaks of having been
away for the summer.
When you buyaPair ^■■1 SlV
of Shoes for your boy or girl, Im
m Write the Dete 1XMLB
V In the lining, in ink. Til ||^
T Clover Brand Fm
SHOES
STAND EVERY TEST
Oot the
DICTIONARY
That ta men
with every pair
ot Webster’s
from stas 11 up.
©rrlI|rinuT-§uiartfi &Iinr (Co.
XAR9LST FINS SMOC SXCLUSIVlSTS
ST. LOUIS. U. S A.
BROOM CORN
W. L. R0SEB00M & CO. ThIcTbSYll*
Liberal advances mad. on consl6nm.nl..
Quick Sslsi. Corre.pond.ncs Sollctlsd.
I piles ■». fistula
Shirt iosoms,
Collars and Cuffs
laundered with
Defiance
Starch
never crack nor become
brittle. They last twice
as long aa those laun-
dered with other starches and
give the wearer much better
satisfaction. If you want your
husband, brother or son to
look dressy, to feel comfort-
able and to l>e thoroughly
happy use DEFIANOB
STARCH In the laundry. It
is sold by all good grocers at
10c a package—10 ounces.
Inferior starches sell at the
same price per package but
contain only 12 ounces. Note the differ-
ence. Ask your grocer for DEFIANCB
STARCH. Insist on getting it and you
will never use any other brand.
Defiance Starch Company, Omaha, Neb.
W. L. Douclas
•3=&’3= SHOES1S
W. L. Douglas *4.00 Gilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
DAXtine
K TolLET &
I Antiseptic
FOR WOMEN
troubled with ills peculiar to
their iez. used at a doucho J* met tv tow j erne*
Mittal. Thoroughly cletBMt, kills diMAM ferae,
•tops discharges, heals inflammxtiom and local
•oreness, cures leucorrhcst and ntstl catarrh.
Pax tine is in powder form to be dissolved 1b para
water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal
led economical than liquid antiseptics lor a IT 1
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 00 cents a bos.
Trial Bos and Book of loatnictlons Prwo*
TBc Paxton Company Boston, hi to*?
Ilf ANT1CD.—For the U. & Army. Able-bodied
TT unmarried men, between aigee of 21 tad
16; oiti7.cn* of United Btaiea. of good charootef
and temperate habile, who can speak, read sjuI
write English. For information apply to R»
•ruiting Officer, Postofflee building, Oklahoma
City, Okie . or Tula*. Ind. Ter., bii “*
aee er Guthrie. Okie
310,000 ’SSSfiltBBSP
W. L. Dougla. $.1.80 .hot. have by their ex-
cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing
qualitlea, achieved the largest .ale of any $3.80
shoe In the world. They are iuat aa good aa
33.00 to $7.00—the only
II I could take you Into
thoee that coat you
■inference la the price,
my factory at Brockton, Maas., the large*! In
the world under one root making men's fins
hoea, and show you the care with which every
pair of Douglas shoes la made, you would reullze
why W. L. Douglas $3.80 sheca are the beat
thoes produced In the world.
III could show you the difference between the
•hoea made In my factory and thoss of other
makes, you would undcratand why Dougla..
S3.SO shoes cost more to make, why they hold
PITS cored. Kofltaornervouan.Mafter
er. Send Tor h’llhK *i.00 trial bottle and irtatlac.
DK.K. H.KUNK, Ltd.. *31 Aril, Street. I'lilladelphla, I'a.
Do not aspire to prominence by at-
tempting to belittle others. Force
yourself above them.
You never hear any one complain
about “Defiance Starch." There Is none
to equal It In quality and quantity, 16
ounces, 10 cents. Try It now and save
your money.
their shape, tit better, wear longer, and are ol
■Treater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50
.hoe on the market to-day.
"kkSvitetigg't&ftsgfn
Drmmm Mho—,$2.BO, $2, $1.75,01.50
CAUTION .—Insist upon having W.L.Doug-
Ita shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
without his name and price stamped on bottom.
WANTED. A shoe dealer in every town where
W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of
samples sent free for inspection upon request.
Fast Color Eyelete used; they will not wear braeey.
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Sty left
W. L DOUGLAS. Brockton* Mesa.
I CAN SELL
Your Real Estate or Business
Me li(l*r Wh«n
Proper!lea and business
of all kinds sold quicker
for rash I n all parts of tha
United States. Don’t wait.
Write today describing
what you have to sell and
give cash price on same.
If You Want to Buy
a business or property of
any kind, anywhere, tell
us what you want and
where you want It. We ran
fill your requirement*, do
It promptly and save yon
time and money.
L t. TONE WILSON, Jr., Real Emit Specialtt,
413 Ktuu Avenue, Tepeka, Kaaeaa.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 37, 1906
Decision in Cotton
Cotton will be moving rapid-
ly from now on, and you will
have to decide quickly what to
do with each lot, according to
the circumstances of the
moment.
Our services and our facil-
ities are at your command, and
you will make no mistake by
shipping to us.
Wm. D. Cleveland & Sons,
Houston. Tour
Planlalion Chill Cure is Guaranteed
To ourof or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try Iti Price 50o.
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Henry, George. W. The Tulsa Chief. (Tulsa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 29, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 19, 1905, newspaper, September 19, 1905; Tulsa, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1172235/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed May 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.