The Tulsa Chief. (Tulsa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 4, No. 26, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 10, 1907 Page: 6 of 8
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TULSA CHIEF.
O. W. HENRY, Publisher.
Tulsa,.....Ind. Ter.
Excessive Athlrt s.
Exercise ix a* neces-aiy for the
tinman hod;' hx food and «f:ink II Is
jiiipoKsIhh* to main I hIm perfect health
without it, hut It must lie taken In
niodiMBtlon, for excess in this respect
is as harmful In Its way and some
times In the same way, ns excess in
eating. The effect of exercise Is to
Increase the tissue changes in the
hody. The weaker cells are <1 strayed
ind replaced h> new und stronger
cells, the nutrition Is Increased and
the waste products are thrown off If
•xercl# d ■ toe
lengths It may happen that the waste
products are thrown Into the system
In so great quantity that they cannot
be disposed of in the ordinary way,
and they act mutilate to such an ex-
tent that the body Is poisoned by its
own waste. The result is the same as
when an excess of food is taken: and
so, exercise, which In model ation
tends to counteract th * evil of over-
atliig, In excess only Increases the
vil. It has always been known that
excessive physical labor has a tenden-
cy to shorten life, and the attainment
■ >f old age is seldom the lot of the la-
boring man. But the fact Is often
curiously overlooked that physical la-
bor is physical labor, whether It con-
.- sis In wielding a pick and shovel or
In throwing weights, rowing a boat,
running or jumping. The dangers of
Inordinate devotion to athletics, says
Youth's Com) anion, are that one part
of the body, one set of muscles or cer-
tain organs, such as the heart, will ha
developed out of proportion to the
other parts. This Is especially the
case In the young, who have not yet
attained their growth Tho heart Is
a patient organ, and when strain Is
put upon it it quietly increases Its
hulk and its strength to meet the tnsk.
So long as the strain is continued, It
works along, but when the call upon
It Is diminished suddenly, the young
man giving up his athletics and taking
to a sedentary life, Its muscular tissue
begins to degenerate. The arteries,
under strain, act In the same way, and
when tho tension is relaxed tho con-
dition known as arteriosclerosis de-
velops. The tissues are poorly nour-
ished and the man ages before his
time When devotion to athletics has
been excessive, it Is only by the
greatest care In training down that
the athlete can avoid the danger of
weakened body and nerves
Was a Great Teacher.
By the death of Kuno Fischer, Eu-
rope loses one of Its really great
teachers of philosophy. Like Victor
Cousin, Fischer paid particular atten-
tion to the form of his lectures, which
were models of clear und sometimes
eloquent exposition. He spoke invari-
ably without notes, and could quote
from memory extended passages from
the ancient ns well as from (he mod-
ern philosophers. Ills "History of
Modern Philosophy” is remarkable for
i bo precision of its statements and
the justice of its criticisms Although
i Hegelian, Fischer never employed
tho peculiar terms of the school. Ho
was a thoughtful critic of modern lit-
erature, and his lectures on Goethe's
Faust, on Lessing, and on certain
plays of Shakespeare attracted large
ludienccs. A singular episode In Ills
career, relates New York Post, was
in acrimonious debate with Trendel-
enburg of Berlin over an lnterpr< ta
tion of the Kantian philosophy. The
animosity produced by this dispute
was, according to some, the reason
why Fischer never went to Berlin, hut
remained for more than HO years an
ornament to the Fnlverslty of Heidel-
berg and the foremost citizen of that
city.
1'lie death in New York of Prof An
olo lieilprin deprives the woi.d of a
noted scientist. Prof, Hellpilu, who
was a native of Hungary, came to tho
1 ulted Stales when an infant and re-
•eived his education here, rising to
special eminence as a geologist,
though his versa-lllt> was shown by
I Is at hlevement s in othei fli d His
explorations In various directions a- I
id greatly to the sum of human
knowledge, and the r. s-i'ts wv. c n-
bodied in numerous instructive vol-
umes. One of his most notable
t hlovemt nts was 1 he ast ;nt of M nt
’■■lee immediately after the great and
>i attractive eruption of that Mar
' iiique volcano In 1902 He risked bis
ife in scientific Investigation nad
luily took notes of the phenomena
>n the very edge of the blazing cra-
ter.
The day Is coming, says a promi-
nent architect, when buildings twice
> .-* u,gh a.-, li.c Vi us a, llg u IU mill, OTP'.|f
vil! be erected. Then the airship will
be a certainty, for necessity, you
Know, is the mother of invention
it is always a terrible disappoint-
ment when a little boy who has made
ip his mind to grow quickly In order
-hat ho may marry his teacher, Hilda
that she lias gone off and married
.OHM) other fellow.
MOSES PLEADING
WITH ISRAEL
Sunday Si bool Lesson lor Sept. HI 907
Sp®ci*l'y Prepared lor This Paper
MASS' iN Tl \T IX ut li I 1.'. M'-m i y
verM-i 4-’
(iol.UGN TEXT.—"Beware leat thou
forget (lie Lord " In-lit. »i: 12.
TIME Just hefnri the Israelites cruse
t-d the Jordan to enter the Promised J
Ijind. A few months after the Iasi U-s
eon. Forty years after tin: Exodus. Ae-
cordlng to the margins of our Bibles, II.
C. 1451.
l-I.Ai'F Tl . Israelites were eneriinpeit
in the broad spare between the It.ver
Jordan and the mountains of Moab,
a hunt opposite Jericho, on the eastern
baa •
breadth of four or live miles
Comment and Suggestive Thought.
Hensons for Loving God Supremely.
— (1) He is supremely good; he Is the
sum of all good. Up that loves God
loves all that Is good, and hates all
that Is evil. t2i He Is not only good,
but lovable His goodness is attrac
tive; It Is worthy of love, (ill AT
we have and arc we owe to him: and
the only way in which we can make
any return Is to love him and obey
him In love. That Is all that is ours
to give; to withhold It Is unutterably
mean. (4) “The best thing in man Is
love, and God wants the best.' (51
Such love not only honors God, but
elcvatos man. Love is the most i n-
nobling act of the soul; and the nobler
and higher the object, and the iroie
Intense the love, so much the more
Is the one who thus loves ennobled,
purified, enlarged, exalted in nature.
(G) In hint are found nil that ought
to move the highest affections of men.
The Foundation of Religion, of
Character, of Righteousness, lies in a
right lu-art, a heart that loves God
and loves men. No act of goodness
without this is true goodness. And
men will not long continue to do right
toward all without this deeper motive.
This love is not national, but indi-
vidual. Each heart must do the lov-
ing, and when all hearts do it the
whole nation will have tills heart of
love.
He that has this love in his heart
has the fountain and source of all vir-
tue. l! la to the life what the main-
spring Is to a watch, what a fountain
is to a stream, what the soul is to
tho body, what the two olive trees of
Zecliarlah’s vision were to the lamps
they fed. This is v.’liat faith in Christ
brings to the soul.
The one great essential, both for
the Individual and the state, is a new
life In the soul tint supremely loves
the good and hales the evil. This Is
the one way to the best life here and
hereafter. The slat1 is made up of in-
dividuals, mid, therefore, if every one
had this new life tho whole state
would ho free from its corruptions
and crimes. The newspapers would
give us the niornl lg news of good
deeds, instead of Us flood of crimes
and wrongs.
Education In Religion and Right-
eousness.— (7) "And thou slinlt teach
them diligently unto thy children.”
In every way, by home Instruction,
and by schools, and by sabbath wor-
ship and ti aching. "And slialt talk
of them when thou siilcst In thine
house," etc. The atmosphere of the
home shall be full of these truths.
Men will speak often of that which is
of the greatest Interest. Conversation
is a marvelous power for culture and
training. The events of the day, the
deeds of ourselves and of others, can
he made the occasion of moral instruc-
tion, in a concrete and vivid form.
They are to great moral principles
what the particles In the air are to
the light, which would ho generally
invisible but for the objects which re-
flect and disperse it. The homo is in
its nature a university It is a large
part of the true "university exten-
sion" movement.
Family Training Is the greatest In-
fluence around the young.
Family Religion is the foundation of
church, of Sunday school, of religious
life, of tho whole country's morality
and prosperity.
Family Travers are a great aid to
family religion, and the International
Lessons for the whole family are one
of the greatest helps to this end.
The Family Atmosphere, of reli-
gious life, of benevolence, of temper-
ance, of kindness, of Intelligence. of
bright conversation, Is the largest fac-
tor In family training.
(8) “Thou slialt bind them for a
sign upon thine hand." etc. It was a
literal and formal interpretation of
this command which led to the use of
phylacteries upon tl'o arm and upon
the forehead. These are small cnbi
cal leather cases. In which are parch-
ments containing four passages of
scripture in four columns (Ex. 13:
MO, 11-16; IJeut. 6: 4 9 and 11: 13-21).
These are bound upon the arm and be-
tween the eyes by leather thongs.
The real meaning of this command
is that God’s law should be In every
deed of the hand, in the sight of the
eyes, in the plans of the head. Every
part of the daily life should be ruled
hv God's law. It should never be for-
gotten.
Practical Points.
The way to get the revival of right-
eousness we sc much need is by a re-
vival of true religion, a revival that
changes the heart, a revival of love !
to God and love to man. As Herbert
Spencer said, "Golden conduct does
not proceed from leaden Instincts "
What Charles Kingsley says of Eng-
land Is true of our land as well. "Men
say 'As long as England Is ahead of
the world In coal and Iron, she may
defy the wot HI.' I do not believe it,
1 for If she became a wicked nation,
ail the coal and iron in the universe
I would not save her I'nn ruin."
HE HAD TO HAVE FRUIT.
C-. ci feyond H s P irse, Coy Took
Humble Substitute.
James Wilson, the secretary of at'ri-
rnltiire. was discussing in Washington
the aid which his department gives
lie* American farmer. He inflated
nit the benefit that had been derived
from the Introduction of darum wheat,
of the wheat testing machine, and of
the method of extracting potash from
granite.
"In tart,” said Mr. Wilson, smiling.
“I believe that eventually our finest
products will be cheap enough to ln-
wit hin the reach of all. Then the
story of the boy and the hot-liouse
grapes will be as dead and antiquated
as tb<- theater hat stories of the past.
"This boy—he was a bootblack—
entered a grocer's store one day, and,
pointing to some superb grapes, said: |
“ 'Wot's the price o' them there,
mister?’
" 'One dollar a pound, my lad,’ the
clerk replied.
"A look of anguish passed over the
boy’s face, and he said, hastily:
"‘Then give us a cent's worth o'
carrots. I'm dead nuts on fruit.’”
CHILDREN TORTURED.
Girl Had Running Sores from Eczema
—Boy Tortured by Poison Oak— ^
Both Cured by Cuticura.
"Last year, after having my little
girl treated by .a very prominent phy-
sician for an obstinate case of eczema,
1 resorted to the Cuticura Remedies,
and was so well pleased with the al-
most Instantaneous relief afforded that
we discarded the physician’s prescrip-
tion and relied entirely on the Cuti-
cura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cu-
ticura Fills. When we commenced
with the Cuticura Remedies her feet
and limbs were covered wiih running
sores. In about six weeks we had her
completely well, and there lias been
no recurrence of the trouble.
“ln July of this year a little boy in
our family poisoned his hands and
arms with poison oak, and ln twenty-
four hours his hands and arms were a
mass of torturing sores. Wo used
only tho Cuticura Remedies, and in
about three weeks his hands and arms
healed up. Airs. Lizzie Vincent Thomas,
Fairmont, Walden’s Ridge Tenn., Oct.
13, 1905.” ■
Born, Not Worn.
Little Margaret's grandmother had
written for a photograph of her name-
sake, the “baby.” For material rea-
sons it was advisable that the little
girl should appear as well dressed as
possible, and a cousin’s new open-work
dress was borrowed for the occasion.
On being arrayed for the picture Mar-
garet. rushed to her father, crying:
"Oh, father, just look! These ain't
worn holes; they is bora holes.”—Har-
per's.
Pointed Conversation.
"Jack, 1 am going away.”
‘‘Going away. Madge?"
"Yes, going away. Rut before T go
1 have something to say to you."
“Something to say to me, little
wife?”
"Yes, something to say to you. Don’t
send me any poker stories in lieu of
tho weekly remittance. That'll be
about all.”
Girls Destined for Harems.
The Circassians, who live in the
northwestern part of the Caucasus,
and who think it is more honorable to
live by plunder than by Industry, make
it a custom to bring their daughters
up to be sold as slaves to the Turks
and Persians. Circassian beauties,
therefore, shine not in their native
land but in the harems of the orient.
Burglar's Pathetic V/ail.
A burglar arrested in London the
other night remarked regretfully: “I
knew the time when 1 could do 20
houses in two hours. But I am get-
ting old."
You must love your work and not
be always looking over the edge of it
wanting your play to begin.—George
Eliot
FEET OUT.
She Had Curious Habits.
When a person has to keep the feet
out from under cover during the cold-
est nights in winter because of the
heat and prickly sensation, it is time
that coffee, which causes the trouble,
be left off.
There is no end to the nervous con-
ditions that coffee will produce. It
shows in one way in one person and in
another way in another. In this case
j tho lady lived in S. Dak. She says:
"1 have had to lie awake half the
night with my feet and limbs out of
the hod on the coldest nights, and felt
afraid to sleep for fear of catching
cold. I had ^een troubled for years
with twitching and jerking of the
lower limbs, and for most of the time
l have been unable to go to church or to
lectures because of that awful feeling
that l must keep on the move.
"When it was brought to my atten-
tion that coffee caused so many ner-
vous diseases, 1 concluded to drop
coffee and take Postum Food Coffee to
see if my trouble was caused by coffee
drinking.
"I only drank one cup of coffee for
breakfust but that was enough to do
the business for me. When I quit it
my troubles disappeared In an almost
Miraculous way. Now I have no more
of the jerking and twitching and can
sleep with any amount of bedding over
mo and sleep ail night, in sound, peace-
ful rest.
"Postum Food Coffee Is absolutely
worth Us weight in gold to me."
"There’s a Reason.” Read the little
health classic, "The Road to Well-
vllle," la pkgs.
A Case Insinuation.
“I l.r-ar the NV wills have ha 1 a
drendlul quarrel and that the bride
Is talking of going home to her moth-
er. What's the matter?"
I believe one evening stie got the
fipper float her cooking school
recipes, and when the hoys In the
neighborhood lost their hall in a hole
under the fence, Mr. Newed gave
them one of her biscuits to finish the
game”
Not “Just as Good"—It's the Best.
One box of Hunt's Cure is unfail-
ingly, unqualifiedly, and absolutely
guaranteed to cure any form of hkin
Disease. It is particularly active lu
promptly relieving and permanently
curing all forms of itching known.
Eczema, Tetter, Ringworm and all
similar troubles are relieved by one
application; cured by one box.
Arithmetic.
Tommy—Pop, a man's wife Is Ids
better half, isn't she?
Tommy's Pop—So we are told, uiy
son.
“Then if a man marries twice there
Isn't anything left of him, is there?"
Lewis’ Single Binder si might .r,c- eimir
made ef rich, mellow toliaeeo. Your deal-
er or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.
He alone is poor who wastes his
time and neglects his opportunities.
| Why M« Was Jolly.
Bidder tin.-t Kidder, and Kidder "as
jUi.l b . • ding "ill! genii bailor
, “What are you feeling so uncom-
mon jolly over.1" raid Bidder.
“Wliv, my best girl went und „>d
niairit-d yesterday," sal.I Kidder, slap-
ping Bidder on the back.
"Seems to me that's about the last
tniug for a chap to feel jolly over,”
said Bidder.
“What!" said Kidder. "It was me
she went and got married to!”
And so the cigars were on Bidder.—
Browning's Magazine.
For Twenty Years.
Other chill remedies have sprung up,
flourished for a brief season, then
passed away—even from memory
but for twenty years Cheatham's Chill
Tonic has been in the field of action,
i The rt ason i.~ simple, it has the merit.
It actually cures i hills and fever, while
the majority of others merely promise
to. Cue bottle guaranteed to cure
any one case.
All men want to bo able to work,
but all men do not want to yvork.
AUK )OI It < I.OTIIEN FADI-tnf
1 so Red Crons Rail blue and make them
white again. Large 2 uz. package, 6 cents.
Fault-finding women frequently step
on their oyvn corns.
'SEK HEADACHE
Positively cured b>
these l lllle Pills. I
a!*o relieve I)i«*
i rpHrifrom Dy"pepMla, lu-
I i^pst Ion a ml Too Hearty
Kalin* A perfect ma-
nly f*»r DixdnehH, Nau-
Drowwiiieaa, Had
in tl»»* Mouth, Coat-
e«i Tongue, Patu in th«
side, tohpid uvea.
They regulate the lloweN. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SWILL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
CARTERS
BP IT TIE
| IVER
■ pills.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Cl<tn»r> bMi'llifie. Uis not
Promotes
N**ver Falla to Best
liuir to ita Youthfi
Curt* scalp dwakt** u
f'^autl jl-'i' at 1
luxurwi it gruwt'
Brstore
ul C_____
lair
_ (tray
Color.
MlVcKUANF.OlJS Ht\
In frrpnt variety f-T -a'* at
Ll.« Lu MCnsfArkKCU.
Thompson’s Eye Water
W. N. U., MUSKOGEE, NO. 3S, 1907/
Physicians Recommend Castoria
P ASTOrJA lias mot with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharma-
ceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used Ay physicians with
results most gratifying. Tho extended use of Castoria is unquestionably tho
result of three facts; nm—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless;
Second That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimi-
lates the food: Third—It, is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil.
It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic
and docs not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s
Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, how-
ever, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day
for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To
our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by
regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to
the information.—Rail’s Journal of Health.
- -
JSi
■ _
ALCOHOL 3 PEK CENT.
AYccjelalile PrrparalionforAs-
similaiiiigihcFootlamlRei’iila
ting Uic Stomachs and Dowels cl
ESSE
/Ghiim
Promolcs Digcstion.Cherrfijj
ness anti Rest.ConlainsneiHter
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral.]
Not Narcotic.
JUrr^ofO/dHrSliaJUmm
Ihnjjliti Srrd~
jtlx. Scrum *■
JhrheUcSdts-
Aiusc Seed *
ftepcnmt -
1ftCurtail:'. Ceda*
hern Seed-
CJitftcd Suijrr •
hutUiyuen t'tanr.
Aperfect Remedy foiTonslinn-
i ion, Sour Stomach, 1)iai rii ea
Worms,Convulsioits.fcvTrish
ness and LoSS OF SLUT.
Facsimile Signature of
CaIiA//rr if.ScJ
■race NEW YORK.
*-
• T-C-J
DY'o | |<
ArSi-vW Guaranteed underlie i *
.. ...... - - .....
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
Letters irom Prominent Physicians
addressed to Cbas. II. Fletcher.
Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, Ills., says: “I have prescribed your
Castoria often for infants during my practice, and find it very satisfactory."
Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “Your Castoria stands
first in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have
found anything that so filled tho place.”
Dr. J. II. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: “I have used your Castoria and
found it an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for
many years. The formula is excellent.”
Dr. R. J. Ilamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: “I prescribe your Castoria
extensively, as I have never found anything to equal it for children’s
troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the field, but I always
see that my patients get Fletcher’s.”
Dr.Wm. J McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: “As the father of thirteen
children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside
from my own family experience I have in my years of practice found Cas-
toria a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.”
Dr. J. It. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "The name that your Cao-
toria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of home3 blessed by the
presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by tho endorse-
ment of the medical profession, hut I, for one, most heartily endorse it and
believe it an excellent remedy.”
Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Physicians generally do not
prescribe proprietary preparations, but in the cane of Castoria my experi-
ence, like that of many other physicians, has taught mo to make an ex-
ception. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice because I have found it
to be a thoroughly reliable remedy fer children’s complaints. Any physi-
cian who has raised a family, as I have, will join mo in heartiest recom-
mendation of Castoria.”
genuine CASTuKIA always
Bears the Signature of .....
- . yjj*
Tlie Kind Yen Have Always Bought
in Use For Over 30 Years.
TWC ccntauh eo>Mn>, 7T mukhav .thict, new vomi city.
ORIA
3 Of
/ducJC&u
Elixir
Cures by Removing the Ccuse
of Disease
It's a fact well known to medical men that
moM of the diseases that afflict mankind, start
in the stomach or bowels, being caused by
a torpid condition of the liver. The organs of
digestion and excretion fail to perform their
tasks, the system becomes clogged and poisoned,
and Constipation, Biliousness, Sour Stomach,
Indigestion, Liver and Kidney Troubles and
the whole tram of other diseases follow.
DR. MOZLEY'S
LEMON ELIXIR
thoroughly cleanses the stomach and tones up
the dillerrnt organs, and restores them to their
normal, healthy actions. ■ Diseases disappear,
and Health is again restored.
Lemon F.lixir acts gently but thoroughly,
causing no unpleasantness.
50c and $1.00 at Drug Stores
Write for free sample.
“One Dose Convinces”
MOZLEY LEMON ELIXIR CO.. Atlanta, Ga.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
1
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Henry, George. W. The Tulsa Chief. (Tulsa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 4, No. 26, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 10, 1907, newspaper, September 10, 1907; Tulsa, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1173733/m1/6/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.