The Yukon Sun And The Yukon Weekly. (Yukon, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 13, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, May 26, 1905 Page: 2 of 10
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LIVING TOO HASTILY
AMERICAN WOMEN BREAK DOWN
Irregularities and Female Derang®-
raeEM Kesult - Cured by Lyilia E.
1'iiui l!a:u s Vegetable Ooir^cvmd
Owing to our mode and manner of
living, and the nervous haste of ever
woman to accomplish just so mucL
each day, it is said that there is uo
/
C fleeter
opp woman in twenty-five but what
miffers with some derangement of the
female organism, and this is the secret
of so many unhappy homes.
No woman can be amiable, light-
hearted and happy, a joy to her hus-
band and children, and perform tho
duties incumbent upon her, whenihe is
suffering1 tvil h backache. headache,
nervousness, sleeplessness, bearing,
down pains, displacement of the womb,
spinal weakness or ovarian troubles.
Irritability and snappy retorts take
the place of pleasantness, and Ml sun-
chine is driven out of the home, and
lives arc wrecked by woman's great
enemy—womb trouble.
Head this letter:
I) ear Mrs. Pinkham;—
" I was troubled for eight years with irr«gu-
lnrities which broke down my health and
tirought on extreme nervousness and despon-
dency. bydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
{mund proved to bo the only modirinu which
lelpd me Day by day I improved ia health
■while taking it until I was entirely cured, I
can attend to my social anil household duties
aiidlbaroughly itijoy life m-ee more, as hydia
K Pinliham's Vegetable Compound liasmiuie
me a well woman, without, an aeheora paia."
—Mi's. Chester Curry, 42 Saratoga Street
East Boston, Mass
At the first indication of ill health,
painful or irregular menstruation,
pain in the side, headache, backache,
ljeariny-doivn pains, nervousness or
"the blues." secure at once a bottle of
Iiydia R. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound and begin its use.
Union
Mi.do
$3.50 SHOES
I"or
Men*
}} ■ T Jloa.Klaa tn'i'.ics and sells more
s St. .< hIioih thiii) any ntJivr
BrwVp&V''tl,ror 'V «' rW, *10, <><>()
11£WAJID toaDy 0110 who can dbprovg thl iiaUcmnt.
TV. L. Dnnglnfl £1.50 alio** orr ttio
Sr.. n-iU ihi in the world l>ocuum> ia"
their yxt.-llfiit ty?«% t-nny fitting *ii<1
Kuj.fiior «i I(.tialifloH. Tin y mo
i!-11080 tliat
fc- '.00 to <*/.«>(). Tlio only <11 H««r.iu*> 4m
'« !•! . •>. , J.. 1)ovl11 h
rev*, more to niab, bold tluir ttli.ipe
m fii r, iwar longer, nml nro of Ktcittca-
v i.iio Il ii 11 any other ;J.nOHli«>flon the
market to-(lay. \\, L, I>«>tii;ias iruiir-
r.n.c-M thHr value hy stunnlnir |,|„
n:niie and price on tln bottom of earb
mioo. I. >06 for It. Take no guhstitutc.
\\ . 1Douglas m.'A) hi 11 m■ s an- sold
h W'WjUjitooxvn r*-t:iilHtor«>Mli)tlir4)rii|.
1 « i u titles, and by >>li « ditnlerfl evcry-
*; licro. No matter uln-i o yoa live, W. L,
Douglas shoes aro within your rcuciw
t:nUAF $B.OO SHOES.
u I hav&itorn IP. h. Douglas $3J>0 for
tieart, and consul, r thai) , >jnal t. any $5.00 shoe
ir,tr 1 1 ifie tiuirUt. Tti'U htive owen entire
j(i/> </rif/i. - ll'/;i. //. Anderson, Jual £stute
Afft i(f Jiuiisas Citu, Mo.
Roys wear W. I.. Dot'irl.is $3.50 and $2.00
thets because they tit tetter, hold their
*h3fs end Wtarlonser than otlitr rtake5.
II'. L fi'iiglas ntft Corona Celti*m in/lit
JJ..'" Corum i !t u conrfttrit to *
« Iht Jin st pattnt leather produced,
fjyst Cclor Eyelets will not ue.jr /Jrvusi'.
V,' T.. 1 >. Ma l.is lias tlio I:io,'"si mall order
htisln*i!i tlni world. No trimltle to ifet a tit
Iv mail. •^ceiitsexlr.lprri>,ivB«l(>llvery.
If you desire rurtn.-r Infi.rmatlnn, v r\te for
J.itutrah ti Ciitalvyu* -S^nrij Jtvlft.
!.. D0UG1.AS. Brcrluoa,
RAILROADS AND PROGRESS.
In his testimony lefore the senate
rnn'.iiiltlec <m interstate commerce at
Washington on May 4, Prof. Hugo R.
Mijcr of Ihe Chicago university, an
c.\i crt on railroad manaKemenL, made
this statement:
"Let us l(;ol; at what might havi
1 :i;.'i oro'd It we had heeded the pro
les's of the farmers of New York and
Ohio and Penn.-;. Ivania (in the 70's,
vlien grain from the west began pour-
ing to the Atlantic .seaboard), and
act d upon the doctrine which the in-
terstate commerce commission liasr
enunciated time and again, that no
rran may he dejrlved of the ad-
vantage- accruing to him hy virtue
of his KRogtaphical position. We could
not have west of the Mis-issippi a
population of millions of people who
are prosperous and are great con-
sumers. We never should have seen
tlie years when we built 10,000 and
12,000 miles of railway, for there
would have been no farmers west of
the Mississippi river who could have
used the land that would have been
opened up by the building of those
railways. And If we had not seen the
years when we could build 10,000 and
12,000 miles of railway a year, we
should not have today east of the
Mississippi a steel and iron produc-
ing center, which is at once the mar-
vel and (he despair of Europe, because
v.-e could not have built up a steel and
Iron industry if there had been no
market for its product.
We could not have in New England
a great boot and shoe industry; we
could not have in New England a
great cotton milling industry; wo
could not have spread throughout New
York and Pennsylvania and Ohio man-
ufacturing industries of the most di-
versified kinds, because tl>'>se Indus*
tries would have no market among
the farmers west of the Mississippi
river.
And while the progress of this
country, while the development of
the agricultural west of this country
did mean the impairment of the ag-
ricultural val
1 CROP CONDITIONS f
VWW^VVWWWVWVWWWW
General Summary for Week Ending
Monday, May 22
General rains occurred on the 19th,
20th and 21, and thunder-showers on
the 15th, lGth, 17 and 18th. The rain.'
on the 19th and 21s(, were heavy or
excessive over the greater portion of
| the section. Hail occurred on the
: 15th and 19th, and caused some dan:
age to crops, fruit and gardens.
Farm work was retarded over the
Tndlan Territroy by the heavy rains,
over the remainder of the section the
■work was -well advanced until Ihe
j close of the week.
Wheat improved some In condition,
is heading out well, but has rusted
j badly over the central division, and
j the prospect is for a half to two-thirdi
j yield over the counties affected; tae
crop continues in a fair to good cont'l-
I tion over the other divisions.
Oats; barley, rye and speltz are do-
ing well; oats are heading out short
but are in good condition.
Broom and Kaffir corn, cane, millet
and milo maize are up to good stands
and are doing well.
Corn is generally tip to a good
stand, and is being cultivated tha sec-
ond or third time; the plant is still
short but has a good color and is in a
thriving condition.
Cotton is generally up to a pooe
to good stand, is making a good
growth, and is being chopped or
worked; the heavy rains caused sone
rotting over the eastern division, and
some was replanted, with planting
about completed.
Early potatoes are in good condi-
tion, and are nearly ready to market
over the southern portion; gardens
are in good condition.
Alfalfa harvest continued with a
good yield; meadows and pastures are
in a fine condition and stock is do-
ing well.
Fruit continues to drop, but a fair
yield is premised. Cherries aro rl-
UNCONFIRMED NAVAL BATTLE
Neither Russia Nor Japan Know Any-
thing of Their Fleets
MANILA: There is an unconfirmed
rumoi- here that the Russian and Jap-
anese fleets have met south of For-
mosa, and that the Japanese were
defeated.
ST. PETERSBURG: In naval cir-
cles it is now generally assumed that
Vice Admiral Rojestvensky's squad-
rons are in the Pacific steaming
northward, and giving the Pescadores,
Formosa and the Luchu islands a
wide berth in order to minimize the
damage of a concentrated torpedo at-
tack under cover of those islands,
and to force Vice Admiral Togo,
should he elect to accept battle, to
meet him in the open.
All idea that the Russian admiral
will attempt to force a passage ot' the
Korean straits has been abandoned.
Both the Peros strait, between the
islands of Hokka and Sakhalin, and
the Tsurgartt straits between the
islands of Hokkaido and Hondo, were
reconnoitered by the cruisers and de-
stroyers at Vladivostock and the re-
sults communicated to Admiral Roj-
estvensky before he left the coast of
French Indo-China.
The news from Manchuria con-
tinues to point to the proximity of
the fighting on a large scale. General
Linevitch sent General Renenkampff's
cossacks on a daring expedition
around Field Marshal Ovama's left.
Rennenkampff succeeded in getting
to the rear of the Japanese, but paid
dearly, his cossacks being badly cut
up.
m
MISS.
MILDRED
MAYOR IS IN EARNEST
east of the Mississippi
river, that ran up into hundreds of , , ...
millions of dollars, it meant incident- <7 7, strawl)0rrles are 6lvin
ally the building up of great manu- 1 a!r ylelds'
Too many bills aro apt to moko a
man feci bilious.
Gtate of Onio, Citt oy Toledo, '
LtCA® Covittt. t Bw-
Fjunk .J t ijenet nnik? o *h that te !s icnfof
partner 01 the firm of F. J. C2E> *r 4 Co., doing
businosH in the City « f Toledo, County and State
• foresaid, «md that nnld Arm will pay ihe sum of
DXE HUNDHED D0LLAK8 fur each and every
rase of CaTaebu that cannot bo cared by Use c«e oC
UaLL' Cat a hu ii Cl'n*.
FRANK J. CHEXE7.
Sworn to before me and aubicrlbed lu my prra-
ince, this tith day of December, A. D. 1886.
i , A. TV. GLEASON,
' * * NoTa«r PUBLIC.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and acta
ilrectlyon the blood and mucous aurfaces of the
•yatem Send for testimonials, free.
r .1 CHENEY & CO., Toledo, U
Bold by all Druggist*. 75c.
Take Hall's Family I'llle for constipation.
facturing industries that added to the
value of this land by thousands of
millions of dollars. And, gentlemen,
those things were not foreseen in tha
70's. The statesmen and the public
men of this country did not see what
part the agricultural development of
the west was going to play in the in-
dustrial development of the east. And
you may read the decisions of tha
interstate commerce commission from
the flrat to the last, and what is one
of the greatest characteristics of those
decisions? The continued inability to
see the question in this large way.
The interstate eommcrce commis-
sion never can see anything mhrs
tfcan that the farm land of ecc:« farm-
er is decreasing in value, or that some
man who has a flour mill with a pro-
duction of fifty barrels a day is be-
ing crowded out. It never can see
that tho destruction or impairment of
farm values In this place means the
building up of farm values in that
place, and that that shifting of values
is a necessary incident to the indus-
trial and manufacturing development of
this country. And ,if we shall give
to the interstate commerce commis-
sion power to regulate rates, we shall
no longer have our rates regulated
on the statesmanlike basis on which
they have been regulated in the past
by the railway men, who really have
been great statesmen, who really have
been great builders of empires, who
have had an imagination that rivals
the imagination of the greatest poet
and of the greatest inventor, and who
havs operated with a courage and dar-
ing that rivals the courage and dar-
ing of the greatest military general.
But we shall have our rates regulated
by a body of civil servants, bureau-
crats, whose besetting sin the world
over is that they never can grasp a
situation in a large way and with the
grasp of the statesman; that they
never can see the fact that they are
confronted with a small evil; that
that evil is relatively small, and that
It canncrt be corrected except by tha
creation of evils and abuses which
are infinitely greater than the one
that Is to be corrected."
DEEDS CALLED IN
Dawes Commission Asks for Return
of Governor's Deeds
MUSKOGEE: The Dawes commis-
sion has issued an order from the sec-
retary of the Interior to the public,
calling in all the C.000 deeds which
have be-en delivered to allottees by
the governors cf the Cherokee and
Chickasaw nations without tho ap-
proval of Mr. Hitchcock's department.
: These patents, the order says, must
be approved by the secretary of the
interior or they will not be legal. The
| order brings the governors of tho two
: nations to a showdown, and It r<v
■ mains to be seen whether they will
advise the allottees to return their
patents for approval or whether they
will Issue patents of their own, a a
they said they would do in case the
present contingency arose. The situ-
ation is tonse. The attornyes for
the two nations have been notified of
the present turn of affairs.
War Being Waged on the Attempted
Gas Franchise
PHILADELPHIA: In his efforts
to defeat the consummation of the
plan to lease the city gas works to
the United Gas Improvement company
for seventy-five years for twenty-five
million dollars, Mayor Weaver dis-
missed from office David J. Smyth,
the director of the department of ^ub-'
lie safety, and Peter E. Costello, the
director of the department of public
works. The mayor has annonuced
that lio is in the fight to the bitter
end, which means that a great po-
litical battle is now on and will be
carried to the polls next November.
In his fight against the gas lease and
tho Republien organization, the mayor
haa called in as counsel Eliha Koot
of New York, and former Judge James
Gay Gordon of this city.
The mayor Immediately appointed
two men to fill the places made va-
cant, and it is doubtful if their ao-
pointmeat is oonfirmed by the coun-
cil.
RESTORED TO HEALTH.
THANKS TO PE-RU-NA.
Friends Were Alarmed-
Advised Change of Climate.
Miss Mildred Keller, 718 13th street,
X. \V., Washington, D. C., writes:
'T can safely recommend Peruna for
catarrh. I had it for years and it would
respond to no kind of treatment, or if it
did it was only temporary, and on the
ilijrlitest provocation the trouble would
•ome back.
"/ was In such a state that my
friends were alarmed about me, and I
was advised to leave this climate.
Then I tried Peruna, and to my great
loy found it helped me from the first
dose I took, and a few bottles cured me.
'•It built up my constitution, I re-
pained my appetite, and I feel that I
am perfectly well and strong-."—
Mildred Keller.
We have on file many thousand testi-
monials like the above. We can give
our readers only a slight glimpse of the
vast array of unsolicited endorsements
Dr. Hartman is receiving.
LEXINGTON BANK CLOSED
The First National Made Some Poor
Loans—Will be Reopened
WASHINGTON: The comptroller
of the currency has been advised that
the First National bank of Lexington
has failed. Mr. Sturtevant, a national
hank evamtaer, has been appointed
receiver. The last examination of
this institution showed that its capi-
tal had been impaired by losses, and
the comptroller ordered an assess-
ment on the stockholders to mako Ihe
impairment good, or the placing of
the bank in voluntary liquidation.
LEXINGTON: Officials of the
First National bank, which failed to
open for business, state that thay ex-
pect the institution to be in operation
again within a short time.
TO HANG AT ANADARKO
If you try to whisper to a girl she
acts like she was afraid she might
try to kiss you against her will.
Important ta
l!m-n!r.o carefully every bottle of CASTORTA,
afe and pure remedy for InfaaU and children,
ciiii pec that it
Bears tlio
BijpiiUuro of / /'
h L'eii For Over 30 Years.
i'Lc Kliiil You Have Always Bought.
Umbrellas and self-rcsyjct, when
lost, arc seldom regained.
A man passes for what he Is worth.
What he is engraves itself on hts
face, on his form, on his fortunes, In
letters of light which all men may
read but himself. Concealment avails
nothing.—Emerson.
The King of blood purifiers is Dr.
Simeons' Sarsaparilla. It rids the
system of the winter's accumulation
of impurities. It makes the young
feel well—the old feel young. Now
Is the time to renovate yourself. Sim-
mons' Sarsaparilla cannot be ex-
celled.
Price 50 cents and $1.00,
Forbid Use of Monocles.
If one belongs to the German army
he can not wear a monocle. The sin
glo eyeglass has been forbidden to
officers and men as foppish and savor
lug too strongly of Anglomania.
It's easier for a girl to raise a ro*v
lhan It lg for a youth to raise a mus-
tache.
Sentence of Court to be Carried Out
on July 7
GUTHRIE: R. A. Wright, convict-
ed of the killing of William Slattery
in Kiowa county, has been returned
here from Anadarko, to await the
date set for his execution. Wright
is under sentence to be hanged at
Anadarko on July 7, between the
hours of 5 and 8 o'olock in the even-
ing.
The prisoner Is not at all uneasy,
and declares he will never hang. An
appeal will be taken to the supreme
court of Oklahoma, and an attempt
is to be made to secure a stay of exe-
cution.
Breokenridcie Quits June 1
HUSyKOGEE: C. R. Breckenrlflge,
imHnbeT of the Dawes commission,
has toodered hia resignation, and it
hwi boon accepted by the president.
M«ior Breckenrldge will retire June
L T?!f resignation was tendered in
•Ajk-11, immediately after the president
ordsrod that tho Delaware landS
should be held by Dick Adams. It
wtu booause of this decision that
Ma^or Breckinridge determined to
learo tho commission. He was in
ohar^o of Cherokee-Delaware matters,
and had decided that Adams eould not
hold tho lands in question.
RAILROAD ABSORPTION
Says tha Fort Smith Road Is
Kow Part of the Alfalfa Route
WELEETKA: It is stated on good
authority in railraod circles that the
Fort Smith & Western Jias become a
part cf the Denver, Enid & Gulf, and
will soon be running trains to Denver.
This news was received with joy
here, as Weleetka is the passenger
division of the Fort Smith road, and
by the new arrangement will hava
two trunk lines.
Indian Girl Made Sponsor
MUSKOGEE^ Miss Harriet Crab-
tree, an Indian girl of this city, has
been appointed sponsor for the Creek
and Seminole Brigade of ex-Confeder-
ate veterans at their reunion at Louis-
ville in June.
W. F. GIESECKE
A sTioe manufacturer who has been
"everlastingly at it" -sECu
for nearly forty years, ^1^
ought to be "onto his
job." That's therecord
of our senior member,
Mr. Giesecke.
KEY brand SnotS^
ST. LOU IS
ALL WAYS BEST
JlVct V2< Xwiaa •
i n,o° s*8!®f,c|11
|yiW Grinder. |
Flag Day June 14
GUTHRIE: Governor Ferguson
has issued a proolamation declaring
June 14 as flag day. He recom-
mends that on that day the American
flag be displayed over every school
house, church, home and public and
private building in Oklahoma.
No man is so dead wrong as the
man who gets found out.
WILL PAY HIS FARE
Announc«ment That President Roose
veK Will Not Accept Passes
NEW YORK: It is stated in the
■"Washington Star, which has spoken
with considerable white house au-
thority ever since Mr. Roosevelt has
been in ris present office, that the
president will accept no arore
free railroad transportation. This
subject has become a matter of gen-
eral public interest since his cam-
paign on railroad rates began.
The Star says: "In connection with
the trip which the president has defi-
nitely announced he will make to the
south in October next, is the interest-
ing fact that he will refuse to accept
transportation over the railroad lines
without the payment of regular
charge*.
•00 Gclvanized
Tfeel Kflr.d ti
We manufacture all eizea and
style®, it will.
pa;- you to in-I
veatlirato.Write "
for catalog aud j
price list.
CURRIE WIMD WILL CO.,
Topeho, Kanscft.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 21,1905
Cleanliness is said to be next to
godliness, yet one seldom sees a laun-
dry next door to a church.
Thcae Who Have Tried A
will use no other. Defiance Cold Wa-
ter Starch has no equal in Quantity
or Quality—16 oz. for 10 cents. Other
brands contain only 12 oz.
No use to yearn for the wisdom of
Solomon. If you're wise enough to
keep from being chilled by your own
shadow you'll be doing well enough.
It's as cowardly to speak ill of a
iran behind his back as it is danger-
ous to say it to his face.
\\ ANTED -Forth. U. 8. Army, nblo-bodiol
J <" n*rried njen, between agos of 21 antf
Bt o.li7.cnH of United dtaion. of R.,oil chamc-tor
who nnn sp«*k, road ivn.l
tvrite knjjli^h ]%)r information fcpply to
Sti oil. rT?7t0,F0? buildinir. oil*hom«
Uty.OkU or 'I ulsa. Ind. Tar., Bnld Shaw-
■ or Guthrie. Okln
, CURES winXu i"TIL ■ TST
Uo«t Cough oyrup. Tutus Good. Uso
lu time, bold l>y <lrupclnL*. mI
■FPifBTOiaaEiam
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McComas, Gordon. The Yukon Sun And The Yukon Weekly. (Yukon, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 13, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, May 26, 1905, newspaper, May 26, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127797/m1/2/: accessed June 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.