The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 314, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1906 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
gmfliaiiM:ii!iiiiHMr
OH, YES!
There are several brands of Flour sold In Shawnee. ONE of
them Is "SHAWNEE CHIEF"—a Home Product, made by your
Home Mill, and "Hom0 Folks" ought to use that ONE brand! If
It wasn't GOOD as the BEST we wouldn't ask YOU buy It!
But it Is BETTER than the rest, and YOU'LL te.l your neighbor
so when you try It.
SHAWNEE MILLING CO.
THE NEW WHITE MILL.
winn'W!iiyt8:x3''BguBBgiir'iHiiica!aHii<MiBiimi!!m!giiiiii!iiHBai!i!a'!|jiBgnrT3!aimii:TB:«i !
STORM IN CUBA READY TO FIGHT
New York. Oct. 19—Extreme anxi-
ety was expressed for the fate of Ha-
vana and other cities In Cuba when It
became known that for many hours
a fearful storm had interrupted cablc
communication between the Island and
the United States and that the last
message received from Havana, sent
soon after midnight, said the storm
had assumed the proportions of a cyc-
lone. Whatever form the interrup-
tion took. It lasted throughout the day.
Cable communication had not been re-
stored at midnight tonight and none
could say when it would be.
Meanwhile, fears almost as grave
were expressed for Miami, Fla.. which
from Jacksonville In the morning. The
last word from the operator at Miami
was that the hurricane had struck that
city, flooding many streets.
Unconfirmed reports that many hun.
dreds of persons were killed In Havana
and Miami spread persistently through
Wall street today. None could say
whence they came, and they were con-
tradicted vigorously by persons who
said there was no foundation for them
further than the scare natural to such
an anxiety breeding state as existed In
the Isolation of Cuba and In the cut-
ting off of Mlamt from the rest of
Florida.
When the tip of a dog's cose Is cold
aad moist, that dog Is not sick. A
feverish dry nose means sickness with
a dog. And so with the human lips.
Dry, cracked and colorless lips mean
feverishness, and -are as well ill ap-
pearing. To have beautiful, pink, vel-
vet-like Hps, apply at bedtime a coat-
ing of Dr. Shoop's Green salve. It will
soften and heal any skin ailment. Get
n free, trial box, at our store, and be
coBvinced. Large nickel-capped glass
jars 25 cents. Wallace Mann. •
Banquet October 20.
The ladles of the Catholic church
will serve a fine dinner and supper
on Saturday, October 20, at the "Whit-
taker building, lately vacated by Drap-
er and Longmlre furniture company.
The ladles havo served numerous
dinners and always have an abund-
ance of all the best the market af-
fords. The proceeds will be used to
help build the new Catholic church.
Attend, for you not only get a fine
dinner and supper, but aid the ladles
Jn their work. 15-Bt
I Lectures Tonight.
Mrs. George J. KiiBtler will address
the county Sunday school convention
tonight at the Methodist church. Mrs
Rustler Is a prominent Sunday-school
worker, and her address will prove
very interesting, especially to Sunday-
school workers.
LOSES DIVISION
Oklahoma City, Okla., Oct. 19.—An-
nouncement of President Roosevelt's
decision to rearrange the military di-
visions, making Chicago the headquar-
ters of the northern division under
command of Major General Greeley
and St. Louis the headquarters of the
southwestern division under command
of Brigadier General Frederick Funs-
ton. is made.
The announcement was received
with expressions of surprise by the
local army officers and those attacked
to the headquarters of the southwest-
ern division in this city, who have re-
ceived no Information or intimation
that such a move was ever contem-
plated, nor have they received any in-
formation that the headquarters are to
be changed other than contained in the
press dispatches.
The cause for the removal of the
headquarters from Oklahoma City to
St. Louis is not known, even by the
army officers here. Conjecture Is be-
ing indulged In as to the arrangemen
of the divisions and it is supposed that
the new order will place the states of
Kansas and MIssoutI in the south
St. Petersburg, Oct. 19—A crisis is
impending in the affairs of Finland
and upon the best of authority it can
be stated that the revolutionary party
Is now preparing to give the word to
its members—and three out of every
four Finns are members—to rise
against the czar and his minions.
Arms continue to pour Into the coun-! western division ond attach the states
try. They no longer consist In the of Colorado and Utah to the Pacific
main of revolvers of the Browning and
similar patterns, but include all man-
ner of weapons from cold steel knife
and bayonet to short rifles and port-
able rapid fire guns.
It is open to doubt whether the Rus-
sian arsenals in Finland contain any-
thing like the assortment of weapons
hidden away In Finland's woods by the
Finnish revolutionary redoubtables. It
Is of no use longer blinking at hard
facts. Something serious, very serious
is preparing in Finland.
For Sale.
A first class restaurant. Good bus-
Iness. Well located in a city of 20,
000. Reasons for selling, ill health.
Business must be sold at cnce. Good
bargain for person desiring to enter
Into business. Write S. G. Ash-
baugh, 1202 E. Tenth street, Shaw-
nee, Okla. 15-3t
Dysart & Jones, 16 E. Main St. *
division.
Can you win? You realize that to
win in anything these days, requires
strength, with mind and body In tune
A man or woman with disordered dl
gestive organs is not In shape for
day's work or a day's play. How can
they expect to win? Kcdol for Dys-
pepsia contains the digestive juices of
a healthy stomach and will put your
stomach In shape to perform Its im
portant function of supplying the body
and brain with strength bu..aing
blood. Digests what you eat, relieves
Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Srur Stomach,
Palpitation of the Heart and Consti-
pation. Sold by J. K Cockrell.
Dysart & Jones, 10 E. Main St.
PHONE 23 SKIDOO.
The Banner Electric company is in
no pool or •ombinati^u. Wire tkam
and they will wire wire lor you. 2<-lm
* f
* - 1
$100.00
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
4*
*
4?
it
4?
*
4*
*
4*
4?
4f
4*
*
4*
*
4*
4*
4*
4*
4?
4*
*
Superiority in Clothes For
Gentlemen
THE GREAT DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE
MAMMOTH'S CLOTHES AND THE COMMON
KIND IS NOT IN THE CLOTH NOR IN THE
PRICE—IT'S IN THE TAILORING.
NOW AND THEN YOU NOTICE A MAN
WHO'S REALLY BETTER DRESSED THAN THE
'AVERAGE —HIS CLOTHES FIT BETTER AND
HAVE THAT PECULIAR SMARTNESS OF SHAPE
AND FINISH THAT YOU ALL CALL "STYLE."
YOU CAN PUT IT DOWN FOR A FACT THAT
HE'S EITHER FOUI^D A MIGHTY GOOD TAILOR
OR BOUGHT HIS SUIT AT THE MAMMOTH.
AND YOU CAN BE SURE THAT THE DIFFER-
ENCE IS MOSTLY IN THE TAILORING—THE
CUTTING. MAKING AND FINISHING. THE
MAMMOTH'S CLOTHES ARE BETTER TAIL.
ORED THROUGHOUT THAN ANY OTHER
READY-TO-WEAR CLOTHES, AND THAT AC-
COUNTS* FOR*THEIR SPLENDID STYLE, AC.
CURATE FIT AND LONG WEARING QUALI-
TIES. TRY THEM, AND YOU WILL FIND OUT
WHAT CAREFUL, HONEST INSIDE TAILORING
MEANS TO A SUIT OF CLOTHES—AND TO
THEIR WEARER.
The Mammoth Dept. Store
Shawnee, Oklahoma.
*
*
*
*
*
4
*
*
*
*
*
«•
*
*
*
%
%
*
*
*
£
*
%
*§•
*
*
*
%
1
Lots for $10.00 down and $1.00 per week. I have nine lots in Blains'
Addition on North Union avennue two blocks from the oroposed ex-
tension of the car line, which I will sell on the above terms.
These will go fast. See me about them at once. Office of
Guaranty Title & Abstract Co., over Harryman's drug store.
Plione 554
Frank W. Boggs
With Dead Babe's Money.
Tulsa, I. T.. Oct. 19.—Mrs. Dora
Rogers, wife of a prominent Creek In-
dian at Catoosa, eloped yesterday to
Texas with another man. carrying
with her $700, the proceeds of the sale
cf an allotment belonging to a dead
child.
GANDIOATES OFF
Guthrie, Okla., Oct. 19—The Terri-
torial election board today knocked
out eight independent and one social-
ist candidate for delegate to the con-
The child had been enrolled, but the stitutlonal convention on the grounds
allotment had not been chosen, when I tjj^j their petitions in some form or
a few days prior to the e'.opment, Mrs. {,ther were not in accordance with
^ ^ 4* 4* ^ if4'^
Rogers made the choice without her
husband's konwledge, sold the land to
Sapulpa parties and left with the oth-
er man.
Rogers has brought suit to recover
the property.
Keep the bowels open when you
have a cold and use a good remedy to
allay the Inflammation of the mucous
membranes. The best Is Kennedy's
Laxative Honey and Tar. It contains
no opiates, moves the bowels, drives
out the cold. Is reliable and tastei
good. Sold by J. E. Cockrell.
law.
The most prominent candidate thus
eliminated was William D. Fossett of
Guthrie, ex-United States marshal,
who was running as an independent
Republican candidate in the twenty-
fifth district.
The full list involved is as follows:
Tenth district, John C. Peters, inde-
Twenty-second
Basket Ball.
The Shawnee and Y. M. C. A. teams
will play basket ball tonight in the
Y. M. C. A. rooms on North Broadway.
The game will be called at 8".30. Ev-
ery one invited.
Nothing to Fear.
Mothers need have no hesitancy In
continuing to give Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy to their little ones,
as It contains absolutely nothing Inju-
rious. This remedy is not only per-
fectly safe to give small children, but
is a medicine of great worth and mer-
it It has a world wide reputation
fer Its cures of coughs, colds and
croup and can always be relied upon.
For sale by the Owl Drug Store, C.
K. Ilarrymsn, F. A. Reynolds & Son.
Choice Lots it a Sacrifice.
29 lots, high ground, on car line
Oak Park addition, at the extraordi
nary low price of $55 to $C0 each
■which is only half of their actual
value. Must sell. Phone 810 or ad
iress "Park," care of Shawnee News
16-tf
Wounds, Bruises and Burns.
By applying an antiseptic dressing
to wounds, bruises, burns and like Impendent Republican!
juries before inflammation sets in, J(jhn D B,]by lmlependent. Twen.
they may be healed without matura-1 ty.fourth William Mahan, prohibition-
ti°n and ln about one-third the time jgt; Twenty.flfth Rev j E Dlsch
required by the old treatment. Thl3 prohibitionist Twenty-sixth, Rev. Ira
is the greatest discovery and triumph Holhrof)ks prohlultionlst; Twenty-sev-
of modern surgery. Chambenaln s
Pain Balm acts on this same princi-
ple. It is an antiseptic and when
applied to such injuries, causes them
to heal very quickly. It also allays
the pain and soreness and prevents
any danger tef blood poisoning. Keep
a bottle of Pain Balm in your home
and it will save you time and money, I
not to mention the Inconvenience and
_ , . , . , cause the proper residences
suffering such Injuries entail. rori
sale by the Owl Drug Store,
enth, Rev. A. M. Virden, prohibition-
ist, and B. B. Blaine, socialist; Twen-
ty-eighth, Rev. E. O. Whitewell, pro-
hibitionist; Twenty-ninth, Robert
Chowning, prohibitionist. Fossett was
disbarred because the residence of his
petitioners was not given, and Blaine
because his petition was not filed in
time. All the others were refused be-
of the
,, R I candidates or petitioners were not glv-
Harryman, F. A. Reynolds & Son.
Are Held Without Bail.
Ardmore, I. T., Oct. 19.—Lee and
Skyler Williams, of Purcell, were
placed In the federal jail here today,
having been bound over without bail (
by the United States commissioner at
Purcell, charged with murdering Hud.
Wilson, a hack driver, at Purcell, last
Saturday night.
HERE IS A SENSATION.
"Fighting the Flames" to be Produced
With the 4-Paw-Sslls Circus.
The Great Adam Forepaugh aud
Sells Brothers' circus may always be
depended upon for the newest and
most sensational of circus novelties.
This season they have introduced a
spectacular feature which makes all
previous arenic productions look tame
and common-place. It is the stupen-
dous and thrilling show called "Fight-
ing the Flames." Imposing buildings
of a long city block are shown in al-
most actual dimensions, and the ac-
tivities of trade and complicated life
in a bustling large city are vividly por-
trayed and absorbingly fascinating.
Sparkling lights of night, searching
sounds of revelry, stirring tradesmen,
joyous saunterers, blazing shop win-
dows, unbridled and noisy youngsters,
serfy roysterers, drowsing policemen,
mincing dudes, alert cabmen, haunted
unfortunates—all the types, sights and
sounds, gaities and miseries of a me-
tropolis are depicted with magnetic
realism.
When the quieting spell of deepen-
ing night has settled heavily over the
city an alarm of fire quickens the
sleeping stillness into an uproar of
emotional excitement. The courage-
ous firemen unreel, couple and attach
the hose In almost the turn of a hand,
the engines puff and shiver, scaling
ladders are hung upon the window
sills and the daring sure-footed heroes
begin the anxious work of carrying
the imprisoned inmates to the ground.
Many of the rescuers are seemingly
impossible. One tender slip of a girl
is reached for by the rescuer standing
upon his toes on the top rung of a lad-
der while everyone looks upward with
white faces and terrified eyes.
The fire fighters are picked from
among the leading fire departments of
the largest cities and are men who
are nationally and internationally
known for heroic deeds and devotion
When a horse is so overworked it to duty. Forty of them wear medals
lies down and in other ways declares of honor. This mammoth spectacle
its inability to go further, you would is the greatest in dramatic interest,
consider it criminal to us' force Many size, novelty and thrilling incidents
&®©®©©©$$e©
a
9
«
9
*
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
A Trip to Your Old Home
How long has It been since you've been back? Wouldn't you like
to spend two or three weeks this fall among your old frienda and
neighbors-visiting the old amlllar places-talking over old times
and living for awhile In the past? It's the best way ln the world
to store energy for the future. Why not go? You can get away
If you'll just make bp your mind that you can, and you couldn't
have a better excuse than these
'.OW RATES
On October 19, Rock Island agents will have on sale at great
reduction, round trip tickets to many points in Ilinols, Kentucky,
Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Ontario.
On Oct. 9 and 23, Nov. 13 and 27, similar reduced rates to
many points ln Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ne-
braska, North and South Dakota and Wisconsin.
LET THE NEAREST ROCK ISLAND AGENT TELL YOU
ALL ABOUT THESE HOME VISITORS' EXCURSIONS.
Miw
©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©
GEO. H. LEE,
Gen. Pass. Agt.,
Little Rock, Ark.
J. S. McNALLY,
Dlv. Pass. Agt.,
Oklahoma City, O. T.
"*©©©f ©v©©*? *•■
©
©
©
«
©
a
©
«
#
©
*
©
€
©
a
©
©
©
©
©
©
t LOUIS
* PAUL
LIMITED
ANEW TRAIN
VIA
A NEW ROUTE
Children cat. sleep and grow after
aking Holllster's Rock Mountain Tea
Brings rosy cheeks, laughing eyes,
good health and strength. A tonic for
sickly children. Ta or Tablets, 35
cents. Shawnee Drug Co. •
a man of human Impulse, who
would not '.vining harm a kitten, is
guilty of cruelty where his own stom-
ach is concerned. Overdriven, over-
worked, when what it needs is some-
thing thai will digest the food eaten
and help the stomach to recuperate.
Something like Kodol for Dyspepsia
that is sold by J. E. Cockrell. *
DAY BOARDERS.
108 North Beard street. Prices reas-
sonable. 18-lm
ever produced in America, and not one
should fall to see it.
Will be in Shawnee, Wednesday,
October 31.
Taken Up.
One white pided cow with red neck,
mark on left ear, crooked horn and
one red dehorned cow. Owner can
have same by calling on E. D. Berry
at 806 South Oklahoma and paying for
the feed and advertising. E. D. Ber-
r- 16-4t
THE WABASH LINE
Has inaugurated through daily (ram service
between St. Louis and Minneapolis and St.
Paul, in connection with the Iowa Central R'y
and the Minneapolis St. Louis R. R.
Trains run through solid without
change, consisting cf Pullman Buffet
Palace Sleeping Cars, Free Reclining
Chair and Combination Cars.
LEAVE ST. LOUIS 2.IO P. M. DAILY,
L
Arrive Minneapolis,
Arrive St. Paul.
. P. CONNER, S. W. P. A..
DALLAS, TEX.
• 8.15 a.m.
• • 8.50 a.m.
C. S. CHAN*. 0. P. 4 T. A^
ST. LOUIS. MO.
The News 10c a week
Spend 10c to get the ne i
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View four places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 314, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1906, newspaper, October 19, 1906; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc138107/m1/4/?q=Ardmore+ok&rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.