The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 355, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 15, 1907 Page: 4 of 8
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The Snawnee Nev^s
TUESDAY, OCT. 1S. 1907.
10 c Per vv eek
Made in New York
WE might sell any one of a hundred
makes of Men's Clothing.
We sell Benjamin Clothing in
preference to all otters, because the Benjamin
Label is accepted
by Fashionable
New Yorkers,—the
best dressed men in the world,—as a guar-
antee of Correct Style and Superior Quality.
Correct Clothes for Men
Exclusive Agent Here.
Johnson & Dickson
Shawnee, OkJa.
| flferftoWn ft (p. yl&K
England Says,
NO ALUM
In Foop
I
In England and France the Salt
of Alum Baking Powder is pro-
hibited by Uw because of the in-
jurious effects that follow its use.
The law in the District of
Columbia also prohibits Alma
in food.
You may live where a yet you have no protection against Alum
The only sure protection against Alum in your Baking Powder is to
Say plainly-
ROYALpowdeb
ROYAL is made from Absolutely pure Cream of Tartar,—a pure Grape
product • Aids digestion—adds to the healthfuloess of food.
Get Acquainted
With the Soil
A Great. Good CtisHtv. Philippine Home Rule Will Start.
_ , * .. Manila. Oct. 15.—Great Interest .*
The latest charitable enterprise .1 (bown jn the open,ng of [he
Helen Gould la notable not only In pino Assembly, which will tak-! place
•elf, bat for Its auggestlon of a way q,jb and the arrival of Secretary
tn which the city slams may be mea* Taft, who com# a at an opportune hon?
•rably cleared of a large claaa of per time In the inauguration of Philippine
iona who helpless there, might In a "ome rule. Already the contends
1 political faction* are showing gr -at
different environment become Indus- activIly and at the caucus ^m]y
trloua and indei*?ndent Misa Gould the first brush occurred over a
bu purchased near Greeley, In Colors- motion to have the Assembly proceed-
do, a tract of 100 000 acres She Is inns op -ned with prayer. This was J«
J'OO.OOO for imple- f<*ated by 1 vote on the broad fcrouni
099 « 99 99 99 09 9 99099 99999 99 99999$
ready to expend
menta, aeed and fencing. The land Is
tx> be sold in small tracts, and the
ouyers who prove themselves worthy
will be allowed easy terms of pay
ment They will have the advantagt
of inatnictlon. with access to a library
and the sanitation of the tract will be dr^s openingsession,
superintended by skilled and practical view held by Filipino*
that affairs of church and state should
be kept distant. The caucus was at-
tended by forty-^ight delegates
The action of the Assembly ou
questions relating to the political lu
ture of the Philippines, is expected o
be determined largely by Uie opinion
expre*s*-d by Secretarv Taft in his al
Thio is the
well as
director* Early In the operation the Americana. The latter are generally
shiftless will be weeded out No bet- In favor of a specific pronouncement
ter choice of location could hare been **?"?: .. - ,.
_ , The course of legislative action will
made. The town of Greeley was set- depen<J malnl>. on tte resuU of th„
tied many years ago by colonists Sght ^ the Gomei Radicals for a,n-
from the east inspired by the advice trol of the national party. The Na-
of Horace Greelev From the begin- tionalities, when united, exercise cor.-
nlng. say. Philadelphia Ledger. It has f^lng Influence., but their Interr >
....... • ■ cine divisions gire progressive Inde-
been conducted in as orderly a fash „«.nc^DU, the balance of „„„„ It „
Ion as any New England village. No
liquor has ever been sold there; no
rough characters ever found it con
genial. It has developed Into a pros-
perous and beautiful little city of well-
kept streets and neat and luxurious
homes. It is in the midst of a vast
not likely that party spirits will pl y
much part In The Viseuib!/s eti&in,
owing to persMi?l aiffownc m vital'!
the parties.
Guerrero, one of ihe mtlv i^ade-s
in Manila, backs Gomez in his prom-
ise to secure the repeal of the drastic
• flag sedition" laws. If this iepeal is
stretch of fertile land adapted to carried through, other radical mea-
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B. & W.
Dry Goods Store
SHAWNEE, OKLA.
grains and fruits, and absolutely un-
equaled for the quality and yield of
Its potatoes.
sures probably will follow. *§•
*fhe Indications are that Manuel ^
Quezon will be the successful candi-
date for speaker. He i believed to &
be favorably regarded at Washington, 0
and his election gi.*J3 Mssuranc-3 that
no resolution for ihe independence of X
Good Housekeeping.
There is no preservative of love In
married life so sure as good house- Philippines will b« considered. Que«n ~
... . , . „ is a lawyer and in toe last insurrection v?
keeping; and there Is no profess'on so w&£ & major 1q ^ ^
absorbing, and demanding preparation X
and skill, as that of the housewife. \ ^
When a young woman marries she as Napoieon Bonaparte rr
„ . . . _ showed at the battle of AusterllU
really enter, upon the practice of a he was the grcategt ^ tbe @
life profession as does a young man Ballard's Snow Liniment has
when he is admitted to the bar, or shown the public It 1. tbe best Linl-
graduates a physician, after three or ment In the world. A quick cure for X
four years spent in preparation. The Rheumatism, Spuains, Burns, CuU, ®
man I. willing to equip himself fully «* • ^ Pitts Rodessa, La., says: @
for hi. part of the partnership. Doe. ' u9? Ballard 8. Snow LlniInent ln @
family and And it unexcelled for sore
It aeem businesslike and good faith. chest, headache, corns, In fact for
asks New York ^ < ekly, for a woman anything that can be reached by a
to take the place of the second part- liniment" AH drug stores.
ner with a moat Indifferent training. i
or none at all?
Grow the best of everything
for pleasure ard profit. Fakm and
Ranch will introduce you and direct you
on the road to success.
It tells you how in combination with
soil and climate to grow the best of every-
thing—It tells you how to harvest what
you grow, and more important still,
tells you how to market with greatest
profit what you have produced.
It has departments of
special interest to each mem-
ber of the family—father,
mother, son. daughter—and
each department contains clean, reliable, interesting,
instructive, original matter, preparedppecially for Fakm
and Ranch. No second hand or done over articles
printed first in other editions or
publications.
No whisky, patent medi-
dne or other Injurious, fraudu-
lent or unclean advertisements.
Farm and Ranch don't
claim in the reading matter to
be honest and then through i's
advertising columns lure you
into the clutches of those who
will rob you of your money, health or character.
Iti Correspondents' Department contains specially
prepared articles by successful men and women who
till the soil and know what they write about.
Ita Household Department is edited by a woman of
exnerience and ability,
tlVILIZATIOn 6E0IHS AND tNOS WITH THf PtCW -<mi?06fm
The Children's Department is pre-
sided over by a mother, assisted by
other mothers who know how to
make this department more inter-
esting than any similar department
in any other publication. It is not nec-
essary to warn the children not to read
the advertisements.
Its Fred and Feed Stuffs Depart-
ment is conducted by editors who
have made the subject a spe-
cial stuay; its veterinary de-
partment is in charge of
W-. tdiug veterinary surgeons.
That is why the most successful livestock breeders
, ,rl feeders of the Southwest file each issue of Farm and
kanch away lor future reference. The Editors of every
Department are employed be-
cause they are known to possess
ability and superior knowledge
about the topics upon which
they are to write.
Its Department of "Farmers'
Organisations" is intended to
aid in building up organiza-
tions run honestly in the interest
of actual farmers.
Editorially and every other way its proprietors and
editors li^ht tor the riHit of the producers, and will con-
tinue to no so. It has no interest in any other publication
or business not in direct line with this policy. Farm and
Ranch is the honest man's friend, the hor
o
Rich and Poor Indiana.
j Muskogee, I. T-, Oct. 15.—An equal
Columbia university, New York, is per capjta distribution a wealth is
*
to have a mathematical museum, the an impossible thjig, as li 13 >e<>& c l*ar- *1";
nucleus of which will be the collec- ly demonstrsvl in the :ni:ins if the ©
tlon of mathematical models pur- '*ve nations, in lal' 11 . -ni .ry, ai il
. , , 1 the Indians of OkliS i.ua.
chased for the university by ex-Pre.1 There are 104 000 , lnfilana
dent Seth Low at the world a Colum - jn Indian Territory. Th"re &C2 i 5,000
bian exposition In Chicago in 1893 and more in Oklahoma. !?>• act? jf con-
presented by him to the department gress and treaty stipulations the lands
of mathematics. Among other things «f these Indians were divided up
. .. .. . „„„ among them, each individual getting
will b'i a collection of models con ^ , . ... .. t
au equa| yhare with all others of h.s
atructed by Dr. Martin Schilling of This was an attempt on the
Halle, Germany, and also one belong- part of the government to distribute
ing to Prof. Welner of Darmstadt and tribal wealth which was held as a
a set of mathematical Instruments communal interest, so that every la-
from the Institute of Dr. O. Coradi of £la,n w°uld en°ushMfo; a 1,vl,n';'
. Before the allotment could be complet-
Zurlch. | e(j jn a Bingie one of the Indian na-
—— - I tions, it was discovered that some In-
The new post office building In the jjans would have ten times as much
City of Mexico is the first government wealth as other Indians. The equal ty
building In Mexico of any architec could not be maintained even a f*w
. . . .. Tf \ears and sometimes not even a few
tnral design worthy of the name, it J . _T ..
, months. Nature Itself seems to con-
is of fireproof ronstruction, its frame splre aga|nst the plan
nelng the first steel frame to go up Some Indians who refused to select
In the city. Architecturally the new allotments at all and were given laud
post office is unexcelled by any build- arbitrarily that they had never se.;J,
lug in the country, and as a thing of ""ddenly found themselves wealthy to
* ... . « cause of the discovery of some natural
, real beauty surpasses, In the opinion reBOurceB others selected allotmeuts
of many, even the congressional 11- thought to be valuable and they pn v-
brary at Washington. It Is far au- ed worth little. There are poor fu-
1 perior to any office building owned by dians and rich Indians in all of the
tbe United States government.
The girls of Plttsbnrg bid fair to
come to the relief of that city's repu-
tation. A minister who sent out calls
for a girl's ideal man received an-
swers in which "brainstorms and mol-
lycoddles" were barred from the con-! in addition to this may be added $75.)
test So, with such sound Ideas on 000 annually derived under treaty cor.-
the part of the feminine contingent, tracts. The Indians of the Osage ua
.v . .... t. « .t„ tlon and some of the Indian Territory
there Is still hope of the Smoky city 0 tr)beB arg (he rlchegt )n the wor]d b„t
regeneration.
A French barrister, whose client
had the misfortune to be found guilty,
appealed on the ground that during
the trial a Juryman waa asleep. The
court of cassation has held that the
the average per capita of all Indians
in the United States is fixed at JV
400.
has quashed tho verdict and ordered
a new trial.
five civilized tribes today and this dis-
parity exists even among those who
have not held their land long enouga
to get their patents for It.
The Indians of the United States,
of whom there are 284,000, have to.
I their credit in the United States treaa- j ^
!ury $35,000,000, on which they receive ^
an annual Interest return of $1,725,001. j
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Babbled of Braver Days.
Lawton. Okla., Oct. IB—With pralso
for General Price, a Southern hero of
luryman, being asleep, was technically the civil war, upon his quivering lips
not present during the hearing, and and memories of perhaps a score of
battles convulsing In his brain, T. n.
Hayes, a veteran of the civil war u i
der General Price, and an entl-c
stranger in this part of the country,
An army officer, who recently ap- died at the home of T. J. Timmon ,
plied for the benefit of the bankruptcy near Hess, of senility. Charitable ciU-
law had debts amounting to *11,297, zens of the community contributed to
_ . ... vr a fund for paying funeral expenses and
and assets amounting to 29. H. Is the Q,d soldler.s remalna were burl)!
out of place in the army. The field of jn a country cemetery, with an ordi-
a genius of this character is the preal , nary slab to mark his resting place,
dency of a railroad. | Hayes came to the residence of Tlm-
mons Wednesday evening and ask^a
home bunder s
guide Every home would be benefited by its weekly
visits. It costs nothing to
learu all about this
great family,
many of the most
learned, and
able and re
fined w o
men in the
Southwest.
farm and
stock journal.
Why not
try it
your home
BS|V *
Wrlto for free narrple copy and
l,..( [ r .(mi •.! .■
FARM and RANCH PUB. CO.,
>filli n,
. .... i k 1 permission to sit on the porch and rest
A woman lti Missouri has been sent weary limb8 Thlg was grantHl,
to the Insane asylum as a result of an(j he jay down upon the floor.
grief over not being able to get Into \ nervous fit soon possessed him and ^
"society." She waa Just craxy to be in a short time he was unconscioiu. i
a butterfly IIn the presence of members qf tho ^
family and a physician who had been
a i . ...... . .... 'hurriedly summoned, the old man in a
As long as it can be sustained that ha)f artlculate way and Wfth wild ges-
llQuor drinking makes women fat tlculatlons, talked of his war record
there Is no danger of women becom
Ing drunkards.
Milwaukee girls have organised a
lemon club Every well informed
young man knows what to do with s
lemon.
and the brave men with whom he
fought, and passed away later with
these things crowding into his waver-
ing brain.
Violated Internal Revenue Laws.
Guthrie, Okla., Oct 15.—The Laugh-
lin-Bowlin-Shewmake Company, a
| Guthrie wholesale liquor firm, wao
Constant complaint freezes trlnd- fined $900 in the United States dls-
shlp. i trict court here for violation of tin
- ; Internal revenue law. Convictions
A
GOOD
#
PLACE
TO
TRADE
B.
Dry
&
Goods
W.
Store
SHAWNEE, OKLA.
One good turn deserves another
were obtained on three counts.
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The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 355, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 15, 1907, newspaper, October 15, 1907; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc138301/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.