The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, December 25, 1908 Page: 13 of 16
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The Ftr.it Christmas
Why Were the Wis a Men Three f
M ]Vky ivtrt tht li'iti Mtn three.
i p/A'v4 t>r t>-vtn f "
They h ci to m«tch you tea,
Tho trchar.gcls in Heaven.
Ood tent than, ura and «wift.
By H! my {«f!oca proMte.
To bear the thrtc/old !'t
And take tho threefold mos'^c
Fro*
Thut In their hands were so?n
The fold of pur^nr Boauty.
Tha myrrh of Truth ail-clean,
The frankincense of Duty.
Ood cert them fore sign
He wyuld not change n.->r ait«r
Hi.i (oou and fall* design,
However man may filler.
Whoao v^cu d tr.ark and reach
The I it q ho I'-nre-t treasure, The height of man's ligation
>! .' •••*« r~\ a day, Mu t sli!1 Adhlevo and teach
T 3 sur li/e'fi new meaeu-e. The triplicate perfection.
Tki U 'it? Men from tke E,. st," by Bliss Car may«,
LOCAL MEWS NOTES.
fir
' V
Fresh oysters Bit; I.
See J. B. Moore for <:h> ip homes.
A talent unused is iu ei' _-t a talent
unpossessed.
Often the largest vine yield? the
smallest potatoes.
There's many a rosy appi • that in
rotten at the c ire.
A man needs "sand in In - g'/zurd
much as does the Lien.
The "shoe that fits your foot the
best may pinch you th ■ hardest.
Two nice business lots for sale, 011
Muskogee Ave. See R 13. Bean.
The mtn viu the least brains usually
i babbles the loudest.
"Blind as a bat" applies to hiin who
loves darkness rather th in light.
The man who talks the loudest is
often the one who does tho least.
Ne -r mind the roughness of your
amble, if you have tho grit t> get up
i again.
Fresh white perch, dates, figs,
oysters New York catawba grapes,
lettuce and all kinds of fsesh fruit.
Tahlequah Fruit Co. Phone 83.
i The d( : that harks the fiercest when
I in.-id ■ the yard may be the first to run
back whan the gate is opened.
Fur chauped hands, face and lips Pine
Salve carbolized is iinmediate relief,
acts like a poultice). Good for cuts,
onrt:s, brui- s, ~kin diseases. Draws
->ut inflammation. Price 23c, Try it
Hold by Crew Bros.
The man who lives ' from hand to
Fresh oysters, eel"ry and ail kinds of mouth while he is young may end by
Tahlequah Fruit
reason
because
SO 111"
they
men
have
fruits at the
Phone 82.
Perhaps tin
like snails is
"backbone.'
The human mind i-
the owner of which
treasures it contains.
A spendthrift is a Iran who buys
pocketbook with his last e >: 0 and
has nothing to put in it.
Wire! Wire!! Win"' A carload
of all kinds of wire just received by the
Southern Mercantile Co.
The man lion, like his four footed
friend may be mainly for show and is
best admired from a distance.
like a storehouse
knows not what
then
Co. iii.gging from door to door when he is
old.
DeWitt's Carbolized Witch Hazel
Halve has many imitators. There is
O' e original, and the name DeWitt is
on every box. Best salve for bums,
scratches and hurts. It is especially
good for piles. Sold by Crew Bros.,
druggists.
Tho Kansas and "M issouri farm jour-
nal for one year and the ARROW from
now until January 1st 1910 for $1.00.
Subscribe now.
Just a little Cascasweet is all that is
necessary to give your baby when it is
cross and peevish. Cascasweet contains
no opiates nor harmful drugs and is
has just received a fresh line of
andies. At the postoftice stan l.
Uninterrupted prosperity unmixed
by pain or sorrow would not prove a
blessing. All sunshine means a d >-
sert.
When you get the mail remember to
take a little change to buy some of that
delicious candy for sale at the postoffieo
stand.
The man who digests nothing that
he reads is like the owl that has no
gizzard. But he will hardly be regard
ed as go wise.
highly recommended by mothers every
The Pioneer Confectionery Company .,vhere. Conforms to the National Pure
Food and Drug law. Sold by Crew
Bros,, druggists.
The man who has to begin at the
lwttoui has the consolation of kuowiug
that there is but one way that he can
go, and that is up.
There are many people who suffei
from backache, rheumatism, lumbag
and similar ailments who are not aware
these are symptoms of kidney trouble
Pineules for the kidneys act as a tonic
and regulator to kidneys and bladdei
and purify the blood. 30 days' trial $1
Sold by Crew Bros.
"A chip off tin# old bl< eli
the ieason why thern tin
blockhead*.
The man that shifts like t:ie sand of
the sea should have u fisticuff with a
'tir luiliy" un I learn the grace of stick-
to-it-iven«*s.
Bees 1 axative Cough Syrup is guar-
inteed. This is because we know what
it will do and want to convince you. It
is especially recommended for children
as it is pleasant to take and is gently
laxative. For coughs, colds, croup,
hoarseness, whooping cough. Price 25c,
50c and $1. Sold by Crew Bros.
To give to your friend something
fiat you cannot afford is to place an
unwelcome burden upon him the
wearing of which will gall his affection.
Why pay more when you can get,
not only 90 fine large cups of Dr.
Shoop's Health Coffee from a 25c.
package—but a coupon on a 25c.
silvered "No-Drip" coffee strainer l>e
sides? Look for the coupon—I put
them in now. The satifaction is, be-
sides most perfect. Sold by Sequoyah
Grocery Co.
The son who sits trying to learn to
play the fiddle while his mother splits
the kindling is in training to continue
the practice later on while his wife cuts
r own stove wood.
More people are taking Foley's Kid
nev Remedy every year. It is consider
-d to be the most effective remedy foi
kidney and bladder troubles that ined
ical science can devise. Foley's Kidney
Remedy corrects irregularities, builds
up worn out tissnes and restores lost
vitality. It will make you feel well
and look well.—Crew Bros.
If yo would keep vour friend be
ware how you leud him money else
your unkind kindness may prove a
knife which will cut the Iwinds of
mutual attachment.
Kodol for dyspep ia, indigestion, weak
stomach, sour stomach, gas on the atom
ach, etc., is a combination of the nat-
ural digestive juices found in a healthy
stomach with necessary vegetable acids
and is the only thing known today that
will completely digest all kinds of food
under any coudition. It is guaranteed
to give prompt relief from any form of
stomach trouble. Take Kodol and be
convinced. It will cure your dyspep
sia. Sold by Crevi Bros, druggists.
J. T. Ilukill has been appointed and
qualified to fill the vacancy in the of
fice of sheriff of Ottawa county caused
by the downfall of the former sheriff
He has appointed John Lucky as under
sheriff.
Woods Liver Medicine in liquid form
regulates the liver, relieves sick head
ache, constipation, stomach, kidney dis
orders, and acts as a gentle laxative. It
is particularly recommended for jauD
dice, chills, fever and malaria. Its
tonic effects on the entire system are
felt with the first dose. The #1 b ttle
contains 2* times as much as the 50c
size. Pleasant to take. Sold by Crew
Bros.
Some people are like chameleons
which are said to change their color to
that of any substance they may chance
to crawl upon. "When in Rome do as
Romans do "is not a safe proverb for
nn honest man.
Eat all the good food you like. Quit
dieting. You don't have to diet to cure
dyspepsia. In fact you can not cure
tyspepsia or indigestion that way, but
rather you must add strength to the
weak stomach by taking something that
will digest the food which the stomach
can not digest. Kodol is the only thing
known today that will do this, for Ko-
dol is made of natural digestive juices
found in a healthy stomach, and it di-
gests all food completely. Kodol is
pleasant to take, and is guaranteed to
give relief in any case of stomach
trouble. Sold by Crew Bros., druggists.
Some pretty girls are so full of the
lovely home sentiment that they can
sit at the piano and sing ' There's No
One So Dear As My Mother," while
their mothers are toiling in the back
yard over a steaming wash tub.
Coughs that are tight, or distressing
tickling coughs, get quick and certain
help from Dr. Shoop's Cough Remedy.
On this account druggists everywhere
are favoring Dr. Shoop's Cough Rem-
edy. And it is entirely free from opium,
chloroform, or any other stupefying
drug. The tender leaves of a harmless
lung-healing mountainous shrub give
to Dr. Shoop's Cough Remedy its cura-
tive properties. Those leaves have the
power to calm the most distressing
cough, and to soothe, and heal the
most sensitive bronchial membrane.
Mothers should, for safety's sake alone,
always demand Dr. Shoop's. It can
with perfect freedom be given to even
the youngest babies, Test it once your-
self, and see. Sold by J. W. Sutton
may tie Some people, like wasps, are noted
many chiefly bec.mse they stiug
idle linn Is are likely to go into part
nership with an empty heed.
The man with an axe to grind must
have a fool to turn the handle.
Beauty is but skin deep. The love-
liest bud may have an ugly worm at its
heart
You may heat the iron till it glows,
but if you want the sparks to fly you
must use the hammer.
President E. P. Ripley of he Santa
Fe railroad makes the positive state-
ment that there will be no more build
ing of roads by that company until
some of the provisions of the Oklahoma
constitution are modified.
The old fashioned way of dosing a
weak stomach, or stimulating the heart
or kidneys is all wrong. Dr. Shoop
first pointed out this error. This is
why his prescription Dr. Shoop's Re-
storative—is directed entirely to the
cause of these ailments--the weak in-
side or controlling nerves. It isn't so
difficult, say« Dr Shoop, to strengthen
a weak stomach, heart or kidneys, if
one goes at it correctly. Each inside
organ has its controlling or inside
nerve. When these nerves fail, then
those organs must surely falter. These
vital truths are leading druggists
everywhere to dispense and recommend
Dr. Shoop s Restorative. Test it a few-
days. and see. Improvement will
promptly and surely follow Sold by J
W. Sutton.
By Col. J. A
LEGAL XOTICES.
Notice of llfmrliiff K-tiiru of H«l« of
Krai Katitrw.
County Court, Cherokee County,
Oklahoma.
In the matter of the Guardianship of
William Carter, and Andy Carter jr.,
minors, Andy Carter Sr., Guardiau.
Notice is hereby giveu that Andy
Carter, Sr , the legally appointed, duly
qualified, and acting guardian of
William Carter, and Andy Carter jr.,
minors, has returned and presented for
confirmation and filed in this Court his
return of the sale of tho following de-
scribed real estate belonging to said
minors, to-wit:
William Car* i:—S2 of NW4 of NW4
(less 3.20 acres M. K. & T. R. R. right
of way) and N2 of SW4 of NW4 (less
68 acres M. K. & T. R R. right way)
ud SE4 ot SW4 of NW4 of Section 27,
Twp. 25 N., Range 20 E, and N2 of
NW4 of SW4 and SW4 of SW4ofNW4
of Section 27, Township 23 N., Range
20 E., containing 76 00 acres.
Audy Carter Jr.—SW4 of SW4 and
SE4of SW4 and SW4 of NW4 of SW4
of Section 15, Township 29 N., Range
19E., containing 90 acres.
That the land belonging to William
Carter was sold for $1000.00 and the
land belonging to Andy Carter Jr. was
sold for $950 00 and that the 2nd day
of January, 1909, at 10 o'clock a. m. at
the County Court, room in Cherokee
county, Oklahoma, has been duly ap
poiuted by said Court for hearing said
return, at which time any person inter
ested in said real estate may appear and
file his exceptions in writing to said re-
turn and contest the same and are
hereby referred to said return for
further particulars.
In testimony whereof I have here
unto set uiy hand and affixed the seal of
said Court this 14th day of December,
190N.
J. T. Parks,
County Judge.
Ewers & McKinley. Attys.
[First Published Dec. 18, 1908 2]
Order for Hearliig Petition to .Sell It mi
Estate.
In County Court
State of Oklahoma, \
County of Cherokee, t ' '
In the matter of the estate of Henry
Dirteater et al., minors.
Now, on this 8th day of December,
1908, Thomas Tucker, having filed
herein his petition for the sale of the
real estate described in said petition,
for reasons in said petition stated.
It is ordered, that said petitiou lie
and hereby is set for hearing on the 6th
day of January, A. D. 1909, at 10
o'clock a. m., at which time all persons
interested in said estate are required to
appear and show cause, if any they
have, why an order should not be
granted for the sale of so much of the
real estate of said Henry Dirteater
Dick Dirteater, Stan Dirteater and
Rosa Rogers, as is necessary for the
reasons in said petition stated.
It is futher ordered, that a copy of
this order be published for four sue
cessive weeks in the Tahlequah Arrow
of Tahlequah. Oklahoma.
J. T. Parks,
County Judge
Ewers & McKinley, Attys.
First published December 11, 1908-4
Story of
an Army
Christmas
WATROUS, U.S.A.
HAT was my most
memorable Christ-
mas?
"The one which al-
ways comes back to
me when thinking over
Christmas festivities—
comes rushing in at
the head of the line—
is that of 1862, but in
telling of it it will be
necessary to bring tn
the army, and I sup-
pose you do not want
anything that reminds
of war in a Christmas
talk."
From a number of
voices, childish and
others,' came: "Yes, yes; that is Just
what we want, a story about Christ-
mas in the army."
"The motion prevails, ami you shall
have what you vote for—a story of au
army Christmas." said the veteran of
three wars—the civil, Spanish-Amer-
ican and the Philippine insurrection.
"There were many troops in and
shout Manila In December, 1900. My
temporary home was with an Amer-
ican family that had rented the large,
beautiful mansion on San Sebastian
street occupied by a Spanish admiral
before Commodore Dewey sailed up
Manila bay and said: 'You may fire,
Grtdley, when ready.'
"This patriotic man and his wife, a
former Wisconsin teacher, planned a
Christmas dinner and party. They In-
vited a dozen or more officers and
their ladies. The dinner did not differ
materially from most Christmas din-
ners, yet it reminded the diners of
holiday events In far off America, and
the conversation soon turned in that
direction.
"One little army lady began to tell
about a home Christmas, Its tree and
the good cheer, when she was a small
gill. 'No other Christmas had seemed
quite so heavenly. I can see how love-
ly that tree looked; I can hear
daddy's voice as he called off the pres-
ents; can see mamma's smile as ws
children danced and chattered; 1 can
see the happy gathering about the
table Christmas-laden; I can hear
daddy's request for a blessing and—
and, well It was all so sweet and beau-
tiful. Before another Christmas came
1 hadn't any daddy.'
'The little lady's handkerchief
was not the only one that brushed
away a tear.
'Captain, this dinner reminds me
of one our fathers have told ua
about.'
"The captain was the son of a Wis-
consin soldier of the civil war, and the
speaker a lieutenant, fhe son of an-
other civil war veteran.
" 'Tell u about it,' said the wife of
another captain.
YeB, we want that story,' said an
old major of regulars, who had come
down from the civil war.
'It was after the battle of Fred-
ericksburg, Va., in 1862. Four tent-
mates, one of whom was my father,
and another the father of the lieu-
tenant here, were remembered by
their sweethearts. The four sweet-
hearts got up the nicest kind of
Christmas dinner—did all of the
cooking themselves—and sent it to
their soldier boys. Accompanying it
was a good, fat letter from each of
the girls to her particular soldier boy.
They told us of the table they set In
their small tent, of the coffee they
made, the comments as they ate the
good things, of the four sweet girls,
and how It was all enjoyed. Before
the war was over all of the boys won
commissions and were wounded, two
of them twice, yet all returned home
and married the four girls. One of
ihose girls was the best woman ever
born, and the lieutenant here will say
the same about another of the four."
" 'And I will bear the game testi-
mony as to another of those blessed
sweethearts of 1862,' said the wife of
the other captain. 'She was my
mother."
"'It Is my turn to speak,' said the
old major. 'I was one of the four
to enjoy that Christmas dinner back
of Stafford Heights, in 1862. The
mother of my bairns was second to
none of the four sweethearts.'
"Then the four—the captain, tjie
lieutenant, the other captain's wife,
and the old major—left the table,
formed fours, shook hands, laughed,
congratulated, and had such a reunion
as seldom occurs.
" 'Well, well, well, what a little bit
of a world it is, anyway,' said the
astonished hostess."
A Dangerous Operation
is the removal of the appendix by a
surgeon. No one who takes Dr. King's
New Life Pills is ever subjected to this
frightful ordeal. They work so quietly
you don't feel them. They cure con
stipation, headache, biliousness and
malaria. 25c at Crew Bros, drug store.
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The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, December 25, 1908, newspaper, December 25, 1908; Tahlequah, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc138563/m1/13/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.