Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 131, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 4, 1915 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Sapulpa Herald
Sapulpa, CukkkCounty, Oklahoma
Published every day except Sundays
and holidays._
Entered as second-class matter, Sep-
tember 3, 1914, at the post office at
Sapulpa, Oklahoma, under the act of
M irch 3, 1879. __
0. S. Toi»d__________ Editor
J. W. Youno......Business Manager
SUBSCRIPTION
Week .............-...........
Three month*....................
Year...............—..........400
AUVKKTISINO UATK6 0N APPLICATION
Ohio out of
Annual season note:
Its banks.
-oOo--
Progressive age. Physicians at Al-
tus have given a man an almost new
stomach. Perhaps we shall yet have
different styles in them.
-oOo--
A jury in Oklahoma county gave
the widow of a cotton gin employe,
a colored man, killed by a falling
bale of cotton, 11500 damages. The
suit was for |14,0©0.
Mrs. Edward Hauck of Seattle,
claims to have not slept but a half
hour in seven years. Bet she hasn't
missed a tihng that has happened
In the neighborhood.
-oO»-
We have lost our opinion of Car-
ranza as a true Mexican sport. He
allowed his brother to be lined up
against the wall and used for a tar-
get along witk some other disturb-
ing revolutionists, the other day.
-oOo-
Now America is called upon to
save starving Poland. Another boost
for wheat and every other thing
that finds its way to the inner man
1 believe It would pay mere folks
of this country to favor the calling
off of war.
-oO* - ■
If any of the readers of this paper
are laboring under the impression
that they can commit almost any
old offense in this state and escape
the penalty they should read the
article in another column in which
fhe governor and the chairman of
the board of prison control discuss
matters leading up to “butchering
day " It Is a discussion which should
be calculated to cast chills down the
spine of the average intending offen-
der.
---oOo-
TO AVOID SALUTING THE FLAG
Turkey owes us an apology and
we owe Colombia an apology, so
why not have Turkey apologize to
Colombia, thus squaring things all
around and saving our face. The
beauty of this scheme is that we
wouldn't need to make the Sultan
salute the flag.—Phoenix.
-oOo-
HOPES FOR THE PINKHAM BILL
The bill by Mr. Plnkham, recently
introduced in the legislature seek-
ing to clothe the governor with the
power to remove or suspend de-
linquent officials, ought to be proper-
ly enacted Into law. Governor Cruce
and Governor Haskell both urged
such a measure but in each case
such bills fell to pieces because of
jealously and factional trouble. It
seems that this year there is entire
harmony between the governor and
both branches of the legislature.
This ought to Insure the passage of
the Pinkham bill. -Ttmes-Democrat.
was that he was one of the Browns
of Rhode Island.
Here is what they gave him: A
cradle of mother-of-pearl; a cow that
drank only distilled water, fed in a
$100,000 clover field under care of
her own physician, and was milked
by a special maid; a palatial yacht;
a special cook; squabs and chickens
bred especially for him; a pond in
his house in which he could wade
or sail boats; special valets; and al-
ways special physicians.
Of course what ails Johnny Is as
plain as the nose on your face—they
haven“t let him be a boy.
He's had too much care, too little
dirt and real human experience.
They've treated him so like an
angel that he's likely to fly away
and be one.
They worked along artistic and
ethereal lines while the real boy of
him has reverted to the famous
Browns of Rhode Island who had to
roll up their pants and dig clams for
a living.
They’ve thought that millions buy
sturdiness, manhood and health
while they really buy ease, luxuries,
doctors and pills and they’ve got
poor Johnny crammed full of the
latter things, figuratively speaking.
Mother-of-pearl cradles, special
cows, special servants, special doc-
tors produce one sort of boy.
Johnny is a legitimate product.
You can pet to death the oneriest
cactus that grows in Arizoa. From
cradle to date they’ve been distilling
and specializing the boy out of
Johnny.
This is what ails him, and we're
really sorry for him, because the
fellow who is never permitted to be
a real boy misses things which jus-
tify him in holding a deep grudge
against the world, including the
Browns of Rhode Island.—Wichita
Beacon.
-oOo---
NO MALICE IN ELEPHANTS
LUCK
Good Nature Characteristic of Jungle
Monster, Say* Traveler Who
Should Know.
In 1905 I found myself near the
Inzla, river, an important affluent of
the Kwilu, flowing through a fertile
region which Is infested by herds' of
elephants, a source of constant anxi-
ety and frequent losses to the agri-
cultural Inhabitant, writes E. Torday
In the Wide World Magazine. In a
country like this, where he Is not
hunted by man in the ordinary way
and the only means for his destruction
are cruel but easily avoided pitfalls,
the elephant is decidedly good na-
tured. We were told by the mission
boys at Fana that in the rainless sea-
son, when their usual haunts are
dried up, the elephants frequently
wander near the river and attack the
plantations. The natives try to drive
them away with sticks! “But it is no
good hitting them or throwing stones
at them,’’ I was told; “they generally
refuse t6 take any notice. Sometimes
a mother with a calf will turn on us
and chase us for 100 yards or so, but
no real harm is meant and the ani-
mal is not really angry, for all the
signs of fury—spread ears and raised
trunk—are absent All the same we
do run away, although we know there
is no danger. One day a boy fell
when thus pursued, but the elephant
only threw sand on him.”
As L have myself seen a man just
pushed out of the way by one of these
good-natured monsters, when the an-
imal had more than enough provoca-
tion to kill him, I was Inclined to ac-
cept this account as true.
7 re
-•j
[
0
Hodge—I hear you have been hunt
Ing. Any luck?
Dodge—Yes; only one man mistook
me tor a rabbit; and he was a pool
shot.
HER WAY OUT
i; • •
USE OF SIGHT ON A RIFLE
PARTY WIDENS SWIFTLY
Necessary Because Bullet Cannot Be
Made to Travel on a
Straight Line.
The average person, if asked to ex-
plain why a rifle is sighted, would
probably be unable to do so beyond
some vague remark about taking cor-
rect aim.
Sights are necessary because a bul-
let does not travel in a straight line,
but, under the influence of gravity and
J friction, begin to drop almost as soon
j as it leaves the muzzle. Thus the
bullet of our service rifle (Lee En-
' field) drops six inches In the first
PS
Mr. Oldwed—But you said you’c
love me as long as I lived.
Mrs. Oldwed—No. 1 said I'd low
you until you died.
HARD HIT
Revolting Senators Flayed by Stone
, ... , . .... ,, . 100 yards, but when It has gone 200
of Missouri, Little Hope for Bill I . . . .
yards it will have dropped not 12
Washington Feb 4.—Plans of ad-
ministration democrats to save the
government purchase bill went awry
today in the senate, but champions
of the measure had not abandoned
hope of success in an effort to re-
commit the bill tomorrow with def-
inite instructions for its amend-
ment.
The revolting democrats flatly
refused to accept the concessions of
the majority, agreed upon in th<-
secret caucus last night, and the
majority leaders discovered early in
the day that they could not mus-
ter enough votes for their program
to defeat the coalition of republi-
cans and insurgent democrats seek-
ing to send the bill to committee
without instructions to be pigeon-
holed for the session.
yards
inches, but two feet. The drop In-
creases by leaps and bounds with
the distance. Were there no sights
on the rifle and you wanted to hit a
mark at 200 yards, you would clearly
have to aim two feet above It.
This would be awkward, for you
would lose sight of the object aimed
at, to say nothing of the difficulty of
correctly estimating a distance of
two feet at 200 yards.
The sights of a rifle enable you to
keep your eye on the mark, although
the muzzle of the rifle is actually
pointed above it. The moving slide of
the "back sight enables you automat-
ically to point the muzzle just so
many feet above the mark aimed at
as is necessary to counteract the
known drop of the bullet at various
ranges.—London Answers.
-A
C (w-
3
"What's the matter? Neuralgia?'
"Naw; tramp with a wooden leg!’
WRONG GUESS
‘•PUSSY-FOOT'* NOW PUBLISHER
Certain publishers in Oklahoma
should cheer up. What is advertised
as the "dryeat” publication in exis-
tence is that just launched in the
‘•New Republic’’ by William E. John
son, known to every fellow who
tried to evade the prohibition law
in this field as "Pussy foot” Johnson,
a name he earned by his ability to
slip up on them.
Johnson Issues his paper at Wes
tervllle, Ohio, and advertises it as
the “Snappiest four-page paper in
existence” regardless of the fact
that it Is “extra dry." It is needless
to say that there is not much com
fort for the bootlegger In Us editor
ial utterances, and It is not to be
supposed that they make up the en-
tire subscription list.
--oOo--
THE POOR LITTLE FELLOW
John Nicholas Brown, 14 years
oldi possessing $22,000,000 and known
as the ’’richest boy," has arrived
In Southern California in his private
car, accompanied by servants enough
to make a small army, and doctors
and nurses enough to kill a big one.
Johnny is in very bad health and
has alwaya been more or lees of an
invalid and we’re sorry for him.
He ia one of the Browns of the
famous Browns of Rhode Island and
the first thing he learned in his life
The American Boy
Biggest, brightest and best maga-
zine for boys in all the world. You
need never worry about your boy’s
company when he is chumming with
the American Boy. It is the greatest
adjunct to refined home training.
Wins every boy's confidence and en-
thusiasm. Bright, breezy, stories of
adventure, travel, history, biography,
nnd world events. Beautifully illus-
trated. Proper amount of sports and
games, and practical departments of
photography, electricity, stamps, cur-
ios, carpentry, mechanics, how to do
things, how to make things. It is do-
ing more for the healthy entertain-
ment and uplift of boys than any
other single influence. Has the en-
thusiastic support of over 250,000
boys, and their parents thoroughly
respect it for the good it does their
boys. Give your boy a magazine of
his own. Subscription price $1 a
year. Published by the Sprague Pub-
lishing company, Detroit, Mich. Adv.
'¥' FOR TIRED
SORE, ACHING FEET
Ah! what relief. No more tired feet;
Bo more burning feet, swollen, bad smell-
ing, sweaty feet. No more pain in corns
callouses or bunions. No matter what
ails your feet
or what under
the sun you’ve
tried without
getting relief,
just use “TIZ.”
“T1Z” draws
out all the poi-
sonous exuda-
tions which puff
np the feet;
‘TIZ’’ is mag-
ical; “TIZ” is
grand; “TIZ”
will cure your
foot troubles so
you’ll never limp or draw up your face
in pain. Your shoes won’t seem tight
and your feet will never, never hurt or
get sore, swollen or tired.
Get a 25 cent box at any drug or
department store, and get relief
Change of Denomination.
The collector of bridge tolls in a
Scottish border town was quite a char-
acter in his way. Upon one occasion
a large party of American clergymen,
who were visiting Scotland, came to
survey the classic Borderland. The
end of the bridge bears a notice that
not more than ten people are allowed
on it at once, but the clerics chose to
diregard this, and went on in a body.
The collector saw them from his
little sentry box, and rushed out.
"Back oft that bridge!" he shouted,
but unused to such tones the clerics
pressed on.
"Back off that bridge!” shouted the
collector again.
“But, my good man.” expostulated
the foremost, "do you know that we
are members of the Pan-Presbyterian
congress?”
“Ye may call yourselves Pan-Pres-
byterian or pot-Presbyterian," roared
the collector, 'but if ye no gang all
that bridge ye'll be a' Baptists in twa
meenits."
Cholly—You look down In th«
mouth.
Willy—That s not It at all I had
a sore throat, the doctor looked down
my mouth, and charged me ten dol-
lars.
NEVER KNOWN TO FAIL
One Dog Tax the State Has to Pay.
“What,” asks the Mexican hairless
philosopher of the Topeka Capital,
“has become of the watchdog?" And
here is the Emporia Gazette's answer:
"He is. so far as we can make out
from a cursory glance at the Kansas
papers, making arrangements to come
to Topeka during this legislature as
the watchdog of the treasury.' And
he isn't much of a dog—as dogs go.
This state has paid more dog taxes on
watchdogs of the treasury than the
nation has paid on Its dogs of war;
personally we have a low opinion of
all dogs—that grow less than four
legs!”—Kansas City Star.
Their Advantage.
"Yes,” said the world traveler, “the
Chinese make It an invariable rule to
settle all their debts on New Year’s
day.”
“So I understand,” said the Ameri-
can host, "but, then the Chinese don’t
have a Chriotmas the week before '—
Ladies’ Home Journal.
Why They Never Buy Havanas.
“What kind of cigars do you wish
to give your husband, madam—Ha-
ma or domestic?”
"Oh, domestic by all means. I’m
riving them to him tc encourage him
o spend bis evenings at home, you
know."—Judge.
K
The melancholy days are here.
We feel with trepidation.
When 'round us fallen leaves do lit
And folks about vacation.
NOTICE
Sapulpa, Oklahoma, February, 4th, 1915
In keeping with letter under date of January 28th, 1915, this
day retrieved from the Comptroller of the Currency, Washington,
1). C., the unden-igned desire to inform thiir patrons that from this
date on, it will 'positively he necessary that sufficient funds be on de-
pTsiT with them to covtr all cheeks presented for payment, or pay-
ment will have to he refi.sed.
Quoting from the above mentioned letter of January 28, we
are instructed as follows :
“To adopt a resolution directing that no officer or employee of
our bank shall pay or charge to the account of any depositor, any
check of such dejiositor when there are not sufficient funds on de-
posit to the credit of the drawer of the cheek to meet the same.”
We sincerely trust that our patrons will appreciate our position
in this matter, and co-operate with us, and under no circumstances
feel that it is our desire to work a hardship on som«5 one in particu-
lar by refusing payment of a check that is in excess of their balance
on hand.
Due to these instructions we are hound to refuse payment of
checks drawn in excess of your balance and, tor your benefit as well
as*ours, you will kindly see that your account i4 in shape to meet
checks that are issued.
The First National Bank
By C. J. BENSON, President
The Sapulpa State Bank
By H. F. NlIlCHELL, Cashier
The American National Bank
By W. E. BROWN, Cathier
SALES IN HOI WATER
CLEARS PIMPLY SKIN
Says we Must Make Kidneys Clean
the Blood and Pimples Disappear
NOTICE
Kid’s Regiment
Mrs. Blunderby—My sister, Kate
who married the Englishman, write*
me that her boy is going to tight.
Mrs. Kawler—Dear me! Un't be
rather young?
Mrs Blunderby—Well, yes; but. you
see, he's going to joio the infantry.—
Boston Evening 'transcript.
Pimples, sores and boils usually re-
sult from toxins, poisons and impuri-
ties which are generated in the bow-
els and then absorbed Into the blood
through the very ducts which should
absorb only nourishment to sustain
the body.
It is the function of the kidneys to
filter impurities from the blood and
cast them out In the form of urine
but in many instances the bowels
create more toxins and impurities
than the kidneys can eliminate, then
the blood uses the skin pores as the
next best means of getting rid of
these Impurities which often break
out all over the skin in the form of
pimples.
The surest way to clear the skin
of these eruptions, says a noted
authority, is to get from any phar-
macy about four ounces of Jad Salts
and take a tablespoonful in a glass
of hot water each morning before
breakfast for one week. This will
prevent the formation of toxins in
the bowels. It also stimulates the
kidneys to normal activity; thUB
coaxing them to filter the blood of
impurities and clearing the skin pim-
ples.
Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless
and Is made from the acid of grapes
and lemon Juice, combined with
lithia. Here you have a pleasant, ef
fervescent drink which usually
makea pimples disappear: cleanses
the blood and is excellent for the
kidneys as well. Adv
r APPLICATION
TAX DEED
Ftate of Oklahoma. Creek Co. sa.
To whom It May Concern) and
William Winters.
You are hereby notified that the
fo’lowing described land situated in
Creek County, Oklahoma, to-wlt:
fcouthwest Quarter of Northwest
Quarter; and WVst Half of South-
west Quarter of Sec. 14, T. 14 N.,
R. 10 E.
all in Creek County, Oklahoma, was
on the 24th day of Nov., 1912, duly
sold by the county treasurer of said
County, State of Oklahoma, in man-
ner provided by law for the delin-
quent taxes assessed thereon for the
year 1911, A. ©.; that at said sale,
there being no bidders offering the
amount due for said taxes, said treas-
urer of said County and State did
bid off all the above described real
estate so offered at said sale for the
amount of Bald taxes, penalties, in-
terest and costs due and unpaid
thereon in the name of Creek Coun-
ty, State of Oklahoma; and that
thrreafter, to-wlt: On the 3rd day of
June, 1914, the undersigned purchased I
frem said treasurer of Creek County,
State of Oklahoma, the right of said
Comty in and to all the above de-
sc’bed real estate and then and
thue received an assignment and
transfer of the tax sale certificate
theretofore issued covering ail the
above described lands.
WHEREFORE, you are further no-
FOR tif'ed hereby that unless redemption
is made by some person authorized
by law to redeem said land from such
sale within sixty days after the date
of service of this notice, a tax deed
will be demanded and will issue as
provided by law conveying to the un-
dersigned the said property herein-
above described.
STEPHEN B. NELSON,
Tulsa, Oklahoma, Holder of Tax
Ceitificate No. 13275.
“TIZ" FOR ACHING,
SORE, TIRED FEET
Good-bye sore feet, burning feet, swol-
len feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired
feet.
Good bye corns, callouses, bunions and
raw spots. No
more shoe tight-
ness, no more limp-
ing with pain or
drawing up your
face in ago ay.
"TIZ” is magical,
arts right off.
“TIZ” draws out
all the poisonoua
exudations which
puff up the feet.
Use “TIZ” and for-
get your foot
misery. Ah! how comfortable your feet
feel. Get a 25 cent box of “TIZ” now at
any druggist or department store. Don’t
suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet
that never swell, never hurt, never get
tired. A year’s foot comfort guaraateed
or money refunded.
STREET-WILSON
The best, biggest and busiest
Furniture Store in Sapulpa
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Todd, O. S. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 131, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 4, 1915, newspaper, February 4, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1519140/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.