The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Indian Terr.), Vol. 19, No. 38, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 26, 1906 Page: 7 of 8
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PROFESSIONAL CAK1M
W. 0. BLAKE E. W. BLAKE
BLAKE & BLAKE
Physicians and Surgeons
Diseases of Women
A Specialty
Town anil Country Calls Promptly
Answered. Residence Phone No. 4
Office in in the Stapler Building
J. T. PARKS
Attorney at Law
Land, Oil and (ins
Leases Bought and Sold
Practice in all the courts. Office in the
Fite Building
TAHLEQUAH, I. T.
WILLIAM F. RASMUS
Attorney and
Counselor at Law.
NOTARY PUBLIC
Rooms 1 and 2, over Cherokee National
Bank, with Attorney J. L. Harnage.
TAHLEQUAH, I. T.
BREAD, PIES
AND CAKES
FRESH EVERY DAY
Clean and wholesome.
Banquet orders receive
prompt attention. We
close Sundays. Phone 18
HOME BAKERY
HARNAGE ANI)
CARDING
Fresh arid Salt
Meats
1
Phones 67 and 174
FREE DELIVERY
I E. H. LANDRUMI
* y.
NOTARY PUBLIC
AND = I
FIRE INSURANCE
When you are compelled to leave h
home for a short time it lessens V
the anxiety to know that should 8
misfortune come to the premises ?§
you know that your insurance
will go very far toward rebuilding 8
FRANK LEWIS
SURVEYOR
Seven Years Service in
Survey and Allotment of
Indian Lands in Ind. Ter.
Allotment of Land and
Surveys in Contest Cases
Estimates on Earthwork
mid Reports on Sewerage
Plants Made a Specialty
TAHLEQUAH, IND. T,
I. E. TRENT
K. O. TRENT
TRENT
BROTHERS
Oil and Qas Leases, Land
and Insurance
Uorrcopondence Nollulted
TAHLEQUAH, INDIAN TER.
Must Serve Sentence
In an opinion by Justice Brewer, the
supreme court of the United States de-
nied the i>etition for a writ of habeas
corpus in the case of James Lincoln,
who was convicted in the United Stag's
district court of Nebraska on an indict-
ment charging the unlawful introduc-
tion of liquor into the Indian Winne-
bago reservation. Ke was found guilty
and sentenced to imprisonment for six-
ty days and pay a fine of ♦l(M). His dis-
charge was asked for on the alleged
ground that the United States court had
no jurisdiction of the offense charged. !
In dismissing the case the court said:
"While .'he court has authority to issue
writs of h<tl>eas corpus for the discharge
FULLBLOODS ARE PAUPERIZED
Indiana Neort Money to Improve Their
Homestead* Congressmen Take
Wrong View of Conditions.
In answer to certain questions recently
propounded concerning the alleged oil
lease frauds in Indian Territory, J. B.
Shoenfelt, ex-United States Indian agent,
said that 'the question of fraud was
greatly exaggerated and overdrawn.
The department and the senators, lie
said, get a wrong idea of conditions
here, and at once smell treachery and
jump at the conclusion that the Indian
I is lieing roblied. The only objection the
j department could raise in this connec-
tion is that certain individuals have ta
of any person imprisoned within the ' . m— than th ur,,,n(itKt to,
limits of the United States in violation accordi to the rules lincl regulations,
of the constitution of laws of the Uni-
ted States, yet unless there is some
s]>ecial reason calling for the exercise
of such authority, a party convicted in
a trial court should pursue his remedy
by writ of error and this court can't lx
expected in every case, esirecially every
I etit case of alleged wrongful convic-
tion, to inquire by habeas corpus into
the legality of the conviction. In this
case it is held that there are no s]>ecial
reasons justifying a departure from the
ordinary and orderly mode of proceed-
nre."
A Positive Necessity.
Having to lay upon my tied for four-
teen days from a severely bruised leg, I
only found relief when I used a bottle of
Ballard's Snow Liniment. I can cheer-
fully recommend it as the best medicine
for bruises ever sent to the afflicted. It
has now becomeapositivenecessityupon
myself. D. R. Byrnes, merchant, Dov-
ersville, Texas. 2r<c, 50c and f 1.00. Sold
by Crew Bros, and all druggists.
Swell Up Like a Toad.
Men clothed in a little brief authority
cannot be warned too often against swell-
ing up like a poisoned pup and assuming
airs that they will soon have to doff. Be
decent and wise, and when you retire
from power, which you must soon do,
you will have the respect and good will
of your neighbors, which lasts forever,
and is worth much more than the trap-
pings of present and passing power.—
Collinsville News.
Pir?" . Foley's Honey and Tar
Foley & Co., Chicago, originated
Honey and Tar as a throat and lung
remedy, and on account of the great
merit and popularity of Foley's Honey
and Tar many imitations are offered for
the genuine. These worthless imita-
tions have similar sounding names. Be-
ware of them. The genuine Foley's
Honey and Tar is in a yellow package.
Ask for it and refuse no substitute. It
is the best remedy for coughs and colds.
Crew Bros.
Early Statehood Predicted.
Inspector J. Geo. Wright has returned
from Washington where he has been for
several weeks in the interest of legisla-
tion affecting Indian Territory. Mr.
Wright states that the general sentiment
in Washington seems to be that Indian
Territory and Oklahoma will get state-
hood before the close of the present ses-
sion of congress.
A New Theory.
Bunnell's Catarrh Cure advances a new
theory in the treatment of catarrh. It
penetrates the entire head cavity, kill
the germs, removes the dead tissue, and
is the only internal antiseptic, germ-
destroying and microbe-killing remedy-
ever discovered. Bunsen's Catarrh Cure
is entirely new, and is postively guaran-
teed to do better in all cases of nasal ca-
tarrh, catarrh of the head and hay fever
than any other remedy. Price 50 cents
per box. For gale by Crew Bros.
Where News is Appreciated
It is rather a remarkable fact that In-
dian Territory, which two years ago did
not have a single paper with an asso-
ciated press report, now has eight papers
carrying associated press franchises.
Indian Territery has a larger number of
franchises than are found in Idaho, Ma-
ryland, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada,
New Hampshire, New Mexico, North
Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota and
Wyoming.
Itching and Burning.
Eczema, tetter and piles are quickly
cured by Boro-Carbol Salve. It absorbs
the tumors, allays the itching at once,
acts like a poultice and gives instant re-
lief. Boro-Carbol Salve is the only rem-
edy for these diseases that is sold on a
positive guarantee. No cure, no pay.
Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Crew
Bros.
because they are stockholders in differ-
ent corporations.
According to the regulations of the
interior department, no corporation or
individual can hold more than 4,800
acres of oil leases on land in the Terri-
tory where the restrictions have not been
removed. Probably some of the oil
companies have violated some of these
regulations, but the regulations now in
force thoroughly protect the Indian, and
he cannot possibly lose.
The producers do not pay the royal-
ties, but the persons who buy the oil,
and in addition the government has a
field inspector who at all times has access
to the books of any oil company, includ-
ing the Prairie Oil & Gas Co., which is
known to be a branch of the Standard.
From the fact that congressmen feel
that the Indian is being grafted, they
are delaying statehood and the removal
of the restrictions. The provision in the
Curtis bill whereby a full blood is not
permitted to sell his allotment for a pe
riod of twenty-five years, is calculated
to paujierize the very person the govern
ment is trying to protect. The lands he
holds are as naked as nature made them
no improvements dots his acres, for he
has not the money with which to make
the improvements, and this leaves him
at the mercy of the grafters.
If congress would pass an act allowing
the fullblood to post his surplus to be
sold to the highest bidder, the sale to be
made by the Inuian agent, it would per
mit the Indian to live and get a start.
Thousands of fullbloods know the value
of money as well as the white man, and
the restrictions on f ullbloods is a serious
blow not only to the Indian himself, but
to the entire Indian Territory. The gov-
ernment held cut promises when they
ratified the agreements with the Indians
that under certain conditions they might
dispose of their lands. The Curtis bill,
however, takes this privilege away, and
the Indian therefore could scarcely be
expected to come in as a cheerful citi /on.
"So far as the Indian is concerned,"
says Mr. Shoenfelt, "I cannot see how
he can be defrauded under the present
regulations. Every possible safeguard
has been thrown around the leases to
protect the Indians, but I have no doubt
that some companies have violated the
regulations as to the amount of acreage
allowed. Secretary Hitchcock is justi-
fied in goiug after the straw men, but
he should not go broadcast and say that
the people are robbing the Indian."
Deaths from Appendicitis.
Deaths from this most dreaded afflic-
tion decrease in the same ratio that the
use of Dr. King's New Life Pills in-
creases. They save you from danger
and bring quick and painless release
from constipation and the ills growing
out of it. Strength and vigor always
follow their use. Guaranteed by Crew
Bros., druggists: 25c: try them.
Crystal Springs
Water Company
( ames a full line of plumbing goods, also a full
line of steam fitting goods, pipes from 14 in. to
I in. (ilolh's, valves, all kinds of steam fittings.
Office oue block west of the land office building
TAHLEQUAH, INDIAN TERRITORY
The Old Man's Letter.
An old gentleman answered the letter
of his son at*C3llege as follows: "Dear
Billy; I got your letter, which you said
was wrote in Greek; but I didn't read
it to your mother, as you know she is
afraid of lightenin', and I didn't want
to risk it with her, as it looks like zig-
zag lightenin' in print as if you had
took a snapshot at a thunderbolt, aj' it
landed upside down. ' All that I did get
the hang of wuz the postscript—where
you drawed on me for $100 in the
American language. You'll oblige me,
next time you write, by writin' in
American and drawin' on me in Greek. "
DeBells Kidney Pills Free.
To prove the merit of DeBell's Kidney
Pills, we are giving one full size box
free to all Kidney sufferers. This is the
only absolute cure for all kinds of Kid-
ney trouble. Cut this coupon out and
send it to C. W. Beggs, Sons & Co.,
Chicago, Station C. For sale by Crew
Bros.
Cures Biliousness, Sick
Headache, Sour Stom-
ach, Torpid Liver and
Chronic
Pleasant
□BIND
Cleanses the system
thoroughly and clears
sallow complexions of
Constipation. I ovoilira Emit Cvfilfl pimples and blotches,
it to take LcUdllYe 1TIJU Jjrup It is guaranteed
J.
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VW
HENRY DICK
TAHLEQUAH, I. T.
Buy and sell oil, mineral and agricultural
leases in Cherokee Nation. Removal of
restrictions and sale of lands with restrict-
ions removed, my specialty. Correspond-
ence solicited. Office upstairs Crew Block
The Arrow
ti
JOB PRINTING
Is guaranteed to be
the best, cheapest
and the neatest or
your money back
If you want results
from your advertis-
ing you should use
the Arrow columns
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4 s 3 s 4 * s s 3 3 3; 4 s a * 3.? 3 a 3 3 si'<
TIME TABLE
In Effect Jan. 17,1906
Westbound.
51
ori
9:15 a m
9:42 a m
10:20 a rn
11:10 a m
12:22 p m
2:55 p m
4:00 p m
5:18 p rn
fi:lT p ra
7:00 p rn
8:30 a ra
8:47 a m
9.07 a in
9:28 a rn
9:58 a m
11:08 a m
11:33 a m
12:17 p ra
12:47 p m
1:10 p ra
2:00 p m
2:55 p rn
STATIONS.
Eastbound.
52 56
4:15 p
m
5:45
P
m
farmington
8:95 p
m
5:10
P
ra
3:37 p
ra
4<33
p
m
3:15 p
ra
3:47
p
2:45 p
m
2:45
P
ID
1:28 p
m
12:17
P
m
TAHLEQUAH ... .
1:02 p
m
11:33
a
m
Melviu
12:17 p
ra
9:42
a
ra
Fort Gibson
11:47 a
ra
8:35
a
ra
11:?5 a
m
7:45
a
m
10:32 a
m
9:40 a
m
and are Kpgutar Mull uii<l l*a ari.ger Trttlun.
Close connection is made at Fayetteville with train No. 12 for Monette,
Springfield, Kansas City, St Louis, Memphis and all points East and North.
Hates, connections, etc. , furnished upon application. It is no trouble to an-
swer inquiries. For further information appiv to L. W. PRICE, Division
Passenger Agent, Joplin, Mo., or J. D. PARSONS, Local Agent.
You Have Malaria!
HiMms
WILL CURE YOU
0URES
LIVER TROUBLES
BEST FOR
CONSTIPATION
GUARANTEED
PRICE SO CENTS
FOR SALE BY CREW BROTHERS DRUGGISTS
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Hudson, Waddie. The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Indian Terr.), Vol. 19, No. 38, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 26, 1906, newspaper, May 26, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc155887/m1/7/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.