The Tahlequah Arrow (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 34, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 16, 1918 Page: 2 of 4
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TIC MUQtUfl AMOW
THIS TAHLEQUAH ARROW, TAHLEQUAH, OKLAHOMA
^>ec^th^«Rv?mennoned™^m^o
UKO. P. HARDY, Maaa^er.
ADVERTISING RATES
Display matter, run of paper, 16c
par Uch. Special position SO per
cant eitra.
Rate* for time contract! furnlahed
upon request.
Locals and Readers 6c per line to'
first insertion; le per line for each
additional Insertion
additional insertion.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Cherokee County Demoerat and
Tahlequah Arrow 91.60
*u r. oaths 76
Three moaths 40
BaterM at the Tahlequah, Okla-
>■■■ post office as seeoad-slasi
M.'! Bsatter. March «. 1111.
It could hardly be expected that the
Kaiser be an advocate of abdication.
The Kaiser is reported to have pur-
chased an estate in Norway. He
might have done better to secure an
island somewhere In 'he far seas,
where he could remain 'monarch of
all he surveyed."
Norway is probably not greatly
pleased at his selection. But what
country on the face of the earth
would welcome him as an in-
habitant ?
It is impossible to do any forcast-
ing, events are moving so rapidly. So
have been the United States armies
Cotton had climbed so high that we
anticipated it would fall.
In other words, if "Cotton is King,"
it should be kept in mind that in
these days it seems customary fo
monarchs to abdicate.
The pumkin certainly has a dual
personality. It can make the most
alarming Halloween spooks, and then
with equal readinets adapt itself ti
becoming the sweet and domestii
pumkin pie.
Everything is comparative. Three
pounds of sugar per person per month
seems like luxury now.
Before an election each party is
busy explaining why it must inevitab-
ly carry the election. After the elec-
tion one party is busy explaining
why it did not carry the election
The other party it just simply busy
The aviator at Dallas, Texas, who
set the world's record by accomplish-
ing 192 consecutive loops must have
imagined (it his finish that he ha>l
been suddenly whirled back i.* non-
prohibition days.
CASSOCKS AND KHAKI.
There are over twenty-five thous-
and Catholic priests in the French
battle line.
The regimental chaplains are there,
of course, and as France is a Catholic
country there are two priests to every
Protestant chaplain and Jewish Rab-
bi. But thousands of the priests
serve in the ranks.
There is a strategic advantage in
this. When it is necessary to send a
soldier on a dangerous mission un-
married men are at a premium, and
the priest offers himself without feel-
ing any of the compunction that
might daunt the family man. There
will fc« no orphans left destitute if h«
does not return.
Often a brother priest starts on
the same mission an hour or two later
to guarantee its execution. WhiU
not a foregone conclusion, an accident
to the first volunteer is more than a
probability. And by virtue of their
profession it is taken for granted
that both these gamblers have an out-
look on life—and eternity—which in-
vests them with a certain aloofness
They have cooler heads and steadiei
nerves than any gamester at the rou-
lette board could show. To them
death is a trivial incident; it neither
begins nor ends the progress of ex-
perience. It merely marks a change.
Incidents of this kind becomes so
common during the defense of Ver-
dun that they went unnoticed. Even
we, had we been there, would hardly
have remarked it in days so crowded
WRIGLEYS
We will win this war—
Nothing else really matters until we do!
Be patient here—Our Boys are getting
WRIGLEYS
over there!
1
.•jsv
Don't Answer"
When doubt exists as to the accuracy of such a report by the
telephone operator, there are three things to bear in mind.
First, thar it is much easier and quicker for her to ring the
called telephone than to make such a report back to the
person calling.
Second, that people these days are out and about town on
a great variety of uncommon war-time undertakings, fre-
quently leaving their homes and offices with no one to
answer the telephone.
Third, sometimes a minor and temporary disarrangement
of the called telephone prevents the bell from ringing.
Be assured that the operators are tryin
part and that their efforts, justifies
consideration.
ing
full
hard to do their
confidence and
Southwestern Bell Telephone^*,
THRIVE BY THRIFT! BUY WAR SAVING* STAMPS I
with thrills. But as we take the ques-
tionaire and rend the section that
deals with the study and profession
of divinity we realize more fully the
degree to which French man-power
has been strained. We could hardly
find such a section in a French docu-
ment of the kind.
But the French write no peace on
this feature of the wnr. When a reg-
iment is charging ground it is com-
mon to see a priest invite a Rabbi to
precede him. "After you, sir," he
says; "the Old Testament before the
New." When Proteatanta, Catholics
and Rabbis stand hourly in the face of
death and select such a time to kid
each other about questions of doctrine
that separate them, we who have not
yet faced the music would do well
to take stock of ourselves. We should
at least pause before claiming exemp-
tion in a questionnaire.
The Yank private has often seen
his Holly Joe (regimental chaplain)
steal over the top to drag in a wound-
ed rifleman. But there are many of
us who claim, on the slenderest justi-
fication, to be engaged in "essentia
occupations" who could hardly ex-
class us with Holy Joe.
0-
THE SLEEPLESS WHEELS.
Thinking in millions (of men) coat*
us no effort now. When the admini-
stration gave notice that a million
men had crossed the Atlantic we ex-
perienced a variety of thrills. Then
we got used to the idea, and the news
of 2,000.000 left us tranquil.
When we learned ti<at a large part
of our contingent were noncombatant*
certain oversenitive people felt a de-
gree of mortification. The star-span-
gled feeling was cooling off.
These oversensitive ones would feel
more chesty if they could see the non-
combatants at work. Ix-ss than a
year ago there was an unreclaimed
swamp near a French port. Your
Uncle Sam has drained it, covered it
with a series of workshops bigger
than the Capital at Washington, and
out of it he throws high caliber gur^'
like sausages out of Chicago. He
stacks machine-guns on freight-cars
like an elevator vomiting grain, nnd
away they go to the front. And
many of his larger guns contain about
8,000 parts.
In another he found workmen
querying by hand to prepare concrete
road to the trenches. He installed
mechanical cxcavators, and on the
fourth day was loading cars as fast
as they could be hauled.
Up and down France he is building
Pittsburgs and liethlehems from
which Pershing draws his supplies in
a ceaseless flood. And in the Krupp
work at Essen, where exhausted serfs
toil vainly to keep up the pace, they
are learning from hint what a real
war it like.
LEGAL NOTICES
ORDER FOR HEARING PETITION
FOR REMOVAL OF GUARDIAN
In the County Court within and for
Cherokee County, State of Okla-
homa.
la Re Willie Ford, a minor.
No. 1509 State.
Now on this 11th day of October,
1 18, this matter coming on to be
heard on the petition of Nona Ford,
for the removal of W. H. Ford,
Guardian of said minor, Willie Ford,
and the Court being fully advised in
tJi premises, the said petition is set
for hearing on the 21st day of Oc-
tooer, 1918, at 10 o'clock A. M., and
citation is ordered issued for W. H.
Bord.
It is further ordered that a copy
ot this order be published for two
•sue-, essive weeks in the Tahlequah
Arrow of Tahlequah, Oklahoma, and
by pasting copies hereof in three
puoiic places in Charokeee County,
Oklahoma.
J. D. COX,
County Judge.
(Published Oct. 12, 19)
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE OF
LANDS.
STATE OF OKLAHOMA, TO
WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.
Notice is hereby given that by vir-
ture of an order of sale issued out of
the office of the Court Clerk of Cher-
okee County, Oklahoma on he 25th,
day of Oct., 1918, and to me directed
so to do, 1 will, on the 3rd, day of
Dec. 1918, at the hour of 10 o'clock
A. M , on said date, and at the front
door of the court house in the CHy of
Tahlequah In said County and State,
sell to the highest bidder the follow-
ing described real estate and lauds,
to-wit:
' "The South 20 acers of Lot 2, and
the Southwest Quarter of the North-
east Quarter, and the North 19 86
acers of Lot 2, and the Southwest
Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of
the Southeast Quarter, nad the
Southeast Quarter of the fouthwest
Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of
Section 4, and the North 19.40 acres
of Lot 1, and the North 19. 56 acres
of Lot 2, and the Southwest 10 acres
of Lot No. 2, of Section 6, and the
Northeast Quarter of the Southeast
Quarter of the Northwest Quarter,'of
Section 9, all In Township 15. North
of Range 21 East, In Cherokee Coun-
ty, Oklahoma." .
That said order of sale was Issued
under a judgement of the District
Court of said County and State, dat-
ed March 1, 1917, in an action where-
in Virgie M. Gorsuch was plaintiff
and Pearl Shlpman and A. J. Ship
man were defendants, and said sale
Is to obtain therefrom the monies
necessary to pay and satisfy a judg-
ment rendered on said date for the
sunt of $372.17, with Interest at the
rate of 10 per cent per annum from
March 1, 1917 ,and the sum of $26.00
attorneys' fees, and the costs of said
action, and the accured costs therein,
and the costs of bringing about and
confirming this sale.
Witness my hand this 25th, day of
Oct. 1918
Harris, Howard and Nowlin, of
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Attorneys
for Plaintiff.
Flrit published Nov. 2, 1918, 6-t-a
" W P DAVIDSON.
Sheriff.
Irregular bowl movementa lead to
rhronlc constipation and a constipat.
.•d habit fill* the system With im-
purltlea. I1BRBINM Is a great
system, vitalise* the blood and puts
the digestive organs In fine vigor-
ous condition. —Price 60c. Sold by
all Druggist
HOW TO FIGHT
SPANISH INFLUENZA
BV DB. L. W. BOWERS.
Avoid crowds, coughs and cowards,
but fear neither germs nor Germans I
Keep the system in good order, take
plenty of exercise in the Iresh air and
practice cleanliness. Remember a clean
uiouth, a clean skin, and clean bowels
art* a protecting armour against disease.
To keep the liver and bowels regular
and to carry away the poisons within,
it is best to take a vegetable pill every
other day, made up of May-apple, aloes,
jalap, and sugar-coated, to be had at
most drug stores, known as Dr. Pierce'*
Pleasant Pellets. If there is a sudden
onset of what appears like a bard cold,
one should go to bed, wrap warm, take
a hot mustard foot-bath and drink copi-
ously of hot lemonade. If pain develops
in head or back, ask the druggist for
Anuric (anti-uric) tablets. Theae will
flush the bladder and kidneys and carry
off poisonous germ*. To control the
pains and aches ;.me one .'.nunc tablet
every two hours, with frequent drinks of
lemonade. The pneumonia appear* in
a most treacherous way, when'the influ-
enza victim is apparently recovering and
anxious to leave his bed. In recovering
from a bad attack of influenza or pneu-
monia the system should be built up
with a good herbal tonic, such as Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, made
without alcohol from the roots and barks
of American forest trees, or his Irontic
(iron tonic) tablets, which can be ob-
tained at most drug stores, or send 10c.
to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buttftlo,
N. Y., for trial package.
For u Weok Man.
As a general rule all you need to
do is to adopt a diet suitel to your
age and occupation and to keep your
bowles regular. When you feel
that you have eaten too much and
when constipated, take one of Cham-
berlain's Tablets.
w. s. s.
France, Oct. 12, 1918.
Mr. F. C. Dreaslcr, Dear Father—I
will answer some of your letters. I
have been on the stir up and move so
much lately that I couldn't ffrite. I
guess I owe everybody a letter </t
two. 1 suppose you have received the
one by now that I wrote stating that
I was wounded, haven't you? In
case you haven't I will mention if
The last week in September, we made
n drive and it cam* my turn to gc
over tha top, on the last Saturday in
September. I got shot about noon in
the left leg, above the knee and I alsc
had a chunk of meat tore out of my
leg by a sharpnel, that is a piece of a
shell, otherwise I am fine. I feel
lucky with what I got. I am not the
only one that got hurt. We sure did
capture some prisoners and are still
at it. We sliure stay next to them
I have fine treatment, wounds doesn't
keep me from lying in every shape in
which I feel I rest the best. I will
write soon again.
ORION DRESI.ER
BRACE UP!
Liv-Ver-Lax Will Make
' You Feel Better.
That tired feeling, dull headache and
lasting grouch are most probably due
to a clogged up liver. Now. don't make
yourself feel worse by taking nasty,
disagreeable calomel, but clean out tiiat
bile and make yourself feel brighter and
tetter generally by taking LIV-VER-
LAX. It acta safely surely and pleas-
antly, and is made entirely of harmless
vegetable materiaL
► LIV.
-VCR-LAX is tnaranttmd to give
satisfaction or your money will be re-
turned without question. Insist on ths
original, bearing the likeness and signa-
ture of L. K. Grigaby. for sale here la
the 60c and $1 sites at •
SIRQEONS agree that in cases of
Cuts, Burns, Bruises and Wounds
the FIRST TREATMENT is most
important. When an EFFICIENT
antiseptic Is applied promptly, there
Is no danger of Infection and the
wound begins to heal at once. For
use on man or beast, BOROZONE
'■Jto® IDEAL ANTISEPTIC and
HEALING AGENT Buy It now and
be ready for an emergency. Price
25c, 60c, $1.00 and $1.60. gold by
all Druggist
O
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The Tahlequah Arrow (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 34, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 16, 1918, newspaper, November 16, 1918; Tahlequah, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc163248/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.