The Appalachia Out-Look. (Pawnee County, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 7, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
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GIVE $1,000 TO A HOSPITAL
Japanese Envoys provide for Endow-
ment of Two Beds
Baron Ivoniura anil Mr. Takahira,
who attended,a garden party at York,
Me., having subsequently ascertained
thai 1'ir party was organized partly
for tin Iieueflrnf the York hospital,
ffiive $1,000 to*the fund.
The management of the hospiM,
has requested this act to b > marl-,
public, and to announce that it has
been decide.) to perpetuate it by wi-
dowing ttfo beds In the hospital and
plac.ng over them tablets inscribed
with the names of the donors.
fhe Appalachia Outlook.
The Tide of Affairs in Germany
Geoerai von Liebert. of Germany
has a qiH^r theory • regarding the
fatherland whkh he explained at tiie
recenf conference of the png-German
league at Worms. The general's
theory is to this effect: "Every fifty
years or so there comes a tide in
the affairs of-Germany which taken
at the flood has led on to fortune.
• Thus Bfter the year '1701 fame the
seven years' war in 1750; after the
battle of Jena in 180(5 followed tlie
succissful wars <if 1804 and 18(1';.
High water mark was reached i.)
1870, and the ebb will be due by
about the year 1920."
A bachelor may be an object of
public derision, hut a married man
usually gets his at home.
APPALACHIA, • - OKLAHOMA.
NOTES OF TWO TERRITORIES
Ritter & Monroe, furniture dealers
of Lawton, have gone Into voluntary
bankruptcy. Liabilities, |3,ft00; as-
sets $1,500.
An old settlers reunion in com-
memoration of the opening of Potta-
watomie county to settlement, will
be held at Tecumseh, September 22
and 23.
James A. Hazzlett. a barber of
Tulsa committed suicide by drinking
bay rum. He left a note saying his
action was caused by a woman.
Appropriate and Significant.
It Iceland, that country of gentle
nd old-fashioned customs, it has el-
vcys been the fashion to present to the
)aby, when its first tooth appeared,
i lamb, to be its very own, cared for
ind tended as no o$her pet could be,
and never to be parted with.
What's ten years on the shoulders
of a man who thinks.
The Chiekasatf legislature is in
session at Tishomingo. This Is the
last meeting of this body, on account
of tribal dissolution, and will con-
tinue about two months.
An exhibit of the products of both
territories is being gathered by the
"Katy" railroad for exhibition at the
Indiana State fair.
Employera' Liability.
The Berlin courts recently denied
that an employer was liable to pay
compensation in the case of an cm-
oloye who died from heart stroke after
working hours. It was held that death
was caused by the heat suffered while
the man was at work.
A woman is an attractive listene.r
when her husband talks in his sleep.
Those angels men marry soon shed
their wings.
Beautify Your
Walls and CeOings!
Pay Days in Norway
in Norway on pay days saloons are
closed and savings banks open until
half a year at a time by contract at
midnight. Servant girls hire for
public registry offices. There is a
telegraph box on tivery street car.
One writes the message, puts on the
r;ght numlxr of stamps and drops
it in the box. 'Farmers can borrow
monty from the government at .'5 per
cent. There are practically no il-
literates. The average wage earning*
are S88 a year. There' are more
reindeer than hotses, more sheep
than cows.
OUST THE DEMON.
Ten Indian couples were married a!
the "Red Store' two miles north of
Lawton last week, while the agent
was making the quarterly payment at
that place.
The first bale of cotton marketed
at Pauls Valley brought a premium of
$100.
Chickasha has decided to hold a
street, fair and agricultural exhibit
this fall but has not as Vet set a date.
aA Tussle with Coffee.
There is something fairly demoni-
acal in the way coffee sometimes
wreaks its fiendish malice on those
who use It.
, A lady writing from Calif, says: —
"My husband artd I. both lovers of
coffee, suffered for some time frt?m a
very annoying form ^>f nervousness,
accompanied by most frightful head-
aches. in my own case there was
oVentuaijy developed some sort of af-
fection of the nerves leading from the
spine 10 the head.
"I was unable to hold my head dp
straight, the tension of the nerves
drew it to one side, causing me the
most intense pain. We got no relief
from medicine, and were puzzled as
to what caused the trouble, until a
friend suggested that possibly the col-
fe<? we drank had something to do
with It, and advised that we quit It
and try Postum Coffee.
"We followed his advice, and from
the day that we began to use Postum
we both began to improve, and in
a very short time bpth of us were
entirely relieved. The nerves became
steady once more, the headaches
ceased, the muscles in the back of my
neck relaxed, my head straightened
up and the dreadful pain that had so
punished me while I used the old kind
of coffee vanished.
"We have never resumed the use ot
the old coffee, but relish our Postum
every day as well as wo did the
former beverage. Aud we are de
lighted to find that we can give it
freely to our children also, something
we uever dared to do with the old
kind of coffee." Name given by Pos-
tufn Co., P*tilo Creek, Mkb.
Postum Coffee contains absolutely
no drugs of any kind, but reliev s tlio
coffee drinker front i he old drug
poison.
There's a reason.
Lawton is putting extra men at
J work in order to clean up the city
and put it in strictly sanitary condi-
tion.
Bert Russell of Kiowa, was arrest-
ed at ifouth McAlester," on a charge
of deserting from the United States
army. He had only been enlisted a
short time, but tirethof army life. He
was taken to Fort Riley. Kansas,
where the usual punishment will he
meted out.
James Harmon of Ringwood, la
Woods county, a deputy sheriff, has
been appointed a Deputy United
States marshal under W. F> Fossett.
and is now ser^ng in Woods county
in that capacity. He lias l>eeu a
I>eace officer in Woods county for a
number of years.
Governor Ferguson has been not!
fied from army headquarters at San
Antonio. Texas, of the appointment of
Lieut. Leslie A. I. Chapman, First
Cavalry, sationed at Fort Clark, Tex-
as. to attend the annual encampment
of the Oklaliomi National Guard at
Chandler, on October .'11, fo instruct
the territorial militia.
The board of < mha)mers. created
by the last legislature, met at Okla-
homa City last week arid passed upon
a number of application*. The new
embalming law goe* Into effect the
! th of this month and anyone attempt-
ing to m-actlco without having first
met the requirements of the board,
will be subject to a heavy punish-
ment.
The new bridge at Perkins will
be completed this week and the event
will be the occasion for a large cele-
brat Ion. The bridge is 8o0 feet long,
spanning the Cimarrou river and will
con $ 1 M.OOu. Work on the structure
began on July 7 and since that time
fording has been the only means of
crossing the river at that place. The
county stands the expend o? building
the bridge.
Every hcusekeeoer should know
that if they will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they
will save not or.ly time, because it
never sticks to the iron, but because
each package contains 16 oz —one full
pound—while all other Cold Water !
Starches ate put up in % -pound pack-
ages, and the price is the satne, 10 ■
cunts. Tben again because Defiance
Starch la free from all Injurious chem- i
Icala. if yenr grocer tries to sell you
a 12oz. package it is tecause he baa
k stock on hand which he wisher to
dispose of before he puts in Delbtnce.
He knows that Defiance Starch has
printed on every package in large let-
ters and figures "lb ozs." Demand De-
fiance and sava much time and money
and the annoyance of the iron stick1
Ira. Defiance never sticks.
William O'Brien a Memoirs
William O'Brien, M. P., according to
the Westminister Gazette, Is busily
engaged in writing his remlnisceuc s.
From the age of 17—that is, since 186!*
—when he l ecame a junior reporter on
the Cork Daily Herald, he has been I
beiiind the scenes in Irish politics '
and an active participant in some
important events, the secret history
if which has never been published. His
prison experience , for instance, j
should make a piquant chapter, and
he should have something of peculiar
interest to say when he comes to
his historic contest wltb Dublin castle.
A Rock Cement
tints. Does not rub or scale. Destroy a dis-
ease germs and vermin. No washing ot
walls after once applied. Any one can
brush it on—mix with cold water. Other
finishes, bearing fanciful names and mixed
with either hot or cold water, do not
hate the cementing property of
Alabastine. They are stuck on with glue,
or other animal matter, which rota,
feeding dlseaae germa, rubbing,
scaling end spoiling walls, cloth-
ing etc. Such Finishes must be washed
off every year—expensive, filthy work. Buy
Alabaatine only in five pound pack*
ages, properly labeled. Tint card,
Cy wall and ceiling design, " Hints on
rating" and our artists' services ir
making color plans, free.
ALABASTINE C0„
0m< RtpMt, Mkb., or Mi Witer SI., K Y.
HAVE YOU COWS?
If you have cream to separate a good
Cream Separator Is the most profitable in-
vestment you can poesiblv make. Delay
means daily waste of
time, labor and product.
DE LAVAL CREAM
SEPARATORS save
$10.- per cow per year
every year of use over all
gravity setting systems
and $5.- per cow over
all imitating separators.
They received the Grand
Prise or Highest Award
at St. Louis.
Buying trashy cash-in-advanoe sepa-
rators is penny wise, dollar foolish.
Such machines quickly loee their cost
instead of taring it.
If you haven't the ready cash
DE LAVAL machines may be !>ought
on suoh liberal terms that they actually
pay far themselves
Send today for new catalogue and
name of nearest local agent.
The De Uvai Separator Co.
Isndelph A Canst Its. i 74 Certlsndi Street
CHICAGO I NEW YORK
FEVER'S AFTER EFFECTS
Did Not Disappear Until the Blood
Waa Renewed by Dr. Williams'
Pink Pilla.
Typhoid fever is sometimes called ner
vous fever. During the course of the
fever the nerves are always profoundly
disturbed, and wheu it is over they are
left so sensitive that the patient has to
be guarded against all excitement. In the
tonic treatment then demanded, regard
mnst be paid not ouly to building up flesh
but also to strengthening the nerves. A
remedy that will do both, make sound
flesh to re|>air waste aud give new vigor
to feeble nerves, is the most convenient 1
aud economical. Snch a reinedv is Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People.
One proof of this is the experience of
Mr. Charles Worth, of East vassalboro,
Maine. He says: " 1 had a severe at-
tack of typhoid fever late in the fall
which left me very weak aud debilitated.
My heart imlpitated. my breathing be- ;
ame difficult sifter the least exertion and j
there was nnmhuess in both hands. I I
suffered in that way for fully six months. :
As I did not grow out of it, diil not in i
fact see the slightest, improvement as j
time passed, I decided to use Dr. Wil- '
liams' Piuk Pills as 1 knew of some cures
they had effected in cases like mine.
"Almost as soon as I began raking
them I could see decided improvement
ami afler keeping on with them for |
several weeks I was completely well. I 1
consider Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a most ;
valuable remedy, nnd I am in the habit !
of recommeudingthem to others afflicted
as 1 was.''
When the nerves ache and trem-
ble it means that they are starving. The
only way ro feed them is through tha
blood, and the best food is Dr. Williams'
Piuk Pills. They are absolutely gaaran-
teed to lie free from opiates or other hai in-
fill drug-. They ai-e sold by all drug-
gists. or may I* obtained directly from
the l>r. Williams Medicine Co., Siheueo-
udy, N. Y
W. L. Douglas
*3= & '3= SHOES'*"
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any pHce.
July MOT*.
tj fl flnn "If**®<0 wywe *he can
<#I UjUUU disprove this statement.
W. L. Douglas 93.90 shots have by their «s-
cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing
qualities, achieved the largest sale of any fJ.M
saee In the world. Thej arc lust as good as
?£* that,C?ft W-W to S7 00 —the onlv
.liferents la the price. If I could take you Into
V Metory at Brockton, JV'.ass.. the lar.sst in
«e world under one roof making men's fine
*£ow ^°u th* cars with which every
£•'P0"*1" • «*• I* *te: you would rcallie
/hy W. L. Douglas S3.SO shoes are the best
hoes produced In the world.
If I could show you the difference between the
those asade la mv factory and thoee of other
™*ee. you would understand why Douglas
>J.90 shoes cost more to make, why they hold
wmr h r*r. end are of
ireater Intrinsic value than any ether $£.90
shoe on tha market to-day.
.CAUTION.—Insist apon hsrlng W. J..l)ong.
lee Shoes. Take no substitute. Nose geuulno
without his uaoie and pries stamped on bottom.
WANTKO. A shoe dealer I a every town where
W. L. l>ouj|las Sho«s are not sold. Full line ot
ssinplon eut free for Inspection upon request.
euit Coltr 1 v*l0ti nttd; th*y will not wear brassy.
>Vrlte for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Striae.
W. L. notti LAS, Brockton, Maae.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No, 36,1 £4
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Snow, A. J. The Appalachia Out-Look. (Pawnee County, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 7, 1905, newspaper, September 7, 1905; Appalachia, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc173471/m1/2/?q=music: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.