The Claremore Messenger. (Claremore, Indian Terr.), Vol. 12, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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THE CLAREMORE MESSENGER.
CLARK SMITH, l'lW.lSHEK
CLAREMORE
INUTVH
The colleges a.-e overflowing. This
Is the best Bign of the best prosperity.
As a rule, the physical strength of
the average man begins to decay at
the age of 36.
Three languages are uow being
Bind led in Hotaon -tagliali, Esperanto
and Henry Jauies.
London tailors declare that Amerl
can men do not know how to dress.
Veil, their wives do.
Lieut. Lahtn h victory in the bal
loon race probably will move our Eu
ropean friends to comment further «■>
American hot air.
Pike was not the first man to see
or climb the peak. Neither did Amer
icus seq America first, but he was the
first cuss to write a letter home about
It
With her 50-pound wa;ertiielons and
lS-foot cornstalks it must be admitted
that the new state of Oklahoma Is
making good in a most substantia!
and picturesque way.
The football season promises to be
quite as attractive as usual In spite
of the new rules. Already several
players have been seriously injured,
and one was killed at Trenton, N. J.
Columbia university starts the sea
son with a cane rush In which a num
ber of students were injured, one of
them perhaps fatally. Why should
there be any further complaint over
the abolition of football?
Col. Lambert says he trnveled
through France In an automobile at
the rate of 60 miles an hour between
stops, there being no Bpeed limit in
that country. Yet some people won-
der why the population of France is
decreasing.
The engineer of a lewisville &
Nashville train asked, not long ago,
to be excused from work for the re-
mainder of the month because of a
dream which he had had several
nights In succession. Three or four
days later the train was wrecked, and
the engineer's substitute was killed.
According to the official figures pre
pared by the San Francisco depart
ment of health, 452 persons lost their
lives as a result of the earthquake and
the fire which followed it. More than
one-half of the deaths were caused by
lire, seven persons were shot by the
police or soldiers, and two died from
the effect of poisonous food dealt out
to the hungry. The first reports
which came from the stricken city,
that thousands had been killed, were
exaggerated. as Is commonly the case
in such calamities.
In these days, when families are
moving from one place to another in
the hope of bettering themselves, it Is
Interesting to read of an aged woman
who died in a New England town In
the same house and in tlie same room
in which she was born. For the better
part of a century she had been active
in the kindly Christian work of the vil-
lage, and had come to be looked upon
as one of its
which have an
been In the fam
generation linv
more than del ;
member of an
testily.
Insti
■Id h
unions. Famllli
omestead that has
•r generation after
jtbssesslon worth
i r;uit family will
upon 4" d '
•urvived.
cated the m
dominnl n
lis striking result indi
nner of treatment of ah
ids throughout the war
Father Wrnz twhose name should
be pronounced Vernls), the newl;
elected general of the Jesuit order,
was liorn in Wurtemberg in 1842, and
Is the second Jesuit general of Ger-
man nationality. The first was Fa'/.<T
Nlcke. chosen for the office in the eigh
teenth centun Wrnz left Germany
when the .l> -alts «< re expelled, and
has for the last five-and-twenty years
taught canon law at the Gregorian unl
rerslty at Rome. Most of the generals
of the order have been Italians. The
Italian candidale has been preferred
at no fewer than 11 eloctlons. Spain
has contributed five generals, Belgium
two, and Poland. Switzerland, ltohe-
mla and Holland one each; but there
has never been a general of French
nationality. The voters on this occas
Ion were 75 in number .and 71 vote*
Were cast for Father Wrnz.
BUILDING UP
SAN FRANCISCO
Citizens Make Marvelous Progress in
the Work of Restoration.
New Buildings, Finer Than Those Destroyed by the
Earthquake and Fire, Coiny Up on Every Side -
"City Beautiful" a Matter of Time.
city needs 20,000 skilled men and
could employ 30,000 unskilled labor-
<• s. Some of the shrewder uiibkillud
men have clubbed together and form-
ed little companies of l hair ow&. Tliey
take a contract to feaiove debris far
a price, and perform ilte worlt during
the noon hour and in the night. As
unskilled labor is getting 14 a day.
these willing workers who put in
extra time are getting more money
than they ever saw before. In much
of the burnt district work is carried
on by electric light.
Will San Francisco ever be rebuilt^
Is the question asked lny people 'In
the east. The answer is that San
Francisco Is now being rebuilt. It Js
not a question at the distant future.
The process Is visible to the ntned
San Francisco.—One of the. world's people away. It requires only a visit ^ye. Every steel building Miat was
great sights Is Sao Francisco*, Cities to Sao Francisco to disprove the re- under construction at the time of the
have been ruined and ashee have port that the city has lost half its disaster is being rushed to (xtmpla-
covered them, but never before un-
der modem conditions. A city ruined
by earthquake and fire In the old
days meant that the time of recovery
population.
The* quake shook the life out
some old firms and hastened the birth
t ti on. Other buildings- have boen con
tracted for, and with tftp removal of
debris and, the arrival of materials
many new ones.
Dozens of stores 'he work *Ml WcV-ed. Nothing could
would equal the age of the city up to t,ea, the nlinlt,s of m(.n who were be more absurd tliah to ifotrf>t the re
the hour of its destruction. In this clerkl! before Apr|1 18 MerchnnU <*>very of San Francisco from '
age the very evidences of destruction from othfl(. cltieg have gapped in and
are turned into agencies of repair and ,.Btahllshed houses here. Competition
mprovement. Fire has rarely failed l8 kppn, anU roonoy appears to be
to bring about better conditions in a more plentiful than for many vears.
city, and San Francisco Is no excep-
tion to the rule. It is not the Im-
provement of the city that will make
The financial soundness of San
Francisco has been demonstrated in
Its
great misfortune. In the face of the
work that is actually in progress.
The contract for the reconstruction of
the Palace hotel on its old site, on
a grander scale than ever, has been
let. The St. Francis Is now complet-
ing Its great steel annex. Huslness
them marvel, however, as much as varlous Tt!1" b,ft"k cl:arl"B8 houses are arranging to build newer
the rapidity with which the work
will be accomplished.
are much larger than before the fire.
Some of the new money comes from
_. I insurance companies, of course, but
The earthquake o April 18 caused a not a|, of ,, The ,,„slness of the
™""°n do1 ®rs damage possibly ,)ankg ,8 Krt,a„,r than PV(,r some
$10,000,000 would cover that loss. The
_ , . , , , i of them withdrawals exceed deposits,
fire which had full play after the hut the monPV wlthdrawil
quake had broken the —*" —'—
— „ .. going
. water mains, lnt0 reconstruction. Other banks are
burned over 514 squares, or 2,560 up de„o8lts. The other day a
acres, or four square miles, the total litUe flurry wa8 rallge<1 bv an attPlnpt.
kiss being estimated at 1600,000,000. ed nln on the Miborn|a hank_ one of
On this property there was Insurance the ,arKPgt )ng,1Mlt,ong ln the coun.
amounting to about *315.000.000. Of , ,t wu„ a grutegqlIe fa„ure a„ a
this insurance about *150,000.000 had ,mnk run The bank hag fc0 00Q ar.
been paid In cash to policyholder up
to September 15.
The fire, as everybody knows, de-
stroyed the business district of San
Francisco, but left the shipping and
residence districts Intact. Commerce
continued without Interruption, ex-
cept such Incidental disturbances as
the location of new storage places and
the accumulation of freight. Thou-
sands of people left the city Immedi-
ately after the disaster, but compe-
tent authorities estimate that 98 per
cent, of these refugees have returned.
Their homes being intact they find
that San Francisco is the place for
them, after all, and they are turning
to rebuild the city, either with their
capital or their labor.
Bringing Order from Chaos.
When the fire died down on April
21, the people of San Francisco were
confronted with mighty problems,
some of them demanding instant solu-
tion. As this article deals with the
San Francisco of the future and not
of the past, it is not neecssary to go
Into details regarding the remarkable
ability shown by the committee of fif-
ty in providing for the wants of the
hungry and shelterless, writes Ira E.
Ilennett, In the New York Press. That
Is a story by Itself, and a most Inter-
esting and inspiring one. Another
pressing problem, however, was that
of clearing the streets in order that
communiiatlon might be restored.
Thirty-six miles of streets were piled
high with debris. Within five months
this enormous mass of material has
n removed, trolley wires have been
strung, street car traffic reestablished
and a system of debris removal lnau-
11 which dlspot
counts, receiving no deposits ex-
ceeding *3,000. It la reckoned as sol-
and stronger structures than those
which succumbed to the conflagration
of April 18 to 21. The city will not
be rebuilt in a day, or a year, but it
will go up with a remarkable quick-
ness.
"City Beautiful" Must Wait.
There lias been much talk of a "city
beautiful." with winding avenues
about the hlllt , broad boulevards, park
extensions, and so on. It was thought
that with the buildings leveled to
the ground the opportunity was open
for the construction of a model mod-
ern city, uniting utility and beauty to
loads
. da;
be had the
If me
tea of 100 car-
e labor were to
ould go much
A popular hostess declares that,
tier mind, the most welcome guesl
a ball Is the man who not only will aik
for dances with ladles who are neglect
ed by other partners, but who "has
the tart to do this In a manner that
doea not painfully suggest knowledge
of the existence of 'wall flowera.' "
In Germany nearly every girl, to
have a chance of marrying, must pos-
sess a dowry. Not a few parents,
when a daughter Is born, pay an an
Dual premium that entitles the girl to
a sum of money on attaining the age
of 21.
The adviH-aii s ol coloring matter In
foodstuffs claim that the public de-
mands It. The book publishers and
theaters can testify that the public
demands many things that are not
good for tt.
Cheer up. everybody! A New York
judge has granted an Injunction
agaln^ a song sung In one of the the
atera. Relief Is in sight.
The Germans have been adulterat
fng snuff with ground glass, thus ml
fording the user all tha panaa hi
ona bre
writhing steel learns and crumbling
granite marking the sites of once Im-
posing buildings, iiud the very thought
of bringing order out of chaol suffi-
cient to Btagger the Imagination.
On the next day a far different pic-
ture was preesnted. In every base-
WH ITT ELL
BUILDING
Bra*'
nil H ti
utuirj
"in;;
--~
vn ^
\ few frightened
I a line, obtained their
' cIsco. There was a time, Indeed,
I when the stuff piled up to Btirh an
eatent as to paralyze the operation
' of tha roads. Five thousand ears of
freight ware congested at 8an Fran-
•iseo aud oakland Hy heroic ef-
forts the lingering freight was dis-
posed of and a serious situation re-
lieved. Now that the railroads are
1 able to look after their own business,
th«y are expending great sums In
] permanent improvement, which will
* facilitate the reconstruction of the
city..
Insurance Situation Hurta.
The insurance situation at San
Francisco is exasperating to those
who happened to have iiolleles tn
shaky or dishonest companies, but
on the whole the lapses of these com-
panies have not affected the city
as seriously as early reports Indi-
cated. Nearly one-half of all losses
has been paid. Considering the fact
that insurance records, as well as
everything e|ge, went up in smoke,
this Is a fairly good showing for five
months. Payments are being made
through the banks at the rate of near-
ly *1,000,000 a day. The money goes
into circulation for the most part,
and the resulting activity overshad-
ows the fact that hundreds of other
policy holders are waiting for a set-
tlement.
The people of San Francisco per-
sonally and through their commercial
organizations, are watching the insur-
ance companies with a jealous eye.
Companies that come to the front
with money are reaping a harvest of
new business, while those which
fought for time or actually repudiated
their obligations in whole or in part
will be made to smart for it.
The chamber of commerce Is mak-
ing up a list of honest and dishonest
companies. The Calllfornla delegation
In congress will have something to
say on the subject next winter. The
names of defaulting companies are
to be sent broadcast through the
world, and the opinion is universal ln
San Francisco that ln the long run
the defaulting companies will dis-
cover that they played a losing game
when they defrauded policy holders of
their rights.
Insurance litigation promises to
become great. Policy holders who
have money enough to fight are not
slow In invoking the aid of the courts.
One or two Important cases already
have been decided, but the critical
question is yet to be passed upon.
This question is as to the part played
by the earthquake In causing fire
losses. Policies are variously word-
ed. but ln the main they provide that
payment shall not be made if the
Iosb is caused "directly or Indirect-
ly" by earthquake or other act of
God. Of course, if there had been
no earthquake there would have been
no fire, but the man whose house was
consumed three days after the
quake does not think the Indirect
cause is quite close enough to the
effect to justify the Insurance com-
panies in repudiating all liability.
Show True American Grit.
During the disaster the good humor
and self-possession of San Francis-
cans astonished ti. • world. Now. In
the long tug of disposing of the
ashes and rebuilding the city, this
good humor never deserts them, and
they are as confident as though they
were beginning a city for the first
time. There is Inspiration in num-
bers, comfort in common trouble, and
a spirit of brotherhood that has not
deserted them, although It is not as
marked as It was during times of
danger. The love of good cheer In
the way of eating, drinking and lis-
tening to music is as strong as ever.
The climax Is a continual tonic, and
Invite* to hard work. The very size
of their disaster seems to nerve the
San Franciscans to hasten the recon-
struct I,ifl of the new city. They come
For flexibility, smooth finish, stiff-
ness and durability. Defiance Starch
has no equal—l«c for 16 oz.
To most men's minds an ideal wife
U that of an acquaintance who is Mid
to spoil b. r husband.
This Is No Joke.
Hunt's Cure has saved more peo-
ple from the "Old 8oratch" than any
other known agent, simply because It
makes scratching entirely unneces-
sary. One application relieves any
form of itching skin disease that ever
afflicted mankind. One box guaran-
teed to cure any one case.
boi
money and then r
Ited it. With thl
ronfldence In the 1
solute.
The scarcity of
skilled labor is the
rapid construction.
turned and depoa-
i exception public
anks has been ab-
skllled and un-
chief drawback to
Wages are ex-
yet approached In
A little study of the slt-
*'f that this is nothing but
San Francisco people have
enough on their hands In the way of
getting Into business again, in any
shape, without tackling the great
task of forming a city on aesthetic
llneB. Here and there a street may
be widened and a little park estab-
vory near
their ruins, nn<
a remarkably
tory by eoni] ai
the fate of oth
ment was a gang of workmen. They orbltantly high, but this Is the fault
struggled with girders, piled brick. (lf contractors and proprietors rather llahed. but in the main there will be
sif.,,1 good material from refuse, han- than of tbl, lilbor unl(mg Tbp p|umb. no attempt ntmn plwu
fin 1 JL. ,' m'x?d. m"J",ar era and stationary engineers thought which the citv was built. If It was
and loaded wagons with debris Thou- thpy gaw a ,.hallP<, to get r)ch qu|ck ()1IBcu|t bef(m, the flre ,Q obtB,n
sand8 of busy hands were to be seen
down every street. Thousands of
teams went about on the simultane-
— — — obtain
ami raised their seaie, but were not united action toward civic betterment,
sustained by the labor council, which It is doubly difficult now. when every
,H an amalgamation of all the unions, man must look out for himself
ous task of removal and reconstruc- unii the 0jd waK,,g WPre restored. Uut
t,on- I the owners of buildings which were 1 The ra"r,m<* terminating at San
nearlng completion at the time of the Francl,co an "'e most potent
In their anxiety force,• „,n _tl" city. ~
dings and obtain
famine rentals, and their tactics ln
raising the wages of worklngmen
have caused labor prices to soar. On
this emergency work plasterers are
g. ttlng *9 to *11 a day; bricklayers.
*10 a day; car[ienters. *7 and *S;
stonemasons. *S to *10, and other
skilled labor ln pro|>ortlon. San Fran-
Little Loss of Population.
To one familiar with the crowds disaster are fe
that made Market street and the fer- to complete th
ries famous, there does not appear
to be any diminution of population.
The car system Is wholly inadequate.
although herculean efforta have been
made to establish communication.
The ferries are as crowded as ever.
Theaters are filled to auffocatlon. The
8t Francis hotel put up a temporary
structure In Vnlon square, and It Is ciaco Is a paradise for a worklugman.
turning away a hundred guests dally. Unskilled Labor In Demand.
Other hotels are filled and turning j Unskilled labor Is hard to find. The
.-iii.ii ni m.5 nine or tne : . -
everlsh In their anxletv forc, B ,n '''h <HnS H'o city. They
lelr buildings and obtain San Frano) c° panic and
possible greater disaster during the
time of stress by carrying away thou-
sands of people, free of charge, and
bringing In emergency supplies.
After the crisis the railroads turned
In and assisted in the removal of
debris. Temporary tracks were laid
and rehabilitation was Immensely as-
sisted. Merchants ordered big Blocks
of goods from the east, and the rail-
roads rushed the stuff to San Fran-
Ing when they show
me of them display
nh memory of his-
their disaster with
•Hies that have per-
ished by earthquake and fire, and
risen again. According to these men,
who cite history while making It.
the only bonfire that excelled San
Francisco's was that which con-
sumed Rome In Nero's time. The
great fires of London. Huston, Chi-
cago and Baltimore were mere hints
of what a real conflagration can do.
So say these dusty, smiling, tireless
San Franciscans, who revel In the
advertising that their city has ob-
tained. Their belief in the speedy
reconstruction of the city Is absolute,
and they are backing their belief with
money and energy that balks at
nothing.
All Looked Alike.
Uncle Eph had long boasted that he
had never needed the services of a
doctor, but now he was 111, and his
neighbor felt that the time had come
when a physician should be called.
"Come now, Uncle Eph," said she,
"we will call whomever you wish—
you know there's a good nllopath and
a good homeopath, and there's a new
doctor, an osteopath. Now. who'll you
have?"
"Wal," drawled Uncle Eph, "I dun-
no ez It matters—they do say that all
paths lead to the grave!"
Sjitrh $mtr JOagun
to a £>tar
By MICHAEL L. PADDEN,
Rolitrar of Wsltr Supply, New York City.
Hitch your wagon to a
star.
Or Just as near It as you
can;
Be gentle. If the world
will let you.
For the morrow always
plan.
Don't be timid, don't be
boastful.
Don't borrow coin or
cooking pan;
Dress as well as luck will let you—
The coat doth often make the man.
The first line of that is what makes a hit with me. There is about
ten fuet more of the same two-step style of word coupling, and it came j
to mo through the mails from a Persian prince who had his private yacht
in the harbor at tho time that I was uncovering Iho water front "water1
grafts," and I happened to lw in a position to help him get his daily 1
supply of water on board without having to pay extra toll for it
lie sent me a letter of thanks when ho sailed, and after ho got over
In his own election district he sent me this jig-time string of philosophy,
which 1 take as a compliment, inasmuch as it was especially translated
for tne.
letter from the prince'a secretary accompanying it tells m« that
it was written many years *go by a near relation of that fellow, Omar
Khayyam, who the historians say was a tent-maker who wrote poetry
for the mapuine* that the clown fellows read to the criminal rich when
they were having beefsteak parties along about the time that they were
teaching Cleopatra to use a nursing bottle.
The thing about it that strikes me most forcibly is that you can't
put any twist on the truth that will make it any stronger now than it waa
when those chapa were writing philosophy without tho aid of a tyjiewriter
and interviewers to give them a boost.
% The higher you aim in any gaino the more certain you are to hit
something, nnd we're all trying to make a score of some kind in life.
If a mnn doesn't set his own aims high no one else will.
A man came to tne for a place as a book keeper
in a big place where a friend of mino had some in*
fluenco, and I said: "You can't be a bookkeeper.
You are only a porter," and he replied:
"Well, let's start for tho bookkeeping job and
maybe we'll land on some job between that and a
cold throw-down."
He had the "hikh-your-wagon-to-a-atar" idea,
all right. _. ^
New York Girl Now Lady Paget.
There are now ton Lady Paget s In
Great Britain, the latest being the
wife of Gen. I'a get. who has jusl been
knighted. She was Miss Minnie,
daughter of Mrs. I'aran Stevens, of
New Tork. Her first appearance ln
London society was made n good
many years ago. when her beauty and
vivacity caused quite a sensation.
Starch, like everything else, Is be-
ing constantly improved, the patent
Starches put on the market 25 years
ago are very different and Inferior to
those of the present day. In the lat-
est discovery—Defiance Starch—all In-
jurious chemicals are omitted, while
the addition of another Ingredient. In-
vented by us, gives to the Starch a
strength nnd smoothness never ap-
proached by other brands.
Proposal to Honor Engineer.
A proposition In honor of John A.
ftoebllng's memory by the erection of
a monument in Trenton, N. J., la tak-
ing a new turn and the citizens may
build a new school of Industrial arts
and dedicate It In his name. Mr.
Roebllng was the builder of the
Brooklyn and other suspension
bridges, and one of the foremost en-
gineers ln the country ln his day.
Sheer white goods, ln fact, any line
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done In a
manner to enhance their textile beau-
ty. Home laundering would be equal-
ly satisfactory If proper attention w;us
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
Improved appearance of your work.
Romance in Writers' Llvea.
A strange comedy and tragedy was
woven Into the llvea of Ibsen and
BJornson. As young men they were
great friends; then politics flung them
apart; they quarreled and never met
for years and yeara. Strange fate
brought the children of these two
great writers together and IlJornson's
daughter married Ibsen'B only child.
The fathers met after a quarter of a
century of separation at the wedding
of their children.
THEY CURE RHEUMATISM
A Particularly Painful Form of This
Disease Yields to Dr. William*'
Fink Pills.
Or the many formswhich rheumatism
takes, that which is popularly known as
sciatic rheumatism probably tortures ita
victim more tliau any other. That Dr.
Williams' Piuk Pills bnvo cured tins
stubborn as well as painful trouble is a
fact proven by the following statement,
and no sufferer who reads this can af-
ford to let prejudice stand in the way at
trying these blood-making pill*.
Rheumatism is uow generally re-
cognized as a disease of the blood. Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills make—actually
make—pure blood. When the blood is
! pure there can be no rheumatism. Mrs.
Tboiuas BroHuehiui, of M Mill street,
Watertown, N. Y., says:
" My tron'ble begun with a severe cold
which I took nliout a week before
Christmas in 1004. I began to have
rheumatio puina in my buck and liiuba
aud after a time I couldn't straighten
up. 1 suffered the most awful pain for
mouths and much of the time was un-
' able to leave the honse aud I had to take
hold of a chair in order to walk and
sometimes I could not stand up at all.
"The disease was pronounced sciatio
rheumatism and,although I lind a good
physician and took his medicine faith-
fully, I did not get any better. After
some six weeks of this terrible pain and
suffering I tried Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills and that is the medicine that cured
me. After a few Ixixes the puiu waa
less intense and I could see decided im-
provement. I continued to tuke the pilla
until I was entirely cured and 1 have
never had any return of the trouble."
I All druggists sell Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, or the remedy will be mailed post-
paid, oil receipt of price, 60 cents per
| box, six boxes for fa SO, by the Dr. Wil-
liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively eared by
these Little Pills.
Tliey also relieve Dis-
tress from Dyspepsia, In-
digestion and Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem-
edy for Dizziness. Nausea,
Drowsiness. Bad Taste
In the Mouth. Coated
Tongue, Pain ln the side.
torpili liver. Thagr
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DO" SMALL PRICE.
CARTER'S
CARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
W. L. DOUGLAS
'3.50&'3.00 Shoes
BtST IN THE WORLD
W.LDouglu $4 Bilt Edge \my
cannotbe equalledat any prlco /
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local application!, a. they cannot reach the dla.
eaiw.l portion of tbe cmr. Tlier® !• only . i,u war to
cur®i deaf nest*, mad th*i |«t>« constitutional reine41e«.
Peafrie** la cau«e<l l jr an Inflamed condltl mi of the
niucoua llulnat of tbe Eu-tacblan Tul e. When thl«
tube la Inflamed j >u liav« a rumbling «mnd or Im-
perfect hearing, and when ti l« entirely chtacd, I eaf-
ne«« !• the re*u:t.and unle«e the Inflammation can be
taken out and thit tube rentored to Ita normal Condi-
Hun, hearlDK will bo forever; nine cunt
rut of un are cau-erl by ( aturrh. arhl.-b I" nothing
but an Inflamed condition of tlie nine u« .urfacet.
We « III it.te One HunH-ed II llari for ai.y r .e of
peafueM l,y catarrh, i!, t cannot he ciirtsa
by Uall a talarrh Lure. Sand for circular* free.
„ . ►" •' LHKNtV * CO., Toledo, O.
Bold hy DrureKto. Tic. '
Take Uall a family f UK for constipation.
Keeping Parents in Subjection.
la the life of the very rich some
parents still seek to resemble those '
curfews Incarnate In humble life who
keep the Klrls at home and the bo.va
out of tho barrooms. Middle life and
oltl ape are too hidebound to get ac-
customed to the manners of tho new
generation of young men who are old
ami worn before they graduate and of
young women who win or lose large ]
■urns at gambling. Children have a
right to expect from their parenta do- j
clle obedience. At first this may be
difficult, but, as Aristotle says. "Vir-
tue is a habit," and It can be acquired.
—N. Y. Evening Post.
hlnff Houae la the tnoal
complete In thla
Send/or Catalog
%
SHOES FOB EVERYBODY AT ALL IKICE8.
ltfen'e Sho*e. tS to $. SO. $3
o$l.tfft. Worain'a 8h ■**. M OO to fl.0O.
Mim-i' Jt Chlltireu'a 8c oe . f to f l.OO.
Try W. L. Uoughi* Woi.m uV, M and
Children** aliiM - ; for My to, fit aud wear
tht«f •**< «•! other innkea.
If I could lake you into my larpre
factories at Brockton* Mass.,and show
you how carefully VV.L. l>ouglasshoes
are made, you would thru understand
why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer, anJ are ol greater valuo
than any othsr make.
Wherever you ;i- you Can obtain W. I..
Douglas hh'its. Ifi<* nam'* end prtcc U ttamfed
on tne bottom, w hUh pnitc.ts ymaagulaat high
price* and interior •hoei. Take rto aubstl*
tute. At k your ilea.er lor W. L. houxlua ahoea
ana ineltt ur«in having them.
fa sf • <tr Cui'utn us* T; thpy mill not wear brany.
Write f' r flluatrated Catalog ol Fall Styles.
W. U LMXJULAb, DeyU 12. Urowkton, Maaa.
Put Heafth
In Your Hot Bread
KC
Put health in the good things
made from flour; let the sun-
•hine through them; make
them light, sweet, wholesome
and digestible by using
BAKING
POWDER
25 OUNCES FOR 25C
It is false economy to risk
your family's heilth by using
a cheap baking powder.
Give them good things
made with K C, the
baking powder of known
quality and purity.
lep
%, OUNCES^
Juques Mfg. C*.
Chicago
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER.
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT.
CAPISICUM
VASELINE
EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT
A OUICK. SUHE. SAI-K AND ALWAYS READY CUKt FOR PAIN.-FRICB
l&c —IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES AI ALL DRUGGISTS AND HEALERS. OR
BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OK 15c IN POSIAGE STAMPS DON'T WAIT
TILL THE PAIN COMLS — KEEP A TUBE HANDY.
A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not
blister the most delicate skin. Tha pain-allaying and curative qualities o(
the article are wunderlul. II will slop the toothache at once, and relieve
Headache and Solatlca. We recommend II as Ihe best and safest external
counler-lrrllant known, alao aa an aiternal remedy for pains In the chest
and alomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints. A trial
will prove whal we claim for it. and It will be found to be Invaluable In tha
household and for children. Onca used no family •*lll be wllhuut It. Many
people (ay "II Is Ihe best of all your preparations." Accapl no preparation
of vaseline unieas Ihe same carries our label, aa otherwise It Is not genuine.
SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND TE WILL MAIL OUK VASE*
LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU.
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
IT STATE STREET, NEW YORK CITY
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Smith, Clark. The Claremore Messenger. (Claremore, Indian Terr.), Vol. 12, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1906, newspaper, November 16, 1906; Claremore, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc178128/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.