The Temple Tribune. (Temple, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 5, 1908 Page: 3 of 8
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IIIDIMI SENATORS BUTTLE
A FRIENDLY WAR OF WORDS ON
FLOOR OF SENATE
mum m in mm uie tilt
Own Wanted "Lata Um Rafera
Flva Civilised Tribee— Oklahoma
Senator Fut Up Srava Fight—
Other Cengreaalonal Matters
WASHINGTON : Two ' mighty
braves of different powerful Indian
tribes met in wordy combat before a
large audience of pale faces 09 the
floor of the United States senate Fvl-
day Although the scalping knife and
the tomahawk were not the weapons
used there were wigs on the green
when the battle was over
The combatants were Senator Cur
tls of Kansas member of the Kaw
tribe of Indlanh and spokesman for
the chief of that tribe anl Senator
Owen of Oklahoma heir apparent to
the chieftaincy of the Cherokee tribe
The cause of war was one little word
In the Indian appropriation bill That
word was “late"
Senator Owen' offered It as an
amendment so that the law would
read “the late five clvUliid tribes”
That one simple word If Inserted
would have ceded control over the
lands of the members of the five civ
Ulsed tribes by the federal govern
uient and rendered nugatory all for-
mer congressional ‘ enactments per-
taining thereto Owen desired such
a condition ' Curtis opposed it
When Curtis made a point of or
der pgalnst the amendment Owen
put on his war paint discarded his
blankets and left his reservation
' For his war club he wielded a sharp
tongue and several court decisions
His adversary ala'o donned his war
bonnet and equipped himself with su-
yeme court decisions and the battle
vof words then began It lasted all
day and when It was over the wily
brave from the Kaw had taken his
Cherokee adversary Into his wigwam
The word “late” remained out of the
law and the government will retain
control over the land of the Indlahs
of the five dvllzed tribes But the
Cherokee brave put up a light worthy
of his eagle feathers
While the debate was at Its hot-
test Senator Gore the colleague of
Senator Owen gained the floor and
poured oil on the troubled waters
“Mr President" he began with
much gravity “I wish to suggest
that before we proceed any further
the Senate recognize the belligerent
rights of these Indians"
- Laughter swept the floor and gal-
leries Senator Owen sank Into bis
seat as one collapsed Senator Cur-
tis as one convinced
The section of the bill was adopted
which was tantamount to the sen-
ate's agreement with Senator Curtis
the Kaw that Senator Owen the
Cherokee though a citizen and wor-
thy to sit In the greatest deliberative
body on earth is under the law “in-
competent" to manage the property
which the government gave to his an-
cestors When the bill to appropriate $1-
000000 for the Yukon-Paciflc exposi-
tion at Seattle Wash was up for
consideration before the house com-
mittee on expositions Cingressmat:
Miller of Kansas offered ani secur-
ed the adoption of an amendment
which will require the exposition to
close on Sundays if it accepts the
government’s aid
LOSS MAY REACH 90
Explosion In La Roslta Mine Causes
Great Loss of Lives
LAREDO TEX: Information has
reached this city through federal tel-
egraph sources to the effect that the
explosion In La Roslta mine at Sa-
binas near Musqulz Mexico has re-
sulted In a large loss of life Reports
by the federal telegraph operators
place the loss of life at from 70 to 90
The mine Is owned by the Monterey
Steel company and ordinarily em-
ploys a force of 250 miners mostly
Japanese and Mexicans The federal
government has taken charge of the
situation
At the request of Senator Long and
Representative Madison the entire
Kansas delegation has joined In a
letter to the department of agricul-
ture asking for the creation of a na-
tional forest in Hamilton and Kearny
counties or the extension of the
western boundary of the Garden City
forest to the Colorado line I There
are now 80000 acres In the Garden
City forest and there 13 a proposed
extension of 40000 acres Immediately
west of it now under consideration
The further extension to the Colorado
line so as to include portions of
Hamilton and Kearney counties will
add 100000 acres more making a for-
est In all of about 225000 acres At
the request of Senator Long the de-
partment of agriculture recently sent
a special agent to Garden City and
Syracuse to investigate and he is
now preparing his report
' Senator Foraker has Introduced a
bill providing for the re-enlistment
of such dishonorably discharged ne-
gro soldiers of the twenty-fifth Infan-
try as were shown by the testimony
In the Investigation of the Browns-
ville affair not to have been con-
nected with the affair
Through the influence of Congres
man Anthony of Kansas the house
committee on military affairs has
recommended the authorization of a
new military prison at Fort' Leaven-
worth to cost 2200000 If the appro-
priation committee will set aside a
portion of this amount in Its general
bill work can be started on the pris-
on this year Mr Anthony' has taken
the matter up with Chairman Tawney
of the appropriations committee and
Is hopeful of favorable action The
new prison sit authorized will be
erected just back of the present mil-
itary prison
KENTUCKY ELECTS SENATOR
Former Governor Bradley Republi-
can Wins the Toga
FRANKFORT KY: After a con-
test lasting for more than six weeks
former Governor Wllllaqk Bradley
was elected to the United States sen-
ate over former Governor Beckham
when four democrats who had stead-
fastly refused to vote fo rBeckham
went into the republican camp The
deserters are Senators McNuutt and
Charlton and Representative Muel-
ler of Louisville and Representative
LUlard of Boyle
Senator-elect Bradley haa been
many times honored by the republi-
cans of Kentucky being the one man
of his party to serve a term as gov-
ernor during the history of his etate
had been endorsed as the Kentucky
candidate for the presidential nom-
ination In 1898 being many tlmea a
delegate to the national conventions
long the Kentucky member of the re-
publican national committee and hav-
ing been offered but declined the ap-
pointment by President Harrison as
minister to Korea
WANT PREFERENTIAL RIGHTS
Settlers on Segregated Coal Lands
Ask Congress to Help
WASHINGTON: Settlers on the
segregated coal land of eastern Okia-
homn are now clamoring to have the
Oklahoma members of congress pro-
tect them In their “preferential
rights” They have taken up land
down there by one plan or another
and the government Is getting ready
to eject all of them Now they claim
preferential rights and are asking the
Oklahoma members of congress to
help them
If congress gives anybody down
there a “preferential right" to hold
the land It will be over the protest
of the Interior department Officials
of that department claim that most
of the settlers are sooners and that
none has acquired any legal righto
which the government is bound to re-
spect BOURNE IS ANXIOUS TO BET
Offers to Wagsr $10000 Roosevelt
J ' Will be Renominated
WASHINGTON: Senator Elkins of
West Virginia and 8enator Bourne
of Oregon met at the White House
today Both are millionaires Sena-
tor Bourne Is the sole patentee of the
second elective term
“The president will not be renom-
inated" said Senator Elkins to Sen-
ator Bourne “There is no use of you
wasting any more time In that di-
rection" “He will be' nominated” said Mr
Bourne emphatically
“He will not" responded Senator
Elkins
“I will bet you $10000 that Roose-
velt will be named by the Chicago
convention" rejoined Mr Bourne
“I will not bet” replied Elkins
“but” he added “if I thought you
had that amount of money on you
I would throw you down and take it
away from you”
Discussing the recent financial cri-
sis In the senate Senator Nelson said
that it was not due so much to the
scarlty of money as to the difficulty
In keeping money in circulation Ho
complained of the amount of money
which had been loaned by the banks
for speculative purposes which had
the effect of taking it out of the chan-
nels of legitimate business and plac-
ing It “in the hands of New York
loafers who live on stock manipula-
tion" 1 TO INSURE BANK DEPOSITS
Members of Kansas Association Plan
Organization of Company
TOPEKA: The executive committee
of the Kansas State Bankers’ Asso-
ciation will meet In Topeka to dis-
cuss the organization of an insurance
company to insure deposits In Kansas
banks
The name to be given the proposed
concern Is the Bank Deposit and
Guaranty Company
Its organization will follow In the
main the lines laid down in Senator
Waggener’s bill before the senate
The capitalization must be not less
than $1000000 A directorate of fif-
teen members must be elected and
the directors are granted inquisito-
rial powers It is Bald that there are
now enough bankers In the state to
take over the capital stock
An Enraged Negro Stones Car
KINGFISHER: Enraged because
he had been made to respect the Ok-
lahoma jlm crow law a negro who
gives his name as Williams bombard-
ed Rock Island train No 35 with
rocks as It started to leave the local
station Several window glasses were
broken but no one injured The ne-
gro was caught and locked in the
county jail He claims to be from
Kansas He had caused trouble on
the train after It had crossed the
Kansas line
President Roosevelt has withdrawn
the nomination of Daniel L Sullivan
to be postmaster at Cripple Creek
Colo on account of numerous
charges against Sullivan reflecting
upon his conduct of office and also
his personal character Sullivan has
been postmaster at Cripple Creek for
three terms He gained notoriety and
the president’s friendship In the sum-
mer of 1900 by defending him against
an attack by rowdies while in Colo-
rado S ““
' MUSKOGEE: A landslide swept
several hundred yards of the Mid-
land Valley track Into Bird creek
thee miles north of Sapulpa and the
southbound passenger train narrowly
escaped destruction The recent
heavy rains had loosened the side of
a hill where a long cut had been
made and hundreds of tons of earth
and stones slipped down the side of
the cut pushing the track over into
the creek and partially burying it
When the passenger train came along
the engineer Baw the debris and tried
to stop the train but the engine was
off the track and almost In the river
STATE CAPITAL LETTER
OUR CORRESPONDENT’S VIEWS
OF PERSONS AND THINGS
LE6I5UTIIBE FBIEIDLT TB DI10IUB0B
Speculation as to How Long the Leg-
islature Will Bo In Session— Talk
f Adjournment Before Limit 80 as
to Re-eonveno
How long will the state legislature
continue In session Is a question ask-
ed oftener than any other at Guth-
rie Unless a recess should be taken
the constitutional limit with pay will
expire about June 1 Politicians who
claim to know what they are talking
about say however that the legisla-
ture will not finish Its work earlier
than next fall They claim that It Is
planned that the legislature shall
take a recess about thirty days be-
fore the expiration of the 160 days
The members will go home hear the
complaints of their 1 constituents
make such explanations as they think
best and then make a campaign for
renomlnatlon and election Then
they will return to Guthrie about Oc-
tober and finish making a code of
laws for the state
In this connection It may be said
List the republicans In Oklahoma are
not Itching to win many places In the
legislature next fall Party managers
feel that the democratic legislature
and the democratic state administra-
tion are bound to make such mis-
takes as in time react against any
party and they are hopeful that noth-
ing may happen by which the demo-
crats would be able to shift any responsibility-
Should any consider-
able number of republicans be elect-
ed to the legislature next fall they
might get loaded with some of toe
things the democrats do not wish to
carry The republicans want to save
all their strength and ammunition for
the next general election at which
time they expect to find the demo-
crats quarrelling among themselves
and defending themselves against at-
tacks for what they have done In the
administration of the affairs of the
state -
There Is no longer any doubt that
the Flynn republicans and the Mc-
Guire republicans are agreed that
neither will oppose the other In the
candidacies of Dennis Flynn and B
S McGuire for delegate at large from
the west side of the state to the re-
publican national convention in Chi-
cago In a measure Flynn Is oppos-
ing C G Jones at Oklahoma City
who Is against Taft whom Flynn is
supporting McGuire had a free race
in his part of the state until John Go-
lobie editor of the Guthrie Register
unexpectedly announced that he was
a ' candidate The Influence that
brought Goloble Into the race Is not
clear at Gutthrle but it Is suspected
that he got some encouragement
from Chas Hunter' chairman of the
state committee with whom Goloble
Is friendly and who is presumed to
be antagonistic to both Flynn and
McGuire
There has been some comment in
newspapers and elsewhere In Okla-
homa In the last two weeks about
the practice of carrying concealed
weapons The fact that certain state
officers were accused of carrying pis-
tols gave prominence to the discus-
sion There was a time when no
true gentleman was believed to be
properly attired unless he had at
least two pistols concealed some-
where about his anatomy This be-
lief prevailed In Oklahoma a number
of years There has been a great
change In public sentiment In the
last six years and the man with a
gun is now regarded as a swash-
buckler a coward or just a cheap im-
itation oi the real thing Oklahoma
has advanced so far that in most
communities the man who constantly
carries a concealed weapon is not re-
garded as a good citizen The state
legislature is fixing up a dose for the
pistol ‘toter" that may make him sick
of his job
Governor Haskell can show both
wit and sarcasm when necessary He
had been importuned for a long time
by a certain state officer for an ap-
pointment for -a kinsman This offi-
cer rather demanded several days
ago that Governor Haskell give a di-
rect answer to the question that had
been propounded so often In so many
ways “Yes” drawled Haskell “I
will give him the job In fact I never
thought of anything else But I shall
follow a certain plan in doing it I
have decided that I shall give one job
to every democratic family in tne
state before I get through with my
administration After this has been
done I shall begin again and try to
give every family two jobs Now your
family already has one job The mo-
ment I have finished giving all the
other democratic families a job I
will get back to your family Your
worthy relative Is first on the list
and will be cared for In due time
Now don’t worry about it any more
and remember that I am always glad
to get suggestions from the people of
the state and that my policy Is: ‘Let
the people rule’ Come in and see me
any time I am always ready to talk
to visitors Good day”
Oklahoma lovers of music who
heard Miss Rena Vivienne as “Mad-
am Butterfly” in the Savage produc-
tion of that opera in Oklahoma City
were delighted to claim her as a na-
tive of the state Miss Vivienne In
private life Miss Rena Vivienne
Smith was born in McAlester
twenty-six years ago and lived there
until she was about 15 years old Her
mother was with her In Oklahoma
City where they met many of their
old friends The dramatic ability
shown by Miss Vivienne foreshadow-
ed in her childhood was as satisfying
to her admirers as were her accom-
plishments as a grand opera singer
The state legislature as was the
constitutional convention has been
good to organized labor By the end
of next month practically a’ll the leg-
islation asked for by organized labor
will have been enacted into law The
labor organizations have maintained a
lobby at Guthrie ever since the be-
ginning of the constitutional Conven-
tion and there has been no time
when there was a possibility of the
supping of a cog without the lobby’s
finding It out Governor C N Has-
kell has given the labor leaders and
their plans the benefit of his advice
and support
It Is proable that before the legis-
lature adjourns the labor organiza-
tions will ask for a law forbidding
the contract system in public works
In the state At present as In all
past time the construction of a pub-
lic building Is let by contract and
the contractor often makes an enor-
mous ' profit Certain labor leaders
insist that the contractor Is a fifth
wheel and without use In the erec-
tion of a county court house for In-
stance there Is the contractor and a
supervising architect and a building
superintendent The latter Is paid
by the county and his function Is to
see that both the contractor and the
architect do their duty The proposal
of these labor leaders is that the
board of commissioners of the coun-
ty buy all supplies and employ an
architect and a building superintend-
ent to erect the building thus sav-
ing the county whatever profit the
contractor would get An effort may
be made to get this law enacted be-
fore the new counties in Indian Ter-
ritory have proceeded to make con--tracts
for the erection of court
bouses and jails
As a military garrison Fort Reno
has gone down the long trail the last
troops having been withdrawn Febru-
ary 24 As tbe soldiers marched
away the buglers sounded “taps" for
the old garrison Many an old fron-
tiersman will feel a strange mist In
his eyes when he thinks of the pass-
ing of Fort Reno It was established
in the early 70’s to keep under con-
trol the Cheyenne and Arapaho and
other southwestern Indian tribes
General Miles operated from Fort
Reno agalnBt the Indians in 1874 and
brought back to Fort Reno the white
women whom he found captive
among the Cheyennes Old Wolf
Robe whose picture is often seen on
calendars taken from a painting by
E A Burbank the artist had one of
the women In his possession having
made her one of his wives Buffalo
were abundant In Oklahoma when
Fort Reno was In its pristine glory
The old post will be used as a supply
depot for horses and mules for the
army Ben Clark the old scout and
guide is custodian of the reservation
Chris Madsen of Guthrie is a kind
of associate custodian having the
rights to the hay meadows
There Is no need of a mandatory
primary law by the state legislature
If Governor C N Haskell is right in
his Interpretation of the constitu-
tion “The question Is often asked”
he said the other day “whether or
not a party candidate at the election
next fall must ( be nominated by the
primary system My answer Is tha
under the constitution all party can-
didates for district state county or
municipal offices must be nominated
by primary This Includes congress-
men and United States senators also
and I state further the state election
board will certainly place no party
candidate's name on the ticket who
Is not nominated by the direct pri-
mary The people have adopted that
plan In the' constitution are entitled
to have it In effect and there will be
no exception to this rule”
The democrats In Oklahoma are by
no means agreed that mandatory
primaries are wholly desirable un-
less a limit Is fixed on the amount
of money a candidate may spend for
campaign purposes Some of the
candidates were held up for thous-
ands of dollars in the last campaign
which they claim was unnecessary
and unjust Candidates that did not
have the money to spend came to the
conclusion that only a rich man could
run successfully for office under the
direct primary system
Speaker Murray still declares that
he will not go to Denver as a dele-
gate at large with only a half vote
for the reason he said that the ac-
tion of the convention Increasing the
number of delegates from Oklahoma
to eight practically precluded him
from any possibility of being chosen
chairman of the national convention
This statement of Murray’s Is in line
with the more or less significant ad-
mission that he made at the conven-
tion at Muskogee that his ambition
was to become permanent chairman
of the national convention which the
speaker is confident would have been
landed for him had not the Muskogee
convention done as it did
The claim Is made' at Guthrie that
the “Jim crow” law was not legally
passed in the senate only a vive voce
vote instead of a roll call having
been taken on its final passage How
this will be proven is not known but
it is asserted that an attempt will be
made to have the law declared in-
valid because of this fact The rec-
ord undoubtedly will show however
that a roll call vote was taken and
it is not believed that anybody will
be able to get behind the record -E
Benjamin Andrews president of
Nebraska university who was let out-
at Brown university because of his
strong fight in the interests of W J
Bryan "is prominently spoken of as a
possible successor to Dr Boyd as
president of the Oklahoma state uni-
versity Andrews has made a for-
mal application for the position and
the board of regents will probably be
called together soon to act upon it It
is believed that Dr Boyd will be al-
lowed to serve out the present school
year as head of the Oklahoma uni-
verslty but that a new president will
be selected by the board of regents
the next term
CHIEF BEFORE C0I1IME
TIGER DECLARES AGAINST RE-
MOVAL OF RESTRICTIONS
JEID OF CHEEKS Mi ELOOUEIT PLE1
House Subcommittee Hears a Num-
ber of Indiane on Question of Re-
moval of Restrictions— Indiane
Would bo Wiped Out
WASHINGTON: “If you remove
the restrictions on Indian land that
Is the last of the Indiana Your
great government maintains a soo m
Washington to keep wild animals re
r-rv-'S in the maintains of th- wait
to rr’if 1 ve birds and wild gauv
can't It do as much tor the Indians?"
This was the plea of Moty Tiger
chief of the Greeks in his native ton-
gue before the house sub-committee
on Indian affairs which gave n hear
ing to those tn favor of or In opposi-
tion to the various bills now pending
for the removal of restrictions against
Indian land
When told that several Creeks had
written In that he did not represent
the true Indian sentiment on the
question Chief Tiger replied:
“You congressmen know how It
goes when one is elected to some
public office there are always a few
people ready to criticize his acts"
M L Mott attorney for the Creeks
declared that it restrictions were re-
moved by the wholesale the Indian
would be swept from the face of the
earth In short order
“When Oklahoma asked for state-
hood” he said “it was said the rich-
est country In the union and was
ready to fulfill all the burdens of
statehood Now It is here claiming
that It must tax the Indian land in
order to be able to run Its official
machinery and to do this It Is neces-
sary to have the restrictions removed
If they are removed within five years
Oklahoma will be back here demand-
ing that congress take care of 50000
pauper Indians claiming that con-
gress by removing restrictions
brought the Indians to penury and
want and should provide for their
care”
J C Johnson of Muskogee repre-
senting the Creek and Seminole
freedmen objected to the removal of
restrictions on the homesteads of
either Indians or freedmen He point-
ed out that the freedmen had lost all
their surplus lands since the govern-
ment alienated that and said it would
not be six months until the grafters
would have all the homesteads if
they could be got He explained In
detail bow the grafters operated in
the Creek country and cited Instances
of perjury and forgery committed by
gratters to get the freedmen’s land
B J Hudson a Choctaw also told
of the wholesale operations of the
grafters In his country and declared
that unless the Indians were protect-
ed by the government they would
soon be inmates of the poorhouses
He says that hundreds of Choctaws
signed leases for their land which are
turning up as deeds In fee simple and
that the grafters are now suing to
quiet title In such cases
Webster Ballinger representing 8-
000 people with Chickasaw and
Choctaw blood who were cut off the
roll by the citizenship court some
years ago protested against the re-
moval of the restrictions at this time
He accused that court of being cor-
rupt and declared that his clients
who were still in possession of their
farms would never leave them ex-
cept In coffins He also charged that
the department of justice stood in
with some of the grafters and sum-
marily discharged a district attorney
down there just because he had in-
dicted some of the ringleaders of the
plot to rob his client
Frank Boudlnot attorney for the
Keetowahs wanted probate Jurisdic-
tion taken from the interior depart-
ment and opposed the bill to give the
federal court increased jurisdiction
in Indian matters W W Hastings
attorney for the Cherokees opposed
the jurisdiction bill but favored the
removal of restrictions oh all but the
full bloods
MEADOWS MURDER TRIAL
Celebrated Cases Are On Trial At
Oklahoma City
OKLAHOMA CITY: The case
wherein Mrs Lida Meadows and Ru-
dolph Tegeler are charged with the
murder of James Meadows husband
of the woman is now on trial in the
ditrict court here The defendants
aro to be tried separately Tegeler
was the first to be tried The de-
fense claims to have surprises that
will put the whole matter in- an en-
til ely new light Mrs Meadows
stoutly proclaims her innocence and
10 put more mystery into the case
declares Meadows is not dead Fifty-
two witnesses have been summoned
by the state and twenty-six for the
defendants It is expected the cases
will take two or three weeks
Muller attacked the law as uncon-
stitutional claiming that it put a lim-
itation on the power of contract The
Oregon supreme court upheld the
statute upon the ground that it is a
police regulation and its decision was
affirmed by the federal supreme court
in its ruling The opinion was by Jus-
tice Brewer
PASTOR GIVES BOND
TROY MO: Rev Clyde W Gow
pastor of tbe Methodist church
south of Elsberry Warren county
who was arrested and brought to jail
here following the death of Miss Eliz-
abeth Gleason who died from an op
eration and accused him in a death-
bed statement has been admitted to
bail in the sum of $3500 Rev Mr
Gow refused to waive examination
and his preliminary hearing has been
net for March 10 He was a leader
In the so-called “morality campaign"
which recently swept Lincoln county
HER COOD FORTUNE
AftiV Ykbv ®Pnt In Vain Effort
Mrs MarT £ ft Jouse of Git
iy:: “F-Yp rears ago
Wy::
I A bad fall and
it a&Mftd my kid-
neys Sever pain
In my back add hips
became constant Add
sharp twinges fol-
lowed any exertion
The kidney secre-
tions were badly dis-
colored I lost flesh
and grew too weak to work Though
constantly using medicine I despaired
of being cured until I began taking
Doan’s Kidney Pills Then relief came
quickly and in a short time I waa
completely cured I am now fa ex-
cellent health”
Sold by all dealers 50 cents a box
Fozter-Mliburn Co Buffalo N Y
Sundtjr School Lsssona for the World
A power greater than that of kings
leemi to have been wielded by the
little group of thoughtful men who
gathered at the Fenway residence of
W N Hartshorn to select tha lee-
tons for the Sunday schools of the
world says the Boston Herald Every
year they gather to make this choice
and when a decision haa been reached
the lessons are handed out to the
printers and by them literally scat-
tered over the planet Tbe word thus
goes forth not In one but In scores
of languages Europe and Africa east
and west north and south get these
helps to religious study in the vernac-
ular There la a supply for Hawaii
Japan ind the Islands of the sea For
India alone 40 dialects have to be pr
Tided for Some 500000000 Sunday
school leaflets are thus distributed
every year
CURED HER CHILDREN
Girls Suffered with Itching Eczema-
Baby Had a Tender Bkln Too-
Relied en Cutlcura Remedies
"Some years ago my three little
girls bad a very bad form of eczema
Itching eruptions formed on the hacks
of their heads which were simply cov-
ered I tried almost everything but
failed Then my mother recommended
the Cutlcura Remedies I washed my
children’s heads with Cutlcura Soap
and then applied the wonderful oint-
ment Cutlcura I did this four or five
times and I can say that they have
been entirely cured I have another
baby who is so plump that the folds of
skin on his neck were broken and even
bled I used Cutlcura Soap and Cutl-
cura Ointment and the next morning
the trouble had disappeared Mme
Napoleon Duceppe 41 Duluth St
Montreal Que May 21 1907”
Champ (savagely)— Your dog hae
bitten a piece clean out of my dog
Sharpe (ditto) — Confound it! I want-
ed to bring him up as a vegetarian
In a Pinch Use ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE
A powder It cures painful smart-
ing nervous feet and ingrowing nails
It’s the greatest comfort discovery of
the age Makes new shoes easy A
fcertaln cure for sweating feet Sold
by all Druggists 25c Accept no sub-
stitute Trial package FREE Ad-
dress A S Olmsted Le Roy N Y
Unhappily Alike
"Ha has no ear for music” said
Bulger pityingly “It’s actually a
fact that he couldn’t distinguish be-
tween the air of ‘America’ and that
of ‘God Save the King’ ”
Lewis’ Single Binder costs more than
other 5c cigars Smokers know why
Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory Peoria 111
The average man's idea of a good
sermon is one that goes over his head
and hits one of his acquaintances
ONLY ONE “BROMO QUININE”
That 1§ LAXATIVH HROVO QllNlNB Look tot
tho signature of H W GnOVfc Used the Wwid
over to Cure a Cold In One Day fto
Goethe: There is nothing mors
frightful than Ignorance in action
Clear white clothes are a sign that the
housekeeper uses Red Cross Ball Blue
Large 2 oz package 5 cents
If wishes were coal heaps we’d nons
of us freeze — Detroit Free Press
Truth and
Quality
appeal to the Well-Informed in every
walk of life and are essential to permanent
success and crrditable standing Accor
ingly it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs
atul Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of
known value but one of many reasons
why it is the best of personal and family
laxatives is the fact that it cleanses
sweetens and relieves the internal organs
on which it acts without any debilitating
after effects and without having to increase
the quantity from time to time
It acts pleasantly and naturally and
truly as a Laxative and its component
parts are known to and approved by
Physicians as it is free from all objcction-
rlle substances To get its beneficial
effects always purchase the genuine —
manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co only and for sale by all leading druggists
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Etzold, E. G. & Loosemore, B. V. The Temple Tribune. (Temple, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 5, 1908, newspaper, March 5, 1908; Temple, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1859665/m1/3/: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.