The Kiowa Sentinel (Kiowa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, September 21, 1906 Page: 3 of 4
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'A
WHAT BECAME OF OLD GLASSES?
Mother's Effort to Check Child's Curi
osity Proves Futile.
Oklahoma Democratic State
Press Bureau
A Boston thre* year-old. like Mr.
Kipling's elephant's child is distin-
guished by her "insatiable curiosity."
Bitter and embarrassing experiences
have led her long-suffering mother to
recognize this fact.
Accordingly, when accidents in the
kitchen aud the expectation of guests
to dine, rendered the purchase of new
water glasses necessary. Mrs. S
took her daughter Into her confidence
"Sarah,'' she said, these are new
glasses. 1 bought them at Stearns
yesterday afternoon at 4; SO o clock
Kobert drove me over to the shop with
Jim and the runabout. Kobert -we
his butternut' livery and his brown
derby. 1 paid six dollars for the
glasses, and had them sent. Now you
know all about them, and I positively | tion.
forbid you to ask a single question
about them wheu you see them on the
table."
Sarah wore a subdued look during
the process of the meal, and Mrs
8 was beginnips to congratulate
herself upon the effectiveness of her
lesson, when an eager aud interested
eipression came into Sarah s face, anc
she piped in her shrill but engagi"*
voice: Mother, what did you do with
the old glasses?"
fly Pa
WIS \M FADEI.KS< PYKS roloi
more per package than other*, ant
the color* are bnghtei and faater.
IVIicacy is to the mind what fra
grance is to the fruit.—A. Poincelot.
ght
WOULD RULE OUT FARMERS. The city of Fort Worth has one
U.hough the districting board holds of the be t contract., for th« .uppty
ill of coal for the use of the water works
aud electric lighting plants that it
l*wi*' Single Hinder
maile of rich. mellow
dealer or l^wts' Facto
toltan
I Y<r
gar
that under the enabling act th
be no registration in the cities of the
new state as provided by the Okla
homa election law, yet in order to
keep the farmer vote from interfering
with their plans, the republican coin
mlttee of Indian Territory has issued
an order for the republican farmers
to register, and those who will not
legister will not be permitted to take
part in the republican convention® foi
the nomination of candidates Tor dele
gates to the constitutional convcn
"Silly
you
ly!
Cherry Lips.
' she cried, "why did
seriously? Though mj
severe, you must hav«
was smiling."
.e replied, "your mouth it
didn't notice it."
has ever had. The contract is for
a year and is with the Dow Coal com-
pany of South McAlester, 1. T , a
concern which has a number of
branch offices in Texas. The contract
agrees to deliver to the city for thu
water works not less than five nor
more than twelve carloads of coal a
week ai the price or $1.15 per ton."
One of the reasons Texas can pet
coal cheaper than ok lain una 1h be-
cause the laws of Texas control the
rates. Oklahoma has been subjected
to the domination of the railroads for
years. Every time a citizen has pur-
chased a pound of coal he has paid
tribute to the railroads. With the
I greatest beds of coal in the I'nlted
| States at our very doors. Oklahomans
have paid prices that would shock the
consumers a thousand miles from the
nearest coal field.
Is it any wonder that farmers and
laborers are revolting against the
railroads? Corporations resent it
titles with indignation when men who work
•WOMEN'S NEGLECT
?JFFERIN6THESUREPEHALTY
Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydia
E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound.
How many women do you know who
are perfectly well and strong? V\e
hear everyday the same story over and
over agaih. " I do not feel well; 1 am
so tired all the time !"
The reason the republicans are ask
ing the farmers of the eastern part
of the new state to register is for tin-
same reason they have derided
against registration in the cities.
They want to fix it so the railroads
can control the nomination of can
didates. and write the constitution if
they are successful at the polls.
If they can keep the republican
farmer out of the convention, they
can with the help of the railroads
nominate corporation candidate
Then if they can fix it so the
will not register before the election,
nnd disregard the election law which
provides that a voter must have lived
in the state six months, in the county
sixty days, and in the precinct thirty
days, they hope to be able to place
enough floaters in the district to carry
the election of their candidate. That
Is the situation the people of Okla-
homa are up against.
The people have paid tribute to the
railroads for years, both when they
. " , . ,. ; „ . ,i party, any one lamillar with condi
have botiKhl coal aud provision*, ami '
through rain nnd shine to support
their families call them robbers when
they go to buy coal. And yet when
coal that costs less than $2.50 per
•on at the mines Is sold a hundred
miles from there for $7.5 1 Is It any
wonder the people call the railroads
robbers?
And yet the representatives of the
railroads are in control of the repub-
lican party. If It Is asked today who
are the leaders of the republican
Hate McDonald
More than likely you speak the same
words yourself, and no doubt you feel
far fro in well. Thecause may be easily
traced to some derangement of the fe-
male organs which manifests itself in
depression of spirits, reluctance to go
anywhere or do anything, backache,
bearing-down pains, flatulencv, nerv-
ousness, sleeplessness,* or other fe-
male weakness.
These symptoms are but warnings
that there is danger ahead, and unless
heeded a life of suffering or a serious
operation is the inevitable result
The never failing remedy forall these
symptoms is Lydia E. Piukhain s \ eg-
etable Compound.
Miss Kate McDonald of Wood bridge,
N. J., writes:
I>rar Mrs. Pinkhanv
44 Restored health has meant so much to me
that I cannot help from t<'lliiin about it for
the sake of other suffering women.
" For a long time 1 suffered untold agony
with a female trouble and irregularities,
which made me a physical wreck, andno one
thought I would recover, but Lydia I 1,,lp"
ham's Vegetable < Compound has entirely
cured me. and made me well and strcng, and
I feel it mv duty to tell other suffering women
w hat a splendid medicine it is."
For twenty-five years Mrs. Pinkham.
daughter-in-law of Lydia E Pinkham.
has under her direction, and since her
decease, been advising sick women free
of charge Her advice is free and
always helpful. Address, Lynn, Mass.
when they shipped out their wheat,
corn and hogs. After years of hold
ups and tribute paying to the corpor-
ations and railroads, the republican
caipethag organization is preparing
to defeat the people of the one op
port unity of a lifetime to bring the
railroads anil corporations to time by
making a constitution that will in
sure the people a voice In all leglsla
tion.
They are trying by fraud and elec-
tion robbery to give the corporations
the power to write the constitution
lor the people. It Is not necessary t*
take the word of democrats on this
matter, all that is necessary to do is
to talk to the republicans of Indian
Territory regarding the order that is
intended to shut out the republican
vote in that section of the state. R«
publican papers like the ltrlstow Kn
terprlse condemn the order in bitter
terms and dill the comittee the
Standard Oil committee.
All that Is necessary to convince
an honest republican of the Intent of
the districting board to defraud the
people ol their honest expression is to
read some of the republican papers
that are denouncing the action or
the board, and the letter of republic-
an Attorney General Don Carlos
Smith. It is a wholesale robbery
plan, and If the people hope to pre-
serve inviolate those liberties that are
guaranteed by the election laws >f
Oklahoma, they must arise, and in
this election forever wipe out of e.v
istence the disreputable men who
are trying to defeat the will of the
people.
Hons will say: Dennis Flynn, attor-
ney for the Frisco railway in Okla-
homa; John DuMar, attorney for the
Missouri, Kansas & Texas railway .
Henry Asp, Santa Fe attorney, the
Hill Phelps lobbyist of Oklahoma;
Hird McGuire, the railroad candidate
for congress, who has always been a
willing tool for Henry Asp, and Tom
Ferguson, who owes his political suc-
cess to Dennis Flynn, and who owes
his late nomination for congress to
the efforts of Flynn and Du.Mars and
the railroad influences at their com-
mand.
What will the people pay for coal
in case the republicans write the con-
stitution and get control of the new
state, Is a question that comes homq
to every man in the new state. What
will be the rates on the wheat that is
raised in Oklahoma when the farmer
wants to ship it out? Would not the
people of Oklahoma do better to vote
for the party that will demand a writ-
ten pledge from every candidate of
the party that he will support the
initiative and referendum, than to
give their vote to the party that is
controlled by the railroads? Better
think along these lines.
Don't Bite Off Too Much.
When one man tries to do the work
of three the work of two remains un
finished.
In a Pinch, Uss ALLEN'S FOOT EASE
A powder. It cures painful, smart-
ing, uei^ous feet aud ingrowing nails
it's the greatest comfort discovery ot
the age. Makes new shoes easy A
certain cure for sweating feet 30,000
testimonials of cures Sold by all
druggists. 25c. Trial package. FRISK
Address A S. Olmsted. Le K. .
ne wain t Wise.
He—No, Mr. VVyse, I'm afraid 1
must refuse you. You would have no
consideration for the feelings of my
mother.
Him—Why, what makes you think
oo?
Her—Why did you hang your hat
over the Keyhole before you proposed
to me?
Wanted His Cigar Boiled.
Kloseman—I gave you one of those
cigars the other day didn't 1?
W lee man—Yes, 1 remember it very
well.
Kloseman How would you like to ,
have one now?
Wiseman—Boiled. I guess They
don't seem quite wholesome raw."—
Philadelphia Press
Didn't Have Auk Eggs.
Prof Kdwln Ray Lancaster, presl !
dent of the British association, was
busy in his a'::*)' one morning recent-
ly when a country woman sought an
interview with him Laying a parcel
on his desk she said, triumphantly:
"There's two of 'em." "Two of what?
•aid the professor. "Two awk's eggs
1 ear they are worth £1,000 pounds
apiece." The distinguished scientist
undid the parcel carefully, looked at
the eggs and said with a smile.
"Theae are not auk's eggs. Those that
are so valuable are the eggs of *he j
—a u H " "Oh, hank," said i • u .
an "Wait till I get 'old r t my son,
'Bnery. I'll give iin wot oh for send-
ing me on a wi!a goose chase."
What JOYThey Bring
To Every HOME
as withloyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—when in health—and
hew conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they
enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome
diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved,
not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri-
ous or objectionable nature, and if at anytime a remedial agent is required, to assist
nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure
and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy,
Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co Syrup of Figs has
come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate
of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use.
Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because
they know is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputa-
ble physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an
original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and
presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are
used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence
we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent
medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication.
Please to '•"member and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs
alwavs has the .ull name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly
printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size
only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size* or having
printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get
the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have
a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children,
whenever a laxative remedy is required.
DISCRIMINATE AGAINST HOME.
Can any one explain why it is thai
Fort Worth. Tex., is able to purchase i
South McAlester coal for $1.15 per
i ton while Oklahoma towns are com
pel led to pay $1 to $7.50 per ton
. The Fort Worth Telegram tela of
a contract that has just been made
with a coal company of South M<
Alester. It says:
MR. BRYAN'S ITINERARY
William J. Bryan's itinerary through
Oklahoma and Indian Territory has
been announced. The special train
will enter Indian Territory at Wilbur-
ton Wednesday, Sept. 20, and proceed
to South McAlester lii time for supper.
At 7:30 the train will run to Musko-
gee and proceed during the night to
Vinita. Leaving Vinita at «♦;00 a. m.
Thursday, ten minute stops will bo
made at Chelsa and Claremore and
dinner will be taken at Tulsa. The
train will reach Pawnee at 3:00
o'clock, Perry at 4:30, Guthrie at 6:00
and Oklahoma City at 8:00. The fol-
lowing morning El Reno, Geary and
Alva will be visited, thence to Enid
and Blackwell. Mr. Bryan will speak
at every stop.
HOLD UP!
and consider
POMMEL
ndSLICKEH
LIKE ALL
T°W£^
WATERPROOF
CLOTHING,
ismadf of the best
irolffiab.inMackorrfllow
lultyfluararifttUrul sold fcy
rriidSf dwkrs nn^wtwrt
ll" STICK TO THE
SIGN 0FTHE FISH
NEVER TAKE POISON YOURSELF
And remember you have no right to give it to your WIFE AND LITTLE ONES
your home we do
because there nev
_ because we Know a win uunu ...... . — . . . ..
has been there is not now. anil there never will be the slightest particle of potnon in it It anyone tells
that this statement is untrue, point your Unger to OUR GUARANTEE. We make this guarantee unconditional and open
TO THE WORLD
/"VI ir filTADA MTrr We will give J1.000.00 IN GOLD to.nychemiit in the world whofind.
(JUK. CaUArvAlN 1 LL «ny ARSENIC, MORPHINE, STRYCHNINE or other poi.onou. drug, in OXIDINE
Not only do we give the above guarantee as to its being free from Poison, but we go further and guarantee that
OXIDINE
WILL CURE YOU OR. YOVR. FAMILY OF
CHILLS, FEVERS, MALARIA, BAD COLDS AND LA GRIPPE
And it it fails to cure you your druggists give you back your money; in other words. OXIDINE is pure, contains no poison*
and there is a GUARANTEE TO CUKE that goes with every bottle.
I
MADE IN REGULAR AND TASTELESS FORM
50c Per Bottle to All
Manufacturwd by
PATTON-WORSHAM DRUG CO.
DALLAS, TEXAS, AND MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
OXIDINE, THE CHILL CURE THAT CURES CHILLS
Baths with
COLONIZING NEGROES.
Call it a campaign of prejudice or
anything else you like, but that the
negro question is one that sooner or
luter must be faced by the people oi
Oklahoma is as certain us late. He
publicans disclaim wanting mixed
Democracy will demand separate
schools, separate coaches and separ-
ate waiting rooms. While some of
the republicans claim they are for
separate schools, they are not for any
of ihe other measures for separating
the races, and they will not so de-
schools, and denounce democrats for clare, neither will they so legislate
bringing up the race question, but ai if they have the opportunity. It is
the same time they are sending dele up to the people who are for the
gates into the black belt, and arc ( measures advocated by democracy to
right now importing negroes into this see that the party that advocates
state 911 th<* pretext of importing cot-' these things is given the power and
ton pickers. authority to write the constitution,
it is well known that such repub
Suffer
in
Silence
Thousands of Women
suffer every month In silence, tortures that would drive a man to the edge of des-
pair. The ailments peculiar to women are not only painful but dangerous and
should receive prompt treatment before they grow worse. If you suffer from pain
irregular functions, falling feelings, headache, side ache, dizziness, tired feeling, ttc.,
follow the example of thous-
WINE
ands of women who have
been relieved or cured, and
take Wine of CarduJ.
Sold by all Druggists
llcans as Tom Ferguson have made
it a business, aud are now making li
a business to colonize negroes In
Oklahoma. In view of these condi
tions, can it b.- expected that the race ,
question can be kept out of politic.;? ,
Any one who knows anything about
conditions where the negroes are
thickly settled knows that it meaus
a setback to that part of the country
where they are so located.
The negro has hung like barnacles
to the South. The Southern people
REPUBLICANS DON'T UNDER-
STAND.
Already the republicans are making
fun of the plan the democrats have
adopted for raising funds for the
campaign. The idea of going to the
people for money with which to cany
011 a political tight is one that strikes
the funny spot of the average re-
publican. The Muskogee Phoenix
comments as follows:
"That is a great scheme the Demo-
crats of the two territories have
have had to not only struggle against adopted for raising a slush fund for
Education In Sweden.
Nowhere else, unless In America, Is
education so universal as In Sweden.
Every child must go to school be-
tween tbe ages of seven and 14, un-
less the parents can show that they
are being privately educated. There
are about twelve thousand common
schools In Sweden, even the thinly
populated districts having "ambula-
tory schools," held in various parts
of the district. When this is the case
the school term is reduced to about
half the ordinary duration.—The
Craftsman.
And gentle applications of Cuti-
cura, the great Skin Cure, and
Purest and sweetest of emollients,
or summer rashes, irritations,
itchings, chafings, sunburn, bites
and stings of insects, tired, aching
muscles and joints, as well as for
preserving, purifying, and beau«
tifying the skin, scalp, hair, and
hands, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura
Ointment are Priceless.
Pottw Drsc* Chm- Corp.. Bolt Prop*, Botfos.
m~ Mallei Vie* "lie* W Cats let bkxu, * Hsb.
great odds since the war by reason
of having lost everything in the war,
but they have had to do continually
for the negro. Such men as Tom
Ferguson point to the conditions in
the South and compare them with the
N'orth, and try to discredit the South-
ern people. They do not stop to con-
sider that the people of the North
started out at the end of the wa.
where they quit at the beginning.
They had a strong government bacn
of them and all the credit a counti,.
could need. This was not guaranteed
to the Southerner. In addition to the
advantage of the Northern mail, he
; did not have the negroe
I Yet Tom Ferguson is willing to
fasten these barnacles on the people
! of the new state in exchange for the
I negro vote. He and other republic-
campaign purposes. They pull off a
pow-wow advertising a meeting where
prominent' speakers will address the
I>eople and after the gab fest the
"It Knocks the Itch."
It may not cure all your ills, but it
does cure one of the worst. It cures
any form of itch ever known—no mat-
Audience Is dismissed, excepting the ter what It's called, where the sensa-
dyed-in-the-wool democrats, and then tion Is "itch," it knocks it. Eczema,
the touch is mad'
Every man in Oklahoma who Is for
a constitution for the people who It's guaranteed, and
want to have the initiative and refer- Hunt's Cure.
endum placed in the constitution, Is
expected to contribute something to
the democratic campaign fund,
whether it be much or little. The
corporations are going to contribute
thousands of dollars to the republic-
to care for. an fund for the purpose of electing
delegates to the constitutional con-
vention who will keep the Initiative
and referendum out of the constitu-
tion. It Is up to the people to con*
Ringworm und all the rest are re-
lieved at once and cured by one box
name is
Rlchss and Independence.
"And now," said the friend of other
days, "you are rich and independ-
ent."
"Well," answered Mr. Cumrox, "I
am rich, all right. But when mother
and the girls are around, 1 don't take
chances on being too independent.
Champion Whittler.
B. F. Clay, of Philadelphia, a re-
tired ship carpenter nearly 80 years
of age, is said to be the champion
whittler of the world. Aided only by
a penknife and a piece of sandpaper,
he has cut down a single block of
wood to a quadruple-linked watth
chain over three feet long and many
other exceedingly delicate and dif-
ficult pieces of work. During the
last few years, since retirement, Mr.
Clay has cut scores of watch chains.
—Technical World Magazine.
Difference in Bills.
Borroughs—Say, old man, got a ten-
dollar bill about you?
Hrokelelgh—No, but I've got a nine-
dollar bill.
Borroughs—Come off! There Isn't
such a thing.
Brokeieigh—I wish there wasn't,
but my tailor has n>. down on It:
"Dr. to one pr. trousers.'
You nlwnyi get full value in Lewis'
Single Binder Htmight 5c cigar. Your
dealer or I^wis' Factory, Peoria, ill.
The rays of happlnrss, like those
of light, are colorless when unbroken.
—Longfellow.
Mr«. Wliislow'* Soothing Syrup.
90,000,001
BUSHEL.'
Take U.M.C. Cartridges
lor Buck Fever
They'll giveyouconfidence
and steady your nerves.
Always accurate, sure fire
and hard hitting.
u. M. C. cartridges are fusrsn
teed, also standard arraa when
U. M. C. cartr.dfea are used aa
specifled_oa label*.
THE UNION METALLIC
CAKTRIDCE COMPANY
BRIDGEPORT. Conn.
THAT'S THE WH
CROP IN WEST
CANADA THIS1
ans complain of the democrats Inject tribute to their own cause, and so
lng the race question into the cam far, they have responded nobly
paign when they are forcing the ques- The republicaans can think of no
tion by favoring the importation of other plan but of soliciting from tbe
negroes. The democrats will fight corporations. The Mark Hanna slush
the question to a finish. There i fund campaign is the republican con-
great danger in the making of a con ception of the manner in which it
stitution if it holds out to the negroes should bo conducted. Oklahoma re-
of the black belt which is so close to publicans have never had to ask the
us, the promise of race equality. ^ people for anything.
Never judge a man's worth by the
taxes he pays.
Many a man is honest because his
price is too high.
Buchan's CRESYLIG Ointment
is • positive necessity to every cattleman, will i
quickly heal wound*'and tore*on all animal*,
won tirst premium at Texas State Fair and for
40 years ha- been the standard remedy for
SCREW WORMS AND FOOT ROT
Put Up n 4 <> bolt en and 4 o* , U lb . I lt . J r . and
b MTHW-?"|r can- 11 -M «•!! Hu«-hi n'« €'re«y-
lleOliilmrnt t'.v dru*KlM> uml
wr.te CAKliOMC HO At' C -. NKW VORK t IT\.
W. N. U.. Oklahoma City, No. 38. 1906
' (MNi.UOO bufchel* of
and I7.nnn.000 tmshel* of barley means i
tinustionof good times for ihe faimer*of
em Canada
Free farms, big crops, low taxes, h.
Climate. churches aud schools. p
i railway scrvice.
The Canadian Govern me,, t offer a 1t0
land free t<. everv M-ttlei willing and a
comply with the Homestead Regulations.
Advice and information may be obtain
from W 1> on Miperiatendent of
mation. ottawa. Canada or from autl
Calla han Government Agent—J. S. Ln
No. 1>5 W. Ninth Street, Kaunas City, M
Wanted lor U.S. Army
2i iin.1*'. « 1 neiis of Vnlted State#, of good
ter mil leiiH'erata babitn. who can si« ak. 1
wr -e Knmi-h For information appW toR*
tiftl-er '" ! «••«• IC u Ok'ulionia.Uuthrl
annwnee.O T.,or So. McA.ener aud Muskc
HA LES.IiEX IV AX TED.
% iivi
ulU'lty I
IIue LI|ilU.
jroutfb'y sz|
'"E53L
We want (■
. >1. ttiib locality
s Or*t nio
l*re**ure Hollow Wli
. A utilitv needed la eTerjr 1
rid fniiT complying with Insurance
man ne will ir*e exclusive sales
guarantee to refund money If aooda no
dava Kurtherpartieuiarsonrequest. The
Wluett Litfbt Co.. IMO N. ilalaleUSt.. CI
Plantation Chill Cure isManM
To Cure, or Monry Refunded by Your Morchant. So. Why Not Try IT 7 Price, BOc, «•!•'*
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Vernon, John C. The Kiowa Sentinel (Kiowa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, September 21, 1906, newspaper, September 21, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc273574/m1/3/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.