The Mangum Star. (Mangum, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 19, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 4, 1906 Page: 3 of 8
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MILWAUKEE
Here
s to Health and
a Good Digestion
MILWAUKEE
Quality— Individuality— Purity—
The Quality of the Matt decides the body of a beer. Blatz Mali is produced in the brewery's own malt house by
trained Malsters (years in Blatz service). "Not only hob) much malt-but hob) good" is here the inviolable
rule. This method is expensive, but the^desired result is always achieved—the Vital ingredients of the malt are
thereby brought out and retained. To thecals malt is due the prevailing full-bodied State of Blatz Beer.
The Hops used in the brewing of Blatz Beer are rich in aromatic properties^ tonics (hopbitters), which
tend to the beer that fragrance which captivates lovers of the beverage. The tonics act as a mild Stimulant to the
digestion. Blatz Beer is perfectly fermented and ripened in the coldest and cleanest cellars extant.
The most skilled masters zealously guard "Blatz" individuality. The paramount object being to maintain
with absolute uniformity every characteristic that has these many years meant Blatz Quality
VAL BLATZ BREWING CO., Milwaukee
J. R. JAMESON, Wholesale Dealer, Mangum
Special Attention Given Private Trade
•%'> % 11 AI w i\y s The Sdrne Goo d Old BLATZ'^it i''
DIRECTORY.
* J
SECRET SOCIETIES.
ANGUM LODGE No. 29. A. F. & A. M.
—Meets e^ery 1st and 3rd Satur-
day nights lo each month.
W. S. BRADSHAW, W. M.
FLOYD McNEILL, Sec.
■ASTERN STARS CHAPTBR No.
■Meets flrst Thursday at 3:30 p. m.
titfrd Thursday at 8 p. m., at
isoni* Hall. Visitors are welooms.
MRS. MAGGIE BRADSHAW,
Worthy Matron.
Order for Hearing Petitin to Sell Real
Estate
Territory of Oklahoma, County of
Greer, ss.—In Probate Court.
Estate of Joseph H. Bennett, de
ceased.
). R. M. NA VAJOE TR1 HE No. 3«—
Masts 1st and 3rd Wednesday'!
8th rua at Jackson A Wil-
son's ball. All visiting member*
srs weloome.
W. F. McKOWN, Sochem.
,K8 W. FARRIS. C. of R.
NOUM LODGE No. 6t. I.O.V.—
Maeta avery Mondar night
W. C. MARBLE, N. O.
G. P. STEPHENS. Sac.
NOUM LODGE No. 18. KsfP.—
Meets every Tuesday night at
7:80.
A. M McKINNEY. C. C.
.. WILSON. Jr. K.tfP I 8.
NOUM CAMP No. 11*. W. O. W.~
Meeta avery Sad and 4th Tuesday
8. E. ECHOLS. C. C.
E. J. DeARMAN, See.
>. E.—Meets tad aad 4 th Wadaaa
<ay ef each noath at Jaahm *
The petRion of E. R. Pie: son as the
administrator of tie estate of Joseph
i H. Bennett, decease], iut<\ ing been
I presented to tills court, prating that
I an order be made, authorizing said
petitioner to sell tho wliole or so
much, and such parts of the real es
tate described in asaid petition as the
Court ahall judge necessary and ben-
eficial, at private sale; and K appear-
ing to the Court, from such petition
that it is necessary to seli the whole
some portion of such real estate
for the purpose and reasons mention-
ed in aaid petit-ion: therefore, said
petition will be filed herein and a
time appointed for hearing the aame.
And R is hereby ordered by the
court that Tuesday, the 30; h day of
October, A. D. 1906, at the hour of 10
o'clock A. M.. of said day. that beln*
a day of the regular special October
term, 1806, of this court, be, and the
same Is appointed as the time when
are dlrecftad and required to appear
are Idrected and rcqui-ed to appear
before thla Court tr< show can«e why
an order should not be gran ed to
safld petitioner ty sell eo much of the
real estate of said deoederr as Is
. O. STEPHENSON. Praa
POEEST SHELL. SM.
ISTHOEIST CHUECIH SSCHSM
r Saaday at 11 a'etoak. a. a. aad
p. S—day Sshsui at II s a ;
easai at S:S p. m.; Prar-
■M at T M
A W. SIMS. Paster.
APT 1ST CHUECH Ssrrleas s |
if at 11 a ■. aad S tt p m.:
MM at H a a Prayar
tadasaisf alaht at ?:SS j
T. JOB TALLEY. MM.
BWTBAL CHRISTIAN CH1ECM
Sihsil at H e'etaeh aa.«s
Hay PtsxAtag aad mm
m si 11 a. m, m
And it is further ordered hat a
copy of this order be personal'* perrel
on all persona Intera ed ir. .aid es-
tate. any general guardian of j minor
so Interested aad any legato.* t de
visee. or heir of the dec I it, pro-
vided they are residents of „n! 1 Gre> r
Ooaaty. at least 'en days re the
time appointed f< - heerlr.r «4d p
| ti tie a unless the> vhall • ve each
notice la writltg •• d tfer «j. wrl'
Ins thHr aas-nt t t *r « f nal*
U raVas prsred r * 'ti . .
|«w p*MlsAe«i tor too- « i<t
la the Mane i w Star, r w
per miMUV - (a Gre - V« * Ok a
The Right Road to and from
and between Chicago, Omalha, St.!
Louis, Denver Colorado Springs. Mem- j
phis. Peoria, St. Paul, St. Jeseph, Mln-'
eapolls, Kansas City, Fort Worth.1
Dallas and anywhere beyond. !
Trains arriv9 and leave Mangum.
C 'ihoma, on the following schedule
T" No- 134—Passenger, dally, east-
boui. leaves Mangum 7:30 a.m.
Train 'o. 130—Passenger, dally, east-
bound, leaves Mangum 3;3o p.m.
Train No. 174—Local freight, dally, ex-
cept Sunday, leave Mangum 7:00 a.m.
Train No. 128—Passenge r, daily, west-
bound. arrives Mangum 1:30 p. m.
Train No. 133—Passenger, dally, west-
bound, arrive Mangum 8;so p.m.
Train No. 173—Local freight, dally ex-
cept Sunday, westbound, art've Man-
rira 4:10 p. m
E M. HIGGINS. Local Agent,
Mangum, Okiahouia
J. A. STEWART, Gen. Agent,
Kansas City, Mo
J 8 McNALLT, D. P. A.,
Oklahoma City, O. T.
j SIXTH YEAR IN OKLAHOMA.
I Drs. Clark Hu t Ham
ley, the far cht.-a-
!go Special! fx i > •.
I Chronic at' P.lva'-j
diseases of "<"■ h sf\-
es. Cures r •. irto^d
cons jltatior t
Office ovei
nue. Guthrie
459.
Will be in vi «um. Harrts Hctel
MONDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1906
(ONE OAY ONLY.)
Returning monthly, if necessary.
A'esr Harr - ,i Ave-
ihoira. Pb . .e No.
LET
FRED
SWITZER
SOUR STOMACH
4
It is hfatnres's way oi
■ protesting against im-
proper food hastily de-
roared or too hearty
meals, and if the warn-
V M >Bg is unheeded serious
M results will follow.
~ ^ When your stomach
rebels at this abase.
It becomes Inactive, your food fer-
lonn.aad there ia trouble
ahead. The quickest, safest aad sorset
way to conquer this condition aad
prevent its return ia to imiasrtislal
commence the use of
Dr. Caldwell's
educational column.
By J. C. Moore.
SHORT STOPS.
What a spiteful man the editor of
•he Kaaaas City Post must be. H<v
says: "A New Jernoy principal Is
about to lose his position because
he Is charged wltji having bun-
ged a pretty teacher. All the other
teacher* nho wore nothugged are
against the principal. Its Impose!
ble to please all the women all the
time."
A 8pringfleld woman says that there
are some men so "onory" In that town
that the neighbors' dons refuse to
bark at them.
Which looks the worst The wo-
man whose skirts sag, or the man
whose trousers bag at the knees?
Many women are charitable, but it
Ih the limit when a woman Is chari-
table enough to agree to a husband's
having his own way.
Great i« the Fourth of July. It de-
velops several brands of patriots.
One of the fellows who fires off a rock
et so people around: him can see it;
another Is a feetive cuss who fires
giant crackers after all his neighbors
are In bed; and still another is the
idiot who throws a o:acker under your
own or your horse feet. All of them
are so funny, let us bless them- nit
Ma-st men never appreciate their
wives until it happens they have to
cook a few meals on a hot stove, or
sew on buttons with eyes hard to hit
when not seen.
The fellow who died while trying
to drink a quart of whiskey on a>bet
was a first class fool. He could have
strung out a quart over two weeks,
without furnishing a funeral for the
edification of sensible people.
Every man ought to carry a lot of
life insurance, if for no other reason
than to help his wife to marry again
if she becomes a widow.
If any man, who imagines he knows
"just bow to do it", could' have a
hand in running ti.a government on
his own ideas for a week, it miglu
possibly last twenty minutes.
A household magazine has a lonj
article telling just how to keep th:
service of a good cook. From our
point of view, the successful solution
depends greatly upon the kind of cook
as to matter of taste. If the cook is
a negro, we would suggest having
chicken every day for dinner.
A discussion is going on as to the
cause of hay fever. Perhaps one pro-
lific cause may be due to the too fre-
quent kissing of grass-widows.
Why is it so Tnany girls will seek
to attract the attention of a strang
R. Littlefisld,
Late of the Boston Op< ra w|!h the-
Columbia Opera Co.—At ;.'8w Operai
House October Hth.
t urning loosw I hat u. ,o. , ungs>
ter before Mme to discard h,s swad-
ding clothes. In fact, it vi< ihugo
mistake to turn him loose , ! after
Cuba from Spanish iu^ uba la
proving a dull pupil in ! ; g the
art of self-Government, atr. the billot
costs of Uncle Sam's e: Iment ia
yet Inclosed, and is likely to remain
unbalanced indefinitely.
SNAP JACK.
John Graham Philosophy .n a Letter-
to His 8
"Noise in't author!.. ,:.d ther# is
no sense in ripping l. ioarng an£
cuseing around the ot... ..things,
don't please you. Foi when a fellow
is given to that, his men secretly,
won't care a cuss .whether he is.
pleased or not. They'l jump when he
speaks because they value their heaida.
not his good opinon. Indiscriminate
praise—it only makes a manured.
"I l amed -this like ..<ost of thj
sense I've got—hard: as on
ly a few years ago 1 tM A u j .a&t lee-
son in it. I came do'A ^ one ...orning:
with my breakfast t.. i.-ssti;i.., prettjr
easy, anvl found ilie ,rde. :i fairly
heavy and the kicks rctther ii'ti:; «o 1
told the young man who was . eadang
the mail to me, and' who, o' couirse
hadn'4. ha3 anything sp-cial to do witlj
the run of orders, to buy h.meelf a
suit of clothes and send the bill to the
old man. f
"Well, when the afternoon mall
came in I dipps.l into that,too, but
I'd eaten a pretty irony luncheon, and
it got to finding fault with ite eur-
rounlin-8, and the letters' were as
full of iiicks as a idrove of Missourt
mules. So I began taking it out of
_ | the fellow who happened to be handl-
youi*,. man who may be a horse thief, est. the seme clerk to whom I had giv-
er an escaped criminal for all th_«
know, and at the same time turn a
"cold shoulder" nice young ;nen
they have known ail their li\es?
And now it is rejnrted that some
last doctor has dit«- ■ ered a method Liy
which dead dogs euu be restored to
life. If he ie to api iy his discovery
industriously, he . ly is not fond of
"weinerwurst."
POLITICAL i JNCEPTS.
By Sua Jack.
en tho suit of clothes in the mornings
Of course, he hadn't had anything to.
■do w; h the run of kicks either, but
he nc . • ■ ptr up a hand to defend him-
self ill I v as through, and then he
only i-ked: "Say , Mr. Graham, don't
you want tljat suit of clothes back?'*
"Of .-nurse, I could have fired him on
the sp<> for impudence, but I made i*
a suit mi l an overcoat instead I don't
expect get my experience on free
passes. Viwl I had my money's worth
too, -bee.; ise it taught me thai it is a
; -WW, .. 4^ . lousm Hits WUU it its Ct
Perhaps the fe ar uas already con- good mi- to make sure the o.hcrfel-
cluded we are suffer ag from sever ■ low-s ;on„ ^tore ,ou go ahead,
attack of Bryan ,, the bra n, but | when ,, , Julnp oa :aan ,vbo«dn t
phychologically it > more pn perly a:,ioi:. nia <PSore 8il. .Ual: .erhim
case of anU-Brjan .n the cecelwal or-: ar,, r 5akes !he sfciug out
gan.
The present poi.:ical whirlpool
hreatens to engulf long cherished
. democratic principles and to obliter-
ate oM-time party land marks that so
;. ften marked the path to democratic
i vio ory ia anti-beJlum years.
It is now reported that Senatot-
Hailey favors lUke Smith, the pros-
is a common anddistrsa*
ing complaint.
It is Ns
| the fsci
cut ti
Syrup Pepsin
Figure on your bill '~~lT
It m jtm what
st the
that a«r dates sralosa-
Ssd on troth asd spbrld
Ik. CdMwaVs ..
mm aktsiasd la Sath^oteai
Mangum ^
Lumber Co.
IhM IV
!•*€
srs 4s ^
iARrKT T
l«r<
If
. !l thl
K-as sad k * nth-w
tM tW s *oat +
• lstn r*.
M *
—JS—
r ♦ «s*. nr-
pective governor of Georgia, for dem- J
(ooratic presidential nominee in 19<W. I F
• In that case, why not make the irre-j^°P'
pressible Gov. Vardan;an of MissU-
j sippi, his running mare? They'd
■ make a splendid team—to be beaten— J * CUt
both being of s sameness on the negro I eaou*
taste f©1
question, the former proposing to d^> j .
'franchise the colored brothei t>y
I educational test, sod the second .>! V* n
reach the same end indirectly by d * ° w
n>lng n«trro children any part of th-
public school fund, thus reducing th?
race to s stateof serfdtMm approschtnc
closely i hat of former slavery.
Mr. Bryan is begitaiug when'a
Stt la late, to back water as he be-
to rsslte thst he p« W, Itoot In'^ 1 ** ^ lBl°wl
It by reaewing Ms sdvoeacy of the iw l'^ *** <h",b
practtesble policy 'wl,h
leap for h*? fellow who did
"One i'f the first ihdi. ;s a
lose is iiis temper—an. i;
lost. There's about as ll :
gettin. jjsursHf work
rage when -a clerk nu.k
their in going into a
i lug . a keg of gun i
j terr • t>ecau e be got
nd bluncered
^tea.1 of a ratd
rirht ratter,
lis foot -dips (
v and 'hen
ke«p :n or
chick* n .k
:.ose tor ra'?
o on* of tfc-.
dm off the p
a few wo
v . aren't • :
•Whe
and dec
f your
•j must
c stay
•use in
ito a
ke, as
ouch-
ier a
a the
:cken
may
e or
y an I
/itcbw
f hK
aster
f to
than
*arp%
of sUte railroad
read the wiitiac
a ch« < out is tc>
that h* 4 unfit for hi
yon for yours. Tt<
fellowa «rh*i could
which t <jr put into i
H ot
ig of
oa the democratic wall. aaJ to hasten
lag to esptsta jaw how be hspp^-l -
f. _ _ k,
ta open his mouth and put his foot L.
It Ihii hto eaplaa*. tor. Is ao npaat
ttaa at all. «r ft a weak psertW
1 dUa i go to do it." Win M etmmt*
oa hts «aplalataa tow to wis!
ftM K « M* J>* to irv4MH J
to view Ms-wOd
aad sidi' rattooad poMUo« Uroag'j
to a rwa l
a drras togr Saiasa to aa air.
KSt
Wliltaaw
for |.A« j
Mt
KILL
OtfRC Tto
Ntv Dif
•* #- ft .«i
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Echols, R. C. The Mangum Star. (Mangum, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 19, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 4, 1906, newspaper, October 4, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc280794/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.