The Western World (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1904 Page: 3 of 8
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J. T. JETF.D, M. D.,
Physician in Charge.
W. H. St. CLAIR,
REST SANITARIUM
NURSES' TRAINING SCHOOL
Open to all reputable phyaiciang. Furnished throughout with
a view of treating and caring for all patient* which may come
nuder oar care.
CLEANLINESS—-The Watchword.
Fully eqnlppvd with all neoewary appliances and trainml nur«« in charfe
of operating room. Correapondeni'e with phyniciauti who wi«h to plao*
their patient* in the sanitarium for treatment promptly answered aud
physician's interest carefully guarded.
COLORED PATIENTS ADMITTED. CHARITY WARDS LATER ON.
EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE AT
PETTEES
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THI3 THADE-MA.^tC
KIND Cf ti
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lift iy.S sT'-
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^Worlds
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
TO THE
SD1IY SOUTH.
TICKETS ON SALE DAILY UNTIL APRIL 30, 1904
to the principal Winter Kssorls of Mississippi, Georgia, Alabama, Florida,
Tennessee, South Carolina, Louisiana and Texas. Return Limit —June
1st, 1901. Full details as to rates, routei, etc. on application to
C. W. STRAIN,
Division Pass. Agent,
Wichita, Kans.
&
DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE
Free Reclining Chair Cars on all Trains
Pullman Buffet Drawing Room Sleeping
Cars, Pullman Tourist Sleeping Cars
between MEMPHIS and the
PACIFIC COAST
JAB. HARRIS, O. P. A., GEO. H. LEE, G. P. A.,
Little Rook. Ark. Llttie Rook, Ark.
Dealer in
I will
3
THKiiH
iff VETEB4NS m
The Old Fashioned Cider Mill.
Slngr uv the modern elder mill, with all
Its speed an' size,
Boast uv Its gcnrln' up to date, an* laud
It to the sklfs;
Slngr of It® big capacity hydraulic press
an' flow—
I'll take thft gnod ol' fashion* mill uv
tlfty years ago.
The good ol' fashion' cider mill uv fifty
years ago!
The gray an' beaten older mill whoso
roof Is sunken low;
The country r ill beneath the hill where
to an' from the school.
We knelt beside the foamy tub &n' suck-
ed the Juices cool.
The modern mill hez glasses now, or
gold-lined cups to sip,
The good ol" straw we uster use fure'er
he* lost its grip:
fhe ol' white boss hez lost his job an
leans ag'ln the wall.
Fur in this modern cider mill harsh
science does it all.
More quarts per day. more water used,
more style in ev'ry way.
More flllergree an' lol-der-rol, more mod-
ern ev'ry day; ,
More like th • new, less like the old, less
temptin'—that 1 know-
Less liable to draw a crowd than tlfty
years ago!
ling not to me in heartless verse uv
mills "right up to date—"
I want the good ol' fashion' mill in all
its native state;
I want the boss, the grlndln' cogs, the
straw we uster know—
The real ol' fashion* elder mill uv fifty
years ago.
—New York Sun.
F. C. SEEGER,
New and 2nd-Hand Household Goods
Cook Stoves, Heaters, Lamps, Gasoline Stoves, Watches,
Guns. T&LA LINE OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS.
£tjfr W here roocL aro sold on (ho installment payment plan the title iloej
not pass from us until all payments have been mado and receipted for in lull.
gr au account* due aud payable the First of each Month or Week.
Lowest Prices in the City.
Bell Phone ^-lO.
201 California AVe. - - - OKLAHOMA CITY.
Soldiers' Incidental Hurts.
Said an Eighty-Sixth Illinois man, "1
did not run to bullet wounds, but 1 had
bruises until I couldn't rest, and in
the army a bruiso was a bruise, as 1
learned by long and painful experi-
ence. I got my first bruise before I
had been in the service sixty days.
That was at. Perryville, Oct. 8, 1862.
We were lying down behind a rail
fence when a bullet from the rifle of
a rebel sharpshooter struck a rail
right above my head, flattened out like
a pancake, glanced oft In my direction,
struck me on the shoulder, leaving a
black and bluo spot as big as my hand.
That bullet hurt me worse than if it
had gone through me, and yet I was
reported bruised, not wounded.
"Again at. Jay's sawmill at Chicka-
mauga a flattened ball or a piece of a
shell grazed me so close as to bruise
and bllstet 'he skin, and again I got
no sympathy and was laughed at for
not tallying a hit. At Buzzard's Roost
in May, 1864, we fought in a corn field
from early morning before daylight
until 8 o'clock at night. Along in the
afternoon, tuckered out with the hot
fighting and the hot weather, I
squared myself behind a tree for a
rest.
"I told the boys I was going to take
a nap. This was meant to be a joke,
but, sitting against the tree, I went to
sleep, my head wabbled to one side,
exposing my camp-kettle hat, and a
Johnnie put a bullet through the hat
so close to my head as to cut the
hair. I awoke with a start, to be
laughed at by the boys. I got another
scratch at Kenesaw and a blister or
bruise at Peach Tree Creek, and an-
other at Jonesboro, but I got no fur-
lough on any of them. I can't truth-
fully say that I was wounded, and yet
that bruise on my shoulder troubles
me to this day."
"I had worse luck than that," said
ti.e sergeant. "On the nlglit our divis-
ion crossed the Tennessee river in the
march on Chattanooga, in September,
1863, I met with (he queerest mishap
that ever befell a soldier. I had been
on heavy duty for two days and nights
and it seemed to me I couldn't keep
awake another minute if all of Bragg's
army came swooping down the gorge
through which we were moving. I
remember looking up at the ruins of
the high bridge and trestlework at
Falling Water, between Shellmound
and I.ookout mountain, 3!»d then all
was blank.
"I had gone to sleep, walking. We
were marching in fours, rifles at a
right-shoulder shift, and the men on
either side stood shoulder to shoulder,
so for a time I slept and walked.
When a turn came in the road ihe
mechanism of my body, set for going
ahead, stopped, and I went down like
a log, my rifle striking me a cruel blow
and my face striking the rough
ground. I was hurt worse than if a
bullet had gone through my arm, but
in my pain and misery i hoard the
laughs and shouts of the men jeering
me. I carry the marks of that fall to-
day, but the men of the old company
would call me a fraud if I should say
I was wounded at Falling Water."
"My most painful wound," said the
Captain, "did not come irom bursting
shell, or rifle bullet or saber cut. In
going up Missionary Ridge I was close
behind a great big fellow, who push-
ed his way through brush and abattls
alter the manner of a fly-bitten bull.
At one point he bent forward the
sharpened prongs of. a branch of a
fallen tree, and, releasing himself, let
the sharp points fly back. They struck
me at the knee, with the swiftness of
a swinging saber, tore my trousers on
that leg, and left three great gashes
across the knee. It was not a wound
from the soldier's point of view, and I
did not fall out. 1 climbed on, blind
with pain, and I carry the scars to this
day, but I was not among those report-
ed wounded."—Chicago Inter Ocean.
With Old Tecumseh.
At an Informal dinner of about a
dozen Grand Army comrades, the other
evening, one who had served as cap-
tain under Gen. Sherman In the civil
war, remarked that he had read with
much Interest the Incidents of Sher-
man at Shiloh published In the Tri-
bune last week. And then the conver-
sation took the course of reminis-
cences of Sherman's "March Through
jecrgta." One of the veterans related
a Ftory in this way:
"Everybody who served under Sher-
man as a commander must give him
credit for his strategy In flanking the
rebels out of their rtrong positions.
Even a young woman of Georgia could
not help observing his military
genius, and her remarks were amus-
ing, to say the least. She told how
Sherman's army marched down
through her country, and how he de-
tached his commanders to do certain
things. I think I can recall her lan-
guage, which was about like this: 'It
wasn't fair for Sherman to fight the
Southern soldiers on end. Now, it was
right smart of Gen. Bragg to form
two streaks of fight in our dooryard j
with walking soldiers, and then he j
got Gen. Joe Wheeler to line up one
streak of fight with critter soldiers
(l\eaning cavalry) behind the house. |
And just as our side was ready to whip
the Yankees Sherman sent Joe Hooker j
up, and he flanked Bragg and made
him fall back, which he did in such |
a hurry that he upset dad's ash hopper
plant, which cost $2.50 in Atlanta, and
dad vows as how he is agoin' to sue
Bragg for waste. But I'd like to know
where the Yanks get those guns which
tl)ey load on Sunday and fire all the j
week?'
"I remember a young Confederate
prisoner, who was standing pear the
young woman, evidently her best fel-
low, who responded vj»lh this remark:
'Why, Sherman can do anything. Ho
gets on a hill, flops his wings and
crows; then he yells out: "Attention,
creation! By kingdoms, right wheel,
march!" And then we git.'"—New i
York Tribune.
Excitement Increases!
Guthrie still in a fever of excitement ovor
the Wonderful Cui.s Performed by
Dr. Russell & Co,
THE ENGLISH SPECIALISTS
Offices: Astor House, Guthrie, OKIa.
OUR BEST REFERENCE. Not a Dollar Need be Paid
Until Cured.
Nothing like it was over seen here before. Hondredn right hero at home testlfr to their
wonderful skill,
trouble after
Pension Bill Is Passed.
The house of representatives passed
without division the pension appro
priation bill, carrying $138,150,100.
French Ship Subsidy.
France has, within six months, paia
in subsidies for new ships $38,GOO,000.
ill. One lady, Mrs. Jonn Corner, of Ualton, was cured of a horrible stomach
nine year* suffering, during which tiino ahe could eat nothing but raw eggs and
Mrs. Emma Hunter, of Tuscola, says she was entirely blind with an eye disease, and now
she thanks God and those wonderful apecialista, Dr. HushoU & Co., for her eye sight.
.1 ames Gray says the world-renown doctors nured him of consumption. When Miss Lulu
Raglan of Nakomls, was rescued from the jaws of death by the famous English Specialists, Dr.
KuHsell A Co., the people called it a miracle, but it was no miraclo, simply skill and ability.
Ur II \T aro the officer of Dr. ltnssell & Co. constantly thronged with suffering humanity,
III eagerly waiting to consult them, from early morn until lato at night.
Ti 4 TTQTji They cure to stay cured each and every case they undertake, or charge
J LJ OXjI nothing; the wonderful cures they have mi. le in apparently incurable
cases hns created confidence and dollght in the hearts (if those who have struggled in vain for
years against the ravages of disease, until Dr. llugsell & Co. cured them.
I > l/i/l A ITCl^ ****• RUSSELL A CO., have cured thousand? of customers who have tried
J) I iy A U O Ti advertising fakirs; medicines; electric belts, quack 'specialists," "Osteo-
paths, Magnetic. Healers," "Scientists." etc., etc., and have at last, after l>eing deceived bv
many frauds, found a cure for their disease, after being pronounced incurable and given up all
hope.
I £ K TTQ1? RUSSELL & CO. are graduates from the best Medical Colleges in the
ill U kJ-Ti world and havohad many years of experience in the lurgc&t hospitals in the
country,—-also years of successful practice that CHALLENGE THE WORLD.
liiin 4 ITUL^ Thev have TEN (10) different LICENSES and DIPLOMAS from the most
I >1A j!\. U OXj celebrated Colleges and Hospitals in this, us well as other countries. And
their licenses and Diplomas hang on the walls of their offices!
mpr\ A I 171 The people have absolute confidence and abiding faith in them ; thoy have
UOP-i become widely known for their scrupulous fairness in the treatment of
each and every case; and they ask very, very reasonable fees in cases thev cure.
BECAUSE You need not pay a Dollar until Cured!!!
ItEMEM BER : We Treat and Cure such as Falling of the Womb] Whiter
(Leuoorrhea), Bearing Down Pains, and all Chronic Discharges, etc., Piles, Fistula, Rupture,
without pain, knife, needle, blood or detention from business, successfully cured. All Chronio
SirinDiseases, Superfluous Hair and Warts removed painlessly. CATARRH POSITIVELY
CURED. All diseases of tee Throat, Nose, Ear, Eyes, Lungs, Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and the
Bladder, positively cured. Also, Rheumatism, Sciatica, Paralysis, Heart's Disease mid Con-
sumption when taken in time A never- failing romedy for Goitre or B'g Neck.
I> I> I \7 A ril 111 C \? A C Confidentially and successfully treated Gonorrhea
J Jv 1 V A 1 VJ l'lijriAljI!ikj cured In five days, Gleet, Stricture, Impotency, Lost
Manhood, Milky Urine, Sexual Exhaustion, Youthful Follies or Self Abuse. Spermatorrhea,
Emissions. Loss of Semen, Debility, Nervousness, Unfitness for Marriage or Business, Poor
Memory, Varicocele, Aversion to Society, Quickness, etc., happily cured. Delay means danger
and death.
BLOOD POISON OR SYPHILIS Sore Throat, Pimples, Copper
Colored Spots. Ulcers on any part of the body, Hair or Eyebrows Falling Out, cured forever.
Tho Pftnr Trnitfl/1 FrAf hiili; from 11 a. m, to 1 p. m. Dit. Rugs km. * Co. have faith in
lilt' ruui 11 tultu 11 it vaiiy their ability to cure; have achieved a worldwide reputa-
tion orowned with unparalelled success, hence make the following lilwral offer.
Not a Dollar Need Be Paid Until Cured u^tTnr^;
maintained with every patient. They briQK all their latest niedieal and burgiutil instruments
and ft large supply of their own druRs. Con-mltat ion free and private.
A r i .j r n u'j v i, |v , Don't delay ; remember it means dnnRer and death. How
JjAn I Oil It I', easy it is to ov*reome and cure that dreadful disease NOW!
If yon put it off you must abide by the consequences. Time waits for no_one; and soon, if that
malady linfreraon, tlte urim monster, DBATli, will claim i
Farragut's First Command.
The story of a boy of 12 years not-
ing as commander of ft ship seems
rather wonderful, yet Farragut was
but twelve years and four days old
when he was put in command of the
Barclay, a prize ship taken by Capt.
Porter. In consideration of his ten-
der years, says the author "Twenty-
Six Historic Ships," the former Eng-
lish master of the vessel was sent in
her for the possible benefit the young
prize master might find in his advice.
Farragut tells the story of the queer
division of authority in his journal as
follows:
"I considered that the day of trial
had arrived, for I was a little afraid of
the old fellow, as every one else was.
But the time had come for me at least
to play the man; so I mustered up
courage and informed the captain that
I desired the maintopsail filled away
in order that we might close up with
the Essex Junior. He replied that he
would shoot any man who dared to
touch a rope without hi? orders. He
would go his own course, and had no
idea of trusting himself with 'a blast-
ed nutshell,' and then he went below
for his pistols.
"I called my right-hand man of the
crew and told him that I wanted the
maintopsail filled. He answered with
a clear 'Aye, are, sir,' in a manner
that was not to be misunderstood, and
my confidence was perfectly restored.
"From that moment I became mas-
ter of the vessel, and immediately
gave all necessary orders for making
sail, notifying the ca tain not to come
on with his pistols u. 'ess he wished
to go overboard, for i ~~!ly would
have had very little trouble in haviig
such an order obeyed."—Memphis
Commercial-Appeal.
Buckeyes at Chattanooga.
"There was no jealousy—hardly riv-
alry," says Grant of the battle of Chat-
tanooga, where various divisions
of the Army of the Potomac,
the Army of the Tennessee and
the Army of the Cumberland serv-
ed under each other's standards. That
is the spirit in which the dedication
of a monument to commemorate
Ohio's part in the culminating moment
of the victory—tbo storming of Mis-
sion Ridge—was undertaken by the
Buckeye State veterans yesterday, and
in which it will be received by their
brethren in other states.
Ohio men were thickest in the Army
of the Cumberland. It fell to that
army, which had been so grievously
battered in the defeat at Chickamauga
eight veeks before to strike the finish-
ing blow at the Confederate center
after Bragg's left had been turned by
Hooker and his right fought to a stand-
still by Sherman. The Ohio generals,
Grant, Sherman and Sheridan, loom
large in the story of the victory, but
when the Ohio regiments moved out
for that dash up the mountain side
their commander was Thomas, the
great Virginian. Nothing stopped them
when they started.
Many a Buckeye commander was
made by the work of that day, and
many a deed was performed that Is
still recited around the camp fires of
Ohio veterans. Every state has its
heroic episode to point to in the civil
war. Perhaps the supremest moment
01 Ohio history blossomed on that
bloody Tennessee hillside.—New York
Mail and Express.
i its victim : youj lay down and bite the
... id wupderinc, KiM the roses on your
grave; spring-time comes and ROea, Dut you know it not—then it is too late. Then DR. RUS-
SELL & CO. can do you no good.
AV IJ 1 fCT? if unable to call. Write us your troubles and receive by return mall onr ex-
\) 111 J li pert opinion free. Our homo-trcatmunt is the most perfect known to medical
science- Address:
DR. RUSSELL CSL CO., guthrie, o. t.
and treatment rooms: Private parlors, Astor House. Hours 8 a. m. to 8p»
'II" JjO m.; Sundays 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Private entrance for ladles. Courteous at-
tention to all, no matter if vou wish to take treatment or not. Call and let us talk your trouble
over pleasantf/ and soelablj.
The Agricultural and Normal
University at Langston, Okla.
The Next School Year Will Commence September I, 1903.
DEPARTMENTS:
Elementary, Normal, College,
Preparatory, Collegiate, Musical,
Industrial, including Agricultural, Mechanic Arts,
Sewing and Cooking.
Students admitted at or about tlie ago of fourteen.
Tuition in all departments free.
Furnished rooms in dormitories for young men and women free.
Board, including fuel and light, $6.00 per month in advance.
Washing, $1.00 a month in advance; also arrangements made for
students to do their own washing.
A branch of the Santa Fe Railroad runs from Guthrie to Pawnee,
O. T. Persons coining to the university should purchase their tick-
ets to Coyle, Okla. The U. S. mail hack runs from Langston to
Coyle, a distance of one and one-half miles.
For further information address,
I. E. PAGE, t-angston, Oklahoma.
I he Monrovia
Is the Place to get
Good Meals and Clean Beds
Board and Lodging By the Day or Week
322J W. Harrison WHIT ELLIS, Prop. Guthrie
B. G. GARRETT.
R.. WAGl^'Lii llAhHivl -
G. Garret & Son®-
Loan and Real Estate Agents. Farni
and CHattle Loans on Long or Short
Time. Or X? £?
We will Lend you Money and you need not Pay it Back sr
long as you pay the interest and give Good security
vKoora. 17 DraKe Bldg. * GUTHRIE. OKLA-
The Booker T. Washington Cafe
Nice Tables
Meals at a!l Hours
Short Order on Notice
No 213 West
Harrison Street.
YORK BYERS. Prop.
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Leftwich, John C. The Western World (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1904, newspaper, January 14, 1904; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc283927/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.