The Foraker Sun (Foraker, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1911 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE FORAKER SUN
CHAS. C. DAUTRICH
Lditor anil Publisher
App|katk,n mad for entry „ socond-ria,, matter
»t the postofflce of Foraker. Oklahoma.
Published Every Thursda
PfilCE OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One Year
SI* Months
Dr. 1 'otter has sued Miss Kate
Barnard for the sum of $50,000
for slander.
It will soon be time for city
election. Look over the material
and select the best.
Dr. Crippen willed his property
to Ethel LeNeve. The court set
aside the will on the grounds of
public policy.
Oklahoma City seems to be
having a Utile troube over their
water proposition. It seems as
if there is a little graft there.
Mrs. Wood, a full blood Indian,
mother Chief Saucy Calf. Her
exact age is not known, but she
was past the century mark.
§1
IT'S GOING TO BUY
DR. KING'S
X NEW ^
PISOOVEPV
I THE CURE THAT'S SURE |
COUGHS,COLDS, WHOOPING COUGH
and all diseases of
. THROAT, CHEST AND LUNGC
I Famous tor Forty Year. ofCures. », Sr ,
—— SOU, AND eU«<NTreo ,y S0C — «
all leading druggists
FARMERS MEAT MARKET III
Revard building
Sunflower Smoked Ham, good « - 16
Sunflower Breakfast Bacon, - - 22 1-2
English Bellses,
Smoked Bwteher Backs, - - - 21
Dry Salt Backs, - - - 15
Dry Salt Butts, - . . 12 19
Dry Salt Plates, - . - - 15
Wienie Wursts, - . . 121 2
Balogna. - . . . in
Pick Nick Hams, 12 1.2
Porter Houst' Steak, - »o
Sirloin Steak, - 171 9
T-Bonh, * -17 1-2
Boney Lower, * jc
A good Chuck, - 101.9
A medium Chunk in
Round Steak, ----- 15
A good Pork Ham, . - - 15
A mixed Sausage, - . 191 9
A good Lard. - j7 JJ
A mixed butcher Lard. - - - - 15
NUN AMAKER & JONES Props.
Two boys thought it would be
a good joke to pass a whiskey
bottle filled water in church near
Dickson, as a restlt they are in
jail.
Tulsa is trying to get up her
reputation by saying a girl was
kidnapped there and say she re-
sembled Dorothy Arnold, the
New York heiress.
A Cowley county, Kansas, girl
commited suicide because he
father made his will to read that
she could not marry until she
was 25 years old or lose her int-
erest in his $50,000 estate. The
girl was 18.
The editor seldom expects any
I reward for good service, and
when Thos. W. Loyless editor of
the Chronical, Augusta. Ga., was
asked to attend with his wife,
a meeting of more than 100 busi-
ness men he went, ready to do
his part in some new enterprse. t
He was astounded when he was'
presented a solid silver service
worth $1,000 for the services he
had already rendered.
Every young girl looks with scorn on
the old drunken sot and wonders how
his wife ever came to marry him. She
doesn't stop to think that the old sot
was always such a miserable being, but
maybe Was at one time a handsome
young man. He had no idea of ever
becoming an old sot. He simply thought
of having a good time with the boys.
He saw other men take a drink with
the crowd and still maintain their posi-
tion in society and in the business world
and he thought he could do the same.
But he could not control his appetite,
and his love for the flowing bowl and
the result was that it got him down,
just as it will get any man down who
follows it up. If you could look back
twenty-five years, young lady, you
might see that old sot, a fair-headed,
open-face, lovable young man. the lead-
er of his social circle, whose only fault
was his free-heartedness and his love
of pleasure. But twenty years of dis-
sipation have scared his cheeks and
bleared his eyes and as a result he is
the wreck you now behold. And then
again if you could look twenty years
into the future; that sporty young man
with the flashy neck tie and pegtop trou-
sers u])on whom you lavish your affect-
ion that free any easy, happy-go-lucky
young fellow who holds your heart in
bondage, and who you say "only drinks
a little to be sociable" he may be a
drunken sot of twenty years hence and
you may lie the poor wife, and then
people will look upon yonr haggard,
care worn face and say: "How in the
world did she ever come to marry such
a brute?" —State Capital.
htve taken the public drinking cups
from the school houses the number of
cises of tonsilitis among children has
ctecreased more than 50 per cent and
all contageous diseases have decreased
t> a greater or less extent. In so|
much reform we may get a few fake
laws, but we also get smoe good one "
Palace Pool Hall : '
Cool Room
Good Light
Good Tables
Do you feel anxious and pre-occupied
when the coal man goes by? Do you
sleep badly? Do you go to bed hungry?
Does your heart palpitate when you see
a steak? Is there an all gone feeling
in your pocket? Do you have night-
mares? Do you do mental arithmetic
every time you contemplate the pur-
chase of "coffee and--?" Have you a
haunted look? Do you walk down al-
leys when you go down town? Beware!
These are the symptons! You are eith-
er an editor or dead broke. I cannot
tell which. - Osage Chief.
Falls Victim To Thieves.
s. W. Bends, of Coal City, Ala., has
a justiable grievance. Two thieves 11 C r II n . 1 £|
stole his health for twelve years. They I k VlffiiirS, COlu DriNKS I
were a liver and kidnev trouble. Then I ® '
Dr. King's New Life Pills throttled 1 1
them lie s well now. Unrivaled for | J. H. HIERONYMOUS
Constipation, Malaria, Headache, Dys- in-
pepsia. 25c at all druggists.
Oscar Kraus of Pomona, Kansas, the
Kansas giant is reported to have re-
cently married a young lady of Longton,
Kansas, who measures something like
H feet aud 7 inches in her high heel
shoes, while he negotiates 7 feet and 4
inches in his stocking feet. That is
only another illustration of the big
t hings of Kansas. Mr. Kraus did think
that he wanted to be a Kansas City
policeman, but he has done the wiser
thing and become a Benedict.—Ex.
A. C. PUKE
NOTARY PUBLIC
Legal papers of all kinds properly
drawn an acknowledged
Proprietor
Electric
Bitters
ucceed uhrn i_: . ,
fn'Cn!rv WhC" evcry,hinK cIse fails,
wratn rjostranon and female
It is the best medicine ever sold
over a druggist s counter.
The Lions in the Way.
<( Many young people who lack
"gumption," get-up-and-get. or
whatever you may term it, often
reason thusly: If it had not been
for so and so and such a thing, I
could nave made a great success.
The lions in the way of these
young people and a successful
career is barred by the ifs and
the ands that enter into their
daily life and rob thdm of their
vim and courage. They are the
breasworks thrown up by the
weak and vacillating which be
beguile and deceice, and which
One of our exchanges advertised a
cow for sale as follow,-: "Full blooded j
cow for sale, giving milk, three tons of,
hay, a lot^ of chickens and several j — ——
by a cure-defying stomachTrouble I the preatest aspect for"meek-e!ld B00NE» LEAHY & MACDONALD
iat baffled doctors, and resisted all I ®ent'e bossy, we nev ■ -
Tortured For 15 Years
' —.'"s «t,viiiai.ii iruuuie
that baffled doctors, and resisted ail
remedies he tried. John W Modder of
Moddersville. Mich., seemed doomed.
He had to sell his farm and give up
work. His neighbors said "he can't
live much longer." "Whatever I ale
distressed me," he wrote, "till I tried
Electric Bitters, which worked such
wonders for me that I can eat things
I could not take for years. Its surely
a grand remedy for stomach trouble.'
Just as good for liver and kidneys.
Every bottle guaranteed. Only 50c at
all dr uggists.
... ..jver suspected for a
moment that she would branch out into
the junk shop business. And she is
full blooded, too! No "yaller," do* or
posthole in^her makeup. Too bad.
We are not a bit curious but we
would like to know why it is that
Life baved at Death's Door
"I never felt so near my grave "
writes W. K. Patterson, of Wellington,
Tex . as when a frightful cough and
lung trouble pulled me down to I on
pounds, in spite of doctor's treatment
for two years. . My father, mother and
two sisters died of consumption, and
that I am alive today is due solev to
Dr. King s New Discovery, which com-
pletely cured me.
Now I weigh 187 pounds and have
been well and strong for years." Quick
s:i ft* i lien it-, t-1._ t. . . '
w. F. McBeth n
Donald McBeth
W. F. McBeth & Son
PAINTERS and DECOR AT ORS
House, Sign and Carriage Work
Wall Paper for sale.
LAWYERS
Pawhuska, .. Okla.
G. B. STURGILL
Attorney At Law
Hall-Floyd Building
Pawhuska, - Okla
Foraker
Oklahoma
"IlILlI, |j
she must wear a quarter section of ,
- . to ch"rch. trimmed with a half sec-
are offered as excuses for many I T wheat- ei^ht acres of corn, half
■Tn i mi i • . 1 ^ n'nM ~ — ' 1
woman can travel the stretts or sail1 We" and 8tron« ''"years.
around in an auto all day in the blazing ff SUr?' ,ts the best remedy on earth
sun bareheaded and never flinch, but ^ C°Ughs' colds- la*fippe, asthma
^T«,a"d a"throat *"d *»» troubles.
failures. The liona in the way
and nothiny more.
Young people who lack these
qualities need our help; our life
- -v..to ux turn, nan
a dozen rooster tails, a dozen or two
-- a uv/ien or iwo
belt buckles, fifty or a hundred yards
of ribbon besides a parlor full of bric-a-
brac, and keep the whole works in mo-
tion while some poor insignificant man
who happens to sit behind her, unjoints
» vui int; i . ' — man
work is to train young people to ™a,ppens b-hind her, unjoints
determine, to get up and dolh
things the commercial world
wants done, develop their latent
talents, quicken their percept ion,
teach them Bookkeeping—Busi-
, , . " wreJr 'Musi snow
these delusions of "stylish" millinery
why not have a table put behind the
pu pit where each one can deposit her
hat m full view of all during the ser-
rL^^^^-toaay
IUIIP
5oc & 11.00. Trial bottle free,
teed by all druggists.
GRINSTEAD, MASON & SCOTT
Lawyers
Pawhuska, . 0kla.
Guaran-
ness Training. Shorthand. Type- ITtLl--, u, -
writting. Business English. Busi. the
nessLaw Business Arithmetic, I J™ "«* (•>="■ wound » h.yauck"""?'
Spelling Business Writing, Rapid j !'?e r" Dang the styles, anyhow
Calculation, and the use of the1 ge Chief"
most modern office appliances 1
With such training the lion is put
out of the way. We have trained
And it came to pass that after h<- had
advertised his goods; there came unto
him great multitudes from all the re-
gion round about, and did buy of him.
And when his competora saw it they
marveled among each other sayinc-
How be it that this man is busy while
we stand idly about our doors?" And
he spake unto them saying: "Verily in
this fast age of push and rustle, it is
easier for a locomotive to perch' on a
tree and make a noise like the u,„,gful
canary bird, or deliver the plaintive
notes of the whip-poor-will, than for
the merchant to flourish without adver-
tismg And the multitude thereupon
w»nked ,ui other eye. and continued tc"
buy their V irginia Twist and Chewing
Gum from the party 0f the first part
And the non-progressive merchant of
that country still chew the rag and
wait for the ship that never "saled "-
Exchange.
Our Business Is
PRINTING
What's Yours?
I Look at our Town and Country I
•' Before Locating I
what WE WANT
Another Railroad
115.000 Hotel
Brick Plant
Broom Factory
Alfalfa Mill
Fence Factory
Builders Material
Handled in Car Lots
L. O.Allen
\ The Brightest Prospect
® in Osage County
North Side Barber Shop! Meat
UP-TO-DATE TONSORAUSTS Market
AND
E. W. Stoner, Prop. * a ^ e r y. .
— :j Cold Drinks and Ice
Watch, Clock, Jewelry
Repairing
®®»®®®
WILCOX'S
■ Wife Got Tip Top Advice
thousands who are now on the', T anted me to tak^our boy
road to success, 'and we can d.! write D°F™k .T0 *" ug,y boil'"
the same /or yon.. Write today Uw W *
or catalogue, and make y«ur *■' and it cured the boil j„ a ,„h °| -VCH' k""w-" "»M a physician the J
arrangements to enter as soon as "ho" " Quickest healerofBnm. I-Uat th* U"clio° <:ily "nion-
iwsstble. Capital City Business Cu(*- c°r'"- Brui^. Spm.,.,' "*■ r<'w,'c dri'>k
College, Guthrie, OW, .*?
instance. Since tbey)
PAn ' I Work Guaranteed
^PRAKER f Ira A. McCoIlister
j Try it. Only 25c at ali druggist." ' ^
% WHAT AVE HAVE
Six Hundred Inhabitants
fjan Regions
Two Hanks
$20,(KK» School Ruildinr
Two Churches
Midland Valley KailroU
One Weekly Papers
3 miles Cement Sidewalks
Two hlevatora
Snlendid Citizenship
j. l. johnson
Licensed Embalmer
and Undertaker
Pawhuska, Oklahoma
Ray phone 97 Night phone 2351
SEEDS
r SUCKBEE'S SEEDS SUCCEED I ^
SPECIAL OFFER: .
b»tl4 New HqiIumi A trial 1
Prl^p rnl WH^rm,nentI
prue
1
— ay n m
SEND 10 CENTS
^ TalaaM. i
-
ti - ■
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dautrich, Charles C. The Foraker Sun (Foraker, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1911, newspaper, February 16, 1911; Foraker, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc287192/m1/4/: accessed March 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.