Cherokee County Democrat (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1914 Page: 3 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:
CHEROKEE COCNT* DEMOCRAT, fAHLKQt/Vfl Of LAHOMA
)
SHIPS ON THE WAY
TO WRECK SCENE
WASHINGTON, Sept. 25.—The
steamship Cordova, south bound
fropi Nome to Seattle has been Inter-
cepted by wireless and has gone to
Rescue the officers and crew of the
revenue cutter Tahoma, Wrecked on
the Aleutian chain several days
ago, according to a message received
here yesterday from the divis. a com-
mander at Seattle. The Cordova is
expected' to reach the scene of the
wreck late today or early tomorrow.
The coast survey steamer Pater-
son left Unalaska at daybreak on
September 22 for the scene of the
Corn Gomes Off as
Easy as You Please!
"Gets-It" Being Used by Millionc I
It is the first time that a real,
aure-as-fate corn cure has ever been
discovered. "QETS-IT" is the new
i
wreck. She probably will not arrive
before the Cordova. The steamer
Senator, north bound from Seattle
to Nome, which wa9 supposed to
have gone to the assistance of the
Tahoma was reported by Captain
Reynolds to have been directed to
resume her course.
SPEAKER CLARK'S
DAUGHTER STARTS
COTTON FASHIONS
WASHINGTON, Sept. 25.—Miss
Genevieve Clark, the speaker's
daughter, has launched a boom to
make cotton fabrics the dress goods
of the women of the congressional
set, and thereby contribute to ef-
forts to relieve the stagnation in the
cotton market caused by the Euro-
pean war.
With Miss Lucy Burleson, daugh-
ter of the postmaster-general, the
speaker's daughter hopes to see the
movement spread among American
women, who will be asked to banish
silks and satins for the fabrics of
the American mills, now running on
reduced time.
U. S. HEARS OF
AN INTERVIEW
WASHINGTON, Sept. 25—An in-
terview published here and attribut-
ed to Baron Von Schoen, former
secretary of the German embassy at
Tokio and now attached to the em-
bassy here, dwelling upon the prob-
ability of war between the United
States and Japan, was called to Pres-
ident Wilson's attention yesterday
by administration officials. After
Secretary Bryan had talked with the
president on another matter, he said
lie had seen the interview, "but
nothing had been done about It."
The interview quoted the baron as
saying:
'You may safely say that the>
mass of the Japanese people believe
that war with the United; States Is
inevitable. Throughout Japan there
is an intense hatred of the American
people."
The interview attracted a good
deal of attention in official quarters.
FIRST FROST OF SEASON"
IN STATE OF KANSAS
Fi d the Lady Who Uae« the World's Groilcit
Corn-Cure, "GETS-IT."
corn-ender, based on an entirely new
principle. It is a new, different for-
mula, never successfully imitated. It
ninkes corns shrKol and then van-
ish. Two drops do the work. You
don't bundle up your toe any more
with sticky tape and plasters that
press down on the poor corn—no
more flesh-eating salves that don't
"stay put," no more hacking at corns
with knives or razors, no more bleed-
ing- or danger of blood poison. No
mere limping around for days with
sore corns, no more corn pains.
"GETS-IT" is now the biggest-Belllns
corn cure In tbe world. ITsoltonnny
iiuril or soft corn, wart, callus or bunion,
""night's the night.
QETS-IT' is sold by druggists every-
v lit-re, 25 cents a but lie, or sent direct by
'•I. Lawrence A Co., Chicago.
Oklahoma Pharmacy, Tahlequah, Ok
F
I Ta
m
j All Kinds I
Monuments
and Tomb
Stones
SEE
C.J.Haglund
Tahlequah Oklahoma
ATCHISON, Kan , Sept. 25.—The
first frost of the season formed in
low places here Wednesday night,
but was not heavy enough to cause
damage.
NOTICE OE SALE OF REAL
ESTATE BY GUARDIAN
^1
ma ■
In the County Court of Adair
County, State of Oklahoma.
In the matter of the guardianship
of Lorenzo D. Keys, Jr.. a minor;
Joseph H. Lagley, guaTdian. No.
534.
Notice is hereby given that, in
pursuance to an order of the Coun-
ty Court of Adair County, Okla-
homa, issued! on the 9th day of
September, 1914, the undersigned,
as guardian of the above named
minor, will sell at private sale to
the highest bidder for cash, sub-
ject to confirmation by said court,
on or after the 3d day of October,
1914, at 10 o'clock a. m., the un-
div'ded one-ninth, and being all the
interest of said minor in and to the
following described land, viz:
The W2 of NW4 of Section 24,
andi SE4 of NE4 of Section 23,
Township 16 north, R: .ge 23 east,
containing 120 acres, more or less.
In Cherokee County, Oklahoma.
Bids for the purchase thereof
must be in writing and must be
filed with the County Judge of
Adair County, Oklahoma, at Stil
well, or delivered to the under-
signed guardian at Ballard. Okla-
homa, or to his attorney, W. H
Martin at Stilwell, Oklahoma. The
right is reserved te reject any and
all bids.
Dated this 10th day of Septem-
ber, 1914.
JOSEPH H. LANGLEY,
Guardian.
(First published September 17,
1914. 3tw.)
JUDICIAL DRAMA.
"Now they say the late theatri-
cal season was a frost in New
York.'
"What's the blame?"
"Too much competition from mur-
der trials, managers say."
WHY SHOULD YOU HESITATE? ;;
You Have No Right to Doubt Our Sincerity
when at is backed by This Honest Promise
You have no excjse to hesitate—no reason for
doubt — when we say to you that with eich ?iid
every sale of any one of the famous Rexall Rem-
idies we giv e an honest promise to refund the
money paid for it in case it does not give abso-
lute satisfac tlon.
That is the whole story in a nutshell.
That is a system that always has pre-
vailed and always will prevail In eveTy
one of the more than 5,000 leading drug
stores of the United States where Rexall Rem-
edies are so Id. That guarantee is not only print-
ed on every package of Rexall Remedies, but is
backed ever y time a sale of one of them L made
by the perso nal guarantee of the Rexall drug-
gist making that saie. Yo u rijsk nothing what
ever when you buy one of the
(/
1fexaM j?ewtedte£
NEW YORK, Sept. 25.—Count
Von Bernstorff, the German ambas-
sador, denied last night the authen-
ticity of the Washington interview
attributed to Baron Von Schoen, In
which the possibility of war between
the United States a:id Japan was
dwelt upon. The ambassador said
he had communicate I by telephone
with the baron, who is attached to
the Gern.an embassy in Washington,
and that the baron l as repudiated
the interview, declaring he had
made no such statements as those
attributed to him.
TEXAS PLANS STATE BANK.
AUSTIN, Tex., Sept. 25.—A spe-
cial session of the Texas legislature
yesterday began to consider the es-
tablishment' of a Central Bank of
Texas with $20,000,000 capital. The
object is to provide an institution
which will loan money on crops.
This is the special session. The
first, which has ended, passed a bill
enabling cities, towns and individ-
uals to build cotton warehouses un-
der state supervision.
Noyon. The latter place a few
days ago wa? the allies' extreme
left. A detachment has occupied Pe-
rone, still further north.
A report from German headquar-
ters dated September 23, says, how-
ever, that the efforts of the French
to encircle the German right have
had no results.
The French also claim to have
made an advance northwes: of Ber-
ry-Au-Bac, which is about the point
where the German line crosses the
Aisne, continuing southeast to Bri-
mont, which has been the center of
many vigorous attacks.
Along the rest of the line, al-
though there have been fierce en-
gagements In which both sides claim
victory, the situation is unchanged,
except that, according to German re-
ports, the German troops have re-
captured Varennes, department of
Meuse, which the French iook a
few days ago.
The Austrian general staff denies
reports of Russian victories and the
defeat of General Dankl's army.
The Servian and Montenegrin arm-
ies are before Sarajevo, capital of
Bosnia, flushed with victory and pre-
paring to take this latest acquisi-
tion of the dual monarchy.
RED CROSS FUND
WASHINGTON, Sept. 25.—In-
dorsement was given by President
Wilson yesterday to the appeal of
,the American Red Cross for special
collections In all churches of thfc
country on Peace Sunday, October
4, to swell the European war relief
fund.
OFF FOR WASHINGTON.
WAR DENOUNCED BY GOMPERS
(From Friday's Daily Arrow)
A party of twenty-four left here
today for Chehalis, Wasn., to make
their homes. Ten months ago H. W.
Christian and family came here and
today they left for their former
home, accompanied by L. Rosser and
family, A1 Woodard and family, and
John Looman and family, well known
and' respected citizens of this coun-
ty. We wish success to the Wash
ington-faring party.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. 25.—
Samuel Gempers, president of the
American Federation of Labor, In
addressing the convention of the
United Brotherhood of Carpenters
and Joiners of America here yester-
day, said the present European war
is "the most brutal and unholy war
in the history of mankind."
Mr. Gompers praised the work of
congress during the present admlnis--
tratlon, calling attention to the leg-
islation enacted and proposed which,
he said, protected workers and im-
proved working conditions. Routine
work of the convention was inter-
rupted by the death of I. S. Fitzger-
ald, one of the Boston delegates.
because yon either get the relief you are looking for or you
get back the money you paid for the remedy. Nothing can
be more fair than this. It empty means that whenever you
buy one of the Rexall Rem edies you are trying it at our risk,
,..i,i that if it does not give satisfaction we want you to
r ■ •" back and get your money, because it is yours and we
want you to have it
Sold only by
Crew Bros.
| TAHLEQUAH
SJulfaitalL.
Sole distributer Harmony Toilet Aid
OKLAHOMA
EMPEROR WITH-
DRAWS TROOPS
COPENHAGEN, Sept. 2o.—It is
learned here from apparently good
sources that the German government
Thursday stopped all traffic of civil
passengers in East Prussia because
a great battle was in progress and
the Russian army was advancing
from that direction toward Breslau.
Telephonic communication from
Breslau to Berlin, it is stated, was
stopped to prevent information of
the serious situation being sent.
LONDON, Sept. 25.—General Ren-
nenkampf, who withdrew over the
East Prussian border into Russia
when German reinforcements arriv-
ed, has received more men and has
again taken the offensive, causing
the Germans to withdraw.
It is considered probable that the
fall of Jaroslau and the isolation ot
Przemysl has compelled the Germans
to look more closely to the protec-
tion of their line from Thorn to
Kaliez, which guards Posen, as the
Russians now are able to release a
large number of men for the lnva
sion of that part of Germany.
Heavy artillery continues to play
a leading part in the battle of the
Aisne, which has been in progress
nearly a fortnight. The opposing
forces continue to hammer away at
each other from their well en-
trenched and strongly fortified posi-
tions with the greatest stubbornness.
Almost without lull great shells
are being hurled across the rivers
valleys and plains stretching from
the River Oise in the west to the
Meuse in the east, ant' thence south
ward along the whole Franco-Ger
man border, while the lighter guns
play on th,e infautry lying in the
trenches awaiting an opportunity to
deliver attacks and counter attacks
with, as the French official commu-
nication says, "alternate retirements
on certain points and advance on
others."
The battle line has stretched out
farther westward, the French left
wing having made some progress in
the direction of Moye, northwest of
WRECKED BOAT ABANDONED
SEATTLE, Wash., Sept. 24.—The
United States revenue cutter Taho-
ma, which struck a reef 90 miles
west of Kiska Island, In the Aleutian
group, has been abandoned, accord-
ing to a cable dispatch received yes-
terday from Seward, Alaska. The
message said the steamship Maripo-
sa, now at Seward, picked up a
wireless message to this effect.
This may mean that the Tahoma's
crew has been taken off by tne
steamship Tacorna Maru, the nearest
vessel to the Tahoma wtien she
struck last Sunday. The Japanese
liner should have reached the cut-
ter yesterday.
KILEING ON STREETS
OT TORT GIDSON
Special to The Arrow.
FORT GIBSON, Okla., Sept. 24.—
Guy Thornton yesterday afternoon
about 4 o'clock shot and killed
James Tapp In front of a livery barn
where both were employed.
The shooting followed a quarrel
wherein Tapp threatened to "shoot
him down like a dog." After the
threat Thornton went to the home
of his brother where he secured a
Winchester rifle and returning to the
barn opened fire.
Both men are Cherokee Indians.
Thornton was taken to Muskogee
and lodged in jail charged with mur-
der.
DIES ON HUSBAND'S GRAVE
WARRENSBURG, Mo., Sept. 24.
—Grief over the accidental deaths
a few months ago of her father and
brother, followed last Saturday by
the death of her husband, who was
killed in the railroadt yards at Den-
ver, Col., was more than Mrs. Viola
West could bear.
Standing by the side of her hus-
band's grave in Denver vesterday,
she committed suicide, accoiding to
a telegram received at the AVest
home in Warrensburg from the Rer.
C. W. West, father of the dead man,
who also had gone to Denver to
attend the funeral.
INSPECTORS HAVE FILED
THE REPORTS
WASHINGTON, Sept. 23.—The
long drawn out suspense over the 111-
ing of the Five Civilized Tribes su-
perintendency vacancy is reaching a
climax. Secretary Lane has return-
ed to Washington and the report of
inspectors sent to Investigate the fit-
ness of various applicants for this
much coveted $5,00b federal plum
have been received at the Indian of-
fice. It is said) that appointment of
a new superintendent v/ill be an-
nounced before October 1. No inti-
mation is given out as to the con-
tents of the reports of Inspectors or
as to whom will be named.
RiilTISHFltS RELY ON GARDEN
VALDEZ, Alaska, Sept. 24.—Be-
fore the revenue cutter Tahoma
struck on a reef west of Kiska Is-
land, she had) picked up the entire
crew of a steamship wrecked on ^o-
mlchl Island, east of Attu Island, in
the Aleutians. The name of the
wrecked steamer Is not known here.
■I- ❖
* WHEN WAR IS DONE *
J* *
* In Europe, when the war ❖
* is done—may that day soon •>
* be greeted!—when some <-
•> their victory have won, and •>
some have been defeated, ❖
* 'twill be a country of the old, ❖
<- the halt, the maimed, the dy- ❖
* ♦ ing; in unmarked couches, ♦>
'neath the mould, the young ❖
* man will be lying. Afar the ❖
•> youthful hosts are flung, like ;
•I* grain that waits the reaping; *
for war takes harvest of the ❖
* young, and leaves the old ❖
men weeping. In Europe, *
when the war is done, and *>
* rust dims sword and sabre, *
* in barren fields,, from sun to
* sun, old men and dames will *
*:♦ labor. The patriarch must ❖
•!- guide the plow in fields yet v
* red from slaughter, while *
* hitched like horses are the *
* frau, the grandma andi the *
* daughter. Perhaps some *:•
cripple from the wars may v
* help to do the seeding, while v
* groaning o'er his varied scars *
* and old wounds freshly ❖
* bleeding. Some veteran on *
* wooden legs, whose strength ❖
* is swiftly dwindling, may *
* milk the cow and" fetch the ❖
•J* eggs, and split the daily *!*
>:♦ kindling. But everywhere the *
* weak and old must do the ❖
*■ heavy tolling, must strive the *
*:* little farms to hold, and keep •>
* the pot a-boiling. Old men ❖
•> and dames the harvest ❖
* waves! Go forth and do tbe ❖
reaping, for in their red and ❖
* shallow graves, your strong v
•£• young men are sleeping.— v
•I* Walt Mason. *
* *
I.***************
LONDON, Sept. 24.—The British
foreign office it was learned here
yesterday, has not as yet made any
inquiries concerning the interview
attributed to Sir Lionel Carden, for-
mer British minister to Mexico, be-
fore he left New York last week for
England. The interview is leported
as objectionable to the American
government.
The steamer on which Sir Lionel
is returning should dock at Liver-
pool on Thursday. He will come to
London immediately. The foreign of-
fice is reluctant to believe ne nas
said anything offensive to the Wilson
administration.
CIIARjTIES DINNER
WAS Bit1 SUCCESS
(From Friday's Daily Arrow).
The dinner given by the Associ-
ated Charities in the room vacated
by the Spot Cash Store, yesterday,
was a decided success. Plenty of
goodies were donated by the goo£
ladles of Tahlequah to make the
dinner a veritable feast and the
large crowdi In attendance, which
netted the association $64.50, proved
the good feeling of the citizens to-
ward this charitable organization.
The members of the Associated
Charities desire The Arrow to ex-
press their sincere thanks to all who
assisted In making the dinner a suc-
cess.
COFFEE MARKET IS HARD HIT
RIO JANEIRO, Sept. 24.—The
crisis in the local coffee situation Is
becoming aggravated as a result of
the closing of European markets.
The Brazilian government is consid-
ering means of protection.
It is reported that Germany is ne-
gotiating with the Btate of Sao Paulo
for the purchase of its stock of 3,-
200,000 sacks at present Hamburg
quotations.
For line job prinMM il at
the Arrow office. Prlcee reaioa-
iMft
CHICHESTER SPILLS
diamond
brand
5)s.//
LADIES |
Aik yoir Drafrffat for chi-chrs-ter S
diamond hrand pills in rkd and
gold metallic boxes, sealed vfitb Blue*
Ribbon. takb no otubk. Buy oF yo or
Dragflit >d uk for CHI'CHEMttt 8
DIAMOND BBAND pills, for twentf-five
years regarded as Best,Safest, Always Reliable*
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
SJ& EVERYWHERE TUSTKO
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.
Cherokee County Democrat (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 1, 1914, newspaper, October 1, 1914; Tahlequah, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc90298/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.