The Chandler Tribune (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 25, 1915 Page: 3 of 8
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THE CHANDLER TRIBUNE Till HSDAY. NOYKMRKR. 25. Hi.*,
__
Our Business
Is Our Pride
In making the assertion that we are better prepared
to supply the trade with anything in the way of Farm Im-
plements, Wagons, Buggies. Harness or Shelf and Heavy
Hardware than any other firm in the county, we do so with
every confidence. We have been engaged in business in
Chandler for many years and have built up a trade mam-
moth ill its proportions.
Had we treated the trade unfairly, or attempted to
sell them goods that we did not know to be standard, both
in price and quality. or offered as an inducement price only,
we could never have made the success we have. To handle
the best known brands of goods and sell them at a reason-
able margin of profit has been our aim. By buying in large
quantities and paying cash, thereby saving the discount,
we are enabled to sell standard goods cheaper than can
our competitors.
N
7
X
We desire to call special attention to our line of
buggies—the Hercules line—known the world over as
one of the best vehicles made. We were fortunate in
purchasing our last invoice and are enabled to offer
them at a reduced pri ce:
$45.00 $50.00 $55.00 $65.00
We want you to call
see how, anti of what, they
of other firms.
and make a close examination of these goods,
are made; then compare them with offerings
FRED NEAL HARDWARE CO.
CHANDLER, OKLAHOMA
■*3*
* STATE HEALTH DEPT. ❖
Of Guthrie, Okla.
4- +
■> Dr. John \Y. Duke, Commissioner *
•5 +
tiled at an
the eon veil
present. The attention of chambers of
commerce, commercial clubs, county
comissioners, county engineers, coun-
ty superintendents, sc hi ols of engin-
es ring and highway organizations is
(-specially directed to the importance
of this meeting, as it-will be the first
to held since the enactment of the
new road law by the last session of
the legislature, and a number of pro-
posed amendements to said law will
be discussed by high officials and
others who have carefully observed
the operation of«s:tme, with a view of
making suggestions to the next leg-
islature for the purpose of strength-
ening said law. Should a special ses-
sion of the legislature
earl date this featun
tion will be doubly important. A
spi i ial legislative committe * will 1 ike -
l> be appointed and it would l e for-
tunate indeed if such committee could
have the benefit of suggestions of
real road builders from every part
of the state and listen to an intelli-
pont disci ssion ^ (' same, both the
friends and the opponents of such
suggestions.
All frieiu. oi the good roads cause
from every part of the state will he
| entitled to sit in said convention, and
j it is most earnestly hoped that it
' will surpass in interest and attend-
j ance the last annual convention which
was held in Oklahoma City, which
i was pronounced by everyone as the
[ most successful roads convention
since statehood. Much has already
| been accomplished by (his organiza-
: tion, including among other things an
active part in procuring the adoption
j of the new load law, and by the hear-
j ty cooperation of all advocates of bet-
ter roads greater things can be ac-'
■ complishcd in the future.
( handler and Lincoln county should
have a good representation at this
meeting as we have some of the best
good roads workers in the state with
i us.
10,000 producing wells in Osage coun-
ty.
These Indians hope for better treat-
ment after the Uncle Sam and other
independent oil companies will have
leases and drill on their 1,400,000
acres.
The 080,000 acre lease will expire
on next March 11th after which date
all the Osage lands will be leased for J
nil and gas drilling purposes.
These Indians have been getting!
only $50 for every gas well, when |
they should have received $30 fori
every well
W. M. Dial, an intermarried citizen;
who ha.-, lived v.i.h the Indians the!
la. T ’0 yea . and who ha
CHURCH
(Disciples)
114 Hast Eighth Street
Lord’s Day Services:
Bible School, 0:45 a. m.
Emmett Hereford, Supt.
C ommunion and Sermon, 11: a. m.
Y. P. S. C. E. 6:30, p. m.
Praise service and sermon, 7:30.
Midweek:
Teacher Training -Monday 7:00
and 8:00 p. m.
Pi aye Meeting -Wednesday 7:30.
A very cordial welcome is extended
mad th u' people <0 worship and study the
oil and gas business a special study,
^ the most persistent and able de-
fender of these Indians, purloined and
endangered rights. Mr. Dial’s ad
dress to the tribal legislature, the
other day was an eloquent, truthful
and effective oratorical effort. Two
former Osage Indian agents are now
■ penly working for the monster oil
i orporation.
Nearly 500 Indian children attend
the government, the Catholic Sister’s
and the public schools of this city.
This romantically located city of
5200 souls is now a pretty fire-water-
less town.
About 80000 Texas steers were im-
ported to feed and fatten on the un-
usual large quantities of corn, fet-
orita, kafir, alfalfa and hay this
winter.
A goodly number of the blanket-
wearing 620 fullbloods, own and op-
erate automobiles, alias, • thundering
devil wagons.
The Osage « r /; .
Irdians cons!;;. a ? u .
A majority ?.:■». > i
me mber owi s 1 1
$ 1,200 in tl e j i ... ____m
gets royalties
brought to the
Bible with us.
E. O. HALEY, Pastor.
Residence, 522 East Eighth Street.
all is
or the
armer
&didreed li\fe______
will be or. firess paRYcle
Displays of So il and
T
YC
products ^
. </ /Vj'jI
amt
-CT-.-
OSAGES WANT LEGAL
RIGHTS
Pawhuska, Okla., Nov. 23.—Most
J of the adult male Osages are on the
warpath for their legal rights and
tribal privileges. They claim that they
have been “held-up” by the oil com-
pifny that got a lease on 080,000 acres
‘ °r ,h‘‘ir land nearly 20 years ago,
and failed to properly develop the
j domain, as there are only 2,000 oil
and gas wells where there should he
t ihe oil
urface.
Most of the 1,400,000 acres of land!
■ 11 ibis laige county is still owned by
these Indians. It is estimated that
each member of the Osage tribe is!
financially worth $32,000.
MATT DUHR.
--CT__-—
BAPTIST C’HllRCII SERVICES
1st and
Sunday School, 9:45 a. m
Preaching services every
3rd Sundays at 11:00 a. in.
T. M. PYLE,
Pastor.
^our specif
: :s appeal to the
' rm, and the man
who v. _ iike to be there.
California brings city and country
together.
"Santa Fe all the way” this fall to
"two fairs for one fare.”
San Francisco Expo, ends December 4.
San Diego Expo, ends December 31.
Expo, tickets off sale after Nov. 30.
Four daily transcontinental trains on
the Santa Fe, including California
Limited.
Ask for booklels about lb. tour to the bit lairs,
"(jraud Canyon Outings" uuil’Xaliloruia Out jugs."
GLENN EDDIE, Pass’g. Agt.
Topeka, Kansas
II
There Are Other Good Cigarettes
In fact, some other
good cigarette may just
happen to please YOUR
particular taste better
than Fatimas. We don’t
know.
What we do know is
that Fatimas please most
men so well that they out-
sell every other cigarette
costing over 5c
lives only two or three hours outside | The best way is to exterminate the
the blood, which makes it easily possi- j mosquitoes
ble to disinfect the room in which the!
patient as been confined. It is only
necessary to ipen all the doors and
A Monster of Barbarism
When man relapses into a state of
barbarism, such as now exists in
Euicpe, there emerges from the dark-
TlVo
7'£sts for
h lk! —---1E* i
I windows and thoroughly ventilate the j neg8 diseases that are pecu,iar th(.
\ room for five of six hours. misery, squalor, poverty and filth if
tq Get Ready to Prevent Malaria. barbarous peoples. Typhus fever is j
are children jg worth while to begin getting! a notable example. This devastating
ready to escape malaria and its at- \ monster has never failed to appear
in the dark periods of the world’s I
misery. In earlier centuries it filled I
Europe with its dead. The world then
Control ol Measles.
The coming of winter brings
households where there
the danger of measles. Where there
no complications the mortality in
meric* ranges from 2 to 10 per cent. There are three kinds of parasites
Any rate of mortality, however slight, t|,at cause malaria fever. Trere par-
tendant discomforts next summer.
is something against which every
mother would shield her children. Hui
the likelihood of complications in
measles must not be forgotten, and
iy effort should be taken to guaro
against its contagion. Perhaps
,],(>4 dangerous complication is bron-
cho-pneumonia, for which the death
been as high as per cent,
foolish, therefore, to regard
- ns a trivial di
. The disease can be controlled
minting and quarantining the
Prevention is impossible, if,
be sufficient exposure. In i:
tr.gcs, including the period ■
n, the disease is very contac
:: ..> but this danger decreases with
the -aling of the epidermis. Thu
inn. physician should be consult:
in nil cases of measles.
The measles germ, fortunately,
a sites feed on the red blood-cells. \ entered upon what promised to be an
They develop in the female mosquito, | enlightened age of peace and progress
nd by her are injected into the blood I Typhus became so rare that until re-
jf the person she bites. Three things I cently there were living scientists
are necessary for the spread of mal-1 who had never seen a case of typhus,
aria: (1) persons with malaria par-j This frightful companion of war and
rites in their blood (2) mosquitoes to | barabrism is carried by the human
/'“nifuc. aj',re, c°rinp,s / Rth.ioi ‘‘*r I do »ou ilv, I
if#
If you find that Fatimas
please you as well as they
do all these other men,
you’ll want to stick to
Fatimas “for good and
for keeps.”
For, you will find that
Fatimas are the most
SENSIBLE Cigarette
you ever smoked.
—sensible because they
are cool and comfortable
to the throat and tongue.
—sensible because they
never leave you "feeling
mean” after a long-smok-
ing day.
Will you try Fatimas
and discover how much
a SENSIBLE cigarette
can add to your smoke-
pleasure ?
(St
PAT1MA waa thm Otity Cigarette
Awarded the Grend Prime, the high-
ft award given to anjf cigarette mt
the Panama • Pacific 1 iter national
Bxpoaition.
ite such persons and suck the blood
of such persons: and (3) healthy
•. son* into whom the mosquito may
nject the malaria parasites by bit-
Tlv breeding place of such mo-
hould be destroyed. Well
should be protected by screcn-
ises. Malaria persons should
ted by a physician until the
have been removed from
lood. In summe when mo-
actively breeding, well
body louse-
gredation.
-CT—-
SPATE HOOD ROAD
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Smith, G. A. The Chandler Tribune (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 25, 1915, newspaper, November 25, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc915235/m1/3/: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.