The Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 111, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 14, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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TWO
THE SHAWNEE DAILY NEWS-HERALD
THURSDAY EVENING. DEC. 12, 1912
SATURDAY EVENING, DEC. 14, 1912
THE NEWS-HERALD
otis B. WEAVER, Editor and Owner
label
UNION
Business Office l'hone
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Entered a second cl
Dec 1. 1911. at Shawm 0
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ROWTH is tin evidence of service and
confidence. Your attention i** citlloil
to the following statement of deposits
for four years that you may see the
gradual growth of this institution and the confi-
dence expressed in it.
November 27. 1908, $320,938.42
January 31, 1910, $363,903.i5
November 11, 1910, $379,175.78
December 5, 1911, $609,492.34
November 26, 1912, $796,181,86
^re You One Among Our Many Satisfied Customer#?
National Bank of Commerce
SHAWNEE, OKLAHOMA
"CASCARETS" BEST
FOR THE BOWELS
NO HEADACHE. BAD TASTE, SOUR
MOM \( II OB I OA1 ED TON.
(.I E ill XOBNXfi.
It is more than
you keep your Bowels,
weeks to a will case, in which tehc-
j ideal questions were raised so often
'that the Jury spent the greater part
of the time In an ante-room, while
' the lawyers oil both sides argued
' with the judge as to whether cer-
tain questions should or should not
1 Lo asked.
Most of the men on the jury were
business men and every, day they
were In court meant a sacrifice to
them. While the lawyers Jawed and
necessary 'bat | iang|etj their business was suffering
Dr. Hartman Advocates Fresh Air
As a Treatment for Lung Diseases
Liver and
and finally the jurors became exas-
SCRIBE fi.AY'VIIHiHT.
Another name was added o the
playwrights furnished by the new
paper workers o fCblcago when .1
lively conn dj the drst play of
Frederick ISatton, dramatic critic
of the Evening Post, made a real
lilt. Cleora Ade's name is one of
thoses prevlottbly h"st known and
Ada has made ifor'une from hirf
musical comedies. Much of the
credit lor the Hatton play is given
to Mrs. Hatton. who enlivened the
dialogue in-an unusual degree bin
Bhe also is one of the "literati of
newspaper row. There were cur
tain calls and speeches and flowers
and more peeches on the o caston
of the llatton triumph, «nd thus,
things aren't won from the city's
sophisticated first, nighter bj
popularity or anything but merit
The play was described by the
critic In the News, Amy Leslie, in
Iter florid sort of way, in this
fashion "A prodigally rich widow
who has never had her owu wny
all her life but drummed out forty-
eight years of monotonous pro
prietory In Brook h lie, Mass.. sud-
denly feels the call of the kitten
In her well regulated, motherly
veins and plunges into reckless
briskness of existence accompanied
by volnttle rejuvenation, false hair.
loverB, coquetry, wonderful ad-
ventures, sentimental and fantastic
and the inevitable train of adoring
middle age swains to gratify her
swan song leap Into the white
lights. Her grown son conies in
accurate Massachusetts indignation
to rescue his mother from a tour
winding up in a madhouse, and Is
properly horrified at her bare back
her Salome petticoats and promis-
cuous adorers." The play hat been
named, "Years of Discretion.'"
ute. This would show a consump-, dealer. He will allow you to ex-
tion ot about fifteen cubic feet per,arable the Article, which can not
Inn experts allow lrom forty to^f It is not all right he will make
1,S#0 cubic feet per minute per per-,it right—McComb Herald,
son depending upon conditions. A j
hospital, an auditoiium, a gym- ; Jim Lemon, the new representa-
nasiuui, our modern picture shows ■ live from Grant county, announces
and the like, should approach the. that be will Introduce a bill to
higher point while residences and, make the Bteallug of chickens he-
other similar buildings may onlyj tween sunset and sunrise afelony.
allow forty to fifty cubic feet per,Walter Ferguson thinks this an
uilnute j utttrage against the colored brother,
The apparent discrepancy be- U'ho has already been Jimcrowed
tween these figures and the actual «nd grandiatherclaused. But what
consumption as state., above Is duo j could one expect from a /epresen-
the fact that the air exhaled,
al. native
though not exhausted oxygen, never- lal
thelcss contains a comparatively
large percentage of carbon dioxide j
that will foul a portion of the un--
Ireathed air in the room.
A series of interesting experi-.
ments have 'been carried on lately
at the Oklahoma A. & M. College In
which it was determined by an in-
strument cnlled an anemomonter the
umoun' of air entering various
rooms under average conditions and
whether the ventilation was ade-
quate when the rooms were filled
to their capacity with students. In
tiie course of tlie experiment it was
determined that If all air Inlets were
closed and all criAi.es carefully
sealed the air In most of the rooms
hen occupied would be unfit for
breathing in Icbs than ten minutes.
II there were gas lights and open
heaters in the rooms, the time would
shortened materially. In cou-1
nection with the lasr few remarks j
will be well to adi that I11 prac-
tically no building aro all air pas-
sages closed except by special ef-
fort, as under doors and between
window soshes large quantities o?
air usually enter. Most buildings
on the campus, however have ven-
tilating ByBtems. In 'hese buildings
the air In each room Is changed
every twenty minuteB.
The writer believes In good ven-
tilation. even at tho cost of an extni
dollar to the conl pile, and has
named Lemon?—News-Capi-
The world is moital weary ol
charity, but it is hungry—starving
—for downright, gcuulne brotherly
love; the love that expresses itself
first in common justice and Tart-
ness, and then in honest, heartfelt,
sympathy, mutual understanding,
and fellow chip. That Is the only
i thing that can furnish tho basis
and inspiration for the solution of
our modern social problems.—U. D.
Williams, Protestant Episcopal Bi-
shop ot Michigan.
stomach clean, pure and fresh than I licrated. Monday morning when the
it Is to keep the sewers and drain- lawyers resumed their old tactics,
age of a large city from obstruc-1 uad observing no disposition on the
t'on. part of the court to shut oft what the
Are you keeping clean inside with t„ror8 considered trivial argument,
Cascarets—or merely forcing a pas- ,hey rebelled. One juror suggesteu
sageway every few days with salts, ltiat a formal protest be made to the
cethartic pills or castor oil? This court.
is important. ! "What is tho good of these techni
Oaecarets immediately cleanse anl t al questions anyhow?" he* asked,
■gulate the stomach, remove tho • Some other lawyer is sure to get
sour, undigested and fermenting up and object at the top of his
food and foul gases; take the ex- (voice, and then the judge sends us.
cc-ss bile i'rora the liver and carry out in the hall to wait an hour or
out of system the constipated waste no while they all wrangle over it.
matter and poison in the intestines Then they tell us to come back in
nnd bowels. ' the box and we find out the ques
No odds how badly and upset you lion never should have been asked,
; , a C.i' ' t ton:.ht will straight- myhow, a it had nothing to do
on you out by morning. They work with the cast-. And if the witness
while you sleep. A 10-cent box from unfortunately has slipped in an
your druggist will keep your head answer before the lid was put on,
clear, stomach sweet and your literwe're told tc forget it—that it never
and bowels regular for imoiths. was said.
Don't forget the children—their lit* j That was all true, they agreed
tie insides need a god, gentle cleans- «o they drew up this protest, which
illgi t00 ( v. as received by the judge without
(comment:
"We want to get Dack to work.
This trial has been going on nearly
i three weeks. These lawyers kill too
Sign Protest Against Long-Winded much time asking long and foolish
Arguments of Counsel and Ask 'questions and objecting to them and
Judge to Bar Tactics. | then arguing about it. We're tired
; of being senl out of the room while
Jurors in Judge Lucas' division 01 they wrangle for an hour or tv|>
the circuit court rebelled against'over technical points, we don't care
%
Mr. S. B. Hart-
man of Colum-
bus, Ohio, In
his recent ar
ticies on lung
diseases has
certainly made
stir. He has
many readers
JgfcJ Much comment
„ * lias been ex-
V. i-ited, some fa-
did more harm than good.
My treatment for lung diseases
was food and plenty of it, suited to
the taste or the patient. Fresh,
warm tiir. The patient sleeping on
an upper floor. If there is anything
such a patient needs it is warmth.
ilF well as air and sun. In addi-
tion to tliis. the right sort of a tonic
and diffusive stimulant constituted
mi' treatment for lung diseases. This
1 had been advocating all along. 1
,vas 1 he first doctor In this country
to advocate fresh air treatment.
I do not approve of the fresh air
treatment at applied by the doc-
tors loday. In some future article
1 am ttoing to tell why. It is stif-
! cient for me to say now that the
doctors ha swung to the other ex-
treme. in applying fresh air to
their patients they have killed many
I v dampness and cold and exposure
to the elements. Ily stuffing them
with eggs and ntilk -they have de-
ranged the digestive organs so as
to hasten the end.
With rest, home surroundings,
tresh air, good home-cooked food
and Peruna a greater per cent of
unlg diseases recover than from any
other treatment In thic or any other
country . I sincerely believo this
vorable. Tliou-
sands of peo-
;?l believe in Dr
Hartman and
all his teach-
ings with grati-
tude and o.on-
fidence. Others
S. It. llartman, M. D.,
Columbus Ohio.
criticise. One of his rritics, ill com
menting upon Dr. Hartman 3 last
article, entitled "Catarrh of the
Lungs," remarks that he sai.l no
thin;- whatever about the fresh air
treatment for lung diseases.
As the fresh air treatment for
the only treatment of the ordinary
physician of today, ".he omission to, (
refer to it at all is regarded as a'.,a(j 1 propose to proclaim it to tho
grave one. ' j.eople and restore somewhat the
Hearing ol these ihlngs th do, prestige of the old Peruna. now
tor good naturedly answered his „n0wn as Katarno, in the treatment
critic as follows. He said:
No. I said nothing about fre:'h air
as an adjunct to the treatment of
lung diseases. I intended to speak
of that later. I have so much to
MISSOIRI JtKORS REBEL.
■ o-
FBE!SH A1 It.
The above title should not bo
confused with the sense In whlcl'
we speak of u cold, erlsp air. Fresh
air Is not necessarily cold air.
Closely allied with the subject of
ventilation is the subject of hearing
Necessarily the more often the all
is changed in a room the more
heat will lie necessary to keep
comfortable temperature In cool
weather. It Is a common error to
suppose that the presence of
draft In the room is an indlcatlo
that there is ample or more than
TTmple ventilation. This fact does
not always follow. *
► Physiologists tell \ t that a per-
son breathes approximately twenty
cubic inches at a breath and makes
alwut twenty respirations per min-
We want to
the long-windedness of the lawyers u rap about anyhow
in arguing technical questions about'go home."
which the jurors said "they didn't while the court made no comment,
care a rap," and made a written pro- y,ere waa a noticeable quickening
test in which they also gently "side- | 0* trjai Gf the case and a shut-
swiped" the judge for permitting t|ng 0fj useless questions and
such dilatory tactics to consume not i arguments.
only the time of the court but their 1
of catarrh of the lungs and other
catarrhal diseases. Catarrh of the
lungs is just ordinary catarrh, not,
a germ disease In ireating it as a
catarrhal disease 1 am making cures
say on that subject that I could not 'where others fail.
combine it with my previous articl* Those wishing the Uevlsed Peruna
without making it too long Just Lacupla or Manalin can find them
wait I will get tP that subjec ftny drilg store. Those wishing to
soon enough. | procure Katarno, the old time Pe-
have always been an advocate ot runa referred to in the above re-
marks, should inquire of their drug-
Among the laws to be enacted by
the next legislature is a bill pro-
posed at the last session putting
the thumbscrews to bad check ar
tists. It allowed a man ten days
to make good a check when it was
found to bo phoney, and if he fail-
i'd iu that time he had a peniten-
tiary sentence to face. No more
reason for making it easy 011 the
passers of bad checks than any
other sort of confidence men, so
fai as we can see.
Following his asinine exhibition
In which he invited his critics to
betake themselves to hades, with
which place he he seemed thorough-
ly familiar, friends of Governor
Hlease of youth Carolina, endeavor-
ed to get an invitation for him to
the famous Gridiron dinner
own valuable time, says a Kansas
City dispatch to the Boston Trans-
script. The seven divisions of the
circuit court ground steadily all last
week, with the net result of one
verdict in an unimportant case. The
jurors in Judge Lucas' court had
themselves been listening for three
fresh air for the treatment of lung
diseases. Long, long before the
doctors said anything about it I was
talking it and writing it. 'n my
book "The Confidential Physician,"
fifteen years ago, 1 was warning
the people against the treatment for
lung diseases then in vogue with the
doctors In those days they usqjl
to shut such patients up in a tight
room with the fumes of creosote,
administering large doses of creo-
sote internally, strychnia, morphine
and the like Against all this I pro
tested. I said what was needed
\\;is fresh air . I said that such
drugs were not needed at all; they
CONTEST PETITION FORWAliDED.
Oklahoma City, Dec. 14.—A peti-
tion in the contest of Judge John
Carney of El Reno, democratic can-
didate for congress from the second
Oklahoma district, defeated by Dick
T. Morgan of Woodward, republican,
gist for it. If he does not keep it
in stock he can easily get it of any
wholesaler in the United States, ff
for any reason he does not do so
write to the Katarno Company,
Columbus, Ohio, and they will tell
you how to get it
In referenc to Katarno I wish to
say again what I have said many
times before, that Katarno is manu-
factured by the Katarno Company,
Columbus, Ohio, by my consent I
personally guarantee Katarno is
made strictly according to the for-
mula of the old Peruna.
was forwarded to Washington by E.
J. Giddings, attorney for the con-
testant. It is alleged that 1,740
illegal negro votes were cast thro-
ughout the district, which, if elimi-
nated would give the office to Car-
ney, as Morgan's majority was but
(50 on the face of the returns.
The papers also allege that the
fourteenth and fift-enth amendments
the constitution were never ac-
cepted by the states, and have been
illegally enforced since their pre-
sumed adoption
Washington, but found that the
spoken of the time of fouling of air | managers of the banquet were not
iu rooms when all air intakes wero; jree with their invitations as was
closed, so that others may reap tho ^ governor. The rjridiron affair
benefit of investigations that have ^ wa8 evidently more exclusive than
been carried on. -Charles 'ukl°NV the governor's favorite haunt.
Department of Mecnanica 1 En gin- j n
eering, Oklahoma
Stillwater.
A. & M. College.
BREAKS A COLD
IN A FEW HOURS
I'Al'K'S COLD (OMI'Ol-M) CUKES
COLDS AND 6RIFPE IX I
FEW HOURS.
THE COINTY SITE EI.Et TIOX. j
Governor Crucc has set Feb. • .
1913, as thi time for holding the
election to decide whether fir not ,
Pottawatomie county's court house'
shall remain at Tecumseh or be lo-
cated at Shawnee. This question
J,ns been vote on once and Shaw-
nee won, hut the election was set The most severe cold will b' brok-
— .ac.-ws ss ajsr
and the question has to be ■"•>" pound overy tw0 hours until threr
milted hgaiit. ' consecutive doses are taken.
The columns of the Observer will j You will distinctly feel all the diss
he open to both Biles for a full agreeable symptoms leaving after th
Christmas Presents
BUILD OR IMPROVE
\ ilOMK'
PAY IT BACK LIKt RENT
H. B. SEARS
The Bond Man
discussion of the merits of both
places, without the .east partiality
to either. We feel that, under the
very first dose.
The most miserable headache, d\\V j
ness, head and nose stuffed up, fever
ishnese, sneezing, running of tin
Icircumstances this is the proper n0§e, sore throat, mucous catarrhs1 J
thing to do, Inasmuch as tho pre-1 discharges, soreness, Btlffness rheu-'
Lent edltoi Is a new man In. the i raatlsm pains and other distress
unfamiliar with local v,n'B'le8'
I Take this wonderful Compound ;i.
directed, with the knowledge tint
there Is nothing else in the wot id
county and
conditions.
Ljot the olu timers BCttlo th;
question ar.d we will be content.—
Mel/oud Observer.
0
Joseph Moon Buggies, High Grade
Harness, Saddles and Blankets, Auto-
mobile Robes, Automobile Gloves, Bug-
gy Robes and Whips.
Gents" Shaving Mirrors, Shaving Brushes
and Supplies. Wiss Razors and Shears,
Safety Razors, Razor Strops.
which will cure your cold or
Grippe misery as promptly and wi 1
out any other assistance or had af-
ter-effects as a 15-cent package cf
Papc's Cold Compound, whlrh an
druggist can supply—conta.us
MERCHANT AM) FARMER.
The merchant and tho farmer
should co operate to build up their quinine—belongs in every liorni
country The merchant should buy cept no substitute. Tastes nice- a<
l the produce of the farmer and tho gently.
farmer should buy the wares of the
merchant. This mutual aid keeps I The First National Hank of Ma. I
money at home, makes wages high- and the Maud State Hank show a...
j t r and enhances the value of the aggregate deposit of $157,000.00.
I property of both the merchant and I
farmer. Think of this when you aro Every day that you delay
I tempted to send an order away . C hristmas shopping
from home, and bv all means first. tional
vouv
means ad<.
burdens for the men nd
j go to vour local merchant and see [ women In the sheps who must nun-
it he can not furnish the article ister to your wants—do it now.
desired at the same or irsi; o
than you can get it from a foreign Try a want ad in the News-Herald
Silver" are, Knives and Forks, Spoons,
Pocket Knives, Carving Sets.
Air Guns, Shot Guns and Rifles.
Nut Crackers, Cut Glass Bowls,
Clocks, Wagner Aluminum
Coffee Perculators, Roasters.
Bronze
Ware,
Boxing Gloves, Foot Balls, Base Balls,
Base Ball Bats, Icy Hot Bottles.
Bicycles, Go-Carts, Coaster Wagons,
Velocipeds.
Fancy Shears,Scissors and Manicure Sets
All Articles Guaranteed
Warren-Smith Hardware Company
ph •* ns
"THE HARDVVAARE STORE'
Agents S. W. P.
Main and Phila. Streets
41
c
•W Wi
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Weaver, Otis B. The Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 111, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 14, 1912, newspaper, December 14, 1912; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc91830/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.