State Sentinel (Stigler, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 26, 1912 Page: 3 of 8
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8EXTINEL, STIGLER, HASKELL COtfc'TY, OKLAHOMA, SKPTEMBEB 26. 1012.
IA
PAGE THREE
"EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME AND fARM."
More Than.
1 375,(
Are In
,OGOi
Use
CREAM
SEPARATOR
The Bes( Investment
Any Cow Owner Can Make
That's what nearly a million and a half of cow
owners the world over have found the De Laval cream
separator to be,
i De Laval farm separator costs from $35 to $160—
according to capacity. It saves butter fat and produces a
cream of superior quality over any setting system or any other
separator every time it is used—twice a day—730 times a year.
It involves far less labor than any setting system, and runs easier,
has greater capacity and lasts from two to ten times longer
than any other separator.
That b how a De Laval separator saves at
least its cost the first year, and frequently i:
• few months, and then goes right along saving
your money year after year.
'"We have an arrangement
whereby you can make a partial M Easiest
payment at time of purchase, B to turn,
and pay the balance on cuch easiest to
liberal terms that your ma- wash, skims
chine will more than save the cleanest
its cost while lasts the longest
you are
SOONER OR LATER
YOU WILL BUY A
DE LAVAL
DON'T YOU NEED
HAMAD:
DO YOU LIKE THE RANGE YOU'VE COT?
A NEW ONE?
YOUR FAMILY WILL NOT BE HEALTHY AND HAPPY UN-
LESS THEIR FOOD IS WELL COOKED. A PROPER RANGE MEANS
PROPER FOOD.
ONE OF OUR RANGES WILL LIGHTEN THE HARD WORK
OF COOKING, AND MAKE IT FUN.
COME LET US EXPLAIN OUR RANGES TO YOU.
DOBYNS-LANTZ HARDWARE CO
Stigler, Oklahoma
TEDDY SAYS B.O.P.
IS VERY ROTTEN
HE SAYS THAT YELLOW IS A VERY AP-
PROPRIATE COLOR FOR A TAFT
BADGE AS IT SHOWS A
YELLOW STREAK.
Joplia, Mo., Sept. 23.—Governor
Hadley of Missouri in the opinion
of Col. Roosevelt, as he expressed it
today, will join the progressive par-
ty in the national campaign.
"I not merely hope, but believe. '
said Col. Roosevelt, "that Governor
Hadley will yet decide to stand with
us."
Col. Roosevelt saw nothing of the
governor during bis trip through
the state. When he went to St.
Louie to speak at the beginning of
his tour, the statement was publish-
ed that he had received a letter
from the governor. The colonel
would say nothing about it. Gover-
nor Hadley has already said he
would soon make a public statement
of his position.
Beginning the day in Kansas, Col.
Roosevelt came into Missouri and
spoke at Springfield and Joplin, with
a number of short speeches from
the train at other points. He attack-
ed the republican national commit-
tee, saying it had forever separated
the people from the republican par-
ty until you could not get into it
with a Jimmey." He told the peo-
ple in Speaker Champ Clark's home
state that Mr. Clark had been beat-
en in the democratic convention al-
though he had defeated Governor
Wilson in the primaries.
In the crowd at Lamar there was
a man with a huge banner bearing
the words, "We want Taft, let well
enough alone." The banner at-
tracted Col. Roosevelt's attention.
Bending over the railing of his car,
he pointed to the man with the ban-
ner and said:
"Any man who supports the re-
reiver of stolen goods stands on a
level with the receiver of stolen
goods. He Is a dishonest man, and
unfit to asociate with honest men."
Ab tho train drew out. Col. Roose-
velt called to the crowd:
"Good bye, honest men."
When the colonel readied Spring,
field, he found another Taft banner
and saw a number of men who were
wearing Taft badges.
"i have noticed several Taft
badges In your town," he said in his
speech. "And they are an appro-
priate color of yellow. There never
was a yellower performance than
that of the republican mnnagers at
the Chicago convention, and the
badges are Just the right color. The
man that puts on one shows that be
has a streak of yellow about some-
where."
In his speech here he said: ''The
republican committee is composed
of 25 men, most of them shady."
"All of them?" a man in the
crowd shouted.
"Well, pretty nearly all," the col-
onel said. "There were Just about
enough of the other kind to have
saved Sodom and Gomorrah."
$S.OO REW ARD.
Strayed or stolen, 1 black mare
mule, 8 years old, 14 hands high,
weight 800 pounds, white nose,
branded K on left choulder. Will
pay $0.00 for recovery of same.
WM. KENNEDY,
Hughhart, Okla.
The implicit confidence that many
people have in Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is
founded on their experience in the
use of that remedy and their know-
ledge of the many remarkable cures
of colic, diarrhoea and dyscntry that
it has effected. For sale by all
dealers.
JES* CAN'T HANG
THIS MISSOURIAN
Fort Smith, Ark., 8ept. 24.—The
closing chapter to the most spec-
tacular fight ever recorded in a
criminal case in Arkansas was writ-
ten today when Governor Donaghey
commuted Will Bowman's sentenca
to life imprisonment. Bowman was
under sentence to hang here Friday.
He was convicted in October, 1908,
on a charge of criminal assault and
was sentenced to hung on three oc-
casions. He contended his convic-
tion was illegal, charging that Choc-
taw Strip, the scene of the alleged
crime, is a part of Oklahoma and
not Arkansas. Bowman's home is
at East Billings, Missouri.
Running up anVl down stairs,
sweeping and bending over making
beds will not mrke a woman healthy
or beautiful. She must get out of
doors, walk a milo or two every day
and take Chamberlain's Tablets to
improve her digestion aiul regulate
her bowels. For sale by all d >ulers.
HNPTKMIlKIt 22 IX I1IHTOKY.
September 22, 1180. Richard I. j
digs his sheet-Iron overcoat out of
the moth balls.
September 22, 1684. Sir Walter
Raleigh arrives in America and is
wooed by an Indian heiress with
2,000,000 clam shells.
—.——— fj i i _ _
If you knew of the real value of
Chamberlain's Liniment for lame
back, soreness of the muscles,
no* 'nni«d puo tmiu.ids
would never wish to be without It.
Fur sale by all dealers.
MAY WANT IT
PUBLWD
STATE SENTINEL HAS RECEIVED NU-
MEROUS REQUESTS THE PAST YEAR
TO PUBLISH THE "LETTER
FROM CHRIST."
There has been going the rounds
of the press the past year or so,
what is alleged to be a letter from
Christ. In this letter Is a promise
of bad luck to whosoever has the
letter in his possession and fails to
give it publicity, while whosoever
will give it publicity will have much
prosperity.
As we have received more than a
dozen requests to publish the letter,
and are perfectly willing to relieve
tho superstitious fear of anyone, the
letter follows:
According to tho history of the
letter It was written by Christ just
after his crucifixion, signed by the
Angel Gabriel ninety-nine years af-
ter the Savior's birth and presunv
ably deposited by him under a stDiio
■•it the foot of the cross.
On this stone appeared the legend,
'Blessed I? he who shall turn me
. vcr."'
"No one knew what the insorip-
i'fi ii cc.nt, or seemed to have .-tlli-
cleiit curiosity to investigate, ur.til
the si.one was turned oyer by a little
r.uld r.ud the letter which folio'"*
was discovered:
"Whosoever works on the Sab-
bath day shall be cursed. I com-
mand you to go to church and keep
holy the Lord's day, without any
manner of work. You shall not idle
or misspend your time in bedecking
yourself in superfluities of costly
apparel and vain dressing, fori have
ordered it a day of rest. I will have
that day kept holy that your sins
may be forgiven you.
"You will not broak my com-
mandments, but observe and keep
them, they being written by my
hand and Bpoken from my mouth.
You shall not only go to church
yourselves, but also your man ser-
vant and maid servant. Observe
my words and learn my command-
ments.
"You shall finish your work every
Saturday at 6 o'clock In the after-
noon, at which hour the preparation
for the Sabbath begins. 1 advise
you to fast five days In the year, be-
ginning on Good Friday and con-
tinuing tho five dayB following in re-
membrance of tho five bloody
wounds 1 received for you an,I man-
kind.
"You shall love one another and
cause thom that are not baptized to
come to church and receive the Holy
Sacrament; that Is to say, baptism,
and then the supper of the lx>rd,
and be made a member thereof, and
in so doing I will give you long life
and many blessings. Your land shall
be replenished and bring forth abun-
dance and I will comfort you in the
greatest temptation, and surely he
that docth to the contrary shall be
cursed.
"I will also send hardness of the
heart on them and especially on
hardened and unpenitent unbe-
lievers. He that hath given to the
poor shall And it profitable. Re-
member to keep the Sabbath day,
for the seventh day I have taken as
a resting day to myself.
"And he that hath a copy of this
letter written by my own band nnd
spoken by my own mouth and keep-
eth it without publishing it to others
shall not prosper, but he that pub-
lisheth it to others shall be blessed
by me, and if their sins be as many
as stars by night, and if they truly
believe they shall be pardoned and
they that believe not this writing,
and my commandments will have
my plagues upon you and you will
be consumed with your children,
goods and cattle and all other
worldly enjoyments that I have giv-
en you. Do but once think of what
I have suffered for you; if you do,
it will be well for you in this world
and in the world which is to come.
„"Whosoever shall have a copy of
this letter and keep It In their house,
nothing shall hurt them, neither
pestilence, thunder nor lightning,
and if any woman be in birth and
put her trust in me shall be deliver-
ed of ber child. You shall hear no
more news of me except through the
Holy Scriptures until the day of
judgment. All goodness and pros-
perity shall be in the house where a
copy of this letter shall be found.
Finished.",
The story goes that the little child
who found it passed it to one who
became a convert to the Christian
faith. He failed to have the letter
published. He kept it, however, as
a sacred memento of Christ and it
passed down to different genera-
tions of his family for more than
one thousand years.
During this period the family suf-
fered repeated raipfortunes, migrat-
ed to different countries until finally
one of them came to America, bring-
ing the letter with him. They setr
tied in Virginia, then moved further
south, still followed by misfortune,
when snally the last member, a
daughter, approached her deathbed
and called a neighbor, Mrs. Thomp-
son, giving her the letter and relat-
ed Its history for more than one
thousand years. The Thompson
woman began the attempt to have it
published and it first appeared in
the Rome, (Ga.) Tribune on Oct. 31,
MALARIA
headache, biliousness, in-
digestion, rheumatism,
pimples, blotches, yellow
complexion, etc., are all
signs of poisons In your
blood. These poisons
should be driven out, or
serious illness may result
To get rid of them, use
E
Word's
Black-Draaghti
the old, reliable, purely
vegetable, liver medicine.
Mrs. J. H. Easier, of
Spartanburg, S. C, says:
" I had sick headache, for
years. I felt bad most of
the time, I vried Thed-
ford's Black-Draught, and
now I feel better than
when I was 16 years old."
Your druggist sells it, in
25 cent packages.
Insist on Thedford'j
1891. It then appeared in the Dab"
ton, (Ga.) Citizen, and Mrs. Wort-
man, now living in Marion, Ind.,
clipped it and kept It in lier posses-
sion for many years without an ef-
fort to have It published. She was
followed by misfortune, which sh
attributed to her neglect in trying
to have the letter published.
Mrs. Ruby Critchfleld of Treza-
vant, Tenn., is also said to have had
a copy and failed to make an effort
to have it published for three years,
and was followed by a varied lot of
misfortunes which she attributed to
the fact of her neglect in this re-
spect.
Bven when a man isn't barking
up the wrong tree he may be lead-
ing a dog's life.
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Milam, C. D. State Sentinel (Stigler, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 26, 1912, newspaper, September 26, 1912; Stigler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc99547/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.