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THE OUTITRIE DAILY LEADER, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1011. K wit mfM m m im 9 m PAGE PIVE STRAP WA Now Being Shown at Strand Theater, New York, Can Be Seen At The Li Jl I Most remarkable war pictures ever photographed In addition to our regular program L. H. Lonr Is preparea to do all kinds of gas piping at a reasonable coat. He keeps on hand a supply u Hh- .nHntlen tclo'ie unci rmrnur , For "Thanksgiving Day" Thursday, November 26 will be the more enjoyed if you have on hand some of our famous Benton County Arkansas apples from the very heart of the Ozark Mountains. Wo, will ship you by ex press to" your address, fancy Ben Davis and Gano at $1.85 and Mammoth Black Twig Winesap and Kentucky Streak at $2.15 the box f. o. )., Rogers, Arkansas. We park in paper lined bushel boxes the very best fruit that, is grown. Express charges to any station in Oklahoma not over 75e. Terms: CASH with order FRUIT Rogers, Arkansas APPLES BENGO COf' NOSTRILS AND HEAD STOPPED UP FROM COLD? TRY MY CATARRH BALM h IniUntly Clears Air Paage; You Breathe Freely; Dull Headache Goe; Natty Catarrhal DUcharge Stop. Try "Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, just to try It (Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped up air passages of the head ., will open; you will breathe freely; ..dullness and headache disappear. By .morning! the catarrh, cold. in-head or catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the ; small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" , 'at any drug store. This sweet, ! fragrant balm dissolves by the heat GEM THEATRE Program Week of N'.;. ember 22 to 29. Sunday, Nov. 22. ViMor (2 reel) "The Wite'.i (lirl" Featuring Mary Puller an 1 Chas 'Cgle in their lirst release with the I'niversal. Nestor. "When Pess got in Wrong.' Comedy. Featuring Bess Meredyth and I.ee Moran. Monday, Nov. 23. Erlair 2 reel detective. "The Mystery of Ora-son Hall" Edna Payne and Hal Wilson. Joker "Mr.-,. Xond.- Adlesa Diy," go id Slapstick comedy. Tuesday, Ncv. 24. Powers "The Senators l.iub" Taken from I." ke's e r, "H tn na'i Jane.'" Edna Mai.-osi and Bon Hadley. ' TrcnrVr "Tre P.la -V mi'h-.-C.jr:.'i an C';r:s -:;!:! luibP bandits up with irrse shoe .-terlins "A Hue for a Bride" Comedy. Max A?her. Wednesday, Nov. 25. Eclair (2 reels "The Return." A stirrim tale of reform aii.-n un der unusual circumstances. Kdn.i Paae aDd lb Frazier. Joker "The Btlii.wis Method of Worfare" Oord p! ip?t- eoin-ly. Kn" Matinee 4 p m. IO . ... gL i onigni POISON IN PANCAKES. Girl Dead and Three Others of Fam ily Critically III. Mount Pleasant, la., Nov. 2. Inez Jordan. 14 year old daughter of J. B. Jordan, is dead and three other mem bers of the Jordan family are in a critical .condition as the result of eat ing pancakes which contained poison- Fat ducks for Thanksgiving roasts; 75c apiece. Phone 51 L. K. LilliVs Drug Store The close of the contest for the ex. position trfp shows the following re sults which, however, are to be veri fied by the contest judges and the awards of the nine additional prizes will be ni:ide and published in the Leader for Wednesday evening- All candidates .who have not yet turned in unsold due b:lls are requested to do so at once and make their final report. As the vote stood at close of the cent est Saturday- evening, November 14 th: CONTEST CANDIDATES. Abrnms. Madge W.flA Baldwin. Grace 5(130 Burke, Lenore 6210 Hurling. Maude 1 105720 Donakey, Agnes 014175 Farquharson. Xouo 15-135 Jels'tiia, Marie 2D&S95 Dawson, Bern ice fit) 2770 Lohman, Mrs. lCdgar 22M20 Mcr.ee, Olive 24190 Preston, Onice 5250 Payne, Nellie ,'!7S::5 Raniev, Olive 10X25 Steele, Ruby 509' Smith, Kate 249(15 Sehoner, Mary 71105 Van Horn. Mrs. I. 4S.130 LILLIE Dfiuu & STATY. CO , Phone 61 206 W. Okla. Ave. Opposite Post Office. of the nostrils; penetrates and heals the inflammed, swollen membrane which lines the nose, head anJ throat; clears t'iie air passages; stops nasty discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes im mediately. 'Dont lay a.wake tonight strug gling for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with its, running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distress ing but truly needless. Put your faith just once in "Ely's Cream Balm" and your cold cr catarrh will surely disappear. For pale by Owl Drug .Store. HIGHLAND THEATRE I I VAUDEVILLE AND PICTURES Comedy Musical Playlet. PICTURES. Ka'.em spr. ial in 2 parts: "The Girl and the Stowaway." Alice Joice. S. & A. Comedy, "Three Boiled Down Fables." I.uban Comedy: "Making Aunt.' Welcome. .Sometin.es it Works." Friday, Nov. 20. I'.iograph. -Mary Pickford a-s she use J to be. "Muggsy's First Sweet ooart." Selig: "The Fpeck on the Wall." Kalen, "Sherlock Bonehcad." Saturday Big Feature Where the trail Divides FIVE ACT ROMANCE BY AI.A-KA. N..te ZUDORA Thanksgiving FAMILY AFTER O -D MN, 82, AFTER MANY YEARS HaS CHILDREN RESTORED Muskogee, Okla., Nov. 21. doe Dickey, 82 years old and a Musko geean for the last fourteen years, found his family yesterday when tie walked into the room of a friend and was introduced to a woman whom he remembered thirty-five years ago as his little daughter. Today the ol 1 man is going back to Missouri to enter the home for which he searched so vainly all that, length of time. .Like a leaf from a fairy book, the plot of the most improbable of novels, is the story of the disappearance, thirty-five years' search, and life of Joe Dickey with its romantice end ing here. It was in 1S79 in Colchester, 111., that the story begins with the death of Dickey's wife. He was stunned, completely shattered by the blow. For several months he was unable to turn a hand at any work. Then sick and sore at heart" he .placed his six chil dren in the care of a relative and set out for the new west, there to seel: another home and to forget. Fortune or even a slight measure of success was denied the man. On and on, through Missouri into Kansas down intcf '(Oklahoma and later to Texas he drifted. A carpenter by trade, the thought of his j.;reat sor row weighed so heavily upon him that he could not find success even in a country where his labor was in demand. .A few years rolled by and then he wrote a letter5 to his old home It came baCt undelivered. His children had been taken, by the rela tive in whose care they had been left to Galestl.urg, 111. ' There they grew to man and womanhood's estates. Hearing nothing from their father, they began a, search. They advertis. eel in newspapers, they did every thing iiossible, hut no father could they find. Many, many years ago they gave him up for dead. In 1000 Dickey drirted into Musko gee. He was then PS years old. but he got a position as carpenter for the Missouri, Kansas and Texas rail road. He had not given up hope of finding his children, but his means were small and growing smaller. He did not know what to do. As late as 1!nf() in some manner, he learned that one of his daughters had married a man in Brookfield, Mo. He wrote a letter. But fate had decreed thatjhe was to have) learned a slightly dis similar name from the one his daughter took and although his daughter was in Brookfield the letter enme back undelivered. Then, Dickey gave up hope and he settled down to pass the last few years of his life as best he might. For several years he has lived in a little Quarter between Broadway and Okmulgee on F street. The little place belongs to Thomas A. Marcum. who has allowed Dickey to make his home there free. The old man, Btill worked at small carpentering jobs. Just one month' apo he was em ployed to build a flower stand for Mrs. W. TT. McKay. 113 North K street. To Mrs. McKay and her hus band, in laree measure, is ( due the ending of this story. She became in terested In the man, who althoueh old, worked away so cheerfully. "Haven't you any relations?" she asked, and then he told her the story, so remarkrable that she became in terested. Further questioning drew from Dickey the fact that he believe 1 his daughter had married a conductor. Here fate got in its hand aaain but this time In Di -key's favor, for Mr McKay had been a railroad conductor. He wrote to the secretary of theOr der of Railroad Conductors at dales 1 i rp 111., where Dh'Vry thought his daughter mieht be He. cave him all the facts In the case. Again fate came to the old man's aid for the crctarv of the order ha;;cned to oe a close friend of W. II. Bowles of Brookfitbl. Mo, hon he knew had married a girl. named Dickey in Cales l.urg. He sent the letter to Bowles. Thst was about three weeks ago P-owles at one wrote to th McKays Another letter followed and Tuesday incht. on the Katy. came a husband and wife, ihe latter firmly llievin? that she as to Fee her father for th first time in thirty-five rears. 1 ncit day they went to Mrs. M'Kays horn and the latter snt for Mr pickv ith lh message that ther 0 .... - i ' yV ' i "' Rev. C. L. Johnson, of Ft. So ith. Ark. .Who begins a series of revival meetings at First Christian Church, Monday. Nov. 23 rd. was a letter for him at her home. Tin old man came over and nodded his head pleasantly' to the anxious wo man and eager husband who were in the (room. Unable to restrain herself longer, the woman cried: "Don't you remember me, papa?" "Are you my dauuhter?" were the only words the old man could utter and then he stood stock, still in the center of the room incapable of an other motion. This morning the three are going back to Brookfield, where Mr. Dickey will spend the rest of his long life. "Our boy, Vernon," Mrs. Bowles said, "has, always wondered why lie didn't have a grandfather. Now he 11 get one although he had to wait longer than most boys." Dickey has three sons, all in Mys tic, Iowa, engaged in the mining business, two daughters married in C.alesburg and one in Brookfield. Five were notified by telegraph last night that their father had been found.' Mrs. Bowles was the only one who knew of the good fortune. Mr. and Mrs. Howies spent all day yesterday at the home of R. L. Davis, 42.3 East Broadway. The Davis home is literally filled with tables, chairs, racks and other pieces of lurniture that the old man has made. "Uncle Joe," they call him, and do not wan' to see him leave. Joe Dickey, in spite of his great age, is alble to work. He runs rather than walks as he goes along the. streets and none, even those .who knew him best, had guessed the story he carried locked to his heart. He dtesn't smoikie or drink and he eats whatever he feels like, lie says, die chews tobacco incessantly and defies anyone to say that it's a bad habit or ; unhealthy. Glasses have never been necessary to aid his still keen vision. "I'm glad I've found my boys and girls," he said, "but It'll take me some time to foraet the people here and get used to what's my own." '$100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper wilt t pleased to learn that tlierx la at 1.,-ast one dreaded dir.ease that science has been able to euro In all Its stacks, and that la Catarrh. Jl'.U'a Catarrh Cure is the onl posltlvo cuift now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh btkif? a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional trcat rient. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken in ternally, actin? directly upon the Mood and mucous eui faces of the eystem. there by destroying tho foundation of the dis ease, and giving the patient Btrenpth by building' up the constitution and assisting nature in doing Its work. The proprietors have so nvjrh faith In curative pow ers that they offer On Hundred Dollars for nnyra:a that It fills to cure. Send for l!-t of testimonials. Adlrrss I J. fllENLV A CO., Toledo, Ohio. Po!t bT r.ll Prur-tu's, 7"-. Take Hall's Family Tills for constipation. SHIPPERS MUSI HUSTLE OWN Ul RECEIPTS Effective December 1st the stamp tax act passed by the fi:ird congress (H. It 1S.K91) becomes effective, af ter -which date each railroad and fy press company is required by law to issue a written receipt for every shipment received for transportation on which the revenue derived exceeds five cents. The new law further pro- i vides that after December 1st each recei; t so issued shall have pfli'.ed to it a one cent revenue stamp, it' . eing the duty of the shipper to pro vide such stamp, affix it to lading and rancel tt. The law further provides a enalty of $.VUKM for each failure, to affix such stamp. It further pro-, vides a f .".) fine in each case , where the railroad or express com- pany issues a receipt before such stamp is affixed. Postmas'er McCoy tays he ill not handle revenue stamps which means that they will have to be procured through the In ternal revenue collector for this dis trict, though likely ban.s will pro vide themselves a tupply for general local use. For dyspepsia, our national aliment, use Uurdock fUood Hitters. Recom mended for etrenfthetinf digeftlon. purifjin? th blood At k 11 drug stores. t oo a bottle UN TO URGE NEW 'SLAVE' LAWS CONGRESS WILL BE HELD! IN CHICAGO TO DISCUSS PROBLEM Chicago. Nov. noi.s are to aol gross here on 1 21. Woo;en of llli- a Icni dative con a'cember . , II and 12, it was announ.i'ed today, to dis cuss legislation they believe neces sary to improve conditions affecting their sex- The women, it is said will recom mend six measures regarding the white sbme traffic and social evil in the state, four or five measures along educational lines, and four statutes pertaining to .conditions under which working women are asked to perform their duties. The Senate Welfare Commission of which Lieut. Ceo. O'llara is chairman has naned Mrs. Harriet Taylor Treadvvell chairman of the congress Campaigning for measures to lie pro posed will be started immediately throughout the stae. Don't Delay Treating Your Cough. A slight cough often .becomes seri ous. Dungs get congested, Bronchial Tubes fill with mucous. Your vitality is reduced. You need Dr. Boll's Pine Ttar-Honey. It soothes your irritated air .passages, loosens mucous and makes yotwr system resist Colds. Give the Ba and Children Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. It's guaranteed to help them. Only 25c at your druggist. FUNERAL NOTICE. The Grand Army and Ladies' orders nre requested to attend the funeral of Comrade Colman R. Delay, late ot Co D, 107 Ills. Inft., to be held at the Methodist church .Sunday, Nov. 22nd. Bil l, at 2:00 o'clock P. M. Meet at. G A. R. hall at 1:.'!0 P. M. Isaac Clark. Post Commander. ODD FELLOWS, ATTENTION. The funeral of Brother Coleman It Delay will be held at the Methodist, Episcopal church, Sunday aternoon at 2 P. M. The Odd Fellows will meet at their hall at 1:30 P. M., go to the church in a body and have their services at the grave. G. H. Stagner, Noble Grand; H. A. Herwig, Secre tary. A household remeay In America for Dr. Thomas' Electric Oil. For cuts, sprains, burns, scalds, bruises. 25c stores. and f0c. At all drug li ' -!T.".'L'TW MO I have purchased the Poison Grocery 102 W. Oklahoma Avenue. We will carry a complete line of staple and fancy Groceries which are always fresh, and kept in a sanitary condition. I solicit the patronage of Mr. Poison's customers and as many others that we may have the opportunity of serving. Yours for Business. We Carry Thirty Day Accounts. 1 M w, Phones 66 and 67 102 W. Okla. Ave. a- n LUG We Can Use 20 Bales of Cotton 8c a Pound in Trade F. O. Lutz Guthrie Store In case you don't care to trade it all out wo will pay 7c a pound cash lor, hall' of the hale. This cot ton must he pure while and clean. Tell your pinner to clean it vn'ood. It must he understood that we cannot use tinges and off colors in this lot. It must rade middling. This store is doing its host to assist the farmers in the effort for hotter juices for cotton. Competition may th'nk it hind the gun efforts. foolish, hut -knows our I RESOLUTIONS OF CONDOLENCE. Whereas The AlmUhtv God in His t infinite wisdom has seen fit to re move from our midst Neighbor .lames S. Keller, Therefore, Be it Resolved, That we, the members of Guthrie Camp, fiN'.lT. extend our heartfelt sympathy to the bereaved family in their hours of deep sorrow. F. 3. Mathls. .1. W. Shelton, Luther Arnold, Committee. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S O A STO R i A Mrs. Tearl Olson-llam has opened her music studio again; :'ny pupil taking a 20-week, course will the given free us of an instrument which will be keipt in good condition. Studio, 319 South First street. What a Bank THAT IS WHAT WE STRIVE TO DO AT ALL TIMES. First National Bank Guthrie, I T . . . j IN. IJOiIIian, 1 lesiuent. itittM TT A I s i 11 the farmer the man bo eeling and appreciates the ' IC tt J M M K b 0 M T. C. VINSON H hi The time to take care of the M S hair U while you have it. Elec- M ! trie Face and Scalp Massage. !8 J? Scalp Treatment a specialty. M M Hair cut 25c. 119 So. First 31 X street. Stop in for a Bcalp M 1 treatment. H w fMRIHIIRIII Have Your Cistern Cleaned BY VACUUM PI 1 ON E 11C JOHN GIEM Cistern Builder, Repairing a.nd Cleaning. '7: awa 3 Should Give The greatest possible service to the greatest possible number of people in the greatest possible number of ways. Oklahoma George Tipton, Cashier aj.r -I " - a -i 4iwi 't1 Smi.ij.Timi A It-mtn m m J J HOP IT? -y iOvV 1 1