The Territorial Topic. (Norman, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 6, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1895 Page: 4 of 4
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BEAUTY'S ANGER.
*_/ ivt A is'S LOVE.
EDITOR MEDILL'S COMMENT.
MR. NOONAN'S riG NUGO*T«
H It Worth CkAOO and Win Fo«a4l to •
of ThIIIiikh.
Mr. Martin Noonan, a Coeur d'AUue
mining man, arrived in this city from
Delta, Idaho, the other day with ft $500
gold nugget in his pocket., says th« Ore-
gonlan, Mr. Noonan haBhad nearly forty
years' experience as a placer miner
and prospector all over the west and al-
though, like the far-famed Reuben
Glue, hla countenance is ornamented
et the lower end by a little hunch of
whiskers, there the similitude closes,
lor, unlike Reuben, Mr. Noonan really
knows a thing or two. Mr. Noonan
exhibited his big nugget to several per-
sons yesterday. They viewed it with
great curiosity and wondered if it were
really possible that so largo a sum
could represent the value of so small a
«hunk of quartz and yellow metal. It
was about as large and much resembled
In shape a fair-sized Bartlett pear. A
Quantity of dirty-looking quartz was
mixed up with it and its rounded sides
betrayed its origin In a bed of gravel.
"There's too much quartz in It to be
worth so much," said a bystander.
"You can tell nothing by the looks
of a nugget how much It is worth,"
nald another bystander, who looked like
a miner himself. "You can only tell
by hefting it, you see, and judging by
the apparent weight of this, it is worth
fully }Fi00."
"It weighs Just 27 t-2 ounces," said
Mr. Noonan, "and what quartz there
is in It won't weigh much. It was
rather odd how this here nugget came
to be found. It lay in a heap of coarse
tailings for five years before some one
happened to pick it up. You see, it
was forced out of the sluice box along
with other rocks usually forked out to
keep the box from being obstructed.
The man that forked It out probably
didn't notice Its extra weight or it
would have been found much sooner."
"How often can a man pick up stones
like this in the Coeur d'Alene coun-
try?"
"Well, I don't know. It isn't exactly
like digging potatoes in the Snake
River valley. I have been looking for
nuggets of all sizes for thirty-seven
years, and this is a good deal the big-
gest I have yet found. This one oame
from Trail gulch, near Delta, Idaho,
and I have worked around that camp
eleven years without seeing any others
like this."
A NARROW ESCAPE.
Opportune Appearance of a Mini Who
Wum Su| | oh«>«| to llo Murdered.
A hanging was once averted in Hall
county, this state, in a thrilling man-
ner, says Atlanta Constitution. A man
was murdered for his money, it was
thought. He disappeared, anil, after a
long search, only a skeleton was found.
There were circumstances pointing to
another man as the perpetrator of the
awful deed. The clue was taken up
and one by one tho links in the chain
of convicting evidence were discovered.
He was placed on trial, convicted and
sentenced. The day for the hanging
came. People by the thousands came
to see a human being swung oft Into
eternity. The black cap was placed
over the victim's face, and in five min-
utes the tragedy would have been over.
Just then a tall mountaineer, who had
been attracted to the hanging along
with the crowd, stepped upon the scaf-
fold and a brief colloquy between him
and the sheriff ensued. The tall moun-
taineer was the man who had disap-
peared and whose death was about to
be avenged by the law.
tbe I'ari.Uii Qu*eu Creates ft
Great Sensation.
Irene Is Mentone, a resort for
Briefs.
Lawyers having short notice briefs
to file in the supreme court can get
them in the shortest possible time, in
new, clean type, and it I most leasou-
.11 lo lie Hlffi-rent In Intea.My M ^fcen ||„ l.ookeit Over the llnlllant AT-
Certain I'erlod. of Life. n>y of Hi, New.puper Worker.,
Ij It -.. stole tor a woman to 1ot« The venerable Joseph Medlll, puB- coa>umpUve people, but which becomes
ti ' •' with tho same Intensity, is • nn)ler 0f the Chicago Tribune, and than ] le, since a few members of the able prices at the TOPIC oillce
ill ' ion ofteu asked, but seldom an- w|)0m no wiser editor ever walked the squadron of the army of beauty —-———
'.vc-i-el. There seems to be so many auarterdei k of a great daily, spends | have decided that Cannes was stuck , Land Owners,
sides to the question that an answer all mogt of nis time jn California, where ! up, Mice, dusty and vulgar, Monte Carlo A little investigation will show voil
at once would be quite impossible; but. he haB dlverg ani various possessions j good enpassant only, and that Mentone Tol,IC t)a9 l)eeI1 the means of
viewing it as any other problem, weigh- of „ (ruit plantat|on sort. In his ab- j better than any other piac.
lug every phrase, and looking at It gence the pr.per is under the controlling the first to start
.almly and dispassionately, there gui(lan(.e 0f Managing Editor ,Van Ben
comes -nore than one reply to the In- thuysen. Among his other emphatic
terrogition, and it resolves Itself into editorial traits, Medlll has the one of
thi?, " >'" < and No." Woman may love frUgalIty. He likes not waste and ex-
with e.quM intensity at different periods travagance. Recently Medlll returned
of her life, but the love will be of an t0 Chicago on a brief visit. The men
entirely dlf'erent character. To begin on the Tribune force, as told to a writer
with, many womeu imagine the fancy jor star, concluded as an evidence
of a rnomert to be the everlasting re- reSpect and veneration which
gard of a life-time, and for the time they fe)t for thelr ripe old chief, to give
being they will be as much in earnest, jjel]m a reception at the Newspaper
suffer as keenly, and feel as deeply as c]ub yan Benthuysen had the cele-
though they were really in possession Oration most in command, and that
of the genuine sentiment. Therefore night beneath the central chan-
when years go on and they meet a man ,jelier he stood w[th Medlll and intro-
who inspires a true, earnest and sincere d,lce(i to him the Tribune young men,
feeling of affection, the world wonders a8 one by one they flled by and shook
at the second outpouring of feeling, the oM editor's hand.
and considers her either fickle or capa-( Uil PI- these splendid young men
ble of more than one great love in a worl{ on l1c Tribune?" asked Medill
lifetime. So few women know their j )n hjs geuuine way, as the six-
real sentiments until they are in the ty-sevent'n dress suited gentleman ga/ve
neighborhood of 30, and it is no wonder ^js han() a South Clark street grip and j
that the man who pleased the girl of on
17 has no attraction for the woman "They do, Mr. Medill," replied Van
whose tastes have changed, whose mind jjenthuvsen' proudly, "they do. And
has broadened, while he, a man at the j can aasure you sj"r, that a better or |
time her early fancy was attracted, re-
mains as he was, while she progresses
far beyond htm. Love, lasting and en-
during, love of the type, comes but
once, and comes to stay; but fickle,
more competent set of newspaper men
nevrr took an assignment in Chicago."
"No doubt of it," said Medill, in a
musing far-away tone, "no doubt of it,
whatever. I can see it in their faces.
fleeting fancy can so disguise itself that j-jj je]j you> yan " and here the
no one could discovei it was not the editor's far-away look faded,
genuine article until the passing years ^jjile a brighter and exceedingly fin-
preved to the unhappy woman her mis-
take.
TEETH WORTH $7,500.
de-slecle expression supplanted It, "to-
morrow you and I had better take a
look over the pay roll."
A Convict Trade* Valuable Information
for a Set.
A well-known firm of bankers in
London has Just made a profitable in-
vestment. Some time ago a man who
had defrauded them of a lzrge sum of
money was taken into custody, convict-
ed, and sentenced to a long term of pe-
nal servitude. The prison fare did not
agree with a man who had by means
of fraud lived on the fat of the land,
says London Tidbits. The change af-
fected him in many ways, but he com-
plained more particularly of the effect j be a favorite 'one with a great many
the food had upon his teeth. They | paj.ents, who no doubt consider it all
THE FRINTINC BUSINESS.
la England the Number of Learners I®
Mill Ahead of Other Trades.
So many people appear to believe that
there is no money in the printing busi-
ness, and that, owing to the introduc-
tion of type-setting machines, composi-
tors must turn their attention to some-
thing else, it is quite refreshing to
learn from an English contemporary
that, "notwithstanding the Intermit-
tent and desultory nature of a com-
positor's occupation, it still seems to
Lla-tM de Pougy
thi movement when she fitted up at
Mentone the daintiest of the villas,
which Is always en fete, and looks
every evening like an enchanted bower.
She felt like the queen of the place, and
behaved as such till the day of the bat-
tle of the flowers came, when she ex-
pected to be crowned by her admiring
subjects. She arrived last on the
scene, so as not to mar the effect; she
appeared standing, driving tandem, her
carriage completely hidden under a
thick bower of carnations, roses and
hyacinths, she herself being got up ns a
bunch of lilacs of different shades, from
the deep reddish Charles X. to the pal-
est Persian, and then pure white. A
murmur of delight received her and her
vanity was almost satisfied; but how It
happened nobody knows, at the distri-
bution of banners she received the
smallest and most insignificant one.
The superb beauty took it with a grin;
then, pulling from her hair a long dia-
mond pin, which held two bunches of
lilac, she pricked the satin and tore a
bis hole in it, then handed the rag to
her groom with a whisper. The man
broke the golden handle in two and
threw the whole on the ground. After
this the tandem was turned around and
the offended beauty drove home. Till
now the story is not extraordinary, but
the point comes with the worthy mayor
of Mentone, at the same time president
of the committee of the battle, who a
few minutes later drove to the enchant-
ed bower, Insisted on seeing the fairy
of the place and actually asked to be
forgiven fnr an involuntary and much-
deplored error, but the bunches of lilac
nodded mercilessly and said "No," and
the fair Liane, after having shown the
door to the inconsolable dignitary, de-
clared that she was leaving Mentone on
tho morrow. After that the banquet of
the committee turned out to be a fail-
ure snd almost a battlefield, the mem-
bers putting the fault on one another's
back, and Mentone seriously thinks of
rebuking the authorities who have stu-
pidly offended and driven away such a
superb signboard from their sleepy hole.
saving every man who desires to prove
; up,the price of his publication notice,
j Just remember this and bring your
notices to the Topic office. We write
J all papers ami publish the notice free
of charge.
Iti-uuliTy Your Homes.
Mr. O.T. Gorton, living just south
of town has a lot of line shade trees,
j from four to twelve feet high whicli
I he sells for onlv 10 cents eaclr He
I will furnish trees for church yards
| free. At this price tliere is no excuse
for not beautifying your premises.
iK-tf
WHKN VOW PBOVB IIP.
Remember that the Topic has saved
the farmeis several dollars each on
their linal proof notices, and are still
making the same low rates. Give us
a call before you prove up and we will
save you money.
were not numerous or in good condl
tion when he was sentenced, and as
they rapidly became worse he applied j ^ Q. a number of scholars passing ! treasury of the city are only nominal, j
to the governor of the prison for a new j through the schools it was ascertained The earnings increase from year to
couleur de rose. According to a return
Just issued by the London school board
The Giving Airay of Fram-lilties.
Taken together, these figures show
that the gross earnings of corporations
supplying gas and electricity and hav-
ing street car privileges in New York
city exceed $35,000,000 per annum, says
a writer in the Century. Their net
earnings are in excess of $14,000,000.
The amounts paid by them into the
Excursion Kate*.
Chautauqua Assembly, Winfield,
Kas., June 18th to 28th. One fare for
round trip. Sell June 17tli to 22tid,
return limit June 29th.
Chautauqua Assembly,Ottawa,Kas.,
June 18th lo 29th. One fare round
trip. Sell June 15th to 28th, return
limit June 30th.
Annual Convention Republican Na-
tional League, Cleveland, Ohio. One
fare round trip. Sell Jur.e 17th, re-
turn limit June 24th.
Epworth League Convention Chat-
tanooga, Teun., June 27th to 30th,
One fare round trip. Sell June 25th,
return limit July 4th.
Christian Endeavors, Boston, July
10th to 14th. One fare round trip.
Sell July 5th to 8th, return limit July
27th.
Baltimore, one fare round trip. Sell
July 15th and 10th, return limit Aug.
8th.
Louisville, Ky., one fare round trip.
Sept. 8th to 10th, return limit Sept.
2oth. R. J. Mohgan, Agent.
THE
TOPIC
Job Office
IS isro^r FULLT
Equipped
TO DO ALL KINDS OF
Neat
Commercial
He was told that the government j ^at ^[ie iacjs were destined for occu-
dld not supply prisoners with artlfl- | pations as follows: Printers, 625;
cial teeth, and at the first opportunity ; groC0i.gi 257; greengrocers, 245; bakers,
lie wrote to the banking firm in ques-l 20o. eng(neers, 179; carpenters, 148;
tion, offering. If they would send him a! p^bers, 123; hairdressers, 120; drap-
new set, to give some valuable in- j ers n5; butchers, 21. Printers head the
formation. Thereupon the bankers, „st' by' a considerable number,
thinking the offer might be a genuine ]
Cleveland County Sunday School t'onven
tion
Tne Sunday school convention of
one, eent the governor of the prison j
a check for £5, and asked him to pro- !
vide the convict with a set of artificial I
teeth. In due course the convict kept '
his promise and sent the bankers cer- i
tain information, by means of which '
they were enabled to recover no less j
than £1,500 of which they had b6en de-
frauded. They naturally regarded this
as the best investment they had ever
made, but it proved even better than
anticipated, for they have just re-
ceived from the prison authorities a re-
mittance for £1, the teeth having cost
only £4.
(icncral M Union of Kiiflitnd.
In a recent article the Loudon Times
undertakes to enlighten the world as
to the general mission of England. The
Argument Is to the effect that the Brit-
ish empire is a commercial nation of
\ast extent, and that its maritime trade
is the real circulatory system of the
whole civilized world. England must
maintain her supremacy upon all seas,
end punish her enemies by blockading
their ports during a war, after destroy-
ing their fleets. The Times Is opposed
to giving up anything held by England
and believes that it controls the situa-
tion with its present flee! of 420 war-
ships and 220 torpedo boats, equal to
the navies of France and Russia com-
bined. The article does not touch on
the comparative smallncss of the popu
lation of England. It is assumed that
sea power is the key to the situation,
and that when Great Britain ceases to
be first in this respect the days of its
dominion will be numbered. In case of
war with England, therefore, ihe Unit-
ed States must prepare to havo its navy
Wiped off the sea and its ports block-
aded, unless something unforeseea by
the Times spoils the program.
A Heaftlhle Kml.
If you are an engaged girl, of course
you have started a "medley trunk."
Don't you know what a "medley trunk"
Is? It Is the latest fad, and a very
sensible one, too. As soon as the en-
gagement is announced, the bride-to-be
buys a trunk, the larger the better,
and then her friends and acquaintances
at once proceed to fill it for her. One
donates a fine tablecloth and napkins,
another a few towels or a bit of lace,
another a bureau cover or a couple of
pairs of gloves, and so it goes on. grad-
ually filling up with odds and ends,
tbe gifts of generous friends, until at
Jast when the wedding day has actually
arrived, there Is a varied but valuable
assortment in the medley trunk that
puts some of the utterly useless offer-
ings that will be stored away In safe
irposit vaults completely to shame.
A f.tghlnlnR lUionojfraplier.
Business Man—Cau you write short-
band? Applicant—Yes, sir. "How
(aany words a minute?" "I never
counted 'em; but the other day, when
®y wife found in my overcoat pocket
a letter which Bhe gave me to mail last
tail. I took down every word she uttered
as fast as she said them." "You'll do."
•—New York Weekly.
Nat Goodwin** lllcyclo Hloompru.
In wide flowing bloomers, such as
many feminine bicyclists affect, belted
blouse and nobby cap, Nat C. Goodwin
sailed down Michigan avenue on a
wheel yesterday as if in training for
the coming road race, says the Chi-
cago Tribune. By reason of his pecul-
iar "get-up" he attracted more atten-
tion than any of the scores of riders
who went flying along the broad,
smooth boulevard before, behind, and
all around him. At first glance specta-
tors generally exclaimed;
"Look at that funny woman!"
Then, as they caught sight at closer
range of the comedian's face and
recognized him, they were both
surprised and amused. Goodwin on a
wheel and in bloomers ought to be
fairly familiar to the people of Chi-
cago by this time. During his recent
engagement at Hooley's he was out rid-
ing every morning and afternoon.
Ureases Made of Aluminum.
Some new fabrics are now being pro-
duced, the novel feature of which con-
gisis in weaving or intertwining
threads af aluminum, or alloys of it,
with the material used, in many cases
employing that metal alone, for the
purpose of making the cloth. It iB
claimed that the cloth made wholly
or partly of this material will be free
from chemic il action, as few substances
affccl it. An attractive lustre is ob-
tallied which renders the fabric very | city the profits beyond fair Interest on
ornamental, and there is the addition- capital. The figures given above
al advantage of the metal being equal- I, "how the overwhelming Importance of
to the finest fabrics and ' control by the city of Its valuable fran-
The wire or threads chlses.
year because of the growth of the city.
ODuipetition among them is impossible, Xonujin, June 28th and 29th. An in-
because street railways cannot be js bei BrrBnged.
paralleled; and it would be unwise and i h 1 h " ,. '
Impracticable to attempt to charter i f,1'* i-«cu .v-e Committee of the
new gas companies continually. The | i'erritonal Convention of Oklahoma
streets would constantly be tom open, j are expected to he present to inspire
and the health of the citizens endan- I us with some enthusiastic addresses,
gered; and then no sooner would they ] Every school in the county is expected
be closed up than the two competing
companies would enter into an alliance,
either for maintenance of rates or for
| consolidation. This has been the ex-
| parlance of New York, and, in fact,
of all great cities. Private competition
[ being impossible, some kind of public
control seems desirable that would
either keep the charges down, so that
| the returns would be reasonable, or that
would secure to the treasury of the
ly applicable
j to the heaviest.
| can be drawn to any degree of fineness, j
■o that it may be employed in combina- j
| tion with silk, linen, and the like—it j
! may also be drawn round, flat, or In
any other form convenient for wear-
! Ing.—Sun.
a distance of a few yards from the win-
dow it was quite impossible to see into
the shop. Everybody knows that you
There is not a more enthusiast bicyclist j must hold a magnifying glass very
in the country. It has become his sole close to the eye to see anything through
hobby. Whether in the lobby, cafe, I it. Nevertheless, for some time, at
parlor, barroom, bedrocm or dining-
room, his friends say he talks of noth-
I ing else. He owns a bicycle, and car-
j l ies it around the country with him.
Napoleon's Use of Etiquette.
' The uses of rigid etiquette were wtll
j understood by Bonaparte. He appre-
ciated the dazzling power of economy,
tb« fascination of condescension, and
| the mastery of women in the conduct
of affairs. All such influences he lav-
I lshed with a profusion which could
have been conceived only by an Orien-
tal imagination. As if to overpower the
| senses by an impressive contrast, and
symbolize the triumph of that domi-
I nant third estate of which he claimed
to be the champion against aristocrats,
| princes, kings, emperors, the simplic-
I ity of the revolution was personified
I and emphasized by his own form. His
was the fact that at I ostentatious frugality, his disdain for
dress, his contempt for personal wealth
and its outward signs, were all height-
ened by the setting which inclosed
then, as a frame of brilliants often
heightens the character in the portrait
of a homely face.—Prof. Sloane's Life
of Napoleon.
to send at least two delegates. The
superintendents of the various Sunday
schools see to it that we have a full
convention. No school can afford to
miss sending a delegate. It will be a
treat to all who attend. Come and let
us study and work together; it will do
u& all good aud will promote the inter-
est of the Master's Kingdom.
Uemember the date, June 28th and
29th, 1895. It the superintendents
will kindly send their names and ad-
dresses to lie v. S. E. Henry of Nor-
man, programs and instructions will
be seut. J. P Lane,
President of Convention
AT LOWEST LIVING PRICES
Prompt Attention
GIVEN TO ALL ORDERS,
THE
A Magnifying Show Window.
One of the most extraordinary de-
vices for attracting custom on record
was that of a fruiterer In a Midland
town in England. Instead of the or-
dinary plate glass a largo number of
rough magnifying glasses formed the
window. Seen through one of these
panes an orange looked as large as a
pumpkin and cherries as large as ap-
ples. A great disadvantage attached
to this novelty
all events, the enterprising proprietor
did a roaring trade.
Wo
III Huston.
K«*ttIuk Type by Wire.
Donald Murray, a newspaper man of
Sydney, New South Wales, has invent-
ed and patented a device by means of
f tich an operator in New York, with a
key-board before him like that of au
ordinary typewriter, can not only pro-
duce typewritten copy In New Orleans,
but It Is claimed can operate a type-
setting machine here and deliver his
matter thus In lead ready for the forms.
Not only that, but the same operator,
by using a number of telegraph lines,
j can set up the same copy simultaneous-
ly in a dozen different places. In this
operation only ordinary currents are
used, such as are capable of being re-
layed, and are subject to all condi-
tions of ordinary telegraphy. The
work can be done with the same speed
as an ordinary typewriter Is operated,
and dispenses with all clock-work
! mechanism, synchronously moving type
wheels and other cumbrous devices. It
Is Bald to be capable of manipulating
some eighty different characters.—
Press and Printer.
Rudyard Kipling. It is announced. Is
on the point of returning lo India—not
to live there, however.
Mrs. Brown—It's funny, but I meet
you wherever I go.
Mrs. White—Yes; fact is, my hus-
band is right in the midst of his house-
cleaning and I am willing to go any-
where to escape from the atmosphere
of soapsuds and deluges of hot water.
1 really believe he is crazy on the sub-
ject of housecleaning.
Mrs. Brown—That's just the way
with Mr. Brown. It's perfectly awful;
I haven't been near vhe house for a
week.—Boston Transcript.
Ltut Days of a FoeteM*
Jane Ingelow is now a veneiable wo-
man of 74. She spends the most of the
year at her quiet home in Kensington,
alternating her time with a sojourn
oach season at Nice., In both places she
is surrounded by her household pets,
and in this life of quiet domesticity she
passes her time, saying little of her
work unless urged to do so. She is de-
scribed as "a sweet-faced gray-haired
woman In a cap," with nothing roman-
tic or suggestive of her profession In
her appearance.
The SI. Loii'm KepubllcFree.
The "Twice-A-Week" St. Louis
Republic will be sent free for one year
to any person sending, before January
31.189-5, a club of three new yearly
subscribers, with $3 to pay for the
same.
Already the clans are gathering for
the fray in 1896, ami 1895 will be full
of interesting events. The skirmish
line will be thrown out, the maneuver-
ing ioneand the plans of campaign
arranged for the great contest ill '96.
The remaining short session of the
democratic congress, to lie followed
shortly by a republican congress with
a democrat in the presidential chair
will be productive of events of incal-
culable interests.
in fact,more politilal history will
be constiucted during 1895 than in any
year since the foundation of the gov-
ernment, and a man without a news-
paper will be like a useless lump in
the movements of public opinion.
You can get three new subscribers
for The Republic by a few minutes'
effort. Remember in the Republic
subscribers get a paper twice-a-
week for the pricie of a weekly—only
$100 a year. Try it at once, and see l
how easy it can be done. If you wisli
a package of sample copies, write
for them. Cutout this advertisment
and send with your order. Address j
The St. Louis Republic, St. Louis, Mo
IS THE BEST
WEEKLY PAPER,
IN TIIE CITY.
And will be placed in the Front Rank
of Reliable Local Newspapers.
We will make a Special Reduction in
in Subscription Rates for the next
Ninety Days, and will
continue to save
Money for
the
FARMER
On Final Proof Notices.
Ollice at the Corner of
St,, and Railroad Avenue.
East Main
What Europe U Koarilnff.
Book stores and newc stands are nu-
merous both in England and on the
continent. In France Zola's books are
displayed In greater profusion than
those of all other authors combined,
from which it Is a fair inference that
th« demand for them is greater. The
navel Is enormously consumed there.
TU« news stands are more like Amer*
A SitdrienliiK Sight.
First Tramp—Lookec here, Jiir,
Here's a man been killed on the rail-
road; all cut to bits.
Second Tramp (sacllyi Too bad! toa
bad' Thim clothes wou'd 'a' just about
(It me, and thef's all spoiled.
HI* Version.
Some years ago when I was a pastor
In the town of Waynesboro, a tramp
was found dead under a haystack on
the outskirts of the settlement, with
an empty bottle labeled "Laudanum,"
at his side. A German being in the
town, and learning of it, was greatly
exercised over it. Upon his return
home, he said to his wife, "Der vas a
man come to de town. He got some
laudanum In de drug store. He crawled
under de haystack, and drank de lau-
danum. Den he vent to sleep, and ven
he vakes up, he vas dead."
Tfce very finest of sheep's wool U
only one-fifteen hundreth part of an
Inch In thickness.
Come and See Us.
micli rows Tor Salt' or Trade,
I have a lot of good milch cows,
fresh, which I will sell for cash, cheap,
or will trade for fat cows to ship.
C. T. GOitTON,
28-tf Norman, O.T.
Assessor s Notioe-
To the owners of city property who j
have not as yet rendered their proper-
ty it would be well to see me at once
and assist me in placing a proper val-
uation thereon. This is important
and must be attended to at once,
J. F. Rice,
City Assessor,
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Brown, Quincey T. The Territorial Topic. (Norman, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 6, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1895, newspaper, July 5, 1895; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116721/m1/4/: accessed May 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.