Harrison Gazette (Gotebo, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, July 1, 1904 Page: 4 of 12
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The Gotebo Gazette.
I
L
GOTEBO,
OKLA.
NEW 8TATE NEW8.
Up to date, the Couth McAlester
base ball team has defeated all oj
ponents.
The federal government has been
asked to open a permanent road be-
tween Nowata and Bartlesville.
Bartlesville has let a contract for a
(school building to cost |17,230. and
It is to be ready for occupancy by
January 1, 1905.
Buyers are paying from sixty-five
to seventh-five cents a bushel for
potatoes at Shawnee. The local
acreage is more than one-half of what
it was last year, and the yield is
lighter.
Capitalists from Colorado Springs,
Col., are sinking an oil well at Chand-
ler and leasing large tracts of land in
Lincoln county.
The contract for t?ie new govern-
ment building at Guthrie was award-
ed to Robert Bulke of Hastings, Neb.,
whose bid of |G9,500 was the lowesf
received.
George W. Bingham and W. D. Fos-
sett were selected to represent the
territories on the republican com^
mittee which is to formally notify
Theodore Roosevelt of his nomination
for the presidency.
Captain Frank Frantz, who assumes
control of the Indian agency July 1st,
has selected Ret Millard, formerly as*
sistant postmaster at Oklahoma City,
as his chief clerk.
The elevator owned by the Can-
adian County Mill and Elevator com-
pany burned at El Reno last week.
The loss is estimated at |54000, par-
tially insured. A large quantity of
oats and wheat was burned.
Luke Dearin, a lineman in the em-
ploy of the South McAlester-Eufaula
Telephone company, fell forty feet
from a pole and sustained injuries
which are considered fatal.
While crawling through a barbed
.Wire fence, near Mangum, during a
'thunder shower, George W. Mulinax.
an old settler, was severely shocked
by lightning. He was thought for a
time to be in a serious condition, but
it is now believed he will recover.
Mr. Hahn, territorial cattle inspec-
tor, states that the cattlemen of
Woodward and adjoining counties
have been given until July 25 to com-
plete the dipping of all cattle in the
Infected district, to rid cattle of
mange. The sheriff of each countj
has charge of the dipping station.
Ed Escue was tried before the com-
missioner at Chickasha on the charge
of assault with intent to kill Whittle
McFadden, colored, at Womack. He
was discharged on ttre complaint, and
fined 925 for assault and battery.
• ______
John Brown was bound over to ap-
pear before the circuit court in South
McAlester this fall on a charge of
having killed William McCoy in a fist
fight. The amount of his bond was
placed at $2,000. No autopsy was
held over the remains of McCoy.
The ninth annual session of the
Greer county normal inst t" o !* to be-
held at Olustee beginning July 18 an<i
closing August 13. The two last
days will be examination days.
John Dolan, a soldier stationed at
Fort Reno, committed sulcido by
•hooting himself through the heart.
The gold of grace does not came
from the greed of gold.
WHY HOT WEATHER MAKES WOMEN NERVOUS.
I am sure Plso's Cure for Consumption saved
my life three years ago.—Mas. Thus. Hobbiks,
Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17, 1900.
It's no use praying for your debtors
If you won't pay your debts.
No chromos or cheap premiums, but
a better quality and one-third more
of Defiance Starch for the same priee
of other starches.
W. M. Scott of the department cf
agriculture is making experiments at
Fort Valely, Ga., to find something to
stop "brown rot" in peaches.
This Will Interest Mothers.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Chil-
dren, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in
Children's Home, Now York, Cure Fever-
ishness. Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders,
move and regulate the bowels and destroy
^Vorms. Sold by all Druggists, 25o. Sample
FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, LeRoy.N.Y.
After repeated failures by the
United States government to erect h
lighthouse and fog signal on Outer
Diamond shoals, off Cape Hatteras,
Captain A. F. Eells of Boston will
make the attempt, assuming all ex-
penses.
There Is None.
"There may be a better remedy for
cuts, burns, sprains, etc., than Hunt's
Lightning Oil, but if so, I have failed
to find It. Used as directed it is cer-
tainly very fine for catarrh also."
R. V. MORRIS,
Scottsviile, Ark.
25 and 50c bottles.
Suggestions by Dr. Htrtmtn.—How
to Combat the Nervous Depression
Incident to Warm Weather.
A Pertinent Query
"There's just one thing more I wish
to ask," said the visitor at the arse-
nal.
"What is it?" inquired the officer.
"Does the twelve-inch gun throw a
foot ball?"
How's Thit?
We offer One Hundred Dollar* Reward for any
ease <>f Catarrh that cannot be cured bjr llall's
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY * CO., Toledo, O.
We. the undersigned, bare known F. J. Cheney
fbr the last 15 ream, and believe him perfectly hon-
orable in all bualneaa transactions and financially
able to carry out any obliymtlonamade t>y hie firm.
WaLDIno. Rinnan * Mabtii*,
Wholesale brajrxlstn. Toledo. O.
Ball'* Catarrh Care U taken Internally, acting
directly upon the Mood and mucous surfaces of tha
system. Testimonials sent free. Price 73 cents per
bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take llall's Family Fills for constipation.
Green corn on the cob is said to be
a favorite dish with the czar.
A Well Known Canadian Lady Sends
Letter ot Endorsement to Pe-ru-na.
Miss Mary Burns. 28 Spring- Garden
Road. Halifax, N. S., writes: "Having
used Peruna forindigestion and stomach
trouble and to build up a broken down
system with the very best results, I am
pleased to state my experience with this
excellent medicine. I had been troubled
with stomach trouble and poor diges-
tion for some years, and although 1
tried many remedies and dieting, noth-
ing seemed to restore my health until I
used Peruna. In three months I had
entirely recovered my health and
strength."—Mary Burns. .
Nervousness is very common among
women. This condition is due to
auiemic nerve centers. The nerve cen-
ters are the reservoir for nerve vitality.
These centers become bloodless for the
want of proper nutrition.
This condition is especially noticeable
during the warm season. Every sum-
mer an army of invalids are produced as
a direct result of weak nervous systems.
This could easily be overcome by tho
use of Peruna. Peruna strikes at the
root of the trouble by correcting the
digestion. Perfect digestion furnishes
increased nutrition for the nerve cen-
ters. Perfectly digested food gives these
reservoirs of life a vitality which cre-
ates strong, steady nerves, and in this
manner fortifies and nourishes life.
Miss Blanche Grey,a prominent young
society woman of Memphis, Tenn., in a
recent letter from 174 Alabama street,
writes: "To a society woman whose
nervous force is often taxed to the
utmost from lack of rest and irregular
meals, / know ot nothing which /s ot ao
much benefit mm Peruna. I took it a
few months ago when I felt my strength
giving way, and It aoon made Itaell
manifest In giving me new strength'
and health."—Mlaa Blanche Qrey.
Pe-ru-na Contains No Narcotics.
One reason why Peruna has found
permanent use in so many homes is that
it contains no narcotic of any kind. Pe-
runa is perfectly harmless. It can be
tised any length of time without acquir-
ing a drug habit. Peruna does not pro-
duce temporary results. It is perma-
nent in its effect.
It has no bad effect upon the system,
and gradually eliminates catarrh by re-
moving the cause of catarrh. There
are a multitude of homes whero Peruna
has been used off and on for twenty
years. Such a thing could not be pos-
sible if Peruna contained any drugs of
a narcotic nature.
At this season of the year we are
peculiarly liable to infia initiations of the
stomach and bowels. It is the part of
wisdom to learn how to cut them short
and in the easist and quickest manner.
Perun does this by its peculiar power
over all forms of catarrhal troubles, a
TILL CURED. 27 YEARS ESTABLISHED
viand FREE aitf paatpaM a 232-mp traatlaa t* Piles Fists Is ■-* ai
mSi SrtlttS'&i
PBS. THORMTOSIMIWOS. Sfljr.Sr.?-.
PILES
Bewew of Sweat Breakfast Foods
Many of the breakfast foods upon the market are sweetened with gluside, a drug substitute for sugar
The direct interference with the gastric digestion and the assimilation of food caused the French
Government to prohibit its use as a dietetic substitute for sugar. Children love it because it is sweet
hence the danger. In selecting foods for daily use *
D* PRICE'S
WHEAT FLAKE CELERY
FOOD
is the one that will be found free from all injurious substances-safe for the children—for all, sick or
well. Prepared by a physician and chemist whose name on any article is a positive guarantee of its
purity and healthfulness.
Palatable—Natritieao—Eat; of Oifootioa aid Ready to Eat
■swftsar
Dr. Price, the creator of Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder and Delicious Flavoring Extracts.
A cook book containing 7S sicsllsnt receipts lor using the Food msllsd free to any address.
Prsparsd by PRICE CEREAL F00R CO., Ft*4 Sills, RATTLE CREEK, SICH., Mala Offless, CHICARO.
—
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Rehfield, E. T. Harrison Gazette (Gotebo, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, July 1, 1904, newspaper, July 1, 1904; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc185081/m1/4/: accessed May 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.