The Hennessey Clipper. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1901 Page: 2 of 8
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Hennessey Clipper.
L. G. MILLER. Editor and Publisher.
U. H. MILLER. Proprietor.
HENNESSEY, : OKLAHOMA.
CURRENT COMMLNT.
Filipinos «rr fond of dried prasR-
hoppriK, II stumlnril artii-lc in the mar-
kets. An Ameriean who has tried
them says they taste like gingersnaps.
A 'nan naniril EdgOTtOV* Of Madison,
Ind., thrust his hand into a horse's
mouth to see how many teeth the
animal had. The horse closed his
teeth to see how many finfjers >lr.
Edperton had. The curiosity of both
was fully satisfied.
Tin: i.Fii mi m i icr.
According to the latest returns
here are 807,471 paupers in Knplnnd,
97,1147 in Scotland and 97,587 in Irel-
and, supported at an annual cost to
the' public of $07,000,000. A serious
part of the problem is that the num-
ber prows no smaller.
The Russian ruler has sent n token
of his esteem to President MeKinley.
Jt is rather an odd circumstance that
the most democratic and most ab-
solutist of countries have always been
fast friends. Kvcr since the days of
the American war of independence
Russia has been especially friendly to
the United States.
Probably 50,000,000 pounds of turkey
arc consumed every Christmas in the
United States, which, at ten cents a
pound, would represent a value of
000,000. Cranberries come to at least
$500,000 more, and it is surely not an
overestimation to suppose that 10,-
000,000 mince pics would come to $1,-
000,000.
Statistics show that in the whole
Dominion of Canada there hove been
only 271 divorces granted in years;
in Prince Kdward island, with a popu-
lation of 100.000, there has not been a
divorce in 30 years. Here is some-
thing' for the people of this country,
who believe that civilization begins
with the home, to think about.
The supreme court of Iowa has de-
cided against a young lawyer who
took out life insurance and accident
policies to the amount of $34,000 and
within a week came back from a hunt-
ing expedition with his foot so badly
mangled that it was necessary to cut
it off. The jury came to the conclu-
sion that he had maimed himself and
declined to give him a verdict. The
supreme court sustains this verdict.
According to a St. Petersburg cor-
respondent an invalid who has
reached the remarkable age of 140
years is now lying in the hospital of
Toinask. lie still remembers Cathe-
rine II. and talks of having buried
his wife 100 years ago and his son 90
years back. His record was nearly ap-
proached by a Georgian who died a
few days ago in Tiflis at the age of
128.
A cup of hot coffee is an unfailin
barometer, if you allow a lump of
sugar to drop to the bottom of the
cup and watch the air bubbles arise
without disturbing the coffee. If the
bubbles collect in the middle the
weather will be fine; if they adhere to
the cup, forming a ring, it will either
rain or snow; and if the bubbles sep-
arate without assuming any fixed po-
sition, changeable weather may be
expected.
The tallest skyscraper yet is to be
erected in New York city. The Aetna
Real Estate company haa acquired a
plot at Broadway and Thirty-third
street, upon which it proposes to erect
a .10-story office structure. The plot
has a frontage in Broadway of 118.fi
feet, and in Thirty-third street of
97.7% feet. The total height of the
building, as planned, will be 455 feet
The ground area will be about 11,000
square feet. The building will cost
about $2,500,000. The land is estimated
to be worth $1,500,000.
Someoftli* Doing* of tli-tt Itorfly for III a
l'4lt Uork llrlftlv Toltl.
(Juthrie.—The council parsed the bill
providing for the establishing of a ter-
ritorial hoard of health.
A bill providing for the initiative nnd | on i he final and decisive roll call lie
referendum for Oklahoma was praeti- voted for the passage of the bill,
tally killed in c mmittee of ihe whole. ! Those voting for the affirmative weijs
Neatly an entire day was devoted to Miller, lie I In my, I pdegratT, Winkler,
general orders in perfecting bills for Coupon. llnulholl, Dutlo, Foster, Mes
Th« Public itii.hiim; inn.
Guthrie.—The public building bill
pat-sed the council on the 21, by a vote
of 10 to 3. Jn tlie preliminary roll
call.-, S-nator Foster from Logan
county voted with the opposition, but
ti a a I passage.
The bill locating a southwestern
normal school, to cost 855,000, in Greer
county, was favorably reported.
In the h< use on the 20th, the quaran-
tine bill, which hud been mu«le a
ttpecial order for ten o'clock, was taken
up and the day w ih devoted to a dis-
cussion of its sections. The bill puts
alI of Oklahoma except Pottawatomie
and two townships of C eveluud
sail and Harrison. The three votes in
the negative were cast by Clarke.
Todd and Woobey.
Three other bill* on the calendar
were taken up and passed, and when
the clerk had coucluded reul'ng a
memorial Senator Miller arose and |
moved that council bill No. 129 (the
public building bill) Le read a thlid
time by ti tie and placed on its tiual
passige, and before an objection could
county north of the quarantine, also I be inu roo>ed, he quickly moved the
shutting out the eastern portion of the j previous question. On all the prelim i
Otoe and Ponca Indian reservations, nary questions the toll was called and
The bill was recommended for passage. j the vote fdiowcd Clarke, foster, lo<!d
'ami VVool>ey \oting in the negative.
Hills were introduced regulating
guarantee companies; to provide for
the creation of the county of MeKinley
out < f the south half « f Woods county,
with Cleo as county seat; to amend the
general election law of the territory,
also authorizing Alva, Woods county,
to issue bonds for public improve-
ments.
A message from the governor an-
nounce I :hat he had signed house bills
12 anil 13, allowing Oklahoma railroads
to control and own property inside aud
outside the territory.
Tne house passed a bill repealing the
present coal oil inspection law and
doing away with tlieottk-e of inspector.
The report of the governor to the
secretary of the interior, which is con-
sidered by experts as the best piece of
advertising ever given the territory, is
to be circulated where it will do good.
The legislature has ordered 5,000 extra
copies from the government printer at
Washington.
Councillor Miller lias succeeded in
getting bills passed making liberal ap-
propriations for the colleges and nor-
mal schools. Stillwater college gets
$40,000 and Langston colored college
932,001) for buildings alone.
Winkler's bill creating a territorial
board of health and prescribing regu-
lations for the practice of medicine
and surgery in the territory was the
only bill to pjss either house ou the 21.
The committee on education re-
ported favorably on council bill No.
158, providiug for the recording of
births and deaths, and house bill No.
51, providing for separate schools.
The committee on private corpora-
tions aud corporate law reported coun-
cil bill No. 130, au act to tix the salary
and prescribe certain duties of super-
intendent of insurance with recotn
mendatiou that it do pass. Also coun-
cil b 11 No 41, prohibiting forced con-
tributions from employes of corpora-
tions was recommended that it do pass.
The committee on quarantine and
animal industry recomeuded thai coun-
cil bill No. 108, relating to veterinary
mediciue and surgery do not puss
Council bill No. 138, an uct relating to
the live stock sanitary boail and quar-
antine lines was recommended that it
do pass.
Committee on municipal corporations
recommended that the substitute for
council bill No. 113, relating to tli
Historical society do pass
The committee on private corpora-
tions and corporate laws recommended
favorably council bill No. 143, relating
to building and losn associations him
council bill No. 125, relating to kid-
napping.
House bill No. 48, relating to plant-
ing trees, was recommended that it do
not pass by the committee ou sgricul
tine and highways.
tlouitt I'rocaetllnga
Oliphant's quarantine b 11 which
came up on the 20th, in the committee
of the whole house under the head of
spec al orders, excited a lively debate,
which at times was inarUed with lively
exchanges of pei soualities. The chief
opposition to the bill arot-e over the
I rovisions creating a livestock com-
mission of three persons to be named
by the govci nor and a secretary who
shall be paid a salary of 31,200 per
annum. Tne members of the comtuis
mission are to receive not more than
#100 a year in addition to mileage and
actual necessary espouses.
The committee on public conipena-
ti< n reported unfavorably ou four bills
two of which related to sheriffs, anoth-
er regulating the compensation of
county commissioners and the fourth
an act lepealing all laws creating
otlicers ex-officio.
11. use bill No. 232, by Mr Alexander
anticipates future action of Congress
in conveying the buildings at Fort
Supply to the territory, and appropri-
ates ^5,000 for plac.ug the buildings in
condition to be utilized as a reform
school ami 510,000 to operate the
school.
House bill No. 110, by Mr. Suiggs,
which contemplates a rigniflcant in-
crease in the perquisites of probate
judges, was referred back to the autlu r
ut his personal request, and an expla-
nation that he had introduced the bill
by request.
House bill No. 231. by Mr. Alexander
lin
j quent taxe
A petition signed by citizens of Still-
water was icad in the house. It asks
1 or the passage of a law requiring
boards of county commissioners to de-
oting
The iinal roll on tne pa^suge of the
bill culled for a number of "explan -
tious" of votes
The total railway mileage of the
United States is 190,000 miles. Of that
over 45,080 miles is owned by roads
whose policy is controlled at this time
by J. Pierpont Morgan. K. H. Harri-
man and his associates control rnil-
road systems, chiefly west of the Mis-
sissippi, which have a mileage of
over 24,700 miles. The object of this
concentration of railway control in a
few hands is the prevention of rate
cutting. Legalized pooling not having
been secured the maintenance of rate's
by means of pools is now being sought
after in another way.
Judge Baldwin, of Iowa, in closing
his oration at Des Moines on John
Marshall, said: "Marshall was as
good, if not as great, a patriot as
Washington; wiser,, if not as talented,
as Hamilton; nobler, if not as clever
as Jefferson; and his star glitters the
brightest in that constellation. I
venture this sentiment for this
occasion—the constitution of the
United States. It was a growth rather
than a creation, and not the work of
any one man, but Marshall was its
expounder, Webster is defender and
Lincoln its preserver."
It is admitted that the Italian ban-
dit, Musolino, has already cost the
imperial government more than $500,*
000, spent in vainly sending out ex-
peditions for his capture. The costly
outlaw makes his home in the moun-
tains of southern Italy, where he is
said to hnve hundreds of fiends in videg for Uie col|eotion of
every village. It is declared that he 1 . ,
has already committed 1G murders,
and it is said that he has condemned j
to death 12 other men who have of- j
fended him. On one occasion he was'
surrounded by 100 armed men, l>ut| p0iit a ,unty funds with ihe highest re
sponsible bidder.
Btimll I'm Aiming tlie Indians*
Fort SMI.—The Kiowa and Coinancli'
Indians are have a siege of the genuine
old fubhioncd small pox and aie dyin •
quite rapidly in some localities. Asa
consequence allotting is delayed from
ihe fact that they are not able to g
and select their allotment and alloting
agents are afraid to go into their,
camps to get them. When they see an
Indian coming towards them they take
to their heels in a manner that recalls
some of the Indian t.CHren that were
prevalent when old Geronimo was
leading bisb<ndof warriors over the
wi d and uninhabited parts of the
western p ains. It is quite amusing lo
see one of the tenderf et alloting crew
go out on an Indian hunt. While he
does not gi armed as of the old days
he nevertheless keeps his eyes wide
open for the red man and when lie does
see his victim he is seen to make tracUs
in the other direction, and returns t>
camp and informs his superior officers
that lie could not get in speaking dis-
tance of the noble red man.
FMllier Turns lip •* ll*lr.
Guthrie.—Newt Holland, 23 years
old, died in October la^-t, on his farm,
j nine miles east of (Juthrie. His moth-
! er, Lucmda Holland, and two younger
brothers, Sam and Howard lived with
him. Dr. Q It Neule was appointed
administrator of the farm and personal
property, ut the request of Mrs Hol-
land. He filed bond aud took charge
of the property.
W. B. Holland, supposed to be the
divorced husband of Mrs. Holland anil
married again in Kentucky, arrived
this week from Kentucky and claimed
the property by heiiship. Under Ok
lahoma laws tne property of a son who
dies heirless goes to the father tirst
and the mother second
Holland, the father, arrived on the
sceue last week and demanded the
property. Mrs. Holland, who claims
him u dangerous man. went to her
daughter's Mrs. Charles Abel, liv ng
eight miles north of Guthrie. The
futlier moved on aud took possession.
Holland is 65 or 70 years of age. lie
hiis demanded that Neale resign as
administrator and turn him iuto full
possession of the property.
Will Open in .Inly,
Writ ng from Comanche, I. T., under
recent date, C. K. Moss says:
"As it has been stated in several pu-
pers that the Comanche and Kiowa res-
ervations would not be opened earlier
than 1902, perhaps the following
would interest your readers:
"Mr. 11. 11 Locket, Comanche, I. T.:
"Dear Sir—Your telegram to hand
I do not think there will be any delay
in the opening of the Comanche coun-
try later than August (>, as that will
L-ive them time to tinish the survey-
ing aud make the allotments. The
law requiring the country to be open,
•d on or before August 0 is mandatory.
"Jno. II Stephens."
Cul<* W ilk Ci*"e* In C'onrl.
Enid.—The famous cake walk cases
have been called up for trial in the
district court. An application for
change of judge was granted and the
ease is being heard by Judge llaiaer.
The case now on trial is the Territory
,s. C. F. Gannon, one of Enid's most
prominent real estatemenund heaviest
property owners. It is alleged that
Mr. Gannon was the leader of a mob
that disturbed a colored cake walk
given by the Golden Circle of Enid in
he spring of 1600. at which time guns,
brick bats and stale eggs were used
fieely aud u number of persons in-
jured.
Would < rmie a New County.
Guthrie —Representative Campbell
has introduced a bill to create the
county of Mclv nley out of Woods
county. The proposed county is to
couip ise all that portion of Woods
county commencing at the northeast
come- of section 1, town' hip 24 north,
lauge 9 west, thence to 14 west, thence
south to township 23 north, thence
west to range line Iti west. The bill
locates the county seat at Cleo.
FOREIGN GOSSIP
The estimated population of British
Guiana at the end of December last
was 2S7.288.
American apples are becoming
known in France |is well as in Eng-
land and Germany.
France consumes more wine than
Germany, the United States and the
United Kingdom combined.
It took 14 years to build the sana-
torium for tuberculous patients re-
cently opened at Agincourt, France.
In the region of the southern Urals
a Kuss'ian laborer gets only 15 cents a
day, and a man with a horse and a
cart costs 4." ceiits a day.
Glasgow is- the second city now in
the United Kingdom. In the matter of
city municipal improvement it is in
the lead. It is expected that the cen-
sus soon to be taken will show "great-
er Glasgow" with a population above
1,000,000.
Three hundred perrons in London
earn a living and several of them are
growing rich by providing meals for
tin* eats of the metropolis, which they
deliver regularly once, twice or thrice
a day, as may suit the owners of fe-
line pets.
During last year about 70.000 tons
of sugar were produced in Spain, .'10,-
000 tons of which were contributed by
22 cane-sugar mills and 49,000 tons
formed the output of 20 beet-sugar
works, only 16 of which were com-
pleted in time to avail themselves of
the entire crop.
UNDERGROUND WORKERS.
I
K e n r I >
pie
•'our ninl'tt llnlf >111 lion I eo-
Wlio Delve In the Karth
for a l.hiim.
THANKFUL TO MRS. PINKHAM
Letters Proving Positively that
there is No Medicine for Woman's
Ills Equal to Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
BucuL'cdtd in getting uwujr.
I
Young Man Miol hi Norman.
A shooting affair took place ut Nor-
man on the evening of the 20, in which
Douglas Miner, a popular young man
lost his life. The shooting is surround-
ed with mystery. Either the city
marshal while in pursuit cf a fugitive,
dropped his revolver, or else M ner,
who aided in the pursuit, (bopped his
and it was discharged, the ball enter-
ing Miner's body with fatal result®.
According to a recent computation
made in France there are 4,355.000 pel -
sous of both sexes who spend their
lives procuring from the earth such
indispensable products as coal, metals
and salt, as well as other like precious
stones, which cannot be classed among
the necessaries. Most of these toilers
spend their working hours far below
the surface. Not many years ago the
treatment which thousands of them
received, and particularly the women
and children who toiled in the decj
coal mines in Great Britain, became a
public scandal. The adoption of hu
mane laws led to a change in the dis-
graceful conditions under which they
worked aud lived. The miners of the
world have now a pleasant existence
compared with that which they led a
few decades ago, says the New \ork
Sun.
In no part of the world are there so
many underground workers, in pro-
portion to total population, as in the
South African Republic. These work
IM S are in the gold mines, and practic-
ally all are negroes under white over-
seers. The worst thing about, their
life is that the Boers of the Transvaal
have never consented to suppress the
liquor saloons near the mines. The
Transvaal government has drawn a
large revenue from these saloons by
means of a heavy license tax. I he re-
sult is that most of the black miners
have spent a large part, of their earn-
ings in drink, and many murders, rob-
beries and other crimes have occurred
Thousands of black men also work in
the deep diamond mines at Kimberley.
The most peculiar feature of their em-
ployment is that during t.he term of
their contract they are prisoners
They live inside a large compound sur
rounded by a high boafd fence oi
which guards are mounted as on th
walls of Sing Sing prison. Every
morning they are marched out- to the
mines and every night they are
inarched back again. Inside the coin
pound are the rude cabins in whict
thev sleep; and here and there arc
shops where they may buy everything
they require. Liquor, however, is kepi
away from them, and so the year*
spent in the mines are far more profit
able to them in every way than is the
case among the gold miners.
The United Kingdom has over one-
tenth of all the subterranean workers
of the world. They are mainly
gaged in the coal and iron mines of
western and central England and
south Scotland and in the tin mines
of Cornwall. Many of the iron and coal
mines have now reached great depths
and the day is not far distant when
some of them will he abandoned, as it
will be cheaper to import than to sink
to greater depths for mineral.
The United Kingdom has nearly
twice as many miners as there are in
the United States. Germany also gives
work to more miners than this coun-
try employs; and yet this country
turns out a great deal more iron and
coal than either of those kingdoms.
The reason why we obtain a far great-
er product with a much smaller min-
ing force is that we use a great deal of
improved mining machinery; so that
though we pay the highest wages the
cost of mining is less in this country
than in most European lands.
The "Ilahit** of Fruit Hearing.
Fruit bearing in trees is merely a
habit, for a young tree, taken in hand
at the commencement, need only be
pruned during the first three or four
years, after which it will continue to
produce fruit spurs of itself. For it
must be remembered that fruit bear-
ing is a habit which may be encour
aged in trees, and when once they
are well trained to do it they will not
vary except, in untoward circum-
stances. Therefore, the nim of all
pruning, whether of root or branch,
of young trees or old, is to induce the
fruit bearing habit.—Profitable Farm
and Garden.
MRS. ANNIE THOMPSON
(all letters are published by special permission.)
"I cannot say enough in regard to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
It has done me more good than all the doctors. I have been troubled with
female weakness in its worst form for about ten years. I had leucorrhoea
and was so weak that I could not do my housework.
I also had falling of the womb and inflammation of the womb and ovaries,
and at menstrual periods I suffered terribly. At times my back would ache
very hard. I could not lift anything or do any heavy work ; was not able to
stand on my feet long at a time. My husband spent hundreds of dollars for
doctors but they did me no good. My husband's sister wrote what the Vege-
table Compound had done for her, and wanted me to try it, but I did not. then
think it would do rae any good. After a time, I concluded to try it, and I can
truly say it does all that is claimed for it. Ten bottles of the Vegetable Com-
and seven packages of Sanative Wash have made a new woman of me, I have
had no womb trouble since taking the fifth bottle. I weigh more than I have
in years; can do all my own housework, sleep well, have a pood appetite, and
now feel that life is worth living. I owe all to Lyriiu K. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound. I feel that it has saved my life and would not be with-
out it for anything. I am always glad to recommend it to all my sex, for 1
know if they will follow Mrs. Pinkham's directions, they will be cured."
Gratefully yours, Mrs. Annie Thompson, South Hot Springs, Ark.
CHANGE OF LIFE.
" I was taken sick
five years ago with
1 The Grippe,' and
had a relapse and
was given up by
the doctor and my
friends. Change
of Life began to
work on me. I
flowed very badly
until a year ago,
then my stomach
and lungs got so
bad, I suffered terribly; the blood
went up in my lungs and stomach, and
I vomited it up. I could not eat
scarcely anything. I cannot tell what
I suffered with my head. My hus-
band got me a bottle of Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound, and before
I had taken half of it I began to im-
prove, and to-day I am another woman.
Mrs. Pinkham's medicine has saved my
life. I cannot praise it enough."
M. A. Denson, Millport, N.Y.
S?-maden52?
PROFUSE PERIODS
411 commenced
taking Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound
about 3 months
ago, and cannot
express the won-
derful good it has
done me. Men-
struations were so
profuse as to leave m
ine very weak for V'>3§L.d.H0DG£J'
some time after.
Was also troubled with leucorrhoea,
tired feeling, bearing down sensation,
pain across the back and thighs. I
felt as though there was a heavy
weight in my stomach all the time.
I have taken two bottles of the medi-
cine, and now have better health than
I have had for four years."
Mrs. Lizzie Dickson IIonoE,
Avalon, Ohio.
A _ aa aa REWARD.-Wo have deposited with the National City Hank of Lynn, $5000,
V ■ C llllll which will be paid to any person who can find that the above testimonial letters
* >DUUU aasL—,ui~-or were ibtfiiffiSKcr
■ II idpd engines and
nUDCL|\ threshers.
Noted for its Simplicity, Durability and Economy of Fuel.
WINNERS AT ALL WORLD'S FAIR TRIALS.
UI1DCD CCDAOiTHD with one belt principle. Tailing*, Di«tributoran<l Ovrr-
flUDtn OtrflnAlUll shot Heater will do belter work than any other.
AIm TIIKKMHKK TANKS, TASK IT*PS, ADJUSTABLE 81KVK8 and fall line of hupfllr*.
Write for Catalogue and mention this paper.
FF.BtJl &oy M/1'l/.Mf..Vf CO., JimiMH City, Mo.
Sur prinl ii if l*rmnn.
fCncle Grimm- Mrs. Sogiry is the
queerest old lady of my acquaintance
Nephew—How so?
"Why, although she weighs 2H;
pounds and has a wart on her chin, s 1:«
never boasts about what a terrible flirt
she wai when a girl!" — Harper's
Biuar.
The Prince Declined.
When the prince of Wales was about to
visit Niagara Falls Blond in had a rival,
one Farini, who was a character. He is-
sued an advertisement urging that the
prince make his initial entrance to the
groat and glorious United States in a
striking manner. Accordingly he proposed
that ho should wheel the prince in a wheel-
barrow over a tight rope across the gorge
to the United States—an entrance that
would he unparalleled! Then the notice
added: "Should any accident happen to
Ins highness whereby he should happen to
be precipitated to the gulf below (of which,
I assure you, there is little danger) the
money taken from the spectators shall b#
refunded."—Chicago Inter Ocean.
Chenp Hulen to California.
February 12th and cach Tuesday there-
after, until and inc.tiding April 3Uth, Special
Low Kate Colonist Tickets will be sold via
the Southern Pacific's Company's "Ogden"
and "{Sunset" Routes to ail points in ( alifor-
nia. The rate wid be: From Chicago
$30.00, from St. Louis, Memphis and New
'ir.rai-w .* '), frrm HimIm, k r - i ~ < lty,
etc., $25.00. Corresponding low rates from
all other points east and north.
For particulars and detailed information
pertaining to the Southern Pacific Com-
pany's Routes, and these special rates to Cal-
ifornia, call upon or address
\V. <;. Nr imyrr, (i. W. A., S. P. Co., 238
Clark St., Chicago, 111.
\V. II. Connor, C. A., S. P. Co., Chamber
of Commerce Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio.
Herring, C. A., «s P. Co., 711 Bark
Bldg., Pittsburg, Pa.
L. E. Townsley, C. A., S. P. Co., 421 Olive
St., St. Louis, Mo.
O. <'. Cary, C. A., S. P. Co., 208 Sheidley
Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
Carrie (joyfully)—"Harry has proposed
to me!" Bertha—"Oh, well, I wouldn't
mind. lie's such an odd creature, you
know. You never can tell what he will do."
—Boston Transcript.
To Cnre n Cold in One Pay
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
ilruggUts refund money if it f ails tocure. 35c.
When you forget there are others you
are ncaring a burned bridge. — Atchison
Li lobe.
Ask your C.rocer for Red Cross Ball Blue.
Large 2 oz. package five cents.
Genius can only breathe free in an at-
ntwybere of freedom.—Johu stuart Mill.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Boar Signature of
See Fac-Slmile Wrapper Below.
▼cry small and as ctaj
to tike as sugar.
CARTERS
IWr
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FDR BILIOUSNESS.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
OKSt'lNU MUSTHAVt jjQMATUWt. _
S cents I PnrelT TefetaW
rmmmnmnm
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
PILLS.
CONSTIS
cnniM Rupture.
Ilcnrlncho Heart Trtr.i-
Ifcnrlnchr. HeartTrou-
Kidney and Liver Diseases «>t r.
Constipation ran be cured. How
to bo cured free and < t porlurlt v to make per
cent profit. WrltsWM. a LlVlNORTON, Ph
Johnstown, New York, Inclosing ii-eent stninp.
S£ FAIL
Heat (\uitfh Syrup. Tantoa timid. UM
in time. Sold by drncfiistA.
gaaanaaHEg
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Miller, L. G. The Hennessey Clipper. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1901, newspaper, February 28, 1901; Hennessey, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc104843/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.