The Dover News. (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 1, 1910 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DOVER NEWS
Mr®. Sue Lower, Pub.
dover, i : s : : okla
COUCH OF LUXURY.
The most perfect resting place evtir
devised for a human being la Ju«i be-
neath the roof, and then you must be
able to see the shingle nulls sticking
through. If a gentle rain be fulling,
•o much the belter. Five minutes
spent In that sweet retreat are enough
to banish the memory of every trouble.
Debt and death lose their terrors, and
the peace that passes understanding
comes upon you. says the Washington
Post. You beconm a boy again and
enter once more Into the world that
used to be. Soon the durk corners of
the room are peopled with the Imaged
of childhood. Over where the old
clothes are hanging you can see the
outlines of a dismantled ship, while
down the sandy shore come Robinson
Crusoe and Man Friday. A swarthy
face peeps from behind the big trunk
It Is Farlnghea, the strangier, creep-
ing stealthily upon his victim. Fast
•r and faster they come, some pleas
lng. some ferocious. You welcome
them all and are not a bit afraid, and
the rain drips, drips, with a steady,
monotonous souud. Then cornea a
blank. Next morning the spell Is
broken, but the memory remains. You
see the old clothes and the trunk, and
find that the only gobelin tapestry In
the room 1s a cluster of cobwebs over
the little dormer window. Hut you
had slept the sleep of the Just, and
found It most refreshing
SYNOPSIS.
r'apt.
Farmers Hold Bulk of Wealth.
(iuthrie, Okla.—Figures given • ut
from the state auditor's office showr
that Oklahoma's total taxable valii*
tlon for the present year is $016,313,*
RMO, including $L'23,0tt9,249 of puHtc
service corporation property and tSfiJ,.
244,581 ussesed locally.
Thcwe figures show that the real
wealth of the utate Is in the hands of
the faimer, as farm animals al ne run
up to approximately $80,000,000, while
farm implements and vehicles would
add $5,000,000 more, with $3,000 000
additional represente d by lau year's b„,dl Na, by a Mth
crops still on hand at the time of the P*ck*K*. to Franklin Pier« •, pr
assessment and $1,000,000 for Improve-
ments on undented lands, to say noth-
ing of the $324,14H.67C turned in as the
value of farm lands.
The showing of the city dweller
se«ms very puny In comparison. The
total value of town lots Is $187,39M20.
Capital invested In mercantile business
totals $23,677 255 and in manufactur-
ing only $2,415,597, while both state
and national hanks aggregate less th in
$20,000,000, showing $8918,240 for
state banks and $N,684,679 for na
tionals.
KCOMGE of
CAMN MM
ft JAMB 01JVFP CUIAVOOD
HXL'STPATIOK
STPATIOW <§> MUMV (i.MTTNtR
OOffvmoM-T- lyvs jtoNM
The passenger traffic between the
United States und Europe continues to
otter most alluring Inducements. Many
of the big companies are adding the
newest, largest and swiftest vessels to
their fleets. One of the latest launch-
Inge is that of a ship that is being
built by a French line, to run to New
Negro Murderer Surrenders.
Sapulpa, Okla.—Tom Dlckerson, a
negro wanted on the charge of killing
W. Wllllnton, a white man, near
Olive, surrendered to the authorities
at Tulsa and was brought to this clt
and locked up In the county J. 11. Ex
haustlon and hunger drove the negro
to surrnder. For four days he had
been chased by three (Hisses through
the hills of several townships. The
feeling against Dlckerson U very
strong and sentiment for a lynching
has been expressed by residents of
Olive.
thuniel I'lum of the *] , .p Ty-
phtMin. land* aocretly on lleuv* r Inltnd.
stronghold 0r o,« Mormon otiu.liah
. lit. °'m°a councilor, confront* him,
telle lilm h« la cxp^-ted. and bargain* for
the ammunition aboard the Nl>..,p il-
ia Nat by a n< lemn oath ro deliver a
kftKH to Franklin Plerv-. prenldent of
the t nlteil StntiH. Near I'rice'ii cabin
Nat men Ihe frightened f i «• of a yount;
woman who dlaappeara In the darkness,
leaving an odor of lllaca. It develop* that
Nat h visit to th*> laland Is to demand net-
|lenient of the king Hlrnntt. for the loot-
ing of Ida nlofip by Mormons. Price shown
Nat the king's palace, and through h
window he uses the h.dv of the filar*,
who Price miyti la the kins * aeventh wife
' allltifc at the king's ofH. e Nut I* warned
by a young woman that his life Is In dan
Ker Htrans professes lndl'«mttlon when
he hear a Nat's Krievnnce and promiaei to
punish the guilty. Nat res. u.-s Nell, who
Is being publicly whipped. and the king
orders the sheriff, Arhor Croc he, to pur
r."'. T. ' ,'1** twn Plutn h ams
*' at Marlon, the girl of the lilacs. Is
Nell ■ sister The two men plan to escap-
on Nat s sloop and tnkn Marlon and
>V Innsotne. daughter of Arbor Troche,
and sweetheart of Nell. Nat discovers
that the sloop I* aon* Marlon tells him
that his ship has been seised by the Mor-
mon,,. H ie begs Mm to leave the Island,
telllna him that nothing ran save her
from Strang, whom ahe Is doomed to mar-
ry. Plum finds Price raving mad. Her ov-
ertng, |„. tells Nat that Strang Is doomed,
that armed men are descending on the
island. Nat learns that Marlon has been
rVmmoned to the castle by Strang. Nat
kills Arbor Proche, and aft r a desperate
flght with the king, leaves him for dead
The avenging host from the mainland de-
scends on St. Jam. *. IS.*. II and Nat take
h part In the battle and the latter Is
wounded.
CHAPTER IX.—Continued.
Big Wolf Hunt Great Success.
He felt the dash of the water In his
face and it put new life into him.
Somebody had raised him to a sitting
, posture and was supporting him there
' while n second person bound a cloth
in thlrr7' 1 < gJI°If^hU,nt about h,H head 1,0 0Pf"®U his eyes
n the OlaBB mountain, on Thank.glv Hnd the ,lgl„ „f day >hot |n(o t|ipm
rtny was a Kreat <Hicr«ss in every ■ like a stinging, burning charge of
way but one there wero not wolves | needle points, and he closed them
York.,This is one of the greatest craft enough to satisfy the hunters. Getter- j again with a sharp cry of pain. That
yet completed, and when put In coin- i'lper, chief of the hunt, marshaled second's glance had shown him that
mission will he able to carry 2.020 pas h,s force8 In good shape, the day was It was a woman who was binding his
perfect, the huntsmen keen, hut the , head. He had not seen her face, lie-
wolves were scarce, only four being yond her he had caught a half-formed J
brought into the round up, and two be vision of many people and the glisten-
ing killed too far out to be brought to edge of the sea, and as he lay with
center. The farmers of the neighbor* l'l°8°d eyes the murmur of voices
hood are well satisfied, however. i came to him. The support at his back
— , was taken away, slowly, as if the per-
Creek Crawl. Up In Cotton. "°n ,„wh° , he'<! !>ln\ that he
o . , , would fall. Nathaniel stiffened him-
Sapulpa, Okla. C reek county, cot self to show his returning strength
ton crop will amount to over $600,000 und opened hu eyeB nRa|n Thls tlme
this year, aceording to a close est!- the pain was not so great. A few
mate This Is nearly $100,000 more yurds away he saw a group of people
than a year ago. Next year's crop and among them were women; still
■engers. The total cost will be about
$5,000,000. That Is what foreign con-
cerns are doing to get American trado.
And Americans permit them to mo.
nopollze a business that should be in
American control and which should
be a most Important auxiliary in ex-
tending American commerce.
After a time—it seemed a day of
terrible work and pain to him—they
came to the streets of the town, ard
In a half conscious sort of v. ay he
cursed at the rabble trailing at their
beels. They passed close to the tem-
ple, dirt and blood and a burulng tor-
ment shutting the vision of It from his
eyes, and b< yond this there was an-
other crowd An aisle opened for
them, as It had opened for others
ahead of them. In front of the Jail
they stopped. Nathaniel's head hung
heavily upon his brtast and he msde
no effort to rsise it. All ambition and
desire had left him, all desire but one,
and that was to drop upon the ground
and lie there for endless, restful years.
What consciousness was left in him
was ebbing swiftly; he saw black,
fathomless night about him and the
earth seemed slipping from under his
feet.
A voice dragged him back Into life
—a voice that boomed in his ears like
rolling thunder and set every fiber
in him quivering with emotion. He
drew himself erect with the involun-
tary strength of ime mastering the
last spasm of death und as they
dragged him through the door he saw
there within nn arm's reach of him
the great, living face of Strang, gloat-
ing at him as if from out of a rnlst—
red eyed, white fanged, filled with the
ven^efulness of a beast.
The gnat voice rumbled in his ears
again.
"Take that man to the dungeon!"
CHAPTER X.
Winnsome's Verdict of Death.
The voice—the condemning words
—followed Nathaniel as he staggered
Tm used to It, Nat. Boen here Be-
fore," he said "Can you get up?
There's a bench over here—not long
enough to str«tch you out on or 1
would have made you a bed of it, but
it's better than this mud to sit on."
He put his arms about Nathaniel
and helptd him to his feet. For a few
moments the wounded man stood with
out moving
"I'll! not very bad. 1 guess," he said,
taking a slow step "Where is the
seat, Neil? I'm going to walk to It
What sort of a bump have I got on the
head?"
"Nothing much," assured Nell.
"Suspicious, though," he grinned
cheerfully. "Look* as thorgh you
were running and somebody tame up
and tapped you from behind!"
Nathaniel's strength returned to
him quickly. The pain had gone from
his head and his eyes no longer hurt
him In the dim candlelight he could
distinguish the four walls of the dun
g«on, glistening with the water and
mold that reeked from between their
rotting logs The floor was of wet.
sticky earth which clung to his boots,
and the air that he breathed filled his
nostrils and throat with the uncom
fortable thickness of a night log at
sea. Through it the candle burned in
a misty halo. Near the candle, which
stood on a shelf-like table against one
of the walls, waa a big dish which
caught Nathaniel's eyes.
"What's that?" ho asked, pointing
toward It.
"Grub," replied Neil. "Hungry?"
He went to the table and got the
plate of food. There were chunks of
boiled meat, unbuttered bread and
cold potatoes. For several minutes
they ate in silence. Now that Na-
thaniel was himself again Neil could
no longer keep up his forced spirits.
Roth realized that they had played
their game and that it had ended in
defeat.' And each believed that It was
his Individual power to alleviate to
some extent the other's misery. To
Neil what was ahead of them held no
mystery. A few hours more and then
—death. It was only the form In
which it would come that troubled
him, that made him think. Usually
the victims of this dungeon cell were
shot. Sometimes they were hanged.
A. H. SCHOW ALTER & CO.
O0 l0rs In
All Rinds cf Building Materia!
Lumber, Suh, Doors, Moulding, Glass, Screen Door*
Paint, Oil and COAL*
JL R. ROTH, Mir.
COO, CXLA.
You Don't Need a Town Crier
to emphasize the mtriU of your bminrai or an-
nounce your special ealee. A itraijfht story told in
a straight way to the refders of this paper will
quickly reach the ears of the thoughtful, intelligent
buying public, the people who have the money in
their pocketa, and the people who listen to reason
and not noise. Our bouks. will ho\v you a li t of
the Hnd of people you appeal to. Call and see them tt this office.
011 between his two guards; it haunted i Hut why tell Nathaniel? So he ate
English owners of homing pigeons
have lost so many of them this season
that they believe there Is an especial
cause. This cause, many of them are
Inclined to suspect, Is wireless telegra-
phy. Many will dismiss the indict-
ment as fanciful, on account of the
comparative weakness of the current
which wireless telegraphy brings Into turn,
play. The answer to this Is that the
current does not kill the birds, but
only confuses them, causing them to
miss their way. If the Marconi cur-
rent affects pigeons, why not gulls?
Indeed, It would seem not Impossible
that wireless telegraph stations may
be the means of greater disaster to
gulls than lighthouses.
will amount to nearly $1,000,000, from.
Indications of increased acreage. The
cause of the heavy crop this year Is
not only the natural increase in fields
planted to cotton, but the excellent re-
Their Second Fight Fatal.
Hugo, Okla.—In a pistol fight be-
tween Dr. W. H. Morris and Thomas
Ingram, the second they have had
this year, both men were fatally in-
jured The shooting occurred on the
main street of the town about 6
o'clock. Dr. Morris shot and seriously
wounded Ingram last March.
From London comes the announce-
ment of the death of the woin«n who Oklahoma Legislator Dead
XT'Tf,he or,g'r °f "Lutie <>* •-< a. j. cuiiop,
Dorrlt. ,hat a,nous character of member-elect of ,ho Oklahoma legist
Dickens The lady waa entitled to the lure from Muskogee and Haskell coun- fVel7 P 1 ln hlm s,rivlnB
women; still
farther away, so far that his brain
grew dizzy as he looked, there was a
black moving crowd. He was among
the wounded. The Mormon women
were here. Down there along the
shore—among the dead—had assem-
bled the population of St. James.
A strange sickness overpowered him
and he sank back against his sup-
porter. A cool hand passed over his
face. It was a soothing, gentle touch
—the hand of the woman. He felt
the sweep of soft hair against his
cheek—a breath whispering in his
ear.
"You will be better soon."
His heart stood still.
"You will be better—"
Against his rough cheek there fell
the soft pressure of a woman's lips.
Nathaniel pulled himself erect,
benefit of the doubt, but It Is a fact
that similar claims have been made by
others. It Is also asserted that a
brother of the woman who has Just
died was the original "Tiny Tim," and
that he served in part as the model for
"Paul Dombey." If all those asser-
tions can be proved it would stem
that the family formed a sort of trust
for Dickens characters.
Perhaps if the truth were known a
considerable proportion of the no
called automobile "accidents' would
be found to have resulted from be
fuddled heads and unsteady nerve;
The menace of a man under the In
fluence of liquor and In an automobile
is easily appreciated, and when it is
demonstrated that crashes on the
road are due to drunkenness the pun
lahment should be severe. Those who
insist upon running amuck on the
highways should be made to pay a
heavy penalty, whether they be sober
or drunk.
Ilea, died at his home at Haskell of J°r mastery of hls body. his vision
his strength. He tried to turn, but
strong arms seized him from behind.
A man's voice spoke to him. a man's
strength held him. In an agony of ap-
peal Marlon's name burst from his
Hps.
"Sh h !" warned the voice behind
him. "Are you crazy?"
The arms relaxed their hold and
Nathaniel dragged himself tn his
knees. The woman was gone. As far
as he could see there were people—
scores of them, hundreds of them—
penumonia. His successor will be
"hosen at a special election.
Man Stabbed to Death.
McAlester, Okla. Adolph Wynskl
was killed in a resort at Krebs with a
hlg butcher knife, a hole being cut
In his lung into which u man's nand
could be placed.
May Serve Four Years.
Guthrie, Okla. An opinion affecting multiplied into thousands and million
the terms of all district judges In the H8 he looked, until there was only a
1
Strang Was Alive.
Our Jot
Department
la at your service
end guarantees to ploaso.
The Ncwg Office
J. Uj. BE.A MS AM
AUGT.OhsECR
yPor date* and term* call or address at Dover, or
call at The News office.
G. W. FLETCHER
Hotary Public and Res! Estefs Agent
Wl' WCY TO LOAN ON FARM3
A MOST TOUCHING APPEAL
falls shc t of iti desired effect if ad-
dressed to a small crowd of interested
listeners. Mr. Business Man, arc
you wasting your ammunition on the
small crowd that would trade with
you anyway, or do you want to reach
those who are not particularly inter-
ested in your business? If you do,
make your appeal for trade to the
largest and most intelligent
audience in your commun-
ity, the readers of this
paper. They have count-
less wants. Your ads will
be read by them, and they
will become your custom-
ers. Try it and see.
The usual fate of get-rich quick
schemes is collapse nt the end And
the "lambs" are fleeced as a prelim-
inary. A speculative scheme of th's
kind in Connecticut has brought up
in the bsnkruptcy court, with unse
cured claims of $500,000 to be hvi
tied. And the furtner sequel doubt
will be the charging of the sum to
the profit and lose account of thoj-e
foolish enough to "invest."
siatc. including those elected at the
recent election, has been given by At-
torney (lenora! West to Judge Preslie
H. Cole of McAlester, lie bolls that
the constitution and not a legislitiv.*
act fixes the terms of district Judges.
Judge Cole was re-elected district
Judge in Pittsburg county and the elec
Hon for two years, beginning Nov. 23,
1910 Attorney General West holds
that under the constitution his term be.
gins the second Monday in January af-
ter his election and that he serxe-
for four years
An Oklahoma Bank Robbed.
Crawford. Okla.- Two robbers enter
ed the Cotton Exchange bank of Craw-
ford. during hanking hours, held the
cashier and two depositors up at the
point of guns, and took $1,000 in cash
from the vault and cash drawer. The
men were followed as far as the can
y the town, where the trail
yons iie.u*
was lost.;
a German musician says that our
craze for ragtime is the great obstacle
to creative work in American music
Ragtime? Sounds like a f01 echo
from our past. Our friend mi st have
got his idea from old newspaper tiles
Among airmen excessive avoirdupois,,
is at a discount, most of the ■ ,
ful atmosphere navigators h. lng phys-
ical lightweights. In this as In some
other matters good goods ofte: <>me
In small packages.
who
waa
There Is a man in Callforn
went to sleep on a railroad tra
■truck by a fast train and «m aped
with a headache. To complex the
simple beauty of this tale, we are
pleased to add that the locomotfve is
also doing well.
One by one the comic supplei n nt
Jokes come true. In Detroit a hen-
pecked lion tamer has really taken
refuge from his wife by sleeping Id
the cage.
Boy Confesses His Folly.
T'onca City, Okla.—James McGinnls,
aged 17. has been arrested on a charge
of trying io blackmail James McGraw,
pre .-Ident of the Farmers' National
bank, out of $30,000. McGinnls' father
Is a veteran of the civil war. and ho
ha.-« a brother at the Annapolis naval
academy. Two letters were received
by McGraw, one more than a month
n.o. The letter received recently dc-
manded thai the money be buried and
designated the spot. Officials say the
boy has confessed.
Hog Cholera at Byron.
Byron, Okla. A disease similar to
cholera is spreading among the hogs
In this s 'ctlon of the state. Many far-
mers have lost all their hogs and in
mon.v cases the number of head run
up into the hundreds. Farm r- who
!ia\e net lost their hoir< are feeding
them tar and oth- r mediae in hope
of k"eping off the disease, but i .^ei 14
♦hat there is no way to check It after
it once gets started in a bunch 0!
hugs.
black cloud about him. He staggered
to his feet and a strong hand kept him
from falling while his brain slowly
cleared. The millions and thousands/
and hundreds of people dissolved
themselves Into the day until only a 1
handful was left where he had seen
multitudes. He turned his face weak-
ly to the man beside him.
"Where did she go?" he asked.
It was a boyish face into which hlR
pleading eyes gazed, a face white with
the strain of battle, reddened a little
on one cheek with a smear of blood,
and there was a startled, frightened
look in it that did not come of the
strife that had passed.
"Who? What are you talking
about?"
"The woman," whispered Nathaniel.
"The woman—Marion—who kissed—
me—"
The young fellow's hand gripped his
arm in a sudden fierce clutch.
"You've beep dreaming!" he ex-
claimed in a threatening voice "Shut
up!" He spoke the words loudly.
Then quickly dronulng his voice to a
whisper he added: "For God's sake
him still as the cold chill of the rot-
ting dungeon walls struck in his lace;
it remained with him as he stood
swaying In the thick gloom—the voice
rumbling in his ears, the words beat
lng against his brain until the shock
of them sickened him, until he stretch-
ed out his arms and there fell from
him such a cry as had never tor-
tured his lips before.
Strang was alive! He had left the
spark of life in him, and the woman
who loved him had fanned it back into
full flame.
Strang was alive! And Marion-
Marion was his wife!
The voice of the king taunted him
his meat and bread without words,
waiting for the other to sptak. as the
other waited for him. And Nathaniel,
on ills part, kept to himself the secret
of Marlon's fate After thev hnd d
with the meat and the bread and the
cold potatoes he pulled out his De-
loved pipe and filled it with the last
scraps of his tobacco, and as the
fumes of it clouded round his head,
soothing him In its old friendship, he
told of his fight with Strang and his
killing of Arbor Croche.
"I'm glad for Winnsome's sake."
said Neil, after a moment. "Oh, If
you'd only killed Strang!"
Nathaniel thought of what Marion
had said to him in the forest.
from the black chaos that hid the j
dungeon walls. The words struck at "Nell," he said quietly, "do you
him, flllmg his head with shooting , know that Winnsome loves you—not
! pain, and he tottered back and sank ua the little girl whom you toted
to the ground to get away from them, about on your shoulders—but as a
They followed, and that vengeful leer woman? Do you know that?" In the
at the king was behind them, urging other's silence he added: "When 1 last
them on, until they heat his face into . saw Marion she sent this message to
the sticky earth, and smothered him I you—'Tell Neil that he must go, for'
into what he though' was death j Winnsome's sake. Tell him that her
There came rest after that, a long 1 fate Is shortly to be as cruel as mine
silent rest When Nathaniel slowly | —tell him that Winnsome loves him
climbed up out of the ebon shadows
again the first consciousness that
don t betray her! They saw her with j came to him was that the word-demons
had stopped their beating against his
brain and that he no longer heard
the voice of the king. His relief was
so great that he breathed a restful
sigh Something touched him then.
Great God! were they coming back?
Were they still there—waiting—wait-
ing-
It was a wonderfully familiar voice
that spoke to him.
"Hello there, Na^! Want a drink?"
lie gulped eagerly at the cool liquid
that touched his lips.
"Nell," he whispered.
"it's me. Nat. They chucked me in
very body knows that It was the
king's wife with you!"
The king's wife! Nathaniel was
too weak to analyze the words beyond
the fact that they carried the dread
truth of his feara deep into his soul.
W ho would have come to him but
Marion? Who else would have kissed
him? It was her voice that had
whispered in his ear—the thrill of her
hand that had passed over his lace.
And this man had said that she was
the wife of the king! He heard the
\olces of other men near him but did
not understand what they were say
lng. He knew that after a moment ! with y6u Hell's hole. Isn't It
there was a man on each side of him Nathaniel sat up, Neil's strong arm
holding him by the arms, and me- j at his back. There was a light iu the
chanically he moved his legs, know itig room now and ho could see his com-
that they wanted him to walk. They 1 ['anion's face, smiling at him encour
did not guess how weak he was—how i agingly The sight of it was like an
he struggled to keep from becoming • lixir to him He drank again and
too great a weight on their hands. ! new life coursed through him
Once or twice they stopped in their J Yes-bell of a hole!" he repeated
agonizing climb up the hill. On its
top the coo! sea air swept into Na-
thaniel's face and it was like water to
a parched Uwoat.
drowsily "Sorry for you—Neil—"
and he seemed to sleep again
Nell laughed as he wiped his eola
panlou's face with a wet cloth.
and that she will escape and come to
him 011 the mainland.'" hike words
of fire they had burned themselves in
his brain and as Nathaniel repeated
them he thought of that other broken
heart that had sobbed out its anguish
to him in the castle chamber. "Neil,
a man can die easier when he knows
that a woman loves him!"
He had risen to his feet and was
walking back and forth through the
thick gloom.
"I'm glad!" Neil's voice came to
him softly, as though he scarcely
dared to speak the words aloud. After
a moment he added: "Have you got
a pencil. Nat? I would like to leave
a little note for Winnsome."
Nathaniel found btfth pencil and
paper In one of his pockets and Nell
dropped upon his knees ln the mud
beside the table. Ten minutes later
he turned to Nathaniel and a great
change had come into his face.
(TO BR CONTINUED.)
=ret QU/-3
THIS ad. is directed at the
man who has all the
business in his line in
this community.
Mr. Merchant — You say
you've got it all. You're sell-
ing them all they'll buy, any-
how. But at the same time
you would like more business.
Make this community buy
more.
Advertise strongly, consist-
ently, judiciously.
Suppose you can buy a lot
of washtubs cheap; advertise
a big washtub sale in this pa-
per. Put in an inviting pic-
ture of a washtub where
people can see it the minute
they look at your ad. Talk
strong on washtubs. And
you'll find every woman in
this vicinity who has been
getting along with a rickety
waahtub for years and years
will buy a new one from you.
That's creative business
power.
OURo AD. RATES ARE RIGHT
—CALL ON US
(Oopyrtfbt. liMt. by W. N. UJ
Queer Visiting Cards.
The natives of Korea carry visit
lng cards uhich measure about IS
inches square, and when their use Is
required they are merely shown.
TRADE MORAL—The quality ol
what you have to sell is known
to some people ail of the time
and all of the people some ot
the time, but advertise regu-
larly with us and you'll reach
all of the people all of the time
nw r 1 ■
KEEPING
the quality of
your goods a
secret is what
you accom-
plish when
you don't ad-
vertise them.
You know they're
best; so do a few
othera I But the
general public—are
they informed? Tell
them! Don't keep
it a dark secret.
\
Let the light
shine through
the columns
of this paper.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lower, Sue L. The Dover News. (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 1, 1910, newspaper, December 1, 1910; Dover, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc106938/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.