Cleveland County Leader. (Lexington, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 18, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 9, 1895 Page: 4 of 4
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All the cabs In London placed in
lino would make a length of forty-four
miles. _____
No brass band can play as many airs
as a drum-major can put on.
London is now listening to Siguor
Fabozzi, a Neapolitan pianist, born
blind.
In 1897 Canada will celebrate the
400th anniversary of the landing of
bebastian Cabot.
The wool-grower and the editor
know the value of good picking.
The corn crop is very successful in
the west, nevertheless chiropodists
make no complaint about the east.
To My Joy
Rood's Sarsaparilla overcame the efTeots
of the grip, cured nie of dyspepsia, and
nervous prostra-
tion. I treated
with three differ-
ent doctors with-
out realizing re-
lief. I resorted
to Hood's Sarsa-
i parilla and short-
ly my appetite
was i ni p r o v e d
and my rest was
not so much brok-
en at night, get-
fiting up in t ho
morning greatly
refreshed. After
^<5 taking three bot-
tles of Hood's
... Sarsaparilla I was
entirely cured and today feel as well as
ever in my life." R. B. Sangster, Ken-
lett, Arkansas. Get Hood's because *
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is the Only True Blood Fiirifler promi-
nently in the public eye. $1: six for $5.
Prepared only by ('. I. llood & Co.,
Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass., U. S. A.
Pillu. Mire allllver Ills, WIIoim-
rlOOU S I HIS Les«, lieudacho. Mc.
World s ratr i ni<ini:3i awaku. ?
IMPERIAL!
1 <3rRANUM j
| Prescribed by Physicians?
| Relied on in Hospitals*
\ Depended on by Nurses\
\ Endorsed byT HE-PRESS \
1 The BEST prepared FOOD \
\ Sold by DRUaaiST5 EVERYWHERE I 5
f John Carle & Sons. New York. J
PINEOLA COUGH BALSAM
iicutnn-
tives will invariably
derive benefit from
lt u e, art it quisUy
abates the cough,
n-ndeis expeitora-
tion eiiny, agisting
nature in re-storing
wasted tissues.
There is a large per-
centage of thowe who
tatarrl.
remedied are pleasant to u?e. Cream Halm, 80c. per
lottle; Pineola Halsam.XSc. at Druggist*. In quan-
ttties of M.P0 will deliver on receipt of amount. m
ELY BROTHERS, 50 Warren St., New York w
Waterproof
ill the
SH
WORLD I
GALLOWS FOR TWO.
DURRANT AND HOLMES
CONVICTED OF MURDER.
fivo of the Most Hensntlonnl Criminals
of the \ko Condemned to I)le tot Their
Fiendish Crimea—Iloth Cases Appealed
to the Higher Courts.
San Fkancisco, Nov. 4.—Theodore
Durrttnt, assistant superintendent, of
Emanuel Baptist church Sunday
school wan convicted of the murder of
Blanche Lamont, for which he has
been on trial sinco July 22 last. The
jury was out twenty minutes and ar- j
rived at the verdict on the flrst ballot.
As there was no recommendation of
mercy the punishment was fixed at
death.
As the aped foreman, pale and
trembling, read the words that fixed
Durrant's fate, a low, rumbling noise,
like the roar of a mob, arose from the
rear of the court room. The next
moment men were cheering wildly,
ots-
J
TWO LIVES WANTED.
(Jovernor Morrill Petitioned to Inflict tho
Death Penalty.
Topeka, Kan., Nov. 4.—About 500
citizens of Edwards county have asked
Governor Morrill to order that the
sentence of death be executed upon
Carl Arnold and William Harvey, who
were ou November 13, 1894, convicted
of the murder in cold blood of John l<\
Marsh, mayor of the city of Kinsley.
Tho petition was presented .Saturday
by Judge S. W. Vandevert ot the Ed-
wards county district court, and Ed
T. 1 fid well, a brother-in-law of the
murdered man. The Governor took
the case under advisement, and prom-
ised to render a decision in the near
future.
This is the first pet ition of the kind
ever presented to a Kansas Governor.
Under tho Kansas law tho death pen-
alty cannot be enforujd unless tho
chief executive signs the warrant. No
(Jovernor has ever seen lit to order the
death of a murderer and no legislature
has ever seen fit to change the law.
As a consequence there are now about
forty peopl« in the penitentiary under
sentence of death. Arnold and Har-
vey of Edwards county are among the
number.
THE EARTH QUAKE.
The Author: "I think I have a good
Idea for a detective story."
His Wife: "What is the idea?"
The Author: '*1 will have the de-
tective trace an umtxrel)a to its orig-
inal owner."
Merritt: "Under tho circumstances,
why don't you go west and get a di-
vorce?"
Cobwiggcr: "BecauMe if I had a di-
vorce, I might be fool enough to mar-
ry again."
Doctor: "Now, Tommie, will you
promise mo to take your medicine like
a man?"
Tommie: "No, sir; when a man
takes medicine ho makes a bad face
and swears."
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Keport
Absolutely PURE
"Hush! There aro visitors in tho
dra w i n groom."
"How do you know?"
"Listen: papa is saying 'My dear'
to mamma."
rJones: "liellol I see Smith has
come out Qn top."
Jenks: "Yes; Smith is a little bald,
that's a fact."
m
TI1KOPOHK DURBANT.
while women wept hysterically in ex-
citement. The bailiff rapped loudly
for order, but the tumult continued
for a minute before anything liko
quiet could be brought out of the dis-
order.
Purrant recovered his old-time com-
posure as soon as he left his mother
and prepared to return to the county
jail. With his overcoat swung care-
lessly over his arm, he walked leisurely
out of the room, twirling his slight
mustache with apparently us little
concern as if he were merely a specta-
tor of, instead of the principal figure
in. the exciting scene.
The case will be appealed to the
supreme court, and it is expected that ;
nearly a year will lapse before a de- j
cision will be obtained.
HOLMES IS CONVICTED.
Murder In the Flint Degree the Verdict .
of the Jury.
Philadelphia, Nov. 4.—II. II.
Holmes, the arch-criminal of the pres- !
ent time, accused of at least six
murders and countless numbers of
other crimes, but never before put on i
trial for his misdeeds, was found j
guilty of murder in the first degree at
Central and Mississippi Valley Hale*
Shaken 1 p. ^
Kansas City, Mo,. Nov. 1.—The
earthquake shocks which startled the
people of this city at 5:15 o'clock this
morning and which caused about half
of them to get out of bed and wander
about their homes in search of bur-
glars, were general throughout the
Mississippi valley. Shocks were felt
from Michigan to Louisiana and from
Ohio to Kansas. Reports from points
throughout this wide territory agree
that the shock occurred precisely at
5:15 o'clock and lasted not longer than
a minute. Reports differ as to tho
number of distinct shocks. All agree
that there were two shocks and many
reports are that there were three, tho
last faint and almost imperceptible.
Every town in Kansas and Missouri
felt the shock.
| Burnley: "What you church people
I need is more tolerance in your rcli
ion."
I Goodley: "I fancy we don't need it
■ any more than you need religion in
j your tolerance."
Every girl should be so neat that she
feels uncomfortable when her stock-
ings are wrinkled.
Bad surroundings do not make peo-
ple bad. They only bring out tho bad
that is already in them.
Trips Undertaken f r Health's Hake
Will bo rendered more beneficial, and the fa-
tigues of travol counteraotcd, if the voyager will
tuke along with him llostetter's Stomach Bitters,
and uso that protective and enabling tonic, nerve
invigoraut nnd appetizer regularly. Impurities
In air and water is neutralized by it, and it is
a matchless tranquilliser nnd regulator of tho
stomach, liver and bowels. It counteracts ma-
laria, rheumatism, anil a i ndency to kidney and
bladder ailments.
The FISH BRAND SLICKER Is warranted wstor
jpryoL and will keep you dry in tho hardest slortn. The
Wlr POMMEu BLI( KElt la a pert. ct riding coal, and
Movers the cnUn saddle. BewareofImitations. ])oni
(buy a coat If tho "Eiih Brand" is not on it. Ilhistra-
frdCHtal..>ur fr. A. J. TOW Kit, Boston, Mass.
. - ondarjrorTer*
nary |t!.oo|> puhON permanently
I'-uredln 151.■ :.5 days. Y>>u can buInvited at
lbomef<>r*an>e prloaVoder k
|ty. If J"U prefer tooome here <*«> wllleon*
'traettopnyrellrnarifareend hotel bills,an4
nochanre. if we fan t<>«-uro. If you have taken mer-
cury, Iodide tmt.ifcli. and mill havo ac hes and
Pilns, Mucous Vatchcfl In mouth. Sore Throat,
IinI>I• h. Copper Colored Sputa, ' Icrr* on
any purtof the body, llalror F.vehrowa fulling
out. It Is tins HeconUiiry Itl.OOO I'OhuN
we iruurrtntee to cure. We solicit lliemost obsti-
nate case* and rtiullenco (lie world for A
ease we cannot cure. This disease has always
hallled th<* ill of the most eminent phy i-
emiia. SrtOo.OOO capital behind our unrondk
Uonal imaranty. A I k« I ot e proofs *«-r t scaled on
application. Address COOK HUM I1)V ( U«
SO? Matonlo Temple, t till. AtiO, ILL.
Cat out anil aend this advertlanmeiit.
Healthy ;
Kidneys I
mako 1
Pure
Bloed
D?Hobb's
j>aragus
ItffeyPills
Guro oil Kldnoy
Dleoaeoe.
At all druggists, or by
mail prepaid, for 50c. a box.
Send for pamphlet.
Hobb's Medlclnc Co.,
Chicago Sss Frsoi Uco.
VARICOCELE CU0«E°
Rupture and Piles no pay.
No Pain «r<'itUlit(. Particular* Kree. Addrrw
l>r. II.•>. Whittles*, 9th * Delaware Kan.Cltr.Mo
CI* A MKT)-Any lady wuhlnr to make s«ma
V' mon.
wnt should work tir m*' wiUni? rntHllraiMl Hilm.
Address A. U. Ljji, M. U., 2U io..mi0u avs^
MINERAL
Best Cough H>rup.
in tin
it. h. holmes.
9 o'clock Saturday night, lie took
the vcriict calmly, and left the court
room as nonehalently as ho had en-
tered it on any day «>f his trial, not-
withstanding the fact that death
stares him in the face.
Judge Arnold's charge was against
the prisoner on every point. In re-
lation to the story of Holmes' wander-
ings with Mrs. Pietzel, lie said: "It
presents the most remarkable picture
of the influence of mind over mind
that I ever saw. No novel overwrit-
ten contains such a story as that of
the way this man dragged that woman
about the country in search of her
husband."
llearne's Attorneys Ituay.
Springfield, Mo., Nov. 4.—Vincent
Courtney and (Jeorge M. Harrison,
attorneys in the Hearne*Stillwell mur-
der case, were hero yesterday gather-
ing evidence. Dr. Lucy Hawkins of
th s city, who lived at HanuUml when
Millionaire Stillwell was murdered, is
I expected to impeach the evidence of
one of the state's most important wit-
nesses that ho saw Dr. llearne acting
suspiciously in the alley behind the
litilhvell mansion. Miss Hawkins says
that she will swear that the witness
was in bed very sick on the night of
the murder.
For Cohan Indepeiidenee.
New York, Nov. 4.—A morning
pa| er asserts that another Cuban ex*
peditiou is being formed, the incmhers
of which all belong to tho National
(•uard of New Jerae.v. All are said to
l e sharpshooters and qualified to com-
mand companies and to be trained in
signal corps work. The men say their
object is to secure practical military
work.
A It una way l oy Crushed to lleiitti.
Nevada, Mo., Nov. 4.—George
Driscoll and John Yockcy, two runa-
way youths, started for St. Louis this
morning on a through freight train.
Op|H>site Harwood. Driscoll attempted
i > -.limb on top of a car, hut missed
his fooiiug and fell beneath the train.
His bodv was badly mangled. Ho was
is years old.
Manured a Child.
. Omaiia, Neb., Nov. I. Ida (>askin,a
I l-year-old-girl, was criminally as-
saulted and murdered last night and
her bloody corpse was found in a va-
eant hou e on Half Howard street at
1 |!\ this mcrning l y a detective Mar-
tin Hooker has been arrested on sut*
picion of haviug committed the crime.
€ Mini's First I'aymrnt to .lapan.
London, Nov. 3.—The Stnudard says
in its financial article: "The Chinese
ambassador with great pomp lias
transferred $10,000,000 to the Japanese
account? Hut the Japanese have not
touched the money ami aro reticent as
, to what thev intend to do. '
ROCKEFELLER S NEW GIFT.
A Million Outright and Two Millions
Contingent for Chicago I'nlveralty.
Chicago, Nov. 4.—John I). Rocke-
feller has given $3,000,000 more to tho
University of Chicago, as will appear
from the following letter to the trus-
tees:
"I will contribute to the University
of Chicago $1,000,000 for endowment,
payable January 1, 1896. I will con-
tribute in addition SV.OOO.OOO for en-
dowment, but only in amounts equal
to the contributions of others in cash
or its equivalent not hitherto promised
as the same shall be received by the
university. This pledge shall be good
as to any portion of the sum herein
promised, which shall prove not to bo
payable on the above terms on or be-
fore January 1, 1900."
A REAL NEW WOMAN.
She Is Handler With a Pistol Than Her
Knraged Lover Is.
Charleston, VV. Va., Nov. 4.—Yes-
terday at the village of Eaorle Irwin
Hostley and ilettie Shields, who have
been lovers, fell out on account of
Hostley's jealousy. She was seen by
him on tho street with another man
the previous day. To-day he de-
manded an explanation which was
given, but which did not suit him. He
lired at her, the bullet cutting her
neck slightly. Ilettie used her pistol
freely in the street duel that ensued,
shooting three times, and each bullet
taking effect. Hostley is dying and
Miss Shields is under arrest.
WOULD NOT STRIKE.
Kinployes of the Montana Central Itefusu
to Obey an Order to yult Work.
JIuttk, Mont, Nov. 4.—It wns an-
nounced last night that a general
strike would go into effect on the
(ireat Northern at 12 o'clock last
night on account of the refusal of
President Hill to meet tho mediation
committee of St. Paul. Investigation
proves that a strike was ordered to
take effect at that hour, but the em-
ployes of the Montana Central have
refused to take any part in the trouble
and thev have announced that they
will not strike under any considera-
tion. #
Krueger Found (iiillty.
Lexington, Mo., Nov. 1.—The jury
at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon found
Ralph L. lvrueger guilty of conspiring
to change the result of the last elec-
tion in Kansas City, and sentenced
him to pay a tine of $100, the minimum
punishment under tho law. The costs
of tho trial are assessed against the
defendant, making the total fine sev-
eral thousand dollars. An application
for a new trial was at once presented
and the case will be taken to the
Supreme court.
Carter to He Deposed.
Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 4.—It is
highly probable, as a result of the
conference of local He pub I leans with
ex-Attorney tJeneral Miehencr, that
the friends of Mr. Harrison will move
early for tho displacement of Chair-
1 man Carter of the National Kepub-
I I lean committee, and the substitution,
j if not of an out and out Hurrison man,
! at least of one who will be in accord
i with the majority sentiment of the
! party in the matter of silver lcgisla-
I tion.
Clerical "Errors."
j Topeka, Kan., Nov. 4.—Tho clerks
!n the state auditor'soflice have figured
' a total of $13,003.07 in errors in book-
I keeping made during the last admin-
i istration in that department. Invest-
! igationa show that the errors made in
I the last twenty years would go up into
j the hundreds of thousands. They
were made under Republican adminis- ,
trations the same as under the Popu-
list.
Marching Toward \ rnexuela.
| Hubnom Ay res, Nov. 1. The New
Yor: Herald correspondent in Rio,
j Hrasll, telegraphs that news has been
received from the (Jovernor of Para
j confirming the report of the passage
( of Itritish troops through tho terri-
tory.
captain Klrkman Esonerated.
! Fort Kilry, Kan , Nov. 4.—Cantain
| Joel T. Klrkman. who has been on
J trial before a court of United States
| army officers, charged with conduct
unbecoming uu officer, has been ac-
j quitted on every charge and specifics
i tion.
Cleveland's Aunt Dead.
' Noiiwai k, Ohio, Nov. 1. — Mrs.
| Daniel Morse, the oldest resident of
this couuty, died yesterday, aged 91.
j She was a sister of President Cleve-
I land a mother.
The man who gets $5,000 for having
j both legs taken off in a railway picnic,
! certainly cannot kick.
A man never grows more eloquent
j about hard times than when he talks
about them to his wife.
1 oannot speak too highly of Piso'a Curo
lor Consumption.—Mrs. Frank Mobds,
210 W. 22dSt., New York, Oct. 29, 1894.
Borrowed troubles are tho heaviest.
A bald-headed man parts his hair
on the what-is-left side.
A bluff works as successfully in a
i love affair as in a poker game.
I The father should fear to walk where
it would not be safe for his children to
I travel.
When Greek meets Greek then comes !
tho talk of war.
llass: "Did you hear what old Sir-
nikus said about you?"
Cass: "No, and I don't know as I
care to hear it.''
Bass: "Possibly not; but then think
of the pleasure it would give mo to
tell you.
Mothem appreciate the icood work
of Parker's Oinger Tonic, with Its reviving qualities
— s boon >u tho paln-atrlcken, aleeploss and nervous.
The lover who will lie to his sweet-
heart cannot be depended upon to
make a truthful husband.
When yon come to realize
that your corns are gone, and no more pain, how
grateful you feel. All the work of lllndercorua. 15c.
Some foolish young people don't
know the difference between a broken
heart and a disordered liver.
Li Hung Chang has been empowered
to negotiate a commercial treaty with
Japan.
Ten plates of John Ruskin, some of
them in colors, will be published soon
from tho Orpington press, with de-
scriptive passages from his works.
It doesn't always follow that a jour-
nal makes a thundering report because
it is printed on a lightning press.
It is clever of us to bury an old ani-
mosity, but it isn't the thing to put a
ombstone over it.
If Troubled With Fore Eyes
Jackson's Indian Eye Halve will positively
curo them. 25c at all drug stores.
A Boston authoress has published a
book whieh she calls, "My First Loaf."
We'll bet it's heavy.
FIT8 -All Fits stopped fror bv Dr. K lino's Orrat
Merve Restorer. No Kltsafter the Him ilay 'a m<\
Marvelouscun's. Treatlsoaiulf2trlalbottlefre ti
fit casus. ot'Uil toI>r. Khul.IKII Arch St., I*lula., 1'*.
The politician who wrote an open
letter wishes now that he had kept it
closed.
The plant ot happiness cannot thrivo
without the aid of cheerfulness.
The interstate commerce law hasn't
affected tho undertaker. Ho carries
ns many deadheads as ever.
The fisheries question—Is there any-
thing left in the pocket flask.
The difference between a buzz saw
and a bull-dog is that when tho for-
mer is most dangerous it never shows
ts teeth.
A little four-year-old created a rip-
plo by remarking to the Sunday-school
class: "Our dog's dead. I'll bet the
angels were scared when they saw him
coming up the walk. lie's awful
cross to strangers.
"Chestnuts!" yelled several persons
in the gallery at the minstrel show.
"That's right, gentleman," responded
Bones, "if you don't get what you
want, ask for it."
If he were fed regularly tho shark
would not bo half as ravenous as lie is.
A Lost Cause—The clubman's excuse
to his wife for coming home at 1 a. m.
"What's a temperance saloon, papa?'
"It's one with a back door oulv."
Cows ara no.v milked by machinery.
Milk is adulterated by hand, as usual.
It is estimated that the commerce
of the great lakes this year will ex-
ceed 45,000,000 tons, of a value of over
8010,000,000.
In Whatcom county, Wash., this
year there are only three hop-raisers
who are picking their crops, owing to
tho low prices.
The Bank of England is 200 years
old. It has 1,500 employes.
Japan has 400 newspapers.
India has 140 ootton mills.
London has 90,000 paupers.
The tomato sausage is new.
America has 180,000 preaf/hers,
Chicago has 25 woman lawyers.
The Sugar Trust has made radical
changes tightening its grip on trade.
In Paris the demand for small dogs
is met by rearing them on an alcoholic
diet, which retards their growth.
"Hanson's Magic Corn Salve."
Warranted to cure or money rofundod. Ask yom
drufc~gl*t for It. l'rtco 15 conta
Many ranchmen in Central Wyom-
ing aro planning to cultivate alfalfa
for the purpose of fattening sheep and
hogs.
ir the Baby is Cnttina: Teetn
Bo aure and use that eld and well-tried remedy, Mas.
w ikslow's Soothikq SYRUP for Children Teeth In*.
The rates of transmission on Atlan-
tic cables is 18 words of fivo letters
each per minute. With tho "duplex"
this rate of transmission is nearly
doubled.
liegeman's Camphor fee with Glycerine.
Tho original and only genuine. Cures Chapped Hands
and Face, C'old Sores, Ac. C. O. Clark Co., N. llavcn, ct.
Cashmere shawls aro much cheaper
than some years back, but there aro
many worn by ladies of rank and fash-
ion that have cost 85,000 or £1,000.
A company producing only one form
or one part of a bicycle, tho jointless
t m covers two acres of ground with
ts works at Birmingham, England.
7-f
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. Th(p many, who live bet-
ter thiin others and etijuy fife more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world's best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in tho
remedy, Svrup of Figg.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most accept ble and pleas-
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax-
ative; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
ana permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid-
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak-
ening them nnd it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug-
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man-
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and lieing well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
Paid often con- |
centratcs all
its Misery in I
ST. J100BS OIL
ITfle
at
once W H a WHVWWV WSia a cure.
I firmly believe that Plso
Curo kept mo from having
quick ^Consumption." —Mrs.
II. D. DARLING, Beaver
Meadow, N. Y., Juno 18, 1895.
Cures Where AM EIso Fails. BEST COUCH SYRUP.
I'A TES GOOD. FSE IN TIMTJ. SOI.n BY DRUGGISTS. 25 CTS.
Deafness Can Not De Cured
"By local applications, ns they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness la caused by an inflamed con-
dition of the mucous lining of the Eus-
tachian Tube. When the tube Is in-
flamed you have a rumbling sound or
Imperfect hearing, and when It is en-
tirely closed Deafness Is the result, and
unless the Inflammation can be taken
out nnd this tube restored to its normal
condition, hearing will be destroyed for-
ever; nine cases out cf ten are caused
by Catarrh, which Is nothing but an In-
flamed condition of the mucous Bur-
fares.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any ease of Deafness (caused by Ca-
tarrh) that cannjt bo cured by Hall's
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists; 75c.
Hall's Family Pills, 25c.
The British potato crop is this year
over 22,000,000 bushels in excess of
that of last year.
The highest inhabited building in
Europe is tho Alpine Club House, on
Mount Rosa—12,000 feet above the sea
level.
There aro now twenty-five women
in Chicago who are practicing lawyers,
and fifteen more will soon bo admitted
to the Bar.
Telephone charges in France are to
be reduced to fivo cents for a three
minute conversation within a radius of
fifteen mileau
Mary Walker, who intends starting
an Adamless Eden In New York State
is a little out of reckoning. New En-
gland is the old maids' paradise.
City man (mistaking tho sawmiller
for the farmer)—What kind of board-
ing can I get at your plaoe?
Sawmllle (innocently)-Mostly weath-
er boardln', but there's a little fioorin
left over, you kin hev.
How melancholly the moon must
feol when it has enjoyed the fullness
of prosperity and got reduced to its
last quarter.
"Tho Companion hu beta growing better, brighter every year for n
than ilxty yenn."
"52 Times a Year." Subscription, $1.75.
The value of the next volume of The Companion is suggested by the titles and authors of a few of the
Articles announced for 1896, as given below.
A Notable Series.
The following Articles of exceptional value from the most Eminent Authorities:
THE BAR AS A PROFESSION. {
WHAT THE SPEAKER DOES.
U0W A PRIME MINISTER IS MADE.
Three Cabinet Ministers.
The Lord Chief Justice of England.
Judge Oliver Wendell Holmes.
\ Hon. Thomas B. Reed*
J By Justin McCarthy, M. P.
/
Naval Adventures.
No other periodical tins evor b«n ftilr to nnnounce articles | AMONG CHINESE PIRATES. Admiral A. H. Markham.
by three Cabiuet Minister*.
SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. Hon. Hoko Smith. ! SEA PETS- 15^ Admiral T. H. Stevens.
SECRETARY OP AGRICULTURE. Hon. J. Sterling Worton. LORD NELSON'S SHIPMATE. Sir Georg. Elliot, K. C.B.
SECRETARY OF THE NAVY. Hon. II. A. Herbert. ! THE CAPTURE OF RANGOON. Admiral P. li. Colomb.
Serial Stories for the Year 1896.
from the great number offered a few of the best have been selected.
THE VENTRILOQUIST. A Thrilling Story of Southern Life. By Miss M. G. McClelland.
IN THE CLUTCH OF THE TSAR. An American's Life among the Russians. By C. A. Stephens.
ROSAMOND'S VIOLIN. A Story of fascinating interest for Girls. By Ellea Douglas Deland.
IN INDIAN MEADOW. Adventurous Pioneer l ife of two Boys 90 years ago. By Charles Adams.
Send for Full Illustrated Prospectus and Sample Copies Free.
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Vf. N. tT„ Wit'HIT A—VOL. 8, NO. 43.
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Yeargain, G. W. Cleveland County Leader. (Lexington, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 18, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 9, 1895, newspaper, November 9, 1895; Lexington, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc108947/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.