Cleveland County Leader (Lexington, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 8, No. 19, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 4, 1899 Page: 3 of 8
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Fill
Wg are sure you do not.
Nobody wants it. But it comes
to many thousands every year.
Itcomes to those who have had
coughs and colds until the
throat is raw, and the lining
membranes of the lungs are
inflamed. Stop your cough
when it first appears, and you
remove the great danger of
future trouble.
pe
stops coughs of all kinds. It
does so because it is a sooth-
ing and healing remedy of great
power. Thismr esitthegreat-
est preventive to consumption.
Put one of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Plasters over your lungs
A whole Medical
Library f ecc.
For four rents in stamps to pay post-
Age, wo will send you sixteen medical
book*.
Medical Advlco Froa.
We have the exclusive services of
some <>f the most eminent physicians
In the United States. Unusual oppor-
tunities and long experience emi-
nently tit them lor giving you medical
advice. Write freelv all the partic-
ulars In voiir r ise. You will receive a
l prompt repi*. without cost.
Address, DR. J. C. AYER,
Lowell. Mass.
A dead man can not be said to be of
any real importance unless his funeral
is held awaiting' the arrival of some
relatives.
Some people who claim to be from
Missouri are really from Arkansas.
Yon must beat it into tlieir heads.
The poorer a workman, the more
apt he is to take up with some foolish
fad, and neglect his work still more.
Reward of &20.000 Offered.
A wealthy lady lost a satchel con-
taining jewels worth SI ">0,000 and of-
fered a reward of 940,000. The loss of
health is far more serious, and yet it
can easily be recovered. A little mon-
ey invested in Ilostetter's Stomach
Bitters will restore strength, purify the
blood, regulate the bowels and help
the stomach to properly digest food.
Don't, deride the vanity of others. It
isn't modesty that creates a censor.
Health for Ten Cents.
CascnretH mnko bowels and kidneys net
naturally, destroy microbes, cure headache,
billiousnes.s and constipation. All druggists.
Don't expect your opinions to fit if
you obtain them ready made.
I know that my life was saved by P.'so's
Cure for Consumption.—John A. Miller,
Au (Sable, Michigan, April 21, 18U5.
Never attempt to talk if your mouth
is full or your head is empty.
Blrs. WiiiKlow's fcootnmjy Syrup
Forchil Iren teething:.softens tiie gums,reduccn inMnm.
ation, allays pain, cures wind colic. :li> teats a bottle,
It's almost impossible for a man to
find anything to do nowadays except
work.
Richard's Magic Catarrh Exjel'ant
Co., Omaha, Neb. Write for particu-
ars.
Men never overlook a chance to take
a vacation, but it's different with gas
meters.
TO CITKK A COM) IN ONE I>AY.
Take Laxative Hromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund the money i' it fails to cure.
2&c. The genuine has I.. 11. y. on each tablet.
The women are wearing trains that
are big enough to step on, but not big
enough to see.
Old age comes sooner than we think.
Some railroads won't hire a brakeman
who is over 28 years old.
No man who has never known what
it is to go hungry is lit to get mar-
ried.
MISFIT AMBITIONS.
It is safe to wager that every human
being In his secret soul yearns to do
something which is precisely what is
farthest from his powers of achieve-
ment. Mary Anderson used fiercely to
resent any criticisms of the strange
things she did with brushes and paint,
and for years thought she was going
to make a great painter of herself.
Jessie Bartlett Davis would rather
live oiit on her Indiana farm than
queen it on the stage, and Calve, too,
says she is never happier than when
roaming the mountains in her airy
country home.
Viola Allen says if she were not an
actress she would rather carve a great
statue or write a book. Edna Wal-
lace Hopper has literary pretensions,
and Gladys Wallis would rather be a
locomotive engineer than anything else
on earth.
May Irwin wants most of all to live
In a quiet home and keep house for her
two sons. Isabella Irving would be
happier if the public would recognize
her as a musician; May Robson wants
to be a famous sculptor, and Delia Fox
would rather be a tragedienne than a
soubrctte.
Amelie Rives, after gaining fame
with her novel, "The Quick or the
Dead," tried to distinguish herself as
a sculptor, and failed. Mary Manner-
ing, the pretty and capable actress,
wants to write a book, and has many
short sketches ready that she has made
from real life.
S
i
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I
A Q K everybody you know so
nd !\ save their tin tags for yen
e <
The Tin Tags taken from Horseshoe, "J. T.,"
Cross Bow, Good Luck—and Drummond
Natural Leaf—will pay for any one or all of
this list of desirable and useful things—and
you have your good chewing tobacco besides.
Every man, woman and child in America can find something
on this list that they would like to have and can have—FREE!
Writs your name and address plainly and send every tag you
can get to us—mentioning the number of the present you want.
Any assortment of the different kinds of tags mentioned above
will be accepted as follows:
TAGS| TAGS
1 Match Box, quaint design, im- 19 Alarm Clock, nickel, warranted 2(H)
ported from Japan 25 20 Carver*, buckhorn handle, good
2 Knifr, one blade, good steel .... 2"i i # steel 200
S ^ci^s irs, 4^-inch, pood steel ... . 2.*> 21 Six Rogers' Teaspoons, bet qu. 1 225
4 Child's Set, Knife, Fork and Spnon 25 22 Knives and Forks, six each, buck-
5 Salt an l Pepper, one each, aiiad- | horn handler ... .... 250
ruple plate on white metal . 60 23 Clock, 8-day, Calendar, I hcimom-
6 Razor, hollow ground, fine Fnglish | eter, Barometer . 500
steel 60 -4 Stove, Wilson Heater, size No. 30
7 Butter Knife, triple plate, beat qual. 60 j or No. 40 ... 500
8 Sircar Shell, triple platr, best quality CO 25 Tool Set, not playthings, lilt real
9 Stamp Box, sterling silver 70 I _ tools 050
10 Knife, "Keen Kurtrr," two blades 70 20 Toilet Set, e'efcorattd porcclain,
11 Butcher Knife, "Keen Kuttcr," j very handsome *00
8-inch blade 75 , 27 Watch, s. lid silver, full jeweled 1000
12 Shears "Keen Kutter," 8-inch, 28 Sewing M.icbinc, fust class, with
nickel 75 j all attachments lf00
1,1 Nut Set,Cracker and 6 Picks, silver 80 20 Revolver, Colt's, best quality 1500
14 Nail Kile, sterling silver, amethyst 1.0 Rifle, Winchester. 10-sliot, 22-cnl.lCOO
set, 0-inch . . 100 31 Shot Gun, double barrel, hammer-
15 Tooth lbush, sterling silver, anie- less, stub twist 2000
thyst set. C-inch IOC .12 Guitar (Washburn), rosewo< d, in-
lf> Paper Cutter, sterling silver, anie- laid with mother-of-pearl 2000
thyst ^et, 7-inch *100 33 Bicycle, standard make, ladies'or
It Base Bill, "Association/' bettqua) 100 Rants' 9000
18 Watch, stem wind and set, guaran- BOOKS—30 choice selections —same
teed good time keeper 200 I as la^t year's list, 40 tags cach.
A woman likes am in to remember
what ache she had last the sa ne as he
"lilces her to remember how he likes
his coffee.
I'„ is strange, but children who are
too young to gossip, seem to have a
very good time.
Richard's Magic Catarrh Expellant
Co., Omaha, Neb. Write for particu-
lars.
Airships will only add to the trou-
bles of mankind. Every time a man
starts out on a flying trip he will wor-
ry about how he will land.
A sissy man is one who feels per-
fectly at home and at his ease when
his wife begins to pass around the
napkins to her guests at a party.
There is so much sympathy for the
wader dog that it amounts to an ad-
vantage.
SPRAINS
A BAD
•) WORSE
\ WORST
\ C be promptly cured without delay
or trilling by tho
\ GOOD
V BETTER
0 BEST
() remedy for pain
ST. JACOBS OIL.
farm"
SEEDS
rSalicr'8 Setdl arc minted to Prodnrr.
rHakloaLather. R.Troy, i a.. astontalMd U World
' \ rotiacl 1 b itli Hi,; Four i> it ; J- pd U t
J V-I.kmU, V. i . 1.1 l.us: .la. . a 111 I .
fi 1 WI05. Minn . bv growi- I'U Sul/or's
|.nr ticre. If roti itoubi, w 1 • then. U'e wisn togai
00 uew cuatomi rs, In <*<• will send on trial
10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 10c.
I 10 pk^ofnre farm «r. ! .It fin-li. Hnpe for Bhwp, ]
\ t!ic $ tiiwHorn. •' I'.iT V iir • >n? !• aidless ftarl^j
romus Iurrmi-— t--l ii:>: 7 t • - ha p r arr«,<i:i «<r>
_ >ils,etc., "4 Ic. Wheat.' iu.-lu.linprour mammoth
B«-«i Catalogue, tiling alt our Farm j
' f, 1*.. a.l inv.1 « i ur •> r 'i| ' of but
100 i i ita fMMlttrel? worth 10. t. . • t
k Mart,100.00AbhU.Kurd 1'otuto i
tf l.ttll an-
POTATOES
This effsr ex; ir?s Hovpmber 30, IS99. *
Address all your Tags and the correspondence about theni to '
DRUMMOND BRANCH, St. Louis, Mo.
FREE W1TIS OnDER. !,. .b. VIMELESS
T.J. Skinner, OGlumlius, Kan.
IEF
"DIRT DEFIES THE KING." THEN
' SAPOLIO
IS GREATER THAN ROYALTY ITSELF,
DR. MARTEL'S
FRENCH
FEMALE
P5LLS
Particulars an«l tmti-
monials in plain noaled
letter M au.! d Pei k.
FRLNCH DRUG CO., 3B1 & 383 Pearl St., Ne* York
FOR
WOMEN
Awarded Highest Honor*—
Medal and Diploma, World'®
Columbian Exposition, also special
Gold A\edal and Diploma, California
Mitfn titer Fair.
A
Pure
Cream
of Tartar
Baking
Powder
HOW CREAM TARTAR IS MADE.
Cream cf Tartar—which enters so largely into the manufacture of Dr
Price's Cream Baking Powder—is obtained from the turt Wines of France,
Germany, Austria, etc. The Crude Tartar, called Argolis, is deposited on the
tides of the wine casks during the fermentation of the wine. After the wine
is drawn off, this crystal deposit is removed, dried and exported to America
where the elaborate process of refining takes place, producing the tnowwhito
crystals of Cream of Tartar.
In singling out Dr. Pricc's Cream Baking Powder from all
Its competitors and bestowing upon it a special Gold Medal, the
California Midwinter Fair concurred in the verdict given by the
World's Fair jury, which awarded both medal and diploma to
Dr. Price's Cream baking Powder, declaring it superior to every
other brand.
The victories won by it at all the great fairs, and its
wonderful growth in popular favor, due to its purity, uniformity,
wholesomeness, keeping qualities and excellence, have confirmed
and emphasized it as
"The Foremost Baking Powder in all Ihe World"
Note.—The Cream of Tartar Refinery, controlled by the Price Baking Powder
Company, is the most complete and extensive in the World.
UUHKft
Id 1 lo S UT
If qoi u> unci
Pre «uU coi.itRi n.
CINCINNATI,0.[
IT. H. A.
CURE Y'JURSELF!
| I'm' Hit: €jS for iiuiiutlira.
| dim haiKt'B, in 11MiniiihI I« >IIH,
irritutioiiH or ulceration*
of III II C O U H IIH'lll I'l'll IM'f.
I'ainleiH, ami not aatrlu*
^\THEEVANSCHEMICAICO. "• poisonous.
^unuxiTi n i " 1 Sold by DrmricUt*.
or wnt In plain wrnpp«r,
liy prrpnirl, for
?i w. or iMittlw. r.'.T''.
C ircular m nt on rnqn««t
!• Thompson's Eye V'^ter
Beat Counh Syrup. Taatca Good. Ubo
In tinio. Hold hy dmgKi*ts.
W. N. u.—WICHITA—NO. 5—1899.
When Answering Advertisements Kindly
Mention This Caper.
} • A Natural IBiack by J
j Buckingham's Dye.
! 1'rico 60 ccnts of all di' « or It. 1'. Hull & Co.,
N:islnt:t. N. II.
j PATENTS, TRADE MARKS
Kxfiminftttnn nnil Advlco mm t" I'atontMtjtllty « f .n-
1 Trillion, hi '.I fur "ln\e.itoiV On ilo,' r How InUota
; 1'iitu'it." O VAKIilit.I. AH'JS. Wiu-Wnirton, 1). O.
ltiiltlmoru A Ohio.
From time to time articles appear
in various papers about the so-called
"Hill control" of Baltimore & Ohio,
together with exhaustive details of
various struggles which are supposed
to be in progress between Mr. Hill
and other people in the Baltimore &
Ohio board. The details of these strug-
gles are very interesting, but are open
to the criticism that they have no ex-
istence in fact. The plain facts of the
matter are, first that Mr. Hill does not
control Baltimore & Ohio, nor has he
at any time expressed any desire or
taken any steps in that direction;
second, that there has at r.o time been
any differences of opinion between Mr.
Hill and the Baltimore & Ohio people
with regard to a selection of general
manager, the selection of Mr. Under-
wood being satisfactory to everybody;
and third, that the delay in regard to
Mr. Underwood's acceptance of the
general managership of lialtimore &
Ohio was due to matters connected
with the Soo Line more than anything
else.
It is pretty well understood here
that Mr. Hill was invited to interest
himself in lialtimore & Ohio, on the
theory that he could be of great ser-
vice to the property as an adviser, and
to this end he, with some of hU
friends, purchased a substantial inter-
est in the f)referrcd stock of the
company. This interest is nowhere
near a controlling interest, but is still
very large. It may be said without
fear of contradiction, that there Is en-
tire harmony in Baltimore & Ohio
circles from top to bottom.
The frirl with a new hut that is be-
coming is never satisfied until the man
she likes best and the K'iH she likes
least have seen it.
Richard's Magic Catarrh Kxpellant
Co., Omaha, Neb. Write for particu-
lars.
Young men for love; old men for
law and medicine.
llnnr'it 'I liInt
We offer Ono Hundred Dollar* rrwnr.l fornny
CAM'OtCiitBirli that cuunot bo cure d by Hull s
Catarrh Cup ^ ( In;NI.Y & m> Tolo.lo. o.
V,'e, thn undersiiiiii d, Imvo known C. J.
Cheney for llio lust 15 \< urn and bi llcvo him
nerfn tly Uoin.. aldo In all minlnc** transact win
and tlnunrlnlly aide t. i-urryoutanyobl.ua-
ttons made by their llrm.
! \\'i st U Truux Wn.m sale Pnn'Klsts, Toledo,
O.; WaldinK. Kinnaii & Maruu, Wbolesulo
DrufffflstK. Toledo. Ohla.
liall s ( 'hIii rili i 'u; ■■ is taken Internally,.net-
! Inn directly upon tin-hi
of III!- system. 'restliinMiiiilH Bi nt lice, i rice
Jf* per bottle S.-M l>> all linn irlsUk
liull ■ Family rllllIN th® bt* U
Whenever a nervous man reads a
description of how it cancer originates
lie begins to feel all over himself for
I little lumps.
WOMEN AS CRIMINALS.
Women as criminals are very smart,
but they cannot keep crime hidden so
well as a man.
A woman is more desperate in love
affairs than in anything else. Men get
desperate about money matters.
If a woman of the criminal type loves
a man she will, as a rule, do almost
anything to win him.
It is difficult to convict women of
murder; the jurors are men, and they
sympathize.
Men don't want to have women
hanged, but a jury of women might
go to the other extreme.
Women don't like women as well as
men like men.
A woman has no sympathy for an-
other woman who lias gone wrong,
but often a man will have sympathy
for a wrong-doing fellow, and will help
him out..
If a man doesn't like a man he wants
to have the other know it. It is just
the reverse between two women.
A half-way decent woman will do
anything to hide a criminal who is her
lover.
Get a woman in a tight place and
she will tell about a crime quicker than
a man would.
When a woman is led to believe that
a man has f;i 1 n her up, she is apt to
tell about his crime,
Men kill themselves when they aro
broke; women don't. The women can
stand 11 better, and are mure used
to it.
Moi l of tie suicides of women r.re
on account of tie 'rtion.
When a man is deserted he gets an-
other girl and kegimi life over.—V -vs
of a Veteran Man Francisco Detec-
tive.
Richard's Magic Catarrh Kxpellanl
Co., Omaha, Neb. \>rito for particu-
lars.
Why don't contractors put sticking-
plas; 'r on the walls of houses?
Why isn't it proper to refer to a
cigarette fiend as a pack animal?
Why isn't a woman good to herself
when sho permits a man to love her?
Why does a man wish for a good
appetite and then try to get rid of it?
Why chouldn't the nose and chin be
at variance when words aro constant-
ly passing between them '
"La Creole"
HAIR RESTORER
¥ your merchant doesn't handle, send us SI and get prepaid to any part U. S. or Canada.
Is a perfect bail
dressing and
...Restorer.
VAN VLEET-MANSFIELO DRUC CO., MEMPHIS.
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Lydick, J. D. Cleveland County Leader (Lexington, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 8, No. 19, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 4, 1899, newspaper, February 4, 1899; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc108961/m1/3/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.