The Enid Weekly Wave. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 9, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 20, 1902 Page: 1 of 8
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The Oldest and Most
Popular
LOCAL DAILY
of
Central and Western
Oklahoma.
Head by More People
than any other
Strictly Local
DAILY PAPER
in Oklahoma
n
h
S
).
Vol. 9--N0. 46.
IT WAVES, SURGES, ROARS AND REBOTJN'lJS, ONLY TO COME BACK AGAIN )V1TH GREATER FORCE FOR ENID, GARFIELD COUNTY
Enid, Oklahoma Territory Thursday, November 20, 1902
OKLAHOMA AND DEMOCRACY.
Phone No. 123
BI06HEMIG MINERAL WATER.
OF LAMAR COUNTY, TEXAS.
A A',4 L YSIS- -1) up!lea te.
Austin, Texas, Oct. 23,1901. j A specific for dyspepsia, constipa-
This is to certify that I have had tion, kidney and bladder diseases,
the mineral water furnished by Mr. dropsy and impure blood. For ner-
Isaac Bernstein,of Paris, Texas, anal- vous prostration due to delicicncy of
yzed, with the following results: 1 cell salts, this water is most valuable
Parts per Grains j For diseases of the glandular system
100,000 per gal. and for kindred diseases, scrofula,
SndiumChloride 128.60 7f>.o.'il8 skin eruption, nephhitis and cist c
Sodium Bicarbonate 00.44 52.7427 j diseases, it is unsurpassed: also for
Sodium Sulphate 125.40 73.713!) diarrhoea, flux, summer diseases of
Calcium Sulphate 204.00 118.0087 I children, chlorosis anaemia and earlv
Magnesium " 130.00 79.3124 j stages of Qright's disease. It is vaf-
Sslica _ 3.70 2.1577 uable in many of the conditions inci-
Ferric Oxiiie &Alum. 5,00 3,2058 j dental to women, but in all cases the
i drinking of this water augments cure
Total 694.80 405.1930 As a Mineral Water it is unsurpassed.
E. T. dumble, State Geologist. |
Recommended by the following Physicians of Paris, Texas, the home of
the Biocbemic Water:
B F McCuiston M D, G W Bedford, J !• Hooks, Harry Taylot. Geo Stell M D,
Wm S Baldwin M D, Edwin H Kies, KB Leach. W E Daily M 11, Carlton
Fanner MD, J F Clark, J B Chapman, W W Stell, J W Haden M D
7-7tf O Smith M D, R R Walker, E C' Zindell, and J M Fort, M O.
For Sale by and for farther information see
Hlnid Liquor Go Phone32
• *. • JSi \ •
Enid Plaining Mill Co.
Manufacturers of
Sash, Doors, Frames, Mouldings,
Before building call and see our line, of inside finish
121m porch work, etc. Prices reasonable-
Enid, Oklahoma.
Phone 182.
SuMbe for the Wave.
BEGINNING OF BKBT SUGAR. T0 WED THE DGLI£ST MEN.
KIDNEY CUBE.
There is no disease so insinuat-
ing, so slow but sure, as kidney dis-
ease, or so wide-spread. The symp-
toms are so slight as to generally
escape notice.
The first indications appear in
the urine, with varied efleets. The
quantity may be Increased or de
creased; it is likely to be highly col-
ored and scalding; it nuiy be pale
or thin, or thick and milky with a
sediment. Later on more pro-
nounced symptoms will be present,
such as dizziness, bloating, etc.,
with marked bladder and urinary
disorders.
Poisonous waste matter is collected
by the blood from all parts of the svs
tern and carried to the kidneys, where
it !• separated and cast out through the
urine. The kidneys deal with the blood
only, deriving nourishment there-
from. Hence, if the blood is bad the
kidneys are not only overworked, bu
underfed. How necessary is It, there-
fore, that the purity and vitality of the
blood should bo maintained. It is plain
why the great blood purifier and
strengthener-Dr. Barter's Iron Tonic-
has been successfully used in treating
kidney diseases and in preventing same.
In purifying the blood the kidneys are
greatly relieved, while, at the snme.tinie,
new strength and vitality are given
these organs. The following letter tells
a very old story:
I'ine Knot, Ky., June 25, 1902.
The Dr. Uarter Medicine Co., Dayton, O.
Gentlemen: i had a severe case of
typhoid fever six years ago, which left
my kidneys in bad order. I have tried
a number of remedies and taken treat-
ment from doctors, but Dr. Harter's Iron
Tonic has done me more good than
everything else. C. Cordell,
Merchant and Mine Operator.
There are thousands of just such
cases as the above that are treated
without results because they are
wrongly treated. Mr. Cordell's
condition resulted from an exhaust-
ing fever; the kidneys, as well as
the rest of the system, had been
wasted by disease. No wonder Dr.
Harter's lron Tonic •promptly cured,
because it purified and enriched the
blood, ana such blood carried new
strength and vitality directly to the
kidneys and to all the organs.
FOR SALE EVERYWHERE.
Kind* of Rtijn
What is the lix
y. if you spend i
f earn-
as fast as I
H ut's all rig-lit, father. I
> making
in if it just 11 much as you
'•klvii Life
The Ftimnein! I'l.
Man (In theater, to
front) Madam, I paid ont
a half for this seat.
Woman ' (calmly)
$40. N.Y, Weekly.
ind v
That
your bus
you know,
those two
! Yonkers
a oman in
dollar and
>ur hat
hat eost
imnir
"Yi
\ niMtiu
vife is n
stories'.
likes fl« t
vs then
pt Ion.
great admirer <
i' n in v>ve|w; h\
r ti inp no\
'.altimore News.
OrlBlnnli, a Veuetmbl. r,D.„ and
Developed br Hans of That
Nation.
The preat( Rugnr-beet industry of
11r w.rld owes its very existence to
'' < "t \ ilmorin, anys Success.
!1;)' sugar beet grown in
(•rave lid not contain enough sugar
"" "!"erc«. The amount of sugar
< I I e easily (ietermined in the
1 ' '• 1 111 in making the (est the re-
1 r. (lurtive .jiialitief of the plant were
:-lwar^ (1 -stroyed. Vilmorin learned
' ' " tract th • pulp without de-
' " plant, and by selection
reeding he grew a pl,-nt
!!;inn 1 ,rh the great industry is now
f 1 (led. We owe also to Vilmorin
t!:c present carrot, a vegetable which
was nothing more than a thin, hard,
woody root, unfit for the stomach of
a sheep or a cow. Year after year. I
he sowed in a bed and carefully ex '
a mined every root. By selecting seed I
from only the best plants for the
new sowing, he produced a carrot |
with more flesh and less wood. The
horse radish, the turnip, and, indeed,
the potato vine, were once plants
with thin, dry, woody roots, without
the least suggestion that they would
ever develop into food for man or
beast.
Artificial Eyelid.,
The latest surgical triumph is the
grafting of a new set of upper and
lower eyelids to the eyes of a man
who lost his original set in a fire,
says London Science Siftings. The ac-
cident had left both eyeballs entirely
unprotected, and there was d( nger of
the victim losing his sight intirely.
It wa resolved to replace ti nm by
graft in? four new eyelids if prssible,
bv taking the skin from the i ip of
the patient. It was necessary to pro-
ceed slowly, but the experiment was
successful from the start. TI e four
new eyelids perform their normal
functions naturally.
tome EaMp*.
Buckeye—What does a menibsr of
the legislature get in your state?
Keystone—That depends. Some-
times one is sentenced for a year or
two, but more frequently he gets off
scot-free.—Catholic Standard and
Times.
Husband (angrily—What! More
money? When I'm dend you'll prob-
ably have to beg for all the money you
get.
Wife (calmly)—Well, I'll be better
off than some poor women who never
had any practice.—Chicago Daily
News.
The ladies of the christian church
will have a pillow show in the church
1 building Dec 17. There will be about
500 pillows on exhibition and the
Society of Lovrir American Girls ladies who want new ideas on pillow-
Whlnh II. . *i B< a m
Haa Ilern Formed fop
That Purpose,
Extremes meet in the fickle fem-
inine fancy. The attractiveness of
the Adonis for women is not to be
compared with that of the man who
is so fearfully and wonderfully ugly
as to serve as a living confirmation
of the truth of the Darwinian theory
regarding the descent of man, says
the New York Herald.
A be
[ should come and see the show.
Catholic Fair.
Preparations are being made for a
magnificent fair at Schiller Hall, on
November 24, 25 and 26.
Meals will be served for three days
at 2ac a meal.
There will be a multitude of at-
f lovely American girls i ,,A be u"ful display of ai-
1 a societv. the obiect of ; 1.^1 and us.eful "i'l
How Tliey finnr.
First Year—1The biggest trout I ever
caught was a foot and a half long, and
he had n big fish-hook in his stomach.
Tenth Year—Did I ever tell you
nhout the trout 1 onee caught? It was
over a yard long, and had an anchor in
his stomaeh. N Y. Weekly.
have formed a society, the object of i
v' i< h is to search the land for the
' ,. -st men to be found outside a
) useum and, when found, to marry
t e;u Ms soon as possible.
Kver since the time when Mira-
"ti. the ugliest of all Frenchmen,
I ! is host of female admirers
5 ideoiit* men have been wor-
•• v \vmnen.
•• i i i'iinary fondness of
• t- i t-xi reuiely ul !v men is
n n • "ine especia I
• ; ■ criminal
iillainous
f a par-
«'\'i ib-
f h be-
a ccu si
! •-«•( ions criu
ck and ho-
ld..! of all t! e -.mm w' o
• ; « n t • t rial. The : 1 . e ms
; i ti ., nee and the f uler his
• ' « .• .* t! e in re ent^ u-iastic is
ti e worship of the women.
"1 e is so delightfully !;gly," said
• i } r its gii l, when asked what par-
ic"I r fascination a brutal criminal
>< > for her.
It ih a fact that in all ages and
•iniries this strange feminine ten-
♦ncy has been strikingly demon-
i rated.
No explanation that seems plai>ai-
ole has ever been given.
ItlCALIBTIC GAMU.
be one of the conspicuous features.
All donations to the fair by city
merchants will be made known later
to the public and advertised durin"
the fair time. A cordial invitation
to all our citizens. The Committee.
Time Table.
Obo'-taw, Oklahoma & Gulf H. R. cu,
VE.-T UOOND.
I Trn. No. I |
about mv fiction!"
The Old«"r th- Peltier.
Ella That fellow Ik a soft mark.
Stella Yes, men are like shoes; tlx
older they yet the easier they are.
Cole's original Hot Blast Stoves
keep down the coal bills. See Frantz
Hardware Co. 9-30d&wlm
$40.00 buys one business lot or two
residence lots in the townsite of We-
woka, capital oi the Seminole nation
Grand distribution 011 November 20,
11)02. $1,000 Is offered for lot 1. block
20, and $500 for lot 3, block 40, and
one of these lots may perhaps be dis-
tributed to you. For particulars call
upon S. I. Hudkins, Local Sales
Agent, over Faubion's grocery, room
12- 10-21d&wlm
Notice.
The Ladies Aid Society of the M.
E church will have a rummage sale
beginning Wednesday, Nov. lHth, at
the old land office building. All arti-
cles from a darning needle to a
threshing machine will be on sale.
Mrs, Dr. Way, Pres.
Market Report.
Wheat, 57c.
Oats, 20 (a> 25c.
Eggs, 15 c.
Broomcorn, $70 (a) $75
Corn, 25 @ 30c.
Butter, loc.
Hogs, $5.50 (a) $5.75
Ducks and geese, 2ic.
Chickens, spring, 6c.
Hens, 6c.
Turkeys, 5(«)7c.
New hay, baled, 22(a25c
Hay, $6 (a> $8.
Fifty Years the Standard
Awarded
Highest Honors World's Fair.
Highest Tests U. S. Gov't Chemists
Howe 1, T
Wister I. T...
South McAlester
Shawnee
Oklahoma city
El Reno
Weatherford
Ivlijifiam
lv ti :45 a id
lv2:."{/) p m
Iv 5:65 "
lv 7:20 "
lv 8:15 "
ar 10:00 1
lv h:;jo
lv 10:00
vl10 67
EAST BOUND.
Weatherford
El Reno
Oklahoma City...
Shawnee
South McA ester
Wister
Howe
I No. 2, | No.
11,50a, m
.. - 1 v 1:33 p. m,
... \v2:U2 "
... Iv 4:00 '•
.. 1 v 7:20 "
... lv 10;05p ni
...: arlO :20 "
5:15 j.
... tJ;15
7 ;4h
The throu/h t rains connect, with all tra'i
fother lines at all Junction poln's,
J.F, Bowden Traffic Muna^r
Rock Island Time Table.
TRUNd Noam
No. 2. Mall and Express 6 a. ;
No. 4, Mall and Express B.XSp
No. a«, Express «:;«a.
No. 8", Local Freight t, ,
TRAINS SOUTH.
No. 3 Mall and Kxpress [viO a
No. 1, Mall and Expronn l'n.v; p
No. :h5, Expresn 7 n rr
No. 31, Local Frelnht . lV.20 i i«i.
Enid ani> Hilmngh ]>ink.
#...9,50 ti, iii.
. 3.- • p. m
Ttrke Sf)ld to all points and bMir^ape
•h^cke through.to destlnatlun.
A P f.fPi i i ,
OR. KING S
try new discovery
FOR THAT COLD.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
Cures Consumption,Coughs,
Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma,
i 'nemnonia,Hay Fever,Pleu-
risy, LaGrippe, Hoarseness,
Sore Throat, Croup and
Whooping Cough.
NO CURE. NO PAY.
Pric 50c. ind $ 1. TRIAL BOTTLES FRE&
For sale by Watroua-Harley Drup Co.
SIZE OF GREEKS (iALL
Enormous Bill of ihe Guthrie Capital
for Printing election tickets.
Must be cut down.
Guthrie, o. T., Nov. 14.—The
territorial election board met last
evening-to audit and pay the expen
incurred in printing- the congression-
al ballots. Hills were filed aggregat-
ing $1,800. As the maximum allowed
the board is only $1,500, the bills must
be trimmed or the legislature asked
for a special appropriation. Official
returns have been received at the
office of the territorial secretary
from all counties except Blaine,
Garfield, Lincoln, Noble, Pawnee,
Pottawatomie, Rodger Mills and
Woodward, and these must be in by
midnight this evening The returns |
will not be opened until the canvass- j
COUNT THE BEANS.
Don't forget the famous bean con-
test. Remember that the best guess-
er of the number of beans in the jar
in the west wi dow of the store jfets
a }2.i suit of ciothes.
NE\ COON IN TOWN.
Soj.e fellow with more music tha
discretion started to sing, "There's a
new Coon in town," on M tin street
He didn't get through the second
line, befori a dozen men surrounded
him and with more eagerness than
politeness requested him to point
out the new Coon. As soon as the
singer understood the situation, he
said it was only in the song. He says
he'll know better next time.
A DIET OF WOOD.
ing board meets Novemb r24. c<m« chvmi.t i>t u *■ a.Ib.i
BRAKEMAN MURDERED.
Eight negro boys have been arrest-
ed in Chandler for shooting and kill-
ing a brakeman by the name of
Galoway on a moving Frisco train
the other day. It seems the boys had
a gun and they took delibeberate aim
and tired at the brakeman standing
on top of a car and they hit him kill-
ing him instantly.
No. H"departs..
No. 141 arrives .
....The...
Vdiiflalia-Peniisulvanid
LINES'
train service is the best. Through
sleeping cars, dining cars and quick
time. If you desire to make a trip
east, nlease write for folders, rates
and full partitulars to
A. T. Anderson,
Traveling Passenger Agent,
S-2(itf Joplin M .
!5 Cents!
Oysters! Oysters!! Oysters!!!
W holestkand Retail.
Oysters served in any
style at
,o.rtcrrt,-'0"""" ""* ■ (WEBB'S STAR RESTAURANT
"liush, aunti«! I'm pretending to be Yes just think of it, a nice Oyster stew for
thief!"—Punch. I
I ' only 15 cents at Webb's Star Restaurant
A Funny Vote,
The other night when the judges
were counting the votes in El Reno
they came across one that was
scratched up in good shape on the
state ticket. The county ticket had
one or two marks and then the voter
had written across the ballot, "All
the rest democrats.
The Point is Clear.
A tramp printer struck this office
for a quarter yesterday, for the pur-
pose, he said, of paying his way to
Enid, where he had a brother who is
well fixed. An hour or two later we
happened to look out and behold, he
was hitting the back door of a saloon
See the point?—Ex.
Hennessey Bonds Defeated.
In a special election held in Hen-
nessey last Monday, as to whether or
not said city should issue bonds to th"
amount of $10,000 to extend and com-
plete the water works was defeated
by ten votes.
This is the first time any town in
I Oklahoma ever voted against the is-
j suing of bonds. Hennessey must have
water works enough orta.\ enough
one or the other.
rndd<-r with llndnrt mm Prim-
«ly.l lngr.dl.al.
Wood it to b« the n«we«t food, uti
leinrich Reh, n profes«or of chemUtrj
m llerlin. He hn. secured n patent
upon a form of nnimal fodder which
bas «nwdun an its chief ingredients
savs a London report.
He argues that animals hare a de
:ided liking for young fhoots, roots
nf shrubs, tree hark and other heavy
food of the came nature, nnd. since
■xperiments havt proved thin tlie nu-
triment contained in such growth re-
Tains in it. even after it has become
wood, he observes that with a little
<alt and water added to it the .aw
lust will proTe to be a highly nourish-
ing diet.
He has statistics to prore it. Pine,
birch, slder, acacia. bee«h and walnut
woods nnd straws have been analyzed
:hemically by him and he finds that
th* wood ha. vastly more albumen, ni-
trogen and fatty substance than the
straw.
The inventor claims that "a ?#ry
sheap sattle food can be prepared in
thia manner, to which may be added
potato peelings, corn husks and shell,
of grain and the realdue from the
sugar b.rt after the sugar has been
extracted."
Democracy's future is all right.
Equal rights for all and special privi-
leges to none, will win its way when
the people fairly understand the
class legislation now on the statute
books.—Beacon.
Gov. Ferguson pardoned a fifteen
year old boy out of the Penitentiary
this week, because he didnt thlnic the
penitentiary was the place for bad
boys, as they would probably become
worse. The governor is right for
once, but if it hadent been for the
money a republican governor recefv-
■d to vote the public building bill
Oklahoma would have had a reformi-
tory for boys long before this writing.
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Isenberg, J. L. The Enid Weekly Wave. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 9, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 20, 1902, newspaper, November 20, 1902; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc112187/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.