The Okeene Eagle. (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, May 17, 1901 Page: 3 of 4
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A FAMOUS OLD EOUSE.
The house of Walter linker & Co.,
whose manufactures of cocoii and
chocolate have become familiar in the
mouth us household words, was es-
tablished one hundred und twenty-
one years ago (1780) on the Nepon-
set Kiver in the old town of Dorches-
ter, a suburb of lloston. From the
little wooden mill, “by the rude
bridge that arched the flood," where
the enterprise was llrst started, there
has grown up the largest industrial
establishment of the kind in the
world. It might be said that, while
other manufacturers come and go,
Walter linker & Co. go on forever.
What is the secret of their great
success? It is a very simple one.
They have won and held the confi-
dence of the great, and constantly in-
creasing body of consumers by ul-
wn.vs maintaining the highest stand-
ard in the quality of their cocoa and
chocolate preparations, and selling
them at the lowest price for which
unadulterated articles of good qual-
ity can be put upon the market. They
welcomehonest competition: but they
feel justified in denouncing in the
strongest terms the fraudulent meth-
ods by- which inferior preparations
are palmed off on customers who ask
for and suppose they are getting the j
genuine articles. The best grocers
refuse to handle such goods,not alone
for the reason that, in the long run,
it doesn’t pay to do It, but because
their sense of fair dealing will not
permit them to aid in the sale of
goods that defraud their customers
nnd injure honest manufacturers.
Every package of the goods made
by the Walter Baker Company bears
the well-known trade-mark “La Belie
Chocolatiere,” and their place of man-
ufacture "Dorchester, Mass." House-
keepers are advised to examine their
purchases, and make sure that other
goods have not been substituted.
An attractive little book of "Choice
Recipes” will be mailed free to any
housekeeper who sends her name and
address to Walter Baker & Co., Ltd.,
158 State Street, Boston, Mass.
LITTLE FACTS OF INTEREST.
A cord of wood weighs, on an av-
erage, 2Vi tons.
Ireland sends to England 237,000
tons of meat a year.
Ireland produces 210 tons of honey
a year, worth £12,000.
The oceans of the world comprise
nearly 324,000,000 cubic miles.
An English convict gets ten pounds
of bread a week, a pauper seven
pounds only.
Competition of electric tramways is
alluded to in many of the half-yearly
reports of English railways as affect-
ing short-distance passenger move-
ment.
Albert I., emperor of Germany, had
only one ear, the other having been
cut off by a saber stroke during a
cavalry fight. He concealed the de-
ficiency by allowing his hair to grow
very long.
A new military law of Peru makes
every citizen liable to compulsory
service from 10 to 50 years. The army
has five classes—the regular, super-
numerary, first reserve, second re-
serve and national guard.
The Japanese university, in Tokio,
exclusively for women, is approaching
completion and will be opened some
time this year. The institution is the
outgrowth of advanced ideas held by
Japanese families of education. Three
rich Japanese men have given enough
to insure the completion of the build-
ings.
A MIRACLE EXPLAINED.
BRlGADlLB
(Copyright. 189?, by F Tcnnyjoo Neely.]
Bryant, Mo., May 13.—The sensa-
tional cure of Mrs. M. A. Goss, of this
place, lias sent a ripple of excitement
all over Douglas County, and Dodd’s
Kidney Pills, the remedy in question,
are receiving thereby, the greatest
advertisement aiiy medicine has ever
had in this state.
To satisfy the many inquiries
which she finds it impossible to un-
svver by letter, Mrs. Goss has sent the
following statement of her case to
the St. Louis Globe-Democrat:
"I did not think i could live a day
and suffer, as I have lived and suf-
fered for months, with Sciatica and
Rheumatism. I used baths and lini-l
ments of all kinds. Two physicians
treated me, one of them for two
months. Nothing helped me. in the
least. I never slept more than ten
or fifteen minutes at a time. 1 was'
bedfast, and had to lie on one side all
the time. 1 used to wish for death.'
to deliver me from such torture.
“A friend suggested Dodd’s Kidney'
Pills, and after I had used them a
week, I began to improve, and in
about four weeks I could sit up in
bed. A few days later, I walked a
quarter of a mile and back. I now dc
all my own cooking and house work
The pain has entirely' left me, and I
am a well woman. I have taken alto-
gether, sixteen boxes of Dodd’s Kid-
ney Pills. Dodd’s Kidney Bills saved
my' life.” Mrs. M. A. Goss.
People come for miles to see Mrs.
Goss, and hear her wonderful story.
Dodd's Kidney' Bills are working
marvelous cures in Missouri.
PRICE, 25c
W2MTFI1 Men, Women. Boys and Girls
If •eH It Ir eac& locality to collect name*. *.*
i**r 1 •«■!. gend !OName**n<1 18c lor List-Books.
NOVELTY SUPPLY COMPANY. Betdanr, Ma
CHAPTEll XIV.—Contisued.
“Were you looking for anyone, Mrs.
Fletcher? 1 thought you were in your
room.”
“For Mr. Folsom, please, when he is
at leisure," was the answer, in un-
ruffled tones. ”1 believe it easier to
take active part in the preparations
tlinu to lie there thinking.”
At one the girls were to lunch at
the fort, ns has been said, and it was
time for them to dress. There were
other matters on which Elinor much
wished to talk with her father and,
with more reluctance than she hud
yet experienced, she left him to hear
what Mrs. Fletcher might have to say.
The conference was brief enough,
whatever its nature, for presently his
voice was heard at the foot of the
stairs.
“I’m going over to the depot a few
minutes, Daught. I wish to see Bur-
leigh. Don’t wait for me. Blurt when-
ever you are ready. Where? do the
boys meet you?”
“Here, daddy, at half-past twelve."
It was high noon now,and the ruddy-
faced old- fellow grew redder as the
summer sun beat down on bis gray
head, but he strode sturdily down the
broad avenue that led to the heart of
the bustling new town, turned to the
right at the first cross street beyond
1)is own big block, and ten minutes’
brisk tramp brought him to the gate-
way of Burleigh’s stockaded inclosure.
Two or three employes lounging about
the gate were gazing curiously within.
Silently they let him pass them by,
but a sound of angry voices rose upon
the heated air. Just within the gate
stood the orderly trumpeter holding
two horses by the reins, one of them
Marshall Dean’s, nnd a sudden idea
occurred to Folsom us he glanced at
the open windows of the office build-
ing. There was no mistaking the
speaker within. It was Burleigh.
"Leave my office instantly, sir, or I’ll
prefer charges that will stick—”
"Not till I’ve said what 1 came to
say, Maj. Burleigh. I’ve.abundant evi-
dence of what you’ve been saying at
my expense. You asserted that I lost
my nerve the day we met Ued Cloud’s
band—you who never dared get out
of the ambulance until the danger was
over. It’s common talk in the troop.
At Frayne, at lteno, and here at Emory
you have maligned me just as you did
in the cars to my friend here. Mr.
Loomis, nnd in hearing of iny sister.
I will not accept your denial nor will
I leave your office till you swallow
your words.”
“Then, by God, I’ll have you thrown
out, you young whipsnnpper!”
And then Folsom, with fear at his
heart, ran around to the doorway to
interpose. He came too late. There
was a sound of a furious scuffle within,
a rattling of chairs, a crunching of
feet on sanded floor, and as lie sprung
up the steps he saw Dean easily squirm-
ing out from the grasp of some mem-
ber of the clerical force, who, at his
master's bidding, had thrown himself
upon the young officer, who then deft-
ly tripped his heels from under him
and dropped him on the floor, while
Loomis confronted the others who
would have made some show of obeying
orders. And then there was the whirr
of a whip lash, a crack and snap and
swish, and a red welt shot across Bur-
leigh’s livid face as he himself stag-
gered back to his desk. With raging
tongue and frantic oath he leaped out
again, a leveled pistol in his hand, but
even before he could pull trigger, or
Folsom interpose, Loomis’ stick came
down like a flash on the outstretched
wrist, and the pistol clattered to tlic
floor.
“Good God, boys! what are you do-
ing?” cried the trader, as he hurled
himself between them. “Stop this in-
stantly. Sit down, Burleigh. Conn;
out, Dean—come out at once! And
you, too, Loomis.”
"I'm entirely ready—now,” said the
cavalry lieutenant, though his eyes
were flaming and his lips were rigid.
“But whenever Maj. Burleigh wants
to finish this he can find me,” and
with these words he backed slowly to
the door, face to the panting and dis-
ordered foe.
“Finish this! you young hound, I'll
finish you!” screamed Burleigh, as he
shook his clenched fist at the retiring
pair.
“Go. boys, go!” implored Folsom.
“I’ll see you by and by. No—no—sit.
still, Burleigh. Don’t you speak. This
must stop right here.”
And so the old man's counsels pre-
vailed, and the two friends, with
grave, pallid, hut determined faces,
came out into the sunshine, and with
much deliberation and somewhat os-
tentatious ealin proceeded to where
the orderly waited with the horses.
“You will see—the ladies out to
camp, Loomis?” asked Dean. “I must
gallop on abend.”
"Ay, ay, go on. I reckon—"
But on this scene there suddenly-
appeared a third party, in the par- j
tial guise of an officer and the grip |
of Bacchus. Lurching down the
office steps, with flushed face and
bloodshot eyes, came (.’apt. New-
hall.
“GenTm'n.” said he. thickly, “lo'm
’ntroduce rn’self. Haven’t, th’ honor I
y'r 'quaint’s. Im Ca'm New(hic)'ll.
Gap'll N-n(hic)oohaul (this cost pro- I
digious effort and much balancing*. |
an’—un’you sherv’d that Tier per-per-
tiieky ri’. lie's damn seoun'rl—
gen'lemen—an’ ole frien' mine.”
For an instant he stood sway ing un-
steadily. with half extended hand. For i
an instant the two young officers
gazed at him in contempt, then turned
abruptly away.
"Good Lord. Marshall." said Loom- |
is. as they cleared the gate, “if that's >
the only approbation this day's work |
will bring us what will the results I
be? You served him right, no doubt. |
but—" nnd an ominous shake of the
bead wound up the sentence.
"But or no but,” said Dean, '‘it's
done now, and Ld do it again.”
There was no dinner party nt Fol-
som's thut evening. At two a messen-
ger trotted out to tile post with u
note for Miss Folsom to apprise her
of the fact, und without u word or
change of color she pul it into her
pocket. The garrison girls were bent
on having them spend the afternoon,
but presently Miss Folsom found a
moment ii\ which to signnl to Jess,
and at three they were driving home.
"You will surely come out this
evening und hear the music nnd have
a dance," were the parting saluta-
tions, ns, with skillful hands, the
young girl took up the reins.
"We hope, to,” wus her smiling an-
swer. Jess was clinging to her broth-
er’s hand as be stood by the wheel,
and Loomis bad already clambered in
beside her.
“Please come, Marshall," pleaded
Jessie; but be shook his head.
“I must be at camp this evening,
sister mine. We go to stables in an
hour. You will come back, Loomis?”
“As soon ns I’ve seen—’’ and a sig-
nificant nod supplied the ellipsis.
Something ominous was in the wind
and both girls knew it. Loomis, usual-
ly gay and chatty, was oddly silent, as
the light, covered wagon spoil swiftly
homeward. Beside the fair charioteer
sat a young officer of (he infantry who,
vastly rejoicing (lull Dean could not go,
bad laughingly possessed himself of
the vacant place, and to him Miss Fol-
som bail to talk. But they parted from
their escorts at the gate and hastened
within doors. Just ns Elinor expected,
papa hud not come home. It was near-
ly six when slie saw him striding slow-
ly and thoughtfully up the road and
she met him at the gate.
“Tell me what has happened, dnddy.”
was her quiet greeting, as she linked
her hands over Ids burly arm, and look-
ing into her uplifted, thoughtful eyes,
so full of intelligence and deep affec-
tion, he bent and kissed her cheek.
“By Jove, daughter, I believe it’s the
best thing I can do. Come into the
library.”
That night the moon beamed bright-
ly down on the wide-spreading valley,
glinting on the peaks, still snow-tipped,
far in the southern sky, and softening
the rugged faces of the nearer range,
black with their clustering beard of
spruce and pine. The band played
sweetly on the broad parade until ufter
the tattoo drums had echoed over the
plains and the garrison belles strolled
aimlessly in the elfin light—all nature
so lavishly inviting, yet so little val-
ued now that nearly every man was
gone. Out in the camp of G troop men
were flitting swiftly to nnd fro, horses
were starting nnd stamping nt the
picket ropes, eager eyes and tilted ears
inquiring the cause of all this stir and
The pistol clattered to the floor.
bustle among the tents. In front of
the canvas home of the young com-
mander a grave-faced group bad gath-
ered, two gentle girls among them, one
with tear-dimmed eyes. Old Folsom
stood apart in murmured conference
with Griggs, the sillier. The regi-
mental quartermaster was deep in con-
sultation with Dean, the two officers
pacing slowly up und down. One or
two young people from the garrison
had spent a few minutes earlier in the
evening striving to be interesting to
the girls; but Jessie’s tearful eyes and
Miss Folsom’s grave manner proved
hint sufficient to induce them to with-
draw. each bidding Dean good night,
safe journey and speedy return, and
the hand-clasps were kind anil cordial.
The colonel himself had paid a brief
visit to cam]), his adjutant in attend-
ance, and had given Mr. Dean ten min-
utes of talk concerning a country Dean
knew all about, but that “Pecksniff”
had never seen. “It is a responsibility
I own I should have expected to see
placed on older shoulders,” said he.
“but prudence and—and, let me sug-
gest, cool-headedness—will probably
carry you through. Y'ou will be ready
to start—”
“Ready now, sir, so far as that's con-
cerned; but we start at three.”
“Oh, ah—yes, of course—well—ah—
it leaves me practically with no com-
mand, but I’ll hope to have you back,
Mr. Dean. Good-by.” Then as he
passed Folsom the colonel whispered:
“That’s $10,IKK) as good ns thrown
away.”
“Ten thousand dollars!” answered
the trader in reply. “What do you
mean?”
“That's what those boys are to run
the gantlet with. My—nh—protest-
are entirely unavailing.”
For a moment Folsom stood there ,
dumb. "Do you mean,” he finally cried. |
"that—that it's beyond Frayne that i
they’re going—that it’s money they're |
to take?"
"Hush! Certainly, hut it mustn’t be j
know n. Every road agent in Wyoming 1
would Dr* out. anil every Indian from
the Platte to Hudson bay would be on
the watch. He’s to take ten men nnd
slip through. The money comes out
from Burleigh to-night.”
Inr colonel turned away, and.
beckoning to bis staff officer to join
him, stumped onward to the garrison.
The prolonged wail of the bugle, aid-
ed by the rising night wind, sent the
solemn strains of taps sailing down
the diinly-liglited 'alley, and with
staring eyes old Folsom stood gazing
after the departing officers, then
whirled about toward the tents. There
in front of Dean stood i'appoose. her I
hands clasped tightly over the hilt of I
the saber the “striker” had leaned '
against the lid of the mess chest but
a moment before, her lovely face smil- I
ing up into the owner's.
“You'll come back by way of Hal’s, j
won’t you?" she was blithely >aying. I
"Perhaps 1 can coax father to take
us there to meet you."
"By heaven, Burleigh." muttered
the old1 trailer to himself, “are you the
deepest man I ever met, or only th<
most infernal scoundrel?”
Cl! APT Eli XV.
A sleepless night hail old John Fol-
som, and with the sun he was up
again und hurriedly dressing. Noise-
less ns he strove to be he was dis-
covered, for as he issued from bis
room Into the dim light of the upper
hall there stood I’appoose.
“Poor Jess has been awake an hour,"
said she. "We've been trying to see
the troops through the glass. They
must have started before daybreak,
for there's nothing on the road to
Frayne.”
“It disappeared over the divide three
miles out,” lie answered vaguely, nnd
conscious that her clear eyes were
studying bis face. "1 didn't sleep
well, either. We shall be having
news from Hal to-day, anil the mail
rider comes down from Frayne.”
She bud thrown about her a long,
loose wrapper, and her lustrous hair
tumbled like u brown-black torrent
down over her shoulders and back.
Steadfastly the brown eyes followed
bis every move.
"It is an hour to breakfast time,
dnddy dear; let me make you some
coffee before you go out."
“What? Who said I was going out?"
lie asked, forcing a smile; then, more
gravely: "I’ll be back in thirty min-
utes, dear, but wait a moment I
cannot. I want to catch n man be-
fore he cun possibly' ride away.”
lie bent and kissed her hurriedly,
nnd went briskly down the stairs. In
the lower hall he suddenly struck a
parlor match that flared up and il-
lumined the winding staircase to the
third story. Some thought as sudden
prompted her to glance aloft, just in
time to catch a glimpse of a woman’s
face withdrawing swiftly over the
balcony rail, hi her hatred of any-
thing that savored of spying Ihe girl
could have called aloud a demand
to know what Mrs. Fletcher wanted,
but strange things were in the wind,
as she was learning, and something
whispered silence. Slowly she re-
turned to Jessie’s side, and together
once more they searched with the
glasses the distant trail that, dis-
tinctly visible now in the slant of the
morning sun, twisted up the north-
ward slopes on the winding way to
Frayne. Not a whiff of dust could
they see.
Meantime John Folsom strode swift-
ly down the well-known path to the
quartermaster’s depot, a tumult of
suspicion and conjecture whirling in
his brain. As he walked he recalled
the many hints and stories that had
come to liis ears of Burleigh’s ante-
cedents elsewhere and liis associa-
tions here. With all his reputation
for enterprise and wealth, there were
“shady" tales of gambling transac-
tions and salted mines and watered
stocks that attached perhaps more
directly to the men with whom he
foregathered than to him. “A man
is known by the company lie keens,"
said Folsom, and Burleigh’s erodes,
until Folsom came to settle in Gate
City, bail been almost exclusively
among the “sharps,” gamblers and
their kindred, the projectors nnd pros-
pectors ever preying on the unwary
on tlie outer wave of progress. With-
in tlie past six months be had seen
much of him, for Burleigh was full of
business enterprises, had investments
everywhere, was lavish in invitation
und suggestion, was profuse in offers
of aid of any kind if aid were want-
ed. He had gone so far as to say that,
lie knew from experience how with his
wealth tied1 up in real estate and
mines a man often found himself in
need of a few thousand in spot cash,
and as Folsom was buying and build-
ing, if at any time he found himself
a little short nnd needed ten or twen-
ty thousand, say, why, Burleigh’s
bank account was at liis service, etc.
It all sounded large and liberal, and
Folsom, whose lot for years had been
cast with a somewhat threadbare ar-
ray of people, content, with little,
impecunious but honest, wondered
what manner of martial man this
was. Burleigh did not loudly boast
of liis wealth nnd influence, but im-
pressed in some ponderous way his
hearers with a sense of both. Yet,
ever since that run to Warrior’s Gap.
a change had come over Burleigh. He
talked more of mines and money und
showed less, and now, only yesterday,
when the old man’s heart had mel-
lowed to him because he bad first held
him wholly to blame for Dean's ar-
rest and later found him pleading for
the young fellow's release, a strange
thing had happened. Burleigh con-
fided to him that he had a simply fab-
ulous opportunity—a chance to buy
out a mine that experts secretly told
him was what years later be would
have called a “bonanza.” but that in
the late sixties was locally known
as a “Shanghai.” Twenty-five thou-
sand dollars would do the trick, but
liis money was tied up. Would Fol-
som go in with him. put up twelve
thousand live hundred, nnd Burleigh
would do the rest? Folsom had been
bitten by two mines that yielded only
rattlesnakes, and he couldn’t be
lured. Then, said Burleigh, wouldn’t
Folsom go on his note, so that he
could borrow at the bank? Folsom
seldom went on anybody's note. It
was ns bad ns mining. He begged off.
and left Burleigh disappointed, but
not disconcerted. “I can raise it
without trouble.” said he. “but it may
take forty-eight hours to get the
cash here, and 1 thought you would
be glad to be let in on the ground
floor.”
"I’ve been let in to too many
floors, major.” said he. “You'll have
to excuse me.” And so Burleigh,
with his Louisiana captain, had driven
off to the fort, where Xewhall asked
for Griggs and was importunate, nor
oul Griggs’ whisky, freely tendered to
all comers of the commissioned class,
tend to assuage his desire. Back had
they gone to town, and then came the
cataclysm of noon.
(To Be Continued. 1
Of Course.
“She talked to him just to let him
know -he wnm’t afraid of old baclie-
"And he talked to her just to let her
know that he wasn’t afraid of widows.”
"Well ?’*
“Oh. they're married now."—Chicago
Record.
WHAT WE HEAR FROM ASSINI-
B0IA, WESTERN CANADA.
“Don't Tillub. of Coming, lint Come,'
To the Editor:
The above is the emphatic man-
ner in which a friend in York-
Ion writes to a friend near St. Paul,
Minnesota, and it is pretty nearly
right, too, when the advantages'
that Western Canada offer to those
seeking homes. The Assiniboia dis-
trict is one of the best. The writer
rom whose letter we quote goes on to
>ay:
"John, if you miss this chance you
uro foolish, for you cun got out cheap-
er when there are so many coining,
and 1 would not tell you to come if I
thought you could not do well, and if
you don’t come in the spring you will
have to go away back, for you do not
want to think that there is no one liv-
ing out here but us. I saw nicer build-
ings out here than 1 ever saw before,
and if the country was no good what
would they want them for? John, if
you sold everything you have and
come nut here you would be worth
more than ever you were before, and if
you can bring your team, you can get
anything you want on tick, nnd when
they do that with strangers they are
not afraid they can’t make enough to
iny for it. 1 saw as nice wheat as I
ever saw in my life and if they could
not grow grain wliat would the flour
mill be for, anil it cost $20,000.”
Now this was what Mr. Thomas
Fitzpatrick, of Yorltton, Assiniboia,
Western Canada, wrote to a friend.
There will be opened up this summer
new districts in Saskatchewan nnd
Assiniboia, At low prices, particulars
of which can be hnd of any agent of
the Government of the Dominion of
Canada, whose advertisenfent appears
elsewhere in tin' columns of your pa-
per. Yours truly,
AN OLD READER.
, ... —
Student of Humanity.
The manager looked over the advertising
man’s work.
"1 see you speuk of our payment plan,”
said lie.
“Yessir."
“Make that word ‘credit.’ instead of‘pay-
ment.’ It is more attractive.”- Indianap-
olis Press.
If you wish to have beautiful, clear white
elothes, ask for Red Cross Ball Blue. Re-
fuse imitations.
A man doesn’t know how many people he
is acquainted with until he walks up the
street with a black eve.—Atchison Globe.
PERMS OF PAIR
How Three Women Found Relief.
THE GENERAL MARKE1S.
Kansas City, May 11.
CATTLE—Iteef steers .......$1 00 # 5 30
Native Stockers ........ 2 80 # 4 75
Western steers .......... I oo # t 35
HOGS .................
1 25
# 6 77>;
SHEEP .............
3 75
4 25
WHEAT—No. 2 hard ..
1)9(4#
70
No. 2 red ..........
70
#
71
CORN—No. 2 mixed .........
43(4
OATS—No. 2 mixed ..........
30
RYE-No. 2.....
54
FliOUR—Hard wh’t patents.
3 35
# 3 55
Soft wheat patents.....
3 60
© 3 70
HAY—Timothy ..............
5 00
m\ 00
Prairie ..................
4 00
#10 00
BRAN—Sucked ..............
73
#
74
RUTTER—Choice to fancy..
u
<h>
17
CHEESE—Full cream ......
u
0
11(4
EGGS ................
10
POTATOES—Home grown ..
35
©
40
While no woman is entirely free from periodical Buffering, it does not teem
to have been the plan of nature that woman should suffer so severely. Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the most thorough female regu-
lator known to medical science. It relieves the condition which produces so
much discomfort and robs menstruation of its terrors.
The three letters here published should encourage every woman who suffers t
Aug. 6, 1898.
“Dkab Mas. Pi.nkiiam: — 1 have
suffered since the age of sixteen with
ST. LOUIS.
CATTLE—Native steers ....435 #575
Texas and Indian steers 3 50 # 5 15
HOGS—Packers .............. 5 45 # 5 65
SHEEP-Muttons .......... 4 00 @4 05
FLOUR—Patents ........... 3 55 @ 3 75
WHEAT—No. 2 red .......... 73(4# 754$
CORN—No. 2 ................. 45 # 45V.
OATS—No. 2 .................. 29(4© 30
RYE ............................ 56
BUTTER—Dairy ............ 12 # 15
DRY SALT MEATS ......... 8 37y,# 8 C2M
BACON ......................S 12(4# 0 37(5
CHICAGO.
CATTLE—Steers ............ 3 85 # 5 90
HOGS—Mixed and'butchers. 5 50 #0 75
SHEEP—Western .......... 4 20 #4 35
FLOUR—Spring patents .... 3 45 #3 SO
WHEAT—No, 2 red .......... 73 # 74
CORN—No. 2 ................. 521/
OATS—No. 2 .................. 28(4# 29 ’
RY E—May .................... 62
LARD—May ................. 7 92(4# 7 95
PORK—May .................14 47(4014 «2M
NEW YORK.
CATTLE—Steers ............4 GO # 5 10
HOGS ......................... 5 95 # 6 10
SHEEP ....................... 3 50 © 4 75
WHEAT—No. 2 red .......... 80(4# 82(5
CORN—No. 2 ................. 6F,# 52
OATS-No. 2 .................. 3T<
painful menstruation. I have been
treated fur months, and was told that
the womb had fallen a little. The
doctor says that is now in place again,
but I still have the same pain. Please
tell me what to do."—Mrs. Emma
Kukri,, 113 Trautman St., Brooklyn,
E. D., N.Y.
Jan. 19, 1899.
“Dear Mrs. Pinkham : — After re-
ceiving your reply to my letter of
Aug. 6 I followed your kind advice,
and am glad to tell you that I have
been cured of the severe pain at time
of menstruation through the use of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound. I have taken six bottles of
it, felt better after the first bottle,
and after a while had no more pain
or womb trouble.
“ I had doctored from the age of six-
teen to twenty-six, and had lost all
hope, but your medicine has made
me well.
“ I would like to have you use my
testimonial, so that others may see,
and be inspired with hope, and take
your medicine.” — Mrs. Emma Kueiii.,
112 Trautman St.,Brooklyn,E. D.,N. Y.
Feb. 20, 1900.
“I saw your medicine so highly
recommended I thought 1 would write
to you for advice.
“ My menstruation occurs every two
weeks, lasts a week, and is painful. I
have been troubled in this way for
some time. 1 suffer from sick head-
ache and backache all the time, appe-
tite poor, sick at
stomach every
morning, every-
thin; I eat hurta
me, am very weak,
thin, and sallow.
“ 1 have tried a
doctor, but he did
not seem to do ma
any good.”— Mias
Maggie Pollard,
319 So. 4th St,
Richmond, Vs.
April 23, 1900.
"Since receiving your answer to
my letter 1 have been taking your
Vegetable Compound, and it has done
me more good than any medicine I
have ever taken. My menses are all
right now, and appear once a month,
and I feel so much stronger. 1 shall
always praise your medicine.”—Mtsa
Maggie Pollard, 319 So. 4th St,
Richmond, Va.
“ I was troubled with female weak*
ness,irregular and
painful menstrua-
at ion, and leu-
corrhoea. The
doctor’s medicine
did me no good.
I have taken one
bottle and a half
of your Vegetable
Compound, and-j
thanks to your j
medicine,my pains
aregone. Iadvise
all women suffering as I have to ns*
your Vegetable Compound." — Emma
J. Pbibrle, Indianola, 111.
If there is anything about your case about which you would like special
advice, write freely to Mrs. Pinkham. No man will see your letter. She can
surely help you, for no person in America has such a wide experience in treat-
ing female ills as she lias had. She has helped hundreds of thousands of
women back to health. Her address is Lynn, Mass., and her advice is free.
You are very foolish if you do not accept her kind invitation.
REWARD.—Wa hare depoil tod with the National City Bank of Lynn, 85000,
which will be paid to any person who can And that the above testin'mat letter*
ere not genuine, or were imbllehed before obtaining the writer’s special per-
LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO.
mission.
cn 3 or 4 Years an Independence Is Assured
I f you take up your homos
In Western ( an ad a. the
land of plenty. Illus-
trated pamphlets. Hiving
experiences of farmers
who have become wealthy
rts
im
fin growing wheat, re ports
I of delegates. etc., ar a full
II nformation as to reducet
[ railway rates can be bat
ippllcatlon to thi
on applK
Undersigned, who will mall you atlases, namphlc
etc., free of cost. F. PBJJLEY. Hunt, of linmlg:
lion.Ottawa. Canada: J.8.CRAWFORD, 214 W
9th St., Kansas City, Mo.
the
bleu.
rat
es-
Wholesale LIGHTNING RODS K
AddrMs KIW. A. MIY k CO.. CINCINNATI, O. | Wanted.
PILES
MIMESIS
lief and POSITIVE*
LY CUBES PILES.
For free namn'o addreat
••AWA BESTS,” Trib-
une building, New York
Twenty-fl ve be»u*:fnl Marine Florida Shelia*
I no two nliko—sent postpaid for M&c, Stamp*
taken. MKS. SUSAN M. MUUli. Lealman, Florida,
TMWnffl TWTOT FARMERS wanted as agents.
tWlttil AUGUbT POST. Moulton.Iowa.
A. N. K.-H
1803
WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS
pleuoe state that yor saw the AdvertlN*
Sent la ttio paper.
Every day you clean the house you
live in, to get rid of the dust and dirt.
Your body, the house your soul lives in,
also becomes filled up with all manner of
filth, which should have been removed
from day to day. Your body neecb daily
cleaning inside. If your bowels, your
liver, your kidneys are full of putrid filth,
and you don’t clean them out, you'll be in
bad odor with yourself and everybody else.
DON'T USE A HOSE to clean your
body inside, but sweet, fragrant, mild but
positive and forceful CASCARETS, that
WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP,’ prepare
all the filth collected in your body for
removal, and drive it off softly, gently, but
none the less surely, leaving your blood
pure and nourishing, your stomach and
bowels clean and lively, and your liver
and kidneys healthy and active. Get a
50-cent box today, a whole month’s
treatment, and if not satisfied get your money back—but you'll see how the cleaning
of your body is
MADE EASY BY
10c.
25c. 50c.
ALL DRUGGISTS.
AlinP bowel troubles, appendicitis, bll-
I'llUL *on«ne»», bad breath, bad blood, wind
III III | lh® stomaeh, bloated bowels, foul
V W I Ik mouth, headache, indigestion, piuiples,
pains after rating, liver trouble, sallow complexion
and dizziness. W ben four boweis don't move regu-
larly you nre getting sick. Constipation kills more
people than ail other diseases together. It Is s
starter for the chronic ailments and loug years of
suffering that come afterwards. Bo matter what
ails you, start taking CAM AHKTN to-day, for yon
will newer get well und be well all the time until
yon put your bowels right. Take our advice; start
with CASCARETS to-day, tinder an absolute guar-
antee to enre or money refunded, 453
NEVER
SOLD IN BULK.
GUARANTEED
TO CTREi Five years ago
irst bo* of CASCAR-
sold. Now It Is
over si* million bose*
similar medicine la the world,
great merit, and oar best t<
sell ( A« ARETS
year, greater Chan
This Is absolute
money refunded. Ov buy today, two 54K> boi
folr, honest trial, as per simple direction*,
itlaflcd. ufter oslos one 50c box. retam
any
___________ _ _ jfsf
; (fitlsoalal. We bave faith und
bsolsteiy guaranteed to care or
50c boxes, give them a
aot satisfied. aflcroilng
box aud the empty bo
whom you purrs:
boxes. Take
*lve I
I If jroa are
Cara the naused SOc
x to us by malt, or the drssgtat (Vom
It, and set your money back fbr both
xes. Tske onr advice—no matter what uUs you—start to
y. Health will quickly follow and you will bless the day
you first started the use off AbCAR ETA- Bosh free by walk
Address: MtKLLMi R£B£DY CO., SKW YO&k m CHICAGO.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Chapman, H. C. The Okeene Eagle. (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, May 17, 1901, newspaper, May 17, 1901; Okeene, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1171874/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.