The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 06, No. 07, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1894 Page: 2 of 8
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A
Norman Transcript' aenebal news in brief
ED. P. INGLE, Ed. and Ilib.
Norman, Ok. Ter
Colonel Hohf.ni.ohe - Shillinos-
nntST starts right out by showing that
(here may be a great deal in a nume,
after all.
PARAGRAPHED CURRENT EVENTS
OF THE WEEK.
ClnnWI from thr Four Corner* of
t.bc World and Condensed in Short
l'aragruplK for the Convenience of
Hurried Readers.
Heavy storms are reported In the J*0VK_RTY
northeast.
PICTURES.
To re-emplov a well-worn Baying—
the boundary dispute between Mexico
and Guatemala is to bo settled by
peaceful means even if both countrios
Lave to light to that end.
London has "reformed" its muslo
halls by making stringent regulations
as to the character of both performers
and frequenters. In a selfish sense
American moralists have littlo reason
to rejoico over this much-needed re-
form. Unless proper arrangements
for fumigation be mado at New York
this country will be devastated by
noisome ••Gaiety" and "Folly" theatri-
cal companion as never before.
The Chinese Six companios, in or-
dering the Celestials not to give evi-
dence in suits brought under tho
Geary law, set themselves above tho
courts and tho statutes of the Unltod
States and invito investigation by the
federal authorities. Much as that law
has been criticised it is now tho law,
and certainly wo aro not going to por-
mit a foreign combinatiou to nullify
one clause in an act of congress.
That the students at the North-
western university should have to or-
ganize to suppress cribbing among
themselves at examinations would
seom to suggest that President Rogers
and his cabinet have failod to use
their disciplinary powers sufficiently.
The examination cribber is a con-
temptible sneak-thief und should bo
punished accordingly. He has no
rightful place among decent studonts.
There is not the slightest doubt
that the spread of diphtheria and
Other deadly contagious diseases is
largely due to tho ignorance, thought-
lessness or solflshnoBB of paronts. Tho
only way to protoct the public is to
rigidly quarantine tho houses whon
cases are known to exist. If the law
requires a small'rod flag to be placed
on a house whero thero is small-pox it
ought to require a bigger and a rod-
der flag on tho house whoro thero is
diphtheria.
The statistics prosented by the Brit-
ish medical association show that it is
possible for a steady drinker of spirit-
uous liquors to livo as long as tho old-
est of total abstainers. Those cases,
however, do not prove that abstlnonco
from tobacco and liquor is not con-
ducive to longevity. There aro per-
sons who soom nover to be injuriously
affected by whisky and tobaoco, but
tho rule still holds that for most por-
sons abstinence or moderation is a
good thing.
Pittsburg claims to possess the '
smartest bill posters in tho country. I
If a hat box is left outsido the house
the owner is quite likely to find a
cigarette boauty, a ballet girl or somo
now kind of headache cure upon it.
But the chap who is regarded as tho
brightest hustlor is the one who
coverod the carcass of a doad horse, be-
fore it was quite cold, with bills an-
nouncing a political mass meeting.
'Ihe sight caught the crowds,ana mado
fun for the spectators.
Those people who have denied
themselves the pleasure of eating
grapes during tho past season for fear
that sono grapo sood would wander
along down tho intestinal way until it
reached that little cul do sac, called
the vermiform appendago an then
drop in, aro as apprehensivo as was
the chronically-well old lady who
would never wear any stockings but
spicspan new onos, explaining that
she might somo day have a fit on tho
street and then how she would look
with a hole in her stocking.
A British officer, who apparently
knows, says that it "would bo as rea-
sonable to pit brave mon armod with
pitchforks against bravo men armed
with rifles as to pit, man for man, tho
•Chinese in thoir present condition
against tho Japanese. Of all native
and colonial troops," said he, "I
would, next to Ghoorkas, prefer a
regiment of Japanese. They are
brave, temperate, patient and ener-
getic, and at this moment the Chinese,
whatever might bo done with them,
are 200 years behind the times."
We are accustomed to regard the
Japanese as little better than half civ-
ilized, even though recent treaties
with the great powers have placed her
on equal footing with them. But
there are many ways in which her
people are eminently superior to the
; average American, who might profita-
bly copy tho example of tho Japanoso
workman, who bathes his wholo body
once a day,and sometimos twice. Pub-
lic baths aro provided on every street,
which are fed by a constant current
of cold and hot wator. Tho bather
plungos in, remains immersed somo
ten minutes, then comes out and re-
ceives a warm douche of fresh wator.
J. D. Park, broke the three-quarter
mile, class A, unpaced bicycle record
Monday, making in 1:37 1-5.
The Minneapolis and St Louis road
has given notice of withdrawal from
the Western Passenger association.
Near Kflingham, 111., IIe ry fiend-
elmeyor. aged 14 years, blew off liis
head while playing with a shotgun.
A postoflice hn been established at
Rural, Chase county, Kunsas, and
Eleazer Martin appointed postmaster.
Waynwright, the American corres-
pondent who suffered from cruelties
in l!ra/.il, died at Monte Viedo Sun-
day.
Munson AMcNamara, Wichita, Kan-
sas, big dry goods house, have ladies
employed to answer mail order en
quirk's. Write them.
Twenty-one students and one of the
professors of Weslyan college at Mid-
dleton, Conn., have been victims of
the tvphold fever raging there. ;
At Benson, Ariz., Saturday night,
the store of A. Guinananu was burg-
larized, the thieves carrying off mer-
chandise to the value of $100.
The storm on the New England
coast reached Portland at 0 o'clock
Monday night. At Lynn, Mass., it
was accompanied by rain and snow.
Senator Isham O. Harris was robbed
of his gold watch and chain at llolivar,
Tenn. The thief entered his room
and secured the valuables while he
was asleep.
Lucius S. Itlake, a millionaire man-
ufacturer and businessman, one of the
early settlers of Racine, Wisconsin,
died last Sunday of heart disease,
aged 80 years.
Joe Pencil, alias Jaines Jackson, un-
der indictment in the United States
court at Dallas for the alledged pass-
ing of counterfeit money, was arrested
at Fort Worth, Texas.
Stockholders of the New Mexican
Terminal company, organized at Balti-
more Thursday with M. Johnston as
president. The capital of the enter-
prise will be 95,000,000.
A severe northeast storm passed
over Atlantic Citv, N. J., last Monday
night, accompanied by a heavy gule
and dangerously high tide on the
ocean front. Much damage has been
done to wires. The life-saving crews
aro keeping a sharp watch for wrecks.
The joint case of W. S. Richardson
and Ed Smith, charged with murder
in the lyinching of six negroes near
Millington, Tenn., was called in the
Criminal Court at Memphis, last Mon-
day. Owing to the lack of a complete
venire the case was continued until
Thursday.
A dispatch from Zanzibar saying the
J the Hova Prime Minister has replied
I to the ultimatum of France, forward-
. ed to the Government of Madasgar by
J M. Le Myre de Villers, that the Ilovas
J will only yield to force. The French {
are evacuating Antannrivo, the capital
of Madagascar.
The $50,000 damage suit of Rev. j
Larrabee Cainpell against Hanker
Johnson for alienating his wife's af-
DEMOCRAT1C TIMES PROLIFIC
OF THEM.
Soup Hollars, Colfy Armies and (ieneral
Revolution the Fruit of Oeniocrallc
Rule—Prices Golnff Down All Along
the Line.
Less than a month ago the barley
growers of the United States and those
who trade in barley received news
from London that two cargoes of Rus-
sian barley had been sold at Odessa for
shipment to New York. This, of
course, is the direct result of the first
A Free-Trade Monument
the officer havo been dismissed, as he
has settled his accounts with his cred-
itors.
It has been discovered that a lion
story from Washington Court House,
Ohio, was caused by a large wolf
which had been brought from the
west by a farmer. It got loose and
killed a few sheep and the lion story
j soon started.
j At Kahoka, Mo., Saturday, two ofli-
j cers arrested Cyrene Bader, alias, F.
J W. Delnor, defaulting station agent
! from Pony, Montana, who left that
factions, which has been on trial in | place October 24, with several thous-
the District Court in Omaha for two j and pollers of railroad and express
wesks, was concluded Monday by a company's money.
verdict for the defendant. The de- At Frederick, S. D., last night
ense wan blackmail. , Fylpa's general store, Dyty's general
A telegiam from \ alcncia, \enczu- store, the city hotel, Symmons & How-
'I"11 rCb-Cl f,ymp,athizT ell's bank, PettingiU's drug store, the
besieged the troops in the barracks postofflce building, a meat market and
Monday night, but finally the troops j ^everal smallel. *ores and ,aces of
made a break m a wall and sallied out lmsiness wcre destr , b fi?e. IjOSS
attacicmg the people. Six soldiers t c0 ted. y
and twenty rebels were killed and
many wounded on both sides. ! John Traynor, mayor of Athens,
A dispatch from St. Petersburg says i K.V* sllot and killed Isaac Davidson,
the trial is impending of a number of a^so seriously shot Lewis Shary, a
peasants of the Kazan district for the farmer. Traynor is a Breckinridge
killing of a peasant as a sacrifice to man and Davidson and Sharp were
the idols of the Votiaks, a Finnish | Owens supporters They quarrelled
Mr. Gladstone's Horace's odes were
published Tuesday.
James R. Coleman, a well-known
business man of Princeton, IU.f died
last Sunday, aged 60 years.
The steamer Wawatain is ashore at
Scammon cove, Druminonds island
fifteen miles below the Detour light
house, Michigan.
William Jackson, who murdered his
wife on June 28 last, was sentenced to
ninety-nine years in the penitentiary
Saturday at Greenup. Ky.
The Mexico president, Diaz, has
commuted the sentence of death
against Edwin Adams, the American, step toward free trade und democratlc
to twenty years imprisonment. legislation for the benefit of foreign
The transit of Mercury was observ- farmers.
ed at tho Washington naval observo- j Under the tariff act of 1883 the
tory Saturday under the direction of duty upon foreign barley imported into
Professor William Hoskncrs, astrono- this country was 21.50 per cent ad valo-
mer. rem. This being insutlicient to afford
The Union 1'acifie receiver have prQper Paction to the American farm-
completed arrangements with the
Gulf line, whereby the Union Pacific
will manage the Denver shops doing
Gulf road work.
A special from Portland Ore., to the
Pioneer Press says the Northern Pacif-
ic has concluded to re-oponthe Colum-
bia river route between Portland and
Wallula Junction.
Jared G. Davis, one of the best
known horsemen in the country, shot
himself in the head Saturday at Lee,
Mass., and died shortly after, liis act
was due to ill health.
Four miles south of Litchfield, 111.,
A. Hottentot shot and killed Mrs.
Charles Neimeyer and then fatally
wounded himself. Tho tragedy was
the result of a quarrel over the owner-
ship of a piece of land.
A big fight is in prospect between
the Canadian Pacific and the western
lines over the claim of the former—28
per cent of the west bound emigrant
business. The Grand Trunk sides
with the western lines.
James Doyle, treasurer of the Junior
Plumbers association, was shot and
killed Saturday night at Chicago by
Harry K. Hurg^ss, an iron worker.
He died in the hospital an hour later.
Burgess gave himself up.
Jesse Conn, Louis Porter and Ed.
Meadows, while digging a ditch near
Wabash, Ind., Saturday, were caught
by a cave-in and Conn was instantly
killed and Porter fatally injured.
Meadows was not seriously hurt. r
John Ferguson committed suicide at
an early hour last Satmday night at
the home of his son, near Kahoka,
Mo., by swallowing strychninc. No
cause war assigned, but it was sup-
posed to bo due to domestic troubles, j er the duty was increased to C4.C8 per
The court martial ordered in the ! cf°t.under the McKinley tariff. How
case of Captain Samuel K Schwenk, , fc in.crease benefited our farmers by
United States Army, retired, has been i ,ss('nmp ,°"1' ""ports of barley is
disolred and the charges against &ho"'11 1,1 the following official figures:
Russian crops has the following infor- : "Suffer and lie strong"—
mation that is of extreme interest to la other words, to exhibit fortitude when en-
\merican farmers- during bodily pain is. of courso, praiseworthy,
^iiientan iarratrs. ,, ^(offerers from rheumatism would undoubt-
^'Notwithstanding the comparatively forego the praise which the exorcise of this
small yield per acre and the great varia-
tions in the harvests from year to year,
Russia, in the export of all breadstuffs,
has gained the foremost position
among countries placing their grain
supplies upon the world's market,
yielding to the United States only in
respect to tho export of wheat and
maize."
As Russia "has gained the foremost
position among countries placing their
grain supplies upon the world's mar- |
ket," and particularly so of barley, it j
is evident that the value of Russian ; tQ pnb],c In8titution_Isn.t
barley does much to regulate tie price , rathcr c,ose here? DoQ.t yoa think
of barley in the world s markets that are
not protected; hence it is interesting to
study the value of Russian barlej'.
During a period of seven years, 1881—
1887. the average export value of Rus-
sian barley was 35 cents per bushel at
port of shipment. The Gorman tariff
rate of ;10 per cent ad valorem
will dd cents per bushel to
this price, making 4f>Va' cents, to
which must also be added 4 cents
Spartan virtue calls forth.to obtain prompt and
easy relief. It is at their very threshold in tho
shape of Hostetter's Stomach Hitters, which
arrests thla formidable disease at the outset,
and acts as an efficient anodyne upon the afflict*
od nervous system. Take time by the forelock
If you feel rheumatic twinges, and give them a
qultude at once. Rheumatism is, reader, you
may perhaps not bo aware, liable to attack the
heart. Many a man and woman with a heart
thus attacked has promptly "shuffled off
this mortal coil." The Hitters is also an ex-
cellent remedy for kidney trouble, malaria,,
constipatioif. debility, neuralgia, sleeplessness
and dyspepsia. ,
Ventilation.
A story without words.
Street Swne in Knv York—Corner Seventh
4venue and 125th £treet—Grover Cleveland
President, January j/, 1894.
—From American Economist.
BARLEY.
Bushels. Value.
8,596,122 15,922,144
9,986,507 6,523,092
7, i77,887
6,173,208
8,070,082
7,723.838
5,629,849
3,222,593
1,592,040
921,605
race living in a more or less uncivilized
condition along the River Volga, be-
tween the Vaitka and James rivers.
4 A dispatch from Lima says that the
Oaceres Government has imposed du-
ties on all articles that have hereto-
fore been admitted to Peru free of
duty. On iron, coal and machinery a
duty is imposed of 8 per cent ad valor-
em, plus 6c silver per ton of 1000 kilos.
Oen. Peirola, ex-Presidont, has landed
at Pisco, 100 miles south of Callao.
over the election.
The Federal Court met at Jackson,
Miss., last Monday During the term
the case against the'Governor, Auditor
and Treasurer will be disposed of.
They are charged with violationg a
United States statute, in issuing $200,-
000 Mississippi warrants.
It Is reported from Paris that the
government will ask the Chamber of
IMPORTS O
Year ending June 30.
I 1884
| 1885
j 1886 10,197,115
1887 10,855,594
! 1888 10,831,461
i 1889 11,368,414
189 0 11,332,545
189 1 5,078,733
! 1892 3,140,328
1893 1,970,729
It can here be seen that under the more
proper protection afforded the Ameri-
can farmer by the McKinley tariff, our
imports of barley have fallen off from
over eleven million bushels in 1889 and
again in 1890 to less than two million
bushels in 1893. Where we paid an
average of $6,750,000 a year from 1884
to 1890 to foreign farmers for foreign
barley, we have paid less than $2,000,-
000 a year since the time of McKinley
protection and less than $1,000,000 last
year.
Comparing our imports of foreign
barley for 1893 with those of 1888, the
saving to American farmers was more
that $7,000,000 in this one year alone.
It is evident that protection on bar-
ley was a good thing for American
farmers. The free trade party thought
it was too good a thing and feared
lest our farmers might get too rich, as
rich js the sugar trust, perhaps. It
was therefore the polic}' of the demo-
cratic congress to grind the farmer
down and keep him poor, so the duty
on barley was reduced from
the McKinley rate of 64.68
per cent down to 30 per cent ad val-
orem by the Gorman bill. This is a
reduction of 53.62 per cent, and it
would have "been more if the Wilson
bill had become law, because the Wil-
"TarifT Reform."
per bushel for freight and insur-
ance, making the total cost of Russian
barley, laid down in New York, t;> be
49)£ or 50 cents p r bushel.
It may be considered that the future
value of barley in the New York
market will be about 50 cents per
bushel, as compared with an average
price of 60 to 70 cents per bushel dur-
ing 1891-1893, when McKinley protec-
tion was in uninterrupted operation.
The American farmer must prepare
himself for this new value of barley
*1 New York, deducting freight from
the farm and commissions, so as to
arrive at the new farm price. The
American farmer will appreciate the
loss as his contribution to a valuable
"object lesson" in free trade. He will j
also remember that this is but the first
step toward free trade, and that the 1
democratic leaders have promised to !
make the tariff rates still lower, and ;
oonsequently to still further cheapen |
the farm value of American barley.
Cotton Needs Protection.
In the fiscal year of 1893 our exports ■
of raw cotton were 4,401,524 bales, or i
2,204,131,711 pounds, of the value of j
$187,01?,689, or 8,484 cents per pound, i
In the same year the imports for con-
sumption were of raw cotton 43,330,286
pounds of the custom house value of
#4,686,439, manufactured cotton goods
of the custom house value of 819,031,-
638, of flax and its manufactures, $30,-
679,240. All these foreign products
should have been excluded by a tariff |
sufficiently protective for the purpose;
all the needed cotton and flax and
manufactures of both should have been !
produced in our own country.
Of Course It Will.
The woolen,the textile,the Sheffield,
the Birmingham, and some other of
our representative industries are antici-
pating' increased American orders, and
the return of prosperity to these trades
will show itself in greater activity
among the iron and steel trades. Welsh
tin plate, moreover, is greatly advant-
aged by the new tariff, and tiie return
of settled conditions of trade in the
United States also is calculated to help
on the revival which has already com-
menced.—Colliery Guardian of Eng-
land,
In Doubt.
Sympathizer—My dear, I hear that
your husband is dead.
Sympathise (weeping)—Yes, ho has
left for parts unknown.—N. Y. World,
He Had Hip Disease
Was treated at the Children's Hospital
in Boston, aud when he came home had
John ltoylc
SEVEX RUNNING SOKES on his
leg. Could not step. We have been
giving him Hood's Sarsaparilla a year,
and he can walk, run and play as lively
as any boy. He has no sores and is the
PICTUHE OP HEALTH. John
C. Boyle, Ware, Mass. Remember,
Hood's
-'•Cures
Hood's Pills do not t>urge calnor gripe.
WE WILL MAIL rOSTrfllft
a fine Panel Picture, CL.ltled
"MEDITATION "
in exchange for 18 Large Lion
iieuda, cut from Lion Coffee
wrappers, nnd a 2-ceut Btamp to
pay postage. Write for llat of
cur other fine premiums, includ-
ing books, n knife, game, eto.
Woolson Spicc Co.,
450 iluron St., TyLEDO, Oeio.
Woven Wire FENCE
8 No. 9 and 11 No. 14 wires 50 In
high. Make It yutirKelf for 16c
** per rod.
U.0TH/N&1
(HUNGER
vOuBL
trade
bull strong, pig and chicken
tight. Make it yourself for 20o
. l>cr rod. Kltnelmnn Bros.,
KklgevUle, Ind. Catalogue free.
Patents. Trade-Marks,
Examination and Advlre as to Patentability of
Invention. Send for " Inventors' Uiiide, or IIow to Gel
a Patent." PaTP.I'Z 0TAR2ELL. WASHRTGTJiT, D. C.
DIRECTIONS for using I
CREAM BALM.—Apply!
a particle of the Balm well [
up into the nostrils. A fter
a moment draw a strong I
breath through the nose.
Use three times a day, af- I
ter meals prefeired, and \
before retiring.
ELY'S CREAM BALM
Opens and r'eansea the Nasal Passages. Allays Pain
and Intiammation, Heals the Sores. Protects the
Membraue lrom Colds, Restores the Senses ot Taste
and Mnell. The Balm is quickly absorbed and given
relief at once.
hay fever
j deputies for a credit of 60,000 francs
Near Spol^ne, Washington three j for the expense of an expedition
apainsi the Hovas, the ruling tribe of
John Hi'SS.mav of La Crosse, Wis.,
had a busy day a short tima ag-o. In
tho morning his horse ran away and
smashed up a costly carriago. In th«
afternoon another runaway bruised
him, and in tho evening ho was jhot
accidentally.
Faiimer Swayne of Huntington, Pa.,
who has unearthed tho skeleton of a
mastodon on his farm, is watching tho
mouths of the scientists water as "they
angle for his prize. It is tho best
crop Farmer Swayne has raised in sev-
crul yearu.
highway robbers successfully worked
the western part of county on last
Monday, and besides securing consid-
erable plunder, they shot two of their
victims. They were first heard of
near Cheyne, where they held up and
robbed several parties who were on
the highway. A farmer who refused
to contribute was shot through the
shoulder and seriously injured. Later
in the day the trio attempted to hold
up Louis Quincia near Marshall, and
when he failed to comply with the re-
quest of "hands up," they all fired at
him. Quincia fell with two bullets in
his body and later was found bv the
roadside in a dying condition.
Von Bieberstein, while retaining
his present office of imperial secretary
of state for foreign affairs, has been
appointed a member of .the Prussian
cabinet without portfolio.
It is stated that Viceroy Li Hung
Chang, instead of taking command of
the first Chinese arinv, as it was said
he had been ordered to do, has been
transferred from Tien-fsin to Pekin.
A detachment of the first Japanese
army has reached the landing place of
Madagascar. The hostile operations
will be under the direction of tho
Minister of Marine. Col. Tiorgoise des
I Hordes will hold the chief command.
Governor Altgeid last Wednesday
commuted to imprisonment for life
tin* sentence of (Justave II. Menkhaus-
•*n. of St. Clair county, who killed his
wife about a year ago, and was con-
demned to bejhung. In granting the
commutation the Governor suggests
that there is a possibility that the
woman committed suicide und was
not murdered.
The First National Hank of San
Hornardino, Cal., closed its doors last
Thursday morning, and posted a
notice that the suspension was due to
lack of funds. The directors assert
that the bank's depositors will not loso
a dollar. They state that the with'
drawal of large sums of money by a
few heavy depositors who had become
alarmed by rumors that the bank was
unsafe brought on the failure.
The store of Julius Auerbach, at
the second army, and communication Wetraore, Mo., was looted last Satur-
between the two armies has been es- tla>' watches and clothing being
tablished. . taken.
son bill proposed a duty of only 35 pe:- j
cvnt ad valorem.
Since we are to have imports of Rus-
sian barley into the United States it is
v eli for farmers to learn a few facts i
concerning this new competition that
they must meet. The total average
barley crop of Kussia amounts to 135,-
000,000 bushels, as compared with an
average crop of 00,000,000 bushels in
the United States. During a period of
five years, 188G-1890, Kussia exported
30,000,000 bushels of barley to other
countries, this being 15 per Cent of all
of Hussia's exports of cereals.
The only recent official report tipon
Its "Inspiring Confidence."
The democratic party is the only
party that has given the country a for-
eign policy consistent and vigorous,
compelling respect abroad and inspir-
ing confidence at home.—Democratic
Platform, Chicago, 1892.
An instance of its "inspiring confi-
dence at home"' can be found in the
withdrawal of Mr. Harold M. Sewall
of Maine from the democratic party.
Aluminum Hunts.
An aluminum torpedo boat, built by
Yarrow for the French government,
hasj nst had a trial on the Thames.
The boat in GO feet [long, 9 feet 3
inches beam and weighs, wjth the
water in its boilers, 9 tons 8
hundred weight, the hull alone weigh-
ing just 2 tons. The material used
was an alloy of 92 per cent ot' alumi-
num and G per cent of copper. A
striking result obtained from using the
lighter metal Was a gain of three and !
one half knots over the steel boat of |
the same wodel; the aluminum boat
making twenty and one half knots:
but its was also made possible to use
thicker scantling, which stiffened the
boat so that the vibration was not ap-
preciable. The boat is easier to lift,
and more buoyant in the water. The
cost of the metal was over £1,000, or
twice as much as a steel boat of the
same model.
The Alaska, Indians in the absence
of suitable birch make their canoes of
sprues bark. A measured section of
bark is first peeled from the tree after
it has been ringed at both ends and
scored longitudinally. The ends are
then doubled and sewed with roots,
and a suitable gunwale und frame of
willow are fitted and sewed to the
bark. Two Indians can build one
oanoe in a day.
A particle 1b applied into each nostril and is agree-
ible. Prifce 50 centa, at driiKKlsts or by mail.
ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street, New York.
WALTER BAKER & GO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, HICH CRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On thia Continent, hare receivdA
HIGHEST AWARDS
from the great
Industrial and Fori
EXPOSITIONS
In Europe and America.
Unlike the Dutch l'rocean, no Alka-
lies or other Chcmicala or l) ei ar*
'n "n7 of thHr prepnfationa.
Their delleioua BREAKFAST COCOA la absolutely
pure and aoluble, and costs less than one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
walter baker & co. dorchester, mass.
"COLCHESTER''
SPADING
BOOT.
BEST IN MARKET..
BEST IN FIT.
BEST IN WMAKING
QUALITY.
The outer or tnp Role ex-
m : tends the whole length
3..^ down to the heel, pro-
tecting the boot in dig.
glng and in other hard
work.
ASK YOTJR DEALER
FOR THEM
and don't be put off
with Inferior goods.
COL.CI1ESTEK RUBBEII CO.
E FAILS.
Beat Cough Syrup. Taatoa
•d. Uso
In time. Bold by dniKKlata.
aazMSEason-E
(
t there is need of ventilation?
City Father — Ventilation? Great
Csesar! No; there's been altogether too
much ventilation of the place already.
—Boston Transcript.
Dashau ay—I have just heard from
Miss Penstock what an uncomfortable
voyage she had going over, and I wish
now I hadn't sent her that five-pound
box of candy down to the steamer be-
fore she left.
deverton—Why?
Dashaway—Well, it was just like'
throwing money overboard.—Brooklyn
Life.
f
1
J
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Mangum, R. Y. The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 06, No. 07, Ed. 1 Friday, November 16, 1894, newspaper, November 16, 1894; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc137189/m1/2/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.