The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 06, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 19, 1895 Page: 2 of 8
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Norman Transcript
ED. P. INGLE, PuMidhor.
f-cCK'S BAD BOY
Norman,
r
Olc. T'y
^
humilation of a countess.
Driven by Poverty to Menial Bervlre
and Finally to Theft,
Countess Clarice Strozrl nat on the
prisoner's bench In a Rome police court
three weeks ago. In the police books
■he had been registered as a chamber-
maid whose mistress accused her of
theft. Behind this humiliation of the
Countess lay a remarkable story. Count
FMppo Strozal, her father, stood In
the front rank of Papal Rome's society.
He was enormously rich and his ances-
try was traced well back beyond the
mldiiN utffH. R« hid lUwiUidHd his
fortune by marrying a Marquise of
Blond!, who l«i 1867 bore him the
daughter afterward known as the
Countess Clarice. The child lived In
Roman splendor und luxury until her
twelfth year, when her father lost
three-fourths of his fortune. 8he had
just begun to attract lovers by her
beauty and be counted on by her par-
ents for a rich marriage, when th« rest
of the family fortune went by the
board. The Strozzls yielded their last
hold on the fashion of the capital, with-
drew to a Cv't.nge in Bologna, and, with
only the nocesHarles of life, began a
long penance for the extravagance of
other days. The troubles of her par-
ents told upon the young countess'
•plrltn. Without society and exiled by
poverty from her acquaintances of
former days, she grew moody and de-
spondent. Eventual.y she decided to
run away and distract her mind with
work. At Christmas she went to visit
a girl friend In Catania. She did not
return home, but hastened from Ca-
tania to Rome, where she got a place
as a chambermaid, Hhe had cut her
hair and disguised her figure and car-
riage so completely that she was rot
recognized by two of her father's old
friends who callctl at her mistress'
house, and could not be identified by
the detectives whom her father had
looking for her. Accidentally one day
In February she hear<] a man calling
upon her mistress speak cf her father's
distress. A few hours later she took
some $300 worth of diamonds and pearls
from her mistress' room. She pawned
them In the evening, and made ready
to send the money to her father on the
following day; but the theft was dis-
covered, and she was arrested the next
morning. Five men from the Roman
world of fashion appeared In court to
plead with the Judge to show her mercy.
They all had known her as a child In
her father's palace. The result was
that the judge pronounced her crime
already expiated by the six days' Im-
prison tnmt between her arrest and
trial.
THE CO-OPERATIVE PLAN.
tfiuiy Chicago Kctail Store* Aro Putting
It Into Practice.
Quite a number of Chicago's large re
tall establishments are at present be-
ing conducted on the co-operative plan,
and the result Is said to have been
highly satisfactory to both the pro-
prietors and the employes. January 1
Is th" date at which the distribution
f>f prvv'n take place, and consequently
quite a number of the establishments
which have adopted the system made
their semi-annual dlvisicn of profits
within the past several weeks says the
Chicago Grocer. Among those which
have adopted this method of rewarding
their employes are Carson, Plrle Scott
A Co.. and the system under which this
distribution Is made is something
unique and well worthy attention of
business men throughout the country.
When the system was adopted all the
salespeople who had been In the em-
ploy of the company one year or more
were then Informed that If the amount
of their sales for six months exceeded
the total for the same period of time
during the previous year, they would
receive a commission—averaging
per cent, throughout the store—on the
excess. Immediately the young men
and women behind the counters began
to Increase their efforts to sell good?,
and when the first distribution was
madp 'ast July pome surprising results
were shown. Shop girls, drawing $10
a week in wages, received as high as
Scares the (iroeeryinan About Mad
Dogs- Tel In How Crime Can lit*
Prevented by Vaccination.
•'Maldo^! Mad dog!" shouted the
hoy, us he rushed in the grocery store
r it h both ha cJa on the basement of his
pants, as though a do^ was after him.
lumped under the count r and crawl cl
behind the barrel of lump white su^ar.
"Hide yourself quick or you are a dead
man." The groeeryman was cutting a
slice off a cheese for a servant girl with
a shawl over her hem! His first idea
was to run down cellar, but the girl slid
iown there, so the grocery man simply
jumped ; to a crockerv crate and laid
down aim ]>erspire'l. He wished every
dog in the world was dead. Presently
he heard a crunching behind the count-
er, as of lump sugar b ing chewed by a
boy, and he raised up out of th • crock-
ery crate slowly, got out of it and walk-
ed on tip-toe behind tin; counter, and
took the bad boy by the ear and led him
out by the stove, an I emptied about a
hat full of sugar out of his pockets.
Then he looked at the boy. The boy
began to froth at the mouth, and snap
with his teeth, and In; said:
4,<), vaccinate me, quick, I am bit.11
The grocery gave the boy a kick in
the pantaloons, and said:
"There, you are vaccinated. That is
the first application of Pasteur^ treat-
ment. If you feel spells coming on
again, I will give you more sole leather
virus in your system. What you mean,
coming in here yelling mad dog, and
scaring my customers down cellar?11
and tiie grocery man wrapped up the
cheese and called the girl out of the cel-
lar and sent her home.
"(), 1 only wanted to see if you were
a coward. But you ain't, O, no. You
only went into that crockery crate head
first just for fun Say. do you bcl eve
in vaccinationP11 and the boy brushed
some straw olF of the grocery man1 s coat.
"Yes, I do,11 said the groeeryman.
"The science of vaccination is the great-
est discovery of this or any age, and
he turned the boy around to give him
aiK -.^j' kick.
"VroU, so do I,11 said the boy as he
put tut. stove between himself and the
groeeryman. "The time is coining
when vaccination is going to be used for
everything. I bel eve the time will
come when criminals will be prevented
from committing crime by vaccination.
For instance, suppose yv u were a thief,
and everybody knew it I don't say
you are,11 said the boy, as the grocery-
Jian picked up a barrel head, "though
your symptoms are favorable. But sup-
post? you were a thief. Take an honest
man, one everybody knew to be honest,
and vaccinate him, and when it began
to work, tako some of the virus and vac-
cinate you. As soon as it began to work
on you, your power of lift ing things that
Jiil not belong to you would birgone.
You would Lc 'omc an honest man in
spite of yourself, by vaccination. I don't
say it could be made to work on you,but
it might. If my scheme works, and uni-
versal vaccination is established, there
will be no more crime. Then they will
vaccinate bank cashiers against defalca-
tions, and with the virus from an honest
m nister, say, th«j cashier can't steal to
save him."
"Yes, but TJ'.yOse the minister hap-
pens lo be one of these kind that runs
away witli other people's wives?
VVouldn't the cashier be liable to elope,
if the viniti worked on h m?'1 remarked
the groe rvman. with a wise look.
"(), well, maybe," said the boy. "But
we w ill have to be careful where we get
our virus. Bur -.ve can settle the In lian
question by v; eination. Suppc se we
tako the hostile Indians, and vaccin ite
them with virus from these dudes. As
ouick as it works on the Indians all the
light will be taken out of tiiem, and they
w II go moping around, afra d to say
their souls are their own. The virus
from a dude—if you can raise virus on
a dude, and it senn as though you
could, if you can make it work on a
heifer calf wo ild do as much to ex-
terminate Indians, and make them
jjcaeealil •. as a whole army. I wouldn't
be afraid to tight an Indian myself, after
he ha 1 been vaccinated with the virus
from a dude. Say. that will be a good
Way to whip Sullivan. Let him b • vac-
cinated with virus taken from a peace-
able Quaker, and Sullivan would Ik
patrol wa^on." V/e'l, you'd a dlje to GRIPS.
see pa. He jumped right over the dog,
and went down the crllar stair, at two | A hickory club is very eood luirfwr
jumps and crowded in the coal Inn un- , ^ 11()or a msn with
der the kindl ng wood. I wiped the
la'h r oil th - dog's mouth, and took tin
rubber hand off, an I me ami the dog I
| went down cellar and hunted pa out. . . -
When pa saw our dog wagging his tail 1 J-™1' than it is to begin wacre you left
and acting so happy, and no froth
When Adam got up in the morning it
never took him long to dross.
It is easier to leave off where you l>e-
his mouth, lie came, out, and then said,
•That settles it. I drank an egg-nog
down town, and it went to my head,
and 1 thought 1 saw egg-nog all over
the dog's nose and mouth, and 1
thought he w„.i Mad. Poor doggie! No
more egg-nog i'.e your Uncle Ike.' And
then pa crawled out of the coil b'n, and
gave in 'a half d >11 ir not to tell auyb ly
he was scared. (), whew, whew, what
a dust! What makes you sweep out
grocery?" And the boy went out
coughilig,—Peck's S//n.
in premiums for the six months. | Come a man of peace, ami any of tin
The salary of the employe Is raised In
ratio with the excess of the sales and
according to the wage percentage
which governs the department in which
she works. If, however, she wus suc-
cessful In exceeding the amount of
eales necessary to make her salary at
the percentage fixed In her department
by, say, $1,000, she would receive a com-
mission on this amount of about 2%
per cent, or $25. Besides this she would
have her salary raised for the next six
months by an amount equal to the com-
mission per week that she had earned
on her sales. In this example it would
be one-twentieth of $25, or $1.26 ad-
vance per week.
Where Are the Cl rand mot hern?
I often wonder what has become of
the type of white-haired, white-capped,
eweet-faced dames, whom we treasure
in our memory as either our own or
some other favored mortal's grand-
mother. Search for her as you will, she
Is not to be found. The grandmother of
to-day is a dressy, middle-aged party,
who would prefer that her children s
children call her "aunty" than give her
the rightful appellation that implies a
gTeater weight of years. The ardent
love for the Uttle folks has not dimin-
ished. The active, stylish woman of 50
is quite as wiapped-up in the toddler*
who lisp "grandma" as was her more
picturesque prototype. Are these youth-
ful grandmothers due to the fact that
girls are marrying earlier? Whatever
the cause we Cf-.niot help feeling sorry
for the children who will never possess
memories of such grandmothers as
marked the old time.
The lliimltle lien.
The poultry and egg crop of the Unit-
ed States Is estimated to be worth $2f Q,-
000,000 annually. Startling as these fig-
ures may appear, it seems still more re-
markaHe that, besides the above, we
import between 60.000,000 and 100,000,000
dozen each yenr
The ca;«i?men are right—th* United
States should compel Gel-many and
France to inspect all the wines and edi-
bles exported from those countries Into
this. About two-thirds of the wines
WCttld 1* found defective.
boys could go up and swat him in th
mouth, and lie would go oil' and cry, and
8ay he would tell his mother. The only
tiling I am afraid of is that they w)l) :rei
to using vaccination in politics. Suppose
all the democrats should be vaccinated
with virus from republicans, and it
should work, the vol rs thus operated
upon would vote the republican ticket,
and ruin the party in power."
"(>, don't go on that way, you weary
me," sad the groeeryman, as he took a
wash dish of water and a whisk broom,
and began sprinkling the lloor, prepar-
atory to tie* regular semiannual sweep-
ing out, "Tcli roe v hat the commotion
was over to your house last night? 1
heard your father had to bo dug out of
the coal pile under the sidewaP,. How
did he get there?"
"Well, I'll tell you. It u... all his
fault. You nee, we have be n excited
about this mad dog scare, and 1 asked
Pa what he would do if he met a mad
dog. 1 told him he would get up and
dust, but he said he would grab the
dog by its hind legs and beat its brains
out. IL< said men were cowards gener-
ally. He hated to see men get frighten-
ed and run when any calamity happen-
ed. 1 thought 1 would try pa, Vause I
never heard of his showing much sand.
So I took our black setter dog, and took
pa's lather brush and put lather all
around the dog's mouth for foam. Then
1 took one of these little rubber bands
and put it around the dog's upp r jaw.
That made the do<; open his mouth and
show his teeth, and chew so as to get
the rubber oil". But the dog wagged his
tail all the time, t a use he icuew it was
only one of my jokes on him, and he
wasn't mad. But he did look savage.
When pa came in from down town at
supper time I was up stairs with the
dog. and I let him go, and he went
down stairs on a gallop to welcome pa.
He thinks everything of pa. Pa saw
him cui-'tgand he saw the foam on
tiy mouth, and pa's hair just raaed
figfit up. The dog was go ng to jump
Upon pa as usual, and have pa take oil'
the rubber band, but pa yelled, "Take
him oil! He's mad! Hanner, lock your-
self in the closet aud telephone for the
Ostriches in New Zealand.
C\i ristchurch, New Zealand, corre-
spondent of The Sew York Mail and
Express writes: The experiment of
ostrich-farming at this place is likely to
be successful. In 1881 a pair of
ostriches w re brought from Africa.
This was before the duty of £11)0 per
bird and 1,7) per egg was imposed. In
consequent* i of an order for 160 pairs
of ostrich •& for (California having been
received, the South African government
saw that a valuable revenue might be
lost to it, in the exportation of ostrich-
feathers, and therefore imposed the be-
fore nicut Y.ned prohibitory duty. Now
it is asditlicult to get an ostrich or an
ostrich tvrg from Africa :ls it had before
been comparatively easy. Only ashort
distance from this place is an ostrich
farm that bids fair to become profitable.
With the afor said pair there have been
raised two line hens now 2 years old,
and six young chickens only a few days
old. The male bird is black, very tine,
and pugnacious. If a stranger ap-
proaches the paddock he drops on the
ground, expanding his wings to the
fullest extent, an.I thrusts out his head
and long neck in a challenging mood.
If the stranger comes nearer he b-gins
to tight and as the bird is both heavy
and strong he is generally the victor.
He thus protects the hens and the young.
To collect t.ie feathers is a very d.Hicult
task. The birds have to be driven from
the paddock by means of long forked
sticks into a house especially bu It for
the purpose, an 1 which is entered by
means of swing gates. When penned
in the fcainers are cut off to about an
inch from the butt. These butts are
left on the birds until dried up, when
they are removed by means of t weezers,
without injury to the bird. From the
young birds, those not 2 years old tint I
February, two corps of valuable feath-
ers have been obtained, and a third is
nearly ready. The "chicks" have no
feathers yet, but will have in about
twelve months.
The hens are very prolific in laying
eggs, which art; hatched here by means
oi a patent incubator, heated to ab >ul
10,'J degrees Fahrenheit. The first ex-
periment, about a year ago, was unsuc-
cessful, through want of practical
knowledge of the necessary appliances.
This month six out of twelve eggs have
been successfully hatched, and the other
six are likely to be liefore the next mail
1 aves. The young birds are about the
size of a small hen, and covered with a
peculiar substance, not at all like feath-
ers. but more res 'tabling cut paper of a
gray-whit sit color. Tiie shells from
which they came are about as thick as a
china t -acup. Th • food of the younr :
birds consists of crushed maize, oats,
and chopped cabbage, while the old r 1
ones feed on oats, calcined bones, j
and the grass of their paddocks. After
the young birds are hatched, and old
enough, they w II he removed to a glass-
roof d house, the lloor of which is cov-
ered with sand heated artificially to 110
degrees Fahrenheit, and here they w.ll
grow up. This sort of a plan for rear-
ing has been tried with gre.it success.
The experiment thus far has been cost-
ly and many eg,rs have been lost; but
th • success of the past month has war-
ranted the h li f that ostrich farming
may be probably carried on here, and
the outlay of 1881 will pay a good reve-
nue with n a very short time. The 2-
year-old ostric.ics have to sonm
extent become acclimated, and tlu
young of this month w II in less than a
year add to one of the Lest-paving en-
terprises ever started in N.vv Zealand.
owners in the swampy
are a set of hoated-j*ond
oil".
Ileal estate
city of Toledo
holders.
It is believed that deodorized whisky
would Im; popular in the prohibition
par.y.
Lii'e moves in counter-currcnt* ever,
There Ih no vi« tors where then* Ik no rout,
No anion could exist were there no sever,
Aud fuilh uiu*t always meet with douht.
A lucent dispatch says, "bmpcror
William opened the German diet to-
day." What, the head of another bar-
rel of sour erout knocked out?
The reason Kve was not created be-
fore Adam was, the Lord kn w if He
made the woman lirst and then tried to
get. a man to suit, her, He might as well
quit and go fishing.
"I know," said Jackson, "that I
swear a great deal, but you see, 1 have
such a How of language, t.iat I am neces-
sarily compelled to put a dam in now
and then to steady the current."
When an undertaker in Texas hears
one man call another a liar, he jumps
behind a stump and by the time he gets
his measuring-string ready, there1 s a
corpse waiting for him.
"Frightened to Death by a Fit" is
the startling headline of a recent press
dispatch, and in >re startling even than
the headline is the fact that it occurred
in a tailor shop.
When Brown opened the front door
one morning and found a strange baby
in a basket on the front steps, he pick-
ed up the bundle ami as he carried it to
his wife he was heard to remark:
"Soma men are born babies, soyt?
achieve babies and some have b&biOfe
thrust upon them."
Phlit had always been accustom *d
to say his prayers under his mother's
direction, but one night he was left to
attend to it himself. When his mother
saw him next morning he said: ••Mam-
ma. 1 guess I'll say my prayers by my-
self after this. It makes me feel
'quainted with God and I can tell II m
things, better when you aintlisteninV'
After the feast, the pain,
After the plaster the draw,
After tin* clou Is th * rain,
After the freeze the thaw.
"Aw,11 drawle 1 ac'ty swell to a coun-
try boy, whom he met in the road one
freezing morning, "the superlative
gelidity of the circumamYi cut atmos-
phere rend rs extrat'ora icons peregr n-
ations, much less d leetable than s.ibte-
gulaneous pcrsuits, don't you know."
• •<Joshamity," said the boy, "do it
though? I thought it was too dang
cold for that."—Merchant Traveler,
The Heavenly Map.
Astrologers divide the heavens into
twelve equal parts, called "houses."
This is done b\ dividing the vert col cir-
cle—or .inle passing through the zen-
ith and east and w-st points of tlu
horizon into six p.irts of thirty degre s
each, and six corresponding divisons
lie below the horizon. In regard to
these "houses" Lilly says that "the
exact knowledge of them is so re pi's te
that he who learns the natur of the
planets w th out exact judgment of the
houses is 1 ke an improvident man that
furnishes himself with a variety oi
household stuil', having no place where-
in to bestow them."
To each of t lies; "hous '81' is ascribed
a particular significance. For instance,
the first house refers to tne stature,
health and life of man, or it stands in
state astrology for the common people;
/ho second one refers to wealt h general-
ly; the third to brethren, to lc t. rs and
to messengers, etc., and so of the other
houses. The seventh house is singular-
ly heterogeneous in its signification, as
it refers to lovers and husbands, animals
strayed, thieves and things stolen; so
that if a young lady were to itmu re after
her absent lover, or an elderly lady alt r
her favorite cat, the as rolog r 'would
look to "the seventli house and pla icts
therein and respectng.'1 The n xt
things of importance in astrology are the
zodiacal signs. Aries, the first sign, is
described as being fiery, choleric, bes-
tial, luxur ous, in'ein->crate a id violent;
and b'sides, it "ru es" gumboils, tooth-
ache, baldn ss, pl ic 's of refuge for
thieves, and, am ng oth r countries,
England. Campanella says that "Aries
makes people ferocious, st inborn, tierce,
bold, pre sum dive and crafty, like the
English." We ought to fe 1 compli-
mented. Taurus 8 gniti-s p ople given
to pi 'asures, I.ke N apoli a is. Virgo
signifies the lust mathematicians,
astronomers, lc u iumI a id ingenious
m n, e c. Libra no nts to those given
to t ie del'ghts of music, aud so on.— All
t ic Year Hound.
ADAM'S PEAK.
Ceylon's Holy Mountain, to Which
Kuddhlsts .Make PIIgrimages.
Far away in the mystic east there
risos, high to tiie sun, a great natura
altar, at which, since the dawn of ages,
man has, without ceas'ng, worshiped
until now. Over the d irk-eyed, impas-
sive people of t hat strange, unalterable
east ages flow a id leave no mark; hun-
Is oi generat'ons are born and pass
:.«vay and no change is wrought among
them There is an awfulness in their
steady inmi ibility. Dynasties may ris
and fall, governments in iv come and go,
the name of their belief may be change I
and little differences in ritual and ser-
vice may spring up, but from ;eon unto
a on the pcopie are unchanged. It is
the same life that they lead and the
same things that they worship. Back,
far back into the night of time, so far
back that the memory of those then
living is irrevocably lost in the void of
the forgotten past, the dark-skinned
people, wandering naked and unshamed
in the forest depths of tli3 Island of
('eylon, look <1 with wide eyes, in which
the freshness and the wonder of the
youth time of mankind still shown with
the brightness of the dawn, upon Adam's
peak, the great, solitary moil ita n, ris-
ing Ion ly in its grandeur and height
from the low hills around it and the sea
of forest at its f et. Clouds capped its
hoarv summit, storms played around its
heights, the very lightnings themselves,
which they so dreaded and revered,
scenic 1 born among its great roeks and
deep ravines; and gazing upon its sub-
lim ty in storm and upon its majesty in
peace they innocently wondered un il
wonder grew to worship. So slight
have ham the changes wrought upon its
rocks by the w« ar and tear of fourthou-
j sand years of storm that the Very paths
i to its sacred summit that were followed
j centuries before the beginning of the
1 pr sent era are worn by the f •-t of the
weaiy p-lgr'4} of to-day. There is a
legend that ..e iron chains fastened to
the walls of rock to give the pilgrims
safety along the prcc'pices of that last |
"sky league" were placed there in the
time and by the order of Alexander.
The links, though worn, arc sound even
vet. About a mountain such as this,
beaut ful in its If, long eonsid red to be
the 1 ftiest in all Ceylon, and holy, if
only from the steady voice of four thou-
sand years of prayer, 1 gends are sure
to gather, eloudlike and thick. Adam s
peak is clothed from base to summit
with one great rob; of myth and fabled
story. Not a rock but has its h story,
n >t a brook without its legends of wor-
shiper or worshiped. Beneath this over-
lii.iiguig cliti* Gautama Bu dna slept,
upon that dizzy he ght Buddha, in his
second incarnation, prayed. Although
i so cialiy sacred to Bod Ilia, it is not only
B iddhists who regard th s mountain as
a holy spot; Hind os an I Mohamme tans
j resp ;ct and rcvcrcn. e it, as, too. d d our
' ow i Christian people, in earlier and
; simpler tini *s than these. But although
| the w hoi i mountain is regard id as holy
I by all Or e ital people, i h only the sa-
I cred footpr nt on the b >ld crag at the
: very summit that is act, tally worshiped,
j To perform a pilgrim ig 5 to tlrs and to
I lay an off ring upo it is to a Buddhist
what a vis t to Mecca is to a M >hamtnc-
i dan. The time for the gr atest number
of pilgrims to visit the mountain is April
an I May, but all the year round a
steady stream of devotees Hows to t-iis
s irinc of the m >st holy of ali th j reiics
of their great t tucker.—Com hill Mao-
azine.
Berlin has no shims.
Edison makes rubies.
Krupp is worth $2,000,000. ^
Aluminum yachts multiply, i
China has no telegraph poles,
Zante has a petroleum spring.
Brussels wili become a seaport.
Milliona:re Starin was a peddler.
Rawlins Wyo, has a pa nt mine.
New York City has ll.ono factories.
Throughout Finland women are reg-
ularly engaged in agricultural labor.
A British commander-in chief when
on active service receives f375 per
week.
Out in Walton, Kan., a church festi-
val nu postponed on aciouut of a
dance.
The clothing of the women of the
Sult'in of Turkey costs $7,500,000 a
year, so it is said
North Carolina go d mines will be
worked.
Weak Nerves
Indicate sorely as any physical symp-
tom shows anything, that the organs
and tissues of the body are not satisfied
with their nourishment.
They draw their sustenance from the
blood, and if the blood is thin, impure,
or insufficient, they are in a state of re-
volt. Their complaints are made to
the brain, the king of the body, through
the nervous system, and the result of
the general dissatisfaction is what we
oall Nervousness.
This is a concise, reasonable explana-
tion of the whole matter.
The cure for Nervousness, then, is
simple. Purify and enrich your blood
by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, and the
nerves, tissues and organs will have the
healthful nourishment they crave. Ner-
vousness and Weakness will then give I
way to strength and health.
That this is not theory but fact is
proven by the voluntary statements of!
thousands cured by Hood's barsapa-l
rilia. Iiead the next column.
"With pleasure I w"l ft ate that Hood's
Sarsaparilla lias helped me wouderfully.
For several months I could uot lie down to
sleep on account of heart trouble aud also
Prostration of the Nerves.
For three yrgra I had h*eu doctoring, Ixit
could not jfet cured. I received relief for a
while, but not permauent. Soon after be
ginning lo take Hood's Sarsaparilla ther*
was a change for the belter, in a short
time I was fueling spleudidly. 1 now ml
well aud am able to do work of whateror
kind. If I had not tried Hood's 8arsa|iarllla
I do uot know what would have t>ecome of
me. I keep it in my house all the time, and
other members of the family take it, aud ail
say there is
Nothing Ilk* Hood's
Sarsaparilla. I have highly recommended ti
and on> of my neighbors has commenced
tukina 't I recomiueod Hood's Sarsaparilla
at every opportunity." Mas. S. Bk«b
dock, 404 Erie A v., Williaiusport, Peuusjt-
vauia, liemember
Hood's Sarsaparilla
fls the Only
True Blood Purifier
niiefUL l.wt or h(da*n lrea*>ur*-n. vr |. ru« u I
l-rn iv Mr*-.*. M i). Fowl nr, Box Wl. Smithlnrtnn, Cl
Patents. iraae-Marks.
P.xaininaUoo and Advice &a to Patentability <u
ft vmtion. ft nid for " Inventora' Oulde, or IIow to Ge
• nt'op — — *w*3HntGTW, D. &
HAVE YOU HEARD
How rheap you can buy tne Car.
rlfiUalvniiir.rd Steel \\ li <l
.fllllt If nut, write for price*; t
will a*tonl h you 4'lltltltC
U I > l> SILL CO.. Aanliat.
tan.
' e scalper
14 pare«, 9c. ill abont making money la Oral*
nd Sb-ckn by "scalping tbo market" on margin* of
WO to 1,000 Het,t method yet. All calper n
nooey. LaxaiKU A Co., 112 guincy St., Chicago*
WELL MACWN-RV
• Catnlo ne ehowlria We i
J "KILLS HYDRAPUC
MACHINEKY, KT<\,
vZrJa 'Ifd e bten U5aled *nd *J1
Sowell i Cfnse Machinery Co
«r tuLI'a Avenue, '
kansas way, >t i6ooliu,
" COLCHESTER •'
spading
bcct.
BEST IN MARKET.
BEST IV FIT.
BESi' IS WE A KINO
J QUALITY.
The outer or tap sole ex-
* tends the wln le length
down to tliti heel, pro-
tecting the boot in difr-
pintr and iu other hurd
work.
ASK YOUR PEALEU
KOK THEM
and don't I e put o 12
with iuterlur Rood*.
COliCflE^TF TI It IT nil Kit CO.
WALTEK BAKER & GO,
*■—The Largest Manufacturers of
\ PURE, HIGH GRADE
vcocoas and chocolates
^ Ou tlila Continent, have receive
HIGHEST AWARDS
from the a,ut
Industrial and M
EXPOSITIONS
in Europe and America.
pure aud aoluble, aud co*ts lets than vnc ctut a cup.
SOLD BY QROCtnS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
Theve pattern* retail In taxhlon barnart and •lore*
for J'. to 10 cent* each, but In onler to inciea-e the da
Biand among htrarnyera *e offer them to the lady read
er- ef thin paper lor the teniarkably low price of ecJy
I•• ceatfa earl) I'« *U.ge one cent e<tr
The pattern- are all of the erj lat«*t New Terk
•tyle- ami are une<|ualed for >t.vle. accuracy of nt, «lm
pllclty an I economy. For twenty-four year* thaw
pattern a hare been used Site country over. Fall de
icrlptlono and ilii ectloBH—a* the number of yard* ctt
material require!, the number and name* of the dil-
r«*i ent piece* In the pattern, how to cut and and po«
b e garment together ai« ent with each pattern,
with a picture of the carment to go by. The •< ;>a -'
lern* are omplete In erery pai tlcular, there bclx* a
lepaiato p ern for every ninifle piece -A the tcewe.
lour older w||] be filled the >-ame day It ti recalred.
F.rery pattern urua- perf ect.
Udibm' Tea Gown. „33l is cut In lx elsae
via.: 33, 94, 34, 30, <9 axid inches bunt measure.
Here i> a ve j ehaiinta*
g"«n of pale gieen crepoa,
with front of crimped Chin*
silk In pale pink, green a <*
whlt««.
Fi 11 graduated bretelle*
of lace from the ahouliiere.
tiie full equaie yoke being
outlined wit i l'!<>*
satin ribbon. 1 <ng ^ earner*
of which fall from the roeette
at thu left fr<>nt. The «tyUak
anantreineiit is made ever
fit e i linlnga that alo*e u
oenter front. The yoko and
ull front can aliw be made
i cen i er, or at the
ohoulder and left front under
rosette a- here shown.. A
criibh collar of silk finishes
ti e neck. The lower por-
ti nH of the nleeve* ar*
faced with th* crln ped Hilk.
full Empire puffs oi the ore
pon standing out styUshty
at the top*.
When not convenient to
om? ti e crimped nlk, the
front can be gathered or plaited. Accordion plaited
lllk Is much ur^l in this way.
I Hloh oon.blnatlona of laco. net. crepe, or rnom <ellne-
ie- ole and hilk, taffeta, ca-hmere or Henrietta, can
!>e deouru eI to suit Individual fancy. This wlila!**
be found a good model for o«.tton iabrice and the full
roice, collar and bretelle* can be omitteJ lf.«o pr*
fai iod.
Tiie retail price of thf" • in 35 centa
Bon* shirt Waist. i k..c "o <364 la eut la flva
ti e , via: I, 6. 8, 10 and 12 yearn.
i 8ul|Ol outing flannel make _
this u>e ul and oonifortablo
farment for boys
Buttoua or btuds are used n I vMlffJ
plot-log ti e I a id at the wal i r.MBHlll
line l.elng pi o\ 1 iod * ith la< ge UUWW
I butt' n-- which will auppoit the
knee trou era AByroneollar
i flninhe* the neck. The coin-
j foitahle •'■ti t sleeve* art
I ilaahaJ at ti e back, provide I 6354
alth upi or and under faoln* BOY'S SHIRT V/A.6T8
and com I leted with cuff.-that
! are cloned 1th buttons and buttonholes or ktud* ■+
I prefert ed
j The waJ*t la lnfendad to wear with or without a coa*
, or b arer a- the weather an I circum.-tances diet .te.
It can be attractively ma '.e • p In striped, checked or
plain |ercale carabtlc uinKh^.n, Oxford KhlrUag
rrench ilanuel In blue, KTav or mix* 1 varieties.
The et .. pi ice oi .;ont«
Kia*K*' Waift vrrni \ . Pattern No. 1303 U
eut In th -e -dies, vlx : ia. U and 14 yari
A very stylish oomblna
1 n of plain and fano^.
ixed eilk and wool novelty
olotn ia heie ahown.
The plain cloth that te
shown In the waist. Jacket
[ fronts, revei-H and sleeve*, i*
tern gieen In color, ths
'trlnmdnjt that decorate* the
mu'tcm, or, at Itimt, ix mm htve don* thu pant, ntll t'*enty
<i tr ou* of «ee*-y rwen(y-/fie windmills that memM Sinc*
Vmm+Mng th* *,il* in jH/,9, WE IIAVK hOLD A HO If
500 AERMOTORS :
W* do not at'.nbuts this fairly good record entirely to onraf. Uhed
forts, but & the ► ipericrify of the g/>ods which you u.ske. si) I*
BubsillA Wins Urliana, ill , February 18, 1896 " I
0 .L*a ii W Iviught and put up Aerniotor Ifo. 1, and
out of tKs first flftj whirb you nado wa had thirteen. Since I
that tirue we bav« nolJ <Vint
400 AERMOTORS
galloon In green, browu a
goid shade*
The novelty goods from
which the ve^t Is made com
blue i the ame color*, gel der
brown being the mont prom-
inent ahade The chemisette
can be made of the plain
cloth, or It can be emitted In
fevor ef a «uite or colored lineu shirt front, aal
bow aecktie
I This Jaunty style will be found re**y becoming te
j wall foruied rais e-, who like to oopy their maiura**
-1jla, or who are almost young la lies
many pretty com lnations, both of color and fabrlo,
n be effectc l by the mode, which can be plainly flu
•shed in tailor fashion, or decorated !u any preferred
6303.
be retail price of pattern Is 33 centa.
hour. That history i _
Ande from the Aei motor
other wmdioill* put up
vnoujjh with whieh to
•how (he inflniW su- |
Aertnctor in 4eai|n,
Annh (all (ilvanitcd
tion), aud sbility to run
when all 'ither* strnd
We should have sold more,
supplied with wind power
pfsied, it hems onlyM miles
fears he«n the battle ground
argest, best known
paniei. sll bains located
Bl ( II OF Ot'R bI'^mrhh
Fl.tCINO noooi.1 AND
TOUY W IIKFLS WITII
you have during the past
*iom year's record by
you expect to duubl* your
ooming year Count on u«
the Asrn.ot .' n-var stood farthi
id in fact ttian to day.
unbroken tr.iniph.
ther* have l>een but fsw
t rri ory—Just
I ^om^are snd
seniority ef the
>*orkmankhip,
tftar comple-
and <le effeotive werk
Idle fur want af wind,
but (his region was well
when the Aernietor sp-
to Chicago, and had for
for tan or twelve uf the
atrnr.Kest windmill oora-
within 50 ni*es of ut.
cons I-non rk.
OTH Ell un8atihfac.
AFKBO I OILS, You say
year suri assed any pre-
shout one-half, and that
last yesr's ou(put the
_ for our portion of it, for
r shove all competitor* in repu-
Sbith A Haunt, Marengo, III.,
will be of pomps. We shall offer for
$7,50 A $15
three wsy force p'.mp All Ueslsrs shouM have It or ran get It
lo *ell at that price. All Aetmotor ir.en will have It The week
following will appear our advertisement of gilvanired ateel
tanks at 21* cent* per gallon. They neither shrink, leak, ruj'
•er u>ake water taste bed. Aormotorco., tkteage.
B**t Cough Syrup. Tastes iio* d. Use
In time. 8old by druggists.
COUPCN
In ordering, give No of patterns J
wanted Bust and Waist . .. meaa- a
ure. Either of thene pattern* will be aent 6
to any address upon receipt of 10 cents in |
■liver or stamps when thia coupon Is en 4
closed with order and one cent for postage, a
with your address. ^
Address COUPON PATTERN CO., a
m m99m ^ock Bo* 7%7 New York. 1
Vt. L. Douglas
C ^ CIL3AE1 IS THE BEST.
vv#_wnvis riT FOR AKING.
f3. CORDOVAN,
FRENCH ACNAMELLCO CALF.
;4*35o FINE CALF&KAN8arqa
♦3.B0 POLICE,3 S0LE3.
WSSSpat
32.«I.7-5B0YSJ^.]0LSH0L1
BROCK TON. MAJI3.
Over One Million People wear the
W. L. Doughs $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes are equally satisfactory
They "'ve the best value for the money.
They ual custom shoes In style and lit.
Thslr wearing qualities are unsurpassed.
The prices are uniform,—-stamped on sola.
Prom Si to5j saved over other makes.
V jrwur dealer caanot supply you we caa.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Ingle, E. P. The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 06, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 19, 1895, newspaper, April 19, 1895; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc137226/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.