The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 24, 1904 Page: 2 of 10
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EIGHT > EARS OF TORTUHE.
No Buffering more
keen than kidney Buf-
fering;. Sick kid-
neys make bad blood;
causc weak, stiff and
aching backs; cause
blind, sick and diz-
zy headaches, lack of
appetite and loss of
sleep; keep you all
tired out and spoil
digestion.
To have perfect
mt-r.
m
nil,
Buying Milk by the Test.
Prof. K. A. l'oarson. lu an address
recently said: Milk for the market
ihotild be bought from the producers
in a basis of its fat content and Its
health, you must !i,anitary condition; its value as
cure the kidneys, salable product depends upon titer a
CHAPTER XXIII.—Continued.
Now there came upon the faM of
(he country faint scars where wheels
tiad cut into the hard soil, these va-
grant indices of travel not pointing ail
one way, and not cut deep, as was the
royal highway of the cattle, but cross-
ing, tangling, sometimes blending into
main-traveled roads, though more of-
Head how one man j : -o things. Everyone knows that 4
was cured by Doan'B er cent milk is worth more than H
Kidney Pills after eight years of tor- j ;>er cent to the dealer, and milk that
tlir8- las been carefully handled Is worth
Henry Soule of Pultney St., Ham- nore than that which has not. Why
mondsport. N. Y., says: "For eight should not these two desirable fac- 'on straying aimlessly off over the
years I suffered constant agony from tors be paid for at a fair rate? Al- prairie to end at the homestead of
kidney complaint. I endured the aost every argument in favor of paj* j tome farmer. These new houses were
worst torture from gravel and the ug for milk delivered to a factory, on dark and low and brown, with the ex-
kidney secretions were excessive and i rat basis, applies with equal force option that each few miles the travel-
contained sediment like brick dust. I o market milk and there are Just 1!r might see a small frame house
bad to get out of bed from ton to is strong arguments In favor of hav- painted white. Here and there over
twenty times a night and the loss ot mg the value governed also by the 'he country were broken rows of little
sleep wore me out. Indigestion came sanitary condition. The Babcock test ' J'llow, faded trees struggling up out
on and the distress after eating was shows the fat content quickly and ac- "t the hard earth. The untiring
terribie. Doan s Kidney Pills effected ;urately. An occasional examination wheels of windmills could be seen
a complete and lasting cure, and after ; ,f the producing premises supple- everywhere at their work,
the symptoms of kidney trouble were I 'nented by tasting and smelling the In the town of Kllisville the great
gone my stomach began to work as uilk when delivered and the simple heap of buffalo bones was gone from
it should. I his lasting cure, espe- icld test or the fermentptlon test, 'he aide of the railroad track. There
ciaily In a person of my age, proves the ;learly shows the sanitary condition were many wagons now, but none
great value of Doan s Kidney Pills jf the uilk. A few milk buyers are i brought In bones to pile up the rail-
more convincingly than could any now ptnehasing milk on the basis of way; for even the bones of the buffalo
words of mine i[g [ui content and, roughly we may '"ere now gone forever.
Doan s Kidney i'llls sold by all drug- say, its sanitary condition. It Is to The I.and Office was yet at Ellis-
gists. piiee 50 cents per box. or mail- the dairymen's own interest to have vllle, and the rush of settlers was con-
ed on receipt of price by Foster Mil- this practice extended. tinuous. Ellisville had thirty business
burn ( o., Buffalo, N. Y. Write for A western creamery has built up a houses and two thousand Inhabitants.
very large and successful business of It had large railway shops and the di-
Jiaking butter from hand separator vision offices of the road. It had two
^reani which is shipped from all direc- schoolhouses (always the schoolhouse
freo trial.
Don't fancy that you savo money by
patronizing Some dingy pressing and cjons and from some points 500 miles grew quickly on the Western soil),
cleaning establishment down the al-
listant. They pay two cents more per
ley. Better pay a little more nnd go pourul for buttor fat that comes lu
to a tailor. Hell respect your clothes.
Haley's No. Chill Tonic cures
Chilis and Malaria. Every bottle guar-
anteod. Sold by all dealers.
The most valuable ring in the world
Is in possession of one of the Vander-
bitten. It is set with a diamond valued
at 935,000 and muny smaller geuis.
six buildiugs of two stories, two build-
ings of three stories and built of
brick.
The stranger who asked for the old,
wild days of Ellisville the Red was
dow
6c.
,ood couditiou than for that which
:omes in bad condition. They make
iigh-class, prize-winning butter. The
lalry industry Is rapidly developing ■ told that no such days had ever been,
n their section, showing that their Yet stay; perhaps there were half a
neUiods are wise. The president of dozen men who had lived at Ellisville
•hat company told me recently that from the first who could, perhaps, take
aost patrons deliver the higher price one to the boarding houseof Mrs. Daly;
;ream, or soon patronize another who could, perhaps, tell something of
jreamery, where there is no discrim- the forgotten days of the past, the
lays of two years ago, before the pres-
population of Ellisville came Wqst.
as perhaps, a graveyard, but
it the rate of 6 to 10 cents per hun- [ the headstones had been so few that
When a woman gets a letter from jred pounds of milk, the buyer of
wim f,„„, I i , . nation between good and bad. If a days of h
>wsmoke l,cwig' -rearaery finds it profitable to differ- ent popul;
i Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. ;ntiate between good and poor cream There wa
verse ending, after the vocal fashion
of his race, with a sudden uplift of a
sheer cctave, as thus:
"I-I-I-'d dance ll-l-i-ke a fa-a-a-lree-ee-ee,
For to see ould Dunlear-e-e-e-e-e!
I-I-I-'d think twi-i-i-ice e-e-e-r-r I-I-I-'d
lave It,
For to be-e-e-e-e a drag-o-o-n."
Franklin stepped in and said good
morning. "You seem in fine fettle
this morning, friend," said he. "Very
fine, for an old man."
Battersleigh squared around and
looked at him soberly. "Ned," said
he, "ye're a dethractor of innycince.
Batty ould! Listen to me, boy! It's
fifty years younger I am to-day than
when I saw ye last. I'm younger than
ye ivver saw me in all your life be
fore."
"And what and where was the foun
tain?" said Franklin, as he seated him
self at his desk.
"The one fountain of all on earth
me boy—Succiss—succiss! The two
dearest things of life are Succiss and
Revinge. I've found thlm both
Shure, pfwhat is that gives one man
the lofty air an' the overlookin' eye,
where another full his ekil in inches
fears to draw the same breath o' life
with him? Succiss, succiss. me boy!
"Well, I suppose you don't mind my
congratulating you on your success
whatever it may be," said Franklin
as he began to busy himself about his
work at the desk. "You're just a trifle
mysterious, you know."
"There's none I'd liever have shake
me by the hand than yoursilf, Ned,
said Battersleigh, "the more especial-
ly by this rayson, that ye've nivver
believed in ould Batty at all, but
thought him a visionary schamer, an
no-more. Didn't ye, now, Ned; on
your honor?"
• "No," said Franklin stoutly. "I've
always known you to be the best
fellow In t.ho world."
"Tut, tut!" said Battersleigh. "Ye're
dodgtn' the Issue, boy. But pfwhat
wud ye say now, Ned, if I should till
ye I'd made over tin thousand pounds
"Wron* agin. It's thlm same d—4
domineerin' idjits. the yally-headed
subjeckB o' the Widdy. An' pfwhy are
they wise?"
"You'll have to tell," said Frank-
lin.
"Then I'll till ye. It's because they
WESTERN CANADA HAS
AN EXCELLENT CLIMATE.
The Saskatchewan Valley Very Highly
Favored.
An Interesting feature of Western
Canada is Its climate. Those who
have a sacra fames fer all the land on j have made a study of It speak highly
another woman that isn't underscored
every other word it seetns cold and
distant to her.
aiarket milk would find it profitable
ilso to adopt such a plan.
Old and Damaged Milk Cans.
What is more disgusting than to see
milk that is to go Into a thousand
homos carried in milk cans that bear
every mark of filth and neglect?
If we are to judge people by what Caim that aro rusty and discolored
All Up to Date Housekeepers
aae Dnfianoe Cold Water Starch, because ft
is lietier, aud 4 oz. more of it for same
money.
they say, some men must live on hay
and thistles.
Salter'* noma Builder Corn.
Bo named because 00 acres produced
•o heavily that its proceeds built a
lovely home. See Salter's cataioff.
Yielded in 1903 In Ind., 157 bu., Ohio
160 bu., Tenn. 9S bu., and in Mich. .120
bu. per acre. You can beat this record
In 1904.
WBiT DO TOU TIIIN'K or TI1EHB YIELDS
I KK ACItR !
120 bu. Beardless Hurley per acre.
810 bu. Salzer's New Nat. Oats—per A.
HO bu. Salzer Speltz & Macaroni Wheat.
1,000 bu. Pedlgref Potatoes per acre.
14 tons of rich Billion Dol. <irass Hay.
60,000 lbs. Victoria Kape for sheep—acre.
within and wlthoqt, bruised and bent,
till one would wonder if they had
been in a railroad wreck, are often
found at the stations at which milk is
delivered for shipment to the city as
well as at the creameries and cheese
factories. Such cans give the impres- j
siou to the beholder that the miik
they contain has not been well cared
for, and they speak the truth. As
every one knows, it is impossible to
clean such cans after the first layers
of tinning have been broken and rust ■
spots have appeared.
At a factory in Illinois we saw a
wagon drive up with two rows of such
■ f, II
160.000 lbs. Teosjnte, the fodder wonder. caus- How were they unloaded? The
64,000 lbs. Salzer'B Superior Fodder driver simply pushed each can over
Corn—rich, Juicy fodder, per A.
"And what and where was the fountain?"
Now such yields you can have. Mr.
Farmer, in 1904, it you will plant Sal*
aer's seeds.
JUST BIND THIS NOTICS AND ]0o
In stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co.,
La Crosse. Wis., and receive their
(treat catalog and lots of farm seed
samples. (W. N. U.)
the side and permitted it to fall to
the ground and into the mud, being
entirely careless whether the can re-
ceived injury or not. He may have
been only a hired man and apparently
did not feel a personal interest in the
matter. A close inspection of such
cans would show them utterly unfit
The world's yield of gold at this for use in conveying milk. They
time is $350,000,000. Of this amount might indeed bo used for the carrying
South Africa furnishes J7rt.000.000 and back to the farm of whey and skim-
the United States J74.425.000. miik, but are almost certain to be not
so used; for most farmers do not
UnttierOrar's Swoct rowitira for children, want to carry two sets of cans to the
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nursa creamery. One might say that the
in the Children's Home in New York, euro outside of the cans does not prove
Constipation. Feverishness, Bad Siomach,
Teething Disorders, move and regulate the
Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 30,(W0
testimonials. At all druggists 25c. Sample
Fit EE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Hoy, N. Y.
It scares a woman half to death to
think that if she never had been born
she never would have loved ber chil-
dren the way she does.
what the inside is, but the man that
stops to make an investigation finds
that there is a striking likeness. The
managers of many of our cheese fac-
tories &nd creameries will do well to
give the matter more attention than
it has so far received.
Screens in Creameries.
Screens are now being extensively
used in tiie creameries managed by
the most progressive creamery men.
We notice that the dairy and food
commissioner in one of our western
states makes a report on whether
screens aro used In the factories. As
yet no totals are possible, but the iact
that the inspectors are asking about
this practice will naturally call the
attention of creamery managers to it.
Mrs. Sequel- 1 understand your hus- The reports are published in the bul-
band can't meet Ills creditors? Mrs. letins, and the reports get back to the
Equals—I don't believe ho particularly creamery men by way of the press.
To Cere a Cold in One «lny.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
dru^guwrefuud money if it fails to cure. 25c,
Parading s cross is no proof of pos-
sessing a crown.
ir YOtT CSF IlAt.L It f.17 K,
Get Red Cn.ss Hall HI,,, the Iwst Ball Bio*.
Large 'J or package oaiy 5 cents.
one could tell but little of it now.
Much of this, no doubt, was exaggera-
tion, this talk of a graveyard, of a
doubled street, of mlirders, of the
legal killings which served as arrests,
of the lynchings which once passed as
justice. There was a crude story of
the first court ever held in Ellisville,
but of course it was mere libel to say
that it was held in the livery barn.
Humor said that the trial was over
th< case of a negro, or Mexican, or
Indian, who had been charged with
murder, and who was himself killed
in an attempt at lynching, by whose
hand it was never known. These
things were remembered or talked
about by but very few, these the old-
timers, the settlers of two years ago.
Somewhere to the north of the town,
and in the center of what was de-
clared by some persons to be the old
caitle trail, there was reputed to be
visible a granite boulder, or perhaps It
j was a granite shaft, supposed to have
J been erecten. with money contributed
by cattlemen at the request of Mrs.
Daly, who kept the boarding house on
a back street. Some one had seen this
motuinent, and brought back word
that it had tut upon Its face a singular
inscription, namely:
wants to.
The Cure that Cures, Haley's No. 3
Chill Tonic. Every bottle guaranteed,
Bold everywhere.
This should be a strong incentive to
improvement along this line.
The fly is not only a carrier of dis-
ease, but he is also a carrier of filth
in many forms. It is surprising that
all creameries and cheese factories
have not been long since provided
: JUAN THE LOCO, :
: The End of the Trail. :
This matter was, of course, not un-
derstood by all, nor did many con-
I eern themselves therewith, men being
now too busy working eight hours a
day. It was generally supposed to re-
ler to something that had happened in
the ti ays when Ellisville was wrong-
| fully alleged to have been a cow town
I —a day fur back in the past, In the
I tine of Two Years ago.
CHAPTER XXIV.
School Teacher*.
Salaries from $65 to $125 per month, wlth screens. Flies gather by thou-
II months in the year. Take a Busl- Bands wherever there is a creamery
ness and Shorthand course at Tyler or cheese factory and literally swarm
College, Tyler, Texae. Get a position 01 er the butter, cheese and into the
in a bank, mercantile house, railroad m'"c ail(I cream. The writer reniem-
offlce, or in the Civil Service work. bers being in a first-class dairy school
What hundreds have done, you can w'hero flies were altogether too nu-
do. ; merous for comfort. Here and there ,
Write for catalogue and full partlcu- they were to be seen swimming in The Success of Battersleigh.
lars. Address Tyler College, Tyler, *he cream or buttermilk. In a "brick n,'morl'ing when J-ranklin entered
Texas. cheese" factory visited by the write. h'" he ,fo"nd h's fr en(i, "attor"
flies were present by the thousands there before him, in full pos-
"Is your father at home?" "No; ! and were continually falling into the and apparently at peace with
gone fishin'." "Well, Where's your J'°t whey and being pressed with the I world.
brother?" "Gone to borrow a wheel- cheese. The men did nothing to pre-
vent this. It may be assumed that
they thought that If the proprietor
cared nothing about it, there was no
reason for them to worry over the
barrow to wheel dad home!"
Defiance Starch
ehonld be In every household, none bo good,
lieMidee 4 or. more for 10 cents than any ! outcome, even If the flies did reach a
other brand of cold water march. Cnal tomb lu the pressed cheese.
He did not hear Frank-
lin as he app'ached the door, and the
lalier stood looking in for a moment,
n'mined at Battersleigh and his atti-
tiwie and Ills song. When quite happy
Battersleigh always sang, and very
often his song was the one he was
sinking now, done in a low nasal, cach
of good English money since I came to
this little town?"
"I should say," said Franklin calmly
as he opened an envelope, "that you
had been dreaming again."
"That's it! That's it!" cried Bat-
tersleigh. "Shure ye wud, an' I knew
it! But come with me to bank this
mornin' an' I'll prove it all to ye."
Something in his voice made Frank-
lin wheel around and look at him.
"Oh, do be serious, Battersleigh," said
he
"I'll till ye a secret, which hereto-
fore I've always neglicted to mintion
to anybody. Here I'm Henry Batter-
sleigh, agent of the British-American
Colonization Society. On t'other side
I might be Cuthbert Allen Wingate-
Galt. An' Etcetera, man; etcetera, to
God knows what. Don't mintion it,
Ned. till I've gone away, fer I've loved
the life here so—I've so enjoyed bein'
just Batty, agent, and so forth! Belave
me, Ned, it's much comfortabler to be
merely a' And-so-forth thin it is to be
an' Etcetera. An' I've loved ye so,
Ned! Ye're the noblest nobleman I
ivver knew or iver expict. to know."
Franklin sat gazing at him without
speech, and presently Battersleigh
went on.
"It's a bit of a story, lad," said he
kindly. "Ye see, I've been a poor man
all me life, ye may say. though the
nephew of one of the richest women
in the United Kingdom—an' the stin-
giest. Instid of doin' her obvayus juty
an' supportin' her nephew in becomin'
station, she marries a poor little lord-
let boy, forsakes me entirely. Wasn't
it hljjus of her? There may have been
raysons satisfyin' to her own mind,
but she nivver convinced me that it
w as Christian conduct on her part. So
I wint with the Rile Irish, and fought
fer the Widdy. I've been in the Rile
Irish ivver since—whin not some-
where ilse'; though mostly, Ned me
boy, stone broke, an' ownin' no more
than me bed an' me arms. Ye know
this, Ned."
After his fashion Franklin sat silent,
waiting for the other's speech.
"Ned," said Battersleigh at length,
"till me, who's the people of the intlre
worrld that has the most serane be-
lief in their own shupayriority?"
''New-Yorkers," said Franklin
calmly.
"Wrong. Ye mustn't Joke, me boy.
No. It's the English. Shure, they're
tho consatedest people in the whole
worrld. An' now. thin, who's the
wisest people in the worrld?"
"The Americans," said Franklin
promptly attain.
earth
"I infer, Battersleigh," said Frank-
lin, "that you have made a sale."
"Well, yls. A small matter."
"A quarter-section or so?"
"A quarter-township or so wud be
much nearer," said Battersleigh dryly.
"You don't mean it?"
"Shure I do. It's a fool for luck;
allowin' Batty's a fool, as ye've alwayi
thought, though I've denied it. Now
ye know the railroad's crazy for pop-
pylation, an' it can't wait. The rail-
road offers Batty the Fool fifteen hun-
dred acres o' land at three dollars the
acre, if Batty the Fool'll bring settlers
to it. So I sinds over to me ould
Aunt's country—not, ye may suppose,
over the slgnayture o' Cubberd Allen
Wiggit-Galt, but as Henry Battersleigh,
agent o' the British American Coloni-
zation Society—an' I says to the prop-
er party there, says I. 'I've fifteen hun-
dred acres o' the loveliest land that
ivver lay out of dures, an' ye may
hav# it for the trifle o' fifty dollars
the acre. Offer it to the Leddy Wig-
git,' says I to him; 'she's a philan-
thropist, an' is fer Bettherln' the Pore'
('savin' pore nephews,' says I to me-
silf). 'The Lady Wiggit,' says I, 'I'll
be sendin' a ship load o' pore tinnints
over here,' says I, 'an' she'll buy this
land. Offer It to her,' says I. So he
did. So she did. She tuk it. 111 be
away before thlm plsints o' hers comet
over to settle hero, glory be! Now,
wasn't it aisy? ' There's no fools like
the English over land, me boy. An'
'twas a simple judgment on me rev-
ered Aunt, the Leddy Wiggit."
"But, Battersleigh, look here," said
Franklin, "you talk of fifty dollars an
acre. That's all nonsense—why,
that's robbery. Land is dear here at
five dollars an acre."
"Shure it is Ned," said Battersleigh
calmly. "But it's chape in England at
fifty dollars."
"Well, but "
"An' that's not all. I wrote to thim
to send me a mere matter of tin dol-
lars an acre, as evidence o' good faith.
They did so' an' it was most convay-
nient for settlin' the little bill o' three
dollars an acre which the railroad had
against me, Batty the Fool."
"It's robbery!" reiterated Franklin.
"It wud 'ave been robbery," said
Battersleigh, "had they sint no more
than that, for I'd 'av' been defrauded
of me just jues. But whut lo you
think? The murdherin' ould fool, me
revered Aunt, the Leddy Wiggit, she
grows 'feared there is some intint to
rob her of her bargain, so what does
she do but sind the entire amount at
wance—not knowln', bless me heart
an' soul, that she's thus doin' a distin-
guished kindness to the missin' rela-
tive she's long ago forgot! Man,
would ye call that robbery? It's Di-
vine Providence, no loss! It's justice.
Man, man, it's happy I am to-day!"
"It looks a good deal like taking
advantage of another's ignorance,"
said Franklin argumentative])-.
"Sir," said Battersleigh, "it's takin'
advantage o' their Wisdom. The land's
worth it, as you'll see yoursilf in time.
Anyhow, the money's in the bank, an'
it's proper dhrunk'll be Batty the Fool
this night, an' likewise the Hon. Cub-
berd Allen Wiggit-Galt. Etcetera.
There's two of me now, an' it's twice
the amount I must be dhrinkin'. I
swear, I feel a thirst risln' that
minds me o' Ingy In the hills, an' the
mess o' the Rile Irish wance again."
"You'll be going away," said Frank-
lin, sadly, as he rose and took Batter-
sleigh by the hand. "You'll be go-
ing away and leaving me here alone—
awfully alone."
(To be continued.)
of it. The Canadian Government _
Agents are sending out an Atlas, and
at the same time giving valuable in-
formation concerning railway rates,
etc., to those interested in the country.
As has been said, the climate is ex-
cellent. The elevation of this part of
Canada is about 1,800 feet above the
sea, about twice that of the arerage
for Minnesota. It is a very desirable
altitude. The ciuntry has a very
equable climate taking the seasons
through. The winters are bright and
the summers are pleasantly warm. R
F. Stupart, director of the meteorologi-
cal service for Canada, says:
"The salient features of the climate
of the Canadian northwest territories
are a clear, brucing atmosphere dur-
ing the greater part of the year, and a
medium rainfall and snowfall. The
mean temperature for July at Winni-
peg is 66, and Prince Albert 62. The
former temperature is higher than at
any part of England, and the latter ia
very similar to that found in many
parts of the southern countries."
At Prince Albert the average daily
maximum In July Is 76 and the mini-
mum 48, Owing to this high day tem-
perature with much sunshine, the
crops come to maturity quickly.
Moisture is ample in the Saskatche-
wan valley, being about 18 inches an-
nually. It is notable that about 75
per cent of the moisture falls during
the crop months. Thus, Western Can-
ada gets as much moisture when it Is
needed and with several hours mora
sunshine daily than land further south
gets during the growing season, it ia
not difficult to understand why crops
mature quickly and yield bountifully.
Winter ends quickly, sowing Is dona
dtirlnj April and sometimes in March.
Harvest comes in August, about the
middle. Cyclones, blizzards, dust and
Band storms are unknown.
There is no excellence without la
bor.—Wirt.
^Thompson's Eye Water
W. L. DOUGLAS
•3.52 4*3 SHOES 8
W. Tj. Douglas
shoes have by tlieir
excellent style,
easy-fitting, a n <1
superior wearing
qualities, achieved
the largest sale of
any shoes lu the
world.
They are just as good
as 1 lioso that cost you
$4 to §5 — the only
difforence is the price.
8old Everywhere.
Look for name and j
price on bottom. j
l>ougl;ig usps Corona t
< "ltsUti!, which is everywhere conceded!
bethe finest Patent I., ather yet produced.
£S'i Co.or Eyelete used. Shop* ti) null. 2 c.ext ra.
1> fite for Catalog. IV.I,,lJ,jui-lr.<, ltrocitton, .Hang.
HOW INDIANS ARE NAMED.
Have Various Cognomens at Various
Periods of Life.
Major Frank Terry, who ' is in
charge of the Indian school on the
Puyallup Reservation, is thus quoted
by the Tacoma (Washington) Ledger:
"Translations of Indian names, as a
rule, have been unsatisfactory, though
there are exceptions. The case Is re-
ported from the Pawnee Reservation,
Oklahoma, of an Indian named Coo-
rux-ruh-rah-ruk-koo. The literal in-
terpretation of his name as given to
me is 'Fearinp;-a-bear-Jiat-is-wild.'
With this interpretation the agent
named him 'Fearing B. Wilde.' As
the Indian grows he commits acts
from time to time, each of which
gives him a new name. For example,
he may see a bear and run screaming
to a tepee. The folks laugh at him
and call him 'Afraid-of-a-bear.' If he
braids in his hair a yellow feather
which he has plucked from the tail of
an eagle, lie may be called 'Eagle-tail,'
'Eagle-feather,' 'Yellow-tail,' 'Yellow-
feather.' If he gives it to his friend he
will be known as 'Gives-feather,' but
if he keeps it, when asked for it, he
becomes 'Keep-the-yellow-feather,' if
he has more than one feather. The
plan resorted to in some quarters of
discarding the Indian names and fit-
ting the Indians out with names that
are purely English has not worked
well, for those selected in many cases,
are names illustrious in American his-
tory, and this has caused the Indians
to become the butt of many a joke.
William Penn, Fitzhugh Lee, David
B. Hill and William Shakespeare are
the names of Indian policemen at the
Shoshone Agency, Wyoming. I my-
self have seen George Washington,
John Quincy Adams, Franklin pierce.
Rip Van Winkle, Allen G. Tlmrmau
and Hilary A. Herbert engaged togeth
er in a game."
ti
Tin Genuine TOWERS
POMMEL
SLICKER
HAJ BEEN ADVERTISED
AND JOLD FOR A
QUARTER OP A CENTURY.
LIKE ALL***.
CLOTHING.
It is made of the beat -
materials, in black or .yellow,
full/ guaranteed, and sold by
reliable dealers everywhere.
STICK TO TH£
SIGN OF THE FISH.
J
0 SEED,POTATOES 1
f? 500,000 bushels ]
FOR SALE CHEAPAi
Latta I seed potato trohnn in the Ivor Id I
J'.lf^ant Block. Tremendous yields.
JrVorn 400 to loco buKhois per acre.
FOR 10 CENTS
and this notice we urnd you lots of form
1 !!n k'K '"HtRloRiie, telling
|. all about Teoslnte, Fpcltz, I'eaoat Aerid
{£",'! Macaroni Wheat. liromus, |
Earliest Cuue, etc. beud loruauie toduy^"
~i®
A
y
1
London has one licensed drinking
plate to every 436 inhabitants.
FREE to WOMEN
A I-arge Trial Box and book of in-
structions absolutely Free and Post-
paid, enough to prove the value ol
Paxtine T oilet Antiseptic
Paxtine Is In powder
form to dissolve iu
water — non-poisonous
and far superior to liquid
antiseptic* containing
alcohol which irritates
Inflamed surfaces, and
have no cleansing prop-
erties. The contents
of every box makes
more Antiseptic Solu-
tion — lasts longer —
goes further—has more
uses in the fan-" and
doesmoregoodt uny
antiseptic preparation
you can buy.
The formula of a noted Boston physician,
and used with great success as a Vaginal
Wash, forLeucorrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh. Nasal
Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyej, Cuts,
and all sorentss of mucus membrane.
In local treatment of female ills Paxtine Is
ihln .'u (l, ,as a VaRinal Wash wo
challenge the world to produce its equal for
thoroughness. It is a revelation in cleansing
and healing power; it kills all germs which
oanse inflammation and dischar'es.
All leading druggists keep 1'aitlno;.price,60a.
f. 1° .'. i7'.'!'.r8.">s Pot'8end to us for'lt. Dou't
ULe a substitute — there Is nothing liko Paxtine.
Write for tho Free Box of Paxtine to-day.
PAXTON CO., 5 pope Bldg., Boston, Mass.
l
\
V
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The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 24, 1904, newspaper, March 24, 1904; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc137608/m1/2/: accessed April 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.