The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 30, 1908 Page: 2 of 10
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Norman Transcript.
NORMAN
OKLAHOMA
NEW STATE NOTES
The board of regaftls of the negro
agricultural and normal university at
langston re-elected President I. M.
Hage and all members of the faculty
with the exception of R. Shield, pro-
fessor of agriculture, and A. A. Lasl-
ter, instructor in blacksmlthing, who
have resigned.
Last week Mary Parker, the fifth
daughter of Chief Quanah Parker, of
the Comanche Indians, was married
to Edward H. Clark, of Faxon, a half
blood son of Dr. Clark, who was a
soldier at Fort Sill many years ago,
and married a Comanche squaw.
Congressman Carter of Oklahoma
has introduced a bill authorizing the
government to spend $2.',000 for a
school of mines and mining at Wil-
burton, Okla., whenever the state of
Oklahoma appropriates a similar sum
for the same purpose.
GENERAL NEWS NOTES
Judge Thomas Ryan, at the head of
the field forces in Oklahoma for the
interior department, has gone to
Washington to consult Secretary Gar-
field on Indian matters.
.lohn D. Benedict, supervisor of
government schools in the five civil-
ized tribes has received a notice
from the commissioner of Indian af-
fairs to furnish at once a comprehen-
sive statement of the national schools
owned by the five nations, where they
are located,1 who owns them, how
much land each school has and any
other information that he can secure.
State Insurance commissioner Mc-
Comb has authorized the operation
of the Union Life & Trust company,
of Muskogee, with a paid up capital
of $200,000. The Washington Trust
company, of Oklahoma City, has also
been authorized to establish an of-
fice. Its capital is $,'>00,000.
By an almost unanimous vote the
citizens of Erick voted on a $15,000
bond proposition for the erection of
a new eight-room school house—the
vote being 179 for bonds to 4 against.
Governor Haskell has offered a re-
ward of $">00 for the arrest and con-
viction of the person or persons who
murdered C. W. Williams and wife
near Binger on April 0. The aged
couple was murdered and the house
burned to hide the crime.
The city council of Durant has ac-
cepted the plans and specifications
for a sewer system that will cost
$20,000. The contract will be award-
ed after due publication of the re-
quired call for bids.
' A cow which weighed 1.880 pounds
and cost the butchers $SS has been
slaughtered at Ponca City. It is be-
lieved that she was the largest ani-
mal of the bovine •variety in the
state and was so considered by the
Miller brothers, who considered tak-
ing her with their wild west show for
exhibition.
Mayor Stearns, of Shawnee, will
reduce the hours which city prison-
ers are required to work upon the
streets to eight hours.
Four years in the peinitentiary
with possibly a year off for good be-
havior, is the sentence given Glick
Lunipklns, at Perry, convicted there
for the killing of Ed Fitzpatrick.
Judge Boles, in sentencing the boy,
said that if there was any way to
make it lighter on him he would.
Albert Taylor, who was considered
the only heir in line for the chieftain-
ship of the Kaw Indians to succeed
Wah-shun-gah, who recently died, has
been selected as the head of the
tribe. United States Senator Curtis
was recently mentioned as a candi-
date for chief.
The 4 year old son of Louis Wil-
liams, a farmer living southeast of
Lawton, was found dead In an old
well near his home. The child had
been missing since early morn-
ing, and it is thought the body had
been in the water two hours before
discovered.
Newton Slafford, a farm hand liv-
ing near Brushy mountain, was shot
and instantly killed by Alex Wat-
kins, 17 years old, while the boy was
attempting to shoot a mad dog. Staf-
ford was married in Muskogee only
a few days previous.
The corporation commission has or-
dered the railroad station at Capron
changed from Kermit to the former
name.
A BRIEF REVIEW OF THE NEWS
OF THE WEliK
Thursday afternoon a tornado de-
stroyed the eastern portion of De-
port, Texas, a town 20 miles south-
east of Paris, killing W. R. Isbell, a
druggist, and wounding several oth-
era.
Governor Hughes has filed with the
secretary of state a proclamation con-
vening the legislature of New York
in extraordinary session on Monday,
May 11. The proclamation does not
specify any subject which the gov-
ernor will recommend for considera-
tion at the extra sessi.on.
George McLaughlin, a saloon-
keeper of Cleveland, Ohio, shot and
fatally wounded his wife who died a
few hours later at a hospital. The
tragedy was the culmination of two
years of domestic strife in the Mc
Laughlin home. When arrested Mc-
Laughlin begged the officers to
shoot him.
Four men were killed, three seri-
ously injured and ion others had a
narrow escape from death when an
explosion occurred in Mine No. I of
the Ellsworth Collieries Company, at
Ellsworth, Pa., Washington county.
The dead are foreigners. Their bod-
ies were mangled and badly burned.
Two milion, live hundred thous-
and people in Illinois, now living in
prohibition districts would have been
put back in saloon territorj but for
the decision of the supreme court in
the McBride ease, declaring constitu-
tional the new local option law as
passed last year.
The Ohio senate has passed a bill
prohibiting secret societies among
pupils of high schools. The law pro-
vides expulsion for violation of tlie
law shall continue only so long as the
pupils continue to violate it.
('has. Barnes, state insurance com-
missioner of Kansas, has held that
death from swallowing a loothpiek
entitles the heirs of an accident in-
surance policy to the insurance. II.
S. Myers, of Arkansas City, swallow-
ed a toothpick, it lacerated his
throat atul blood poisoning set up,
causing his death.
John T. Dooling, president of the
board of elections of New York City,
testified in the proceedings brought
to oust Mayor McClellan from the
office of mayor, that he found in a
loft ballots of the last mayoralty elec
tlon thirty ballot boxes, none of
which appeared to have been sealed
He declared that he saw ballots,
stubs and unused ballots scattered
nbout the floor. Many of them were
marked in either the republican or
democratic column, but none of those
so found were lndependencee League
ballots.
Mrs. George W. Stipp. of Welling-
ton, Kan., was the first soldier's
widow to be pensioned under the wi
dow's pension bill. Congressman
Mttrdock received word to this effect
from the pension bureau. She gets
$12 a mouth, the amount all widows
will receive after this.
Through efforts of Dr. W. T. Vet
non. registrar of the treasury, Ihe war
department lias been induced to
send about 100 rides and accessories
to the Quindaro negro university in
Kansas. Dr. Vernon is chancellor of
that institution, hut is on an indefi-
nite leave of absence to fill the fed
eral job at Washington lie hopes
to build up a military branch at his
school and the war department will
aid him.
An unsuccessful attempt to hold
up the north coast limited train,
west bound, the overland flyer on the
Northern Pacific, was made at a point
betwee nWelch's spur and Home-
stake, Montana, 13 miles east of
Butte, the scene of the recent hold-
up in which Engineer Frank Claw
was murdered. |Explosives brought
the train to a full stop, hut when
ihe time for action came Ihe nerve
of tlie bandits failed.
OKLAHOMA STATE NEWS
Latest News Happenings Condensed for the Busy Readers
NEITHER WANTS PLACE
Mu«kogee' Mayor, Because of Rjl-
ing Wants to Turn Office Back
MUSKOGEE: Because the attor-
ney general holds that the election
called under the Hrook bill was not
legal, and that the old city officials farmers' union was read in the house
should hold over until the regular i while the bill was under consldera I
election in 190H, Mayor Bennett sent , tlon- The speaker explained that the j
for ex Mayor Martin and told him he section of the bill, where it spec I
wanted to turn the office back to I ifips lhat "combinations which are
him.
"Not on your life," returned the ex
mayor. "I have had enough of it;
it's yours."
If the decision is sustained all the
present officials are holding their of-
fices illegally, and the old officers
are entitled to ihem, with the excep-
tion of four members of the council.
Several hundred thousand dollars'
worth of municipal contracts are in-
volved In the legal tangle and neither
the city officials nor the citizens
know what to do next
Not Antagonistic to Farmers' Unions
GUTHRIE: The operation of farm-
1 era' unions, which pool agricultural
products to insure higher prices, will
not be affected by the anti-trust bill,
as was apprehended throughout the
state. A protest from the Oklahoma
against public policy are declared il- j
legal" will exempt the farmers' or-
ganization, which is not contrary to j
public policy.
Wheat Is In Fine Condition
GUTHRIE: Reports received by j
Charles F. Barrett, secretary of the '
j hoard of agriculture, are to the effect
that the rains have been very general
' throughout the wheat belt, and that
the wheat is probably in the be«;
condition that it has ever been in at
this time of the year in Oklahoma,
j The federal department of agricul-
i tire reported the Oklahoma wheat
conditions on April I at 94.3. anil
there has been a big improvement
Former Indian Agent Cannot Recovc- inee that time. Conditions are re-
LOST DAMAGE SUIT
FIVE SMS
GREAT SOUTHERN STORM KILLS
NEARLY FOUR HUNDRED
LITEST REflDRIS SNOW
35? KILLED: 1213 INJURED
States of Louisiana. Mi&sissippi, Ala-
bama and Georgia—Tornadoes at
Work for Two Days Cover Vast
Area—Path Dotted with Dead
ATLANTA, GA.: Reports indicate
that 225 persons were killed and
about 400 injured in tornadoes of
great violence which passed over
sections of Louisiana, Mississippi and
Alabama Saturday. Several towns
were almost totally swept away and
the property damage will run into a
large figure. Most of those killed
were negroes, whose cabins were
swept away like so much paper.
On Fraud Charges
ported as favorable everywhere ex-
Another Report Increases List
GUTHRIE: Former Indian Agent | "ePt in the f°tat0 be't. where there I XEW ORLEANS: Neary half
has been a little too much rain. J thousand lives lost, a hundred
more persons fatally injured and
Discovered in Time to Save Wreck j "'any times this number painfully
"We Have Many Similar."
The following is an extract from a
letter received from Mr. H. H. Meyers
of Stutgart, Ark.: "You would greatly
oblige me If you would introduce
Hunt's Lightning Oil at Mllledgeville,
HI., as I have many friends and rela-
tives there, in whom X am much con
cernvd, and I understand the Oil is not
kept there. I can recommend it as
the best medicine I ever bad In my
house. It cured me of a bad case ot
the Bloody Flux in less than one-halt
hour, and it cured my grand-daughter
of a bad case of Cholera Morbus in a
very short time."
She Did Her Duty by Him.
One Monday morning the colored
"wash lady" did not arrive at the
usual hour to do the weekly washing
of a family residing in a Pennsylvania
town.
When she appeared some time later
the mistress of the house descended to
the kitchen and was greatly edified
by the woman's explanation.
"No'm"—carefully removing a hat
ornamented by a voluminous black
veil—"I wasn't sick. I had to stay
home to receive my diseased brother*
remainders that was sent from Pitts
burg day before yisterday."—Lippin-
cott's.
Bentley lost his suit for $200,000
damages when a verdict was render-
ed for the defendants, Frank A.
Thacker.v, United States Indian agent
at Shawnee, and George Dixon, Indian
inspector. The ease resulted from
wholesale charges of fraud involving
certain transactions with the Kicka-
poo Indians while Bentley was Indian
agent, which resulted in a senatorial
investigation.
Bentley went to Mexico after the
TULSA: A heavy obstruction, con-
sisting of a ten-inch bridge spike
wedged in between two rails and a
fishplate securely strapped to the
rail, the whole so arranged that any
train on striking the obstruction
would have been sent into the ditch,
was discovered by Deputy United
States Marshal G. W. Hanna on the
Frisco track at a point two miles east
tribe had remove,1 to that republic, j of ,he cUv off,ceI. Hanna madp
He was charged with defrauding the , to ,.emove |hp oUgtruction and
Indians. He brought suit against had bm done so whpn a fagt weg,_
Thacker.v and Dixon for $200,000 j i>Jllnfj
damages,
character.
charging defamation of
TO PREVENT ELECTION FRAUDS
passenger train dashed by. lu
all probability a serious wreck was
averted.
MIOTIC CONDITIONS
EXIST in MUSKOGEE
New Bill Will Regulate Selecting of
Oklahoma County Seats
GUTHRIE: With elections for the |
location of the permanent county seat.;
called by the governor in about tit- j
teen counties of the state to he held j
during May and the early part of.
lutie, the Thomas bill, which was re- {
cently signed by the governor regu-
lating such elections, assumes special
interest. The bill carries the emer-
gency and is now the law which will
apply in the coming elections. I he
object of the law is to hedge these
elections about with every possible
safeguard to prevent fraud, the sup-
porters of the measure on the Hoot- of j Muskogee practically
both houses urging that, in county j government.
seat elections, where so much of prop-1 Chaos exists at the city hall. The
ert.v interi si and town pride Is at i city officials do not know whether
stake, the participants are apt to for-j they have the power to do anything
or not. Recent municipal contracts
hurt, together with a property loss
running up in the millions is the rec-
ord so far of a tornado that swept
Texas. Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennes-
see, Alabama and Georgia. It has left
a path of death, desolution and want
in its wake, seriously interrupted all
communication between cities in the
south and brought about chaotic con-
ditions in many smaller towns.
The latest report shows the fol-
lowing dead an dinjured in the sev-
| eral states through which the tornado
j passed: Louisiana, dead 108, injured
j "50; Mississippi, dead 183, injured
! 600; Alabama, dead 31, injured 113;
Georgia, dead 30. injured 100.
The tornadoes lasted in all a pe-
( riod of nearly two days. It was
| Thursday night that the damage by
j tornadoes traveling eastward was re-
ported from points in Texas. This
was followed during the next 24
i hours by similar reports from Arkan-
| sas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Ten-!
I nessee.
The towns
$100 Reward, $100.
The reader* of this pap«r will be pleased to lear&
tbal there lent leasi one dreaded d!ftean« that science
haa t>eeu Able to cure la all It* ntstfen, and that 1*
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure la the only positive
cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
belQK a constitutional 01 teste, requires a constitu-
tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure 1> taken In
ternally. acting directly upon the blood ami mucoua
surfaces of the system. thereby destroying tti
foundation ««f the disease, and giving the patient
OI> j strength by building up the constitution and assist-
ing nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have,
so much faith In Its curative powers that they offer
One Hundred Dollars for any case that It Tails tc
cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENKV A CO., Toledo, O.
bold by all Druggist*. 75c.
Take KaU's Family fills for constipation.
which suffered the
EE: "No municipal busi-j worst damage are Amite, La., Galium, I
b transacted in this city Purvis, McLaurin and Winchester,
No Occasion for It,
"My dear," said the old man to his
only daughter on the morning of her
wedding day, "I don't see how I am
going to get along without you."
"Now, don't let that worry you.
papa,'' replied the fair maid, as she ad-
justed her bridal veil. "George con-
fessed to me last night that he hadn't,
enough money even to buy a second
hand stove, so instead of losing me it
looks as if we were going to stay
right with you."
"Nails."
"Nails are a mighty good thing—
particularly finger nails—but 1 don't
believe they were intended solely for
scratching, though 1 used mine large-
ly for that purpose for several years.
1 was sorely afflicted and had it to do.
One application of Hunt's Cure, how-
ever, relieved my Itch and less than
one box cured me entirely."
J. M. WARD,
Index, Texas.
MAYOR ASKS THAT PROCEED-
INGS BE MADE TO OUST
ALL CITY OFFICIALS
MUSKOGEE:
ness will he transacieu in tins city; films, .McLaurin and Winchester,! People who boast of their ability to.
except what is absolutely necessary Miss., ami Albertvllle, Ga. I atttend to their own affairs usually
to protect life and property until! The following fifteen towns were j manage to butt into the affairs ot
there is a decision of the supreme more or less damaged: others.
court to decide whether the present Richland and Lamourie, La.; Win-
officers were legally elected." This j gate. New Augusta, Columbus,
is the statement of Mayor Leo. E. j Walls, Braxton, Helle Grove, Melton! I
Bennett made Saturday. This leaves Lorman, Pine Ridge, Quitman's Land )
without any
Fairchilds Creek and Wahalak, j
in Mississippi and ltergen, Alabama.
LIABILITY BILL IS SIGNED
HaVttuol
Constipation
get the ordinary principles of de-
cency in government and in many in-
stances stoop to violations of the elec-
tion laws to gain the desired end.
let are probably void, though halt j
completed, ordinances that have been
Marshal Brave: Shot Drunk Man
passed may be illegal and neither the 1 ',us signed the employers
old or the new city officials will act.
Mayor Bennett will ask the attor-
PI ay 1)0 permanently overcome l)y prof-er
President Acts Upon Receiving Opin- P^Ollu! fjjorts iKc assistance
o| the ono truly Qonejicial liuqtivc
remedy, Syrup o jhgs an >1 KliilrojSe Una.
ion From Attorney General
WASHINGTON: President Roose-1
lia-
BARTLESVILLE: I P. Lively, the 1 ney general to bring a quo warranto
city marshal of Ochelata, welve miles proceeding to oust the present off!
south of here, shot anil instantly kill- eials, himself Included, and thereby
ed John Davis, aged IT. Davis, with bring the case before the supreme
other men. had been drinking, hut j court immediately. If this is refused
had gone to his room. Lively and a j ihen ex-Mayor Martin will bring the
constable went to his hoarding house, suit, but will insist that Mayor Ben-
took Davis from his bed and stalled nett retain the office as his deputy,
with him for jail. Davis protested i Martin absolutely refusing to retain
and resisted being taken to jail, whfnj 'he office. If the last election is il-
Lively shot him through the heart, legal than it is proposed lo have an-
Lively was arrested and brought to j other immediately. This probably
the jail here. Davis made his home J would mean Ihe re-election of the
The supreme court of Illinois holds
that a board of education has no
right to bar a child from the public
schools for failure to comply with
the dictations of the board as regards
vaccination.
The board of regents of the Tonka-
*s preparatory school has elected the
present faculty with two exceptions
The board refused to confirm the ac-
tion of the state board of education in
the selection of a new president.
Mrs Polly Morgan, a negress who
was freed from slavery when she was
ti2 years old, died at St. Louis last
week at the age of 107 years. Mrs
Morgan was born in IS01 ou the
plantation of Thomas Cox near what
Is now Becchfolk. Tex. She also lived
with the Cox family when Ui tht1
dren of her first owners moved to
Macon, Tenn.
The president has signed the bill
providing for reorganization of ihe
medical department of the arm so as
to provide for a medical cot ps and a
medical reserve corps
Basing his action 011 information
which he has been gathering for the
last six months, .lames Bingham, at-
torney general of Indiana, will with-
in the next ten days tile suits against
all brewing companies in the state,
which have, as will be alleged been
operating saloons, and in other ways
transacting a retail liquor business.
The attorney general contends that
the conducting of a retail liquor bus-
iness by brewers Is exceeding the
powers granted by law If success-
ful this will put three-fifths of the ta
loons of the eta's cut of business.
with his uncle in this city,
ents live at Youngstown, O.
Ills par
TWO FIRES IN A DAY
! present officials, but would give them
a legal status.
West Assumees 'Nother Big Task
wKicK enaMef, one to form regular
bility bill, upon receiving an opinion j *>aoitf> daily 50 tluvl assistance to na
Irum Attorney General Bonaparte lure mav be gradually <)i$pensec|toilH
that the measure was constitutional.; wtati ho ionber needed the tiest of
Ihe bill makes railroads other remedies, when rco.nrcJ, arc lo asstst
(ommon carriers, while engaged in J ti \ HI v
rsta.ee commerce, liable tor the ^Supplant tKe naW.
Injury or death of an emplove if the fu^UonS.l.uistdepend ulh-
injury or death results, iu whole or! WoMV .uP^ proper ttourisKnieht,
in part, from the negligence of any HIPP**'cjjorLR,aMci r«£nt living §en<ral/j.
Sapulpa Citizens Lose $90,000 by Con- has filed in the district court at Affl-
flagration more a suit against the five express
SAPULPA: Two blocks of busi- companies and 13 railroads entering
ness houses and twelve stocks of the Indian Territory and the Osage
goods were destroyed by two tires Indian nation from points outside the
here Monday, one of which began at present state boundary, seeking an in-
4 o'clock a. m . and the other at 10: Tm I junction to prevent the shipment ot
a. m., and Ihe estimated total loss is liquor by express or freight. The en-
$75,000 to $110,000. Six one-.uory tire area of what was the Indian Ter-
brick buildings iu the Iowa UIock rltory, the Osage nations is Included,
were lotally destroyed with their The section iu (he enabling act speci
stocks iu the fir. i lire, which original-, ftcallv forbidding the sale of liquor for
ed in the dry goods store of Sheffrick -i period of twenty-one years in the In-
& Treadway and from an unknown dian country, is the ground on which
cause. The second lire destroyed six 'he proceeding is based.
buildings with their contents on the .
of the officers, agents or employes of
such carriers, or by reason of any
defect or insufficiency in equipment,
i his provision is made applicable to
carriers in the territories, the Dis-
trict of Columbia, the Panama canal
zone and other possessions of the
United States.
In bis opinion the attorney general
indicates that the. bill is confined
GITTHRIK: Attorney General West] 'n scope to "common carriers by
To get its beneficial effects, always,
buy the genuine
SvrupfFtgs<^E) i *ir°fSenna
California
Fig Syrup Co. only
SOLD BYALL LEADINC DRUOCISTS
on? U7e only, rnJuUr pncc 5CK Bottle
railroad," as distinguished from the
act declared unconstitutional by the
supreme court, which embraces "all I
common carriers engaged in inter-
state commerce and foreign com-
merce.'*
The attorney general then shows
through court, decisions and constitu-
tional interpretations that this re-
striction does not make the act re-
pugnant to the constitution, hut is
ill line with slate statutes which
have been upheld in the highest
tribunals.
block immediate!;, south of the Iowa
block, and is sun posed 10 have been
caused hv the first fire.
Fire at Texola
TEXOLA: Four building
. The Nebraska Stale Lumber Deal-
Girl Sues Railroad Company i rl's' Association has been perpetually
MUBKOOKK: Nannie Hates, an 11- 1 b>' <"« supreme court, and
year old girl living at Crowder City, ,«sl|a|ne" r™m a" operations ealcu-
has brought suit against the M. K. & j t() eliminate competition in the
T. railroad company for $fi,000 dam-1 sales of building material. Secretary
011 (he ages for personal injury. She allege.-j Bird t'ritchtield, of the association.
main streeet of tliis town have been that while the railroad company was ! is also forbidden to carry 011 any of
destroyed by fire, and the total loss ol
buildings and stocks is placed at $L'n
000. The fite is believed to have been
of incendlan origin.
doing excavating work in Crowder]
City a rock thrown a distance of 200
feet by a blast struck her on tMt- Knee ;
and Injured her for life.
the business of the organization.
The association was accused of at-
tempting to fix prices in the state.
GUTHK1K: Robert K. Lozier, state
dispensary superintendent, lias let a
contract for the first car load of alco-
hol for th" state dispensary to ller
ti Co., "I Omaha. Neb., at an average I the bales produced and place
price of $'.'.70 per gallon, put up in weight on each. The new law
Governor Haskell has sigued Cue
bill by Representative Wilson, of Ca-
nadian ran illy, requiring the owners
of cotton gins to brand and number
the
de
Dynamited Okemah Negro Hotel
OKEMAH: Dynamite that had
been placed beneath the rear of the
Southern hotel, a negro hostelry, Sat-
urday morning, wrecked a part of the
building and precipitated the unin-
liu encased containers and delivered signed to protect the cotton prodncei \ lured guests into a panic. They ran
at Guthrie Approximately J.000 to ;is well us the ginner. Buyers are re into the streets, many in their night
2,200 gallons will he purchased at tlti '• j quired to keep a record of tue number
time, but Superintendent Lozier ad- of bales and the names of the ginners,
mils his Inability to tel! whether this It is made a misdemeanor, subect to
will be sufficient lo last for Ihreela fine or from $25 tu $r,i) to deface
months. Some of the wholesale drug ihe markings 011 a bale or to offer foi
gists claim that II will take 2.00 gal-1 sale any bale which has been so de
Ions a month to suDply Ihe slate. 1 raced.
clothes, and refused to return to the
building under the fear that another
explosion would take place. The
damage Is about $.".00. No arrests
have been made but the authorities
are In search uf some suspects.
Economy
in decorating the walls of
your home, can be most
surely effected by using
Aiafcastme
The Sanitary "Wall Coaling
The soft, velvety Alabas-
tine tints produce the most
artistic effects, and make the
home lighter and brighter.
Sold by Paint, Drug. Hardware and
General Stores in carefully sealed
and properly labeled packages, at
60c Ihe package tor white and
W>c the package for tints. See
that the name 'Alabastine1* is on
euch packaee brlore it is opened
either by yoursell or the workmen.
Th Alabastine Company
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Eastern Office, 105 Water Street,
HAIR BALSAM
ClraflMi bo«utifle« tha h !r.
InoiiioUf luiariant growth.
Hr?r to Beit^re Ormy
Hair to its Youthful Color/
Cure. .< alp ^ h fr fcU&J
lolor.
. — — .hit lalli
ft>c,fcod >l.0U
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Burke, J. J. The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 30, 1908, newspaper, April 30, 1908; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc138464/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.