The Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, August 12, 1898 Page: 3 of 4
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-- „.i. .
But few men decline a nomination
for office if they think there is any
show of being elected.
Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H.
Green's Sons, of Atlanta. Ga. The
greatest dropsy specialists in the world.
Road their advertisement in another
column of this paper.
Even a fool thinks he is wise in com-
parison with some of his neighbors.
, For n perfect complexion ami n elf nr.
healthy *kin. use COSMO BUTTERMILK
KOAP. Bold everywhere.
The worst whipping a bully ever
gets is from some man who doesn't
want to tight.
Kriucate Your Ilowela With ('anraretft
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10c. :15c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money
An old bachelor declares that even
the sweet girl graduate will ferWnt
in time.
•Even the optimist forgets to smile
when the tax-collector comes around.
A woman's strength lies in her weak-
ness.
Beunly it Itluoil
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cancarets, Candy Ca-
thartic cleans your blood and keeps it
clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and
driving all impurities from the body. He-
gin to-dar to banish pimples, boils, blotch-
Vs. blackheads, and that sticky bilious
complexion by taking Cascarets, — beauty
lor 10c, All druggist-*, satisfaction guar
anteod. 10c, 2ftc. .r>0c.
Only a* truthful man knows how
much he lies.
o HaU'fi Catarrh Cure
Is ft constitutional cure. Price, 75a
The 5-year-old girl of to-day wjll not
be able to remember fhe Maine tfveu-
ty-flve years hence.
FITS eermuueutlM 'uri'tt. No fits or iH,i v<>u*n^«*after
first d«> k una ot Dr hlinr ■ tox-at V rvo Restorer,
fhrad lor FREE 19.00 trinl bottle pad trattlM.
r,H. R. u. Kline. I.ttl.. Jl Arch .St.. Philadelphia. I*
Some men are always out when their
country calls.
m+HwmHHmmHwww
Your Liver
needs coaxing, not crowding. Dr. Ayer's Pills stand with-
out a rival as a reliable medicine for liver complaint. They
cure constipation, and > they cure its consequences, piles,
, biliousness, indigestion, sick headache, nausea, coated tongue, .
foul breath, bad taste, palpitation, nervousness, irrita-
bility, and many other maladies that toive their root in
constipation. They are a specific for all* diseases of the
stomach and bowels, and keep the body in a condition of
soflnd health. • t
# "I have used Ayer'a Pills for the past thirty years and
consider them an invaluable family medicine. I know of no *
•better remedy for liver troubles, and have ahMft found
them a prompt cure for dyspepsia."—James yuikn, !>0 Middle
Street, Hartford, Conn.
I Take Ay Br'a PiHs
iBwgmnnmn^^
«0VJEi?;y
fISH #
SLICKER
WILL KEEP YOU DRY.
IDnn't he fooled with a mackintosh
or rubber coal. If you want.-i coat
that will ke*p you dry in the hard-
est storm buy the Fish Brandy
Slicker. If not for sale in your k
town, write for catalogue to
OA. J. TOWER. B .ston. Mas
#
Remember the name
when you buy
again
PLUG
Being good at figures never made a
man rich. «
Women will never love each other as
they do the fellow-men. •
^fen are like rivers: the deeper they
are the less noise they make.
The musician on the stage looks
•down on the one in the orchestra.
The women of tin* hour is the one
who says she will be ready in a min-
ute. *
Ity the time some people make up
their rninds what to do it's too late to
I do it.
Lovers may refuse to say good-by
forever and yet put in two or three
hours at it.
A 9 rl of five enjoys a birthday par-
ly. but do not hope to please a five year
old boy in tha^ way.
We have a sort of prejudice against
a man who claims that everything he
wears is "made to order."
Kvt^ v single thing on earth lias its
use and it is probably just as well that
we don't know about some things.
Notwithstanding all the arguments
that have taken place,#but few debata-
ble questions hwe ever been settled.
EDUCATIONAL.
ag k
a==-—- *
: ..... « ,-r': «f
% .. '
m>
el**.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE JAMB,
NOTRE DA,IE, INDIANA.
FULLCOUR5E5 IN Clasxic.i, Letters, Science,
Law, Civil, Mechanical and Electrical Enjjl-
oeerlng.
Thorough Preparatory and Commercial
Courses.
Rooms Tree to all Students who have com-
t>letcd the studies required f<>r admission into
the Junior or Senior Year, of any of the t ol-
kegiato Course s.
A limited 11 umber Of Con 1 Mates forth® Eocle-
Has ilea i sia:<- u ill be re ■< Iwd at special rati a.
5t. Edward's hall, for b > s uml'-r M - cars, is
Dnojue in «•. inpl.u-ne-sof its cquipm ". 1-..
The 10 til lerm Will open September 6th,
■89S. Catalogue s* nt Free on nppl; ti< n to
REV. A. flOI^RISSLY. C. S- C., I'.eaident.
SI. l))arp's
flcactemp,
One Mile We«t oi the University of Nof.-e Dame.
ST. M ABY'S ACADKMY for young ladle*, now en-,
i^rlnn upon li forty-fourth year ->f active educa-
tional w>.rk. hai earned the reputation of being
one of the in->-t thoroughly equipped and •ui-cpMful
InMltilUon* In the I'atted Bum**. The Academy
•alldlngfl are beautifully situated on an ntnlncnoa
ore r-looking the pictun-squa bauka of the M. Ju eptj
Uiver. All the branches of •
A Thorough English and
Classical Education,
Ireek, Latin. French and German are
i v • • f t> ■ On < mi
fulT' urse oi ktud.FH htu.lents rceelvo
Regular Collegiate Degree of
Litt. B., A. B. or A. M.
The Conservatory of Mimic is eondneted on
.th « 1
fneiti'linc <
pleting the
wrckly. tti ! ii:< aided la the
I n« Art Depart ment Isiiiol'iicd afteiKhe befit
ope.
fri'i'ii ifii.ry mol Minim I ep«rt ment«.
I' 1 wbo need primary training, and Ili<•.*«• Of ten-
der age, arc here earefullr prepared for the Aca-
demlc 1 uurse and Advanced Coura<*
Bet>k-kee|>lng i*hon<igraphv and Typewriting ea-
tra Rverr vm (tj of Fauci Weed la work taught.
For cittalogue containing full Inturiuatlou. adAred
DIRECTRESS. CF THE ACADEMY
St. Mary's Academy,
NOTRE DAME P. 0.. INDIANA.
BAYLOR FEMALE COLLEGE, ti
oaaBi- s * ',,H 'I Iih sWmI, Isrfrst, eli s| «i. '
line in th south Mild winters.heaithiul«-i an
tore* %i..v■ . Wm.A Wilson. Pres . Beltcn. iexat,
y ^ .
^ yj '-j ' ■ ' . •-
—4^f/7AD/H<r M'HOOt (M 0MAtf.S S,
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYlftlP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes,
known to the Cai.ifobxia Fig Syrup
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the California Fig kui* Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthlesa
imitations manufactured by other par-
ties. The high standing of the Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi-
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given to millions of families, maktw
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liter and
bowels without irritating or weaken-
ing thfni, and it does not fcripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
HA.\ FKANOIHCO, < al.
LOrilVII.I.E. Kj. NKW VOItK. N. f
•••••••••«#
Remember the name
when you buy
again
FLUG
■IflfATAMA/fi/r/p,! r4fc#A,wr
Much Concern Over America's Phil-
ippines Policy.
A LETTER FROM AGUINALDO.
Il«> Deinamlii to Know What lie In
Fighting For— CoiupliiliM That the
I 'nlteii Stut oh Hits Not Heen Frank
With Him—Mukea Two Propositions.
London, Aug. 6.—The Hong Kong
spondent of the Daily Mail says:
"The prospect of America abandoning
the Philippines has well nigh brought
on a panic. The insurgent leaders are
greatly dissatisfied with the Ameri-
cans and the British here. Mr. Wild-
man, the United States consul, has
replied to Aguinaldo as follows:
" 'Trust to the honor and justice of
the United States and let nothing in-
terfere with the first task of throwing
off the Spanish yoke. I believe in you.
Do not disappoint me.'
The Rome correspondent of the
J)uily News says: "The Vatican has
telegraphed the ar.chbishop of Manila
instructions to place himself and his
clergy under the protection of the
Unite£ States, in view of the threat-
ening attacks by the insurgents. The
archbishop's position is very odd,
bearing in mind his foolish anti-Amer-
ican manifesto at tho beginning of the
war.*"
New YorR. Aug. 6. —The New York
.fournal prints a cabjegram from Hong
Kong purporting to give the text of a
message sent from Aguinaldo. the
Philippine insurgent leader, to Consul
General Wildman. The message is
dated Cavite. July '30, and in it Aguin-
#ddo says it has been reported that he
"is getting the big head and not be-
having." as he promised Mr. Wildman.
"In reply," says Aguinaldo, "1 ask
why should America expect me to out-
line my policy, present and future, and
fight blindly for her interests, when
America will not be frank with me?
Tell me this, am I fighting for annex-
ation. protection or independence? It
is for America to say, not for me. I
can take Manila, as 1 have defeated
the Spanish everywhere, but what
would be the use? If America takes
Manila I can save my men and arms
for what the future has in store for
me.
"Now. good friend, believe me, 1 am
•<<t both fool and rogue. The inter-
ests of my people are as sacred to me
as are the interests of your people to
you."
Nfw York, A^jg. 0.—A dispatch to
the New York World from Manila bay
by way of Hong Kong says: * Aguin-
aldo. the insurgent chief, has made
two propositions to General Merritt.
They may solve the insurgent problem
in a manner highly advantageous to
the United States.
FOR A SAMOAN NAVAL BASE.
STEPHENS ON EXPANSION.
Missouri'* (iovcrnor Think* It In a Schema
of CapltiillRtM to Control the Senate.
Jefferson Ciiy, Mo., Aug. fl.—In
view of the fact that the Democratic
party will be called upon next week to
meet the question of territorial expan.
sion, Governor Stephens has the fol-
lowing to say regarding the annexa-
tion of the Philippines and Porto Rico:
"I oppose the annexation of the Phil-
I ippines on any terms. We should not
j add to our citizenship classes of people
incapable of appreciating our prinei-
j pies of liberty and individual rights.
The people of Missouri should resist
to the uttermost the policy of drag-
ging into the Union alien populations
of the undeveloped lower races of man-
kind, to be governed by oligarchies,
consisting of the agents of capitalists,
who wish to hold all such subject ter-
ritories in reserve for admission as
states, hoping thus" to control the
Senate and the electoral college
against American voters. We should
adhere to the Monroe doctrine and re-
member the advice of our fathers and
keep free from entangling alliances
with foreign nations. We did not
enter the present war for the conquest
of the Philippines. We were guided
wholly by motives of sympathy and
humanity, and to carry the liberty
and life to tho starving and persecuted
Cubans. We have for the present suf-
ficient territory for all purposes." •
CERVERA VISITS COMRADES.
to Use the iHliinda* One
\>tliiiil>le Harbor.
Washington, Aug. G.—The Presi-
dent has decided to inak^ practical
use of American rights at Pago-Pago
harbor, Samoa, and the establishment
of a fully equipped naval coaling sWi-
tion there will be undertaken at once.
With this end in view Frank P.
Chambers, civil engineer, now on duty
at the New York navy yard,
has been ordered to Wash-
ington for consultation with the
authorities prior to departing next
week with full power to carry out the
important project. Pago-Pago is the
only harbor of any value in the Sa-
moan group and the one considered by
fl&val officers of scarcely leas strategic
importance in the Pacific ocean than
Pearl harbor, Hawaii, The*decision to
utilize the concession sectored by Ad-
miral Meade twenty-five years ago,
giving the United States permanent
ownership of the harbor* indicates
sufficiently the administration's appre-
ciation of the vastly extended sphere
of American interests in the Pacific.
It is the inauguration of a great naval
and commercial policy in that direc-
tion due in gr£at measure to the re-
sponsibilities incurred in Asiatic
waters.
miles changes his plans,
SpanUh Mine* Cuuie the Abandonment
of the Military Hoada.
Nfw Your, Aug. • . A dispatch to
the New York Herald from Ponce says:
General Miles, having received infor-
mation that the fine military road from
Ponce to San*Juan has been mined by
the Spaniards, has formed practically
a new plan for the Porto Rican cam-
paign. In aooordanpe wittf this new
plan. '•< i4 t;i1 >ton. . with some WH
consin troops, is pressing rapidly to-
ward Apecibo on the nerthern coast of
the island and General lirooke, who
has arrived, with General Harris and
1,•.'(«) men. will advance toward San
Juan from Arroyo. General Miles will
thus avoid risking the*lives of the
American troops through the explo-
sion of mines along the military road
and the use of explosives which the
Spaniards have hidden iu the bushes
along the way.
captain clark is sick.
Commander of the Oregon Ha* Heen
Invalided Home.
washington, Aug. (i. — Captain
Vharies K (''ark. commander of the
battleship Oregon, now in Cuban
waters, off Santiago, has been inva-
lided home. It is believed at the navy
department that t aptain Clark is suf
fering from some climatic affection,
Induced, probably, by the tremendous
strain under which ho has been for
months.
Cbupmlti, Lessons b|f Mail, boot fosilnns. Utju! titi'ijit Irtt, Ingress L, H. Stickler. Tniii, Km.
How Among the Officer*.
liosTo.v, Aug. A special from
Porto Rico S.1\ t If til >i \th M l I
"ehusetts officers, the colonel, lieuten-
ant colonel and*three majors and three
captains resigned. They were charged
with ineo nyeteney and lack of disci
pline. The trouble in the Sf^th Ma —
achusctts is partly attributed to tin
fact thai the officers refuse to return
the salutations « f the negro company
The investigation, no doubt, will end
in a separation which will be, in ef
feet, a dUbandment.
Wounded and iii They Fmhrace Their
Former Commander.
Norfolk, Y ., Aug. 6,—Admiral Cer-
vera and his son, Lieutcnaat Cervera,
arrived here yesterday morning from
Baltimore .to visit Captain Concha,
commander of the admiral s flagship
Maria Teresa and the oilier Spanish
sick and wounded at the navy hospital
here. This wae the first time they
had met since the fatal dash* oat
of Santiago harbor. The meeting
was a pathetic one, the admiral
and captain embracing one another
like children. The admiral then vis-
ited Lieutenant Noval of the PIuton,
who lost a leg. Drs. Nicoli and August!
of the Vizeaya, and the scenes were
equally affecting when their former
chief entered the ward where the Span-
ish sailors are. Their faces lit up and
they embraced him as best they could,
their joy being plainly visible. The ad-
miral took lunch with Medical Director
Cleborne, and it is said he will remain
here several days.
SPANISH PRISONERS SICK,
Toral Ahiih General Shaffer to llavo the
Camp Moved.
Santiago, Aug. —General Toral
the commander of the Spanish troops,
sent a lctti^* to-day to General Shafter,
advising the latter that the camp of
the surrendered Spanish troops is
in an unhealthy condition. The
Spanish officer also reported that
there were several hundred sick in the
hospitals, and that there was an aver-
erage of twelve deaths daily. The
transports expected here to carry thf
J troops back to Spain have not yet
j been heard from. General Shafter will
take action at once in order to im-
prove the sanitary condition of the
I Spanish soldiers and their camp.
would like to be annexed.
CultaiiM. Imperially the Army, In Favor
9t Annexation
| Santiago i>e Ci ha, July '.'s.—Among
! the American citizens of Cuban birth,
I and perhaps generally among those
who desire annexation to the United
States, the rift between the American
and Cuban forces has been a source of
J concern.
1 Within the last few days, however,
i Garcia has expressed his opinion that
the welfare of Cuba depended upon
her joining the sisterhood of the
j United States. Partly on account of
his attitude and partly on account of
the same reasons which led to his con-
| version, many of his officers now side
with him.
row is on at guatemala,
I Predicted Resolution Arrives on Selied
ule Time.
j San Francisco, Aug. o. The follow-
ing message regarding the revolution
I in Guatemala has been received in this
city from a friend and supporter of
General Morales, now at Tampachula:
"Prospero Morales is at San Marcos.
i Quezaltenango favors the revolution.
We are on the way to Ocos.
Miguemn."
Morales is said to have 5,0()0 Reming-
I ton rifles and 700 men. Details of the
revolt are difficult to obtain, as tele-
i graphic ooinmunication is interrupted.
victims ot yellow fever.
Michigan Troop* flit Hard by the
Scourge.
Santiago, Aug. 5.—Sanitary reporl
I for August 4—Total sick, 3,3.54; fevei
| cases, 2,548; total new cases of fever
."iO"-.'; total cases of fever returned tc
duty, 549. Deaths Auguit 4, lfi. Foui
j Michigan troops died of yellow fever
--Shafter." *
jeffries' wrist shattered
I California!! Itafcatn Armstrong but In N<
lining Injures His I.«• ft Arm.
j Nfw York. Aug. (V Jim Jeffries
the heavy weight pugilist from Cali-
fornia, was to have tonght Bob Ann-
I strong and Steve O'Donnell fur toi
| rounds each before the I>enox Athletic
j Club last night, but he was only able
to carry out part of his proposed task,
lie met Armstrong and defeated hin.
in the tenth round, but in doing so he
shattered his left arm and was uuahlc
To He Made Floating Hospitals.
&ui fiuxcisco, Aug i Dr. W < or
busier, medical surveyor of the expe-
ditionary forces for the Philippines
lias received w<>rd that the transports
and Scandia would, when
BEAUTIFUL HOMES.
The Tendency of the Ac<- !■ Toward
Mural Decoration*.
Probably at no time in the world's
history has so much attention heen
paid to the interior decoration of
homes as at present. No home, no
matter how humble. Is without its han-
diwork that helps to beautify the up itt-
ments and make the surroundings
more cheerful. The taste of the Araer
lean people has kept pace with the t:^o
ind almost every day ohrlngs forth
omethlng new in the way < f a pictute.
i draping, a plecc of furnlture°or other
/orm of mural decoration. One of the
latest of these has been given to the
world by the celebrated artist. MtFville,
in a series of four handsome porcelain
game plaques. Not for years has any-
thing as handsome in this line been
seen. The subjects represented :i'"
these plaques are American Wild
Ducks, American Pheasant, American
.Quail and Bttflith Snipe. They are
handsome paintings and are especially
designed for hanging en dining-room
walls, though their richness and beauty
entitles them to a place in tfie parlor
of any home. These original plaques
have been purchased at a cost of $' *>.-
coo by j? c. Hubinger Broa. Co., mtia-
ufacturers of the celebrated Elastic
Starch, and In order to enable their
numerous customers to become posses-
sors of these handsome works of art
they have had them reproduced bv a
special process In all ihe rich colors
and beauty of the original. They are
l.nlshed on heavy cardboard, pressed
and embossed la the shape of a plaque
and trimmed with a heavy band of
gold. They measure forty inches in
circumference and contain no reading
matter or advertisement whatever.
Until September 1st Messrs. J. C. Hu-
binger Bros. Co. propose to distribute
these plaques free to their customers.
Every ptftvbaser of tljiee ten-cent pack-
ages of Elastic Starch, l'.at-iron brand,
manufactured by J. C. Hublnger Bros.
Co., Is entitled to receive one of thess |
handsome plaques free from their gTO-
cer.« Old and new customers alike are
entitled to the benefits of tills offer.
These plaques will not be sent through
tho mail, the only vftiy to obtain them
beiQK from your grocer. Every grocery
store In the country has Elastic Starch
for sale. It Is the oldest and best
laundry starch on the market, and -s
the most perfect cold process starch
ever invented. It Is the only starch
made by men who thoroughly under-
stand the laundry business, and tho
only starch that will not Injure the fin-
est fabric. It has been the standard tor
a quarter of a century, and as an evi-
dence of how good It is twenty-'wo
million packtgea were sold last ye tr.
Ask your dealer to show you the
plaques and tell you about Elastic
Starch. Accept no substitute. Bear
In mind that this offer holds good
a short time only, and should be taken
advantage of without delay.
The receivers of the Baltimore &
Ohio Railroad have turned their atten-
tion to the improvement of the grades
on the third division, from Cumber-
land to Grafton, or rather that portion
which lies between Altamont, the top
of the seventeen-mile grade, and Ter-
ra Alta where the Cranberry grade be-
l^ns to descend. The line passes
through Deer Park and Oakland and
crosses what Is known as the "Glades"
of the Allegheny Mountains. The
grades are short and choppy, some of
them being SO to 85 feet to the mile.
One of the first pieces of work to be
done is now In progress at No. 58 Cut,
where the grade is being reduced from
81 feet to 42% feet per mile, with equa-
tions for curvature. It is expected
that the cutting down of this grade
will enable the receivers to increase
the train load from 1,000 tons to 1.300
tons on east-bound trains. One mile
of the roadway will be lowered and it
Is expccted that the work will be com-
pleted by the middle of October.
Perhaps some people do not know
hat the sphinx got its reputation for
jeing very wise by keeping its mouth j
ihut for 3,00(1 years.
Tlie Pl:n^ for Your Dk-Ugliter*.
St. Mary's Academy at Notre Dame,
'nd.. ranks first among the educational
institutions for girls. Young women '
from all parts of America and Europe
ire fount! in its classes. The facu! •
have just issued va catalog that com
ains much valuable data. Parents de-
rirous of st ndlng their ^au^b e .- to ' le-
be.-1 institution should send for this
'Mtalog before deciding on sending
them elsewhere. It Is under the super-
vision of the Sisters of the Holy Cr >
and is located at Notre Dame, far from
the excitement of even village life, ami
right among the beautiful scenes of tb.
Creator's handiwork.
It is easy enough to say bright
things; the difficult part is to think ot
them.
Americans are great people to manii
lecture burdens and then carry them
around.
A man never lias as much trouble
with his mother-in law as his wife has
with hers.
Some musicians go upon the stage j
while others never get further than ;
the orchestra.
Whenever we see a weed-covered
grave, we thrill with indignation at
the thought thai perhaps in this for-
gotten spot lies tbe rare woman wbo
in her day knew* bow to make good
apple dumplings.
I .out lila I.I ft- Having Other*.
A country boy visiting New York
stopped a runaway team that wfis
about to dash on the sidewalk where
there were hiincl'cds of women and
clilldion. He saved their lives, but
l st bis own. s Hundreds of lives are
saved every year jby Hoststter's stom-
ach Bitters. lVnplc with disordered
KtomiK'h. li\et®an>i bowels are brought
back i<1 good iie;iit h by It* •
How a man whose collar wilts in
fifteen minutes, hates a man who al-
ways looks cool!
1 believe Piso'i Caie is the only medi-
cine that will cure consumption.—Anna
M. Boss. \\ illiamsport. Pa., Nov. 12, IH95.
WJien a man s opinion has weight, no
where else he gets up in prayer meet-
ing and delivers it. •
No-To-Hac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobaoco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. Mk\ f 1. All druuulslH.
When a man doesn't like a thing be
says so. but a woman expresses her
disapproval by looking at you icily.
COSMO Hl'TTKKMII.K TOILET SOAP
mnkea the kitt soft, white aud healthy®
Bold every where.
• •
The only way some married people
manage to avoid quarreling is by re-
fusing to make up.
•
More Hubles I.Ivvs have been saved bv I>r.
MofTett'NTKKTniNA (Ti e'liluR Powilermthan
by all other remedies ruinbintd TKSTHINA
A:iis inn-i , i. ..gate-, tiie Howels uud
makes Seething easy.
•
Woman was made from tbe rib of
man, but as t§ the origin of ladies hie*
tory is silent.
Don't Tohacco Spit and Smoke Your Lijp <Uav.
To quit tobsceo esally and forever, be mag-
netic, full of life nerve and v ltfor, tako No-To-
Unr, the womle:- worker, that makes weak men
BtriitH- Alldriif.'Kists. f>dc. or II. ('tire Ktiaran-
teeu Booklet and sample froe. Address
Sterling lfeiue.ly Co., Chicago or New York.
When some people nsk for time to
think we wonder what they are going
to think with.
Shake luto Your Shoen.
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the
feet. It cures painful, swollen, smart-
ing feet and Instantly takes the sting
out of corns and bunions. It's the
greatest comfort discovery of the ago.
Allen's Pool Blase makes tight-fitting
or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain
cure for sweating, callous nnd hot.
tired, nervous, aching feet. Try It to-
day. Sold by all drugulsts and shoe
stores. Hy mail for 25c in stamps.
Trial package FREE. Address, Allen
S. Olmsted. Lo Roy. N. Y.
A married man never realizes what
he's missing unless he counts tbe
change in his pocket night and morn-
ing.
Wheat 4O lenta a Ifuabel.
How to grow wheat with big profit at 40
ei nts and samples of Kal/.er's Red < 'ross (80
ltUHhelsperacre) Winter Wheat, Rye, Oats,
Clovers, etc., with Farm Hoed Catalogue
fo.- 4 cents postage. JOHN A. BALZER
UUFO CO., La Crosse, Wis. w.u.u.
Every time a woman visits a ceme-
tery, she coines back snorting about
some man because t here are weeds on
his wife's grave.
If a bride does her own work for the
first six weeks after marriage she has
t\\<> or thrc
suit of using the can ope
Doctors and lawyer?: rn nlwa;, n'.ve
you a large bill in exchange for small
ones.
To Care Constipation Forever.
Take Cascurets. Candy Cathartic. lOoorSSc.
IfC. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund inonoy.
Very few children have as much
strength of uiind as they have of don't
mind.
A bath with COSMO BUTTERMILK
BOAP, exquisitely scented, is soothing und
beuelicial. Sold everywhere.
A man loves to eat and a woman eats
to lov%.
Mr*. WIdiI^w'i Mouthing SJjTnp
For i In Mi mi Mkhf^oflM llllllMHiHil > MlM
atioii, ll«) h pain, curt * in«i r->iu as • «ata a bottle.
Costly'apparel doesn't always make
a woman look neat and attractive.
TO MRS. PINKHAM
From Mrs. Walter E. Budd, of Pat-
ohogue, New York.
Mrs. Run*, in the following letter,
tolls a familiar story of weaknesft an4
suffering* and thanks Mrs. I nkl am
lor complete relief:
44 Dkaii Mrs. Pinkham:—I tlfink it is
ray duty to write
to 3*>u and tellyou
what Lydia
E Pinkhara's
Vegetable
Compound!
has done for;
me. I feel like
another woman.
1 had such dread-
ful headaches
through my
temples and
on top of my
head, that I
nearly went
crazy; was also
troubled with
chills, was very
weak; my left
side from my
shoulders to .
mpwaist pain-
ed me terribly. 1 could not sleep for
the pain. Plasters would help for a
while, but as soon as taken off, the pain
would be just as bad as ever. Doctors
prescribed medicine, but it gave me no
relief.
"Now 1 feel so well and strong,
have no more headaches, and no
pain in side, ami it is all owiug to
your Compound. I cannot praise it
enough. It is a wonderful medicine.
1 recommend it to every woman 1
know.'1 •
Remember the name
when you buy
again
FLUC
SEARCH
1 ^ N(QUIRES NO CUOKiKu *
maltts cohixs akc cuffs stiff and mce
,,, r, mn Fia-r k\i „ .
ONE POUND Of THIS STAPCH WILL 00
AS FAS AS A PCUNU/ND * HALF
OF ANY OTHtP STARCH
v *j<",A£TUBt0 aw
f"J C.HUBINCF.R BROS'C?
Ktokuk Iowa NewHavem.CON*./^
iskum,
ittnn- < i vjhh., v
Bftifl. ai.> .a h.wV.il
IRONING MADE
EASY.
HAS MANY IMITATORS, BUT NO EQUAL.
This Starch Bcientitlc princi-
ples, by men who liavo had years of
experience in fancy lauudering.
restores old linen and summer dresses
to their natural whiteness and impart
a beautiful and lasting finish. The
only starch that is perfectly harmless.
Contains no arsenic, alum or other in-
jurious substance. Can be used even
for a baby powder.
ASK YOUfl GROCER FOR IT AND TAKE NO OTHER I
There's nothing longer than the
summer days to the girl who is to be
married in the fall.
When the time comes to start off on
a vacation, nine out of ten people wish
they were going to stay at home.
it i-- hard to ho satisfactory, a man
was abused in Atchison, Kansas, the
"other day because he was honest.
Ilis first love ami his first shave are
two of the things that occur in the
life of every man which he never for-
gets. •
NEW
FAST TRAIN
SSfe""WABASli
wa
. st. i.oris
. NEW lOKK
HOSTO*
NEXT DAY
:IO A. ML
:;: o i\ u.
s.so p. m.
further lnf"rn,i.t and a han i oui« IllubtraiM
diiacrlpt ve booklet, a'ldrep-i
C. 8. CRAM . ii 1 . A T. A., ST. I.Ot lS.
AUTOMATIC GRIP NECK YOKE. AN ACH^T£LW.!X"vn'
Ore«t«
Hvnu 11
-■•wawauiiiiiwiwwi'iMiiWW ***
.-3&JM.
nhii*.
Whenev
valk into
we want to get cooled, w
room where a pair of lov
ig ami take a chair and si
a frhile.
One of the most distressing things
in the world is to hear any one scold
who Is so old and'feeble thnthis breath
gives out.
they reached Manila, be converted into
floating hospitals. *
U iiiufin tur«* of NhflU
RkaJ'INO, Pa.. Aug. i
standing peace negotiate
penter Steel works are nuimuK m
shells and projectiles under the heav-
iiht pressure from the ^'ovcrnuuent
since the war l CL'On.
Notwith-
the Car-
orks are working on
1 he season has arr
pay no cents to 1
Id to keep out
f Klondike, by. a lecturer who has
n thei
Remember tlie name
when you buy
i lw soph
has to
ti a
sn t kn
aLrain
PLUC
AUTONIATIC CSIP NECK YOKE CO., 81 Harding St., Indianapolis, Ind.
"THE POT CALLED THE KETTLE BLACK."
BECAUSE THE HOUSEWIFE DIDN'T USE
SAPOLIO
ing from her words, but nature has
saved a few of them the trouble of
making themselves plain.
When a voting man comes inoit than
a hundred miles to s^e a young lady,
that settles it so faV as her neighbors
bors and friends * are concerned,
ami they commence to \v; rry about
what they will get for a wtdding pres-
ent.
CURE YlH
VC NClSHaTl. ;.l . I
• c
r'• '. ' i i i u«iria>
ChemicalOO. «*ut ' ' I 1 ■ •
Sold t « •>i<::Kirllla
::ra
<JUM&
DROPSY
NfcW D'SCOVFHY r' .,
lo <lay«
tri'UilllPUt 1< I'Vl*. Ur. U. a.UKkL.N'n HU%a. •
WAM I II
( o., Srw \ > rk, for in aaiiiuli** anil 1
W.N. U.-WICHITA.-NO.33.-1898
fc'bea Aoswcnot] Advertisemests Hisdly
Ncatiou Ibis f« pcr.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
French, W. H. The Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, August 12, 1898, newspaper, August 12, 1898; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc150686/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.