Norman Democrat--Topic. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, March 18, 1910 Page: 2 of 10
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: KEYSTONE,
TO HEALTH
IS
HOSTETTERS
STOMACH
BITTERS
jjl
Pv1-^
j|You miss a great deal of the
I pleasures of life if your
j stomach has "done
T back oil you"—but don't
I remain in that condition.
yTiie bitters will set things
''■ght and prevent Indigestion,
ICosttvcness & Headache.
ALWAYS LATE.
Hixon—Ever run for an office?
Nixon—I run for on© nearly every
morning.
PUBLISHED EVERY WINTER
Famous Cough and Cold Prescription
Has Cured Hundreds Here.
"Get two ounces of Glycerine and
half an ounce of Concentrated Pino
•'003pound. Then get. half a pint of
good whiskey and put the other two In-
gredients into it Take a tenspoonful
10 a tablespoonful of this mixture after
<*ach meal and at bed time. Shake the
bottle well each time," This la said to
he the quickest cold and cough remedy
known. It frequently cures the worst
colds in twenty-four hours. But bo
sure to get only the genuine Concen-
trated Pine. Each half ounce bottle
comes put up in a tin screw-top case.
Don't use the weaker pine prepara-
tions. Any druggist has it on band or
will quickly get it from his wholesale
house.
An Easy Job.
Do you think that you can make
my daughter happy?" asked Mr Cum-
rox
She has been happy with you,
hasn't she?" rejoined the confident
youth.
"1 think so, sir."
"Well, if she's that easy to please
there ought to be no difficulty."
- :v^-
Meredith ;
Nicholson
il l uc5tra t/on6 3y
pay walters
COPY ft/CUT t90/ QV 3033J Cfk
SYNOPSIS.
Ff< \m
t.-i t
announced. He lounged into the din
ing room, drew his chair to the table
and covered a biscuit with caraembert
with his usual inscrutable air.
I think it is better," he said deiib
eratingiy, "to be an a.^s than a fool
| Have you any views on the subject?"
"None, my d« ar Buttons. 1 have
been called both by shrewd men."
so have I, if the worst were known,
and th y offered proof! Ah, more and
Pairi !
k. I ■
f I.n
hut who
k T.
Intention of
Icing
I :
lighting Fit
mltt<Mi g
^Bn th
thin*
I hi* love for her.
(lllh «!)!•• gagged and
mm
IDgiit. til
Don
hound I
I., nous Italian nnd Ffolhrook If. rel
Inn j'.oth Ollhfi.h- nnd l « nov
inlft^d lov- for ll« l«-n. t' lllng herS*df
npi*f>ah>d to Donov
for help Khe told hint i< go to the
maker'* hom«* nnd « *<• that no Injury he-
lilrn. II* w« nt to li d
nnoe-niaker'* homo. Don
ul the brothers Arthur and l! -nry
Holbrool: who had fought ph. h other
llatlon. "Rosalind
thur averted a murder. Donovan r turr-
rnet Olllewple alone In the dead of
night. On Investigation tie found Henry
Mi.lhrook. tin sailor, and Ml
I in an arirnment It was settled
I th v departt-d. Donovan met th
I rioBullnd. Who by night h- had sup-
posed lie M'ss H« h-n Holhrook She
led ti - mix up. Her father. Artl
Holbrook. wmm ti' • no. maker.
||. h ns fat 1 •• wns 11 e n r > Holhrook. ti
i
I dnplh'lty
Continued.
STRIKE MM BE SVERTED
MEDIATION OFFERS FROM GOV-
ERNMENT IS ACCEPTED
OF WALKOUT IS lEIRlf
If Mediation Falls Through, Leaders
Say Strike Will Go Into Effect
at Once—Railroad Offi-
cials Are Hopeful
Chicago.—Dander of an Immediate
strike of 27,000 locomotive firemen,
the throwing out of employment of
more than 125,000 other employes
and the temporary luspension of
business on pr. thallv « . < Jr ail-
way system of the United States, was
averted Tuesday through tie accept-
ance of offers of mediation from ui®
more 1 see that we were born for each : federal authorities at Washington,
other, Donovan. I was once so 1m- At the reques, of the gen ral man-
piv 1 wi h the notion that to be a agers of the forty-seven
1 was to be distinguished that I involved, Chairman Martin \ Knapp
conceived the idea of forming a Noble of the interstate commerce coinnn •
Order of Serene and Incurable Fools, gion, and Commissioner or Laboi <
I ! cted my:elf the grand and most p. Xeill tel • .raphed an offer of led
worthy master, feeling safe from cora-1 t,ra] mediation to the union >ITi< i lis
petition. News of the matter having This offer was necept.-d. W S. Car-
gone forth, many persons of the high- teFi president of the Ilrofherliood of
< i standing wrote to me, recommend- Locomotive Firemen, and I'n,ine- ,
men, stipulating, howev -r. that ai-
correspondence soon engaged three tion mu8t begin without delay,
typewriters, and I was obliged to get appea| JO Washington wa^ tak-
the post-office department to help me eR ag an eleventh-hour move to pre
break the chain. A few humble souls ven( a walkout which, it was deelar-
applied on their own hook for consid- p(1 t)iroatt'ned the greatest railroad
eration. These 1 elected and placed iu gtI!lk(, ginC<4 that of Thirty-
the first class. You would be sur- gevpn members of lhe Western Fed-
prised to know how many people who Bogr(1 Qf (he Br0therhood at
are chronic joiners wrote in absent-
mindedly for application blanks, fear-
ing to be left out of a good thing.
United States senators were rather
common on the list, and there were
throe governors; a bishop wrote to
propose a brother bishop, of whose
merits he spoke in the warmest terms.
Many newspapers declared that the
iciety filled a long-felt want. I re-
ceived invitations to speak on the
in: \l>. II U K AMI I I (. i \l III •
Achr till n
The decay of poetry may l>o due to
the fact that so much of It is rotten.
ru t s CCICK.!! !N « TO I I DAYS.
I'A'/o olNTAU.NTisKDtiruntei'.i to cure unv case
It hlnj Blind Bleeding oi Protruding i'llo* in
Ui 14(lu>hotluiioey rcfuuUtxl. U)c
Every man has theories about rais-
ing a family—before he marries.
l^win' Single Binder, the famous
straight 5c cigur- annuul Kile P,500,000.
To enjoy love or sausages one must
hav a lot of confidence.
JniUro v. rsl£ .ims 1
Lice, Mites,
ticks, fleas, and other para-
sites cause serious losses to
every stock and poultry rais
er. Kill ttiein safely, by using^
BLACK-DRAUGHT
DISINFECTANT
LICE KILLER & DIP
This is a safe, cleansing,
aromatic preparation, much
stronger than carbolic acid,
without its disagreeable and
dangerous qualities. Try it
Your dealer sells it.
Write lor free uapl. I*
Dlack-Drauglit Stock Mntletar (
ihatlnnnofia. Teui.
CHAPTER XIX
"Yes; but It Is a mere coincidence.
It was a good hiding place for him, as
well as for us."
"It is very unfortunate for all of us
that he should be here. I had hoped
he would bury himself where he would
never be heard of again!" she said,
and anger burned for a moment in her
face. "If he has any shame left, I
should think he would leave here at
once?"
"It's to be remembered. Mi;ss Hol-
hrook, that lie came first; and 1 am :
quite satisfied that your father sought
him lieri- lx for you and your aunt
came to Annandale. It seenu to me
the equity lies with your unck—th--1
creek as a hiding place belongs to him
by right of discovery."
She smiled ready agreement to thi .
and 1 felt that she had come to win j
support for some plan of her own. She
had never been more amiable; certain- j
ly she had never b • n lovelier.
"You are quite right. We had all or i
us better go and leave him in peace.
Wh it is !' he does there - .una a ferry
or manna s a boathouse?"
"Ho is a canoe maker," I said, dryly,
"with more than a local reputation."
Her tone changed at once.
"I'm glad: I'm very glad he has es-
capo-.l from his old ways; for ail our
sakes," she added, with a little sigh.
"And poor Rosalind! You may not
know that he has a daughter. She is
aboflt a year younger than I She
must 1 ve had a sad time of it. I was
named for her mother and she for
mine. If you should meet her, Mr.
Donovan, I wi h you would tell her
how sorry I am not to b<* able to see
her. Hut Aunt Pat must not know
that Uncle Arthur is here. I think
she aas tried to forget him, and her
troubles with my father have effaced
everything else. I hope you will inan-
! age I hat, for me; that Aunt Tat shall
i not know that Uncle Arthur and Rosa-
I lind a#e here. It could only distress
i her. It would be opening a book that
she believes closed forever."
Her solicitude for her aunt's peace
of mind, spokon with eyes averted and
in a low tone, lacked nothing.
"I have seen your cousin," I said. "1
: saw her, iu fact, this moriiinu."
i "Rosalind? Then you can tell me
whether -whether I am really so like
her as they used to think!"
"You are rathei like!" I replied
lightly. "Hut I shall not attempt to
j toll you how It would not do—It
, would Involve particulars that might
prove embarrassing. There are times
j when even 1 find discretion better
than frankness."
"You wish to save my feelings," she
laughed. "Hut I am really taller!"
"By an Inch—she told me that!"
" Then you have seen her more than
"Don't Say 'Must Not* to Me, If You Please!"
Cured by Electropodes
^KtiUllBnlH^I
Innde ihbM. Body t*i on.« u 'wnrt - nrr
iocinrcWPif wli*v I'otitite cute lot Rhruunt
NfimT*. 1
lUrl.arV.r, Kid
Only fl
kiifne.l "Hn
four I >r teod u Ji
WESTERN RLECTRQPODE CO.
247 I .o® Angel*# HU Angrlem. Cal.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
« u.A bMut.ne* b«l
PrvmolM * Ititu - it (frmrth
Ni vup Falla to JlMtorn Ori
to its Youthful Color
■«i|i ii «• •< • * ti«Ir l«:iiin(
, Lim! |)nift'l<tl
PATENT
Hook and Adrlp« f 'HKE.
Fnolrt i WOHtliUtfUilL
O.c. Hat. Hi rr lto«l rwlcrcuctuk
"Yes; more than twice even."
"Then you must tell m- wherein wo
! :
know."
"1 have told you I can't; It's beyond
my poor powers. I will tell you this,
though "
"Well?"
"That i think you both delightful."
"I am disappointed in you. 1 thought
you a man >>f cuun ■. Mi Donovan."
"Even brave men falter at the can-
non's mouth!"
"You are undoubtedly an Irishman,
Mr. Donovan. I am sorry we shan't
have any more tennis."
"You have said so, Miss Holhrook,
HOI I
She laughed, and then glanced to-
ward the brown figure of Sister Mar
garr-t, and was silent for a moment,
while the old clock on the si air
boomed out the half hour and was an-
swered cheerily by the pretty tinkle
of the chapel chime. I counted four
poppy leaves that fluttered free from
n bowl on the book shelf above her
head and lazily fell to the floor at her
feet.
"I had hoped." she said, "that we
were good friends, Mr. Donovan.''
"I have believed that we were, Miss
Holhrook."
"You must y<>o that this situation
must terminate, that we are now at a
crisis. You can understand—I m i
not tell you how fully my sympathies
lie with my father; it could not be
otherwise."
"That is only natural. I have noth-
ing to say on that point."
"And you can understand, too, that
it lias not been easy for me to be de-
pendent upon Aunt Pat. You don't
know—I have no intention of talking
against her—but you can't blame me
for thinking her hard—a little hard on j everything,
my father." "You
I nodded.
"I am sorry, very sorry, that you
should have these troubles. Miss Hol-
hrook."
' I know you are." she replied, eager-
ly, and her eyes brightened "Your
sympathy has meant so much to Aunt
Fat and me. And now, before worse
things happen—"
Worse things must not happen!"
"Then we must put an end to it all,
Mr. Donovan. There is only one way.
My father will never leave here until
Aunt Pat has settled with him. And
it is his right to demand it." she hur-
ried on. "I would have you know that
he is not as black as he has been
painted. He has been his own worst
enemy; and Uncle Arthur's ill doings
must not be charged to him. Rut he
has been wrong, terribly wrong, In his
conduct toward Aunt Pat. I do not
deny that, and he does not. Rut it Is
only a matter of money, and Aunt Pat
has plenty of It; and there ean be no
question of honor between Uncle Ar-
thur and father. It was Uncle Arthur's
act that caused all this trouble; fa-
ther has told me the whole story. Quite
likely father would make no good use
of his money—I will grant that. Rut
think of the strain of these years on
all of us; think of what it has meant
to me, to have this cloud hanging over
my life! It is dreadful—beyond any
words It Is hideous; and I can't stand
it any longer, not another week—not
another day! It must end now and
here."
Her tear-filled eyes rested upon me
pleadingly, and a sob caught her
throat as she tried to go on.
"But—" I began.
"Phrase — please"' she broke In,
touching her handkerchief to her eyes
and smiling appeallngly. "I am ask
Ing very little of you, after all."
"Yes, it is little enough, but It seems
to me a futile interference. If your
father would go to her himself. If you
would take him to her—that strikes
me as the better strategy of the mat-
ter."
"Then am I to understand that you
will not help; that you will not do this
for us—for me?"
"I am sorry to have to say no, Miss
llolbrook," I replied, steadily.
"Then I regret that I shall have to
go further; I must appeal to you as a
personal matter purely. It Is not
easy; but If we are really very good
friends—"
She glanced toward Sister Margaret,
then rose and walked out upon the ter-
race.
"You will hate me—" she began,
smiling wanly, the tears bright In her
eyes; and she knew that it was not
easy to hate her. "I have taken
money from Mr. Gillespie, for my fa-
ther, since I came here. It Is a large
sum and when my father loft here he
| went away to spend it—to waste it
it Is all gone, and worse than gone. I
lust | ay that back—I must not be
:nder obligations to Mr. Gillespie. It
! was wrong, It was very wrong of me.
but I was distracted, half erased by
my father's threats of violence against
Mint Pat—against us all. I am sure
j that you can see how I came to do it.
And now you are my friend; will you
help me?" and she broke off, smiling,
tearful, her back to the balustrade, her
hand at her side lightly touching it.
Khe had confidence, I thought, In the
power of tears, as she slipped her
handkerchief into her sleeve nnd
waited for me to answer.
"Of course Mr. Gillespie only loaned
' you the money to help you over a dlf-
i flculty, in some way that must bo
midnight Monday night formally vot-
ed for a strike. The hour for strik-
ing had been set for next Monday
morning and the members were pre-
pared to start for their homes, some
of them as far as the Pacific coast,
to put the strike into action when lhe
mediation steps were taken
It is stipulated that the mediators
will come to Chicago. According to
uses and be nefits of the order from Mr. t arter, then nun ' >n will ■ 1!(,:
many learned bodies. The thing began to arbi iato the matters in dispute,
to bore me, and when my official sta- but to determine wha' sha 1
tionery was exhausted I issued a fare- bitrated. Tlu* questions invo vo
well address to my troops and dis- wages, which both sides have agrqed
solved the society. Rut it's a great upon as arbitrable, and two other
gratification to me, my dear Donovan, technical points involving promotion
that we quit with a waiting list." and representation in the union,
her
physician
approves
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Sabattus, Maine.—"Ton told m to
tike Lydia E. Pinkham's VegeUblo
IComponnd and
Liver I'ill# before
child birth, and we
ar:> all surprised to
| sec bow much good
it did. Jly tiliysi-
cian said ' Without
doubt it was tlio
Compound that
liulped you.' X
' thank you for your
kindness iu advising
me and give you f ull
permission to use
my name in your t' timonials."—Mrs.
H. W. Mitchelt.. Box 3, tiabattus, Me.
Another Woman Helped.
Granitevillo, Yt. — "J was parsing
throughtheChangeof Life andsuffereu
from nervousness and other annoying
symptoms. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound restoredmy health and
strength, and proved worth mountains
of gold to me. For the sake of other
suffering women I am willing you
should publish my letter." — Mrs.
Ciiaki.es Barclay, B.P.D, Granite-
ville, Vt. f
Women who are passing throwgh
this critical period or who are suffer-
ing from any of those distressing ills
peculiar to their sex should not lose
sight of the fact that for thirty years
Lydii E- Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, which is made from roots and
herbs, has been the standard remedy
for female ills. In almost every com-
munity you will lind women who
have 6un restored to health by Lydia
e. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Trial Dottle Frao By Mail
"There are times. Buttons, when you
cease to divert me. I'm likely to be
very busy for a few days. Just what assert ar
can I do for you this afternoon?"
"Look here, old man, you're not
anery?"
"No; I'm rarely angry; but I'm often
bored."
"Then your brutal'insinuation shall
not go tin i warded. Let me proceed.
to have misunderstood I Hut first, how are your ribs?"
my puri usf Iu coming her . Mr. IJono 1 "Sore ;ind a trifle stiff, but I'm corn-
van," she answered, coldh "I ask J i fortable, thanks."
your help, not your advice I have As I understand matters, .Irishman, Amend
even thrown myself on your mercy, | there Is no real difference between you Washington.
cared for. I like him; he is a fellow of
Rood Impulses. I repeat that 1 1
lieve this matter can be arranged
readily enough, by yourself and your
father. My intrusion would only
make a worso muddle of your affairs.
Send for your father and let 1dm go
to your aunt in the right spirit; and
I believe that an hour's talk will settle
which the brotherhood contends are
arbitrable, but which the railroads
a not.
"If the mediation falls through,
the strike will eo right on as plan-
ned." said Mr. Carter.
In a statement given out the gen-
eral managers said:
"All prospects of a strike are over.
There will bo none. Settlement of
the whole controversy by mediation
and arbitration is assured."
If yoo Buffer from Epilepsy. Fits, Falling S
Eplli
fipaams, nr hate children lliat <!o *o, mv New I>in-
corerv will relieve them, a ixl all you a'rr afKed to
do 1« to acud fur a Free Trial Bottle of Dr. May'a
Cplloptioldo Cure
It haa cured thnaeanda where everything eli®
frilled. Ouarantetd by May Med teal La''< rat' y
I tidtr Pure Food ind Drujja Act, June 'ib, It-OS
Guaranty No 1KU71. Pleaae wi ite for Special Free
Bo t.e and give AGS and complete adnrem
DR. W. H. MAY, 648 Pearl Streat, New York.
rieane mention thia jwpt r. bragglaU till or iera
Census Law
To meet the
and you tell me to do what you know , and me except in the matter of a cer- ranmis Gf thr large number of riti-
is impossible."
"Nothing is so impossible as the
present attitude of your father. Until
that is changed gpur aunt would be
doing your father a groat injury by
giving him this money."
"And as for me—" and her eyes
blazed—"as for me," she said, choking
with anger, "after I have opened this
page of my life to you and you have
given me your fatherly advice—
as for me, I will show you, and Aunt
Pat and all of them, that what cannot
be done one way may be done in an-
other. If I say the word and let the
law takes Its course with my uncle—
that man who brought all these trou-
! ? upon us—you may have the joy
01 knowing that it was your fault—
your fault, Mr. Donovan!"
"I beg of you, do nothing! If you
will not bring your father to Miss Pat,
please let me arrange the meeting."
"He will not listen to you. He looks
upon you as a meddler; and so do I,
Mr. Donovan!"
"But your uncle—you must not, you
would not!' 1 cried, terror struck to
see how fate drew her toward the pit-
fall from w hich I hoped to save her.
"Don't say 'must not' to me, If you
please!" she flung back; but when
she reached the door she turned and
said calmly, though her eyes still
blazed;
"I suppose it is not necessary for nie
to ask that you consider what I have
Si^d to confidential."
"It is quite unnecessary," I said, not
knowing whether 1 loved or pitied her
most; and my wits were busy trying
to devise means of saving her the
heartache her Ignorance held In store
for her.
She called to Sister Margaret in her
brightest tone, and when I had walked
with them to St. Agatha's gate she
bade be good-by with quite as demure
and Christian an air as the sister her-
self.
CHAPTER XX.
The Touch of Dishonor.
I was meditating my course over a
cheerless luncheon when Gillespie was
tain lady. Otherwise we might com-
bine our forces in the interest of these
unhappy Holbrooks."
"You are quite right. You came
here to say something; go on and be
done with It."
Ho deftly covered another biscuit
with the cheese, of whose antiquity he
complained sadly.
"I say, Donovan, between old sol-
dier friends, what were you doing up
there on the creek last night?"
"Studying the landscape effects by
starlight. It's a habit of «nine. Your
own presence there mig'.ft need ac-
counting for, if you don't mind."
"I will be square about it. I met
Helen quite accidentally as I left this
house, and she wanted to see her fa
ther. I took her over there, and w
zens of foreign bjrtb. the senate
passed a bill amending the census
law so as to include information re-
garding the race of such persons.
Convicted Murdered to Hang
Jefferson City, Mo. A judgment of
the Kansas City criminal court was
• affirmed by the supreme cjurt nnd
Robert W. Davis was sentenced to
hang in Kansas City April 29 for the
murder of Henry H. Davis
Exports Fall Off
Washington.—The United States
seems to be losing ground rapidly as
an exporting nation, judging by a
report just issued by the. department
of commerce and labor. This shows
found Henry. He was up to some that during the right months ending
mischief—you may know what it was. with February 28. the excess of ex-
Something had gone wrong with him, ports over impori.; was $189,125,41.•,
and he was in all kinds of a bad hu a decrease of $152,524,136, as com-
mor. Unfortunately, you got the bene- pared with la=t year.
fit of some of it." )
"I will supply you a link in the Boundary Line Shifting?
night's affairs. Henry had been to see Washington. A bill providin
is the guaranteed cure for skin dis-
eases. If you suffer from any such
trouble, get a box from your drug-
gist and be cured. Don't suffer the
annoyance of scaly, itching, burn-
ing or pimply diseases of the skin,
when a 50 cent box of HUNT'S CURE
will relieve you. Wc guarantee one
box to cure anyone case. If it does
not, you get your money hack
without question. But one box
WILL cure. Just you try it. You
can get it at your druggist. It comes
in the form of a salve and is easily
applied. Remember one box in
guaranteed to cure any one case of
under our pledge that you get
your money hack if it fails. Ask
your druggist. The price is 50
cents a box. Prepared by
B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.. Sherman, Tex.
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
his brother Arthur.
Gillespie's face fell, and I saw that
he was greatly surprised.
"Humph! Helen didn't tell me that."
"The reason Henry came here was
to look for his brother. That's how he
reached this place ahead of Miss Pat
and Helen. And I have learned some-
thing—it makes no difference how, but
It was not from the ladies at St. Aga-
tha's—I learned la.11 night that the
key of this whole situation is in your
own hands, Gillespie. Your father was
swindled by the Holbrooks; which
Holhrook?"
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
for
the appointment of a comini- ion to
establish a boundary lino between
Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico j
was again introduced by Kepresenta- ;
five Stephens of Texas
It is claimed that the Red river has
changed its course so as to make nn
official boundary necessary. The bill
carries an appropriation of $20,000.
Want Teddy to Visit Cuba
Havana.—Characterising Colonel
Roosevelt "as one of the best, friends
Cuba ever had," the Cuban veter-
ans' association unanimously voted,
to Invite him to visit Cuba as soon
as possible after his return from
Europe.
Can quickly be overcome by
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegetable
Carter's
PILtS.
English as She Is Spoke.
Meeker—I'm going to apply for a
divorce.
Bleeker—What's the trouble? Fire Destroys Kansas Town
Meeker—Oh. iny wife's a regular Fort Scntt Kalis.—Fire practically
shrew; the children and d,.slroyP<i th(. business portion of
makes my life a burden. | Bn)nson> K.lllBas, twenty .niles west
—act surely and
gently on tike
fi.'cr. Cure
Biliousness,^
Head*
ache,
Dizzi- _ ^
nets, and Indigestion. They do their duty.
Small Pill, Small Due. Small Price.
GENUINE must bear signature:
I 10,000 Automobiles
will b« delivered to St. Loul aam.-lea thia
: ring. The majority of these owners will
eed competent chauffeurs to run th« ma
Bleeker—You don't say! She cer-
tainly doesn't look that kind.
Meeker—Great Scott, man! You
don't cail that kind, do you?
When the Phrenologist Fell
Hl Knowledge of Horses Was
dently a Weak Point.
£vj i Ing men, and your owu perfect lion-
Mavor Reyburn of Philadelphia told
at a dinner a horse story.
"A farmer visited a phrenologist,"
eaty pr vents you from either suspect-
ing or defrauding any one '
"The phrenologist thp following
of here in which twenty buildings
were destroyed. Only four buildings
remain in the business district and
they are badly damaged.
Negro Mass Meeting at Guthrie
Guthrie, Okla.—A mass meeting of
negroes of the state has been called
to meet on April 11 and 12 to con-
sider ways and means for prosecut-
ing tho "Jim Crow" case, which will
come up in the United States circuit
court of appeals at St. Paul on May
3. One of lhe objects of the? meet-
ing is to raise $200 for railroad ex-
penses and eosts in that cate.
Tin meeting Is called bj tho
Constitutional League, a semipoliti-
imong the negroes.
luto Owners Need This
onljr to
or
Our course In
chanffeura. but to every innn owning
mobile, and to every ituiutnoblle «ali
agent, ax well ua repair mun
In one month you will t.« an eipert rhauf
feur an.) repnlr man. Write at on e ..r call n<
Automobile School of liwtriirdou.*
1101 ! lnr St., St. l.mila, *!• .
iiui?-- was knock-kneed, It was 25
irs old, it. had a bad temper, and It
lift said. "Ms had heard that the phr«* balked. Though the farmer had only
uologist thought of buying a horse, lie paid $15 for tho anirua!, he secured
had his head examined and his bumps without difficulty $150 from the phre-
revealed surprising things I nologist for it.
"'Your tastes are the simple, home M'It's wonderful.' said the farmer to
ly and pure tastes of a farmer,' said himself, as he hastened toward the
the phrenologist, and a farmer I take bank to deposit tho money—'It's Jest
you to be. Am I not rlfiht? Aha I wonderful that a man should know so
thought so. You are unready and fal much about men and not know a thing
tering in speech; you find It dillieult about bosses!'"—Detroit Free Press.
to express the simplest ideas. You
are sadly deficient in Judgment and Modern Fashions.
have no knowledge of human nature Fashions are so peculiar that it's a .
Your innocent and trustful disposition [real treat for a woman to J e unlovely j superintendent, a woman, at the re-
renders you an easy dupe to design-1 and comfortable. quest of the women's clubs of state.
Your Liver's
Your Life
\ dead liver means awful sick-
ness—don't let it come—when
it can be prevented. Cascarets
keep the liver lively and bowels
regular and ward off serious,
fatal illness. 901
CASCARRTS—toe bo*—week's treat-
ment. All druggists. Biggest seller
in the world. Million boxes u month.
Girls Riot in Industrial Scoool
Des Moines, Iowa.—Five hundred
girls, Inmates of the State Industrial
school at Mitchells ville, revolted
Tuesday morning. Following tho
outbn ak, they commenced demolish-
ing tin furniture nnd buildings. A
riot call was immediately sent in and
a force of deputies responded. Dur-
ing the melee one girl was badly in-
Jnrrd. Trouble has been brewing
since the installation of the present
is the word to remember
when you need a remedy
^Coughs £Coldi
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Norman Democrat--Topic. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, March 18, 1910, newspaper, March 18, 1910; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc153220/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.