The Tribune-Democrat. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 26, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 16, 1895 Page: 2 of 8
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THE TRIBUNE-DEMOCRAT.| MATRONS AND MAIDS.
II L. EDWARDS, Kdltor.
J II Mc KAllLANl), lins Mlir
I 1
Enid,
O. T
A few cigarettes. mciro or loss.with
a cup of black coffoo thrown in, would
undoubtedly have averted that rovi#j.u-
tion in l'eru.
We fool quits safd in saying that
the Pacific railroads will pay thoir
debts to the government—when apploa
grow on blackberry vinos.
From all accounts some of the sacred
concorts now lioin,' given in Now
Vork arc callod sacred because thoro
Is nothing sacreu about them.
Yai.e's latest attempt to freeze out
she university of Pennsylvania arises
jiaiiily from the fact that for several
/ears she has been doing her thinking
with her feet.
It is hoped that tho weathor man
will take prompt and frigid measures
tondlscourage tho spring poet habit,
which has developed alarmingly in tho
last few weeks.
The lato Frederick Douglass was
undeniably a handsome old man. II j
had as much dignity and impre3slve-
noss as Charlos Sumner, who was tlio
ideal statesman in appearance.
There is nothing French about tho
Kentucky duel. Usually tho princi-
pals do not talk long before tho en-
gagement, and usually thoy are not
able to talk about tho trouble after
tho shooting begins. Tho Kentucky
duel, like the favorite Kentucky bev-
erage, is warm and does its work
effectively.
The monarchist newspapers of
Brazil recently published a list of
twenty alleged victims of tho re-
public's brutality and when confronted
by tho men, alive and well, refused to
rotraot. This experience is a "little
worso than American papers are some-
times subjected to after publishing
obituaries of live men.
It is to bo hopod that tho popo is
not dependent for his livelihood upon
the new record breaking 'J71-carat
diamond that is said to have been
sent to him by tho president of tho
Transvaal republic. It is not so
much tho utter inappropriateness of
tho alleged gift as tho improbability
of tho story that prompts tho hopo.
It is true, perhaps, that somo
changes are noedod in tho base ball
rulos, but what is more needed is a
set of umpires with nerve enough to
enforeo tho rulos. Article 1 in tho
umpire's regulations should teach him
that his first, and imperative duty is to
tho game and the paying public, and
not to a band of angry and brawling
players.
The American oyster has boon
slandered. An investigation shows
that ho is not alllictcd by tho germs
of typhoid fevor, but is a healthy and
healthful creature, good in evory
month with or without an "r." Tho
discovery that tho American oyster is
good in August was made by a man
who tried it under the bolief that it is
spelled "Orgust."
The desire of Cubans to froo thoir
island from the yoko of Spain has
reached a degree of intensity that
moans revolution. In the inevitable
strugglo for freedom that will place
tho Cubans in lino with most of tho
peoples of the Western hemisphere,
money will bo contributed bv tho
largo colony of Cubans who aro in
successful business in Now York.
'Jndeu the laws of Now Jersey
flogging is nroliibitod in tho public
schools. This, perhaps, is tho reason
why tho principal of a l'aterson school
has boon arrested for beating his wife
until silo is black an I blue. There
are teachers who must take it out of
somebody, and if they aro not allowed
to expend their irritability on pupils
thoy arc disposed to expend it on
members of their own family.
A financial officer ot tho univers-
ity of Chicago says that its capital or
endowment is ^8,00;),000 and Its in-
come $1)00,000 annually. It transpires
incidentally that one of John I).
Rockefeller's largo donations was in
Northern Pacific livo por cent gold
bonds, then a gilt-edged security, but
the interest on which since lias been
defaulted. Mr. |{<> kefollor makes
good tho amount of tho Interest each
year to tho university. Standard Oil
can afford it.
Not content vith defaming our
modest oyster, quarreling with our
beof and excluding our pork and
wheat, our amiable British friends
have bsgun war on our cotton. The
only ease that they can mako against
it lias nothing to do with its quality.
That is beyond their roach. They
pretend, however, that it is poorly
pressed and inferior in that respect to
cotton from India and Kgypt. It is
evident that our neighbor is not wil-
ling to lose a point against us that a
little mendacity can win.
Tiik discovery is announced from
Vienna that hypodermic dosos of
Koch's tuberculin will cure insanity.
What a boon it will be should it also
cure crankory. A remedy that will
extract whorls from tho head would
bo quite as serviceable as one to re-
move tubercles from the lungs.
The cost of administration of th
Gould estato is $'J00,000, and the ox-
rcutors are to receive $40,000 per
annum each. Tho poor Uoulds seek
to deduct these sumo from the princi-
pal before the estate is taxed.
IF YOU DO NOT KNOW BEANS
READ AND LEARN.
Several Mathoili of rrffparlng the llos*
too Vegetable — How to Arrange a
Coloiilal Ten A Woman of Forty Sum-
inert—Selecting a Veil.
Do You Know Mean*?
There are a great many people who
would feel inclined to resent any im-
putation of want of knowledge con-
corning beans, yet there are a great
many varieties of this plebeian veg-
etable that are still unknown to the
every-day cook. The stranger in a
large New York grocery will he like-
ly to notice a basket of brilliant green
beans. These are the flageolets of
the French cook. They are not raised
in this country, but are imported in a
dry state from France. Their bright,
even color makes them an attractive
object, and anyone who has eaten
beans "panachces" at Delmonico's
would hardly recognize the flageolets
as the main ingredients in the mix-
ture. The French cooks do not soak
their beans as long as we do, and
they do not always succeed in com-
pletely conquering the natural tough-
ness of this dried vegetable.
A llageolet is properly cooked in
the same way as the white bean, or
as dried jfeas. Wash them thor-
oughly, and put a pint of them to
soak in three pints of cold water over
night. In tho morning drain them,
put them over tho fire in three fresh
pints of cold water, and let them
simmer very slowly, covered until
they are very tender but entire.
They must not be boiled to a por-
ridge. It will take usually from an
hour and a half to two hours' cooking.
At tho end of this time drain the
beans again. Mix two tablespoons
of butter with a quarter of a cup of
the water iu which they have been
cooked. Add two teaspoons of salt,
a tablespoon of chopped parsley, and
a pinch of white pepper. Toss the
beans in this mixture over the tire
for a minute or two and serve them.
The dried llageolet is not often used
for soup like the white llreton bean
and tho red bean. The red harieote
or kidney bean is also a French bean
that may ba fpund in most of our gro-
cery stores. We believe, however,
that it is usually raisod iu this
country.
To cook these red beans, soak them
over night as you do the llageolets.
Drain them and cover them with fresh
water in tho morning. Add to them
a tablespoon of butter, and a small
white onion in which a eiove is stuck,
and let the beans simmer slowly for
half an hour. Add half a wineglass
of good red wine, if you would cook
the beans in pure French fashion.
Let them cook an hour longer after
adding the wine; drain them again,
though the liquor should be nearly
all absorbed. Add a tablespoon of
butter and toss tho beans over the
tiro for about tivo minutes. They
should be served as hot as possible.
Our American method of baking
the white b^ans seems to be the very
best method of cooking them—far
better than any fricassee or stew of
beans, though they may be cooked in
exactly the same way as the green-
lined flageolet. It requires an intelli-
gent New England housekeeper, how-
ever, to know the best kind of white
beans. Throughout the middle states
the large white kidney bean is the
only white bean sold. In Boston and
"down Fast," where the cooking of
the white bean is an art, nothing but
tho small pea bean is used, and the
coarse white bean is rejected by all
wise housekeepers. It is possibly
needless to sav hero that it is not
necessary to ad ti pork to a dish of
baked beans, and those who enter-
tain a prejudice'against the meat of
the pig may well substitute a lump
of butter.
Measure out a quart of white pea
beans. Put them to soak over night
in three quarts of cold water. Tho
orthodox dish to bake them in is an
unglazed pipkin of earthenware, with
a handle and cover. In the morning
drain them and rinse them thorough-
ly in clear cold water. Then put
them back in the pipkin in which
they have been soaking, add a table-
spoon of salt, and an even tablespoon
of molasses and a teaspoonful of
mustard. Stir all thoroughly around
in tho pot. Put a heaping tablespoon
of butter down in the center oT the
beans Cover them with cold water,
so that it rises two inches above them.
Put them in a hot oven at 8 o'clock
in tho morning, and let them cook
steadily till 5 in tho afternoon, re-
newing the water as often as it boils
off them. Let them brown down in
the pot the last hour, and they will
be done at 0 o'clock.
Tlio (iuardlantlilp of Children.
A hard-working dressmaker had
laiti by a little monoy. She fell in
love with a boy of 11), consumptive
ami entirely penniless, an I married
him largely to take care of him. Soon
his health failed completely and tind-
ing himself about to die he expresse 1
a wish to mako a will. This seomad
but the curious fancy of a dying man,
as ho had absolutely nothing to leave
and no money even t > pay for making
n will. To humor him, however, the
hard-working wife sent for a lawyer
and paid him to draw up her hus-
band's will. The husband died and
somo months later a baby was born.
When the baby was but a few months
old strangers came to the mother
armed with tho husband's will. They
proved that he ha I bequeathe J the
child to his parents in Michigan an 1
took tlio babv away with thorn. The
mother had no redress.
This is only one of the many, many
cases of bitter injustices which are
caused by the present law concerning
the guardianship of children. In every
slate of the union except six (Iowa
Nebraska, Kansas, Oregon, Washing-
ton and New York) tho existing law
is that the fat her of a minor child ha?
sole legal authority over such child
and has the absolute right of its cus-
tody and its service an d the fruits
thereof, §nd the sole right to indent-
ure, except under certain circum-
stances. In several states women
are striving to have a change made in
this ruling and in Pennsy lvania espe-
cially there has bjen vigorous action
taken lately. The Po nnsylvania Wo-
men's Suffrage associa tion, the Penn-
| sylvania Women's Christian Temper-
ance union, and tho Civic club of
Philadelphia have indorsed a set of
amendments wh ich are to be pre-
sented to the legislature to the end
that hereafter married women oi
good character who aro mothers
shall have the sam s rig hts enjoyed by
the father under tho law.
A Colonial Tea.
Church entertainments in which
children take part are always attrac-
tive, and a colonial tea given by lit-
tle people is one of the most delight-
ful suggestions that can be offered,
says the Ladies' Home Journal.
Chil dren from five to ten years of
age should be chosen, and their cos-
tumes ought to be suited both to the
colonial period and to the characters
assumed. The costumes should be
j true in every datai 1 to the period rep:
resented. If it is not possible or
J practicable to hire costumes, thoy
j may bo all, even to the wigs, designed
anti made without Ihe aid of a cos-
tumer. Patterns for each garment
required may bo ordered by mail at
leading pattern stores. The speciul
features of the ente rtainment are the
supper or "tea," march, music, his-
tory or story and tablea ux vivants.
Tables, conveniently low to accom-
modate guests in kindergarten chairs,
arc spread with simple but palatable
food. A s tately squire and darne pre-
side at each table, dispensing hos-
pitality to their tiny colonial guests
after the fashion of their day, small
serving men and maids in costume as-
sisting.
Whil e the children are enjoying
their supper their elders may be
served in less formal fashion.
After supper the children may en-
gage in inarching for fifteen or
twenty minutes, then take part in a
series of tableaux representing vari-
ous scenes in colonial life. Those
should be selected which represent
the fortunes of domestic life in its
happiest moods. The following order
of arrangement is excellent:
First, an orchestral or piano ar-
rangement of nationa 1 airs. Second,
a brief story explaining the tableaux
about to be given. Third, tableaux.
The stories must be simple in form,
easy rhyme being preferred, spicy,
amusing and well told. They may be
read, but it is far better to select
good reciters from tho colonial band,
giving to each a story to bo rehearsed
at the proper moment. The tableaux
iray be arranged bell ind the curtain,
while the musical numbers and
i stories are being rendered before the
assembled company, so that there
j may be no tiresome waits between
the story and the picture.
A Woman of t orty Summers.
: Full of outline and fnir of face,
! Swituinj her fan with lan zuld tfrace,
! White arms i.'le.iminK through folds of lace,
! A woman of forty summors
j Mo thread of white In tho auburn hair,
No line of a?e in tho forehe.id fair,
I A life unmarrej by touch of care.
j la spilo or her forty summera.
A husband-lover and children sweet.
I Pleasures to charm and friends to groet,
| Koses scattered boforo her feat,
| Through each of her forty summers.
Suramors all. for no winters bold
i Have snatch ed her sunshine and made her
cold
i Have It tiled her roses and loft her old;
: Nothing she knows but summers
i No'hlnr she knows of laden cloud,
of freezln r air and tempest loud.
| Of snows that weave for hope a shroud;
Her life has been only summers.
! So ealm she sits in th? bultnv air, ^
! Mo sorrows to fret, no cross to bear,
. A summer idyl, a vision fair,
; This woman of forty summers.
Yet cold and bl a*t but mako us strong,
I After the snow the robin's son*;
To the fullest life by rljht belonj
The winters as well as summers.
And they whom fame shall carve in stone
The women who n men would fane enthrone.
The women whom (I od has stamped his own,
! Live winters as well as summers
— Jenness Miller Monthly.
LAZIEST MAN ON RECORD.
Selecting
\ ell.
I It may make a pretty woman home-
i 1 y, if taken at haphazard, and cer-
, tainly can improve a homely one if
j bought with tasto and skill. lUack,
brown, white and navy blue veils are
worn but the favorite veil in Paris is
ono of a black ground having small
I white sprays and border. A cream
j white is becoming, unless the wearer
| is very pale and with faint-colored
| uyos and hair. Black goes with all
1 hats and is very fashionable, but it is
the common opinion that it ages one.
1 The spotted black is more becoming
than tho plain, and if the wearer has
a modicum of color she can get along
with it, provided she uses something
bright about her dress or hat. To
others black is becoming any way,
and fortunate aro these few. —Ladies'
j Home Journal.
*Twan Ever Thin.
She was singing vigorously the
opening hymn at church. She was
trim and trig as possible, with ono
exception. Her placket, that bane of
woman's existence, gaped and re-
vealed to those behind her a line of
white. When she sat down her
neighbor kindly whispered something
I to her concerning tho state of her at-
tire. The woman blushed furiously,
made a f'irtive grab at her skirt, was
i unable to decide what was the mat-
ter with it, and settled back, finally,
to finishing the rest of her worship*
ing in a position which would not re-
veal portions of her underwear to tho
rest of the congregation. And then
the choir, in loud, vociferous tones,
sang out, "Stand up, stand up, for
Jesus."
Hit Manner find Appearance Aroused
Cur Unity and Comment
Tho stranger, a Mr. Burr, produced
a quiet sensation by arousing £Wy-
body s curiosity. Ho came Vo the
hotel attended by an Arab servant,
who spoke only three words of Eng-
lish. The newcomer had ample means,
evidently, and loved his ease. He
had no acquaintances in the hotel and
made nono. He drove alx>ut consid-
erably and lolled in the reading-room
or in tho vestibule in an easy chair
carried by his servant Ho said very
little, ate in his room, smoked occa-
sionally in public, the servant always
attending and attentive to his wants.
He seldom used his logs, and never
used his arms at all, carrying them
both in a sling.
This was the point over which tho
fancy of tho observers exercised
itself. They couldn't understand it.
Nobody, of course, liked to speak
about it to tho man himself, and the
servant might as well have been dumb,
as he spoke only Arabic. There was
never a more completely mystified set.
The man was burned brown,perhapd
by oriental suns; he was well and
carefully dressed, was never in any
hurry.novor surprised,never irritated,
but always comfortably self-posed, at
peace with all tho world, and as placid
as still waters that run deep.
Everybody was certain that there
was something beyond this—some ro-
mance or notable intrigue or some
mystery more subtile than either;
perhaps a crime of a rare Eastern
order, oin which love and sharp blades
and poison took part. It was boyond
all question that he had not come out
of the affair as he had entered, as
both arms in a sling bore witness.
Some held to the notion that he had
been hanged and revivified, arriving
at this conclusion by observing his
habit of always resting his head on
the back of his chair; some suggested
Spanish witchcraft, others India hyp-
notism, but the vast majority could
not agree on anything in particular,
and consequently drifted in their opin-
ions from time to time.
Colonel O , well known every-
where, entered the hotel one day,
nodded to the stranger, sat down be-
side him, arid conversed quietly for an
hour in French. Nearly everybody,
of course, knows French, but it so
happened that nobody near by could
catch a word of the conversation, be-
cause the two talked scarcely above a
whisper.
The stranger paid his account and
left next day, and in the evening
when Colonel O called again and
asked for Mr. liurr he seemed not ir
the least surprised at his friend's dis-
appearance.
• 'Pardon me. colonel, but he's a
singular man," somebody remarked.
•'Rather," replied the colonel.
"A great traveler, I presume?"
"No; he comes over from England
Slice a year."
♦•Know him a long while?"
••All my life."
••He's had quite an adventurous ca-
reer?"
"I shouldn't think so."
••Well, he certainly produced a sen-
sation here."
"Why, pray?"
"Oh, I mean he interested us all?"
"That's the caso everywhere."
"Indeed! But he hardly ever spoke."
••That's his way."
"We all concluded that there must
liavo been a curious accident "
"Ho never had a mishap in his life."
"But the arms, colonel?"
"Oh, I forgot. I am soused to see-
ing him I forgot how tho thing im-
presses others."
••What thing?"
"I mean the way ho carries his
arms."
"That's the very point, colonel."
"Oh, I see! Why, my friend sim-
ply carries his arms in a sling be-
cause he's too lazy to carry them in
any other way."
l-l;idln? Out Who Were Poor Pay.
A German paper says that ono ot
its contemporaries recently published
the following advertisement: "A
young lady of enormous wealth, who
is prepared to pay oft all the debts of
her intended husband, desires to form
tho acquaintance of a respectable
young gentloman, with a view to mat-
rimony. Each reply to l o accompa-
nied by a photo of the sender, and ad-
dressed to J. P., at the oftico of this
paper." Tho delicate hand which
drew up tho above linos and thereby
secured a very large number of otters
belonged to no less a person than
Herr Itzig Schlaueheles, who had
lately opened a clothing establishment
in town. By means of the photos
sent in he was enabled to ascertain
which of his would bo customers were
in the habit of leaving their debts
unpaid.—Now York Tribune.
One Way to Get Itnvenife.
"If I wero only a judga!" exclaimed
tho young man, as he picked himself
up at the foot of the front door stops,
and looked up at tho closing door,
clenching his lists and gritting
his teeth ferociously. ••And what
would you do if you wore one?"
asked a sympathetic passer-by,
stopping to help him brush otT the
dust. "Fine that confounded old
fellow $50 for contempt of court!" the
young man answerod, viciously. And
then ho straightened tho chrysanthe-
mum in his buttonhole and sadly
walked away.—Soinervillo Journal.
Tin* I'ate of the "Lion."
At the Hoiroe.
Mr. Collegoboy, passing through a
lonely and deserted corridor—Hello!
What are you doing here, sir? I ran
hero to save my self from tho crowds
that keep lionizing mo.
The Yenorablo Figure I am the
distinguished man in whose honor the
affair is given. I'm hero becauso
couldn't got anybody to taltc to.—Chi-
cago Record.
The world's railways employ 394,000
people.
In Zante, one of the Ionian Isles,
there is a petroleum spring that is men-
tioned by Herodotus. It has been known
for nearly 3,000 years.
Search lights are such good targets
for the enemy's guns that the (Jermans
are arranging to throw tho light first
on a mirror and thence on the enemy,
thereby concealing its real feource.
Lack of trained sailors for the navy
is seriously felt in the United States,
where only two-thirds of a crew has
been obtained for the swift cruiser
Minneapolis just placed in commission.
The average cost of power for the
manuf w,fure of a barrel of flour in
Minni p lis is said to be 2% cents for
water i 0 to 7 cents for steam, while
at Duluth, where steam is used exclus-
ively, the cost per barrel is 'i% cents
to 3 !>. cents a barrel, the coal used be-
ing the refuse from the docks.
The French claim that gas-making
was invented by Lebanon in 1802, who
made gaa> by the dry distillation of
wood.
China exports 8-H10.000 worth of hu-
man h ir every year. It comes mostly
from the heads of criminals, paupers
and dead people.
An expert oculist has been appointed
to test the eyesight of all conductors,
engineers, firemen and brakeinen on
the Canadian Pacific lines.
Five hundred and seventy-six archi-
tects have entered the competition for
the preparation of plans for the pro-
jected Paris exposition of 1900.
Probably the largest single order for
aluminium ever given is that of the
French Minister of Marine. It is for
42,000 kilograms of the metal, to be
used in the construction of steam
launches for the navy.
France leads in wine production.
Pure Blood
Is absolutely necessary in order to have |
good health. The greatest affliction of
tho human race is impure blood.
There are about 2400 disorders inci-,
dent to tho human frame, the large
majority arising from the impure or
poisonous condition of the blood.
The best remedy for all blood dis-
eases is found in Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Its remarkable cures are its loudest
praise. It is not what we say but
what Hood's Sarsaparilla does that
tells the story.
No remedy has ever had so marked
success, or won such enormous sales.
Scrofula in its severest forms yields
to its potent powers, blood poisoning
and salt rheum and many other diseases
are permanently cured by it. For a
general Spring Medicine to remove
those impurities which have accumu-
lated during the winter, or to overcome
That Tired Feeling, nothing equals
411 wish to say that three years ago wo had
a beautiful boy born to us. At the age of 11
months he breathed his last, a victim to im-
pure blood. On Aug. 4, 1891, another boy
was born, who at the age of two months be-
came alllicted with the same di&casc. We
believed the trouble was constitutional, and
not common sore mouth. I procured a bottle
of Ilood's Sarsaparilla and commenced to give
it regularly to both mother and baby. Im-
provement began at once. We have succeeded
in eradicating the scrofulous blood from the
system, and to-day we are blessed with a nice,
fat baby boy, 18 months old—the very
Picturc of Health,
all life and full of mischief—thanks to Hood's
Sarsaparilla. I am a minister in the Methodist
Protestant church, and it affords me much
pleasure to recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla to
all as a safe, sure remedy. Even my wife,
after taking Hood's, became healthy anC
fleshy and has the bloom of girlhood again.'"
Rev. J. M. I'ate, Brooklino Station, Missouri,
HOOD'S
Sarsaparilla
was formerly pronounced incurable,
of the early stages of the disease
N«w it is not. In all
Scott's Emulsion
will effect a cure quicker than any other
known specific. Scott's Emulsion pro-
motes the making of healthy lung-tissue,
relieves inflammation, overcomes the excess-
ivo waste of the disease and gives vital
strength.
For Coughs, Golds, Weak Lungs, Sora Tv oat,
Bronchitis, Consumption, Scrofula, Anajmia,
Loss of Flesh and Wasting Diseases of Children.
Buy only the genuine with our trade-
mark on salmon-colored wrapper.
Send for pamphlet on Scott''s Emulsion. FREE.
Scott & Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists- 50 cents and $ I
flfrw ft##(
W. L. Douglas
THE BEST.
FIT FOM AKIN©.
-Ti**.? CORDOVAN-,
^ FRENCH 1E.NAMCLLCD CALT.
£4?3?? Fine Calf &Kanoaro5
Kafe'BBOT 9 3-e-° POLICE,3 SOLES.
3&\ W2.working
j -extra FINE- ,s.
JyC£.*l.7J?BQY$SC hoqlShces
•LADIES*
i3>"s=s^cNGCX
* SEND ron CATALOGUE
■W' L-DOUG LAiJ-
DRCCKTON..MA35.
Over Or.o Million People wear tho
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes nra equally satisfactory
They give t!io best value for the monev.
They equal custom fhoeo In style and lit.
Their wearing qualities ere unsurpassed.
Tho prices are uniform,—stamped on sol*.
Pr.irn $i to f>3 saved over other makes.
If your dealer cannot su"nly you we can.
Tnomas I . Bimpao
D.<'. So ait; '■ r«* i
tains i. Writi forli
i, Washington
ntlM'atHiit OD
PATENTS
* Successfully Proseoutes Claims.
T.ataPrincipal Kxiimlnur I H. l'«*nalon Bur
u; rain 'usL wur. i:>uujudu\ili.i«rlaiiu:j. atty hujco.
ike SCALPER
aiuney. Lansinu & Co., 112 Quincy Bt., Chicago.
MMTAL
■HUfOLBl
1CTC.
CORRUGATED IRON
Flroand Lljrhtn'.ns Proof. Cheapor than 8hln«les
ami ton times bolter, k. C. MKT AT. HooriNU A
< oitut'OATiNO Co., tth & Central tits., Knnaaa
City, Mo.
?!§iIT COSTS TOUlOTHiWOMB
W —JflTs.
In:..a W.
Ss.. Th!. muotoo
■ in V7or Ff*.
. fvl. DEPT.
Ely's Cream Balm
WIl.fi CTRE
Catarrh
CI
We shall, fontinar
thwe lib/Ml terms
HIHOHUI SHORT
Till F. Cut tuu
today.
75,COO In I
i<**tjrsarw#eoiutni iDot li pt*n of tUmBUMK
tlx it tv.'ora wo we It half tim.urh, Ot It All* KKJ ISF.MK3TO
!>l«Ai-PKAIIKh. WI l'.rcauKe Ui! \) KltK OVERWIIKLMKD
turn III SI.NiiSS. There was but one thine to do: withdraw
Uio advertising and devote every energy to fillu>K the orders
wuh which we were flooded Tin* we <1 i<1 . and bitr.illed with
leaton.ihlo promptne** a most unprecedented ve«r\ hn*ines .
WITH ENUH«K1> I--ACTOKU.H, IM'llKABKO PAt lMTIES,
A*1> IWF..VIY lilt A.Mil lit). Mh KIIOH Willi II 10 IMS
Tltini TE 01 P. <;OOU*i tVB I AN NOW t AUK. FOH ALL WHO
('OMR. ljist year we could not reduco prices I c. «u j we were
compelled in sontoway to limit thedmn.-iud for Aermotor goods.
Wo would hf.ve lioen satisfied with lower price*, hut why create
a demand which wo could not supply? We have made tho
heaviest purohasos of steel and material bought in America this
year, and at unprecedented price*, end have made terms to
dealers which enable thein to make unprecedented prices.
In quality, charartcr, variety, finish, and accessibility to
full stock of goods end repairs, wo are without competitors.
Jn our plan of advertising last year, wo proposed to furnish a
feed cutter under certain conditions for f I v l'or rensons statei
above we did not completo tho advertising, and the feed cut-
ter was not put out. We now propose to make amends in
the following in iiin'-r: V.s w.ll miiM.nrc in this |a| ' r our
HEW ALL STKKL VCKY SI l'ERIOil FEED CI TTKII, W OUT 11
S4CMS10
cash with order, f. o. b. Chicago Only one to one person, he to
furnish addresses of ten neighbors who ourlit to havo some-
thing in our line. Cut. ilescriDtiou u
larding it will appear soon.
M'< enpeeiallu rf«wi v <«i
I. ii on the purl of tin- 4
area I. $10 added
fx ire is 910 clen
tit ler. To be sum
i,eaudtnti.W2R
proptr pri
you,
rays ha^
Becauso of tl.e pr.nl igi
are enabled to have sp
thus reduce the hand
the material and laying it
become the cost of labor put
sell that it is n<>t worth
come the largest dealers in
the material, of course, be-
steel galvanired-after rom-
(tilting and lixedl, tanks,
extent has this become true,
the price of ot..*goods (and
id full informatiou re-
tfon yau against paying
11 ouf/ita. The lempla•
dtuler to ovtrharije fa
■o.flt
th«
Tiro BO Ont*.
a
warhh.
get the
iw of
ill hs protected. Wo
ever* in low prices,
our factories we
lerely'pkkmg up
8o small has
inlerial which we
mentioning. Wo have be-
materinl iu tho country;
ing made up in the form of
' " ""to .uch'.n
,n extent has
unt the vol-
hie), that KOI It I.AIIOK WlKhrflTl. < I .N( tllNS AllE III YIMI
TIIKIK lOtVHlS OK I < THIS YK.AK THKY HO IT IH-
fAl'sK WB MAKE THE O.M.Y ABSOLUTELY HELIAIH.F. ANI*
HAKE TOWER| HECAl SE THEY FAN IU Y OK F8 CHEAPER
TIIAN THEY (AN IUTI.Hi IIEt AI SK WE ALONE ARE PRE-
l-Wil II TO i)M,\ AM/1 I VI lit UMNO '.INK II IS COM
PLETEH, AND COMPLETE KYIUYTIIIMJ EXACTLY BIS1IT.
These concerns nro wise, for, even though they mnv not
furnish the l>< rt of v. heels, the wheel will have the host of sup-
ports. Send to us your name and address, and those of your
neighbors who tnay need something in our line, nr.d thereby do
them n good turn. The Aermotor Co. is one of the most success-
ful business enter prise-- which has been launched in recent
limes. In succeeding advertisements will be discussed and made
ciear the lines on which that success has been worked out. It
was done by a farmer's boy. A careful following of these ad-
rortisements mav so^e^t toaonieothei fanner's hoy a career. I
fcer.TIOtOr Co., r-th Rosfcwill AMlliuureSts.,Ohleago.
" COLCHESTER''
btspading
BOOT.
BE3T IN MARKET.
BEST IN FIT.
BES1' IN WKAHINO
QUALITY.
Tho outer or tnn solo ox-
tends tho whole length
down to the heel, pro*
teotlntr the bout In <11 jr-
jrliifr and lu other hard
work.
i ASK YOUR DEALER
foh THEM
land don't ho put off
With Inferior goods.
COLCUEHTKH RUB UK II. CO. ,
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Edwards, H. L. The Tribune-Democrat. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 26, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 16, 1895, newspaper, March 16, 1895; Enid, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc156989/m1/2/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.