The Enid Democrat. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 47, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 18, 1896 Page: 2 of 8
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THE ENID DEMOCRAT.
* " • . \V AM1KKWIN, publUher.
"t'llsi HIITION RATES;
PerTi-nr, (i( paid In ndv«nrpl .... I
lVr yrnr (If mil piiltt id nUBwe.) . .
Tut Emi> Iiumocrat if published rrry S«l-
itrtUv at KnM. (inrflrM r.ninly. llklnliouin. Mid
.■nloriMi nt Itif |i..« olllce lor Irani
tht. •" .. i-ond IUJIH-I
l Uirougb
Bill Doolin m a bold, had man. but Twin babies are in vo^ue in Kin?
he ban a way of making his jailor for- fisher eountv.
get it. Payne eountv is making- its first e *
Logan county lias a county organi- sav at cotton growing.
ration known as the I nli.niU'd Equal i jn Blaine county they are still plant-
Suffrajfe club.
Although Bill Doolin is out it is
marbles against monarchies that he
will not do auy mor* kiliiuif unless he
! is cornered.
ra>s" j It is oliarped that a sweet girl prad-
! uato of I/ogan county, who had the
Mr. Blizzard of Pott county is
top a corn crop of 15,000 bushels.
A new church has just been com- • swellest dress in the class, pronounced
pie ted at Altoona in Kingfisher coun- j "unique** un-i-kwee.
ty. ! This is the time of year when Billy
Ira Terrill must someday be brought . Bolton travels around in western Ok-
back to Oklahoma to be re-sentenced. • lahoma and breaks down innocent
It is then that he expects to get away. | people's hammocks.
The next ti in,' tliey capture Hill \ A Con^re (rational church in Cana
Doolin they hhould send him to the i diau county indorses the fodlin.s. of
penitentiary ami try him by proxy af-
terward.
< ood crops were made last year
planted as late as July 5th, and good
fodder can be grown planted as late as
August 1. Oklahoma for crops.
Oklahoma is to the front to stay.
She is now shipping vegetables and
fruits into Texas to supply the deli-
ciency in that state occasioned by the wU, remaiQ Keyeral tlav8.
great drought.
i The assessors'report bIiow a popu-
• Hill Tihljjman is certainly .n hard lation in ,.alvnee county of 8.2U3, and
luck. The rewards on Doolin were i ,n ^ natj(m 2 m
for his capture and conviction. That
ing Kr.ftir corn, millet and sorghum.
A Garfield county boy who was a
cagarelte lierm has become insane as
a result
Bill Tilghinan can start right out
again. The next time he will prob-
ably fire.
Only one hundred dollars reward
has been offered for the recapture of
Bill Doolin.
Competition is rife at Coalgate at to
who can produce the longest spikes ot
eastor beans.
A (larfield exchange speaks of a
pleasure by having attached to it a charming young lady as the "wind-
lawn tennis and croquet grounds. some Miss Blank."
The silly story has again gained cir- i It took $N40 to repair the school
culation in Oklahoma that postal house in the capital of Logan county
after the windstorm.
Oklahoma that postal
J clerks hav® been ordered not to re-
ceive mail at the cars Nothing in it.
Bishop Brooks has made a tour of
the churches of the Indian territory,
j spending a month among them. He
it now in Purcell holding services and
conyietion ought to liaye been strick-
en out as redundant-
D. S. Picket of Lincoln county had
a mule shot in the neck by an unknown
party last week, lie oTers $25 reward
for information leading to the capture
of the sneak who did the shooting.
Two Baby, a Cheyenne Indian, re-
cently saw a bicvele go down the
road. He had never seen one before
and at last accounts he was standing
in the middle of the road looking after
the wheel.
An Oklahoma editor lias a poor
speller who writes correspondence to
the paper, and insists that the editor
print his items just as they are written.
The editor does it and they are the
The
country
credit amounts to $320,160.
Beaver county was so dry that
spark would have touched tho whole
works off when down cauie the rain.
The only thing that Oklahoma
wants this year is the assurance that
the Free Homes bill will bo enacted
into law.
Miss Burch, the whistling soloist of
Oklahoma, was married last week.
si eti
IN WOMAN'S CORNER.
INTERESTING READING FOR
DAMES AND DAMSELS.
Current Note*
Clfter Wom i
erties of N<
Young Olrli.
the Mode* t or n
Similarity In the Prop-
Dreas 31merl.il For
teen will fill the place of the silken
lining. One may as well not attemnt
to w ear a rnsdish gown as to try to get
one up cheap.
A sown made by a certain well-
known dressmaker of New York is of
green canvas. The pkirt and jacket are
lined throughout with ponge^. the
same material being used to form re-
vers for the Jacket, while the pleasing
effect is lightened by the changeable
green tafTeta bodice worn with the cos-
clove.* tunie. A green hat, with yellow jori-
draw qulls. adds the finishing touch.
Another costume is of biscuit-colored
canvas. lined with rose taffeta. The
bodice is tight-fitting in the back and
opens in front to reveal a vest of gold-
thread embroidery. Above this vest a
yoke of biscuit-colored chlfTon is softly
laid, flanked each side by a rever of the
embroidery. The collar, of deep, but-
ter-colored lace, has a fan adornment
under each ear.
In the sleeve is shown the mousquc-
comes an object of ridicule among her tajrre model, which is slowly but surely
feminine friends, yet there are women undermining the big sleeve. It is mads
cf sufficiently strong mind to do it. ol chiffon matching the box-plaited
They will eschew all elaborate toilets uche Which finishes the bodice at the
and confine themselves to dainty, sim- bottom.—The latest in Chicago Chron-
T takes
woman
forth the admira-
tion of women by
her perfect dress-
ing, but a still clev-
erer woman It i-!
who can command
the simplicity Iti
her toilet which ali
men so much ad-
mire. She realizes
by this very acquirement that she be-
Sw itzerland proposes to have a Stat*
match monopoly, not for profit, but
aiming at the suppression of the phos-
phorus match. It is dangerous to work
with phosphorus, and the disease re-
sulting is as eorrible as leprosy.
Valuable Franchise Secured.
The franchise of easy digestion—one of the
moat valuable in the gift of medical science-
can be secured by any person wise enough to use
Hostettera Stomach Bitters, either to auppress
growing dyspepsia, or to uproot It at maturity.
Bilious, rheumatic and fever snd ague sufferers,
persons troubled with nervousness, and the
constipated, should also secure the health fran-
chise by the same means.
Tlie horn of the rhinocerous is sim-
ply an extension of the skin, like the
hair and nails. It does not grow up-
on the bone, but is a true excrescence.
The world's
miles.
railroad reach 407,366
amount of property in the Osage Porhap, this is tlu, ba(, end prophesi
try, assessed to Pawnea county's for wllistlin(, girlf)
The rewards for Doolin originally
During a recent cyclone a fellow iin read „for thc capture and conviclion/<
If he is captured again and convicted
Blaine county was picked up and
when he lit he discovered that he was
smothering to death, lie made a
struggle and discovered that a bucket
of peach butter had fallen, bottom
side up, over his head.
Charles Smith, son of William Smith
of Logan county, last Thursday, while
roping a horse, had the two middle
fingers torn off his right hand, pulling
the leaders from his elbow loose with
them. He may be compelled to have
his arm amputatied.
A man registering himself as W.
Fulda, from Harper, Kansas, was ar-
worst botched up things in the whole re!it(,d in oklahoma county Thursday
territory.
We are not a believer in "second pro-
bation,M but there is a second chance
for an Oklahoma farmer. If one crop
fails plaut another. One farmer's oats
made but eight bushels to the acre,
but part of the field has a fine prospect
for sorghum, sown since the oats
were harvested.
Canadian county has an editor
named Furr. l,ast week one of his
readers got mad and went to town
with a shot gun and a warrant, lie
declared his intention to make the
on the charge of fraudulently getting
money out of citizens by represent-
ing himself to be the agent of the Na-
tional Reserve Association, lie caught
about forty eitixens for five dollars
each by telling each one that he wonld
make him secretary of the local asso-
ciation at a salary of $100 a yaar. He
has worked a number of towns all
the rewards can be claimed.
William Markwood of Logan coun-
ty has eighteen pound cabbages on
his place. He irrigated and is much
pleased with his experiment.
Kftie (iilstrap wants to know if the
Canadian county preacher who was
preseuted with a refrigerator will feel
obliged to quit preaching about the
hot place.
The creamery contract in Kingfisher
county reads that the managers, if the
creamery proves to be a paying con-
cern for the first ten months, will
thereafter run the creamery without
expense to the stockholders.
The Sapulpa branch extension of
less than 100 miles would control the
transportation of the product of 00,-
000 acres of cotton, 70,000 acres of
wheat, 40,000 acres of oats and 100,000
acres of corn. There will be this year
in the territory traversed, 20,000 hogs
and 6.000 cattle for export. The ex-
ple things In which they appear years
younger than they really are. It is
always a girl's ambition to reach an
age where she may wear all the finery
restricted to the matron, but there
comes a time when such gowning
grows irksome and she has the com-
mon sense to see that utter sim-
plicity In dress is what she needs to
make her seem young again. By this
is not meant a childish mode, but sim-
icle.
Variety In Shoulder Coverings.
The short cape of silk, taffeta or
satin is the legitimate sort of fancy this
season. It is of a brevity that allows
the slenderness of the waist to be visi-
ble and it widens the shoulders in spite
of drooping sleeves. When it is made
in black it glitters with jet and is
ply-made garments that tend to bring adorned with black gauze plaitings or
out her good points. Too long a skirt ruffles and knots of satin or ribbon,
adds vears to one's appearance, just W hen the domain of color is entered
as an "ill-fitting or unbecoming wairt. there is no limit to the elaboration.
There are so many lovely materials in There are openwork arrangements over
the market this season that it vfould bright silk linings, applications of laea,
seem an easy matter to secure jus; beads and embroidery and innumerable
what one w ishes. constructions more or less complicated,
An effective model is shown made up in plaited or ruffled gauze or chiffon,
in shiny black alpaca. The skirt is The collars of capes match them in ex-
cut en Paquin, quite wide and sharply j travagance. The larger number of
THE SOCIETY BUD TAKES HER MORNING DIP.
over the territory.
The swindles of the Oklahoma insur- ! P°rt from the territory will amount to
anceapent. Fulda, have been reported , (5.000-cars for the first year, and will
to F. W. Sears, supreme president, I increase 34 per cent every year for ten
and J. C. Hennessey, supreme secre- I years.
Furr fly but he did not succeed very tary, of the National Reserve associa- \ J. W. Halin, of Canadian county,
well, as the object of his w rath utter- tion. Both of the gentlemen admitted who was adjudged insane last week,
ly refused to "budge." that Fulda was a duly authorized attempted to commit suicide in the
Martin F. Kindly of Oklahoma coun- 1 apent of the National Reserve, but county jail Thursday evening. He
tv, while transaction business in Kan- they stated that he was only working placed a blanket over his head, then
sas City became violently insane and on commission. Steps will at once be petting in position in the extreme
was sent to a hospital. He was un- taken to see to what extent Fulda has j north end of thc cell of the corridor,
der arrest Saturday, but became ra obtained money through the use of rushed headlong- for the iron bars at
tional and was released. Monday it ! the name of the association. the south end. When his head struck
required three officers to guard him Ia S. ltaugh of Kay county, planted | the bars he fell back like a dead man |
on his way to the hospital. some Nebraska seed corn on his place and it was thonpht he was dead, but
An unknown man was struck bv thia year. The corn from the Nebras- he soon revived. Sunday he attempt-
Katy engine at Savanna Wednesday ! is tro,dv m df The s,alk is ed hls hfe b-v Smotherln^ but "as res"
and seriouslv injure,!, lie was asleep I Ter.v sl,ort «nd heav-v< whil<> the ears cued 1,0 wU1 be ,akl'n to the CleTe"
are exceptionally large. It matures- land county sanitarium.
„ , ml,ch earlier than ,he Kansas variet>" It has developed, since the sudden
The engine wheels crushed his head I ani^ thukness o. tin sta.k rt 1U ( • "V depaature of the "divine healer," Dr.
on the track at the time of the casual
ty to which fact the accident was due.
and otherwise bruise,! him considers il susceptible to the baneful in-
fluence of the hot winds. It appears
blv, but it is uot believed that his in-
juries will prove fatal. \U>be* good variety to cultivate in
S sections where the climatic conditions
The East l^ogan county Sunday
School Association held a grand rally
at Berry Woods grove, a few days
since and more than a thousand people
were in attendance. The morning
was spent in songs, music etc., follow-
ed by a basket dinner which was fine.
After dinner a carefully arranged lit-
erary program was well rendered and
the picnic was voted a great success.
An evangelist in Logan county ac-
cused a woman in the choir with sing-
ing "Come to Jesus" through a set of
teeth that had never been paid for.
He told h«r to get out and pay the
dentist before she came back.
are similar to the
used to have.
hot winds Kansas
A man named Hook, in Kingfisher
county, thought he would celebrate
the Fourth with a dynamite bomb. He
lighted the fuse and threw the bomb
Into the street but the fuse went out.
He went out to get it, intending to re-
light it, and stooping over it to pick it
Furlong of Oklahoma county, that he
left upon the advice of the secretary
of the state board of health. Com-
plaint had been made to the secretary
that Furlong was practicing medicine
and claiming to heal though not a
Up to this time there has been but j graduated physician. Furlong went
little Kay county wheat threshed. W j to McPherson where lie raised great
Don jfcerty and M. C. Yocnm each have excitement by his claims to a divine
a steam thresher and are improving ; healing power, which he exerted by
each shining hour threshing out the simply laying on of hands during a
golden grain. In that section of thc j "trance." He charged $."> per trance,
country the yield is about 20 bushels 1 and many afflicted people were flock-
to the acre. Among those who have ing to him.
already threshed are J. C. Columbia.
1.400 bushels: Charles Wallace, 1,500:
Ooforth A Mitchell, 1,300: Mr. Turner,
2,000; Phil Mason, 1,000: Ben Mayes,
1,000. Mr. Stansberry, 1,000. One of I JUBrds ,nd foreed t„e 1>tter into
the big jobs will be on school section ,^lls Theu they cai!ed opon aU „ ho
wished to escape to do so and fourteen
When the gate was opened at the
Logan county United States jail Sat-
urday night a handful of prisoners
i made a sally, secured the weapons of
of the forty-nine availed themselves of
the opportunity. Bill Doolin and
Dynamite Dick, last survivors of the
Dalton gang, were the ringleaders.
Of the nineteen escaped one. William
36, near Chilloco, where there are said
to be seventy-five very tine stacks of
wheat
In Logan county the other day a di-
vorce was deuied Mr. Pierce, who set
up iu his complaint that his wife re-
fused to aeeompauy him when he mov- Peck, returned and reported Bill
up, the bomb exploded, blowmg oft cd (oOVUhom. from the East. Mrs. ; iwin as so weak that he at beside
one arm, shatter.^ to shreds one leg | pieree set lip in dpfense th,t durmp the nwd ,Vpnd ring ho« he would os-
their courting days her husband had j cape. Bill Tilghinan, who captured
assured her she would never have to . jv olin in the first place, is at the heud
leave her parents, which was her side
reason for refusing to move to Oklaho-
ma. The judge who heard thc case
decided that Mrs. Pierce had a good
and sufficient defen
and dee troy ing both eyes.
The authorities down in the Semi-
nole country caught a fellow stealing
a pig. They took him up, tied him to
a fence post and administered fortv
lashes, on the back, with the nromise
of a double doee if he allowed his ap-
petite for pig to overcome him again, query naturally arises as
They say a proper compound of hick- rash courtship promise can
aej withe and raw hide is a sure cure | preference over the marriage service
for the unnatural appetite for fresh which pledges a bride to leave her pa-
gored to give the desired whirl. It is
lined throughout with rustling white
tafTeta, finished at the foot by a row of
narrow frills. The round bodice is tn
blouse effect, w ith a snugly fitted back
and entirely covered with odd scrolls
of white honiton lace, surrounded by
tiny jet beads. There is a belt and
broad stock of crushed black taffeta
fastened at the back with jet orna-
ments. The bouffant sleeves droop to
the elbow and have a loosely wrinkled
lower arm, spreading over the hand in
a deep point.—Chicago Chronicle.
• My dress will be lined with green
taffeta." or "with pink silk" or "with
white." It doesn't matter what femi-
nine gathering you attend; you are al-
pork.
H. C Hinton, agent of the White
Hewing Machine company, uiul George
Pinch, a grocer, both of Oklahoma
tounty. have made an assignment.
An Oklahoma county man offers
ten dollars reward and no questions
tsked for the return of a diamond
fttud which he lost a few days ago.
Near Anvil in Lincoln eountv, the
rents and cleave unto her husband.
of a posse of deputy sheriffs in pur-
suit. James Koons and a young wo-
man were out driving when they were
approached by two armed men who
though the | made them give up thesr horse and ve- |
. to how a hide and walk home. It is believed I
be given the two men were Bill Doolin ami i
Dynamite Dick. Telephone wires 1
were all cut thus shutting off inune !
diate communication.
Coarse threads, of which large quan-
tities used to be sent from England to
Japan, are now made in the latter
country, except the finest quality.
The imports of raw cotton from Amer-
ica, China and India have nearly doub-
led in the past three years.
I believe Piso's Cure is the only medi-
cine that will cure consumption.—Anna
M. Robs, Williamsport, Pa., Nov. 12, '95.
To help out the sulphur Industry
in Sicily, where, owing to the rivalry
of Japanese sulphur, the price has
sunk from 140 to 60 lire a ton. Italy
intends to abolish the export duty ol
20 percent on the sulphur and to in-
crease the import duties on barley and
corn.
Hall'a Catarrh Core
Is & constitutional cure. Price 75c.
Murah 1-ainbert lires in Kay county
and is a brother of lkc I.a:nl ert. the
Kansas politician and statesman.
Some rascal in Kingfisher county re-
in Garfield county during a recent
•torm Mrs Myers and her baby were
killed by lightning. Mrs. Myers was
silting in the doorway holding her
baby when the bolt of lightning struck wenl through a town at night
Uiem. lhe husband and tv\o little and m4r^e<5 eiervthing up with chalk,
hoys were at thc «ell about twenty Qo tha bank he wrote: Busted ba
feet away and were unharmed. Goeli!** He also decorated the depot
It is developing that the good out and the railroad company will pay
#arly cotton is waist high and full of law is ir. the same state as the good *o:
bolla and looking fine. Indian. So prosperous is Oklahoma, that a
And so Bill Doolin got away. And, Oklahoma is on the eve of a reW? Kay county merchant makes a spec-
ie secret of feis capture and many iou> revival. The paper* are fu!l of i ialty of !XK*ket books, and advertises
-other valuable things went w ith him , the doii js of revivalists. , thirty diffe- ent kinds.
M. Gerve, is to print a picture of the
coronation of Czar Nicholas for the
city of Paris on a canvas 33 by 24 feet
liegeman'* Camphor Ice wltb Glycerine.
The original and only genuine. Cnre Chapped Handa
and Face, Cold Sore*, Ac. C. O. Clark Co., N. Harau. CU
Alma-Tameda executed one of his
best classical pictures before he was
seventeen.
FITS ,topp«l fr « una r.rm n«nt!T tmi, K.
Ot, aft<x fln,c day'. I ' of I)r. Kllne'sOrrat
Rubens had finished a number ol
greatly admired portraits before he
was 16.
If lh. Ilahy I. Cutting Teeth,
B. Bur. .nd u,® that old and !ri«d remedy. Mm
WIXSLOW', SOOTHDiG STRVP iOT ChUdT.II T*.Uli£ff.
As warden of a women s prison, and
as prison commissioner Mrs. Ellen C.
Johnson has served in Massachusetts
for nearly twenty years. She is said
to exert a remarkable influence over
the women prisoners and in many
cases has reformed them.
these on fine capes are lined with an
application of white guipure.
Lace is greatly favored at present.
White, ecru and yellow varieties are all
employed and black Valenciennes is a
new and highly desirable development
for summer gowns of nainsook ard
muslin. If the goods themselves can
be dyed a fast black there is no reason
why so valuable a wash lace should
not be treated in the same way, and
this year's fine dimity costumes prove
that it has been done satisfactorily.
This fact receives additional import-
ance from the other fact that black and
white continues to be very fashionable
this summer and it is by no means
confined to half-mourning wardrobes.
A sketch is given of a costume cl
black satin idorned with spangled mo-
tifs in steel blue. The godet skirt is
plain, save for the spangled adorn-
ment. The blouse bodice is gathered
at the yoke and belt. The yoke itsell
droops over the shoulders and is
trimmed with spangles and outlined
with spangled galloon. Epaulets ol
galloon terming" in pampilles ot jet.
The crenelated collar is of white satin.
The balloon sleeves, extending only to
the elbows, are trimmed with spangles
keeplug Flower* Freah.
The process of crystallizing flowers
is simple and can be satisfactorily ac-
complished by anyone who has artistic
skill. Arrange some basket forms ol
any desired pattern wih pliable copper j
wire and w rap them with gauze. Into 1
the bottom of these tie violets, ferns, j
geranium leaves—in fact, any flowers j
except full-blown roses—and sink them
in a solution of alum ot one pound to a
gallon of water. Wait until tfcv solu-
tion has cooled, as the colors will then j
be preserved in their original beauty. !
and the crystallized alum will hold
them faster than when formed in a |
hot solution. When you have a light
f
Mrs. John M. Clay owns the Henry
Clay farm in Kentucky. She has such
a tender feeling for her stock that she
has provided for the future of all tho
superanuated anlina's on the place by
leaving each 859 in her will so that
tj^y may recei^good care till death
In its course of 120 miles the Jorda n
plunges over 27 rapids, and from it#
source to its mouth has a descent of
8,000 feet
A strange coincidence is noted in the
statistics of Steuben, Me. In the year
just past, there were 10 deaths, 1G
births and 16 marriages.
The bell flower is symbolic of grati-
tude.
Eat
Hsturally, hav© a good appetite, keep your
blood pure aad your nerves itrong by Liking
Hood's
* Sarsaparilla
The best-In fact the One True Blood Purifier,
Hood's Pills curebilloujness, headache. *^c.
Don't take substitutes to
save a few pennies. It won't
pay you. Always insist on
HIRES Rootbeer.
ways sure to hear some girl telling of
her dress lining.
The fact of the matter Is. to be thor-
oughly up to date this year of our
Lord one must have a silken lining t?i
the gown. And to make the Bilken
lining effective it must be placed be-
hind some material sheer enough to
let the glint of the silken sheen creep
through the weave of the dress ma-
terial.
Canvas, either wool or silk: etamine,
gauze and net are the newest materials preserve their freshness.
for afternoon gowns. As a rule colors —
are selected, leaving to the lining the Madrid schools are so bad that Ger-
task of supplying that Brilliancy of \ man residents of the city have united
color so essential t# an 1S#6 gown. j to establish a school where their chil
Vnfortunatelv for the lean of purse ! dren may obtain as good as "ducatIon
these gowns are expensive The ma- as in more civilized parts of Europe
terials cost heavily and no cheap *£- fo a reasonable outlay of money.
ACADEMY OF THE SACRED HEART
•T. JOAF.ru. HO.
Th# i*ourM of lnatrnctlon In thla academy, rondnrt*d
b.T the lteSlgioua of the Barred Heart, embrace* fhe
hole range of eubjecta necessarj to eonatitate a eolid
and re*ned education. Propriety ef deportment, per-
sonal neatness and the princlplea cf morality are ob-
ject, of unceasing attention. Eitenair# grounds af-
ford the pupila every facility for useful bodl'r exer-
e^e. their health Is an.object of constant solicitude,
and in ncWness they are attended with maternal care.
Fall teim opens Tue«day, Sept. 1. Terms for seuion
of s months, payable in advance, HIS, this Includes
tuition, board, washing, courses In French, Oerntan
or Latin, use of library and phraician's fee. For fur-
ther particulars address. THE HI PKItlOK.
Academy Sacred Heart St Joseph, Mo.
DRUGS.
A complete stock of Dares far li s «hear l .
voice ti300.00.
in-od reason (or selling.
FRANK Bt'SITEY
Wichita, Kan.
nENSION«:^,^7oTO
S* Successful ly Prosecutes Claims.
■ I Ate Principal EAmnerU 8.^Pension Bureau.
■ 3 yraiu U*t war, ljadjudKAUugclaims, ally avuee.
covering of crystals that completely QPIIIM "m."'?,
envelop the articles, remove and allow I - ••ateeaae.
to drip for twelve hours. These bas-
kets make a unique ornament and long
Curert Est. In 1 TL Thousands
tea pest and best cure. Fnxi Trial.
Da Ma*su, Qelncy. Mich
W. N. U.~WICHITA,—VOL. 9. NO 29.
When answering Advertisements plena*
mention thla paper.
11 api Una.
In time. &Ud
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Anderson, William W. The Enid Democrat. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 47, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 18, 1896, newspaper, July 18, 1896; Enid, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc157054/m1/2/: accessed May 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.