Enid Daily Eagle. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 87, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 26, 1908 Page: 3 of 8
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LOEWEN THEATRE
SPEXIAL CHRISTMAS PRICES. MATINEE AND NIGH1
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2 7th
THE DISTINGUISHED ACTRESS—-HORTENSE NEILSEN
And Her Splendid Company in two of Ibsen's Great Plays, at Matinee, Curtain 2:30 p. m.
"A DOLL'S HOUSE"
aanfflTt' °wmt n W'WMa
AT NIGHT
lainMim—•jaaigwmaa
PRICES—25c, 50c, 75c and $100
g<6
PRICES—-Children 25c. Adults 50c
Hedda Gabler
26-It
CURTAIN 8:30
Seats on sale at Weisenbcrger's Drug Store Saturday at 9 a. m
PITT'S HOUSE FOR SALE
PRISONERS BOSS JAILER.
FORBADE WIDOW TO WED.
CUP YRGHT15 SOLO
FAMOUS CONSTITUTION TO BE
, BROKEN UP FOR JUNK.
Wa* Bulh to Race Lipton's Shamrock
II.—$25,000 Worth of Various
Metals and Material in
the Craft.
New York —A few days ■
► marked
Rich Californian's Will Now Is in
Court as Result.
Situ Francisco.—Whether or not
Mrs. Edie W. Gonaalez, widow of tho
wealthy Monterey rancher, Mariano
K. Gonzales, may remarry and still
retain her slyire of the estate of her
late husband N*"ill be decided by a jury
in Judge Graham's court at au early
date. Mrs. Gonzalez is contesting the
will, which seeks to keep her in a
state of perpetual widowhood.
Gonzalez left an estate of about
the passing of another American cup $300,000. After making provision for
yacht The famous Constltut ion. the daughter of the testator. Anita C.
predecessor of the Reliance, was Bold Gonzalez, the will creates a trust of
to Edward S. Reiss & Co., by tho the remainder of the estate, the in-
American Cup Defender association,' comc from which is divided Into three
rJie syndicate whjeh built her, of equal parts—one part going to the
which August Belmont was the head, widow, one part to the daughter.
She will be broken up for junk, like Anita, and the other part to be di
Thomas W. Lawson's Independence, vided between the 20 or 30 grandehil-
Upton'8 Shamrock II. and other cele- drcn of Francisco Rico, half-brother
crated racers. of Gonzalez. In tho eveut of the re-
The Constitution is high and dry marriage of Mrs. Gonzalez, the will
10 tho yard of the Thames Railway provides that her third shall go to
Company, in New London, Conn., ihe Rico heirs.
whore she has been since her last j There is another clause in the will
race with the Reliance in 1903. | providing in set terms that any per-
She will be cut In four sections, son contesting the will shall take
tfttch of which will be put on a lighter nothing from the estate. Mrs. Gon-
with a derrick and brought down tho zalez, in endeavoring to break tho
riouBd and East river to the foot of husband's prohibiting will, is there-
IJcoad street. There everything in her fore taking a chance of losing every-
-jonBtruction will be broken up and thing.
old. There is $25,000 worth of so-1 Gonzalez died in December, 1903.
-jailed junk in the yacht. There are The widow's name had been luen-
100 tons of lead, 30 tons of bronze, 25
nons of steel, 20 tons of sails and 20
Ions of miscellaneous materials, in-
cluding anchors and chains.
tioned several times in connection
with a possible second visit to the
hymeneal altar. Under an order of
the probate court she is now receivin
Send Him to Town for Tobacco and
Escape in His Absence.
Mr. Reiss has bought nearly a score a family allowance of $7f>0 a month,
of famous yachts in a few years. The grounds upon which she bases
cJome ho has sent south and sold for her contest are that Gonzalez was sub
tarpon fishing, and others whose ject to hallucinations prior to his
bonos were getting brittle, ho has death and that he came under the un-
broken up. In cases where their duo influence of persons who told him
years have not told on them their size false and malicious stories about his
bas kept them idle in some shipyard, wife.
A cup defender is an expensive play-1 _
thing because of the large crow re-1 STERS WEDDED ON DARE,
quired to man her. The Vigilant and ' . . " ,
Colonia were changed i to schooners; Doub'8 Nuptials in Early Morn Result
—which require less of a crew than I of Cou*ins' Proposal.
•a sloop of equal size—but neitheT is ~
as large us the Constitution The Con-1 „ Slo"x ) alls- S- U.—George Sweet of
<3titiition measures 89 feet six inches Gregory, and Miss Minnie Austin, and
<m the surface of the water, but from ('"y StParns of Ottumwa. 8. IJ , and
toer bow to her stern she is 132 feet h;u,i" w"r« thR Principals
long. She has a beam of 25 feet two ln a ™mantic double wedding, which
Inches, a draught of IS) feet seven
inches, and has 19 feet of depth.
was the result of a dare on the part of
the young men. The brides are sis-
ters and are the daughters of Mr. and
Mrs. Azariah Austin of Iona. Tho
grooms are cousins. The wedding fol-
lowed a midnight journey from the
extreme southern part of Lyman coun-
ty to the county seat at Oacoma It
appears the two young men were vis
Denver, Col. The price of pork has ithig the sisters, and during the eve-
soared away up in this city, higher ning made the daring jest that the
than ever before known, being boosted .sisters had not tho nerve to accom-
fry W. W. Obert, who lives at 1435 pany them to the county seat at once
Champa street, and who sells meats and bc married. The sisters called tho
tor a local markeL He offers $100 for accepting the dare, and the four
AARON BURR RELIC LOST.
Reward Offered for Watch Charm
Whittled by Statesman.
a pig lost by him the other day. The
pig is made of ivory, weighs less than
one ounce, and was whittled out by
Aaron Burr while Uiat statesman was
in jail awaiting tr|>il on a charge of
•reason.
The ivory pig was worn as a watch
<;haim by Obert, who received it as an
heirloom from his father. The pig has
been owned by the Obert family ever
.since one of the Oberts made the ac-
quaintance of Aaron Burr when ho
was visiting Blennerhaaset on his
j*land in the Ohio river.
Before .Ills trial Burr amused him- j
•elf by whittling and filing on a piece
of ivory, and one of these pieces was
fashioned iuto the shape of a pig and ,
Riven Obert s ancestor. It has been |
uarried as a watch charm until it be- '
started out at once on the long and
dangerous journey to Oacoma, arriving
at that place at three o'clock In the
morning. The great difficulty and dan-
ger in making the crossing of White
river in the darkness added zest to the
occasion. After their arrival at Oacoina
there was a tedious wait for the clerk
of courts to appear and issue the
necessary license. After this was se-
cured M^e services of Rev. N. H. May
were engaged and the marriage cere-
mony was performed.
RAISES MALLARD DUCKS.
PROVIDES HOME FOR OLD WOM
EN AFTER DEATH OF MOTHER.
Latter's Crippled and Helpless Condi-
tion Leads to Making—Inmates of
Place Must Agree to Have
Body Cremated.
Bellingham, Wash.—It develops
that the will of Miller G. Scouten, who
killed himself by sending a bullet into
his brain as he stood in the presence
of his aged and crippled mother, pro-
vides for the establishment of a home
for aged women after the death of
Mrs. Scouten, who is bequeathed the
property until her death. Not only
is the will, made three years ago. in-
teresting because of its provisions,
but It is the more so on account oi
the causes that, led up to Its making.
One of the requirements for admis-
sion to the proposed home is that the
woman must deposit her funeral e
pontes with the board of trustees 1
fore entering, and there is the further
provision that the body of each in
mate must be cremated upon hei
death.
When Miller Scouten was a «hild
his father lost his life while serving
his country as a soldier. Since then
the. boy had been all In all to the
aged mother. During the last lew
years Scouten had been almost con-
stant with his parent, finding it im-
possible many of the days to leave
her side long enough to walk to the
post office for his mall.
For years the woman has been au
invalid, and her temperament was
such that she would have no one
about her but her son. lie did tho
work about the house, attended to her
wants in a thousand ways and was
out of her sight hardly a minute dur-
ing the day or night This state of
affairs had existed for some time, and
of late there had been considerable
comment on the fact that Scouten
was no more to be seen about the
city.
He was formerly a man about town
buoyant, restless and fond of a good
time and pleasant associates, but
when his mother became unable to
care for herself and refused to permit
any person other than her son to care
for her Scouten gave up everything
else to be with her. Although she had
been a care for years. It was only
within the last fow months that her
condition became such that he was
unable to leave her for more than a
few minutes at a tlpie.
This condition of affairs caused him
to prepare the will that will be filed
for probate. The two executors are
instructed to secure a site for a place
to be known as "The Marion Scouten
Home," near Bellingham, for the bene-
fit of women over the age of 63
years. This figure was decided upon,
it is believed, because it represents
the age of the mother for whom he
was giving up everything at that time.
Scouten's idea, as expressed in the
will, is that his body be cremated, and
he seems to have hail the idea thai
this is something that is more than a
whim, for he insists on this provision
of the will in regard to the inmates of
the home. The home is to be open to
; all women over the age mentioned
I who agree to comply with the pro-
j visions of tlie will. None Is barred
' beoause of nationality or'religious be
Historic Home of Earl of Chatham Is
to De Auctioned.
1/ondon.—North End Place, Hump
stead Heath, which was once the real- |
dene*- of William Pitt, ear! of Chat-
ham. Is shortly to be put up at auc- I
tiou—& fact which recalls tho often- |
quoted remark that had Lord Chat-
ham not been lying ill there, but in
health and at his post, the llostou tea
duty would never have beeen imposed
and the Union Jack still, posstbly, bo
floating over the North American con-
tinent.
It was in this residence that Pitt,
during ills frequent fits of melancholia
Bentonville, Ark.—When thre. in
mates of the jail here broke out they
abused tho klnd-h^artrdness of Sher
iff Russell.
"Go uptown and get us some to
bacco," was the request sent to th«
accommodating sheriff by his restless
wards.
"Bure," was the sheriff's comment aa
he reached for his hat.
And when he came back there wiu>
a big hole In the wire cage and ther*
was only one man in the cell. He ex
plained that ho had decided to wall and in spite of the fact that h
for the tobacco. As a reward of merit tho time prime minister and was !>«•
he got the entire supply, while th« ing urgently called unon by the king
sheriff mounted a horse and set out and his colleagues, sliut himself off "
uftcr the runaway prisoners. from all communication with the out j
A recently discharged prisoner had side world—even from his owi. family
cut the bars nearly through from th«i and servants.
outside and the Inmates had then The small room In which he re- j
waited for an opportunity to break oui mulned .or dc>s tou. tli -r, s- ing lit
the severed section of tho cage.
Sold to Settle an Estate.
I cu
ihr
Measure Mars' Water Vapor.
Boston.—Prof. Perclval l^owell. th«
well-known astronomer, has made ar
Important statement with reference
to the water vapor on Mars. His as
slstants at his observatory at Flag
staff, Ariz., have beeu able to deter
mine that the water vapor on th<
nlanet Is present and measurable. 1"
betrays itself in lines of the spectrum 1 ^ '.'"™
llneH that show that the atmosphere
of Mars affects tho spectrum in tin
same way, though only one fifth a:
much, as does the earth's eavelope.
lined for
days t
oiAuther,
s< ing
no
e, still
rlotts bo
remains.
and cc
ard in
ntuins
the
..11
rough w
hlch th
• patiet
t recel
meals
and un>
thing •
otiwyed
to
n. It is
an opet
ing about two
ret
l'TO, !i:>.
•ins « d
jor on •
ucl\ sidr
..I
• wall
so that
articles
could
be
ieo1 in
he cup!
oard from the
out-
i and
withdrawn from
the inside
thout it
being
nccessa
ry for
the
servant bringing them to have
Chatham correspondence show.?
Instance after Instance of the urgent
appeals sent by the king, the duke
of Grafton and other ministers, all of
which failed to induce Pitt to leave
North End.
FARMERS USE OAT INCUBATORS
Poultry Raisecs Have a New Way oi
Providing Food for Chickens.
Morocco, Ind.—Farmei s near her€
have a new device In connection with
the raising of poultry. It is called th«
"oat incubator." The outfit is simple
and original, consisting of a number ol . .. . .. .
„ . has announced a discoverv which, If it
crates, one above the other, with nine , 4 4 • ,,
. . . ... /... * a works out, will put Newton, f ranklin
Inches of space between. On the hot f ....
and Edison far in the rear. The pas-
tor-editor declares he has Invented a
CLAIMS WONDERFUL DI3COVERY.
Butler, Pa., Pastor Says He Has Plan
to End Gravitation Law.
Butler, Pa.—llev. Phillip Shred a no-
vlch, pastor of the Greek Orthodox
church here and editor of Justness.
TO CLOSK .\\ USTATK—647.1
acres of the prettiest and best lo-
cated land in Texas was sold to
avoid litigation. We bought it! It
Is a beautiful tract of prairie land,
about, fifteen hundred acres dotted
with fine groves of one-fourth aero
to one acre, the remainder open
prairie, free from brush, with per-
fect drainage, about seven hun-
dred acres of creek bottom ex-
tending through tho center of the
tract for about two and one-half
miles, adding to its beauty and
value, the soil is a rich chocolate
and dark sandy loam; the tract is
all fenced, with ranch house and
other buildings, a handsome com-
pact body of .and.
Three miles north on tho main
line of the Southern Pacific rail-
way is Columbus, the county sent,
with a population of 2000, a water
work-4 system, electric lights, a
fine court house with beautiful
parking, splendid schools and
churches, and an opera house.
There are also dozens of pretty
homes, where flowers bloom sum-
mer and winter, and where orange
trees bear their fruit and demon-
strate that oranges can be profita-
bly grown there.
Three miles sonth I
I Kind, on the main line
it is destined to bo a nice little
town us soon us its surrounding
territory is settled up. This tract
is 35 miles west of Houston, and
125 miles east of San Antonio,
Express shipments reach Houston
In three hours. It is located in the
famous Gulf ('oast country, where
everything grows and is particu-
larly adapted to corn, cotton, cane
onions, potat.x's, peas, beans, pea
nuts, pumpkins. watermelons,
cantaloupes, peaches, pears, figs,
grapes, tomatoes, celery alfalfa
and oranges. Flowers and vege-
tables grow all winter, the rainfall
4 0 inches, being ample for all
crops; one of the most successful
: truck farms in Ihe county is lo-
cated nearby.
The climate, location and rail-
road facilities, make this au ideal
colonization proposition. Two-
thirds of all travel between Hous-
ton and San Antonio passes with-
in three miles of this tract.
, Compare this with any other
tract in Texas and you will see
that It is much better located aud
more desirable than anything of
: the same size offered.
Price flfi.00 per acre, two-
fifths cash, balance 6 per cent. No
Rock trades no options. Price sub-
ihe j jpct to advance without notice
San Antonio A- Aransas Pass rail- i Agents recognized.
way, a prosperous town of several
hundred people; it has a box fac- \
to'y, creamery, pickling plant and ;
prospects of many more small In- ;
dustrietf, it Is settled principally i
by northern people, and Is famous j
for strawberries and trucking.
Five mile* southeast is Altair;
It will pay you to look this up
QUICKLY. It won't last long at
the price.
Oklahoma Farms and City prop-
erty for sale and trade. Let youi
wants be known and we will do
the rest.
Phone 694 Raid. Okla
tom of each crate layers of burlap ur«
placed and on the top crate water li . . . . .. ... # ..
« . , „ . , .. meaus by which the rotation of the
poured each morning. 1 he water soak! ^ J ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
n 0a . ' . iTnHfr th Infln vantage of in travel, and that by stand-
crate to the other. Under the influ , . .. ..
, a , «, Ing still one may go round tho world
enee of artificial heat tho oats sprout . ® .
^ ..... in 24 hours.
and grow rapidly, the green, tendei
shoots making excellent food for chick
«ns during the winter months. A
bucketful of oats will make five buck
etfuls ot' green food. Poultry ralseri
who have tried the "oat incubator" ai«
enthusiastic in its praise.
He has found a way, Rev. Mr. Shre-
danovicli says, by which men may lift
themselves above the eaiih to a point
where thev will stand still while the
earth rotating from west to «*-ast4 will
do their traveling for them.
Tho secret is jealously guarded by
Fine Work with a Pen. | the pastor and his wife, whom he
Clay City, Ind.—Mrs. Lena Wilson credits with suggesting the idea. He
living near Brazil, has performed tin asks $100,000 for the invention,
remarkable feat of writing a sentence Rev. Mr. Shredanovich said; "Wo
of eight words 1,716 times on a poa will hoist ourselves above the earth
tal card, one side only. The sentence and await the coming of the desired
contains 39 letters, seven of whtcfc place, then we will lower ourselves
are capitals. The number of words oi where we desire to be. In this way
the card is 13,728, aud tho number o' we may go from America to Europe
letters 60,924. The writing was don« in less than 11! hours. My secret is
with the ordinary steel pen. Under a how to stand super earth and not
IIUDKINS REAL ESTATE & LOAN CO
S. I. Hudkins, manager
Room 1-2 Over the Garfield Exchange Bank
Will C. Allen £ 0. Hlnkealre C. D. Stovsll
Oklahoma Texas Land Co.
It oomsi 3-4-5-6 Wood Bldg. i09 1-2 S. S Grand Enid, Okla.
160 acr«s on Black Bear Creek 80 seres cultivated 25 acres Alfalfa. 20 seres
Timber. 3 room house, barn 36x42, Jrainery 12x24, price . . $5,800
160 sere, 100 acre cultivated, 4 acre Orchard, 10 acre Alfalfa, all fenced, plenty
water. 5-roora houae, barn 24x30, |raaery. chicken bouse, 80 rods from
School, price $3,500
960 acrcs 5 miles of Vernon, Texas. 460 acres under cultivation, balance nice
level prairie land, house 24x24 1 1-2 stories high, barn, grainery, price $25,000
Will trade for good Oklahoma land.
lens of strong magnifying power everj
word waii readable.
CAMEL IS NATIVE OF AMERICA.
at>d is now yellow with age
ftABY'S LIMBS TURN TO 8TONE.
Doctor Reports Strange Dlseaae st
Medical Society Meeting.
death.
To the aged mother Scouten lefi
sufficient property for the remalndei
of her life, and to bis brother, Theo-
dore Scouten of Chicago, Is given $200
Indiana Man Now Has a Flock of lief, and It is ordered that no religious
Twenty-Seven. i ceremonies or services shall be held
I on the ground or in the building. Any
•uniiKKi Martinsville, Ind.—City Engineer aged couple may go upon the home
<IamT^%mooth as a piece of glass, K Johnson has a fine brood of property and live providing they erec
mallard ducks at his home In this city, a cottage, which shall become ttu
and the flock preseats an attractive property of the h<rme upon theii
sight. There are 27 in the bunch, near
ly all of theru full grown.
Some time ago a hunter in the Kan
kakee swamps found a nest of mallard
duck eggs. He sent them to his
' brother near Mooresville and they1 a month after the mother's death. In
Hew York —On* of the most re- werft p]aced under a hen and hatched. J the event that the remainder of tht
aiarkable medical cases on record, ln Mr j^nson happened to see the little*
which the limbs of a baby six weeks ducks an(| bought ten of them for
old have turned to atone, was report- $1.50. He brought them home and
od at the meeting of the Hudson Coun- have increased until now he
tj Medical society, in Jewry City, by haB 07.
Or. Karl H. Ooldatone of Jersey City, jjen ducks are good layers, and
who has chargc of the children s clinic the eggs ar^ fine for cooking and eat-
at Mount Sinai hospital in this city. jnR according to Mr. Johnson, al
The child so appalling afflicted la though a little stronger in flavor than
Benjamin Gordon. Dr. Goldstone re- ponltry eggs.
ported to his colleagues that the
child's limbs had now become almost: Rewards Constantly Paid.
entirely as hard as stone, after gradu- , The rewards of great living are not
ally solidifying since its birth. I external things, withheld until the
The disease which is bringing about crowning hour of sucoess arrives;
this is known to science as sclerema (hey come by the way—ln the con-
neonatorum, a very rare ailment. The pciousness of growing power and
ehild has been removed to the ohil- WOrth, of duties nobly met, and work
dren's clinic ut Mount Sinai hospital, thoroughly done. Joy und peace are
where it is under close observation by the way.—Mable.
iy physicians. | ;
The reading of the report created a Heard In a Restaurant.
stir among the medical men, as there Gerald—' On account of their slml-
are only olght known cases, according jarity in dress It's hard to tell a g«-ntle-
*0 Dr. Gladstone, on record. ' man from a waiter." Oeraldlno—"Hut
-i doesn't tho waiter usually own his
Monoy to loan on city property, dreas suit."—Bohemian.
Hunter Realty Co. 12-4-tf
state is not sufficient to establish the
homo the funds are to be invested
until they shall have reached s ucb
proportions as are required.
Somewhat Rough on Society "Man."
At dinner one evening a well-known
actress was most amiuble to a very
young lieutenant who sat next to her.
He was mightily pleased at being on
such good terms with a live nctress.
Suddenly she said, In her artless.
pretty manner: "I am taking a boy's
part ln a new play, and I have been
watching you ever since wo were in-
troduced. You don't mind, do you?"
The Dublin Cab Driver.
In few cities ln the world Is your
Jehu more rich ln fancy than In Dub
lin, more skilled ln embroidered desire for knowledge Is do widespread
words, better able to stlng and wither that the percentage of children attend-
with the cunning of his quick scorn, lap school compares very favorably
It Is a feaBt of that "impassioned logic with that of tho inosl civilised Kuro-
whlch outruns the hearer in its fiery pean countries —Kiniberley Diamond
course."—Dublin Freeman's Journal. . Holds Advertiser.
It Went to Asia at Beginning of Gla-
cial Period.
New York.—Camels, hump included,
originated in America, and not ln Asia
or Africa, according to Prof. F. B.
Loomis. who has made a study of
prehistoric animals. In an address
before the Amherst association he
said that about 3,000,000 years ago
the camel roamed about North Amer-
ica. When the beginning of Ihe gla
rial period brought its covering of loe
to this continent, he continued, a few
camels went to Asia; others went
south, passing the Isthmus of Panama
and starting the llama family of South
America.
Prof. Loomis showed a series of
pictures of skeletons which ho and his
party had discovered in Wyoming,
tracing the development of the camaL
o —
The British Press.
Not a little wot Id wisdom lies in the
conduct of tho British pr'-jis. Its
managers do noi let th r instincts for
news run away with their appreciation
of how things said in heat look In cold
print to the world abroad. They do
not furnish arrows for the quivers of
their foreign critic.. -Boston Tran-
script
Native Education at the Cape.
Generally speaking, the natives are
keen about education, though, like
many Europeans, they do not much
liket paying for it. In Fingoland the
he trailed by the earth's attraction.
He says his Invention makes it pos-
sible to get away from gravitation und
still not be lost ln space. He does
not say how one may get away from
the swirling earth aud take his stand
in the ethereal void, but any ana
with $100,000 may find out.
NO SPOONING IN CHURCH.
Pastor and Leader* Take Action
Against Members Who Kiss.
Pittsburg.—While they believe It Is
proper that marriages should be sol
•mnloed in church, the pastor and
leaders ln the Free Methodist church
at Stauffer, Westmoreland county,
have taken a stand against oourtahlp
Inside the church doors, especially
during religious services.
Recently the pastor has b**n annoy-
ed by the actions of love-sick young
people, who have been carrying on
courtships during the services. Open
osculatory expressions of affection
have been witnessed in the church,
and the climax came the other night
The pastor bad before warned the
young people that better order mast
prevail. Thai night Aaron Gadd. a
leader In the church, aroso and ex
pressed the idea that, while marriages
are perfectly proper, church courtship
Is not. and insisted that the later
cease.
Mr. Gf.dd anuounced that he had
secured the names of several offenders
aud that, If the love making did not
cease, steps would bo taken to see that
It did.
To Preserve Historlo Batt1e-8hlp.
Nelson's flagship Victory, almost the
last relic of th© great nuval wars. Is
to be rerlgged, repainted and as near-
ly as possible restored to the condi-
tion In which she gloriously led tho
port column of the British fleet into
battle at Trafalgar.
Christmas Presents . . .
Sellable ior Father, Mother, Brother or Siatrr and the Home
Watches, Chains, 8roochei>. Lockets, Rings. Scarf Pin and Cuff Buttoa Sets, Belt
Pins, Bracelets, Fobs, Emblems, Silver Cups and Toilet Sets, Fountsio Pens.
Gold Plated Mirrors, 12 dwt. Knives and Forks, guaranteed to wear, $3.00
Spoons with 25 guarantees. Carving Sets, Clocks. Cut Glass China Fine Ladies,
and Gent Umbrellas, with detachable bandies.
Wr only Carry the Best Guaranteed Goods eJ Lowest Cash Prices
H. C. DRUMM & Co.. Jewelers
Iilt-'fO OF A P1MPLK.
Gompfections Are <1earr*l und Pim-
ple* Disappear Ova-might Without
Trouble.
The dispensers of poslam, a new
skin discovery, ask that notice be
given that no one is urged to pur-
chase it without first obtaining an
experimental package. Those who
have tried It will find that the fifty
r/mi box <.r. sale at the Watrous Drug
Co., the Corry Pharmacy and all
drug stores, is sufficient to cure tho
worst cases ®f eczema, where the sur-
face affected is not to large. The
Itching ceases on first application.
It will also cure acne, tetter, blotches
scaly scalp, hives, barbers and every
other form of itch, Including itching
feet. Being flesh colored and con-
taining no grease, the presence of
poslam on exposed surfaces, such as
the face and hands, is not percept-
able. Water and soap cannot be used
In connection with it, as these irri-
tate and prolong skin troubles,some-
times even causing them.
As to the experimental package of
poslam. It can be had free of charge
by mall of the Emergency Labora-
tories, 32 West Twenty-fifth St..
New York It alone Is sufficient to
clear the completion over night, and
to rid the face of pimples in twenty-
[our hours.
Source of Poison Dangers.
The action oi' foods and liquors 00
their receptacles may produce deadly
jK>lsons. A« id fruits cooked in copper
or sine pots are a particular source of
danger. A man who was taken ill In
the hunting field with symptoms of
mineral poisoning learned that the fine
old brandy hr carried in his back
IH>cket had dissolved some of tho eot
per lu the sterling silver flasks.
o —
Georgia Editor's Mistake.
Olive Fremstad, who has just come
from Europe, says the women are
wearing monocles over there. It re-
minds us that the last time we used
the word monocle the printer made L*
manacle, and we had to hide out ft*
two days.—Atlanta Georgian.
A Literary Reporter.
I do not profess to be a j>olltlcian.
but idmply one of a disinterested class
of observers who, with no organised
and embodied set of supporters to
please, set themselves to observe hoo
estly and rei>ort faithfully the state
I aud prospects of our civilisation.-—
i Matthew Arnold.
/
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Enid Daily Eagle. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 87, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 26, 1908, newspaper, December 26, 1908; Enid, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc159704/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.