The Daily Democrat. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 54, Ed. 1 Friday, May 27, 1904 Page: 2 of 4
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BACKACHE
The ordinary every-day life of most of our ivnmen is a ceaseless treadmill of work.
Flow much harder the daily tasks liecome when some derangement of the female organs
mak'-s every movement painful and keeps the nervous system all unstrung. One day .--he i
wretched and utterly miserable; in a day or two she is better and laughs at her fears, thinking
then- is nothing much the matter after all; but I- fore night the deadly backache reappears, the limbs
tremble, the lii* twitch —it seems as though all the imps of Satan were clutching her vitals, t-he
"goes to pieces" and Ls flat on her back.
No woman ought to arrive at this terrible state cf misery, because these symptoms are a sure indi-
cation of womb diseases, and backache is merely a symptom of more serious trouble. Women should
remember that an almost infallible cure f.>rall female ills, such as irregularity of periods, which ; mse weak
stoma h, si* k headatli . e: dispLn > ments and ini. animation of the womb, or any of the multitudes of ill
nesses which beset the female organism may be found ia
Lydia E. Pirskham's Vegetable Compound
When a medicine has be« u successful in more than
a million cases, why should you say, "I do not believe
It would help me"?
Will not the volumes of letters from women who
have been made -.trontr by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound convince others of the virtues of this
great medicine?
Surely you cannot wish to remain weak and sick and
discouraged, exhausted w ith each day's work. If you
have some derangement of the feminineorganism try
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It will
surely help you.
GET ADVICE AXO FIF.LP FUEE.
If there is anything in your case about which you
would like special advice, write (reely to Mrs. Pink-
ham. She w ill hold your letter in stru t confidence.
She can surely help you. for no person in America can
speak from a wider experience in treating female ills.
Address is Lynn, Mass.; her advice is free and helpful.
■PHMP
•> \ * J,1 f} J
h
f J
MISS PEARL ACKERS
r
$5000
" Dear Mrs. Pikkuam : — About two years ap-o I consulted a
physician about my health, winch had become so wretched that
1 w;.s no longer able to be about. 1 had severe backache, bearing*
clown pains, pains acre s the abdomen, was very nervous and
irritable, and this trouble grew worse each month.
4'The physician prescribed for me, but I soon discovered he
I then decided to try Lydia E*
Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound, and soon found that
it was doing me pood. My appetite was returning1, the pains
disappearing, and the general benefits were well marked.
•• You cannot realize how pleased I was, and after taking the
medicine for only three Tnonths. I found 1 was completely cured
of my trouble, and have been well and hearty ever since and no
more fear of the monthly period, as it now passes without pain
to me. Yours very truly, Miss Pearl Ackers, 327 North Sum-
mer St., Nashville, Tenn."
FORFEIT -f canm t f rthtrith \ r ! ^ the
original Tetter &l i signature of at ve teat.r:.
which will prove its absolute genuineness.
l ydia K. Pfnkhmin Med. Co., L^nn, Man.
fh
. PI i:'.'*
" ■ ' -*%i
m■ ■■ "*••• I -
THl D A I L < DEMOCRAT,
T. F. HENSLEY, Eoitor.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
DAILY.
One week, delivered In city. . J .10
One month 40
Three months 1.00
Six months 2.00
One year 4.00
THE EL RENO DEMOCRAT
Three month, $ .35
Mx months .. • 50
Dents.
TVe are preparing a short political
biography of each member f -h.
committee on resolution*- in t.>j lat*
democratic convention. It is as inter-
esting as the dieam of a Jezebel
LOTS OF MONEY WEST ENID BANK MUDDLE
NO LONGER
ALL THE GOLD.
|> ifcS
19W
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President Roosevelt wants General going the pace that kills.
Horace Porter, our ambassador to "Every railroad official knows that
France, to run for governor of New no clerk can give his best service or
York Governor Oil*ll seems to si- put forth his best effort who spends
I 'he n.. • .in and has sune •<> Pari" h> ev.-ning- around a card table or THE EAST
to see him Horace may not think in a saloon indulging to excess. The
this is a good year. policy of the latter day railroads is
o , to accomplish the maximum amount
There are SA.0M anti-imperialists [ of results with the minimum amount'
in Massachusetts who demand that : of labor. This being the case it na- BIG CROPS
the democratic platform shall offer turaily follows that t"4«tf'UJJBj 'he labor
independence to the Filipinos at some tha- a competent < iftrk can iMflfoiu
near and specified time General jhe m:-t nut waste Ma spare.tl
Miles alleges that the Philippines un- the practice of t irtfo) habits.
der our protection can equip them- 1 do not know thai the
selves with a stab'.e republican gov-1 clerk* <jf F<jn Worth ?
ernment within two hundred days." ! ces-.-s - at all. J know
" «■'- striking the a'
thai-iron* a XunB' 27.—"The
0 "' v compare 'fe**rabt^drooptoc tone of the l
A t.erman official demands an ex- with ^
Nk freedom of
pllcit deflation of the Monroe Doc- in this country. At the same time.! lhe outward movement is now clear-
^ e as ington Pos ••••'> | there are among them clerks who can I jy reorganized and long time money
responds That s easy' "Thou rio much better work than they are
shalt not steal 1 The Post is a viva- now performing, and the very fact
NOTES OF THE BANK THERE AT-
TACHED BY DEPOSITORS.
ors running the attachment can hold
the Kansas City notes for settlement
in full with him. while the less for-
tunate depositors must accept what
is left and share it proportionately.
CAUSED CHANGE A FEW DEPOSITORS GET ALL
Western Cities
Bankf of
Wero. Mever Bef-sre in As Good
- Ofcnouion A* AiLPresent.
The Others Will Be Left in the
Lurch If Present Indications
Remain Unchanged.
The Gambling Habit.
Don't imagine that the gambling^
habit is the worst of the consequences
of the penny slot-machine games cf
chance. A taste for gambling is of-
ten only an intermediate stage to em-
bezzlement and state's prison.—Chi- _
cago News. ™
ANNOUNCEMENT.
We are authorized to announce J.
M Frame as a candidate f r County
Attorney subject'to the Republican
Primary Election.
We are authorized to announce
Robert Crowley as a can.:idaTe for
representative from the 14'h legisla-
tive district subject to the will of
the democratic primary election.
We are authorized to announce
Miss Margaret Gardner, of Maple
township as a candidate for the re-
publican nomination for superinten-
dent of public instruction of Canadian
county, subject to the action of the
republican primary election
They say that Samuel the profit
wants to sell his Blobeil
is as easy as quoted," said W. S. Webb
of the Missouri Savings bank, yes-
terday. "The outward movements of
gold, say to the amount of forty odd
million dollars as was caused last-
week by the shipments of the Panama
money, would have caused a few years
It is constantly done in the | back the greatest bear flurry in the
I is also common in many ■ money market of the United States
asked if there was any objection to sections of the northeast. But it is; that this country has ever known,
a couple being married rose and said a new wrinkle as far as Fort Worth with the present conditions of the
~ concerned. No intimation has been 1 market, however, the output of S4".-
very
cious paper, but^, it indulges in some that they are not giving the roads
snide definitions The inside mean- the best they can is evidence suffi-
ing of the Monroe Doctrine is of cient that there is something wrong."
course Thou shalt not steal anything The practice of keeping an espion-
that I may want to s'eal That man age over railroad clerks is no new
had a very accurate Idea of the Mon- thing.
roe doctrine, who, when the minister north
I object." "On what ground do you
object?" asked the minister. "I
want Hannah myself" said the can-
did swain
given the clerks of it having been in
contemplation in this city, thotigh it
has now been in force for some ten
days.
Col. Shady Forrest wants to be
elected national committeeman, pow-
erful bad. But the trouble with
Shady Is. that there is nothing in
him. nothing behind him. and no fu-
ture before him. His own county is
against him. and the territorial demo-
cracy has branded him not only as a
bolter but a cheap traitor to his party.
When Bob sticks his head up in the
Anadarko convention at least twelve
democratic cotnities that never fail-
ed to stand in line for the nominees
of the party will ask the bogus colon-
el to explain what he was doing at
the last election while Canadian coun-
ty was crawling over into the repub-
lican column. They will also want
him to tell what price he now asks
for the Billups' letter.
A BRILLIANT EVENT
EIEGANT SOCIAL FUNCTION
THE BRADFORD HOME.
A GATHERING OF
AT
The Pretty Residence
Rare Beauty and
Reigns Supreme.
LOOKING AFTER THE BOYS
The republican family quarrel in
Wisconsin fomented by Sp ■ ner ca
es consternation In administration
circles, i nless compromised immed-
iately it will be likely to give the
democrats the governor and some con-
gressmen.
Railway Officials Investigating the
Habits of the Clerks.
Since General Funs'on confessed
that he did not swim the Rio Grande
river, april 2>>, lxv.V but that two other
men swam it while he went across
®ti a raft, Kansas has revised her
BCbotil books and given up her at-
tempt to classify him as an amphi-
bian.
The Fort Worth Record says:
No less than two of the three rail-
roads having headquarters here have
I ordered investigations made of the so-
cial standing of the employes of the
general offices with a view of ascer-
taining what clerks indulge in imbid-
ing too often and too freely and what
clerks gamble.
"We have not been forced to take
this step." said a high railroad official
yesterday. "But we are taking it
for the benefit of the young men who
work for the roads themselves. There
is many a man today who is down
and out. as it were, who would have
made a good citizen bad he not been
curbed up sharply when he flrst start-
l on his downward path. We be
Brilliant social function is in
• " ' - at'-rTi'i'in at the home
of T J. Bradford, on South Hoff
avenue, where Mrs. T. J Bradford
and Mrs H C. Bradford, assisted by
Mrs. W. D. Cardwell, of Weatherford;
Mrs H L Chowning and Mrs. A. L.
Wilson, of El Reno, and Miss Ree
Winslow. of Oklahoma City, are enter-
taining lady friends at progressive
euchre.
The j rch has been curtained off
as a reception hall, and the rooms
are beautifully decorated with red j
carnations, roses and potted plants. I
the whole presenting a scene of rare
loveliness. There are sixteen card i
tables, surrounded by devotees of
euchre, and the prizes are elegant. !
A list of guests could not be ol>-'
tained in time for publication.
000,000 caused a weakness lasting
less than forty-eight hours and today
gold is quoted at 98 cents against 92
the day before the weakness was de-
tected."
Mr Webb gave as the reason tbr
the extreme confidence in the gold
market noted yesterday the fact that
there is now the greatest surplus of
gold in the Western cities in the his-
tory of the country, in Kansas City
the demand for gold is comparatively
a quality whose infinite smallness
dispells all fear of a weak market;
while the usual demands from the
HE ELITE, Kansas banks, probably a little strong
at present, is nothing to excite a bear
movement.
The fact that a 1100.000.000 loan to
the Japanese government was easily
handled by the I'nited States brings
to light the information that the great-
er portion of the loan was placed in
the Western cities. There is very
little money held in the East by the
banks at present. The fact that the
West was able to come through with
so much gold at a lime when desir-
able loans were to be placed is doubt-
less responsible in a great measure
for the confidence placed in the mark-
et by the East.
Enid, O. T.. May 27 —J. A. Thomp-
son, representing the United States
Fidelity & Guarantee company, of
Baltimore, through their attorneys,
Cromwell & McKeever. made appli-
; cation last week just before court ad-
j journed, of Judge Beauchamp. for per-
! mission to examine the condition of
I the wrecked Citizen's bank, which was
refused by the court. The company
! asked permission bonded the county's
deposit in the insolvent bank, the loss
■ being $23,000 or more, and the repre-
sentative wanted to know what
chances the company had of getting
its money back.
In his ruling Judge Beauchamp cit-
ed that a committee of citizens had
: asked permission to inspect the bank
with a view of reorganizatfon. and
after seeing the condition, one of the
committee, being a heavy depositor
in the institution, finding where the
assets of the bank were located, at-
tached $30,000 in notes in a Kansas
City bank, which maKes it impossible
for the receiver to settle up the busi-
ness and make a statement to the
depositors. On the assumption that
the bank officials knew the bank was
insolvent, it is held that the deposit-
AN IMPORT
THE KERFOOT HOTEL SOLD tO
B. M. RILEY.
AGREEMENT MADE LAST NIGHT
The Purchase Price Not Given Out
—Believed to Be in the Neigh-
borhood cf $50,000.
The Kerfoot Hotel has been sold to
H M. Riley, who has for several years
past conducted the house, under a
lease. Mr. Humphreys stated this
afternoon that, while he had not giv-
en out anything for publication, he
had stated to Mr. Riley the price
which he would take for the property,
and that Mr. Riley had agreed to buy
it at that price. Mr. Humphreys
declined to state what that price was.
The gentlemen have been figuring on
making the deal for some time past,
but could not exactly agree tipon the
price until now.
*1
a Scene
Enjoyment
of
rem©
ARE STILL ONE FAMILY.
Court Decides That Hezekiah Richey
Was Sane at the Time of His
Marriace.
Sainuel the profit -aid in his fam-
ous convention speech, that the cream
of the democracy Toted for him. We
fchould think so. judging from the
nam tier of votes he received. Cream j lieve that if we can ascertain who are by reason of his proximity to the pie k*3 marriage
is ali right if there is enough of it
but in a race for office give us the
blue-John and plenty of it.
For three days the Richey divorc
suit has wound its way through th
district court. A petition had been
filed to annul the marriage, and on*
to set aside a deed to valuable prop-
erty in El Reno, on the ground tha*
This is a
Town
and so is every other
town —you can buy
the Cremo wherever
cigars are sold
Largest Seller in the World
The Band is the Smoker's Protection.
w
\ Y
Not Even a Sandwich.
Shelby Cullom used to "do things" j the old man was insane at the time
, the most flagrant in the practice of counter. It must be that he has not
the small vices we will be able to even a sandwich at hand now—Chica-
! make examples and save others from go Chronicle.
I
The decision of the court denies
both petitions, and the Richey family
still exists as one pair.
1
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Hensley, T. F. The Daily Democrat. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 54, Ed. 1 Friday, May 27, 1904, newspaper, May 27, 1904; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc160230/m1/2/: accessed April 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.