Noble County Sentinel. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 2, 1896 Page: 3 of 4
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LATE NEWS NOTES.
Fresident Flippolytenf Rayti isdead
Benton, Ark., was almost wined out
fire.
The greater New York bill passed
the assembly to 5rt.
French chamber of deputies voted
for an income tax, 0 to L70.
New York attorneys are drafting a
Vill for International arbitration.
Chicago purchasers of unclaimed
fcsggage bought a corpse at auction
Four men were suffocated in a ear
ftf oats in a wrcck at North .ludson,
Ind.
f'ullis Bros. Iron < ompany, St.
l ouis, lias assigned. Liabilities ?.Vi,-
000: assets, S">l.\ooo.
w. f. T. 1'. 1 ailics praise Speaker
Heed for prohibiting" smoking in the
House.of Keprescntativcs.
Parry Belmont i^ the*probably nom-
inee of the New York Pemocrats for
(inrernor this fall.
I he premium on gold bars has been
raised, with tin; object of making its
export less probable.
Major Kdward Leslie, well known
inventor, committed suicide -it Patter-
son, N. .1., by taking morphine.
Senator Sewell of New Jersey has
been awarded a medal for bravery at
the battle of Chancellorsvillc in ISO.'..
By :i fire damp explosion in a mine
nt Briiiinerton. New Zealand, live men
wqrc killed and sixty buried alive.
Luther A. Lawson, a Populist news-
paper man. has been nominated to
fcuccced Congressman C'raiu of Texas
Hobart Mantell married Charlotte
Bchrens. his leading* lady, the da\
after she was divorced from Mr. Huhn.
British royalty is asking for an in-
creased allowance for the Prince of
Wales on behalf of his children.
Miss Mamie ('a ban no, member of an
old and wealthy St. Louis family, has
taken the veil and become a nun.
Tha ticnate pa&ed ;i joint resolution
allowing ex-President Harrison to a-
eept decorations from Brazil and
Spain.
Clara Barton is allowed to work in
Armenia only under Turkish eominis-
Mon and by lists furnished by the
Tu rks.
\|i B. I>avi«lson of Montreal ha1*
sued Queen \ ictoria for si,Moo for flow-
ers furnished at the funeral of Sir
John Thompson.
Shops of the Baltimore. A Ohio
bouthwestern at Washington, lnd .
have been closed, throwing loo men
out of employment.
A V Willey of Bertrand. Neb., ac-
cused of insulting' a ui'i. was brutally
whipped by a mob of excited women
and driven out of town.
•reneral Weyler is out with another
proHamatT-«n --ailing the insurgents
bandM.• and incendiaric- and declaring
they "ill be shot when caught.
Spaniards ai Madrid expect war be-
tween >pn in and Cnele Sam to be the
re-uIt of the Cuban resolutions
Hubiali Snell of Kern county. ' al;
forma, rl.tim-. she i> the n idem
' Nndre v .1 Mavis, the millionaire
whose estate has long been in litiga-
tion at Butte. Mont.
Senator Allen introduced a resolu-
tion declaring that Congress should
rot adjourn without restoring the
free coinage of silver and taking from
the Secretary of the Treasury the
power to issue bonds.
Mrs. Ballington Booth lectured at
Sewicklev, Pa on • siuin and shelter
Work in Large fit • and in an in
terview said she and her husband were
too much Americanized whs the cause
of the Salvation Army split
'Tporpe ifali. who broke out of the
Milan jail, where he war. confined on
n charg" of forgery, was shot and
killed at Vancouver, P. < , ioattempt
tng to evade anest
Twenty six water companies in
Wvominp and Lai kawanna valleys in
Pennsylvania, have been purchased
and combined by a \e*v ^ . rk syndi-
cate, p. fi.OOO.OOf) deal.
Governor A11 geld and the board of
trustees of ti c I nnersity of Illinois
have been indicted at Champaign for
failure to fly the National flag over the
school building-.
The equestrian statue of General
Hancock will be unveiled at Washing-
ton. May 1. Ail illegal levy was made
on it by a creditor of llenry Lllioit, its
sculptor, for a .160 debt.
-fe&jneer ' Jack" Smith of the Mot
Springs i.nlroad went to ' lncagoun a
bridal trip, and while the bridegroom
slept the bride, tool; a S.oO wallet, two
trunk cheeks and a hicyele and started
for Ib ed « ity, M1ch., but was arrested
on board the train.
The statement of
banks shows
ecnt
William ' obb of Athens. t u., has
been appointed private secretary of
Secretary Hoke Smith.
The Senate Committee on Education
has presented a bill providing for a
large industrial commission.
A statement to Congress from the
Interior Department show* the cost of
the I uioii Pacific Kailway lo liave
been S*i0,o0fl a mile.
m
• Mil
\
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a -• <* «
r
5>i;iisff Ati'j mzn
rJ15 '/Ji/iCJllilQS
1
11,
SEBSSEBESbSBS
brazen music hot slnglns. now weep- | Thareare 32 specie?, of th • m•• 1
Ine now floating to the starry sky, now ; in the I'nited S'a the larz-b<
-Inking to the wretrh*d e*rth. and It | ing culex reliatus. which inlmLiu the
Deemed to him that he was surrounded I Southern salt roaibhe;
I ;• his children and hi? grandchildren |
and that there were their happy voices ! The sale of oysters in Baltimore an
—the voices of old and young to-
gether pouring out In one grand chorus
a hymn of Joy and rapture.
So the old hellrlnger pulled the ropes
with strong, nervous arms while tears
poured down his cheeks and his heart
ran falrlv over with a happineFf he
had never known before And below
J the people listened, and they eald to
I each other that Michelch had never
rung so wonderfully before.
| Then suddenly the great bass hell
hesitated—and was silent. For a mo-
ment the others pang an unfinished, un-
I certain harmony. Then they, too,
ceased, and there was silence save for
the low, sad. trembling droning of their
stilled but still resonant throats.
The gray hellrlnger had fallen help-
lessly on the b°nch beside the rope?,
and two tears silently rolled over his
pale cheeks.
Send a substitute! The old hfll
ringer has rung himself out.
nuallv amounts to over 330.00M.Q00.
I believe Piso's Cure i? the only inrdi
etna that « iii etira consumption Mum
M. Boss, Willis ins] 11 Ps N 12, '•
The cocker spaniel is pressing the
French poodle hard for preference
among the fashionat les.
rim ^
v Or. K lino's fin
BF AUTIFUt.
EASTER LILY.
the Favorite Flower l« Raited
Tor the New Tork Marker
HF. flowers which
are in bloom at th°
Faster season are
used more or less
for home and
church decorations
during that relig-
ious festival, but
It is the Raster Illy
which alnne la pe-
culiarly identified
with it The close
association of the Ylrgin Mother with
the Eaater time has connected thp Fast-
er Illy with her as an emblem of pur
Itv, the religious significance of the
Easter Illy being spotless purity.
Painters of religious pictures long ago
...... epi^l f
Nerve Hntorrr. So l it. ilu-
Man '■ i -111« - Tr«-1« >• i" * 11' i! -1 f • ■ *
t itrates. Hem! tOiH. Kllia.Wl \i ' .-t .l i a , 1 a.
The bicvcling people ore figuring
on selling ?.000,000 machines this year
at an average of S60 each.
When Traveling.
Whether on pleasure bent, or business,
take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of
Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and
effectually on the kidneys, liver, and
bowels, preventing fevers, headache?,
and other forms of sickness For sale
In 60 cent and $1 bottles bj If S ling
druggists Manufactured by the Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup Company only.
A company has bee:; formed for the
purpose of placing public horseless
carriages on the streets * f Paris.
Ptate of Ohio. City of Toledo. Lucas
County —ss
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he
Is the senior partner of the llrm of F.
Cheney & Co . dabig business In the
City of Toledo. County and St te afore
Raid, and that s.ild linn will pay the
sum of One Hundred Dollars for each
and every case of Catarrh that cannot
be cured by the use 'if Hall's Catarrh
Cure. FRANK .1. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In
mv presence this 6th day of December.
A D 1R86. A W tJLEASON.
(Peal) Notary Public.
Hall s Catarrh Cure la taken Internal-
lj and acts directly on the Mood and
mucous surfaces of tin system. Send
for testimonials, free
F. J. CHENEY K- CO.. Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Hall s Family Pills, 25c. \
J !ilw,<; -i( i' i . mi Holland average
from to "it' eept per da v.
1 nd • !• it" be- me. nest to Chi-
na the large ' tea growing country.
Jutland w • originally Juteland, or
the land <>f the Jutes, a Gothic tribe.
An I file Sraveujcer.
The bowels u t the part of a scavenger.
inasmuch as they remove much of the de
bri>. the waste elletr- matter ot the system.
When tlicy gn w idle, neglectful of* duty,
it is o! the utmost importance that thev
shuuld I e impelled to activity. Hostet-
ter -tomach l itter- effects this desirable
object withou" griping them like a drastic
pi igat I he Bitters is also efficacious
tor malaria, bilious. d> .-peptic and kidney
trouble.
The King of Muscat has a 3185,000
pearl
The Pennsylvania corn pa in s system
conceived the Idea nf placing one of 1 including some additions last y< ar.
HIE KASTKH
Kansas nat ioual
f per
A Tale from the Russlin of Kovolenko
I . T WAS the night
' ' v :.;]■• before the Easter
'„ .■£ , if niorning. The lit
' ; li ,le v,,la6e by lllP
i murmuring crcek
^1 was half hidden In
%x' the mystical, va
'( porv, starry glnotn
of a Russian night
in springtime. The
neighboring wood
flung blackest shad
fwb on the fields beside It. All was
illenL The village, slumbered.
Hours passed, and long before the
night was gone Its still charm was
broken. Lights began to glimmer In
he windows of cottages whose wretch-
edness was disguised In the bewitching
springtime gloom of niEht. A gate
?reaked. The tread of a foot was heard
here and there. Moving figures, darkly
outlined, emerged from the shades of
:ho wood. A dog barked, and then an-
other and another.
Then a horseman clattered along th«
village street. A passing cart groaned
nr.d creaked under its early morning
burden. The darkly outlined figures
increased In number. The villagers be-
gan to gather In their church to bid
welcome to thn spring holiday.
It was a quaint little church. It stood
ipon a hillock in the middle of the vil-
lage. All at once Its windows glowed
jlmly among the shadows. Then their
brightness Increased. The church was
ill alight.
High into the darkness overhead
-eached the old belfry tower. Its top
was lost In the azure gloom.
Then the rickcty belfry stairs began
o creak. Old Michelch, the hellrlnger,
ivas clambering aloft. Soon his lantern
lung In the hell window, shining like
a new star in the sky.
It was hard for the old man to climb
•ho*e steep and crooked'stairs. Ills
Did eyes no longer served him, and he,
like they, was worn out.
As he climbed, he pondered. It was
ime indeed, he thought, that he should
-est. But God would not send him death.
Ho had seen his children burled. He
had stood by the open graves of his
grandchildren, lie had followed the
old to their last resting place. He had
followed the young there, too. But
still he lived and lived. It was hard.
Many a time had he welcomed the
Easter morning so many times that he
could not recall them all. He had even
forgotten how often in later years he
had hoped for death in this same old
belfry, as now he hoped for it. And
ret tills early morning God had brought
nlm there once more.
It was not yet time for him to ring
'he merry peals and the old man totter-
3 Gladness Comes
\A/ith a better understanding of the
W transient nature of th* many phys-
ical ills which vanish before proper of.
forts gentle efforts pleasant eft'orts—
rightly directed. There is comfort in
the knowledge that so many forms of
sickness are not due to any actual dis*
ease, but simply to a const lpated condi-
tion of the system, which the pleasant
family laxative. M rupof Fitr*. prompt-
ly removes. That why it is the only
remedy with millions of fami'b and is
everywhere esteemed so highly by all
who value good health Its beneficial
effects are due to the fact, that it is the
one remedy which promotes internal
clesnlines-.. without debi'.itatinc the
organs on which it acts. It Is therefore
slfimpor* int, in order to get its bene-
ficial effects, to note when you pur-
chase that you have the genuine article,
which is manufactured by the California
Fig Syrup Co only, anil sold by all rep-
utable druggists
If in the enjoyment of good health,
and the system is regular, then laxa-
tive* or other remedies are not needed.
If afflicted with any actual diseuse. one
posy be commended to the most skillful
physician6, but if in need of a laxative,
then one should have the best, and with
the well-informed every where. Svrupof
Figs stands highest and is most lnrgely
osed and gives most general satisfaction.
$
.
THE BELLRINGER WAS CLAMBER-
IN' I ALOFT.
sd to the belfry window and leaned out
over the railing. Below him in the
darkness he could dimly see the neg-
lected graves. The white wooden cross-
es at their heads seemed to be guarding
them wtih their wldestretcbed arms.
Here and there a few hirch trees bent
naked branches forlornly over the
mounds and the aromatic odors of their
young buds arose on the silent air to
Michelch's nostrils. They bore to him
a tale of tranquil, eternal slsep.
Where would lie he a year from that
moment? Would he be there again '
Would he have once more climbed Into
that tower under the clamorous copper
bells to awaken the slumbering night
«lih their sharp, resounding strokes?
Or would he lis out there In a dark
corner of the cemetery with a white
cross guarding his everlasting sleep?
God alone knew. He was ready to die
but In the meantime God had brought
him into the belfry once more to wel
come the Easter morning.
"To the glory of God!"
His old lips repeated the oft spoken
formula, and hlo old eyes gazed Into
the deep sky abo\e, burning with Its
millions upon millions of stars.
"Michelch! Oh, MlcheJch!"
The voice came from below. It was
the old sexton, who had come from the
church Into the graveyard beneath the
tower and who was gazing upward, with
his hands shading his blinking, tear
moistened eyes in vain effort to make
out the form of the hellrlnger in the
darkness overhead.
"What do you want7" answered old
Michelch, bending over the railing. "1
am here. Can't you see me?"
"I do not see,'' cried the sexton. "Is
It not time lo ring? What
think?"
Botli gazed upon the starB. Thou-
sands of God's lanterns were blinking
at them from the firmament. The nigbt
was waning. Michelch thought.
voting fare had bent hir- powerful back
before the time h;id come. They had
mad® the joyous boy sigh as his elder
brnfher had sighed.
There on the left, among the women
of the village, with hei head humble
bent, *hc ;< • M , • pot b' < i t ;|m \< r>
a good woman May Hie peace of Clod
be with her soul!
Oh. I he p^ln that she had suffered!
Want and work and woman's woes had
withered her glowing womanhood. Her
eyes had grown dim with years r.nd
weeping. The shocks and bllgnts of
life had painted n dull fright upon her
comely face.
Ah, where wan her happiness?
cod had given then one son, their
Joy, their very sonl, and he > gro 1 I
to his death by men's injustice.
•these spoties, emblems of purity in
the hand of the angel that "with a
countenance like lightning and raiment j
white as snow" declared the resurrec-
tion of Christ, says the N*w York
World.
How conspicuous a part the Easter ,
Illy plays In the Easter festival can
best be appreciated and understood by 1
"figures. The annual exportation of
Faster Illy bulbs from Bermuda to this ;
country for the past five years has
been from 2,500,000 to 3,000,000. As the
average production of every bulb In six
dowers, we use from 15.000.000 to 18,-
| ooo.ooo Easter lilies in decoration yesr-
| ly. (if course this entire crop is no
used for the Easter festival as the
Easter lily has been popular for the
past 'en years' for Interior dscoratious
weddings, receptions or other similar
ceremonies But growers of the Eaater
lily insist tha« fully fio per cent of the
now aggregate- ■
Poets
Break Out.
in tli0 Springtime. And a.
great many who are not
poets, pay tribute to the
neason in the same war.
The difference in that tha
poet brenkn out in about
the same epot annually,
■white more prosair. people
break out in various parte
of the body. It's natura).
Rpring tiio breaking-
out. season. Tt is the time
when impurities of the
blood work to the surface.
It is the time, therefore, to
t'iko the purest and most
powerful blood purifier,
Ayer's
Sarsaparilfa <|
\\ V I WICHITA.-VOL. p- NO. 14
Such ills
SORENESS
and the like
\pc "WXOOOOOOOOOOf
ST. JACOBS OIL
WIPE8 OUT
Promptly and Effectually.
[oooooooooooooooogpi
The picture broadened and gri-w
do you j vivid In the old man's mind. He naw
I standing In hie ppvv th- rl. b enemy n' -ntlre crop Is tis d during K,asi r week,
the family, bowing bis bend tn lh" vei j The faphlon of iiFlng Fant r llllea (o so
ground glossing over In his prayer -
the wrongs of the widows and orphans
whose lives he had blighted Inhlsselflsh
greed Michelch felt his heart Eron-
hot within him now, as it had done
then, while the rlarK face.! of the holy
Image?, on the altar frownr-J rt-rnl
11 TO SEIZED THE BELL ROPES.
".\'n. not yet." he said. "Walt awhile.
1 know when." • • •
But It was time to salute Ihe Easter
morning. Old Michelch gazed at the
stars onco more, and then arose. He
removed his hat, crossed himself and
gathered tip the bell ropes. A moment
more and the night air shivered under
the first resounding stroke. Then came
the se-ond. the third, the fourth. The
lightly sleeping Easter air quivered
with the Joyous music of the shouting,
singing bells.
Then the bells ceased. The solemn
service began In the church below.
In bygone years Michelch had always
gone down to the service and stood in
a corner near the door, praying and lis-
tening to the music. But it was hard
for him to do this now. He felt tired.
So he sat down on the bench beneath
the copper bells and listened to their
waning resonance.
He thought. About what? Michelch
himself could hardlv answer (he ques-
tion. His glimmering lantern scarcely
lit up the belfry. He could not inako
out the droning bells. They were lost
in darkness. From the church below
his old ears caught the singing now
and then. The old man's gray head
sank upon his chest. Disconnected
scenes from tho past swarmed In his
mind like bees In the hive.
"Ah!" he said as the music of the
Easier hymn drifted up the tower
stairs, "they are singing the troparion."
In his imagination he sang that
hymn, again n youth, in the old church
below. The littlo old priest, Father
Nauni. many y*ars dead and burled,
once more was Intoning Ihe end of a
prayer, while children's voices united
in the responses. Hundreds of peasants
bowed and arose like corn before the
wind. Now they crossed themselves
de voiitlv.
The old familiar fares were of those
long since dead. There was the stern
\l.cige of his father. There stood his
elder brother at the old man's side
nlghing deeply and cropslnz himself
again and again There he himself
stool, young, healthful, strong. Joyful,
full of expectation of a llfe'n happlnei.fi
Where was that happiness now?
The old man's thoughts flickered up
like a dying; (l ime. Itecollectlon tIIu
mined all 'lie nooks and corners of ^s
life. And all he saw was endless
• easoless. merciless labor- labor far be-
yond his strength. He saw sorrow, too
much soi row and suffering unutter-
able.
Ah. where Indeed was that happlneM
of which he had dreamed?
The burdens of lifs bad wrinkled his
eieat an extent Is one peculiar to the
t'nited States And while a certain
rfliantity of these bulbs are pent to Eu-
rope from Bermuda, It is but a mini-
mum by comparison with the American
market It 1b about ten ears now j
Blr.ce the American market for the Ber-
upon man's sorrows ind nun's Injus- | muda Piaster Illy has been th* largest
tlrn. in the world. "All of our Easter lllle?.
howevet do not come from Bermuda.
\ vrrv beautiful variety rorues from
Holland and .l^pan About ten per rent
of the lilier cultivated heir romee from
these two countries. The other ninety
per cent comes from Bermuda, and the
rcaeon is obvious The extra freight !
from Japan and Holland prevents the ,
products of these countries from com- 1
peting with thoee of Bermuda. Besides,
the Bermuda lily is more beautiful, and j
h easier to bring Into bloom at Easter
than either of the other t*o species
Forcing the Easter lily to#a bloom Jys
at, the desired season is the result of
much calculation on the part of the
grower*. The Easter lily is a ehort-
tl . lived plant as far as its bloom is con- j
Bnr' P'1 cerned, the blossoms or flowers lasting
only about two weeks It expends all
Its strength for the time being In that
one blossoming and for thit season dnes
not bud again.
But all this was long, long parsed
All this was far away in the old times
And now all the wide world for him
was this dark tower, ^ here the wind
sighed gently among the swinging bell
ropes.
"Let God Judge you! God will Judge
you' ' whispered the old man. thinking
of hi? enemy. Silent tears ran down
his cheeks
"Michelch! Ah Michelch! What I?
the matter with you? Are you asleep? '
Th° voice came from the churchyard
n ttfaOUt
"Good God!" cried the old man, re-
membering tho further duty that
sraited him. "Did i. realty fall
asleep?"
mm
V,
them .with ikillful band
Far below the people warmed from
'be church, an ant • -warm from th^ ant-
hill. Golden standards reared them
selves In Ihe air of the unborn Easter
morning. Forming ih a cross, the pro-
cession began lo move around the
church, amid Joyful crier* of "t'hrist
has risen from Ihe dead!"
The words went to the old bellrlng-
er's hear', and glancing out be was
exalted in pplrit. It seemed to him that
the waxen candles that the people bore
blazed with suddenly Increased bril
liance in the gray darkness that the
throng moved more and more swiftly,
that the standards waved the more Joy
nusly, and that the awakening wind
lifted up Ihe Joyful chorus from below
and turned It to the bell's brazen peals'
with a sweetness superhuman.
Never did Mleheich ring Ihe bells
with such Joy and spirit
It seemed a If hi old heart had been
HAD FALLEN HELPLESSLY,
welded into the dead copper of those
bellR. which laughed ami sang and wept
at the entrancing melody that rone .-
the stars above. And the Mara seemed
to fairly blaze with joy of it ea the
music poured upward into heaven and •
fell backward to caress 'he earth.
A'lnt a hymn of Jov it was those bell <
pealed forth I he great bias deafened
the fky v. I h the grand brazen cry of
"Christ' has risen." And the tenors,
struck lo 'heir hearts, shouted sonor-
ously. 't'hrist has risen''' while the
clanging sopranos, as though fearing
their |r -er voice- nhnuld be |o> t to
grand chorus, hurriedly, like gleeful
children trying to outstrip each o h*r.
•creamed a thousand tinips, Christ h
risen!'
And that ead old heart forgot Its
cares. Its sorrows, and Its insults.
The pay belliingcr h^ard only the (
After h Year.
fB' S. Cornish Watkins.)
The slender lilier nod their head?
On either side the garden-way
And all along th flow-pr beds
Tall foxgloves stand In fair array .
Th« throstle, in the pear 'rep near.
Still carols, r■ when first we came
The same old song he sang last year
And we we ar« no more the t;ame
.How strong the lilies smeli! How neat
The ordered rose-beds, row on row'
It's still tbe scene that seemed so ?wect
A year ago a year ago
We noticed bow that apple bough
'toon out o green aguinst the skt*.
It Just ae fair as ever now
But we are altered, you and I ,
Ihe da.\r. have come between us two
And mo\ed us evermore apart,
We cannot ar> we used to do.
Tell lo each other all our h^art.
Onlv a year since i pt tvp mot
But In that year what things har«
been!
We walk, we talk together, vet
We cannot bridge the gulf between.
All looks unchanged a\e we alone.
We've drifted Into other ways
'lime turns the page, the past is gone
And naught restores the vanished
day h.
The flying hours new scenes reveal,
W© never fancied, you an«l f. j —
Tho. could come when we should feci
No longer sad lo say good-by.
"Big as (X Bam Door/
For 5 cents you get almost as
much "Rattle Ax" as you do of
other high grade goods for 10 cents.
Befor? the days of "Battle Ax"
consumers p?id 10 cents for s.ime
quality. Now, "Battle Ax"—•
Highest Grade, 5 cents. That's
true economy.
It's Pure
Walter Baker Co/s
Cocoa is Pure—it's all
Cocoa— no tilling
chemicals.
no
WALTER BAt-TP ft CO . ltd , norrheiKr,
An Imprudent lint hashing Wnmim
Young women who take hookn at th«
circulating library are Imprudent to
use iheir pages hs blotters. The> are
doing wrong also, for it In againpt the
rule. A cop; of "Lord Ormond a nil
His Amlntn which has been in use In a
Philadelphia library, held In front of a
mirror rexealed the Inscription. I
send \ou my heart with a kiss '" All
women finish their letters wilh tha*
phra-e, which cannot therefore betray
*inybodv but, In this case, the signature
was there
Emiianuel church, Lambeth, Eng-
land. has Just *et up an alabaster and
green marble reredos.cai vsd by a work-
mgman In the congregation In menory
of bl wife.
Primary* * --roud*rf er Tertiary H!oo«i
|'"Uoii permit.1-ullf cured lu IS «« **
iIhih v ••• !•. ate<1 ai home for the sama
uuaraul). if you prefer e
A ■DCTfllAI <f\# hotel biUfl
m 3rRt'l# v,l * ' -.v M\ nv la.•.•''! nterrnrVt
loib*! ■ B'f a aBif I V 4<he n<1 pat"«.
'I m on* I'aii ties ' ■ l'J> f P " v IX t i i Ho re Tliroaf«
Pimple*, * « m c « <|ore«< >..• , II • i of ihe hedv. Ilalr ne
F.j el ro« - IhIIIh mm !I,«M>I> I'OIMIN •? cinrnnte* to
cure w • • •• ot .rlii it MV TmP ruaea and -h«lle«§
Ihe world t • n «u* * <• ■ iw 01 S riFL : u ro rii>
h%« Mttitc- hnllled Ihe '1:111 >l ' • « ••«. •■iiiluent pit> «lcUiil>*. SAOO^OOO capital
hehtrcl "Mr 'in<"" I ' I 9 proof*
,. .,• «! ,,ri ippiiraiion
Genu REMEDY CO.
:iobaccohuit.
Addre*^ COOK HI' lll\ * O..
mi Hatonlr Temple, Oil« ItiO. ILL
will cure the ^
any form.
In t to I'• da>a. or money r*
luuded. * IN< O-fAPri la the only
eomWnat'on of p> con i irnc* > true antidote for the poi*on retained ts
iht - . >m from t:i ' l'OB\i * o. it u'h than beforetshtofi.
, free t'l^ro-CAPCl «ea*vandpleaaaaltsisks>
It allow* the |KI- '.-at to u.o •• • I'ohuei-o i x -.vlS. . Mti-li-r r.. •• -• The Mfra*l«|M
and " hniik. i lii^ " - Thouwindi throughout thla bro«4
laud ib - Ot thr.v he r-i « l%t« -t %Pt I. i yon am« He or < liewToba*ol
Dr -'mi flnd It difficult or |mpo**|hle t« *lop < |M O-t tPt I elgar and pipe
anioklutt. .'lira Iiik 'I auuflr taking* 1 -t'-olhede-ull* « lKi relte habit. Mediolna
la lablet form. - >it? rvl in the pi o -l DOTTLE I llll.^< I'HIt K-, S2.00
Adirew ar.AKI UV X CO., ul llilt'Htfo, 111., or iloilou, !
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Whorton, Lon. Noble County Sentinel. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 2, 1896, newspaper, April 2, 1896; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc162060/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.