Noble County Sentinel. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 26, 1899 Page: 2 of 8
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NOBLE COUNTY SEMINAL
Lot of ice has been put up in Okla-
homa this year.
The wheat prospe :t is quite flatter-
in#.
Many Oklahomans say this is the
coldest winter in the territory's his-
. —" tory.
OKLAHOMA ANI INDIAN TEURIToM Many old-time settlers in Oklahoma
TERRY,
OKLAHOMA.
Rosen baum is in the territorial reg-
iment in Georgia.
Many of the children in the country
schools in Oklahoma, along with their
teachers, are being vaccinate!.
The Chickasha graded school is
meeting with su-ccess from its begin-
ning. There are nearly 200 pupils en-
rolled.
Unless more interest is taken in the
ftatehood convention in the counties,
tliat convention in liable to come up
short on delegates and heavy on prox-
ies.
Ardmore is the projective point with
predict an early opening of spring this petitioning the legislature to pass rau-
year. tual insurance laws.
Oklahoma stock never looked better. A sunset at Oklahoma City the other
Cattlemen feel much encouraged over evening presented the wonderful sight
their prospects. of a heavy rain falling from a blood-
Frank (hiult will set out several re<* sky*
thousand elm trees in his addition in The enrollment of the agricultural
Oklahoma City. . college at Stillwater now reaches 200.
/-i mi .«« . . , ... . . .. Twenty-five new pupils have come in
Children will not be admitted to the wuie
, i , • r„ , , sincc the holidays.
public schools in Jecumseh unless they i J
have been vaccinated.
The territorial legislature has mem- CAMPFIBE SKETCHES.
oralized congress for free homes. j
A hail storm visited Oklahoma coun-
ty the other day.
An Oklahoma man has patented a
gasoline light which gives C5-candle
power.
Several farmers in Grant county are
SHORT STORIES FOR
THE VETERANS.
Old Ago Petitions In New Zealand—Hod*
eat .Men Who Lead (iood Lives Get 95
a Week After They Are 05 Years of
Age.
There was a shortage of coal in
Okarche last week and the first relief
came in the shape of a car load from
Illinois. The way of the railroads i9
marvelous.
Owing to plenty of rain during the
past few months, stock water has been
no objcct in Oklahoma this winter.
Stock never looked better at this
the New Orleans, llonhatn and Denison season of the year,'and stock men say
railroad, and just as sure as Denison there will be no shortage of feed this such a large crop of cotton next sea
gets the road the cry will be, on to year son, but to give their attention tc
Ardmore.
The Fallen Leaves.
(An Old Favorite.)
We stand among the fallen leaves,
Young children at our play,
And laugh lo nee the yellow things
Go rustling on their way;
Right meirlly we hunt them dewn,
The autumn winds and we,
Nor pauzc to gaze where snow-drifts lie,
( Or sunbeams gild the tree;
I With dancing feet we leap along
Where wlther'd boughs are strewn,
Nor past nor future checks our song—
The present Is our own.
Some of the Oklahoma papers are
advising the farmers not to put out
We star.d among the fallen leaves
In youth's enchanted spring-
When hope (who wearies at the last)
First spreads her eagle wing.
We tread with steps of conscious
strength
Beneath the leafless trees,
And the color kindles In our cheek
t* • . , a i , , i i i t , : As blows the winter breeze;
It is a beautiful sight to look down something more profitable and less while, gazing towards the cold gray sky,
Councillor Thacker, of Greer county thc Cottonwood Valley southwest of trouble.
has a mileage which is the wonder and Guthrie and see the thousands of stock A territorial charter has been grant-
envy of all of the other legislators. He ted cattle. j ed to the Jones Falls Milling company
i:ets four hundred miles a trip to Guth- The farmers are putting most of at Keokuk Falls. The company has a
i ie and back
The railroads have put all the Okla-
homa editors off this year with six-
month passes, and the editors are talk-
ing of employing a detective to dis-
cover the cause.
The county assessors of Oklahoma
were in session at the auditor's office
January Kith to fix up a schedule of
values of personal property and lands
in the territory.
The wheat all over the two territor-
ies is looking tine. A number of rains
und snows have fallen during the win-
ter montnsand the ground still con-
tains plenty of moisture
The Choctaw, Oklahoma Sc Gulf
railroad company has awarded con-
tracts for the construction of one hun-
dred and sixty-four miles of railroad
through one of the best agricultural
sections of the state of Arkansas. It
is expected to have it finished by Oct
1, 1809.
This is one of the best grape coun-
tries under the sun. No one can plant
grapes and tend them even carelessly
without almost immediate and profita-
ble returns. Plant a few vines this
coming spring and see how easy it is to
The Tryon Mercury advises people
to take some kind of a paper—saying
that even a paper of pins will give you
points.
will be established in Oklahoma next !
summer. Farmers realize that there
is money in this industry.
Clouded with snow and rain,
We wish the old year all past by.
And the young spring come again.
We stand among the fallen leaves
In manhood's haughty prime-
When first our pausing; hearts begin
To love "the olden lime;"
And, as we gaze, we ?igh to think
How many a year hath pass'd
Since neath those eola and faded trees
Our footsteps wander'd last;
And eld companions—now perchance
; Estranged, forgot, or dead—
| Come round us, as those autumn leaves
| Are crush'd beneath our tread.
I We stand among the fallen leaves
1 In our own autumn day—
And, tottering on with feeble steps,
Pursue our cheerless way.
We look not back—too long ago
Hath all we loved been lost;
Nor forward—for we may not live
To see our new hope cross'd;
But on we go—the sun's faint beam
A feeble warmth imparts—
Childhood without its joy returns—
The present fills our hearts!
—Mrs. Nortlfc.
Ilugle Stops n Stampede.
A stampede of 800 cavalry horses
through the streets of San An-
tonio the other day caused a panic,
and sent the blood of the frontiersmen
jumping through their veins as it has
not jumped since the days when Texas
was a republic. The mounts of the
First Texas cavalry broke away from
a corral at Fort Sam Houston, on Gov-
ernment hill, about three miles from
the Alamo. Some of the horses had
been in service for years, but the ma-
jority of them were "cow ponies" that
had never been drilled. Across the
prairie ground they dashed, following
a dun mare with flowing mane. Two
cavalrymen attempted to round up the
herd. On went the flying steeds across
the parade and into the drill ground
tor company of llutrhinson, Kansas. | When will the Indian question be they galloped, when suddenly there
their fat hoffs on the market now. 1 capital stock of S3,000. C. O. Kellogg
They always bring the highest mar- is its president and Harry C. Jonas its
ket, price. secretary.
Merchants in the Chickasaw nation
are required to pay one per cent of the
value of their stock each year to the
Chickasaw government. Lawyers pay
$16.50 per annum, regardless of their
It is said that many new creameries camjng capacity.
The Oklahoma papers have good
reason for keeping up an everlasting
snort against unsanitary conditions
Representative Wood, of Garfield in their towns. Oklahoma is pretty
county, is preparing plans and speciti- well south and cleanliness is more nec-
cations for introducing a bill provid- essary than it is in northern states,
ing for imperialism by international j Everything indicates a decided im-
agreement. provement in Oklahoma during the
It is now against the law In Okiaho- past year. Hundreds of neat cottages
ma to steal improvements from real take the place of shacks in the towns
estate. The first man to pull up a well while new and substantial dwellings
and walk away with it will get in 'lot the homesteads throughout the
trouble. ! territories.
The big 100-ton oil mill at Oklahoma : lmlinn A«ent P°"ock of the Osage
City is now in operation and the town In<Uans is ^coming a little too dra-
lias put on a few more pounds of pride mutlc- and therc is evidently trouble
and moves faster, yet quite naturally over in that <=< ">try. He Pourei1 a
and with the safest of ease. whole Iot of "hisky and beer out in
the street the other day and made a
With the opening of spring such great sUow of
a rush will be made to Oklahoma as T, . .. . . . . . ,
, . , farmers report that wheat is look-
was never before witnessed. Many . ,, . . . ,. .. .
raise enough for your own consump- farmer8 from less productive state ' belt that sur-
t'on« | will want to buy or lease farms.
And now the appellate court will be
rounds Oakland is, beyond a doubt,
the finest grain section in the Indian
...... , , i January 17th W. M. Jenkins, secre- territory. Some one is overlooking the
asked to liberate the prisoners who arc. , .. 4 ,
, ; tary of the territory, granted a char- opportunity of a lifetime in neglecting
confined in the Cherokee national pris- . , ., ,, , „ , ..... .... . ,
...... , # , . ter *° t"1' 1 on" Creek Mill and hlova- to build a mill there.
on at ianlc<iuuh. Some of the pris-
oners will starve to death if they are
the shooting that seemed to us neces- !
sary, and my own notion was that any ;
of us who got out whole would be ;
mighty lucky. The Spanish aim may-
be bad, but there were many of us
who wished it worse. !
Bullets were dropping all around
and so were men, and I had spotted
one Spaniard who seemed to be re-
sponsible for a lot of it. Well, I was
just getting a good bead on him when
it happened.
There was a sudden shock that
didn't seem to strike any place in par- j
ticular on my head, but all over .
My teeth ground together and my
eyes tried to get out of their sockets
and escape, and no wonder, for my
head was full of flames. Then every-
thing went black, and I felt myself
falling.
"That's the end of me," I thought to
myself before I lapsed into total
blankness; and, as I remember it, I
didn't care a snap.
After that I rolled down the hill.
It might have been any length of time
for all I knew, when consciousness be-
gan to return. I wondered what world
I was in, and reckoned that I ought
to have a pair of wings of one kind or
another on my shoulders. It was some-
thing of a surprise to me to find they
were not there, but I had felt that
bullet go through my head, and I
couldn't figure what right I had to bo
alive.
As scon as I found I could move I
felt around for the bullet hole, but
couldn't find it. While I was search-
ing and getting pretty mad about it
not being able to find an escaped col-
lar button is nothing to not being able
to find a mortal wound in your head—
a couple of fellows came along, picked
me up, and poured some water over
me.
"I.ook out," I said; "it'll get into my
brain," and I explained about the
wound.
They explored, and they couldn't ;
find any hole, either, and that made J
me madder than ever, for a bullet
that go.es clean through a man with- ;
out leaving any opening to show for
it is robbing him of the glory of dy- j
ing for his country.
All the time my head was feeling i
like the inside of a mince pie, but I !
finally crawled back to the firing line,
and there they told me what had hap-
pened.
The chap on my left, in rising to
fire, got a Mauser bullet through his
heart, and in falling swung his gun
with great force over in my direction.
The butt caught me just behind the
ear and knocked me completely out. I
have a lump there now like the end of
a squash.
But it's a' great thing to have had
the experience of being shot dead
without compelling your family to go
into mourning.
thrown out on the cold charities of the
world, none of them, it is likely, ever
worked a day at honest labor in their
lives, and if they are given their fr
question seldom asketl
j The capital is 830,000, and the busi- settled
ness, general milling and grain. j nowadays, every one being fully con-
! Thousands of bushels of Oklahoma vineed that the day is right at hand.
: orn are now being hauled to market. T1,e <lay is a Rood many moons off yet.
.loin it will only be a question of time The quality is good and brings the top " will take tho Dawes commission an-
until they arc killed or kill somebody, | price. The farmers seem well pleased other year to get ready to do the busi-
nr are rounded up by deputy United with their corn crop and this spring ness, and another year for the Indians
States marshals. many of them expect to increase the an<l congress to approve, and two or
acreage. three years to conclude. Plant your
faters where you did last year, says a
prominent Indian territory paper.
The report of United States Marshal
Bennett of the northern district, for
the year ending January 1, shows thnt
he has handled 1,101 prisoners during
llie year 1898. Of this number, l'J7
The county commissioners of Noble
county have adopted a resolution that
hereafter no warrants shall be bar Persons from Bochito, I. T., relate a
gained for or sold within the sacred clever capture of thieves which occur,
were taken to the penitentiary at Fort i walls of the court house. Some of the ret* 51 'ew days ago in the eastern part
Leavenworth, Kans., 73 to the peni- b°ys who have been dealing in county °' the Choctaw nation. .Saddles and
tentiary at Columbus, Ohio, 38 to the scrip seem to think this is a direct \ harness had been stolen and a store
penitentiary at Jefferson City, M
to the reform school at lloonevillc,
Mo.. 28 to the United SJtatcs jail at
Fort Smith, Ark., 2 were hanged, 103
*crved their sentences in the Muskogee
jail, and 4 died in jail.
I
1
blow at personal liberty.
Referring to the sum of 83,481.48
paid the attorney general as commis-
sions, Scerctnrv l'ilson of the Sehool
land board says that this sum included
"all costs and expenses for postage,
Paul Truitt, in Newkirk township, travel, stationary, printing, clerk hire
Kay county, has killed 9'JOO worth of j and employment of local attorneys,'1
his own horses affected with the glan- and on the same page of his report
ders. lie may not get any return for
the animals, but under the circum-
stances he ought to be remunerated by
the territory for his loss, lie notified
sheriff Fierce of the disease, and the
says: "No suits have been instituted
or costs incurred during the past
eighteen months."
With the opening of spring many of
. . the farmers expect to put out orch-
fineriti wrote Inspector Matthews, but I „, . ... . ... . .
1 aids in the Strip. Of course some of
through some irregularity the animals 1 4. «,«. n i * i
° J . | them have out small orchards but they
mean to increase. Oklahoma farmers,
were not inspected, and condemned as i
the law provides. Mr. Truitt did the
who put out orchards eight and nine ground, ho responded thnt he
the disease to his neighbors stock, and ! ar0 now «"«J , pretty sure that he could keep step on
^ va nan e returns for their tronbh>. ntu i ..i \i .«v.^...v. . i i
deserving of credit and financial aid
from the territory.
I irurftlom !{ (<>* Sunt a l> llout*.
valuable returns for their trouble, and
have demonstrated to their neighbors
in the Strip that this is a good fruit-
producing country.
On Jan. 17 and Feb. 7 and 21, March |
7 and 21, the Santa Fe will sell rouud j
trip tickets at the very cheap rate of
one one fare plus 00 to all points in
Arkansas, Arizona, Indian Territory, j
New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas* j
These tickets will bear going limit, |
with stopover privileges of fifteen
days, final return limit 21 days from
date of sale. He fore purchasing tick-
ets, you will do well to call on some
representative of the road that reaches
all points of importance '.'The Great
Santa Fe.''
W. J. BLACK, O. P. A.,
Topeka, Kans.
The county commissioners of Cana - A black bear was killed in the Wieh-
rtian county have divided the county ita mountains by some of the men in
printing between the two local demo- the employ of (laniel Sparks ranch
came from the direction of the offi-
cers' houses a bugle call. Chargers
which had often responded to this call
insensibly slackened their speed. Again
rang out a call.
The dun mare and one-third of the
stampeded horses continued their
flight, while the other two-thirds
turned squarely at right angles. The
bugler repeated "columns right," and
the two-thirds again turned at right
angles, and galloped back in the direc-
tion from which they came. Once
more the bugle rang out. The plung-
ing mass took form and steadied its
gait. Again the bugle sounded. The
battalion broke the gallop, went into
a trot, and wheeled into the parade
ground. The bugler sounded "Halt,"
and that part of the stampede was
over.
But the dun pony and her followers
from the ranges continued their mad
flight through San Antonio. Every-
thing movable in the way of the
horses was overturned and demol-
ished. Pedestrians fled in every direc-
tion, while many carriage horses
joined the horses of the plains. "Over
the bridge flew the wild steeds. One
horse dashed its head against a tele-
! graph pole, and the dun mare lost a
follower. Another's fore legs went
I through a basement hole in the side-
1 walk and the unfortunate horse was
quickly trampled to death. A saloon
was reached, and one of the cow
ponies was forced through its doors
i by the pushing horses as they contin-
i ued. A railroad train came rushing
Mct.intys short legs ai0ng. With a bound the dun mare
much trouble on the cleared the track in front of the loco-
, robbed of a lot of provisions. The
thieves traveled in a large hack and
there were three men and three wom-
en, who purported to be the wives of
the men. They traveled in a hack,
I from which a chain dragged on the
ground. Officers traced them by the
trail of the chain for many miles and
finally captured them.
Col. Theodore Roosevelt has this to
say of McGlnty, the Payne county boy,
who was with his company in Cuba:
| "Then, therc was little McGinty, the
bronco buster, from Oklahoma, who
never walked a hundred yards if by
any possibility he could ride. When
Mc( inty was reproved for his absolute
inability to keep step on the drill
Cheap Firumlonnvlrt Sunta Fe Itoute.
Annual convention Missouri and
Kansas association of Lumber Dealers
held at Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 24-28,
one lowest standard first-class fare for
tho round trip. Tickets on sale Jan.
21, and 23, good to return until and
including Jan. 28, 1800. Oklahoma
Live Stock Association meeting held at ^ ^
Woodward, (). T., Feb. 14 15, one fare
for the round trip. Ticksts on sale
Feb. 12 and 13, good to return seven
days from date of sale.
W. J. BLACK, 0. P. A.,
Topeka, Kans.
horseback.
caused him
marches, but we had no better
braver man on the fight."
The order for the mustering out of
the first territorial regiment reported
from Washington last week will be
joyful news to the Oklahoma privates.
One battalion of the regiment is com-
posed of four Oklahoma companies,
with a major, "John F. Stone, of Guth-
rie, and one company from the Indian
Territory. The privates were weary
my life before they left Fort Reno
months ago, and wanted to return to
their families and occupations. Most
of the ofiloers, some of whom are get-
ting larger salaries than they received
as civilians, are anxious to remain in
the service.
Agent Walker is making some con-
verts, at least there are some Indian
territory editors who arc declaring
motive, but several of her companions
were hurled to death in an endeavor to
follow.
The horses were divided only to
come togeth r again when the train
dashed by, and resumed their flight
toward the prairies. Out into the mes-
quite and sagebrush the dun mare led
them, and soon nothing was seen but
a cloud of dust.
The trail of the stampede was as
plain as the path of a cyclone. No
lives were lost, but property damage
was very heavy. Squads of cavalry-
men started out and succeeded in rop-
ing in all but thirty of the cow ponies.
— Boston Transcript.
cratic papers. inst week. Since that time the boys themselves in favor of siugle statehood
A factory employing ten men is bet- been living mighty high on the with Oklahoma.
ter for a town than the penitentiary, ranch. The county commissioners of Woods
asylum, or any of the public Tho Oklahoma farmers hare taken a 0(mlUy havt. ica„Ht the Hiekel block at
colleges | preut deal more Interest in poultry Aivn for u COurt house for 189(1 and
Insane
Institutions, outside of the
Kver.v dollar's worth of provisions or ; (111 1'ill the past few months than usual
other supplies for public Institutions which fact many of the territorial pa-
ure bought on bids, and iuay come pers note with pride. There is good
from competing towns, in fact that is money in this enterprise for tho farm-
iiNiiail v-the t use, says a prominent Ok- ers if they will take hold and (fire it
lahoma paper. j the proper attention.
hereafter tho officers will be under one
roof, making it more convenient for
those having business with the county,
but it is not quite so safe from tire,
lip Thought III. Km Killed.
How it feels to be shot dead is the
subject of some curious observations
on the part of a trooper in Col. Roose-
velt's regiment, which was intended to
be made up of rough riders, but from
force of circumstance, was trana-
! formed, while in Cuba, into an organt-
I nation of rough walkers. This partic-
i ular trooper was In the thick of the
{ lighting, and the New York Sun quotes
J his story.
It was the second day at San Juan,
anil my troop was stretched out at full
length on Its very much attenuated
That pimple
On Your Face Is There to Warn
You of Impure Blood.
Painful consequences may follow a neglect
ot this warning. Take Hood's Sarsaparilla
and It will purify your blood, cure all
humors and eruptions, anil make you (eel
better in every way. It will warm, nour-
ish, strengthen and Invigorate your whole
body and prevent serious illness.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is America's Greatest Medicine. Price |i.
Hood's Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents.
1,000 NEWSPAPERS
Are now using our
lr>ernational Typa-High Plates
Sawed to
LABOR-SAVING LENGTHS.
They will save timo in your compo.ine
room as they can be handled even quiet;*, r
than type. , , . .
No extra charge is made for sawing plates
to short lengths.
Send a trial order to this office and be
convinced.
WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION,
WICHITA, KANSAS.
-
% for 14 cents i
We wiah to jrainthia year 200,i ■ J
5T n w cuiitomcrri, a.ul llenuu olii r 5
1 Pkff. 13 Dfiy Kttlis!:, ) . 9
1 n.jr. l.ui.y Kipe C'tttibnge, lie m
1 " Earliest lied B« it, It cZ
1 " !.')□£LitrhtnVCacamber].-
lo
Q
i'iff Tomato, —
1 " Early Diisnrr Onicn, liv •
3 " Brilliant i? lower Scidi,^ i Q>
Worth $1.00, for 14ccola« $l~i'i 0
AborelOpkga. worth $L00, w« * 1 •
_ ji.so I
l Hbi. Catalog alone 5o. No. * n S
~ JOHN i. SAf.ZKIl 8FK1) CO., LA tROSSP., WIS. Q
D? MARTcl'S
'French
Relief at Last
'French ,
Female
° Pills
wuy8 reliable and without
an equal. Ask Urugui'-t for
Dr. Manet's French Female
Pills lu metal box with
French Flag on top tn Blue,
[White and Red. Insist on having the genuine.
! 'Relief for Women." mailed fhf.k. tn plain sealed
l letter with testhnonlalsiltn'l particulars. Address,
FRENCH DRUG CO.. 381 and 383 Pearl St., N.Y.
_ lanliington, D.C,
\&Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
I I.atoFrlneloal Examiner U S. Pension Bureau.
| 3 via in civil war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty *iuce.
I
quick relief and curi
ease-*. Semi for book of testimonials and 10 flara'
treatment Fret*. Dr.li.H.UHKKX'a bo.ns.
]t depends upon what your living ex-
penses are whether life is worth living
or not.
Old A|;e reiiHloiiM.
The laboratory of social and polit-
ical experiments, New Zealand, has
this week definitely adopted a scheme
of old-age pensions. Already one mem-
ber of the Imperial Parliament has
signified his intention of going to the
antipodes to study the operation of the
act. Although, ot course, the condi-
tions which obtain in a thinly popu-
lated, sixty-year-old colony must be
very different from those which exist
in an old and crowded country like
Great Britain, the experiment will be
watched with immense interest. In
future the New Zealand working man
of 65 years of age, who has lived a life
of honest toil, will be assured an in-
come of £1 a week. The New Zealand
government, accepting labor as the ba-
sis of national prosperity, does not
see why the worker should not be
quite as fully entitled to some stat?
provision against poverty In old age
as a civil servant or other employe.
Last week Sir Michael Hicks-Beach
ridiculed the idea that we should be
called upon to provide old-age pen-
sions for the dissolute and idle. Who
in Ills senses ever suggested that we
should. New Zealand certainly will
not do so, and if the trial she is about
to make Is successful some stronger
arguments than those relied on by the
Chancellor of the Exchequer will be
needed to prevent Great Britain from
following in the fpotsteps of the col-
ony.—London Mail.
Head the Advertisements.
You will enjoy this publication much
better if you will get in the habit of
reading the advertisements; they will
afford a most interesting study and
some excellent bargains. Our adver-
tisers are reliable, and send what they
advertise.
Is it all right to stagger home from
a stag party?
When a man is going to ask you for
something, the first thing he does is tc
shake your hand.
Health for Ten Cents.
Cascnrets make bowels and kidneys act
naturally, destroy microbes, cure headache,
billiousness and constipation. All dru^1^-
When a woman is led to believe that
a man lias given her up she is apt to
tell about his crimes.
Richard's Magic Catarrh Expellant
Co., Omaha, Neb. Write for particu-
lars.
The mission of tome teachers is tc
make fools of fairly sensible people.
The mission of a teacher should be to
make sensible people out of fools.
Charlemagne's Love of Learning.
More than to any other monarch we
owe to Charlemagne (768-814) the fact
that the precious literary Inheritance
of Greece and Rome was not lost.
Himself imperfectly educated, he val-
ued education in others and furthered
it with all his might. The impulse he
gave to classical studies resulted In
some of the best manuscripts; in his
reign, too, the clear "minuscule" of
the Irish scribes was substituted for
the uncouth Langobardic characters.
He also paid special attention to the
careful editing of the prayer books.
His establishment of an academy in
his palace is well known; what is not
so well known is the fact that this fol-
lowed by schools under his patronage
at Wurzburg, Fulda, Utrecht, Tours,
and elsewhere. He also began to com-
pose a grammar of his native speech.
'mitat
as the building is connected, or uearly stomach, shooting over the top of the
,si). with buildings on both sidc . 1 h"'- Spanish were bIbo doing all
Preventing CollUlon. at sea.
The thermopile is an instrument
which instantly detects any emanation
or absorption of ether waves or of
radiant heat. The approach of any
body which is of different temperature
from tbe air affects It. It Is proposed
to try it for use at sea to indicate
tho approach of a vessel. A ship Is a
source of ether waves and would af-
fect the modern almost Inconceivably
delicate thermopile at some distance.
It Is also hoped that wireless teleg-
raphy may prove available for com
muniratlon between ships so as to
avoid or lessen the danger of collision
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to tho California Fig Syrup
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
•enuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the California Fig Syrup Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par-
ties. The high standing of the Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi-
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given to millions of families, makes
the name of the Coinpauy a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far iu advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken-
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. I n order to get ita beneficial
effects, please remember the nume of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SVRtTP CO.
irttAXCHC*, Cjl.
mt'isvm.E. kt. hi w vorb. . f.
f
. i;yiitTwi!rm[¥TAiLi:T
i'U-ll'H i
l dm
in time. Bold by druvgitit
W^N. U. -WICHITA—NO. 4 1899.
Vlien Answering Advertisements Kindly
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Whorton, Lon. Noble County Sentinel. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 26, 1899, newspaper, January 26, 1899; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc162290/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.