Claremore Progress. (Claremore, Indian Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 22, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 6, 1895 Page: 1 of 4
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Claremore Progress
Vol. III.
Claremore. Ind.Ter.. Saturday, July 6.1895
THB QUCtN.
•MB UW tVENVTHINO.
MS. MUM A RIMER.
HowUo<1 Umnm, the Wslsh bi«b-
th" — ■ | i..,,..,,
"hart • jfllow bawd of night-
UrJ«MUisod sis*" Ha lasaid to ha*.
Metn-r U fowina aad
TkrtlUa# Ifca hula ud
takiuc a nrute la hecsslf. and It ia not
bccaoaa I loved her lite a father, bat.
Davis Hill & Co.
NONA.
-l~- mij ran, ana waa UM TrailM*
aad pnrttin* ymu* girl la Um pariah.
Wa lived ao happily together. We wen
-1"1- *"> b« ears, bat wa 11 red, and
"I doat aaa whj a
• — her giortm la her rasa," ha
I aa the carriage rolled away,
rife bated iajnred. "I tboald
.wxssnoh art/tsml
*V. b* I know bow yoa
kept waitiu? "
' h! I rinald think yoa'd have
tiuwifoi an use tauM. i
bad my ponaiou aud my a*dal. and
then wa aaed to co together f. hont for
lobsters in I ho rocks. The trade U a
paying one, and there iaottlyouadauger,
that of being overtaken by the tida
Ah, nnfortauately that waa how aha
mat her death, poor little ouol
"Club day whan my rfammatiem con
flned ne to tlie hooaa aha went Miiiw
alooa It waa Jtwt «u< h a day aa today.
the sky clear, the wind high. When the
rock aoairhera jrathered together with
fall baskets. th. jr peroeired that Nona
failed to respond to their calls. There
waa no possible donb*. Uruat Ood. she
had bot'udi'luyrd and aorronnded by tha
risiii# tide I She had been drowned I
Ah. what a Slight I paaaed, maoslenr!
At my age, yea, a hard hearted man „
like me, I gobbed like a woman. And wear, but you
tha remeiubrnure ratne to me of the * '
Bom yean ago I paaaed aereral weeks
at a flatting village on the euust of Brit-
tany. Wlut a bole it waa I Out bow
• I A mtarrablo anchorage,
i at the most, a aingle atony
sterol, which 1 can ennpnm to nothing
hotter than a mountain lortMt'.Un top
of the hill a rhnirh, a veritable gotliio
toy, which atood in tho middle at a
cemetery from which a mngnineent
riew of the ocean waa obtained, Find,
log myaelf in the vein for work. I lin-
gered in thiaont of the way corner until
the rod of the month of September,
which by a rare chance In rainy Ruin-
tore, waa that year exceptionally mild
and clear.
Bot oua cannot alwaya compose verm
and write, and a walk waa my hygiene
and my diatrartion. My moat frequeut
promeuade wna along the beach, having
ao mj right the bleak and rockv cliffs
and on my left the uncovered stretches
of sand—an iuiAiciuw de«rt of aand loft
hare by the outgoing tide. Two or three
times I had exchanged civilitiea with
aome cnatom house officer going hia
ronnda, hia gun along over hia ahoolder.
* waa ao regular and peaceful a pronie-
nadcr that the aoa swallow* were no
longer afraid of me and hopped iu front
at me. leaving ti e pint of their atar
aha pod feet in the w«t aand. I walked
six or eight kilometera a dov and re-
tained home with my pocket* tilled with
thoae dainty ihella which are found by
borying tin itand deep down in tha
damp pebble*.
Thia ww my fnvorito eatnmifon.
However, nn the day* when a strong
breeae wn* blowing and the tido \v«*
very high 1 abandoned the seashore. and
climbing the village atreet 1 (trolled
along the Bandy moor, or elae I n>ttl«d
myaelf with a book on a bench in a cor-
ner of the cemetery. which waa sheltcr-
ed by the church tower from the wwt
end.
It waa a lovely apot, conducive to aad-
neaa and revery. The church tower
stood out against tha antumn sky, over
which dark clnuda were acarrving. .
Crows, whose uests were in the atoepla,
SS*?to S. dm | (* „.
In the evening more thun at any oth-
er time, the laat ray* of the setting Run
bathing tho sea as though with blood,
the ragged brnnche* of tlie skeleton of
— "M apple tree ailhnnetted against the
ao aky and the deep intent still-
«a of the wild homo of tlie dead flood
ed my aoul with melanrlioly.
It waa on sncli an evening a* I havo
Just described tliat, wniulering among
the tombs, many of which bore under
the sailor's uaiue thia mournful legend,
"Died at tea," I read <«• a pew croaa
the follow ing words, which astonished
and puxrlcd me: "Here repose* Nona
Vo Magnet, Died at sea Oct. Sfl, 1878.
at the nge of 10."
Died at neal A young girl I Women
hardly ever go ont in tho fishing tacit*,
How did thia happen?
"Well, monsieur," said a gruff voioe
behind me suddenly, "y<m are looking
as an octopoa and m 1
ton glove on each one."
in plenty at time, d
well enough to he an
alto would come late CTMt tob
Louis Bepeblio
'Hoemsto me she'a pretty late tat har-
tag a wedding of her own."
Mr«. Brownnnith giggled: "Oh. An-
gaatu*. won't it be too funny? I mean
to watch Ooorge Henry a face when be
prraniaea to endow her with aU his
worldly good*."
"At any rate, that will not be a mere
flgnre of speech as her promise to obey
wilL" '
"Vca, J mean to keep ray eye* Axed on
him all the time. A man doe* look t
foolish when he is being married. You
•ee, I know exactly what Laura is M
1 notice jnat how aim
tell me. I wouldn't
Mm Mary Mapes Dodg^
adit<«af It. Nieboli
John T. largent In
thef
.... rvuinunrauce came to me of the laolu and acU and tell me I «™ii. ..
poor cl.ild's belief tlfct to go to heaven ra^T r^hTng w^rld
±° « *™l t« conaecrated ^ioL. I!^ my U^t^
—^ t.ro IIW « «ai Huau
ww,, t^ «he «hore. and, without it
'Humph I Do aa yon did before you
it Von never complained of being
uuwu . wni 10 me snore, and
with the other*, searched for the body.
"And we fonnd poor Nona," con-
tinued tlie old sailor In a trembling
voice, "Wo found horon a rook covered
with seaweed, where, knowing that she
waa going t i die, the poor little one had
prepared hcrxelf for death. Yea, mon-
sieur, she had tied her skirt* below the
kueea with her fichu, through nodwty,
and with her old idea uppermost had
attached herxolf to the seaweed by her
hair, her beautiful black lialr, certain
that she would tha* be found and in-
terred in consecrated grouud. And I can
•ay, I, who know what bravery is, that
there ia pcrhapanot a man brave enough
to do likewise."
The old man wa* silent. Br the last
gleam of the twilight I saw two great
tear* rolling down his weather beaten
cheek*. Wo descended to the village sido
by side in silence. I was profoundly
touched by thia simple girl'a courage,
who, even in the agonies of death, hud
retained the modesty of her aex aud the
piety of her race, and before me in tlin
distant immensity, in tho solitude* at
tlin heaven* and the son, - —
the beaeoq light* and
it poor Nona'* tomb?"
I turn
I turned around and recognized nn old
sailor, with a wooden leg, whose good
grace* I had acquired by the aid of a
few glawes of brandy, which I had giv-
en him in the taproom nt tho inn.
"Y««," I replied. "But I thought
that yon fishermen never permitted
Vomen to go out with yon. I have *>veq
been told that they bring yon misfor-
" And that is the truth," responded
the good man. "Besides, Noua never
went into a beat Would you like to
know how the poor little one died?
Well, I will tell yon.
"First of all, I must tell yon that
Pierre, her father, was a topnian, like
myself, and an old comrade. At Bona,
get, when Admiral La Runciere raised
hi* golden helmet on the point of hi*
saber, and we flung ourselves, hatchet
in hand, on the embattled honses, we
marched elbow to elbow, Pierre and I,
and it waa ho who received me in his
arms when those enrsed Prussians put a
ball in my thigh. That same evening in
the ambulance at the fort Pierre held
my hand to give me courage while the
rargeoa amputated my limb, and h«
wa* thcro at my bedside when the ad-'
piiral brought bo my medaL Bnt those
raically Prussian* got the best of as,
pnd we were sent home. I, with mv
Wooden leg, was practieslly help Ins*
Bnt Pierre, who wa* uninjured, hired
on board a fishing smack. Very soon
afterward hia wife died from an inter-
mittent fever, leaving him the can of
little Nooa, who waa going on 10 years
Nfe.
Not even Dickens. 1 think, fonnd
room for a butcher amid bis Babylon of
trades. A hailiff he lias and eight sher-
iff's officers, half a dozen beadle* and
half o* macy more brokers. The slier-
iff's tifllcer is, of course, Q familiar
enough figure from tlie days of our lit-
erary drama.
An ingenious American has compiled
a list of Dickem ' cha'acter*. classified
by callings, and it rends like nothing so
lunch as n trade* directory. There are
architects, auctioneer*, bankers, burin,*,
boarding house keepers, blackMuiihs,
carpenter*, carriers, chandler*, chwn-
Uta, clerks (a perfect array of them),
coachmen, coal merchants, constntilm,
porn chandlers, custmners, detective*,
doctors, doinuKtio servants, dry sailers,
engineers, e lgin* drivers, farmers, fish-
ernieu, gam-keepers, grocer*, green gro-
cer*. haberdashers, hopgrower*. jailer*
and turnkeys, laborers, lamplighter*,
lawyers, law stationer*, locksmith*,
manufacturers, merchants, medical stu-
dents. money lenders, notarle*. hostlers,
pawnbroker, parish clerk*, plasterer*,
porters, po.lmasters, potboys, report-
til*. robemalers, saddlers, sailors, sex-
tons, shipwright*, stewards, stoker*,
stonemason*, *ugar bakers.tailor*, teach-
er*, tobaccmists, toymaker* and mer-
chant*. undertaker*, watermen, wnv-
ers, wharfingers, wlicelwrighta
The list might be made longer, but
that perhaps is long enough to makr
yon realize how amply provided with
trade* and tradesmen are the teeming
streets of Dickens'imagination.—Mac-
uiillan'a u *-
then.
I think. Sir. Brownnnith, that I am
better acquainted with my own eyej
thou you are. No; I can't see without
it You must ju*t leave mo at th«
church and go bark and get it11
Remonstrance waa in vain, and her
husband went back in high dudgeon
having received the mast minute in-
struct ion* a* to the whereabout* of tlio
missing article. When be got back to
the chnrrh, hi* wife greeted him with
IT- "Oh, Augustus, I wa* ao afraid
yew wouldn't be able to find it, anil
without it I might just as well have
been at home for all I could see! Now
watch me make Alico green with envy
Sho ia literally dying for one, you
know." ^
"Well, thank goodness, it'a all
over!" groaned Mr. Browmsmith on the
way home. "In consequence of our be-
ing so late we were so far back that I
oonldn't see a thing. "
"The idea! Why. I raw it all. If the
clergyman had been tlie dentist, George
Henry couldn't have been more fright,
ened, while, as for Laura, her veil waa
pinned on inch higher on the right side
than on the left. Bnt I couldn't have
•eon a tiling without my glow."
"ft) you saw it all, eh?"
"Of course I did. Augustn* Brown-
nnith. what on earth ia the matter? Are
yon rung into a fit?"
"Not at all. my dear, only, yi*u ma,
whilo I wa* hunting for your lorgnette!
knocked a pile of thing*'off tho burcan.
It v,-a* among them, and ls th of the
glasse* cracked right across, go I just
•lipped 'em both out, and you've Iwn
looking through a pair of empty rims all
afternoon, that's nlL "
And tlie carriage had gone five blocks
beforo Mrs. prowusiuith caught her
breath sufflciently to tell him what *he
really thought of him.—Chicago Timfe-
HcrahL
A Wmtfd Compiimr^t.
''I e*m« pretty pear being eompll-
mented t.slay," said Willie Wishingtoo.
"How waa that?" naked his friend.
"Mim Cayenne told me 1 waa a per-
fect magazine poem."
"Indeed?"
"Y-a-a-*. She eaid I didn't have an
idea in mo. Washington Star
"Why, Diunia. ye* has been a foightia
agin. Phwat a slitate yes is ta I"
"Ah. bnt ye« ought to gase upon the
rimnant* (4 the other feller. I'm a
Vanus roisin from the sea oomnarod wid
him I"—liifo,
ti
Tho two now \
way* and mean*.
"Itell you," said the first woman,
"ingenuity robs poverty of half its ter-
ror*, and it tokos our sex fur ingenuity. "
"Yes," said the second new woman
"if we only had asserted ourselves soon-
er, two-thirds of the invention* which
are now revolutionising the world would
havo been credited to women "
"I was not thinking so much at in-
tentions," replied the other, "but of
tlie way aome poor women have of mak-
ing nn appearance ia the world. Pnrex
ample, (bere'a Mrs, Lively. Yon know
her husband lost his po*ltioi last win-
tar. the way these silly men always are
doing. The Ann fonnd they could get •
woman to do the work better. I believe.
And since then the Lively* have been
having rather hard times.
"Well, Mrs. Lively'* nncle made her
a present of a bicycle, bnt sho had no
suit, and her husband con Id not afford tc
l«By her one. Yet would you believe it?
That woman appeared in the park laat
Sunday in tho most itriking bicycle cos-
tume of any there."
"You don't say I How did she man-
it?"
•Ub_
re brilliant gatherings at
men and women have Lew known la
tbta country. Bnt the "Radicals" wars
undeulsbly given to tearing everything
from the universe snd its pteator down to
the latest theory of the origin of species
to pieces. When Mrs. Dod,. took ie*vT
■he was escorted to her earriaas bv
Wendell Phillips. ,< whom *h, *
ed her glove, which bad been
ly slit up the back when tt wiu pa
"Yon sas," remarked Mm Dodge
moronsly, "the effect of too much
leal elub. Nothing, not even my g
can withstand it"
Mr. Uruaps—Unod morning! Do yon
take pictures by the instantaneous prac-
Photographer—Yes. sir.
Mr. Urnmpe—Well, this is Mrs.
Orumps, my wife, yon know. I want
her picture taken.
Photographer—Certainly. But are
yon particular about having it instant*-
■UM
IRS. LIH 4 WRITE,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS,
•met wannmitTiK.
RR. T. Ti. (TINER,
nACTiet LIMITED TI EYE,
EM, ROSE MITNMT.
p&SS.
GENERAL MERCHANDISE.
I Complete Stock 91 Dry Good*. Dress
ladies' and Genit' FurnWiingt.
of theVeiyi
D"5K?T it.de
W. «. BRYAR, R. D. S.
Permanent I v Located at Claremore.
• A Sptondld Lln« of Oall
Makes and Latest Styles at
OWVY I OIKTI MR YARD.
A Full
/
Office in
sat1sfACTtOK OfARANTESD.
IEIIS0I, HMIT AIESSET
LAWYERS.
' l«g~ rfASTt <iA£STt
sss
Fumitute and House '
Fumisiuna Gams.
"Why, she just tonlt a pair of mntton
leg sleeves from ono of tho dresses K)ie
used to wear before she bocame a new
woman and mndo them over into bloom-
ers."—Buffalo Ex pros*.
A Har* Cars,
Women are intolerant of tiieir own
weakness, however trifling or grave.
Men love women for tlie very faults and
foibles of tho sex. The Other eveniujr nn
immense crwd got jammed iu a theater
lobby, and mine women grew hysterical.
"Oh, I shall faint !"cxrl:iiincdastout
blon.l, looking pitronxly at her escort
Mi-n on all sid«s glanced at her ym
pathetically, nnd those neamitmadea
frmtic effort to givo the stout blmd
more room. Her e.-^oft looked down
into her foco tenderly.
"I am going t.i faint I" she cried, and
•ho got ready to fall gracefully into
arni.'<.
"Well, faint !" houted a robust lady
Mr. Qrnmpa-Of course. When yon
get things ready, tell ber to look pleas-
ant aud then map off the machine be-
fore the expression fades away. You'vs
•otter bs quicker'u lightning.—New
fork Weekly.
AtantalaM.
'I believe that absentmindednem is a
"•' of insanity," dwlared Mr. Boggs
as he walked down town with hia friend
Beggs. "The extraordinary freaks of
persons afflicted with it cannot be ac-
oounted for on any other maanoable hy-
pothesis. Now, there ia Fogg, who has
worn glasses for ten years and can't see
ten feet ahead of him, walked clear
■°wii to his offlre the other day before
be discovered that he had left hiaglMam
at home. That must be a tompcrarv
suspension of int« lligencc. "
Boggs started to bite off the end of a
cigar.
'By gum," 1m exclaimed, "I left my
A.H. NORWOOD,
LAWYER,
Claremore.
u M. Callaway,
The Lawyer.
Cd,!brattd a M-
ritrhtCT^.a,1JIiy#fr!fhand "'"J1™1 " P"™ •«
neht. Good, defcvered to your house free. Courteous
salesmen are always ready to give prompt attention,
trouble to show goods. Soliciting your inspection.
We Remain Yours,
DAVIS HILL Ik CO.
No
toru. not, a. smsm, a.
SOPER t SIISOI,
attofieys t Councellors-at-Law
Mssk<*«, L T.
Prsettee in all th.
"Naturally while the widower was at
•ea it was I, hia comrade. I, the old
bachelor, who cored for the little one.
She waa a good and pretty child, mou
rtw; conrngnoua and sweet tempeml.
We very oft-n went to the rocks st low
tide to gather turtles, shrimpa, prawn,
knd somet imos we wore fortuuate enough
{rimdli* loU,er' Ah* h01 w* w"f« good
VThia went on for about two yean,
wona had made her first communion,
prowi> and shot up like a thiptle iu tlio
gud. But one day tho Amelia, Us
Magia t a boat, wna overtaken in a storm
•nd wrsdmd. The skipper did not haul
to bit sail soon enough, and tha boat
•iruck ou that reef you can ae, oral
there—joat a little mora to tha star-
board. There were tour men in the crew
—the shipper, two sailors aad my poor
«srre. But Um sea only gave np three
of Us drowned mou aud retained my
"omrade. Nona became sn orphan. It
ps* without laying that I did my beat
to replace b«r fat tier. But the child,
even after tlai first sorrow pawed away.
Bid not aeeni to ooiuole herself. And do
yon know why, monsieur? Beoanae of
M idea all Iho women around here liars.
iPfey bolievo that a ou| must remain In
unto tha judgment day unless it re
posss iu consecrated ground. We men
ieeM v cSto vow
A Dt( rill 1st. a Modern 1st, all.,
M. E. Church, proprietor of tho Bod-
diugton tannery, relatca a rather re-
markable story, showing the wonderful
inntinct of hia dog Don. Ilaving occa-
•ion not Iona alnce to vialt Bangor, bs
left Don at the tannery. But the dog
soon became dissatisfied and returned to
hia home iu Cberryfleld, >0 miles dta-
Wben Mr. V-hurch re fumed to
Beddlngton, he called up his wife on
the telephone, and in the course of con-
versation Inquired for Don. On being
told that D, n was borne, he asked to be
si lowed to talk with bim. Don was so-
oordiugly held up to the telephone and
the receiver placed to biasar. As "Hol-
lo, Don I" catue from bia maatar, lbs
dog began to abow aign of •xcitameut,
Which increased aa the conversation
progressed. In a few momenta aftar be-
ing released he disappeared, and in
about two hours Mr. Church called
agulu ou the telephone and annonnoad
tbut Don had srrived at tho tannsry —
Augusts (Me I Now Agn
nu reetisga,
Trsvers— Di d you go down to mv tail-
er'a and tell him I would settle that lit-
tle matter?
Office Bot—Yes, sir.
Travers—Aud did ho sr*m convinced?
Office Poy—He did. Ho raid ho waf
eonvinc«l that yon wouldn't—New
York Herald.
• J supporo yem ore looking forward t«
the baaeball howiii with pleasure?" aaid
Hobbes to his friend, the baseball crank.
"I don't know," said the crank pa-
thetically. "You see, my voral chordf
in wretched condition."—Chicago
A
"Well, old man, this is the |ra$ time
I've seen you siuco your marriage. Al-
low me to congratulate you!"
"Thanks, my dear feUow, thanks!"
"Have you and your wife decided who
<a to lie the speaker of the house?')'
"\VuU uo. We usually occupy the
chair together."—Pittsburg Chronicle
Telegraph.
Brown—But why do yon stop so of-
ten? Can't you keep up with me?
Typewriter (who ia rather ahaky in
her orthography)—Ob, yes; but yoW
language is so eloquent that I frequently
fed niy« :f spellbound. —Boston Trau-
"I don't am why yon I
ia getting along iu Paris, "aaid Mobs«>:
"f thought you ajsike French." ' *
"I spnaic Freiirh rnooRh," mliad
puug iligmiu. who had jut* munio4
ev'ry day, mom, and I'm put to tho ex-
tra exjienae of pay in a doctor to Met my
Jaw after oallin their uamea
Wander.
A Fta «s
Well Known Playwrigb '
' l>e jm
elbow. "For heaven's sake, faint
snd bo dono with it, for tho rest of n<
want to get out. "
kime people glanced nt her indig-
itly, and others tittered, but th«
stout blond who was alxmt to faint
braced up suddenly and cnueludcd h
wouldn't No sniff of Falu coald bavt
donn tho business quicker or mure **"i
taptorily —Pittsburg Dispatch.
Aa tm instance of wisdom coming
from tho mouths of babes this story ia
told of little Hugh, who had jnst begun
to toddle. The butcher had placed
marketing on the dnmbwaiter. from
which it was taken by the servant. 81m
exposed a string of sausages, the like o<
which the youngster had never sew be-
"What ia that. Hugh?" his mothea
saked.
Ho pandered far a minute and then
replied:
•'Bowwow, bowwow."—Now York
Herald.
false teeth an the
fraucisoo Post
Can I trouble yon for
light, airt
BERT T. HOIDERMAN,
LAWYER,
Real Estate I Collection Agent,
VINITA. IND. TEll.
"Csrtainly. "—Life.
Gertie (who haa behave^ r«ry redely
be play of i
Theattica
Joat oompletwi
wnT?" wwr-
K- 1«wo. Napoleon; heroine.
Trilby. Napoleon, alarmed at revolt
against the Income tax. ia about to ab-
dicate; Trilby's ringing of the "Wash
ingto, Post March" Ores bim with new
o^^hertahs Littte Bills,;
ed byTOJhy: marriage ceremony per-
formed by Mjrr. flatolli with tuttle of
Waterloo raging in the twkgronnd. Aft-
er the battle Napoleon dcturmiiiM to
flee with Trilby, but Svengall hyuuotiara
him into voluntary •nrrrinler to the
ttriitsk I—* —me a tableau—Napo-
o Ht. Helena, Trilby
"IT!; J1 i asiling awsy to Bt. Helena, Trilby
dill Prannhmon s not under- | on shore couunittiug suicide, aud Little
oago Tribuo* | looking oa frota th« clcoda.->T)rvUk
—■—V don't go away yet.
Aunt (flattered;—I had no ideayor
ere ao fond of me. Gertie.
Gertie—Oh. Aunty Clara, it isn't
that, but mamma aaid I waa to be whip.
P d when yon had Dorfbatbiw
• Vet M. Unt the tasi,
Kabliu—'Who's that fellow in the bal-
cony who is hiaairg tho villain ao fierce-
ly?
Bixiuag—That fellow over there on
tlie rijrht ? Oh, that's Sandbsgg. the frl
low that's jnst finished a year at Um
•tote prison for highwav robbery. —Box
bury Uaaette.
A Mount Waahington achoolteadMi
told her pupils to write a sentence con
taiuiug tlio word toward. Thia ia what
eue small hoy produced after a great
deal of mental exertion:
■••(•a Agtla,
Miss Lakeside—Look at that old man
With tha bald head.
iw. Von should say, "Observe that
senesqsnt gentleman with the dscoUsta
bang. "—Philadelphia Bsoord.
Exceptionally long beards hare al-
ways attracted a good deal of attanUen,
and la mast old works on the customs
" " habits of men there are eumsr-
refsrenoes to "whydita't «Dd
of MtMsrdinary length,
J1 Telberg, a German knight
«nd oounciloc of Maximilian 11. who
•lied In 187ft. rejoiced In the possesion
of a beard wbleh reached to hia fsst,
"^ from there again to his waist John
9, the oelebratad sixteenth century
painter (the same who accompanied
Chart* V on bia campaign.), was a
am « (mi « laoftt* la beighk giggt
_ ran seross a newspaper u.«u u«, ova-
er day on Pennsylvania avenue who
once gave oue of our diatinguisbed for-
eign visitors probably the greatnt shock
he rwiTwl in the whole country. It
happened in 8t Paul or Minneapolis, i
forget whieh. and the distinguished via-
iter vas Sir Edwin Atr^]* f he nevn-
paper mau had !«>* left the army after
•BVK.U nt the plains, and he knew moi
•bout "Boots and Hsddlea" and "Taps
than he did about literature. He wa
sent to interview Sir Edwin Arnold.
The greet man received bim with It
conrtesy that took hia breath away, ffe
couldn't V uh a single question to
•J"- ilenco grew embarrassing.
•'••Peration, he blurted ont
"Bir Edwin. I'd like to ask yo,
where—where dollies go in winter?"—
Washington Post
"And what ia that building?" in-
<*,,turTUl' ^ I™' twentieth
Mrs. J. M. Sanders,
MILLINER AND DRESSMAKER.
fun Bus Of mUUnery pnda
Ifolly invite
wetfifiy iavft*
"I ■ * IIW I*I1 * Id
' to call and mm* tt. AU i
n] lnytxl
do my \
BAKER A GlfFORD,
. AND BATH.
For a clean ahave. a good haircut
• ■*ne' <1 see use tiood clean tubs!
pl«-nty of "oft water. Neilson Building
on Third 8reet.
We Hre Still On Top
With the Unequaled
nteCormio Binders
AND MOWERS.
The McCormic Harvesting Machines are unrivaled in the market
to-Hay for simplicity of construction, durability, lightness of draught
•nd class of workaone. If you intend purihm,rnK . m^hinTTa
canncft ln; b<«t. for we know be convinced that t^ey
A FULL LINE OF
Moline Plows and farm Implements
+*£sfi2?is& atiaHSr* Ki°* *"■«-
Special Prices on the Best McCormic Twine.
C. H. HARLOW,
Supplier of the farmers every want.
"Oh. th#," wUe* his host,
"I '"•J* nntioed. " tlie cornfed
philosopher, "that most folks And It a
heap rial* to Aght the devil than to
kivo their fellow men."
Journal.
toetalat aoeh o<unpu^'t'ive raritJITuSld
to be a scmree of no arna 11 troubls ia the
"•* min«^ on account at
tbediffleulty experienced there in sspa
rating it from gold bullion. Practical^,
" u known, this metal ia utilised
far nimkiuff iastraoiniti
of delicacy whioh require to puss** Mm
property off io| ourrodiu, ami u ottAin.
ft*** If Idomina. a natural alloy of
>i«n, osmiuiu. rhodium, pktinua
*on«d in washing for (old ia tha
tipping gold pans, in whieh it la «scial-
^e"n^°M£!*' 'Sf 11 wW*
ai flat, like gold dost, an r*">ml oat
with magnifying gW-iewtort
I have a nice line of
Monuments and Tombstones,
UMl grt my prices before porcfcasti^ eUvhcST
• l 006MR, CIMENMC, I. T.
WM. ROBINSON,
PAINTER ANO PAPER HAN6ER
Claremore. Isd. Ti*.
SSS'-'Swia
asttssssKst..
HOUSE, SIGN
* BUCCY PAINTINC.
W. T. LITTLE,
' and Bum Painting TI : - . ,.
call and be convinced.
R. DOUGLAS,
Contractor and Builder,
CLAREMORE, I. T.
J. B. HOU8LKY,
Practical Horseshoer and General
Blacksmith.
Isssses^
4. •. MONRO*. rn. m. siu.
MONROE & BELL,
Contractors & Builders
Plans undsnecifications furnished
upon application.
Clammom, Ind. Tml
— L. DALE,
General Blacksmithing.
J A TEAGUE,
WATCHMAKER 4 JEWELER,
W, W. Chamber's Building,
Watches, clocks snd jewelry
Repaired.
The
Claremore
Lumber Company,
frntn , . •EflmestJy r«lUC8t intending to build anything
from a chicken coop up to a mansion to get their prices on
budding material before purchasing elsewhere,
WE WILL FOR 60 DAYS &ELL
All kinds of Lumber (except No. 2 dimension,
which we will sell at cost) at
$1 per 1,000 less than former prices
Our stock oflumber is very complete. We also carry
cypress and red cedar shingles white pine, cypress andpopfaur
and iJTK1 au Iawed, balusters, brackets head corral
and base blocks, turned and square porch columns; also
Mrtse]^h°i£?nt j°°"' fommon doors and windows of aU
sorts, sash cord and weights, mouldings, pickets, roofinp and
building paper, lime, lath, hair, cement, plaster etc W? aic
agents for Koyal Cement Plaster, the best in the market We
have split cedar, and sawed and split oak aad walnut p^tti
It will pay you to get our prices on anything you need
in our line before purchasing elsewhere. Car loads direct
from mills a specialty. Grades guaranteed.
CLAREMORE LUMBER COMPANY.
"PROGRESS" $1.0<3 PER YEAR*
Patronize Horns Industty
Ord* Yoor Prult Traea, Vian,
Etc. * '
Vinita Nurserin
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Claremore Progress. (Claremore, Indian Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 22, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 6, 1895, newspaper, July 6, 1895; Claremore, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc183344/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.