The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 28, 1901 Page: 2 of 6
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NORMAN TRANSCRIPT.
I
i
NORMAN,
o. 1
Olil t IKHI t wi) I XI)I AN TKISRtTOIt*
It in faid that oil has been struck in
Madill, I. T., at a depth of 80 feet.
An artesian well at Vinita has pres-
sure stillicient to raise water 55 feet.
Thorn wan cotton picking being dono
about Sulphur, I T., an late as March.
The Creek council is called to meet
at Okmulgee on May 7 to consider the
new treaty.
Current expectation extends the Sa-
pulpa extension of tl « Krisco towards
Fort Smith.
Fourteen carloads of machinery have
been unloaded at Madill, I. T., for the
erection of a cotton mill.
Orand river is the clearest in the
IWackivoll is suffering from an epi-
demic of mumps.
Peach trees are in bloom in many
places in Oklahoma.
The Kock Island is securing right of
way south of Knid.
The Farmers and Mer hants bank ni j country and Fort Gibson people are
Cleo has taken a charter. ! tilling their cisterns with it.
Amos A. lowing has been re-commb- j vVm. A Sullivan, of Oklahoma lias
ftioned as territorial oil inspector. resigned a STO.OfM) clerkship in the In-
Garber'* list of business buildiug« dian department at Washington,
and good residences Is growing rapidly. Suits njrainst Kinglisher county for
The st udents at the Northwestern damages from the falling of the new
normal at Alva, get board for 5-. jO a ! bridge will bo defended upon the
week. ground that the county had not ac-
Several business blocks nnd a large cepied the bridge.
number of residences are being built at j I'onca City merchants will quit buy*
Glencoe. i ing goods at Kansas City unless the
A gang of luirsethieves took a num- BqUad ov men from that city who
ber of animnls from near u church at J ar0 canvassing for retail orders are
Ulcncoc withdrawn from the territory,
Twenly-one national banks have Grading on the Choctaw road from
been established in Oklahoma in the | Ardmore to Hartshorne goes on well,
past year. j Contractors have more than 100 teams
Farmers are taking in their stock at work. The men are used to the
from the wheat lield.s. The wheat is work and every move is toward a finish.
looking tine.
Fire at Oklahoma City destroyed the
Davis house, the Kagle house and a
smaller building
"Shall we bore a hole'' will be voted
upon in several Oklahoma cities at the
spring elections.
Fire at El Ileno destroyed the Long
music and jewelry store and the room-
ing house above.
From December 15. 1900, to February
5, 1901, deposits in Oklahoma banks in-
creased 8042,8-17.
Acting Governor Jenkins has offered
a reward of S'.'OO tor the arrest and
delivery of Ren Cravens.
It in said that there has not been a
trial in the police court at l'ond Creek
for nearly th^ec months.
The executive committee of the In-
dian Territory press association has
announced a program for the next
meeting which is to be held at Checo-
tah. There is lots of solid business in
it
The South Canadian river is 100 feet
wide and from 10 to 20 feet deep for 11
miles east of the town of South Cana-
dian, and it is said that there is to be a
pleasure steamboat put in service
there.
Allotment is progressing rapidly in
the Comanche country. The Indians
are taking lands in strips :s miles wide
along Cache and the two Heaver creeks
and as far south as the mouth of Little
Beaver.
Chickasha has a stone cottonsecd
jnill which cost $00,000. An opera
The Iiook Island has run 14 freight ; ll0U!!c is be!uf? built- Tl,e contract is
let for a 75 by 100 foot hotel, to cost
$20,000. The city has an electric light
plant and two ice plants.
Charles Thomas, formerly of Ed-
wards county, Kansas, was arrested,
charged with bciug of the party who
killed Albert ltateman. Farmers
iloolced into Perry in large numbers
and lynching talk was heard.
Louis Cohen, of Claremore, I. T., has
paid a fine of 81,000 at Muskogee for
selling liquors; the largest of the kind
ever paid in Indian Territory. lie was
a wholesaler and hail agencies in all
the larger towns of the northern dis-
trict.
T. W. Triplet!1, ex-district clerk of
trains each way and every day for four
months, through Oklahoma.
The commercial agent of the Hock
Island announces that a mill site will
scon be staked out at Garber.
The offerings for the Kaw pasture
lands amounted to $20,000 against 8<i,-
000 for the same acreage in the past.
ICmiflctt Cox's hig barn at Fort Sill
burned with r> horses, n buggy, a stage
coach and 2,00iJ cans of canned goods.
•I. M. Kichanls, of Guthrie, has taken
no food except the juice of an orange
daily, since -lun. 9. He is near his end.
The Orient Land and Townsite com-
pany has applied for a charter. Its
capital stock is to be 8600,000, divided Tahlequah district, and Albert Taylor,
into 100 shares. i ex-auditor of the Cherokee nation, have
Four young men were ordained been placed under bond at Wagoner,
priest* and one a sub-deacon in th'
Catholic church at the Anadarko In-
dian agency on March
"Tenderfeet" are giving up their
good money to the grafters under the
promise of being put on a good claim.
charged with complicity in the Chenv
kee warrant frauds. These frauds aro
j said to amount to 8194,000.
The Oklahoma Sunday School work-
ers elected the following officers: Pres-
ident, Fred L. Winner, of Guthrie: vice
The grafters have no claim but they I president. Rev. J. S. Krehbit, ofGeary;
are slick talkers all right.
The 1 wo great brewing companies
which do a wholesale business in (iutli-
rie have been b ought into court. Their
representatives have been arrested for
wholesaleing liquors without a license.
Mayor Heoslcy. of HI Ileno. says lie
has SIO.OOO in the city treasury that
was not there when he took hold of
the city affairs two years ago. lie has
also a new brick city jail that did not
cost the people a cent, six miles of side-
walk and a tine sewer system.
A little girl of the Patterson family,
who iivc between Watonga and Geary,
was burned to death while her mother
was out of the house for a few minutes.
Matches, it is supposed, was the cause.
A new graft being somewhat success-
fully worked is that where a man
stops at a farm and sells his team and
corresponding secretary. Arthur Whar-
ton, of Perry: recording secretary, II.
(i. Kniston, of Hennessey: treasurer,
II. Kiueaid of Norman.
The killing of Alvin ltateman by
bandits at Red Rock lias stirred the
whole territory to a determination to
rid the country of the robbers. Ilatc-
man was 2S years old anil had been a
favorite in business and social circles.
He was cashier in a bank for a long
time but a month since was made man-
ager of a lumber company.
John Palmer, of Bartlesville, planted
a patch of potatoes just after Christ-
mas and in the middle of March was
eating new potatoes as large as hens'
Chickasha claims a population cf
4,000, with good schools and churches.
Eight denominations have church
wagon. After the man has had plenty i buildings, with two more planned for.
of time to change climate another man Reing only three miles from the new
comes along, enquires for his stolen j country to be opened there are now
property and gives an exact description . many in camp
yho are not counted
of it. Of course he gets the outfit and
the farmer gets left,
Daniel Annis landed in Kingfisher
county eight years ago with three
horjes and two cows. He now has 90
acres in cultivation, sixty in pasture,
good buildings and an abundance of
fruit. Last year lie raised '.',000 bush-
els of wheat.
Delegate Flynn has named Karl Kil-
man, of Guthrie, as cadet at the naval
academy with C. N. Cade, of Shawnee,
as alternate.
Francis M. Stetzcr, of HI Reno, is
again industrial teacher at the Little
Water Indian school. Newkirk.
Peter Reeker, of Pond Creek has
been again appointed as secretary of
the li estoeK board.
HI Pc'-i feels confident of seeurin;r
the selection of that place for the re-
building of the Sacreil Heart mission.
The department of justice has named
Itoonttvillc. Mil., as a place to send
jwven'le prisoners of Oklahoma for con-
finement
If a man o-.vns I Oil seres of land any-
where there is no chance of his getting
a claim in the new country; that bars
him.
above, anil there will be thousands
more of them.
Muskogee has been declared a city
of the second class, anil officers are to
be chosen and the city organized into
wards.
The head chie's of the Osages havo
arranged with the Cheyennes and
Arapahoes to hold a great council at
Huffalo Springs, south of Fort Sill on
Jun.t 0. They expect 5,000 Indians to
be present, from tribes named and
andf>om Apaches, Comanehes. Choc-
taws, Chickasaws Seminojes and other
tribes. The Sioux of Nebraska are in-
j vited.
.1. S. Shelburne. of Wakita: Rankir,
■ X- Johnson, of Hillings: Martin Wil-
i son, of Enid: were shippers of stock,
some cattle but mostly hogs, to the
Wichita stockyards which so d March
: i:i.
The Minco Minstrel says that the
story < f a great Indian council at Ruf-
• falo Springs is a great big lie. with no
■ possibility of such a meeting.
A painter at Pond Creek fell from a
! scaffold aad struck the ground on l;is
j head and shoulders. lie was badly
4 larred and internal injuries are feared.
EARNINGS AND PRICES
RATB OF WAGES IN DIFFERENT
PARTS OF THE WORLD.
('niupeimatlao In ths t tilled Slate* Hun
Incroufd Uml.-r Protection, While
t'ml of Living Ninv A vcragea Lens
Lituti ll Illii Teu Year* Abo.
An examination of the general drift
of wages unil prices during the past
ten years should prove interesting to
the Free-Trader who is again con-
cerned over the income and expenses
of the masses. We take all the figures
given below from the ' American Ag-
riculturist Year Book" for 1901. First,
as regards the comparative wages In
different countries, the average daily
wages paid laborers in 1900 were as
follows:
United States .: $1.85
Australia
1.60
Canada and provinces 1.10
Brazil and Chill 80
Great Britain and Ireland 70
France and Central Europe (15
German Empire 55
Austro-Hungary 40
Asia Minor 40
Spain and Portugal .'55
Turkey in Europe 35
Armenia and Persia 35
Italy and Malta i!5
Moroceo and Tunis 25
Chinese Empire 20
Japanese Empire 15
In April, 1900, there was compiled
for the information of the house of
representatives from reports fur-
nished by labor unions, a tabulated
statement showing the increase in
wages by percentages, in 59 trades,
from 1S9U to 1899. These increases run
from 3 to 50 per cent, averaging some-
what over 20 per cent. The report
shows that In every industry wages
were increased between 1S9G and 1899,
while in 20 they were Increased in each
of the three years, 1897, 1898, 1899,
and in 35 they were increased in
both of the two years, 1898 and 1899.
The report proves an unquestionably
substantial increase in all wages from
the reductions made necessary during
(he Free-Trade period from 1894 to
1897.
Now, as to the comparison of pres-
ent wages with the last Protection
period, 1890-2. Using 100 as a basis the
rate Is as follows: 1891, 100.60; 1892,
100.30; 1899, 101.54; 1900, 103.43.
Thus, three facts are established:
We aro getting the highest wages in J
the world; we are not only gettins;
much better wages than from 1894 j
to 1897, but even higher wages than
from 1890 to 1892. And it might be i
added that more people arc getting
these wages than over before in the
history of our country.
But, we are told, the poor farmers
and the poor mechanic have to pay
so much more for what they buy.
Well, here are the figures given for
the prices of commodities in January,
1S90, and July. 1899:
Commodities. 1S90. 1899.
Food "9-2 85.9
Clothing 101.9 S4.5
Fuel and lighting 99 89.S
Metals and implements... 106.8 107.9
Lumber and building ma-
terial 104.1 99.9
Drugs and chemicals 104.5 95.9
House furnishing goods... 100.0 9o.7
Miscellaneous 9L1 95.7
All 102 92.9
With one exception everything is
cheaper, while the whole cost of living
is about 10 per cent less than ten
years ago. This is an old time Pro-
tection argument exemplified and sus-
tained: More people at work; mor;'
money for work; more purchases for
money. Protection wants no better d<>
fense; Protectionists want no better ar-
gument.
AMERICANISM,
Pom.1 bill! lei In That Direction Suggested
bj the Tariff l.eague llanquet.
Rapidly increasing popularity seems
to attend the American idea so effect-
ively demonstrated and exemplified by
The American Protective Tariff League
at its banquet of Feb. 10. The Phila-
delphia Item thinks the idea can and
should be systematically carried fur-
ther. It sa^s:
"The announcement that Mrs. Mc-
Kinley has decided upon an American
gown for the inauguration ball will
make the majority of American people
feel even more kindly toward the first
lady of the land. If Americans would
more generally stick to fabrics of home
manufacture the country generally
would be protected. But unfortunately
there are many who, while firm for
the protection theory, do not carry out
that view in practice.''
Still further in the same direction
the New York Mall and Express is
prepared to go. Distinctly commend-
able it pronounces the example set in
preparing the bill of fare at the Tariff
league Danquet. Says the Mail and
Express:
"It was a commendable example set
by those who made out the bills of fare
for the American i^eague dinner the
other night to name all the good things
in plain United Stales. When we stop
to think how small is our present day
devotion to France, and how generally
our luxuries for the table are products
of American land and water, it seems
rather old-fashioned and last century-
fled to go on calling oysters "huitres."
and to ask for a "roti." There is still
some excuse for our David Harums
when they go forth to see the sight*
if they ask for the "table de hoty" and
the "maynoo." but it is really much
better taste for Americans who give
dinners to call Carolina shad, canvas-
back duck and California oranges by
their own American names instead of
French travesties."
"American Products for American
Consumers" id a good motto. Already
It has been shown beyond question
that American products are good
enough for Americans to eat, drink,
smoke, wear and use. and with coffce
possibilltlee in Porto Rico and tea pos-
sibilities in South Carolina the day Is
near at hand when America need not
call upon any foreign country for a
single article of luxury or necessity.
The dinner of the Tariff League at the
Waldorf-Astoria was a luxurious affair.
Had it been less luxurious it would
have fallen Bhort of furnishing the
splendid object lesson which R en-
forced of the unlimited possibilities of
strict Americanism.
AT THE FRONT.
United State* Now Lenil* All tli* World
In Kxport Trade.
Having been so many times admon-
ished by free traders that the system
of protection was an Insurmountable
obstacle to the extension of our trade
with foreign countries, it is peculiarly
Interesting to note the present com-
mercial position of the United States
as shown by the official statistics of the
treasury department. An examination
or the complete figures for the calendar
year 1900. the third full year of the op-
eration of the Dingley tariff, brings
Into view the tremendous fact that the
United States now stands at the head
of the world's exporting nations. The
figures for the calendar year 1900,when
compared with those of other nations,
show that our exports of domestic
products are greater than those of any
other country. The total exports of
domestic merchandise from the Hnited
States In the calendar year 1900 were
$1,453,012.059; those from the United
Kingdom, which has heretofore led in
the race for this distinction, were $1,-
418,348,000, and those from Germany
wore *1,050,fill.000.
It is especially interesting to note
the phenomenal progress made as an
exporting nation by the United States
In the past quarter of a century of al-
most uninterrupted protection. In 1875
this country stood fotwth on the list,
of exporting nntions. At that time the
domestic exports of the United States
were J497.263.737; those of Germany,
$007,090,000; those of France, $747,189,-
000. and those of the United Kingdom
$1,087,497,000. Today the United
States stands at the head of the list,
the United Kingdom second, Germany
third and France fourth, with the fig-
ures as follows: United States, $1,453,-
013,659; United Kingdom, $1,418,318,-
000; Germany, $1,050,011,000; France,
$787,060,000. All of the figures, it
should be remembered, relate to the
exports of domestic products. Thus in
the quarter century the United States
has increased her exports from $497,-
263,737 to $1,453,013,059. or 192 per
cent; Germany, from $6U7.096,000 to
$1,050,611,000, or 73 per cent; the
United Kingdom, from $1,OS7.497,000 to
$1,118,348,000, or 24 per cent, and
France from $747,189,000 to $787,060.-
000, or 5 per cent. It must astonish
free traders the world over to find that
the greatest strides in foreign com-
merce have been made by the country
in which, more than in any other
country in the world, the protection
principle has been strenuously, per-
sistently, scientifically and practically
enforced.
The following table, compiled from
official reports, shows the exports of
domestic merchandise from the United
Slates, the United Kingdom and Ger-
many in each calendar yar from 1875
to 1900:
United
Year. State". Kingdom. Cormany.
1-7". Jll.iiS7.4S7 IWO $li07,0'J«,00<)
is?'-. .. 7.",r.,.sni utmm.ooo tU9,9i9.oon
1V7T SQ7.5IW, IlHi M7.si:f.000 672,151,1*10
1>7> 7iS.am.f21 Mfc.SOO.OlW 702,513,000
1,s; u ;r>4 tioti,7V. M'J.090,000 i;7ri,3:t7,000
i^o' 5(i4.rt7n i.ots.szi.ooo 741.202,000
I'M .... Ml,162.951 I,I3.\S7S,OOI> 724,370,000
1M2 ... 740,1111,3011 U7.VWil.000 776,228,000
1VS" .... 777 71 < l.l«t;.MS2.000 7 B,20S.000
l^sl .... 733.7tiS.7H4 1.134.01 tf,000 779.ifit2.000
1*6 ... K73.S93.3UH I ,' !7.124.O0G tB5,S!)2.0o0
l«r, .... t!99,5U',430 l.tC.7.22ij.OOO 72ii.471.000
js.\7 .... 7ii:J,31!'.I;M 1,07<I,914.000 7t>2.S:i7,000
KSS ... 079,597,477 1,141.365.000 780,076,000
1XS9 814.154.Mi4 1.211.442.0(H) 770.537,000
IS'tO MS,999,1:113 1.2W. 174.000 W9.S10.flOO
1S91 9ri.".333.:>M 1. '3,169.000 772.679,000
IS32 923,237."15 1.105,747,000 7IS.XO6.00O
1S93 S54.729.454 i.062.162.000 753,301,000
i07.312.11< 1,051,193.000 720.607,000
IS9.-I V/7.712,41.'. 1.100,452,000 807,328,000
1X96 9xli.x3n.oS0 l.l'i.S.671,000 X57,745,000
1 s; 7 ... 1 079.K! 1.296 l.|:!9,XX2.r*«0 SSI,4X6,000
1S9\ 1.2S3.56I.X21 1 15,642,000 894,063,00)
1X99 1.253.460.IKK) 1.2x7.971.039 1,1)01,273,000
1900 1,153.013,659 1,41S,34X,OI)0 1,050,611,000
THE SCULPTOR AND HIS WORK
In Ttils na In Other*.
About ten years ago the fr"e traders
declared that tin plate could not be
made in the United States in quality
and price comparable with British
made tin plate. The quality was long
ago acknowledged to be equal to the
best iu 1h world, and now th" English
Trade Review warns Welsh tin plate
manufacturers that they "may shortly
tind American tin plate manufacturers
competing in this trade, as in others,
in Great Britain."—Ottawa fill.) Re-
publican-Times.
An international air is one assumed
by the man who thinks he owns the
earth.
! Montana's New Senator !
Paris Gibson, who has Just been
elected United States Senator for the
short term of the Montana Uegislature
is the founder of the town of Great
Palls, Mont., and one of the leading
capitalists of the state. He was born
at Brownfleld, Me., on July 1, 1830.
His father was a farmer and lumber-
man. He graduated from Bowdoin
College In 1851 and soon thereafter
was elected to the Mn! " Legislature.
In 1858 he removed to Minneapolis,
Minn., where in association with W.
W. Eastman, he built the Cataract
flour mill, the first in the city, and
PARIS GIBSON*.
operated the North Staj woolen mills,
lie met with reverses during the panic
jf 1873, and in 1S79 removed to Fort
Benton, Mont., where he engaged in
sheep raising. He was among the first
in that region to take up the Industry
and has continued the business with
profit. In 1882 he visited the falls of
the Missouri river, and, on examining
the resources of the surrounding coun-
try, was impressed with the advan-
tages of the place for a city, because
of its unlimited water power, its de-
posits of coal, and extent of agricultur-
al and grazing lands. With James J.
Hill of St. Paul, he acquired title to
:he town and named it Great Falls. By
the completion of the St. Paul, Minne-
apolis and Manitoba railroad to that
point in 1887 a great stimulus was
given to the town, which increased
lo a city of 18,000 inhabitants. To
Mr. Gibson is due its splendid public
park system, the first in the Northwest.
He was organizer of the Great Falls
Water Power and Town Site company
and has been active in the support of
every enterprise in the city. He has
much of his wealth invested in the
gold, silver, iron, and coal industries
of the surrounding regions.
He was a delegate to the Montana
Constitutional convention in 1889 and
was Senator from Cascade County to
the first Legislature, where he advo-
cated the consolidation of all State
institutions for liberal education under
the name of the University of Mon-
tana.
His library is the largest in the city.
His wife is active in literary and ed-
ucational circles and is the founder of
the Yalleria Public Library of Great
Falls. She is a daughter of Jesse
Powell Sweat of Brownfleld. Me. They
have four children.
A. "Picturesque Cuban.
Senor Salvador Cisneros. who is the
most prominent figure in the constitu-
tional deliberations now going forward
in the Havana convention, has been
conspicuous in all the revolutions of
the island against the rule of Spain.
For a long time he had been out of
sight and of mind, hut suddenly re-
appeared in the '60s to throw himself
SENOR CISNEROS.
into the agitation then going on in
Cuba. He was made president of the
provisional gosernment, but was
forced to submit to the Inevitable
When the Cuban deputies voted to dis-
band. In 1879 Cisnero3 went to New
York, where he made his living as a
retail cigar merchant. Early iu the
last revolution, while he was still
abiding with friends in New York, he
was elected provisional president
The old Cuban patriot Is said to be of
noble Spanish birth. His title is al-
leged to be Marqu's de Belancotirt. but
not a great deal is known of his per-
sonal hisrtory owing to the secluded life
he has been forced to live while work-
ing for his country's freedom. He is
now about 76 years old.
'PtcK.pocKcts l/jf Garlic Urcaih.
In a crowded street car the garlic
breath can be used by pickpockets to
advantage. Several witnesses in Jef-
ferson Mai ..et court recently told how
effective the garlic breath was in their
cases. The pickpockets, they avert-
ed, crowded against them in the cars
and blew nauseating bias's in th°lr
faces. Naturally their heads went
back and up, ar.d the pickpockets
could operate with less danger of be-
ing seen. This trick has long been
known to the poliie, but it is n.w to
the public.—New York Letter.
PreacUi'r Trarela 50,000 Mile*
Rev. J. J. Cressman, pastor of th
Evangelical Lutheran church at Bern-
vllle, Pa., him resigned after twent>-
four years' service. Ho preached at
Bernville every Sunday morning and
then drove to Kutztown, twenty-five
miles away, where he held evening
services. Fair weather or foul, he made
the Journey, besides one or two o hers
every week, traveling altogether dur-
ing his pastorate something over 50,-
000 miles.
Stimulants seldom hurt a man—if he
leaves them alone.
TO CI' RE A COM) IN ONK DAT.
Take Laxativp. ISuomo Quimn k Taiii.bts. All
driHrRixts refund the money If It fulls to cure.
E. W. Urove'NKiKiittture is od the box. 25c.
The dop in the inangcr isn't always
the one with the mange.
Red Cross Ball Blue makes clothM
whiter than snow. Large package oo.
Toasts are often drunk yet they are
never intoxicated.
Are You I'alnc Allen'* Foot Ease?
It is the only cure for Swollen,
Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet,
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe
Stores. 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad-
dress, Allen S. Olmsted, 1/eRoy, N. Y.
The professional shoplifter isn't ne
essarily a strong person.
Now that the Winter season is past,
it is well to cleanse the system and
puiify the blood with Garfield Tea -
an Herb Medicine good for all.
If you would mend your ways you
must taUe a stitch in time.
Two Big Pains
swm lo be the heritage of the
human family everywhere, viz:
Rheumatism
and
Neuralgia
but there is one sure aad
prompt cure for both, vft:
St Jacobs Oil
TTTT?TTttTTTTryTtTTTTTTTTT
SEAFARING MEN
/ KNOW THE VALUE OF
OiLED CLOTHING
IT WILL
Wkeep you dry
I IN THE
WETTEST WEATHER
.COft fOR ABOVE TPADE HAPK
0M 5ALE EVERYWHERE:
CATALOGUES FREE
SHOWING FULL EittE Of GARMENTS AND HATS.
A J.TOWER CO. BOSTON. MA55. ..
SEND M MOKEf
II jou live wiihtu
0 nnleo of Minus-
ni'olis lif f m ikear
KKl'l 1.00!.
cut tlllB i.
Oat nnd R'-'i'i
to ns unit we
will sen'l v a
thin KND
<1 A T E
HROAIXJA.ST
HI.KDKK ti/
fn-inht G O D.
«'iiijncl to ex-
amination. Von can eTRmlne it at your freight de
pot. anil if found perfectly witlsfactory. yiu'tiy
reiirwionte'l. and the oquul cf hhhJoii that orhem
at double th« fico, thnn phv tho frniuht tmen; ffC 1C
OliFl ftPtCIAL OFFER P ICE.... "iDilD
anfi freight charm* 'or taw $1.00 iC Mat with onler
Th*seeder wimuJm about 100 pound* und tb« frH«zbt
vrili avoriuje 65c for each miles. OPK 8PKi:iAL
#5.75 PBIOK based on the actual co«t of n:anu-
fcrt.ire, la J«jh thrfa dealer* <^ln l>uy carload lot*.
?i8 'I'Kkeat Grade Knd Gate Broadcaat. Seeder
roaao. Ma le for u« nuder contract by the boat aeoder
inaktr in America. Made from the very best, material
ti at noney can buy, Will sow wore evenly and more
e- liMfactorily than any other Header mode. Will how
H/tacree of wheat per day, other Mode at proportionate
rutev Very Latent Model for Itwl. Kmtttdiea every
improvement ererr icood point of every othor broad-
chat seeder made, with the defects of none. Write for
Free Agricultural Implement Catalogue. \d ln-sH.
T. M. ROBERTS' SUPPLY HOUSE, Minneapolis.
I IT
Is Urn new science of detecting mul
curing disra-i-s (mm ;i CHEMICAL
and MICROiiCOPICAL analysis.)!
the urlno. Send 4cent* for mailing
ease and but tic lur urine. lJuok live.
Consultation Irco. 1-Ves reasonable.
Medicines furnishid. Address
J. F. SHAFER, M. D.,
400 IVnn Ave., Pittsburg, Pa.
.^MWLWaNTED
^WAT0HC5 "
with rig to sell our Poultry Mixture; struU'lit
Sttlury 315.00 per week nnd exponsos; year's
contract; weekly pity. Addtcsx with stamp
EUUBKa MfG. t'o.. Kept. P. KaslSt. Iiouis, 1
FR1EK
A Foil-flf** #1 Treatmnnt of Dr. O.
_ Hie!, ?, Hrown's Great f.>?
Pftt.l A idren
. riiKM'S HltmVS, fi* Broadway, N«n >araU, N.Y.
pension
Itl' NI OKli, Washington. I>. C., thfv
• - "ill rccivr iju'Cl; replies. 1!. .V.U X. II. Vols
Stall -ttr.ii \ urns. Proifcut.ne Claims since 1878
Tour Fortune; Future lnmlnr«-
tune nnd love affn r* P ret.. <1, oi.iy ?6c, and your
birlhdaff*. by hent avtrniogor Hn'ui:.
Prof. lillAPUKJ.. Il*;i. Hlnjdiainpton, N. Y.
* 'Piscrs CURE F
iMES VHtHt AIL LLS£ tA'U
Best Cocsb Tfistee Good Ceo
In ttmi. go) 1 by dnigglms.
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Burke, J. J. The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 28, 1901, newspaper, March 28, 1901; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc186565/m1/2/: accessed April 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.