The Mannford Enterprise (Mannford, Indian Territory [Okla.]), Vol. 1, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 11, 1907 Page: 3 of 4
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500 LETTERS FOR THE WINNER.
One Point of View.
I
nr
G
E5
D
VALUABLE PROPERTY TIED UP.
Bears the
Signature
Divine
OBJECT TO FARMERS' UNIONS.
of
#2 iL
In
Use
»
For Over
BANKERS HAVE ORGANIZED.
THE BEST HE COULD G6T.
$210 Buys a Farm
than her hair dyeing.
COULDN’T KEEP IT.
Kept It Hid from the Children.
Muskogee agency,
of Batrlesville
for $12,500 for the
MRS. AUG. LYON
The water is
very soft.
4
1
I
I [piles
9 oo Drops
Infants/Childr^
Amateur Gardener Could Not Under-
stand Why Seeds Did Not Sprout.
well in this section,
perfectly pure, and
Mr.
which
Tis the course makes all: degrades
or hallows courage in its fall.—Byron.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
1
1
It Isn’t difficult to size the average
man up, but women are built so queer-
ly it is impossible to get their actual
measure.
GASTORIA
For Infanta and Children.
Dr. Chas. F. Simmons has Cut Up His 95,000 Acre Ranch Just South of
San Antonio and Will Sell You a Farm ol From 10 Acres to
640 Acres, (Including Two Town Lots) for $210.
Payable $10 per Month Without Interest.
Full Particular* Wanted.
When the nurse brought the cheer-
ing news to Toperton recently that he
had just become the father of triplets,
he betrayed no particular satisfaction.
"Boys?" he grawlingly queried.
"Only one boy, sir.”
"Well,” said Toperton. "go on; don’t
keep me in suspense. One boy—what
are the others?"—Sketchy Bits.
thirty-four acres, was the first sale of
an adult full blood Cherokee Indian's
land ever made.
negro school to impress upon the
minds of the youths the benefits de-
rived at Tuskegee and other seats of
THE TEN
COMMANDMENTS—
DUTIES TOWARD GOD
aceept any substitute Trial package FREE.
Address Alien S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Postmaster Swamped With Mail for
Miss Toskatomba.
Promotes DigestionCheerfu-
nessand Rest.Contains neither
Opium Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
Artesian Well Waters Celery.
Collinsville, I. T.: C. 1). Mirrison,
of this city, owns the only artesian
z M
CURED-BsnzoGrguzuoTozavas
Ahrpbrarounrswarzrmaan
Aquptis Sod-
dSauha )
ReheleSadts- I
-drude I
(
HfrmSed- I
A perfect Renuedy CorCoMfifa
lion, Sow Slomacli.Diarrtiwi
Worms Convulsions.Feverish
nessand LOSS OF SUEP
)
he miners of the South McAlester
coal belt will form a hospital asso-
ciation for the purpose of establish-
ing hospitals nearer their work than
are the Institutions at South McAl-
ester.
2.86..
1-
38-
Si
learning for the ambitious negro. One
day, in closing a brilliant discourse on
this subject, in which Booker T. Wash-
ington was set forth as a criterion.
She said to one little boy who had evi-
dently heard not a word of her talk:
"Now ‘Rastus, give the name of the
greatest negro?"
The answer was surprisingly forth-
Dr. C. F. Simmons. San Antonio, reSan Antonio, Texas, April 22, 1007.
Dear Sir—J have just returned from a trip over your Atascosa County
property, and to Fay that I am surprised at what I saw, but fairly expresses
my for ling 8- I had expected something pretty good, because I have consid-
erable faith in your agents, whom I happen to know, but what I saw is hr
beyond my expectation.
I drove hurriedly over probably twenty-five miles of ground, passing sev-
eral of your flowing wells and tanks, and I don't believe that there is an
acre of ground that is not fit for first-class cultivation.
Upon my return to Little Rock I shall take out several more shares
before they are gone, and will advise my friends all to take as many as they
can afford.
to It W. Gilkey
AL< OHOL 3 PER CENT
AVegetablePreparalionforAs
stmilatingthFdodandRegula
tingtlveSiomachsandBowelsof
DAISY FLY K’LL.E r UI
si and elestroy-
| Im* fies. It
ALL UP-To-DATE HOUSEKEEPERS
Use Red Cross Ball Blue. It makes clothes
The extraordinary popularity of fine
white goods this summer makes the
choice of Starch a matter of great im-
portance. Defiance Starch, being free
from all injurious chemicals, is the
only one which is safe to use on fine
fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffener
makes half the usual quantity of Starch
necessary, with the result of perfect
finish, equal to that when the goods
were new.
Morrison will use the flow.
Shawnee is organizing her state
capital propaganda in order to secure
that much coveted but entirely over-
estimated price.
Many a woman averages things up
by figuring that her $28 bonnet and
her husband s $2 lid average $15 each.
aches, there are dragging-down pains, nervousness, sleeplessness, and
reluctance to go anywhere, these are only symptoms which unless
heeded, are soon followed by the worst forms of Female Complaints.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
keeps the feminine organism ina strong and healthy condition. It cures
Inflammation, Ulceration. displacements, and organic troubles In
preparing for child-birth and to carry women safely through the Change
of Life it is most eflicient.
Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Earl, Pa , writes — Dear Mrs. Pink-
ham:—“For a long time I suffered from female troubles and hail all kinds
of aches and pains In the lower part of baek and sides. I could not
sleep and had no appetite Since taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and following the adviee which you gave me I feel like a
new woman and I cannot praise your medicine too highly.”
Mrs. Pinkham’s Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to
write Mro Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Out of her vast volume of ex-
per lane* ske probably has the very knowledge that will help your
case. Her advice is free and always helpful.
clean and sweet aa when new. All grocers.
-------------- - Write today for full particulars and photograph* showing views on the ranch.
It takes almost as man.' tailors to —— CHAS E cinaANe
make a man as it takes collectors to -m* vnA* r* PimVNS,
induce him to pay for the job. | 215 Alamo Plaza, SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS.
Retail Merchant* Decide They Art
of No Benefi.
Oklahoma City: In a discussion ol
the matter today in the first session
of their convention, the Oklaohma re-
tail merchants concluded that the
farmers' unions were not only of no
benefit to the country retail merchant
but a detriment.
Every merchant talking on the sub
ject, and the discussion was general
agreed that the farmer went where
he could buy goods the cheapest;
that the union clearing house put a
special price on some products hand
led by the clearing house; that these
goods tn many cases were staples on
which there was little or no profit
to tha onuntrv miawe han t
ve - me-- - 4 -*+ ‘ — ---
_____________ Thompson’s Eye Water
________________ ________________- •
1WOAM ST.KAKUScnY'itoi^ZW N. U., MUSKOGEE. NO. 2®, 1907.
To prevent that tired feeling on
Ironing day—Use Defiance Starch—
Dr. D. M. Hailey, of South MeAl-
eater, has the endorsement of his
Choctaw constituents as a candidate
for the position of commander in-
chief of the Confederate Veterans of
the new state of Oklahoma.
By following the directions, which
are plainly printed on each package of
Defiance Starch. Men’s Collars and
Cufs can he made just as stiff as de-
sired, with either gloss or domestic
finish. Try it, 16 oz. for 10c, sold by
all good grocers.
siuow-woe-Mi
X3-oI~‛
Innocent Purchasers Defendants in
Suits Charging Fraud.
TIRED ANO SICK
YET MUST WORK
“Man may work from sun to sun
but womans work is never done,”
In order to keep the home neat
and pretty, the children well dressed
and tidy, women overdo and often
suffer iu silence, drifting along from
bad to worse, knowing well that
they ought to have help to overcome
the pains and aches which daily
make life a burden.
It is to these women that Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
made from native roots and herbs,
comes as a blessing. When the spir-
its are depressed, the head and back
end. every-
thing. One lasts
theei t fre enson,
I" neat ami clean
and ornamental.
Sold by alldenlers
or sent by mail
postnnid for mr.
AKOL.D SOTKRS,
149 n- Kalb Av.,
BKOOKLYS, a. r.
READERS sfrithis. buy ad-
--- thingadvertisedin
its columns should insist upon having
what they ask for, refusing all substi-
tutes or imitations.
“Soap Bubble Hanging from a Reed."
Our life is but s soap bubble bang-
ing from a reed; it I* formed. expands
to its full size, clothes itself with the
loveliest colors of the prism, and even
escape* at moments from the Jaw of
gravitation; but soon the black speck
appears in it and the globe of emerald
and gold vanishes into space, leaving
behind It nothing but a simple drop
of turbid water. All the poets have
made this comparison, it is so strik-
ing and so true. To appear, to shine,
to disappear; to be born, to suffer aad
to die; is it not the whole sum of
life, for a butterfly, for a naton, for a
star?—Henry Frederic Amiel.
averages something over 100,000 gal-
ions per day, for irrigating a ten
acre patch of celery.
I have just written to my brother in Indiana, advising him to do this on
my judgment.
I certainly think your proposition is one of the most liberal proposition
I have ever seen offered, and I certainly think that the people of South Texas
will owe to you an everlasting debt of gratitude for the method you are
using to settle this veritable garden of Eden with new people.
I thank you for the courtesies extended me on my recent visit, and I
trust the time will not lie long when the division will occur, and I certainly
shall return to Little Rock figuring on eventually coming back to Atascosa
County. Yours very truly, E A. KINGSLEY,
City Engineer, Little Rock, Ark.
Coming—“Joe Gans!"
Laundry work at home would be
much more satisfactory if the right
Starch were used. In order to get the
desired stiffness, it is usually neces-
sary to use so much starch that the
beauty and fineness of the fabric is
hidden behind a paste of varying
thickness, which not only destroys the
appearance, but also affects the wear-
ing quality of the goods. This trou-
ble can be entirely overcome by using
Defiance Starch, as it can be applied
much more thinly because of its great-
er strength than other makes.
So Common.
"Was no one injured in the railway
collision, count?”
"No, but nevertheless it was a most
painful situation. First, second, third
and fourth-class passengers all min-
gled together! Simply unheard of!"
—Translated for Transatlantic Tales
from Fliegende Blatter.
, - ----- It Cures While You Walk.
It Was the desire of a teacher in a Allen’s Foot-Ease in a certain cure for
: hot, sweating, callous, and swollen, aching
1 fert. Sold by all Druggists. Price 23c. Don’t
325
ft
22
lit
The woes of the amateur gardener
are very amusing to others, but de-
cidedly real to the man who has
spoiled a suit of clothes, blistered his
hands and lost his temper in his ef-
forts to make things grow.
A young man, recently married,
early In the spring secured a sub-
urban place, mainly with the idea of
“fresh, homegrown vegetables.' Every
evening he would hurry through his
•upper and rush out to his garden,
where he displayed more energy than
•kill. But, alas! When many little
green things began to break the
ground in his neighbors' gardens, his
own remained as bare as the Sahara.
“It certainly has got me beat," he
confided to a friend at his office one
day. "I can’t understand why not a
blessed thing has come up. I planted
peas and corn and tomatoes."
"Perhaps the seed were refective,"
the friend suggested.
"I hardly think it was that,” the
gardener replied, 'for I got the very
best—paid 15 cents a can for them.”
Why "Kangaroo.”
"Kangaroo" is a queer word. It
means "I don’t understand" in the
tongue of the Australian aborigines.
When this strange animal was first
beheld by Europeans they inquired of
the aborigines “What is Us name?"
And the puzzled reply gave the animal
its name.
A GOOD BUSINESS TO ENTER
The Talloring business, properly handled la one or tue
mont prontablea man enn enter Into an he need know
nothing whatever of making clothes nor of material* -
an<l very little capital is requtred.
Any maniivin in thlntown who ham UM 00 in ensh or
bneking to that extent, who will write us, we will nhow
him how hecan start In businesn for himneif and make
money from the start. We do not want one cent or
money. Kim ply send usyour name and addrens mention
the name of this paper, and we will send you full par-
Kiculars abnolutely free Here lien opportunity that
only comos to one man Iu a town. Addrea a t uure
TUI WHIT^KY <O. Ettln.hr Merehant
Ialter 14® Franklin Street. < hieaeo. |||.
“We cannot keep Grape-Nuts.food in
the bouse. It goes so fast I have to
hide it. because the children love it so.
It is just the food I have been looking
for ever so long; something that I do
not have to stop to prepare and still la
nourishing."
Grape-Nuts is the most scientifically
made food on the market It is per-
fectly and completely cooked at th*
factory and can be served at an in-
stant’s notice, either with rich cold
cream, or with hot milk if a hot dish
la desired. When milk or water is
used, a little sugar should be added,
but when cold cream is used alone
the natural grape-sugar, which can be
seen glistening on the granules, is suf-
ficiently sweet to satisfy the palate.
This grape-sugar is not poured over
the granules, as some people think,
but exudes from the granules in the
process of manufacture, when the
starch of the grains is changed from
starch to grape-sugar by the process
of manufacture. This, in effect, is the
first act of digestion; therefore. Grape-
Nuts food is pro-digested and is most
perfectly assimilated by the very
weakest stomach. “There's a Bea-
son.”
Made at the pure food factories of
the Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Head the little health classic, “The
Road to Wellville," la pkga.
Group 3, Oklahoma-Indian Territory
Selects Officers.
Guthrie. Okla.: Bankers of group
3 of the Oklahoma-Indian Territory
Bankers' association in convention
here today organized by electing .1
.1. Quarels of Fairfax, delegate to
the constitutional convention, chair-
man: William Mee, Oklahoma City,
vice chairman; A. K. Eastman. Guth
rie, secretary, and Charles Olson,
Coyle, treasurer.
Chairman Quarles appointed J. W.
McNeal, Guthrie: Frank Wikoff. Still
water, and D. W. Hogan, Oklahoma
City, executive committee. The mem-
bership list shows 177 banks in the
group, distributed among various
counties as follows:
Osage. 9, 20; Noble, 11; Pawnee, saves time—saves labor—savesannoy-
17; Payne, 11: Logan, 12: Lincoln, 5; ance> will not stick to .the iron. The
Creek, 9; Oklahoma, 19; Okfuskee, big 16 oz. package for 10c, at your
5; Hughes, 15; Seminole, 6; Potta- grocer’s,
watomie, 22.
Mra. Winslow’a Soothing Syrup.
For children teethfng. noftens the gms, reduces In.
Hummation, allays paln, euros windcollc. 25cabottie.
Responsibilities of Officers and Di-
rector*.
A Tahlequah Banker Dead.
Tahlequah, 1. T. • James S. Stapler,
a banker of Tahlequah, known throng-
out the Indian Territory, died of con-
sumption in Hollywood. Cal. Stapler
lived in Tahlequah before the civil
war.
7540aree
Sunday School Lesson for July 14.1907
Spbclally Prepared for This Paper
meseuenmmmemaeesu
l
LESSON TEXT.-Exodus 20:1-11. Mem-
ory versca. Hl.
GOLDEN TEXT.—"Thou shalt love
the Lord thy God, with nil tbln* heart,
and alt thv soul, and with all tRy might”
-Deut. »:5.
TIME.—Fifty days after leaving Egypt
(Ex. 19:1, 15). The day of PeAtecost, the
feast of first fruits. Some time in May.
1191 B. C. or perhaps 1300.
PLACE—in the plain at the bnse of Mt.
Siral In th* southern part of the Sinat-
tic peninsula between the two northern
arms of the Red Sea.
SCRIPTURE REFERENCES.-The Ta-
bles of Stone: Ex. 24:12; 31:1S; 32:15-19;
34:1: Dout. 4 13: 9:9-11: 10:1-5; 1 Kinga 8:9;
Heb. 9:1 Read Psalms 19, 119.
Comment and Suggestive Thought.
Mt. Sinai and Its Surroundings.—
The exact mountain is uncertain, but
Hastings' Bible Dictionary inclines to
the traditional Jebel Mousa, "Moun-
tain of Moses," 7,363 feet above the
sea. In the wild, mountainous region
of the glorious range of granite moun-
tains of which Sinai is the nucleus.
At its northwestern base stretches
Er-Rahah, "the wilderness of Sinai,”
the only plain in the neighborhood
capable of holding 2,000,000 persons,
allowing a square yard for each. The
camp Itself (Palmer) was doubtless
'more extensive, occupying the neigh-
boring glens and mountainsides, wher-
ever there was sufficient fertility for
'the cattle. Fronting the plain is a
lofty and precipitous bluff, Ras-Sufsa-
feh, whence, probably, the law was
proclaimed
Evidently President Kingsley of the
New York Life Insurance company
has learned the great lesson of the
times with respect to the responsibil-
ity and duty of directors of corpora-
tions. Speaking to the new board of
trustees, on the occasion of his elec-
tion to the presidency, he emphasized
the fact that "life insurance is more
than a private business, that life In-
surance trustees are public servants,
charged at once with the obligations
of public service and with the respon-
sibilities that attach to a going busi-
ness which at the same time must be
administered as a trust."
He also realizes that similar respon-
sibilitles rest upon the officers of the
company. "I understand," he says,
"your anxiety In selecting the men
who are day by day to carry this bur-
den for you, who are to discharge this
trust in your behalf, who are to ad-
minister for the benefit of the people
involved the multitudinous and exact-
ing details to which it is impossible
for you to give personal attention. My
long connection with the New York
Life—covering nearly twenty years—
my service In about every branch of
the company's working organization,
gives me, as I believe, a profound ap-
preciation, not merely of the heavy
burden you have placed on my shoul-
ders, but of the standards of efficiency,
the standards of faith, the standards
of integrity, which must be main
tatned at all times by the man who
serves you and the policyholders in
this high office."
Best of all, perhaps, he feels that
words are cheap, and that the public
nlii uc baiiseu with nothing short or
performance. “My thanks, therefore,"
he continues, “for an honor which out-
ranks any distinction within the reach
of my ambition, cannot be expressed
in words; they must be read out of
the record I make day by day."
2 -'
< 4
The hogs of the new state are pro-
nounced by the United States bureau
of animal industry to be the health-
iest on the North American conti-
nent.
E25
E
222
fe:
1285 ______________
Ei Thirty Years
ensmUAS I u KIA
________Pper. re cenraun companv. ,iw VOSS av.
Muskogee, I T.: Three million
dollars worth of property tied up
in Muskogee, Wagoner and Tulsa by
suits filed by M. L. Mott, attorney
for the Creek nation, has caused the
commercial club here to take action
in the appointment of a committee
to go to Washington to lay hte mat
ter before Secretary Garfield.
The suits charge fraud, and inno-
cent purchasers are made defendants.
The club claims that the clouding ol
titles is Injuring the cities named.
Mott is prepairing a suit against the
club alleging that five acres were
purchased at auction without coin pet
itive bids.
Collinsville, 1. T.: A. E. Leap, post
master at this place, stated today
that more than 500 letters had accu
. mulated for Miss Juanita Toskatomba,
winner in the fourth of July beauty
show. There are also numerous large
packages which resemble books and
photographs. Mr. Leap is entirely
snowed under with her mail, together
with that of Miss Laura Brown and
Miss Lula Parker, the second and
third prize winners. Miss Toska
tomba is a tpresent in Chicago en
deavoring to gain admission to the
national beauty contest.
The committee in charge of nr
rangements for the agricultural fair
and racing circuit to be held here
in Sylvan park, October 28, to No-
vember 2, inclusive, have decided to
offer a prize of $1,000 to the most
beautiful woman of the five civilized
tribes.
Sad Disappointment.
A verdant-looking old fellow recent-
ly entered the office of a down-town
woman's exchange, and after a mo-
ment's hesitation inquired of the lady
in charge: “Is this here the Woman's
Exchange?"
"It is,” replied the lady.
“Well," continued the countryman,
somewhat sheepishly, "I'd like to swap
off my old woman for 'most anybody
you happen to have on hand."—Lip-
pincott's Magazine.
5 g"
gle2is
Bartlesville, I. T.: The sale of
the Terrapin allotment adjoining the
Bartlesville townsite, through the
CASTOR
LIFE INSURANCE A BACRID
TRUST.
Pa Was a Kicker.
Geraldine-—What do you think of
pa’
Gerald lie has good terminal facil-
ities.
cYo always get full value in Lewia
Single Binder straight Sc cigar. Your
dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria 111
Laws.—V. 1. "And God spake all
these words,” In three ways: (1) by
his voice; (2) by writing them on the
tablets of stone; and (3) he has writ-
ten them on the very nature of man.
We are not to Imagine that nothing'
'of these commands was known before
'Moses. They were written on the
hearts and consciences of men from
the beginning. We see them in the
early history. They are a lesson for
all mankind.
V. 3. "Thou shalt have no other
gods before me." “Side by side with
me." "In addition to me,” "in my pres-
ence." and therefore "in preference to
me.” ,
Vs. 4-6. This forbids making any
representation of God as a means of
worshiping him.
The First Reason is that all Images
misrepresent God. They are not like
God. They do not represent God as
pictures of a friend represent him to
us.
The Second Reason. V. 5. "I . . .
am a jealous God," L e., not willing
'that- any other should be regarded as
his equal, or take his place in the af-
fections and worship of his people;
because no other can take his place;
no other can love as be loves, or help
as he helps. Every Idol god is not
only useless, but leads to immortality.
The Third Reason. “Visiting the
Iniquity of the fathers upon the chil-
dren." The visitation here spoken of
can hardly be any other than that
which we are accustomed to witness
in the common experience of life (Ex.
34:7; Jer. 32:18). It is a statement
of the scientific doctrine of heredity.
V. 7. “Thou shall not take the name
of the Lord thy God in vain,” I. e.,
lightly, carelessly, thoughtlessly, in-
sincerely.
1. This forbids professing to be
God's people, in covenant relations
with him, and then acting in a man-
ner that dishonors God and misrepre-
sents him before the world. It dis-
graces religion, and drives men from
God.
2. It forbids perjury. "False
*ne‛p*
swearing is among the greatest In-
sults that man can offer to God, and,
as being such, is naturally forbidden
in the first table, which teaches us our
duty to God. It is also destructive of
civil society: and hence It is again
forbidden in the second table (v. 16),
which defines our duties to our neigh-
bor."— Ellicott.
3. But It does not forbid what is
called taking an oalh in court; for
that is a simple affirmation in the sol-
emn presence of God to tell the truth,
ending with a prayer for help to do
it. The way these oaths are some-
times administered borders very close-
ly on the breaking of this command.
4. It forbids all profanity, the care-
less, Irreverent use of God's name and
of holy things, because it tends to de-
stroy the power of these things over
men.
5. It enforces Christ’s Interpreta-
tion that all efforts to support our as-
sertions of a fact beyond the simple
."yes" or "no" repeated cometh of
evil. It weakens the assertion itself.
6. All thoughtless worship comes
under the ban of this commandment.
V. 8. "Remember the Sabbath day.”
Remember Implies that the Sabbath
already existed. "To keep It holy.”
Possibly we talk too much about what
not to do on the Sabbath. Here is the
great thing to do; worship; keep the
day sacred for religious duties and
inspiration, the culture of the sosl of
yourself and of others.
The Covenant of Love.
"In the Old Testament there are
four covenants: that with Noah, of
which the rainbow was the sign, prom-
ising safety from destruction to all
mankind; that with Abraham, of
which circumcision was the sign;
that with Israel as a naton, of which
the sign was the Passover; and that
of which the Sabbath was the sign
for all mankind. The record of the
Mosaic Law is called 'the book of the
covenant' (Ex. 24:7). But the main
covenants between God and man are
two—the Mosaic and the Christian,
the Law and the Gospel."—Farrar, I
Establish a Department Store.
Collinsville, I. T.: About two
hundred members of the Farmers'
Union met here last Saturday in
convention and arraigned to open a
large department store to be known
as the "Farmers’ Clearing House."
They are trying to raise funds with
which to erect a modern brick build-
ing. with a hall above for the use
of the members.
One of the leaders said today that
unionism in the Cherokee nation was
stronger today than ever before in
the history of the southwest, and
predicted great things for the, union
both politically and financially. Local
merchants are watching the union
closely, but they express the opinion
that six months will wind them up.
Th* Commandments
President Jordan to Lecture.
President Jordan, of Stanford uni-
versity. Cal., is on his way to Aus-
tralia and New Zealand, where he will ;
lecture before the colleges of the !
Antipodes on the American university
system.
For Chiggers and Mosquitoes.
Hunts Lightning Oil is great. If
used in time It keeps them away. If
after being bitten it affords instant re-
Mef ________________
Theatrfcally speaking, the heroine's
death scene is usually less realistic '
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Bartlett, H. U. The Mannford Enterprise (Mannford, Indian Territory [Okla.]), Vol. 1, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 11, 1907, newspaper, July 11, 1907; Mannford, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1945263/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Keystone Crossroads Historical Society.