The Seiling Guide. (Seiling, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 23, 1902 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE SELLING GUIDE
W a MIIII PnbUshm
BEILING OKLAHOMA
OKLAHOMA AND INDIAN lUtROBI
Woodward in' 'figuring on water-
works ' ’ : '
Anadarko now ’ claims a population
of 8100 ' ' ' f -
r 1 f
The fixture of the poetoffice at Avoca
bare beenremoved to Asher ' “ ' '
Fire prisoners In the jail at Watonga
bound the guard and escaped -There
were 478 entries at the El-
Jteno land oflSoe during December
The Oklahoma A' Eastern passenger
trains are all of the time crowded
The El Reno Electric Light and Tele-
phone company has been sold for 817-
600 The Oklahoma Bridge and Steel com-
pany has decided to locate its plant at
Enid
A narrow guage railroad is talked of
out of Lawton 40 miles into the Wichita
mountains
The Kiowa Comanche and Apache
Indians are to be given (90000 of gracs
lease money
Enid 1180 white families and 43
colored familes having a total popula-
tion of 6155 - i
STaloga and Woodward are expecting
to get the Choctaw by the way of
Weatherford
Cordell seems to have secured to a
certainty the Blackwell Enid St South-
western railroad
A Kiowa Indian maiden is raising
money to complete her education by
delivering lectures
Major Ross Guffiu of Kansas City
has been appointed as agent for the
Sac and Fox Indiana
Mr Hensell of Blackwell proposes
to establish an automobile line between
that town and Newkirk
The People’s bank at Enid has been
robbed of about 83000 The loss is
covered by burglar insurance '
St Louis parties have coal leases
near Jones City where a fine vein of
coal has been discovered
Three hundred dozen quails and fif-
teen dozen prairie chickens addressed
to a St Louis commission firm were
seized at Alva
A Chicago syndicate has leased 4000
acres northwest of Granite for the pur-
pose of putting down drill wells with
the hope of reaching oiL
Forged checks have been passed at
butcher shpp in Guthrie and in Perry
The checks were all for 8885 and a
quarter dollar’s worth of meat was
ordered and 88 received in change
An agreement has been made and
contracts signed for the B E 8 trains
to commence running into Hobart by
July 1 next The railroad people say
their trains will be there by June 10
’ The committee of the board of educa-
tion to investigate the Alva normal
find no cause for removal of any one
‘ol the faculty and so reported appro-
priations for repairing and other bills
The entire business portion of Arapa-
hoe county seat of Custer county has
been wiped out by fire The town was
at the time very happy over the near
prospect of welcoming the entry of the
Blackwell Enid A Southeastern rail-
road The one fare rate made by all rail-
roads for the round trip to Wichita
Kansas and return on the dates of the
(th Annual Convention of the Oklaho-
ma Live Stock Association February
11 13 andl3 next is effective on 10th
and 11th going limited to return on
the 15th ' 1
The Rock Island is going to intersect
the Fort Worth St Denver road at
Quanab Texas in the near future
Enid during 1901 has been reached
by two railroads has graded eleven
miles of streets laid several miles of
brick and cement sidewalks built two
brick school houses having 16 rooms
17 brick business bouses has a pressed
brick plant three cold storage houses
a planing miU has doubled the capacity
of its machine shop also its telephone
system haa erected about 300 resi-
dences and two churches
H K Bear foreman of the Rock
Island bridge building gang was killed
in a wreck at Okeene E Colby of
Galva Kansas was also killed and sev-
eral other were injured Mr Bear is
a citizen and property holder of Wich-
ita W T Peoples a cotton buyer shot
E F McLaughlin ' aa Oklahoma City
druggist while he was working at hla
prescription csse The bell went
through hla heart Peoples said that
McLaughlin had mined bis life- They
are both of middle age ’
Canadian county claims to he the only
Oklahoma 1 county ' that ever floated
bonds bearing as low an Interest as 4
percent -E
W Klmber of Hobart and Henry
H Dodd of Anadarko have been
named by Governor Ferguson as hon-
orary commissioner from Kiowa and
Caddo counties to the St Louis expo
sition
Addison F Powers emigration agent
for the Sant Fe at Guthrie has been
arrested on the charge of embezzlecsent
of 8600 Powen denies the charge
The Dawes commission Is enrolling
Cherokees at Okmulgee
The Choctaw railroad will sink an
immense well at Ardmore
A cattlemen's convention is called to
be held at Purcell on April 7
The non-resident citizens of Vlnita
have paid their tribal tax under pro-
test v
Bristow I T claims to have a pop-
ulation of 1300 having doubled in the
past year ‘
£ Mattie Coleman was shot and killed
at Okmulgee through the window of
her room ' "
The Friaeo railroad will test Vinlta’s
inexhaustible supply of artesian water
as to its use for steam
A five-foot vein of coal has been
found at Tulsa at a depth of 158 feet
A switch will be built to it
The single statehood delegates elected
at the Muskogee convention left for
Washington on January IS
A “literary feller" has been enter-
tained at Muskogee who will write
about the Indian country for a mag-
azine Chickssha is counting its people to
see if it has not enough of them to be-
come a city of the first class The re-
quirement is 5000
Secretary Hitchcock asks an appro-
priation of 85000 by congress to estab-
lish the boundary between Texas and
the Choctaw nation
An appropriation of 85000 is made
by the Creek council to pay counsel for
the nation Pliny Soper is likely to
get the appointment
The Cherokoee Choctaw and Chicka-
saw nations have by their councils
passed resolutions asking congress for
a territorial government
The first train of steel has arrived
for the Oklahoma City and Western
railway There is to arrive 4000 tons
a month until the order is filled
Secretary nitchcock has granted the
Indian Territory Traction company a
permit to build a street car line from
South McAlester to Haileyville
Ten miners lost their lives by an ex-
plosion in mine No 9 at Dow Choctaw
nation It is a new mine and the ac-
cumulation of gas so soon is a mystery
Judge Clayton decides that in the
Chickasaw and Choctaw nations the
federal courts alone have jurisdiction
in land cases under- the Atoka agree-
ment 0 8 Marshall Hammond called by
telephone upon Ardmore to send officers
to trace the murderers of two women
and a man near the Caddo bridge six
miles from Ardmore
The preachers of South McAlester
have avowed their intention to oust
every teacher in the public schools who
is not a church member and much feel-
ing is general over the subject
Captain Hack bush an attache of the
Dawes commission Is the oldest gov-
ernment employe in the Indian Terri-
tory He has been in the service for
over forty years He is a civil engineer
E T Youngblood a stone quarry
owner and operator near Ravia I T
say he haa found immense deposits of
magnesia He also claims to have
fonnd gold ore there which assays 8138
to the ton
A Choctaw fullblood was arrested at
Atoka for renting pasture lands to non-
citizens snd Judge Clay ton decided that
the Indians who take np no more than
tbeir allotment have a right to rent it
to anybody
At a meeting of the farmers’ institute
the oil inspector and his deputies were
condemned unsparingly One of the
professors of the A £ M college de-
clared that oil of 115 test was allowed
to be sold though the law requires a
test of 175
A force of surveyors with headquar-
ters at Chickaalia baa commenced to
quarter section that part of the Chicka-
saw nation
The special session of the Choctaw
legislature has adjourned Appropria-
tions were made for Indian school
No agreement was reached about a
supplementary treaty
The report of the Santa Fe just issued
shows that Blackwell is one of the eight
points along the entire system that
have shown the greatest gain in busi-
ness during the past year
Roley Sartey the moat notorious out-
law of the fullblood Creek Indians has
been arrested after successfully eluding
the officers for five year The chargee
of larceny against him aggregate at
least fifty and he haa more biding
places near Cowet and Choaka than
any other outlaw In the territory J
The president has nominated John
A Oliphant register of the Man gum
land office and Anton H Classen for
the same position at Oklahoma City
also aa receiver Wm F Yonng at Ok-
lahoma City
V W Cloud of Pond Creek haa re-
ceived news of the death of e brother
in South America - Tle brother left In
1849 and nothing had been heard from
him for a long time Mr Cloud la in-
formed that his brother left consider-
able property
Acting upon orders from Washington
Indian Agent Hhoeufelt bee taken
action to put a atop to hunting In In-
dian Territory This move was made
neocaeery as many who have been
given permission to bunt in th terri-
tory have abused the privilege -
MARKETS CORRECTED DAILY
Kai
City
t 4 TS
CATTtB—
fin
A 6 4ft
m ii"
HOQ9— Choloo to heavy ft T
WHEAT— No t hoid 77
CORN— No 8 Ml sad a
HAY — Choloo timothy 13 50
Choloo proirte 1 00
BUTTER I
soaa S3
It N
!
OhlflBMb ’
WHEAT— He t herd
OORN-Na 8
OAT8— Nat 45
II Loili Lira ItoBk
BREVIS 8 M m
STOCKERS A FEEDERS tU A 4 40
TEXAS FED STBEttri 8 80 3 8 80
Cot to
Vpiuit
LIVERPOOL 4 8-164
NEW YORK o
GALVESTON
80
i¥
45
Gull
Wlehlta Grata
OpM Hlfb Low
Clot
Today
90
90
Okat
Y’day
19
00 ¥
80
93
53
44H
99
WHEAT
JtB
May
July
CORN
May
July
OATS
May
July
90
(JO
n
53
90S
90
TDHV
83
9i
M
93
61
68
4
44
30
4
40
40
Wichita Uh llMk
8 5 50
Chicago Llvt Itooh
GOOD TO PRIME 8 8 50
COWS A HEIFERS 1
STOCKERS A FEEDERS 8 81
TEXAS FED STEERS 8 1
HOGS ft M
9 SO
THE LATEST NEWS IN BRIEF
King Edward has resumed horse
racing
The Canadian parliament is snm-
moned to meet on Feb 13
Both of the Iowa U S senators Al-
lison snd Dolliver are re-elected
Chili Is the disturbing element in the
pan-American congress in Mexico City
The Boer delegates in Holland seem
to anticipate some kind of peace over-
tures A seat on the Kansas city hoard of
trade coat a Southern Missouri miller
2500
The Kentucky legislature elected
James B McCreary to the Cnited States
senate
The Jupiter mine at Breux Austria
was suddenly flooded causing the death
of 43 men
An ioternationhl tournament is being
arranged for the time of the coronation
of King Edward
The British war office has Issued a
call for 9396 more infantry volunteers
to go to South Africa
Alex McClintock the noted breeder
of Alderney stock died suddenly at bis
home at Lexington Ky
The safe in the postoffice at Greens
bnrg Ind was blown open and 81700
worth of postage stamps stolen
Gold to the amount of 8380000 haa
been sent in one shipment from at St
Joseph Mo bank to St Louis
Judge Grosacup of the 0 8 court in
Chicago decides that the city hse the
right to regulate the price of gas
A Spaniard at Chadron Neb says he
touched the button to blow up the bat-
tleship Maine in Havana harbor
The Santa Fe route's lines west of
Albuquerque have been officially given
the title of “Santa Fe coast lines”
Twenty-five thousand men employed
in the steel mills west of Pittsburg
Ohio have been given an increase of
wages
The Kentucky Daughters of the Con-
federacy are calling upon the legisla-
ture to prohibit “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”
from playing in the state
Joseph B Forakcr has been elected
by the Ohio legislature to succeed him-
self as United States senator The vote
was 87 for Foraker and 53 for Chao W
Baker the Democratic candidate
Oscar 8 Strauss formerly U 8 minj
ister to Turkey haa been appointed a
member of the committee on arbitra-
tion at The Hague to fill the vacancy
caused by the death of ex-l’resident
Harrison
When Funston’s confirmation was np
one of the opposition senators asked
“What has Funs ton ever done?” Quick
as s flash Senator Harris replied: “He
saw Opportunity's face we can all see
her back”
Madison Wi has a curfew law
which excludes children from the street
by 8 o’clock In winter end 9 o’clock la
summer
The Congressional Military commit-
tee went to West Point to figure on the
making of provisions of a larger estab-
lishment on modern line
Admiral Schley received a reception
et Savannah Ga equaled by but few
ever given a public man In any southern
city
Statistics show that there were la the
United States 118 legal execution in
1901 The number of persona lynched
was larger than the number of persons
sentenced to death by the court
It is reported that (16000000 ha
been subscribed In Paris for building
and equipping a new system of electric
street railways in the City of Mexieo
and introducing low fare
Lewis Nixon the shipbuilder has
succeeded Richard Croker as chief offi-
cer of the Tammany organization
which ha ruled New York so long
Portia Knight the American actress
has compromised her breach of promise
suit against the Duke of Manchester
and get £1000 and costa of legal pro
seeding
Sugar piantera and merohanta of the
Danish West Indies have petitioned the
Danish government to secure tho A roof-
lean market for their sugar who the
sale of the Islands is completed
Increase of the Year 1901 Has Been
'$31450000
LESS OF GRAIN AND STOCK
Washington Jan 10 — The monthly
statement of the exports of domestic
products issued by the bureau of sta-
tistics shows that during December
1901 the exports were as follows:
Breadstuff 815358143 decrease as
oompared with December 1900 9000-
000 Cattle and hogs (3630454 decrease
of 8500000
Provisions 837190110 increase of
82153000 -
Cotton 843003469 decrease of (1-
150000
Mineral oils (6359169 increase of
81100000
For the calender year the total ex-
ports were 8663800883 increase over
1900 of (31430000
The imports and exports for Decem-
ber are given as follows:
Merchandise imports 879914743 of
which (30015411 was free of duty in-
crease over December 1900 of (11000-
000060 Merchandise exports (domestic)
8135341805 decreoae of (9000000
Gold imports 83510066 increase of
81000000
Gold exports 84744073 increase of
81330000 - f
Silver imports 82784753 decrease
of 8333000
8ilver exports 84723053 decrease
of (2600
During the last twelve months there
was a total increase or decrease in these
articles as follows: 1
Merchandise imports increase of
851356632 exports decrease of 812-
431974 Gold imports decrease of (12367302
exports increase of 83595206
Silver imports decrease of (8057-
394 exports decrease of 810583763
Drouth Help P y TIM
Topeka Jan 19 — The drouth last
summer had a peculiar effect upon
Western Kansas It is responsible for
the payment of not only the current
taxes but also all back taxes Some of
the counties were behind from four to
eight years When the drouth played
havoc with the pastures in eastern and
central Kansaa stockmen from those
sections went on further west and
bought up tax deeds to the cheap lands
as s precaution against another drouth
This swelled the treasuries of the
western counties and they in turn
poured a lot of cash into the state
treasury As a result nearly all of the
western counties now have their taxes
paid np to date
Earthquake la Malice
Mexico Jan 18 — Four distinct
shocks of earthquake shook this city
The shocks were very sharp snd buildings-swayed
perceptibly Thousands
of people rushed from offices and dwell-
ings into the middle of the streets for
safety snd many knelt in prayer
Telegraph poles bent like trees in a
gale The event of the day in the Pan-
American conference was it may be
said the earthquake The delegates
sprang from their chairs and grabbed
their desks in alarm but were reassured
by the calmness of the Mexican
Ne Ids of Ccucolldctlu
Washington Jan 13 — Delegate
Flynn baa called on Secretary Hitch-
cock at the interior department and
inquired as to a report that owing to
lack of business at the Enid Alva
and Kingfisher land offices the offices
would be discontinued He was told
that the department bad no idea of
discontinuing them
Mast Stead by Coetrse
Indianapolis Ind Jan 15— By a
decision of the supreme court in the
case of John R Payne against the
Terre Haute £ Indianapolis Railroad
Company a person holding a free pas
who signs a contract releasing the
company from ail claims for personal
injury or loss of baggage must stand
by contract and the company ia not
responsible for his injury an damage
eannot he recovered against it on this
ground
Tromp Castle Yew Inrall
Topeka Jan 16 — The supreme court
has handed down an opinion holding
invalid the law passed by the legisla-
ture ie 1899 providing for the taxation
of cattle brought Into a county After
March 1 and before September 1 It
was enacted for the purpose of putting
an end to the custom of some cattlemen
of shipping their herds of cattle out of
the state before March 1 and then
bringing them back afterwards In or-
der to escape taxation The case came
from Orecnwood county on an injunc-
tion against collecting tax
A BaeCsciee Press
' New York Jan 16— Prince Henry
f Prussia will bring from Oermany a
handsome present for Mia Alice Roose-
velt from the emperor in reeognltl -and
a a souvenir of her part In the
launching of th new royal yacht An-
nouncement of this fact was made in a
dispatch from Berlin The cablegram
also said that Prince Henry had been
directed to arrange for aquatic sports
between American and German tars
In the foreign port - where they
CATTLEMEN WILL BRING SUIT
Ileve Blbt to Bqnat Shipping Rotas
With Fackar
Chloago Jan 15— As a result of th
testimony given before the interstate
commerce commission st Chicago suits
aggregating between 1 and 3 million
dollars ' probably will be brought
against the railroad companies opera-
ting lines between ' Chicago and the
Missouri river to recover charges
illegally made for the shipping of cat-
tle A movement has been started to
have the cattle growers and shippers’
associations combine with a view of
bringing test eases against the rail-
road The Butts which are 'Contem-
plated will he for a recovery of the
difference between tariff rates and the
rates paid on packing bouse products
since June 30 1901 cattle being en-
titled to equal rates with packing
house product The cattlemen base
their hope of recovery upon the rulings
of the United States supreme court to
the effect that the same rate must be
made for the transportation of cattle
that is made for dressed beef and the
products made from cattle
District JadgM Cos
Topeka Jan 16 — Attorney General
A A Godard will institute quo war-
ranto proceedings in the supreme court
in behalf of R C Heizer of Osage City
to oust William Thomson of Burlin-
game as judge of the Thirty-fifth
judicial district ' This will bring about
a test of the biennial election law and
the supreme court will decide whether
or not Governor Stanley was author-
ized to appoint successors to the district
judges whose terms of office- have ex-
pired A number of the old and new
judges agreed upon a statement of
facts and asked Mr Godard to act
Mnekoy Want no Subsidy
Washington Jan 18 — The senate
committee on naval affairs gave a
hearing to representatives of the Pacific
Commercial Cable Company
Speaking of his company Senator
Ward said that for a great many years
Mr John W Mackay has had a great
desire to see a Pacific cable laid because
of his being identified largely with the
Pacific coast Senator Ward asked if
it were fair or just for the government
to lay a cable in competition with
private enterprise and was it good
business policy for 'the United States
to spend (15000000 when it oould get
everything it desired from a private
cable without the outlay of a dollar
Mr Cook general counsel declared
that his company wanted no subsidy
no grant All they did ask was that
congress pas no bill at all
Caught I Colorado
Topeka Jan 18 — Edwin J Royce
charged with being the sharper who
fleeced David Overmyer the Topeka
attorney out of (900 some time ago
haa been captured at Conejos Cob a
little hamlet near the New Mexican
line He will be brought back for
triah Overmeyer admits being fleeced
but says it would not be wise for bim
te say anything about the matter until
the trial ’
Most Hat Ssparsts fVchoola
Guthrie O T Jan — Chief Justice
Buford has issued an order that where
there be only on colored child of
school age in a school district the au-
thorities must provide a separate school
house and teacher This order takes
in the entire territory and will prove
very expensive to the various counties
who have appealed to the supreme
court
Dlroators Approve Lasaa
Philadelphia Jan 15 — At the an-
nual meeting of the Choctaw Oklahoma
and Gulf railroad company held here
the lease of the Choctaw Oklahoma
and Gulf Railroad company of the
Little Rock and Hot Springs Western
railroad was approved
Mm Aotorlma Baste Orders
Ogdensburg N Y Jan 15— Three
davit boats fur the Emperor of Ger-
many's yacht now being built near
New York city here been ordered from
an Ogdensburg boat building eompany
The boats are a twenty-five foot gig a
nineteen foot cutter and a sixteen foot
dinghy constructed of mahogany
elaborately trimmed and finished la
the highest possible manner
Os MsteaK Met (tore
Lawrence Jau 16— General WUdar
8 Metcalf when asked concerning
the chargee made against him in the
senate committee to prevent his con-
firmation aa pension agent at Topeka
said:
“The charge that I shot Filipino
while they were defenseless has been
made before and after an investigation
by the officers of the wnr department
1 was exonerated from all blame The
charges are all old and threadbare and
I have not the least doubt about the
outcome They were started by sows
of my enemies in the 20th regiment
purely for personal reason”
California Pro It
Los Angeles Csl Jan 18— Southern
California will ship 30000 ears of citrus
fruit during the season The crop it
expected to faU short more than 4000
ears of the ontpnt last year The esti-
mated shipment of vegetables will ag-
gregate 1000 ear Frost haa not
damaged oranges but th crop of Bum-
mer lemons will be short Oranges are
smaller in else A fact to which nearly
all of the shortage is stated to ba
da ' The ntw crop is of a superior
quality
— ! —
I Wasn’t tesllpn
One of the colored porters on 'the
Hannibal and 8b' Joe who was qua-
antlned In Kansas City because of th
smallpox was telling hla experience to
some acquaintances: “Dey don kept
me canteeened for three weeks snd It
wssn’t smallpox at all It was nuffla
but celluloid’'
“A Osans tar Tw
Once upon s time s young gentleman
and a younger lady were In a bright
parlor in front of a cheerful open lire '
With a table between them playing
card Aa they continued to play and
chat the table was not so much be-
tween them for they both got nearer
the lira and played the gam on on
corner of the tabl They had started
la to piny euchre but after aa hour
and n half they found that they were
playing heart Moral — We are not
always aura what the game 1— 8b
Louis Republic '
- The New Bias Back i
Advance copies of the completed bt
ennlal publication known as the Blue
Book are In the bands of a few leading
officials although the limited edition
will not be Issued to those designed
by law aa recipients for several day'
It la a compendium of all persona In
the employ of the United States In-
cluding officers of the army and navy
but excluding the rank and file of
the military establishment - Alto-
gether then there are 220000 persons
engaged In the public service in nil
its ramifications at home and abroad
India Territory Coal Dapaalts
Some ides of the value of th coal
deposits in Indian territory can be
gained when it is known the average
thickness of the vein Is four fast
which will produce 4000 tons to the
sere These lands are leased In lots of
000 acres each which means that
8600000 to 4000000 tons can be pro-
duced by those leasing the land On
this output the lessee pay n royalty
of eight cents a ton The output dur- -lug
th last year was 1000127 as
against 1400441 tons tbs previous-
year A Slroaaoon Slsdaa
There was a wild scene at Budn-
Pesth University a few days ago
Twenty students had undergone oral
examinations and eighteen had been
badly “plucked” owing as they
thoughb to the unreasonable severity
of the tesb One of th twenty whip-
ping a revolver from his pocket
rushed up to the examiners’ table and
brandishing his weapon yelled at the-
terrified professors: “You may thank
your stars I’ve no cartridge H 1
had I would have put lead into you
all” Amid the hubbub the professors
fled the room— Buds Pesth Corre-
spondence London Chronicle
Unless a man haa rubbed up against
the rough aide of life ha never accom-
plishes much
Women laugh oftenef from a sense
of duty than from a sense of humor
Is Winter Us Alloa’ Pact Pee
a powder Your feet feel uncomfortable
nervous and often cold and damp U
you hava Chilblains sweating sore feet
or tight shoes try Allen's Foot-Baa
Sold by all druggists and shoe store
25c Sample sent FREE Address
Allan 8 Olmsted La Roy N Y
A Paakte Indian Beak
Ths Santa Fs has In preparation a
book on the Indian along Its line
The material Is being gathered and
arranged by an expert ethnologist and
although tbs primary object of the
publication is to advertise ths wonders
snd interesting features of ths South-
west the book Is expected to have a
definite scientific value and great car
la being given to th accuracy Of th
subject-matter and illustration
Ministers marry people end lawyers
unmarry them
offer One Hundred DollftnmrdfOrMf
mm of Catarrh that emioot ba cured hf HftU'i
U?&Y COl Prop- Toledo Q
We the BDdereliael uve knowa r J
Cheney for the butt 16 years and bailee hla
perfectly booormble la ell busies traaaeeUoas-
and hnaoctaUr abla ta earn ee aay oblige
‘ tbeir Sm
tkmsmadeby Vmw —
Weat ft Trues Wholesale DntfUUTolad
Waldioe Ktanaa Merrla WbolaaeH
Drorf leta Toledo Ohio-
Hail e Catarrh Cure la takes laterally act-
ing directly upon the blood sod mucous surfaces
of tbe system Testimonial sent free Prist
tie per bottla bold by all druggtste
Hall's Pomnv Pills ars IS task
To borrow is human — to pay back In
divine
A bare
relief for
yts-
ssssxsst
KlS££ffS PASTILLES
optioua’muDE
s ( POT Dr IX WlUPilHI VUSBi ) I
A nutntltate tor sod saparler te mastoid ar
eayolbar plsswr sod will sat bllator 4k
mast delleoia kin The pale-allsyla end
eurmtlva qualities of this ertloiv ere wonder-
ful It will oiop th toothsebs et oaea sad
roller hesdsobo snd octstloa Ws went
mead tt as th best sad wfsat sxtorsal
eounter-lrrltant known site as sa szterasl
remedy for pains la the ehest sod atomaoh
snd nil rhoucnatlo nourolsla and coaly com-
plaints A trial will prova wba wo slnlm
for It sad It will ho found to be Invnlaabl
ia thn household Many people My “It la tho
beat of all of yoar preparations ” Prion it
eanu st all drurd-u or other dealers or by
ending thin amount to us In pooiocs ataman
ws Wraa4 yo n tabu by mnlL No srtiaM
should bo accepted by lk public Ml cm th
nemo carries our lebel e oiherwUe 1 1 is net
genuine CNBAewotNlN MPO COL
If Bum b tret New vuaa ctrr
A FEIESCZYEntr?
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Smith, W. G. The Seiling Guide. (Seiling, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 23, 1902, newspaper, January 23, 1902; Seiling, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2043518/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.