Kiamichi Valley Reporter (Albion, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, August 28, 1908 Page: 2 of 4
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Albion Reporter
H R Christopher -'ublisher
ALBION OKIiA
NEW' STATE NOTES
Charged with attempting to pass
counterfeit money Claud Crump is In
jail at Hobart It Is alleged he tried
to pass a confederate $5 bill
Oorernor Haskell has issued a
proclamation calling an election in
Marlow on September 22 at which its
people shall vote on the question of
whether or not It Is to become a city
of the first class
Feeling the need of a reformatory
for boys which the recent legislature
failed to provide a petition Is being
circulated over the state asking Gov-
ornor Haskell to provide a temporary
reform school for boys In the state
I James E Gresham of McAlester
former assistant United States district
attorney for the central district of In-
dian Territory has been appointed
Special attorney to represent the de-
partment of justice at Muskogee in
the prosecution of land fraud cases
A severe fire destroyed three busl-
jnes8 buildings at Graham near Ard-
imore last week The stocks of goods
(in the buildings were a total loss
The Katy railroad has designated
Wagoner as a division point and a
(number of teams and men are at
work preparing the tract of land deed-
ed to the company for round house
tracks and coal chutes
The largest filing fee on record was
received by the secretary of state last
week It was $2250 and was submit-
ted by Appleton and Company book
publishers as fee for taking out ar-
1 tides of Incorporation The firm was
We of the successful bidders before
the state text book commission
Nearly 1000 full blood Indians have
already made application to have re-
strictions removed from tho sale of
'their allotments There were ten of
(these applications forwarded to the
secretary of the Interior for approval
last week from Muskogee They are
the first
The Seventh Day Adventists held
their first annual convention at Lake-
wood Park near Enid last week Sev-
eral hundred people were In attend-
ance some of them national leaders
of that denomination
" Anadarko's new $100000 oil mill
has been completed and the machin-
ery Is now being Installed in readi-
ness for the fall crop
” The Labor Day series of ball games
between the Oklahoma City and Enid
clubs in the Western Association that
was to have been played in the latter
town have been transferred to Okla-
homa City The probability of a
larger attendance Is the reason
Beaver Cimarron and Texas coun-
ties created by the constitutional con-
vention out of old Beaver county have
Just completed a ' itlement with the
old county The net debt of olA Beav-
er county amounted to $34000 includ-
ing an old warrant Indebtedness of
$22000 much of which Is said to be
Illegal and will not be paid Of this
Indebtedness Cimarron county as-
sumes $5000 Texas county $18000
Beaver county $11000
Very little attention Is given the re-
port that the Snake Indians are con-
gregating near Hickory for the purpose
of giving trouble Chester Howe the
Washington attorney is still at the
council ground and It Is presumed that
his Influence will prevent and hostile
movements
Frank Halkey a notorious bad In-
dian who la charged with murdering
Oscar Rutherford near Broken Arrow
about one year ago has been deliver-
ed by his bondsmen to the county
authorities and placed in Jail He
was implicated In a stabblig affair at
Tulsa a few 'ays ago and was re-
leased on a bond of $3000
While lying flat on the ground and
drinking from a pool near Manltou
Fred Roark 1$ year old waa covered
jby sand that fell from an embank
went and smothered to death
The lurgest American Indian Is Boo-jkoua-l-to
a Caddo who weighs 636
pounds He la 26 years old Is six
feet tall and measures seven feet four
luchea around the waist The Indian
will be taken on an exposition tour of
the east this fall He resides near
Blngor
Assistant Attorney General Spllman
holds that a foreigner cannot vote In
'Oklahoma until he has filed his second
(naturalisation papers and completed
all the details of naturalisation
D R Rogers a member of tho board
of oommlaaloners of Seminole county
died at hla homo at Baaakwa laat week
of typhoid fever He -was 35 yeara
old was born In Tennessee and had
beea a resident of Oklahoma eight
years
Mlnsrs Returning to Work
WILlUIltTON: The coal mines aro
rapidly reaumlng operations and the
miners are returning from tholr vaca-
tions and going to work A majority
of thees men earn wages equivalent
to $1500 and often $2500 per year
Farmers Educational
— AND — ‘
Co - Operative Union
Of America
Let It Slide
Llfe'a too short at most to wrangle
Let it slide!
I’m opposed to clash and jangle
Hate and pride
You’ll be happy all the quicker
If you Just forbear to bicker
Do as I do — let’er flicker
Let it slide!
Cure's less easy than prevention
Let It slide!
Don't in any sharp contention
Long abide
Don’t be to opinions wedded
Down In bedrock fast Imbedded
Don’t be foolish and mule-headed
Let It slide!
Yes I’ve found the plan Is bully
Let It slide!
Helps a fellow wonderfully
Once it’s tried
There are times Its application
Wouldn’t have my commendation
But — with due discrimination—
Let It slide!
How Farmers Saved a Business
House
An interesting case where a business
house selling Implements to farmers
and receiving four and six months
notes In payment was saved early
this year by the makers of these
notes came recently to the knowledge
of the writer of this That business
house found itself without sufficient
ready cash to meet Its maturing obli-
gations but was In possession of farm-
ers’ notes varying from $100 to $600
and amounting to almost $44000 all
In all The banks refused at that time
to discount those notes received in
payment for orders secured by adver-
tising When the advertising agent
of the firm called for the payment
of his monthly bill he was surprised
to receive an offer of a four months
note in payment of it Instead of the
usual check with which the firm used
to settle Its monthly advertising ac-
count for a number of years The
advertising agent suggested to the
manager of that firm to appeal to the
farmers to take up their notes be-
fore maturity by offering them a dis-
count of 5 per cent This suggestion
struck the manager as a splendid one
with the result that within twenty-
four hours a letter was mailed to the
farmers whoss notes the firm held de-
scribing the conditions of the larger
cities the difficulty of getting even
good notes discounted by banks and
offering a discount of 5 percent to all
willing to take their notes up before
maturity Within one week every one
of those notes but two amounting to
$650 were redeemed by the farmers
The replies came in quicker than ex-
pected Not only this but a number
of farmers offered to buy more Imple-
ments for cash If acceptable terms
could be offered Only two farmers
did not reply and the reason of It
was as was learned later that they
had gone with their wives to Cali-
fornia This case shows what wealth the
farming population has accumulated
how eager It Is to take advantage of
conditions and what market there Is
now for those seeking patronage for
legitimate propositions by the right
kind of advertising In desirable agri-
cultural papers — Guenthers Journal
Pig Money In Waste Land
Tho woven wire fence Is revolu-
tionizing the hog Industry In the whole
country and when farmers learn to
utilise every bit of waste land for pas-
ture for their hogs the herds will be
healthy and the cost of production will
be decreased many dollars It won’t
do to allow the pigs to He In the shade
of the corn cribs or to allow them
only a run of pasture Feed a litte
corn all of the time that the pigs are
running in the pasture The grass-
grown pig does not appear so attrao-
tlvo with his working clothes on but
when ho Is well developed and ready
to be fitted he makes the pampered
pets look like 30 cents He makee a
fine appearance end la a credit to hie
owner and feeder
Milk Trust In Trouble
From evidence obtained by the
state's attorney of Chicago It seems
pretty well settled that the big milk
companies have dlvldod up the coun-
try In that section and apportioned
each slice to a member of the trust
Farmers testified that no two compan-
ies operated In tho aamo town and
that prices were fixed by the milk
companies In every case and never
by the farmers The only consolation
the farmers get out of it la that thero
aeema to bo a faint possibility that
aomo members of the trust may In
time be Introduced to the Inside of A
JalL
Hard Work
Hard work la the secret of success
It will come quicker If to bard work
are added such other attributes aa a
genial tunny disposition the ability
to make friends quickly eto but the
foundation and groundwork of success
la hard work and the man Just getting
Into tho morchnndls buslnoaa who
follows the rule who buys carefully
and eelle carefully at all times safe-
guarding hla credit and who has no
very bad habits wll win the goal
ovary time— Southern Merchant
j Timely Hints on Farm Land
The sign of the silo marks a pro-
gressive farmer every time
A case of Ingrowing selfishness Is
worse than an ingrowing toe nail
I would not give a cent for a hen
that will not sing — nor a man either
Song and work go together
Sprayed the trees In May? Very
good But Mr Codding Moth ought
to have another dose this month
Too much water and wet mushy
foods will not lay on fat It takes the
concentrated stuff to do that
The man who cannot kick the hired
man harder than the hired man kicks
the cow doesn’t deserve the name of
farmer
We are likely to have good late
pasture this summer but that Is no
reason for neglecting to sow forage
crops next year
August Is just as good month In which
to make new resolutions as January
— JuBt so one makes them and stlcka
to them
This Is the month In which hens’
nest doses up like Hetty Green's
charity purse unless good shade and
extra attention la provided
It takes courage to keep on raising
sheep or hogs or anything else when
prices show a weak backbone for a
couple of yeara In succession But
the man who has tho grit to stick
to tho business will win In the long
run
Do not make the mistake of filling
the silo with corn that is green It
sours quickly and has llttls feeding
value Walt till It la npe
Eggs have a lot of albumen In them
Skimmed milk la rich In It too Put
the two together and see It you do
not think It would be sensible to feed
more milk to your chicks
Justice to All
Truth never contradicts Itself
Neither does Justice ever come Into
conflict with Justice Whatever condi-
tions are just to tho farmer can be
no less than Just to all men No man
Is wronged "Right Is right and
wrongs no man” On the other hand
whatever Is less than Justice to the
farmer Is less than Justice to all men
who participate in the Inequality—
less than justice even to tho specula-
tor and the capitalist who wax fat off
ths farmer’s toil It Is true they do
not object to the Injustice — they like
it — but it is a fact that people who
submit to wrong conditions do Injus-
tice to their oppressors as well as to
their children What Is more to the
point Is the thought that all honest
men — all who want Justice no less
no more whether farmer or laboring
man can join hands as brothers In
the noble work of accomplishing hu-
manity's freedom Moreover one class
unaided is not equal to the Job — each
needs the other Whatever- la Jus-
tice for one Is Justice for tho other
Injustice the same No man llveth to
himself — likewise no class The farm-
er cannot achieve justice for himself
without emancipating the worldt — Na-
tional Co-operator
What to Teach tha Boye
A philosopher has said that true
education to boys is to "teach them
what they should know when they
become men"
1 To be true and to bo genuine
No education la worth anything that
does not include this
2 To be pure In thought language
and life — pure In mind and In body
3 To be unselfish To car for tho
feelings and comforts of others To
be generous noble and manly This
will Include a genuine reverence for
the aged and for things sacred
4 To be self-reliant and self-helpful
even from childhood To be In-
dustrious always and self supporting
at the earliest proper age Teach
them that all honest work In honor
able that an Idle life of dependence
on others Is disgraceful
When a boy has learned these tour
things when he has mads tbess Ideas
a part of the being — however poor or
however rich— he has learned the
most Important things he ought to
know when he becomes a man
Farm Hands Should Marry
Tho man who works on a farm for
others makes a mistake it he allows
his twenty-fifth birthday to go by will
out having a wlfo and a bit of land of
his own It he has learned his Job
well he has provided tor half ths
battle of farming and If he has only
a few hundred dollars laid by It will
do tor a start Ho can rent If he can-
not buy but good Improved little
farms can he had on pretty easy terms
these days It's better to be your owa
boss and not depend on the whim of
somebody abovo you for your Job
And a man past 25 and still a batebeh
or Is on tho wrong track and Is miss-
ing tho best part of life
Jap Millet for Poultry
Japanese millet makes oxoelisnt
poultry food It may be sowed as
late as the middle of June and ma-
ture a crop In tho latitude of Chicago
In a very satisfactory way Prepare
the land thoroughly and sow thickly
If tho farmers will only kaep a strict
account of the poultry they consume
at home during the months of June
July August and September when the
young birds begin to get large enough
to eat they will soon begin to eee
what a saving their poultry le to them
Keep In touch with the market price
and give due credit for every bird end
egg consumed and be fair with blddle
You will bo surprised and you will not
neod false teeth so soon either
Keep your growing chicks well sup-
plied with green food
UPHOLDS THE LAW
GOVERNMENT WIN8 8AFETY AP-
PLIANCE CASE IN FEDERAL
COURT OF APPEAL8
LOWER COURTS REVERSED
Railroads Must Maintain tho Pre-
scribed Coupling Appliances In
Operative Condition— A "
New Rule of Law
St Louis Aug 25 — Two sweeping
opinions noteworthy in that the de-
cisions of the lower courts were re-
versed In full In each Instance were
handed down by the United States
court of appeals here Monday sustain-
ing the position of the government
against the railroads In the matter
of the safety appliance law of con-
gress The cases decided were those
of the government against the Atchi-
son Topeka ft Santa Fe railroad and
of the government against the Denver
ft Rio Grande Railway company
By these decisions the court of ap-
peals abrogates the common law rules
of “reasonable care” that have here-
tofore governed and behind which the
railroads sought shelter and upholds
In full the acts of congress which the
opinions hold ' now totally supplant
the common law rules
In tha two cases decided different
grounds of defense were tried that
the railroads might contest against
the safety appliance acta from every
possible poInL The Denver ft Rio
Grande case was argued before the
lower court on demurrers while the
Santa Fe case was tried by a Jury
The railroads won both decisions in
the lower courts
The syllabus in the Atchison To-
peka ft Santa Fe case lays down the
new rule of law under the acts of con-
gress as follows:
"The safety appliance law of con-
gress imposes upon a railway com-
pany In the situations In which It Is
applicable an absolute duty to main-
tain the prescribed coupling ap-
pliances in operative condition and Is
not satisfied by reasonable care to
that end”
It la believed the decisions will
have a wide effect on railroad suits at
law In the future
A Race Between Atlantlo Liners
New York Aug 25— When the
ocean liner Kroonland from Antwerp
and Dover passed In at Sandy Hook
Monday she was 45 minutes ahead of
the Statendam from Rotterdam It
was a close 3000-mlle race all the
way across As the Kroonland was
leaving the English channel on August
16 she got a glimpse of the Staten-
dam's heels From that moment tbe
Kroonland Increased speed until aba
gained the lead on the seventeenth
The liners never lost sight of each
other from that time until the race
was finished
Hitchcock In Naw England
Boston Mass Aug 23 — Republican
political activity In New England will
center In this city during the next few
days when Chairman Hitchcock of the
Republican national committee will
confer with the party leaders of tbe
six New England states In regard to
the aspect of the presidential cam-
paign especially In reference to the
coming elections In Vermont and
Maine
A Big Crop of Grapes
Erie Pa Aug 25 — Reports from
points throughout ths Lake E-le grape
belt Indicate that this year's crop win
be exceptionally large and tho best In
quality gathered for a number of yeara
The harvest will be early and good
prices are promised a number of con-
tracts at $30 a toa have already been
closed
Paclflo Float Start
Ban Francisco Aug 25 — Seven
cruisers of the Pacific fleet under com-
mand of Admiral I W T Swinburne
will sail Monday on a cruise to Hawaii
and Samoa Each cruiser will hava a
torpedo boat destroyer to tow and for
that reason the cruise la looked upon
as Important
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES
The railroad town of Haaen Nev
has been destroyed by fire
There have been 2024 cases of
cholera In Russia this summer with
900 deaths
Richard Croker has been mad an
honorary burgess of tho city of Dub-
lin Ireland
Ira Parker cashier of Bank of South
Haven Kan died recently of a stroke
of paralysis
A heavy frost visited tho northern
portion of lows the other night dam-
aging the rorn to some extent
It la estimated that the rioting In
Springfield will east tho taxpayers of
the rlty county and state nearly
$200000
King Alfouao arrived In London
Monday evening lie will proceed to
the Isle of Wight Tuesday to Join
Queen Victoria
Kclr Hardlo the Drttleh labor lead-
er and member of parliament arrived
at Montreal Monday on tho steamer
Hesperian from Glasgow
The new battleship North Dakota
Is nearly 50 per cent completed to-
cording to an announcoment made at
the Fore River ship yards Monday
Tho factory of Jordan Shoe com-
pany and the adjoining olevator of
the Crown Milling company at Dalle-
villa III were dnurtoyed by Ore caue-
tug t loss of $160000
f CONDEMNS MOB LAW
Judge Taft Repllea to 8t Louis Man’s
Queries
1 mmi m mmm
St Louis Mo Aug 25— G W San
ford of this city has received a letter
from Judge William H Taft which
gives ths Republican presidential can-
didate’s views on the recent Spring-
field 111 riots The letter Is In reply
to a query addressed by Mr Sanford
to Mr Taft It reads:
"My dear Sir:— I have your letter
of August 15 In reference to the race
riot at Springfield 111 Every good
citizen In the country must deplore
the fiendish work of the disgraceful
mob that has brought the city of
Springfield to sorrow Such an out-
break of lawlessness and bitter race
prejudice makes tbe lover of his coun
try sad It should nerve those In
favor of improving the administration
of the criminal law to more earnest
effort because I am confident that if
all charges of crime were promptly
investigated and convicted criminals
punished there would be much less
temptation to the formation of such
conscienceless and cruel mobs as that
which ran riot In Springfield”
BURIED HIS MONEY
An Arkansas Man’s Deceyed Green
backe Made Good
Washington Aug 23 — Of $10000 in
decayed greenbacks Bent to the treas-
ury department for redemption by O
D Earl of Morrillton Ark all but
$25 have been Identified and a check
for $9975 was mailed to Mr Earl
Friday
Fearing the banks were unsafe Mr
Earl burled his savings In an old pall
in 1904 Recently he dug up his treas-
ure only to find that the bills were
so decayed that he could not discern
their numbers All that was left of
the roll was a bunch of paper resem-
bling a package of dried leaves with
here and there the torn end of a note
displaying a figure '
Mrs A E Brown tbe burnt money
expert of the redemption division was
given custody of the unrecognizable
mass when Mr Earl forwarded what
was left of bis fortune to tbe treas-
ury department After much tedious
work she has succeeded In Identifying
most of the money
'' Te Notify Hlsgen and Graves
New York Aug 25 — Thomas L Hls-
gen candidate for president of the In-
dependence party and John Tempi
Graves that party's candidate for vico
president' will on Saturday next b
notified of their nomination Charles
A Walsh secretary of the national
Independence party committee will
make the notification address
Bryan Will Not Visit Georgia '
Macon Ga Aug 25 — Joseph H
Hall chairman of the Bibb County
Democratic club Sunday received a
telegram from Norman A Mack chair-
man of the national Democrats com-
mittee Chicago canceling the engage-
ment of William J Bryan the Demo-
cratic nominee for president to speak
in Macon September 14
Mr Taft Favors Chinese Mission
Hot Springs Va Aug 25 — Judge
Taft took occasion Monday to express
himself as heartily favoring the ef-
forts of American missionaries in
China as the most effective method
of bettering the condition of that na-
tion and of establishing cordial rela-
tions between tbe Chinese and Amer-
ican governments
A Washington Town Burned
Bellingham Wash Aug 23 — A for
eat fire Thursday night nearly wiped
out the little town of Bow ten miles
south of here The saw and shingle
mill and drying kilns owned by Daniel
Cain with 500000 shingles were de-
stroyed aa well as five cottages be-
longing to tbe mill company
Double Drowning at Ardmore Ok
Ardmore Ok Aug 25 — George
Stevens and Manford Jenkins 15 and
16 years old respectively were
drowned In a lake here Monday
Stevens unable to swim went beyond
his depth Jenkins was drowned when
ho tried to rescue his companion
August B Legula was Friday pro-
claimed president of the republlo of
Peru by the Peruvian congress
MARKET REPORTS
Live Stock
Kansas City Aug 15— Cattle— Common
Steer (3 400444: heifers (525 0 450
western stocksrs and feeders HIOtH74
Hose— Bulk of sales (44004 40 Hheep—
Lambs (5000100 (ooil to rlitih-e weth-
ers (31004 5 awes (3 00400
Chicago Alls 15— Beef— Steers (47549
775 cows and heifers (1 4044 00 ateok-
are and feeders (1400410 1 loss— Bulk
ef aales (41504 It nheap— Native
(3(00460 lamb (4 750100
Ht Louis Aua It— !4ef— Uteers (304
0440 Stockers and feeders 1300 0 400
cow a and heifers (3750400 Tessa
ataars (17(0535 Hogs— rigs and lights
135004 40 Hlieep— Natives 14 400411
lambs 15350 560
Grain
Kansas City Aua II— Tioga: Wheat—
—Bept (75(cl free 45(oj May 135(0
Torn— Bept 70Hc Dec 67Sc May
klo
Chh-aga Aug IS— Close Wheat— Bept
Rapt 3n Deo Ilc May lie Corn—
Bept 745(0! Dee (5eo May 41 tin Oats
— Hept 4KHo Deo 45(o May (OHa
SL Louis Aug 35— Close— Wheat—
Lower) track No I red 06 0 44a No I
hard (4VVIa futures September 434(9
4IHc December ItVio Corn— Iower
track No I rash 74o No 9 white T7o
September 7o December (1540414(0
Oats— Firm track No I rash 475(o N
I whit 100405(01 futures September
T5(0 May OH®
PreSuce
Kansas City Aug II— Eggs Ho pee
doe poultry— liens 4o springs i!5(
turkeys Ho Butter— Creamery sstra
(In packing stock Ilo Potato new
(107(44
OPEN DEALING' IN PAINT
! Buying paint used to bo Ilka tha
proverbial buying of a "pig in a
poke” Mixtures In which chalk
ground rock etc predominated wer
marked and sold as “Pure White
Lead” the deception not being ap-
parent until the paint and the paint-
ing were paid for This deception is
still practiced but we have learned to
expose it easily
National Lead Company the larg-
est makers of genuine Pure White
Lead realizing the injustice that was
being done to both property owners
and honest paint manufacturers set
about to make paint buying safe
They first adopted a trade mark the
now famous "Dutch-Boy Painter" and
put this trademark as a guaranty of
purity on every package of their
White Lead They then Bet about
familiarizing the public with the
blow pipe test by which the purity
and genuineness of White Lead may
be determined and furnished a blow-
pipe free to every one who would
write them for It This action waa In
Itself a guaranty of the purity of Na-
tional Lead Company’s White Leud
As the result of this open dealing
the paint buyer to-day baa only him-
self to blame If he Is defrauded Fkr
test outfit and valuable booklet on
painting address National Lead Com
pany Woodbrldge Bldg New York
QUITE 8AFE WITH HER
One 8ecret "Tootsie” 8urely Never
Would Pass Along
"John love” said the young wife
"you oughtn’t to have any secrets from
me"
“Well Tootsie?"
"You go to lodge meetings and you
never tell me anything about them”
"They wouldn’t Interest you dear
I don’t mind giving you the password
though If you’ll promise never to dis-
close it to a living soul”
‘‘I’ll promise never to tell It to any-
body” -
“Remember It’s to be repeated only
once and very rapidly”
“I’ll remember What Is It?”
”AldaborontIpbo8clphornlostlcos”
"What? Please say It again a lit-
tle slower”
"Have you forgotten the conditions
already? I said ‘only once and very
rapidly’ ”
(Tearful pause)
"O dear! 1 wish you hadn't told
me!”
India’s 8avings Banka
The postal savings bank of India
wa established In 1882 In which year
the depositors numbered 39121 and
the deposits amounted to $932243 In
1907 tbe depositors numbered 1190-
220 and the deposits amounted to $49-
223283 which perhaps should not be
considered large in a country having
a population of some 300000000 but
the average Indian farmer mechanic
servant or laborer never deposits
money in a bank but hides it away
In a pot or box In the ground— New
York World
Never Fall -
’There la one remedy and only one
I have ever found to cure without fall
such troubles In my family as eczema
ringworm and all others of an itching
character That remedy la Hunt’s
Cure We always use It and It never
falls" W M CHRISTIAN
60c per box Rutherford Tenn
Literary
Bings— Say Bangs what ' do you
consider tbe most valuable contribu-
tion to literature during the year?
Bangs — Well I'd say that tbe 5000
bucks young Scrlbler's father put up
to get the youngster's book published
about took tbe plum”
Your Druggist Will Tell You
That Murine Eye Remedy Cures Ejre
Makes Weak Eye Strong Doesn’t Smart
boothes Eye Pain and bells for Stic
A man must stand erecL not be kept
erect by othera— Marcus Aurelius
Clear whit clothe are e sign that the
housekeeper use Red Cross Ball Blue
Large 2 os paokage 0 eeuts
Greatness and goodness ar not
neans but ends— Coleridge
VTss Alien! FooteF-Mf '
CTSllrd trhine swuaMnc ftwt Ko Trial paeksss
IrM A S OliuKftl L Huy N Fa
The best workman la he who lovoe
hla work— T T Lynch
QnmEto
(SOSRJdS?
WHY NOT?
Try Schaap'a Laxative
Chill Cure and do not go
through the same old siege oi
Fall sickness again It is the
best Remedy made for Chills
and Fever Bilious Fevers
Swamp Fever Dumb Ague
all Diseases due to Malaria
It is warranted to cure or
money refunded Price 50c
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Christopher, H. R. Kiamichi Valley Reporter (Albion, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, August 28, 1908, newspaper, August 28, 1908; Albion, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2324140/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.