The Cimarron News. (Kenton, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, September 2, 1904 Page: 3 of 4
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COULDN'T LIFT TEN POUNDS.
Doan's Kidney Pill* Brought Strength
snd Health to the Sufferer, Mak-
ing Him Feel Twenty-;lv«
Yeara Younger.
J. B. Cortoa.
.irmti a ti J
lumberman, of
Deppe, N C..
•ays: "1 sufltr-
ed (or yea. ;
with my back.
It wan so bad
that 1 coulu not
walk any dis-
tance nor even
ride In aas;-
buggy. I Jo
Hot believe I could have < raised ten
pounds of weight from the t ound, the
pain w..s so severe. This was my con-
dition when 1 began using Doan's Kid-
ney Pills. They quickly relieved me
and now I am never troubled aa I
was. My back is strong and i can
walk or ride a long distance and feel
just as strong as I did twenty Ove
years ago. I think so much of Doan's
Kidney Pllla that 1 have given a sup-
ply of the remedy to some of my
neighbor* and tbey have alao found
good results. If you can sift anything
from this rambling note that will be
of any service to you. or to any one
suffering from kidney trouble, you srs
at liberty to do so."
A TRIAL FREE—Addresa ^oster-
Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sals
by all dealers; price, 60 eta.
Askew Often—Hello. Mulb'ry! What
<-heme are you working on now?
Young: Mr Mulberry Heller* A great
one I'm K< tiiijr (lie Hlgtihuard rights
along both aldea of the Panama canal.
You never hear any tne complain
gbout "Defiance Starch." There la none
to equal It In quality and quantity. 1<
ounces. 10 cents. Try it now and save
your money.
The
Is
fu
In
The Murine Kyi- Hri
of Lillydale, N.Y., Grand Worthy
Wise Templar, and Member of
W.C.T.U., tells how she recov-
ered by the use of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
" I)ur Mrs. I'imkiiim : — I am one
of the many of /our grateful friends
who have been cured through the use
of Lydin K. IMnkham's Vegetabln
Compound, ami who can to-day
thank you for the fine health I enjoy.
When I waa thirty-five year* old, "I
suffered severe backache and frequent
bearing-down pains; in fact, I had
womb trouble I was very anxious to
get well, and reading of theeures your
Compound had made, I decided to try
it. I took only six bottica.but it built me
upandcured mc entirely of my troubles.
" My family and relatives were
naturally as gratified as I was. My
niece had heart trouble and nervous
prostration, and was considered incur-
able. She took your Vegetable Com-
pound and it cured her in a short time,
and she became well and atrong, and
her home to her great joy and her hus-
band's delight was blessed with a baby.
I know of a numlier of others who
have been cured of different kinds of
female trouble, and am satisfied that
your Compound is the best medicine
for sick women."—Mrs. Elizabeth H.
Thompson, ltox 105, Lillydale, NY.—
$6000 forfeit if rrlglnrnj t>f stove letter ftremtrt]
(mwimimm conns < be prod wee.
Denver Directory
A $40 Saddle for
^ co D
STUDEBAKER'S
Writ* for Catalogue. 1Mb *■ •! Blake Street*
sitnvfc1 hkpalk* of everj known make of
nl'M I* to*e, furuere or r a* OMO A.
Ft'LLCN. tail I.AWaBNt'tt ST.. ! ■>«*'. FtiooeTH
IvICNVKK HI N| KHM I MVI{Kn|TI.V JTtfi
I 9 A e ei d Mr y en I. it ov r. Ilooafeaeplag *h«ir -
ban<t. Tf| ewrtuiic. Hunmir raManot Fell term
opsns Asptsmbsr Mb « atal«>s<ie free.
..Oxford Hotel..
tffor thi« «elille, at**!
lorn, ffuuhle olnckie*,wo l-
iltneil js-lao/i skirts, J I-J
it • ti atlrrup leeth«*re,
Seel leettoo -o-oHreil altr-
The Fred Mueller
SaddleS HarnetiCo
The Colorado Tent A Awning Co.
f>en*er. Onto.
E. E. Bt'RLINGAME a CO.;
ASSAY OFFICE *■" LABORATORY
Motsbltsh*<1 la Colorsdo.lOM. Mem pit* b? Mall at
siprsst will receive proai t and careful etteatlo*
Mil 4 Silver Bullloi
CacNtritioi Tists
,HU-IIU La.rea.e «• • Dutw. Cela..
JOHN IHilllN 4MHAV CO.
Onld. Missr. CoiMr or ' *e«l 1 iaj eerh Any
II In, «— * —
ransho* | , VfLSrttm, tOLQ.
Hereford and Shorthorn Built
Moth rafteterel end ht«k j
rjvee f..r Mie Addr* '
MM ABMOOlATtOM, * • ■■■—■ .v ^vv . ,
i« r tfttAoa Ml<*«ft Terde. Deaeer ( >«4oead .
mrii* tlitwta t1 m? will?
W, A.J M.4hwe i (UnmTlu
The Bad Queen Bess
It is an extraordinary story, that of
the heartless manner In which Queen I
Elizabeth, during a series of years, I
played with the Duke of Alencon. and
ultimately drove him to despair an<i
death. No woman but one whose heart
vanity and ambition had turned to
stone could have carried on the long ,
juggle as she did with the amorous
young French prince, to the amaze- I
ment; and often the disgust, of her
closest councillors. Swearing with
awful oaths her promise to marry
htm and her eternal affection for hini^
sighing, languishing, and drawing him
into compromising situations by her
pretended love for him. she deceived
not only her lover, but the keenest
politicians In Europe; and yet, with
her private correspondence now be-
fore ut, we see that the whole comedy
was a lie. so far as she was con-
cerned: and that in what seemed her
moments of utter self-abandonment in
her love she was coolly calculating
how to wriggle out of her compromise
while leaving her suitor in the mire.
When at length the poor lad was ca-
joled Into leaving England with the
fulfillment of his marriage still de-
ferred, the queen traveled to Grave-
send with him to see him fairly on
the way. for he tearfully resisted going
to the last moment. In feigned grift
at leaving "her husband," as she
called him. ahe wept and wailed at the
parting; but an eyewitness of the
scene tells us that as soon as her per-
ristent lover's back was turned sha
sought the privacy of her chamber,
not to indulge in her grief, but to
dance for very Joy at having got rid
of him so easily; and scoffed at bis
simplicity to his own false servant
Simier. When later it served her
political purpose to extort terns from
the king of France by again pretend-
ing her intention immediately to
marry hia brother, she called down
curses upon her own head in such ap-
palling language if she did not, fulfill
her promise this time that so sea-
soned a veaael as the elderly French
ambassador declared that it made hi
blood run cold; and solid old Cecil
himself, who was deeper in the plot
than any one. whispered in awestrlck-
en tones to Lady Stafford that If the
queen failed to keep this pledge surely
God would send her to hell for such
blasphemy."—Martin Hume in Har-
per's.
Called Back to Bohemia
The Reverend Bishop Merriman and
his wife were seated one morning at
their breakfast table looking over the
morning mail. Mrs. Bishop glanced
up with a little gasp of surprise.
"Why, Alec!" she exclaimed, "nere's
the funniest notice In the morning
paper. What do you suppose It means?
Listen: 'Heart's Desire, Heart's De-
sire. Heart's Desire. Come back. Hrst
Seven Days in October. Old Home
Wask In Bohemia. Friends Are Re-
quested Not to Send Flowers.' "
"Where's It dated from?" asked the
I ishop, dropping the Church Courier
from his hands.
"Prom Boston—of all places," puz-
zled the lady.
"Well, I'll be—Jiggered!" said the
t lshop.
"Why, A-l-e-x-a-n-d-e-r!" gasped the
lady with an entirely new kind of a
gasp. "Tell me Instantly all about it."
Whereupon the bishop obeyed in a
fine ecclesiastical voice that had prob-
ably done more to shape his destiny
than had any particular twist of soul
or mind.
"Why, Heart's Desire," he explained,
"in a queer little Bohemian cafe
where I used to sport now and then
when I was a youngster. Those were
cay old days," he added furtively, as
efter one glance at his wife's ^sombre
lace he plunged back conscientiousiy
into the "Mission Notes" of the
Church Courier.
"Well." said Mrs. Bishop, emphat
ically, "I knew you used to play ou
a baseball team, and I knew you d
lad the scarlet fever twice, but I
never, never suspected that you'd ever
been a Bohemian."
"Umph!" grunted the bishop over
tne top of his paper. "I'raph! I sea
lhat St. John'* has raised $8,000 for
the Alaskan Indians. Why, there usiai
to be a man back at the Heart's De-
sire who knew all the Alaskan Indians
by their first names. He'd hunted
and fished and everything with them;
his name was Guthrie, and he was
nothing but a child. And there was |
a pretty girl named Molly something,
whom I used to be a bit sweet on. and
President Gaston—yes. I declare, he
was one o( the crowd, too. Goodness,
but I'd sort of like to go back there |
that first week In October."
"Let's," said Mrs. Bishop astonish-
ingly across the rim of her coffee cup.
— Lipplncott's.
Seimen Delight in Pets.
The privilege of keeping ptis is very
much appreciated by bluejackets, who
lavish their spare time and cash on
some very strange animal- The Cen-
turion once had a monkey that used to
cat with a spoon from a plate aud
drink from a glass with a dinner nap-
klu tucked umter his chin the while,
i In- drsar had a pel goose some time
ba< k Cats and dogs, of course, are
common on board r-iiIp. The French
war ship Morceau had a baniam cock
named Boulanger as a pet, which
crowed whenever the guns were fired.
The Herman Prinz Willi, lm hail a grey
stork, and the United States Chicago
had a pig. Doves, pigeons, blackbirds
sr.d peacocks are popular with Italian
seamen, and the unfortunate Almir-
snte Oquendo of Spain had a pair nl
cassowaries as pets.
Colonel Astor's Inventions.
One of the most noted amateur ex
perlmenters in America Is Col. John
Jacob Astor. soldier traveler, hotel
proprietor, bachelor of science and In-
ventor and patentee. His turbine en-
gine ts to be tried on a fifty horse-
power automobile and a thirty-horse
power autoboat. Ills bicycle brake Is
s utility and his pneumatic road Im-
prover may be an Important Implement
when we get to building good roads.
Many other things Colonel Astor has
hatched in his tlOO.OiiO machine shop,
hut his modesty keeps (hem from ex-
ploitation.
Mixed the Speeches Up
The Richmond News-Leader In-
forms the Springfield Republican that
Patrick Henry's famous argument In
the so-called parsons' cause, which so
thocked Rev. James Maury's counsel,
Peter Lyons, that he cried out, "The
gentleman has spoken treason and I
am astonished that your worships can
tear it without emotion or any mark
of dissatisfaction," wag not made in
St. John's church, Richmond, in 1775,
but In Hanover Court House In 17R3.
Henry won his cause, and when the
court adjourned the delighted people
carried him around the court yard on
their shoulders. Parson Maury shared
Lawyer Lyons's opinion that treason
had been spoken to the jurors. He
wrote not long afterward to Rev. John
Camm that It was plain Patrick Henry
thought "the ready road to popularity
here is to trample under foot the In
terests of Religion, the rights of the
Church and the prerogative of the
Crown;" and the Indignant Frailer-
icksvllle parson added an emphatic
expression of his conviction that mch
conduct "manifestly tendB to draw the
people of these plantations from their
allegiance to the King." There <tss
talk for a while of prosecuting Heary,
tut nothing came of It.
Two years later. In 1765 and in Ihe
1 ouse of burgesses at Williamsburg,
he made bis speech on the stamp act
ihe "If this be treason, make the most
of it!" speech. August 12. that year.
Pev. William Robinson, commissary
for Virginia, reported to the Bishop
of Ixindon; "He blazed out in a vlo-
'ent speech against the authority of
parliament and the king, comparing
his majesty to a Tarquin, a Caesar
and a Charles the First, and not spar-
ing insinuations thst he wished an-
other Cromwell would arise."
The St. John's church sprsch
(March, 1775) was the "Give me lib-
erty or give me death!" speech.
Where Money Is Made
Birmingham, England, has a mi lt
which. In addition to turning out m!l-
lk..la of English coins, does more In
tho way of supplying foreign govern
ments with coin than any ether
money-making establishment in the
world.
A few days ago it shipped the first
installment of a huge Egyptian order
for 10,000,000 plasters. The consign-
ment weighed five tons, was con-
veyed in sixty cases, and valued at
115,000,000. For well over a century
Birmingham has taken the lead In
this literal kind of money-making. As
far back as 1797 one firm coined un-
der contract for the British govern-
ment 4,000 tons of copper coin, val-
ued at about t4.000.000. Among the
countrlea and governments which
have gone time after time to Birming-
ham for their money are India, Tunis,
Canada. Turkey. China, Hongkong.
Haiti. Sarawak, Tuscany, Venezuela
anil Chile.
In some instances, notably In that
of China, the coins were not madu In
i Birmingham. As a matter of fact, no
Cnincse coin has, so far as is knrw.i,
ever been made outside the Celei^lbl
empire. The pride and prejudice of
the Chinese have to be humored so
the firm sent out a complete p'ant
with men to operate It, and the coins
were struck In China. No fewer than
eight separate plants have been went
out to China In this way
For the new kingdom of Ilaly the
same thing was done In 1862, 1,000
tons of "blanks" being shipped to
furnish the raw material. Again, in
Marseilles, when the re-establisha^nt
of the empire under Napoleop III.
rendered necessary a new copper coin-
age, 750 tons of metal were In this
way turned into money -on French
•oil.
A Pledge of Constancy
Sweet, sa the homing pigeon wing* Its
wide, unerring way.
As the dawn streaks I he K««t at morn-
ing nn<l the twilight follows da
As the breath In the stag's re<l nostrils
■ peaks of the wood-seqiiratered pool,
Wherr Ihe fearful huntsman chane be
done, by the water slear and cool;
Pweet. as the trembling nerdie knows
the north, and th« craft > ruler true,
do the love in my heart shall falter not,
but alwayn follow you.
See ye Ihe ir M grow green i
faithful more than ['
■ngerp
i f I.ov upatlrri-il. as lb* thought of
the Ilie >up of my paaelon sllr .
And th* blush of the roae at the kiss of
spring nhall follow not more true
..I the blush of m
not. but alway* I
i finds Its neat sud
Sweet, as the swallo
the robin finds .. ....
As thr worn child turn, to lis moth«i *
breast when the Way Is drear and
ling.
As the eyes of age feast hungrily on
youth Mint Is aix-nt anil sued
Aa I.lfe shall drift Ilk. a river on ts t'.ie
Ocenn of the Uettd,
As season shall follow seanon. and til*
■wing of |h - stars tw true.
So the love In my heart shall falter not
but always follow you
Sweet, a* the hope of Heaven springs
unsown. In the souls of men;
As ttu seed «hMll burst with the germ of
life and the grain grow rl| > hhjih
As thi- tide kIihII rlso on the beaten
beach In the sweep of Ihe re*t|.<.i
As the hungering heart shall find Ita own
and Hi* I'llsoned soul be frer
As ll-avrn shall ope at thr w,;rij „f
Ood and the promises be true
So the love In my heart ahnll falt.-r not
but always follow you.
J W Foley In New York Times.
TrlpltO Attain Thglr Majority.
A unique event has recently been
celebrated In Mancheatsr, Rngland, In
the coming of age of the triplet sons
of Mr Edward Buck, of Btiford
House, Whalley Range Th« three
young Bien are all associated with
their father In business Is Manches ,
ter. They were born on June 17. 1HS8
The coining of age was celebrated at
a gathering of relatives and friends
from Manchester and Carlisle, held at
Windermere There were eighty
guests at dinner, and Ihe assembled
aunta and unales of the three young
men presented them each with a gold
chronometer
Kentucky Man's Duty.
Jauiborce, Ky., August 29 (Special).
—After suffering for years with pain
In the back Mr J. M. Coleman, a well
known citizen of this place, has found
a complete cure In Dodo's Kidney
Pills. Knowing how general this dis-
ease is all over the country, Mr. Cole-
man feels it is his duty to make his
experience public for the benefit of
other sufferers.
"I want to recommend Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills to everybody who has pain
in the back,'' Mr. Coleman says "I
suffered for yearB with my back. I
used Dodd's Kidney Pills and I have
not felt a pain since. My little girl
too complained of her back and she
used about half a box of Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills and she is sound and well."
Backache is Kidney Ache. Dodd's
Kidney Pills are a sure cure for all
Kidney Aches, Including Rheuma-
tism.
ller best fellow came up to the
scratch the other night and the result
was a parlor match
Every housekeeper should know
that If tbey will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they
will save not only time, because It
never sticks to the Iron, but because
each package contains 16 o«.—one full
pound—while all other Cold Water
Starches are put up In %-pound pack-
ages, and the price Is the same, 10
cents. Then again because Defiance
Starch la free from all lnjurloua chem-
icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a
12-oz. package It Is because he has
a atock on hand w-bioh he wishes to
dispose of before be puts In Defiance.
He knows that Defiance 8tarch baa
printed on every package In large let-
ters and figures "16 oza." Demand
Defiance and save much time and
money and the annoyance of the Iron
sticking. Defiance never atlcks.
Largest Newspaper Circulation,
M. Psul Dupuy. editor of Le Petit
Parislen. of Paris, which has the larg-
est circulation of any daily paper In
the world, is in St. IjouIb. a guest of
the Buckingham Club. He is ac-
credited to the World's Fair as the
delegate of the Association of the
French Press. He is one of the young
est publishers and editors of ny nf
the great Journals of the world, ti
Dupuy's father. Senator Jean Dupuy.
was the founder of 1-e Petit Parislen
and was a member of the famous Wal
deck Rousseau Cabinet.
M. Dupuy has taken great interest In
the exhibits at the World's Fair, es
pecially thoae front the Philippines,
which far aurpasbed his expectations.
He gave some Interesting farts about
his newspapers. From the latest state-
ment of his pressroom be showed that
the dally edition averages 1.300,000
copies t six and eight pages i It is
said that no English or American pa-
per exceeds a million In Paris alone
350,000 copies are sold. This enormous
circulation naturally Implies high ad
vertialng rates. Them \ ary from 2 to
50 francs, or 40 cents to $1<> a line.
'Ihe paper is sold all over France. M
Dupuy's only brother M Pierre Du-
puy. is In politics, being the youngest
member of the French Chamber, only
twenty-six years of ag< St. Ixiuia
Globe-Democrat.
Feara a Dull Campaign.
Twelve and more years ago there
would have been by this time a score
of marching clubs oiganized. If there
is one to-day the fact of it> existence
has not reached the ear nf the public.
Are we to have no more Zouaves? Are
we to have a real introduction to a
campaign run upon business principles
as one would run a corporation' it
would seem so; but oh! for the fife anil
drum and the twinkling torches' -New
Haven Register.
LEARNING THINGS
We Are All in tha Approntica Class.
When a simple change of diet
brlnga back health and happiness the
story la briefly told. A lsdy of
Springfield, 111, ssys; "After being
afflicted for years with nervouanesa
and heart trouble. I received s ahock
four years ago that left me In such
a condition that my life waa despaired
of. I could get no relief from dootora
ror from the numberlesa heart and
n< rve medlclnca I tried because I
didn't know that the coffee was dally
l-uttlng me hack more than the Drs.
could put me ahead.
"Finally at the request of t friend I
left off coffee and began the use of
Postum and against my convictions 1
gradually improved In health until for
ihe paat 6 or h months 1 hsve been
entirely free from nervousi-.e^e snd
those terrible sinking, weakening
spells of heart trouble.
"My troubles all came from the use
of coffee which 1 had drunk from
childhood and yet tbey dlssppesred
when I quit coffee snd took up ths
use of Postum " Name glveo by
Postum Co.. Battle Creek. Mich.
Many people marvel at the effects
,of leaving off coffee and drinking
Pustum but there It nothing marvel-
ous about It only common sense.
Coffee Is s destroyer Postum Is s
rrbuilder Thst s Ihe reason
l ook In each pkg for the famous
Lille book The Road to Wellv.lle."
An iciesl Art Gsllery.
Sonic day some discerning connois-
seur may perhaps establish a gallery
in which all the paintings are of chil-
dren. And If this much to-be-desired
collection ; made, it will be at once
the mo«t popular and Instructive sym-
posium of art conceivable Imagine,
if you w ill an array of canvases, cdi h
by a master hsnd. depicting in all their
beauty of t'-inc and color the shining
count!tisnces of children or an rfga
«l < ii the mirtd is buddlug and life is a
thing of supreme humor, the world Is
u happy playground. Could one find
anything quite the equal of auch a gal
axy of innocent lovellasss or s more
bracing tunic against Ihe mental and
riutal iariiics of a money uiatl
worldMetropolitan Magazine.
Odd Names In London.
Tn Ix>ndon there are some quaint
Street names In Bermondsey a road
running by the side of the river is
called Pickle Herring street. In Chel-
sea there Is a World's End passage
and near Gray's Inn a Cold Hath
square, and everyone knows Poultry.
Paternoster row. Amen corner and Ave
Maria lane hsve all kept their names
since Roman Catholic times, hundreds
of years ago. when the processions
used to pass along chanting orisons.
The principal street In Edinburgh is
the famous Cowgste.
Insist on Getting It.
Some grocers say ihey don't keep
Defiance Starch. This Is because they
have a atock on hand of other brands
containing only 12 ox In a package,
which they won't be able to sell first,
because Defiance contains 16 oa. for
the same money.
V> you want It; os. Instead of 12 oa.
for money? Then buy Defiance
Kequlres no cooking.
"Do you favor the Impressionist
school of painting?" "Why. yes; it has
ihe advantagi' that you can hang a pic-
ture either side up."
Boston society i.s much scsndslized
at the report that beans sre thrown
after newly-mai rled couples Instead of
rice at the hub.
The millionaire who lives rich by
robbing the public may die poor to tfo-
fraud his heirs.
Stick to Colorado.
Don't be deluded Don't go a thous-
and milea. far from railroad* and mitr-
keta lo Anil a location Un where you
can take your tools and atock to alart
with. Colorado is and always will bo
better than Idaho or Wyoming. We
have good land, absolutely no alkali,
right on the railway line, with splen-
did ■ * *
ater
irkets a good potato country,
rights dating back to I Sf.5.
and Investment Company. Zeph Chaa.
Kelt, president. SI6 Majestic Hull.ling,
Denver. Colorado.
, A college professor Is a wise mar,
wh./ can tea<ii people to do things ht
can't.
SPECIAL KX4 I HSIOKS.
St. louis and Itrlura and Kaesaa
I lly aad lt«-turn.
On Saturdays. August 13. 20 and
27. and September 3. 10. 17 and 24.
the t'nlon Pacific will run popular
excuralons from Denver. Colorado
Springs or Pueblo, to St. lxiuls or
Kansas City and return at the low
rate of II? ;:,.
Similarly low rates from all
points.
Tickets will have final return
limits of fifteen days. Not good In
sleepers.
For complete Information and Il-
lustrated guide to World's Pair, ap-
ply lo K It Orlftln. General Agent,
vi 1 17th St.. Denver.
For Infants and Children.
A\(tietaMe Preparation Tor As
siinilatmti itic Foot! antl Reg ula
luig the Stomachs iind Bowel:
1NFAN IS/t H 11DKI.N
rromotes Di^estion.CheerfuK
ness and Rest Contains neilher
ihnum.Morphine nor Mineral.
fcOT Narcotic.
AsVertM \iKlTLPtrcUR
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Apetfecl Remedy forConslipa
lion. Sour Stomartv Diarrhoea
Worms.('convulsions Jevr rich-
ness and LOSS OF SLEEK
Facsimile Signature of
NKW YOTIK.
)) tfosis- J (i N i *
exact copy or wrapper.
For Over
Thirty Years
TORA
When an outsider Insists <
it Is uusally a poor excuai
dling.
Mora Flexible snd Lsstlng,
won't shake out or blow out, by ualaff
Deflsnce Starch you obtsln better re-
sults than possible with any other
brand and one-third more for saj
money.
When • tiusliand and wife are of o
mind It is a pretty safe bet lhat the
mind belongs to the wife.
theres no use arguing
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.,
•Miuu.au,
Dr. Itovlil Krnnrtlr's Favorite «h«
I way. Colonel, did you
water our#? Kentucky
I've nevah hud the ml>*-
afflicted with the watah
Pino * Cure rannot be too highly Mpoken of m
a rough cure.-J. W.O Hkiik 323 Third Ave.
N , MloucapollM, Mlun., Jan. C, I VMM.
r|T0 permanently rorwt. !*o At*m fwrrotianw
f ti, a •
Defiance Starch Is guaranteed biggest
and best or money refunded. II
cunces, 10 cents. Try It now.
i riTll "aft e' r,, he"getaBttmw h
i breath.
WET WEATHER. WI5D0M'
\ > TMe ORIGINAL
SLICKER
(•LACK on VELLOW
will keep you dry
nothing else will
TAKe NO SUMTlTUTei
ruoowti r*«t
,n« or oammint« an* mat*.
A. 4. TOWKR CO.. aoavoM. ••***.. w a a.
&AWAPIAW CO . ITQ , TpaoWTQ CANADA.
untry maiden Ilk
y «h« I on k m "atmply
W. L. DOUGLAS
IS S3.50 & S3 8HOE8 tt
00 x— * *"
92.50 POLICE, Tmrsk SOLIS. fa.BO MS
v ti.OO WOSWNOMIN'S, BIST IN fMt WOMLD.
$2.BO, $2.00 imo $17B Bots, ron
Dntas snd School Wkah.
VI
listluu LI
BLINDNESS AND DEAFNESS
curio at momi
If fka'« vak tree, falling
Stelu.grauulsMd Ilil*
ti., r, •« + tore etee"! •«{ Hn.i
ealarrb sir iisJasss^erjif Isa^
trMlai.ul will M aanl J ml
frti of charol.
Ttiis trial trswirovnI ts mIM and
hsrmi*<« snd . urod man* s «sr«
I r M.-.r# «|.folate t.f
*rs.jW y• a 4 J*' 5"2J'*•#%(« f.*!
f^of >Tibt If« nd III Iks Aissrli-ss
Iry Cross SfSS tr lght*n«t *• "► • jtalsl*«* moth.>4.
Writs i Vm J HARVIT IIOOBi. Brs a«l Wm9
lasututa. ftuiUftt.Odarsllsws ld« . •%. Lewis.
A«sy wtM forairrlv smM mm&tin iov 1Mb
IEWISSINGIE BINDER
STRAIGHTS* C IO Aft
Tear Jublwr or Slnrt from rat-lory, ravrla. 111.
QEN8ION y"li iBflls? C.'rl
llinin "Oil ear. i*a4je4l«Mii>itlaia,. mk
W N T llRNVKK NO
fa.-turer la Ihe world. Tha rtaun Ihey are
the great**! **ll*r I*. they ara m *a of Ike has*
leatben, hold their >li*|>«. St beltai, wear longer,
ami havo innre value than any otlor *hoSs.
W.I,, linogla* guarantae* ilo-lr ralua b stamp-
ing l.i* nam* and prle* ou Hot bottom look for
It take no .11(1*111111*. H- Id by aboe Sealers
everywhere. fatt Color Hftltli a. r,
"AS GOOD AS S7.00 SHOKS."
Heretofore I haoe been meor.nm 91.00
, MhooM. I pur. Sated m pair of W. L. Doafime
V'fJ.SaiAoM. a-SIr* / erorm every daw for
four man.**. T ey are to tatltfmctory M dm mot
Intend fa return to the more ojrpentlve eheot.
IVM. CMr KNOWLES. J ttt. City Solicitor, MUs.
Brooktoo Lomdmlho Monm Mhoo TaaAtoo* 0/tho WsfM.
WABASH LINE
"BANNER BLUE LIMITED"
■ ITWKIN
ST. LOUIS and CHICAGO
TNI FINEST DAY TRAIN IN TNB WORLD.
Leaves St. Leuis Union Stetien • - 11:00 A. Is
Leaves World's Fair Station - - • 11:14 I. ■*
Arrives Chicago 7:00 t. I.
11:03 A. I.
6:49 P. M.
7:03 P. I.
Leevos Chicago
Arrives World's Foir Stetion
Arrives St. Louis Union Stetion
When Antwsring Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
W. A. WOODWORTH. I WALLACE. K-VeL-f
will report In or ou. of Kenver on •• >.. «•■',^nV'SI
JSttan by telenhone or telegraph 1
• lalegrarh.
..WOODWORTH-WALLACL COLLEGES..
Or Shorthand. Typewriting. BooKKeeping. Raftklag. Etc.
Tr.i. MAIN SU4S.
ID* t'HINI't «ianr.
Howard E. Burlon.
— ' ' ■ ' " "
ti«,n,i .n.-l -, a«. .J fMU erl.-« >>M* a . *e S-
■ liar .1 .oil' H IIM •■ !. I 1,1 I.m4-
■ lla. I *i«. a*l*r.M«* OwbaMWllal
'
BEGGS'BLOOD PURIFIES
CURBS caurrh of the stomach.
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The Cimarron News. (Kenton, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, September 2, 1904, newspaper, September 2, 1904; Kenton, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc233790/m1/3/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.