The Cimarron News. (Kenton, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, December 26, 1902 Page: 2 of 4
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CIMARRON NEWS.
KENTON.
OKLAHOMA.
Charles M. Schwab Is kimply tired;
tired spending muncy
It Is fortunate for royalty that an-
archists are so frequently had shots.
Rig. Marconi continues to send mar-
conlgrams across the oceau through
bis hat.
Franco is making the French duel
a felony. Ping-pong will surely come
iii as a misdemeanor.
"Pennies long saved amount to dol-1
lars at last," nald Franklin, and it la
Just as true to-day of cents.
A big sturgeon In the New York
Aquarium is reported to have com-
mitted suicide. Sounds fishy.
IMPRESSIVE FUNERAL OF THE
WIDOW OF GENERAL U. S. GRANT
Washington, D. C.. Dec. 21.—in the;the Grant home, the main aervtce was
presence of a notable assemblage, In-
cluding President Roosevelt, some of
his cabinet, many senators and repre-
sentatives and most of the army, navy
and marine officers in the city in their
dress uniforms, funeral services over
the remains of .Mrs Julia Dent Grant
the widow of the former soldier-presi-
dent, were held in this city yesterday
morning, and the casket Immediately
afterward was taken to New York on
a train which left here at 11 o'clock.
All of the family of Mrs. (irant were
present except Jesse (irant, who will
reach New York in time to attend the
The man who succeeds best Is gen-
erally the one who has the talent to
advertise himself most Judiciously.
We probably have to do the things
we ought to a great deal oftener than
wo dare to do the things we want to.
Sometimes, pays the Homely One, I
thank the Lord for that I am not good
looking, lor then I might also be a
fool.
The football fatalities, appalling as
they are, might have been worse. Sev-
eral games were unavoidably post-
poned.
Chicago's gambling king Is bank-
nipt. lie admits, however, that other
professional gamblers were the ones
who got it.
Another diamond mine has been dis-
covered In South Africa. Will some
one please put an extra chain on the
dogs of war?
King I^eopold's blast of defiance to
anarchists Is doubtless made by his
comfortable assurance that anarchists
are poor shots.
held In the Metropolitan M. E. Church,
where the family worshipped during
the Urant administration.
The President and Secretary Hay oc-
cupied the front pew. Hack of them
were seated Secretaries Moody and
Hitchcock, Postmaster General Payne
and Secretary Cortelyou. The next was
the family pew, draped with the na-
tional emblem, and occupied by the im-
mediate family, and on the extreme
left by Commander Cowles, P. S. N .
and Col. T. A. Iiingliain, U. S. A. The
Rev. pr. Frank M. Bristol, pastor of
the church, officiated, and opened the
ceremony by reading the Scriptures as
ceremonies there The members of the he walked down the aisle, followed by
family and relatives who attended the I the honorary pall-bearers, consisting ot
Bervlce follow: | senators, the speaker of the House and
Mrs. Sartoris. General and Mrs Fred others. The pall-bearers were seated
Ii. Grant, Ulysses Simpson Grant, who Just back of the stricken family,
arrived during the service at the The casket was covered and the pul-
church; U. S. Grant, Jr . Miss Sartoris. pit was banked with Moral tributes
Mr. and Mrs. Scoville, Miss Julia The choir sang "Lead. Kindly Light."
WASHINGTON NEWS AND
CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS
Grant, Lieutenant Commander and
Mrs. Alexandor Sharp. Nellie D.
Sharp, Mrs James F. Casey,
Miss Casey, Mr. and Mrs. James
Casey, Mr. Jules Casey. Miss Annie
Dent, Mr. and Mrs. Garrlsh Smith,
Grant Smith and Lieutenant Gray
Those who accompanied the remains
to New York were General and Mrs.
F. D. Grant. U. S. Grant. Mrs. Sartoris,
U. S. Grant, Jr.. Miss Sartoris. Com-
mander Sharp, Grant Smith, Midship-
man Jesse Sharp, Mrs. Scovei. Miss Ju-
lia Grant and Miss Mary K. Coffey, for
many years the faithful maid of Mrs.
Hft'T which Dr. nrlstol offered prayer.
Following this the choir sang "Nearer,
My God, to Thee,'' and the .service was
closed.
During the entire service the chimes
tolled and lent an Impressive solemnity
to the occasion. The different bells in
the chimes are named after prominent
people who were instrumental in hav-
ing them placed in the church tower.
One of the bells, the first tolled In the
morning, is engraved with the r.ame of
Mrs. Julia Dent Grant, who assisted in
securing the chimes during the paslor-
ate of the late liishop Newman at the
Grant. Preceded by a short service at I Metropolitan Church.
♦+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦■ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦+
BIG SAN LUIS VALLEY COLONY
WILL SETTLE NEAR ALAMOSA
>enver, Dec. 22.—The Republican I and will locate the new town in the
4 An Eastern paper wants to know
"What co-education has done?" Well,
from all accounts. It hasn't done
thing to Dr. Harper.
Trains that can run a hundred miles
In a hundred minutes are almost as
common now as men who can eat
thirty ducks in thirty days.
Gen. Uribe-Urlbe has been sentenced
to death. The wonder is how did he
manage to live so long with a name
to mention which is to disturb the
peace.
The Brooklyn genius, who has sec-
cured a patent for a nursing bottle
holder for baby carriages, dreams of
millions like Col. Sellers with his
eye wash.
Millionaire Clark offered $1,000,000
for hiB first grandson, and his son
A. Clark, Jr., has won the prize.
W
Has the ciar or King Humbert tried
this plan yet?
The Scottish-American declares that
the length of mourning for a mother-
In law is six months' crape and six
months black. What man would
grudge the time?
Washington's theater managers have
decided to stop wasting money. They
have voted to abolish window litho-
graphs and to advertise hereafter only
In tho newspapers.
Aslm will probably derive more
pecuniary benefit from the visit of
President Schwab of the steel trust
than America got from that of the
Crown Prince of Slam.
Since President Eliot has made the
amende honorable it seems to be up
to Mr. Gompers to explain that his al
lusion to Judas Iscariot was meant
tn a Pickwickian sense.
"The greatest blessing in life, nn
doubt, is to give," says Dr. Lorenz.
And yet young Mr Yanderbllt com
plains that his father left him so much
money that there Is no mission In life
for him.
Dried corn as an article of diet has
caused the separation of a husband
and wife In Ohio. But this Is a mere
patch on the trouble corn has caused
throughout the world after it has
■oaked awhile.
The way to a masculine heart from
time Immemorial has been via the
digestive apparatus, but it has re-
mained for a Hoboken lady to love
and marry a man because of the pies
he manufactured.
this morning says
A new town to lie peopled with In-
diana. Illinois and Iowa farmers Is to
be located in the ceuter of a large tract
of land near Alamosa by a syndicate
of capitalists, which has just pur-
chased 10.000 acres of land from the
Southern Colorado l>and Company. 8.
T. Ambler of Alamosa. Colorndo. rep-
resentiiifc ti.a' . ompans who is at the
Brown Palate hotel, said yesterday af-
ternoon that the deal for the property
nter of their combined purchases.
The name of the new town has not
been selected- The purchase price for
the land !s said to be in the neighbor-
hood of $200,000.
The plan of the new owners of the
land is to bring out large colonies of
farmers from their respective states in
the East, and locate them on tracts of
iarm land, which they will operate on
shares until they are able to acquire
It outright. The land Is about eight
had been dosed and several members | miles from Alamosa on the Creede
of the syndicate, who have been ex-I branch of the Denver & Rio Grande
amlnlng their new purchase, would ar-
rive In Denver this morning on their
way East. The leading members of
the syndicate are Peltere Hill and E.
C. Blckel of Elkhart. Indiana; Peter
Sumner and P. W. Sumner of Peoria,
Illinois, and John M. Schaupp of Fort
Dodge, Iowa. They have made Indi-
vidual purchases of land, all adjoining.
railroad. The railroad runs directly
through the property.
Mr. Ambler Is one of the members
of the company which intends to erect
a beet sugar factory near Alamosa. He
says that work on the factory will be
begun probably about January 10th.
The contracts for the construction of
the factory have not been let.
ANNOUNCES STATE
APPOINTMENTS
Denver, Dec. 22.—It Is announced
that the following appointments have
been decided upon by Governor-elect
Peabody:
State dairy commissioner, Mrs. Mary
.Wright of Arapahoe county. Mrs.
Wright keeps a dairy at Broomfleld, In
MARCONI TALKS
ACROSS THE SEA
Halifax, N. S„ Dec. 22 —After eight
experiments, conducted with the great-
est secrecy. Marconi announces that
he has solved the problem of wireless
trans-oceanic communication, and has
successfully transmitted wireless mes-
sages from the shores of Canada to
the coast of England. The formal an
the northwestern part of Arapahoe nouncement of this achievement was
county ' made by the Inventor himself yester-
State oil Inspector. H W. Hannurn da>'- wl}en. hp 8,ate,l «hat wireless mes-
of Denver Mr. Ilannura was formerly | ,aR''s1ha,li ^ successfully trans-
deputy clerk ot the District Court and mltted an,i ''""warded from the gov-
has recently been engaged in the life t'rnor general of Canada to King Ed-
Insurance business.
State game and fish commissioner.
ward VII. of Great Britain and to the
King of Italy
J. M. Woodward of Pueblo Mr. Wood- j°£ r*e, R' P rkln' Principal of
ward Is a man of some means, an ar- i L,,p<>r Cana,I College, trustee of
dent sportsman and president of the
tPueblo branch of the Game anil Fish
A French army
havo luveuted a
neither flash nor
Now let tis have
officer claims tn
sun that makc«
Hound nor smoke
one that makes nn
wound and we may listen for the c
Ing of the millennium.
Gabrlelle d'Annunclo. among other
thing*, had seventy-two shirts and
twenty lour dozen pairs of "quiet tint
•d" silk underwear. And yet they
tell ua It does not pay to write poetry!
John L. Sullivan I* without his |i
OOII.OOO. But the rich memories of the
gorgeous time he had In blowing It
In remain to cheer hlii decllnlra years
Expensive lingerie worka
modesty. When a girl M
the finest of aflk stockings, every
■treet crossing looks muddy to her.
not for
wearing
Protective League, which comprises
M of the sportsmen of the state
Warden of the reformatory. A
C Dutcher of El Paso county. Mr.
Dutcher was formerly warden of the
reformatory and had an excellent rec-
ord.
Warden of the penitentiary. John
Cleghorn of Rio Grande county. This
apt>ointnient was announced earlier in
the week, and was re-announced Sat-
urday. Mr. Cleghorn held the office
for several years under Governors Mc-
Intire and Adams
ComtnlsFloncr of mines. E. L. White
of Teller county. Mr. White Is a min-
ing engineer of the gold camp, and Is
said to be a thoroughly competent
man for the position.
Poller inspector. Charles Taylor of
Teller county. Mr. Taylor is a resi-
dent of Victor, a competent engineer
and had the highest endorsements and
recommendations from the people of
Teller county.
Dr. Peter Oliver Hanford of El Paso
county, surgeon general of the Nation-
al Guard. Dr. Hanford Is now health
commissioner of Colorado Springs
Mr Cowle, newly elected secretary
of state, as announced the appoint-
ment of Edward M. Mitchell of Central
City as chief clerk In the office of the
secretary of state. Mr. Mitchell was
chairman of the Repub'lcan county
commute* or Gilpin county.
Prjpoaal of the Powert.
Uindon. Dec 22. It Is believed that
President Roosevelt's answer to the
proposal made by the allied i>ov.cr*
that he arbitrate the Vcnezu-lan Is
sues has been received In London. The
strictest secrecy with regard to every
Phase of the negotiations Is preserved
however, and It la Impossible to make
a definite statement, but such Indica-
tions as are obtainable point to Presl
dent Roosevelt's acceptance of the of-
fice of arbitrator.
Rhodes' scholarships, was present
when one of the successful tests wah
made.
Protecting Range Cattle.
Denver, Dec. 22.—A morning paper
says:
City Marshal A L. Burdette of Fort
Morgan, locally known as "High Pock-
ets" Burdette because of his height,
has started In on his winter campaign
against careless cattle owners in the
Lower Platte valley. Burdette Is an
agent of the Colorado Humane So
clety, and last winter nearly precipi-
tated a cattle war by his Intervention
'ti the affairs of local cattle owners
He took up and fed and eared for sev
I eral hundred head of cattle left out on
the winter range. The owners had
. him arrested on a charge of running
off their stock, but he was released
and brought suit against the cattle-
men. He won and made the owners
pay him for feeding the stock.
Yesterday Secretary Whitehead of
the society received a telephone mes-
sage from Burdette. The agent re-
ported that he had again found n large
number of cattle along the river with-
out proper food or shelter The
drouth of the past summer has left
no winter range, and Burdette said
the cattle were starving. He took up
the cattle and provided proper shelter
and food, after which he notified their
owners. To his surprise, they replied
that they were glad he had taken this
ictlon and would pay all charges The
ngent wns so surprised that he could
not wait to report by mall
Att.i
Denv
more
t erdn
•3 the Rueh Aw>ndmor t.
Dec. 21— Brlefi covet Ir
Brief*
ban '.mm printed pages were y
arterm.on tiled In the Supre
r by the utturneyM who are <
In* the validity of the Rush amend-
The Senate has confirmed William
fiardel as conbul at Hamburg, Bava-
ria. and Lloyd C. Griscoui as minister
to Japan
The Senate, In executive session,
ratified the treaty of friendship and
general relations between the United
States and Spain without debate or
division.
General Hreckenridge, inspector gen-
eral of the army, made an argument
against the bill creating a general
staff corps in the army before the
House committee on military affairs.
Senator Patterson of Colorado has
introduced a bill providing that all na-
tional banking association!! and other
national corporations shall, for the
purpose of all suits in law. bo deemed
citizens of the states in which they
may be located, that the United States
courts shall not have jurisdiction in
such cases other than they would
have over Individuals.
A favorable report was ordered by
the committee on appropriations on
the bill appropriating $500,000 for the
use of the Department of Agriculture
in stamping out the foot and mouth
disease in the New England states. The
it' in is Included in u dt&deacj appro-
priation bill and tb* bill carries $500,-
000 alBo for pay of rural free de-
livery carriers and various smaller
sums for miscellaneous expenses of the
Postofflce Department.
Senator Depew has Introduced a bill
authorizing the issuance of emergency
currency by the Treasury Department.
It provides that such currency shall be
supplied to any national bank with a
capital of not Icbb than $50,000 to the
extent of fifty per cent, of the bank'B
capital. The extra capital is. however,
to be supplied only in case of a string-
ency in the money market sufficiently
serious to jeopardize values and im-
peril the commercial and business In-
terests of the country.
In the Senate on the 16th inst. Mr
Dillingham concluded his remarks in
opposition to the omnibus statehood
bill and by unanimous consent it was
■greed that there should be no further
4lscusslon of the measure until the
Senate reconvened on January 5th.
Mr. Teller wanted to submit some re-
marks In reply, he said, to the slan-
ders on the committee on territories
and of Mr. Dillingham, but other sen-
ators Insisted that the agreement not
to further discuss the bill should be
adhered to.
A joint resolution has been intro-
duced in the Houbc by Representative
De Armond proposing an amendment
to th« Constitution of the United States
providing that the term of the Presi-
dent shall continue until April 30,1905.
at noon, and thereafter. April 30, at
noon, shall be substituted for March 4,
as the beginning and ending of the
terms of President and vice president,
and that the Fifty-ninth Congress
shall end and the Sixtieth begin Janu-
ary 8. 1907, at noon, and thereafter
each Congress shall begin and end Jan-
uary 8th at noon.
The testimony taken by the sub-com-
mittee of the Senate committee on ter-
ritories, of which Senator Ileveridge is
chairman, on the omnibus statehood
bill, has been just printed as a Sen-
ate document and to-night was made
public. It makes a book of 394 pages,
with maps, and includes the questions
and answers of a great many people
examined by the sub-committee with
reference to size, population, resources,
schools and churches, business, moral
and other characteristics of the people
of the proposed states, and miscellane-
ous information.
Mr. Morgan of Alabama, in the Sen-
ate. asked that his bill fixing the sal-
aries of the Isthmian canal commis-
sion at f.1,000 a year be referred to the
committee on Inter-oceanic canals. He
said he had been Informed that the
present commissioners were paid
$1,000 a month each and that their
service had extended over twenty-nine
and a hall' months. Continuing. Mr.
Morgan said it was necessary "In ad-
vance of striking one lick on that ca-
nal to make such provision as will
prevent the United States from run-
ning into the horrible iniquities of the
old Panama Canal Company as well
as the new one." The bill was re-
ferred as requested.
The House passed the bill to reduce
the duties on products of the Philip-
pine Islands coming into the United
States from seventy-five per cent, of
the Dlngley rates tthe present duties)
to (wenty-five per cent, of those rates.
The discussion of the bill was accom-
panied by considerable maneuvering
on the Democratic side to secure test
votes on various amendments designed
to lower vhe tariff still further, and a
record vote was forced on a motion to
recommit with Instructions to report
a bill providing for absolute free trade
with the islands. The division on this
proposition was on party lines, with
the exception of Mr. Call tRepublican
of Massachusetts, who voted with the
Democrats.
Representative Fowler, chairman of
the Mouse committee on banking and
currency, introduced a bill which was
drawn by him In accordance with the
views of the Republican mem bars < x-
pressed at recent confi •••ices, anil
which will lie urged Instm.', cf the cur-
rency bill reported to the House •> the
I. ' se i. II Mil pro\ ides: " linn
Sn> national bank may. with the up- '
proval of the comptroller of the cur-
rency, take out for Issue and circula-
tion an amount of national bank notes
not exceeding twenty-five per cent of
Its paid-up and unimpaired capital.
Without depi siting United States bonds
The House, on the 15th Inst., passed
the Senate bill for a union railroad
station in Washington to cost $4,000,-
000. The station is to be situated
north of the present site of the Balti-
more & Ohio depot at Delaware and
Massachusetts avenues, and In front
ot It la to be a large plaza park. The
Pennsylvania railroad, by the terms
of the bill, is to remove Its tracks
from the Mall and reach the site of
the proposed station through a tunnel
to run between the capitol and library
buildings. The government is to pay
'he Pennsylvania railroad $1,500,000
ind the Baltimore & Ohio $500,000, in
idditlon to providing for the plaza
park. The House also passed an ur-
gent deficiency bill, which carried,
among other items, an appropriation
of $500,000 for eradicating the foot
and mouth disease in New England,
and $500,000 to cover deficiencies in
the rural free delivery service. Under
suspension of the rules, a bill to allot
the lands of the Indians in New York
in severalty was passed.
Mr. Bartlett. a Georgia Democrat,
during consideration of the legislative
appropriation bill In the House, of-
fered an amendment to appropriate
$250,000 to enforce the Sherman anti-
trust law and to direct the attorney
general to proceed to the prosecution
of all violators of the law. Although
such a provision was plainly amenable
to a point of order, not a member on
either side of the House raised objec-
tion. Both sides wheeled into line and
all agreed that some such action was
advisable. Some of the Republicans
raised objection to the looseness of the
language of the amendment, and Mr.
Hepburn offered as a substitute for It
the language of the bill he introduced
the opening day of the session to ap-
propriate $500,000 for the enforcement
of the law. This was further strength-
ened to make the appropriation imme-
diately available, and as amended the
substitute was agreed to without di-
vision. The legislative bill was passed
practically as It came from the com-
mittee. except the amendment.
Cattle Epidcmle Ccnqutred.
Washington, Dec. 22 Secretary
Wilson believes that the danger of the
spread of the foot and mouth disease,
where It Is epidemic, to other states,
lias passed Careful Investigation by
the government experts failed to rc
veal a single ease of the disease In
Connecticut, though that state was In
eluded In the general order of the de-
partment Imposing the quarantine.
Pi
ntent, which <■ iiibllshes the cltv and fVlth the United Stntes Treasury In the
manner provided by existing laws "
The hank Is requncd to deposit bonds
tor gold coin equal to five per cent, of
the note* taken out. A tax of one-
quarter of 1 cent la to he paid on the
first days of January and July of each
year In gold on the average amount of
such notes In circulation during the
preceding six month*, which tax. to-
gether with the five per cent, deposit-
ed. shall constitute a guarantee fund.
*The bill provides that these notes shall
be a lien on the l ank* ls«ulng them
Provision I* made for the redemption
of the note* and the protection of the
United State* In ca*e a hank fall*.
>unty of Denver and provldoa hom<
rule for cities The replication of the
Municipal League, upholding the valid-
ity of the amendment, was also filed
The hrlcfa against the amendment
filed by Clay B Whitfer.l a td
k'< for Sheriff Seerle, II.
Charles J Hughes. Jr .
Butler, for City Trea*.
Them a* E Waiters for
'ontclalr and l< |) Reel
of Elyrla Though the
I Fred W
M Oral i cd.
| nnd Calvin I'
I urer Sours
i the town of I
I for the town
four briefs cover to some extent tb
same ground, they were prepared *ep-
mutely and each of them raises soma
! Independent pclnta.
Statehood Bill Minority Report.
| Senator Bate presented In the Sen-
I ate the minority report of the commit-
j tee on territories, favoring the imme-
diate passage of the House omnibus
j statehood bill without amendment.
■ The report opposes the uniting of the
Oklahoma and Indian Territory into
| one state. It shows minutely the eon-
i ditlon of each of the three territories
as to population, wealth and general
feature of the territories and says that
j these are such as to call for imme-
diate statehood.
It shows that both the Republican
and Democratic parties in their last
national conventions adopted with per-
} feet unanimity platform planks recom-
mending each of the three territories
I by name for statehood. Such expres-
I sion. the report continues, should be
respected by both parties. It says,
among other things:
"It never was intended that Coit-
gress should bar by party objection,
admission when population, wealth
and institutions were the same as in
I the case of other states."
With reference to the qualifications
of the population of the territories, the
report contends that "It ought to suf-
fice that ninety-five per cent, of the
population are white in Oklahoma and
the 90,000 white population In Arizona
and the 122,000 white population in
New Mexico are quite sufficient to even
i up all the foreign-born in each of those
territories."
i Referring to the proposition to unite
Oklahoma and the Indian Territory
as one state, the report says:
j "Al legislation for the admission of
new states has been preceded by ex-
pression of desire on the part of the
j people for admission to the Union.
But the amendment submitted to the
Senate committee on territories incor-
| porated the Indian Territory with the
state of Oklahoma without expression
I of the desire of the people of the In-
dian Territory to be either a state or
a part of Oklahoma. So far as your
committee has Information, this alli-
ance may be the union of an unwilling
people and an undesirable connection.
In no case in the past have the people
of any territory been compelled by
the enabling act to forifi a constltu-
ttion against their expressed will.
However much the people of Okla-
homa desire statehood, the Indians
have made no expression of any such
i desire."
Summing up, the minority report
says:
"Each of these territories has com
piled with every requirement hereto-
fore made by the Congress for admis-
sion Into the Union. Each has popu-
lation sufficient for representation In
Congress. Each has wealth abundant
to support all the expenses of state-
hood. Each has institutions In har-
mony with republican government as
understood In the Union."
Liberal quotation Is mnilo from the
report of the majority on the state-
hood bill. One of the parts quoted
ia that referring to a statement made
by n witness that some of the white
people in the territories are "like the
t lffmff who follow the construction of
railroads."
Commenting on this statement, the
minority says:
"The riffraff who follow the rail
roads have been the sturdy Irishmen
whose pick *nd shovel and spade and
labor have built the hundred thousand
miles of American railroad. Why that
riffraff should not be good citizens tn
New Mexico, as they are In every ,
other state and territory, the report j
doe* not advise the Senate. Preaum
Ing the wltnes* upon whose testimony
this reference to rlffr*ff has been I
made was greatly misinformed, we are
forced to conclude that there ha* been
a mistake somewhere between the
witness and the committee, since the I
testimony hss all the ear-mark* of a
purpose to convict of unpreparedness
on the part of Arizona and New Mexl
co, rather than to enlighten the gen-
ate a* to their republican form of gov-
ernment."
The report I* signed by Senator*
Bate. Ileltfebl. Bailey and Patternon.
constituting the Democratic member-
shin of the committee on terrltorle*.
There are plenty of people who hav« '
become depressed and 4Ucourwj(cil
because that dry, hacking coup!*
hangs to them continually. They
have taken much medicine, mostly of
the advertised quack sort, nothing
like Dr. August Koenig's Hamburg
Breast Tea. the discovery of a then
noted German physician 60 yeara ago
We do not say that thlB will cure a "
case where the lungs are badly UIp
eased, for it will not, and up to this
date there is nothing that will cure
under these conditions; but on the
other hand, if the lungs are not hard
hit, the patient should take Dr. August
Koenig's Hamburg Breast Tea. a cup
full every night on going to bed, have
It hot, drink slowly, then every other
night rub the throat and top portion
of the lungs with St Jacobs Oil, cover
with oil silk, let it remain an hour,
then remove. Eat good, plain, nour-
ishing food, live in the open air as
much as possible. By all means sleep
as near out of door* as possible, that
is, windows wide open, except in the
very severe weather. Take a cold
sponge bath every morning; then im-
mediately rub the body vigorously
with a coarse towel. Take Dr. August
Koenig's Hamburg Drops every other
day . according to directions. One
can buy the throe remedies for $1.24
of any reliable druggist. Begin the
treatment at once and see how much
better you will be almost within a
week's time.
ANUARY BUYING
T!i*r« l« no tim* like January for
•ali«faeu>ry buy id l*. The holiday
rush i* over uud the early Spring
trade has not yet bejrun. in January yon al-
ways get first pick of all tho earliest Spring
goods and ther« in ample time to All and
•hip your orders with greater promptness.
Send 15 cents TODAY for onr large General
Catalogue ho. 71. It gives pictures, descrip-
tions snd prices on nlmont everything you
est, wesr or use. 8sve to everything
you purchase by sending your orders to
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
CHICAGO
"The House that Tells the Truth."
Mince
la oor mammoth kitchen we employ a Chef
who is an eipert in making mince pies. He
has charge ol making all ol Libbr's M
Meat. He uies the very choKut mater:
He is told to make the
BEST
MINCE
MEAT
Erer sold—and he does. (let a package at
your grocer's—enough lor two large pies. You
will nerer use another kiud again; I.ibby's
Atlas ol the Wotld.with J2 new maps,size8x11
inches, sent anywhere lor 10 cents in stamps.
Our hoolj^t, "How to Makk Good Things
to eat.'Tnailed Iree.
L1BBY, mcNEILL & L1BBY.
CHICAGO.
Denver Directory, t
iTme Denver Tent
i and Awning Co.
fit(i, iiittaiiDUt, Urn 3acm
©me:
7th SI'KKKT, NKAH
UNION ItKPIir.
Prlc-M. C. U. Hum. ttgr.
bank, office. Miwarwfss:
MhuWIi.. ic. WriU J. f ■ 1 >UU4,„. IfcH Waaee. Denv. r
Financial Contract Security Co.
«e pay S per cant. Interest. MfOHT n lill, |
TRUNKS 1 111 Ni" 41 "•
. . ....I l'h« A. K MKKK T
k ltAu CO.. 10th uiiil la
- for HI
TKl'NK
■ts , D<<nvur, Colo.
WESTERN POULTRY WORLD
to Appl" Ki.lrf . I>«nver, |h.TOt«-l to |'„u try
v^siiteTl^ rests. Sample copy free. Agents
Fidelity Savings Ass n
fcfcMJ FOH ft FICH rfctfr. DfctMHli' i'AHS BOOK
HTOV I* i: 11 'K11* r
till 1 I s liu i**' furuik,!M or rattga. A.
1 1
AGENTS 2K! * ** *•
FQULTRY, EGGS, BUrERfc GAME WANTED
1 imiiiM*. 1,..MM II,,,. fc.hubeal
Trunh's Prescription tor Indigss ion & Dys-
pctsis <•>" • all symptoiur., ramona Hi.
p. ....... I'«l|"lili..ti.. th..Iiasrt.
"V:;: ? "f Hallv raJ
"!'r L'ISo 1'ipt M TRUNK Hit Oft., Deo-
UM.IABI.K
9 , I Onl.l nn I ilrer . ..|l,00
Lead. ... .76 | UoUI.BUrar, Uopnar l.
.'.'.'I'.'ii .... Mm ftamuiv.
4IUI> N \ *AV KIHI'ANI
1 - ' tf.t, |>KN\ I It. 11 u.tiliAI>11
E. E. IH K LING A ME & CO., (
ASSAY OFFICE "°^borS?OBY
Ratabtl.tieil In Colorado.lWt. Bampleabvmallot
f spress will recti«« prompt and careful attest Ion
Gold & Slim Bullion oVv"JlicH;d.Eo#T*'
Concentration Tests loo the. or car load Iota.
itll-l73d Lawrence St*'l/cBve'r.'Colo.
CHICAGO DENTAL PARLORS
W1I 11th Ntreel, llNnr. C..I..,
•OMKTHINO - MKW - IN - IIKNTIRTSY.
If r u m .l a .-1 f M «
IKK I II an I liar* n-ft the
lima or money to^>|>nra to
to I >. ( 1 v
lellliw line I r ui rnnka ron
a ITWM ««t of teoiti mill re.
Iiirn lh**ni In XIII |||T mall
orotptDMi. W.irkina i.'iln,
material A Al * >iarHnte«!{.
rail ftnt Tenth On.'" it..*
ei Teeth, oe t .ililier, || \.i
_ . . Or, ti. C. IHnllhewe.
Hank an'l i <Miimerelai H>far<-n. >• I'l up 4 M*r.
I
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The Cimarron News. (Kenton, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, December 26, 1902, newspaper, December 26, 1902; Kenton, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc234157/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.