The Cimarron News. (Kenton, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, December 20, 1901 Page: 3 of 4
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Orlftn of Vh«* Alphabet
ProNH'ir J. C. i'lnrlo* of Dpptr Alton.
Illinois, 1i:ih Kent totlieKii tliaonian I ti-
atltutlon a uul<iuc volume. In which la
compiled the alphiilHH* of tlie world, tut
tubulated as to show the oritri" of all
of them in iht* Kc.v|ttlan hlirocly plili**
and to exhibit tIn* development of each
from Its earliest to it* Lnifst forms.
I.Iff te Uruwtn( I binger.
From Futilities and certain rhangrs In
Dur metho..* , f living, it haa he. n proven
that life I- being at. a.Illy I. nglhened. W
are Justified tn believing this when we
consider the great advance made in mnll-
:lne durli the |mtt fifty TMri. the mum
noteworthy of them being Hosteller's
Stomach Hitters. This lileai medicine
cures kea.lache, sour rtonwih. belching,
heartburn and Indigestion, also steadies
the nerve*. Induces sound sleep and pre-
Venta malaria, fever and ague, lte sura
to try tt.
A CHRISTMAS WAIT.
By Kmma Alice Browne.
Break In the dreary East, and bring the
Light!
Rise, holy Christmas morning! Break
and bring
The blossom of our hope—the stainless
King—
For weary Is the night!
.^Strange darkness wraps the haggard
mountain rim;
And worn with failure, spent with grief
and loss.
From the pathetic shadow of His Cross
We yearn and cry to Him.
Sad pilgrims, burdened with unshrlven
sin.
Oppressed, and cowering "ncath the chas-
tening rod.
We humbly seek the path His feet have
trod.
And strive to enter In.
His anger Is so slow—His love so great—
Tho' we have wandered In forbidden
ways.
Spurned and denied Him, all our fruit-
less days.
He calls us long and late.
We are so poor! Of all the squandered
years
We bring no tithes of oil, or corn, or
wine.
Nor any offering to His spotless shrine,
Save penitential tears.
We are so friendless. In our abject need
We can but cry to Him in bitter stress;
Met He will not despise our nakedness,
• Nor break the bruised reed.
Hard was the lot for His contentment
spread;
Rough was Ills garb, and rude His lent-
en fare;
In all the earth He had not anywhere
To lay his weary heattt
f, (
His patience is so long. His wrath so
slow,
•Tho" mocked and scoffed, insulted snd
denied,
Bjtaten with many stripes, and crucified.
He will not bid us go.
By all the anguishe of His laden breast—
The bloody sweat—the sleepless agony—
The pangs and pennance of Gethsemane—
He giveth the weary rest.
Break In the dreary East, oh, morning!
Kise,
With healing In thy holy wings, and
bring
Fruition of our hope—the promised
Kin*.
And blameless Sacrifice!
A sudden pulse of waking life we hear
Throb In the hush of hollow glade aAd
dell;
The hills take up their olden canticle;
"Behold! The Dawn is near!"
And far against the soft auroral glow.
PeaJc over peak the kindling summits
burn;
The vales, rejoicing, seem to lift and
yearn
Thro' curling mists below.
^nd far along the radiant heights of
morn
A sudden hurst of choral triumph smells.
The aweet Te Deum of an hundred bells—
And lo! "Messiah's born!''
And all the burden of our grief and sin
Is lifted from our souls forevermore.
As humbly knocking at the Master's door
He bids us enter In.
There used to be a young man |
named Stanwix who was rector of a
church at a little town in New Jersey
called Appleburg. Very amiable young
man, not long in the ministry, aud un-
married. Nice-looking chap, too, and
a bright fellow, but he had his trials
at Appleburg. Mainly it was the wo-
men—they thought he ought to marry,
and of course they were right. But
thinking so wasn't enough for those '
dear Appleburg ladles; with the true
feminine desire to help they resolved
to see that he did marry. But here
again they showed a universal femi- i
nine trait by refusing to combine and ,
work together. They all labored hard
enough, but independently, and each
With a view to inducing the minister
to marry a different woman.
It had been going on thus for some
months when Christmas approached.
Now of course there isn't much you
can give any man for Christmas—slip-
bminiesSto/y;
The Dominie used to complain some-
times about the character of the stories
the rest of us told. He said they were
Mtoo economical in their use of the ele-
ment of truth. And truth was so
cheap, and also so interesting, be
would say. We were always ready to
admit that It was Interesting, but were
not so free to acknowledge its cheap-
ness. Like other exotics it seemed to
us expensive. Fiction, being so much
more easily produced, appeared to be
the true mental provender in the Corn
Cob Club, a social Institution where
we decided questions of great pith and
moment by the aid of the civilising
snd ennobling Influence of tobacro In-
cinerated In cob-pipes. The Dominie
Vd quit smoking when he entered the
ministry, but he always said the cobs
smelt good, so we hail hopes of his
reclamation; besides, the sir was usu
lly so thick that he absorbed enough
to bring him up, In a large measure,
to the high philosophic plans occupied
by the rest of us.
It happened on Christmas Rve that
somebody told a atory appropriate
enough to the season so far aa the sub-
ject went, but palpably Impossible con-
sidered as a happening At least the
Dominie said It waa, and threatened to
tsll a Christmas story himself; and
t*lni counaeled by the Professor, who
*;t£ classical In his language, to "blase
«*Iy." the good nan compiled aa fol
lews:
"WHY DON'T YOU GET MARRIED?"
pers and pipes and shot-guns and slip-
pers. And in the case of a parson it's
still worse—you've got to drop off the
pipes and shotguns, leaving only slip-
pers—and slippers. Of course there are
book-marks and easy chairs, but the
first are trivial and the latter expen-
sive; besides, If he Is unmarried and
you are of the opposite sex. and in the
same Btate, you will see that you ought
to give him something made with yuur
own fair hands, and you can't make an
easy chair. So slippers it had to be
for the Rev. M. Stanwix. especially
after his landlady had been sounded
on the subject and reported that the
poor man didn't have a slipper to his
name.
Well, the result was. of course, that
the whole hundred and thirty-six mar-
riageable ladles at Appleburg went to
work on slippers; and a few of the
flock who already had husbands also
began Bllppers, out of the goodness of
their hearts, probably, or mhybe think-
ing that they might be widows some
day and might as well have a pair to
their credit. The slaughter of plush
and embroidery materials was some-
thing cyclonic, and the local shoe-
maker had to Bit up nights pegging on
soles. Even unfortunate little Jane
Wilkinson went at a pair hammer and
tongs, though everybody said Bhe
hadn't a ghost of a show. In the first
place Jane was too young- her older
sister Katharine was conceded to have
a right to enter for the contest, but It
was universally held that Jane had no
right to compete at all. Besides be-
ing too young she was really nineteen
or twenty—she was also plain. She
might have a certain girlish prettlness.
but not the beauty which the wife of
so handsome a shepherd as the Rev.
Mr. Stanwix should have Further-
more. Jane was In no other way adapt-
ed for the position—sh had been a
good deal of a tomboy, and was yet, for
that matter; she was frivolous and
careless, and was always putting her
foot In it. The first time the pastor
had callfd at the Wilkinson house,
and while Katherine was entertaining
him In the parlor In the moat ap-
proved snd circumspect manner, Jane
bad blundered In and Inside of live
minutes asked htin why he didn't get
married- all the girls said he ought
to. Jane had explained to everybody
that she meant It as a Joke, but It hu<t
gent rally been pronounced Ill-timed
and In bsd ta t«
But poor Jane kept working away on
her slippers regardless of the talk
Kvervbody said that Jane'a slippers
wouldn't fit. or that Ihey would both
be for on« foot, or that she would get
the heels sewed on the toe end. or
something Jane Anally put on the
finishing touches and then packed them
In a pas'elioard box and tied It with
pink ribbon.
Then she got her other Chrlstma*
presents ready She had a lot of hand
kerchief* for an aunt, and a shopping
bag for a married sister, and a little
knit shawl for her grandmother, and
a pair of skates for a boy cousin, and
various other things for divers other
persons, including a fine meerschaum
pipe and a pound of his favorite smok-
ing tobacco for her brother who was
at college, and who wouldn't be homo
till New Year's. Each thing she care-
fully put up lu a box or bundle and
laid it away.
The day before Christmas was a
never-to-be-forgotten time for the
Rev. Mr. Stanwix. Slippers just came
down on him like an Egyptian plague.
Along about four o'clock Stanwix
got crowded out of bis room—slippers
piled half way to the ceiling—and had
to put a chair out in the hall and sit
there with an atlas of the world in his
lap writing his Christmas sermon on
it Mighty tough sermon it was, too,
and got tougher as the slippers contin-
ued to arrive. Fact is, he was getting
pretty mad; and every new pair sent
his temperature up five degrees. Con-
sequently, at ten o'clock he was Just
boiling. Of course he couldn't swear,
but the way he tramped up and down
that hall and ground his tecih really
amounted to the same thing. The
arriving slippers now began to fall off.
For ten minutes nothing came, and he
was Just starting down to ask the
landlady If she couldn't put a cot in
the ball so he could go to be<^ when
in came another box. It was from
Jane—Just her luck, of course, to be
late and strike him when he was all
worked up to the bursting point. But
let us draw a veil over the scene right
here and leave the poor man alone as
he opens Jane's box.
It was not more than half-past nine
the next morning when the Rev. Mr.
Stanwix mounted the Wilkinson steps
and tugged at the door bell. He asked
for Jane. It seemed rather queer, but
they ushered him into the parlor and
sent Jane In. Well, to make a long
story short, it wasn't ten minutes
until he had the thing all fixed up. He
had his chair drawn close up beside
her end of the sofa.
"Jane," he was saying. "I've loved
you ever since the first day I saw you.
but I never knew it until I opened
your box."
"Then you liked them, did you?
I'm so glad." murmured Jane.
"I should say I did! Why, It's one
of the finest meerschaums 1 ever saw.
and that tobacco used to be my favor-
ite brand at college. But, Jane, how
did you know I used to smoke, and
was dying to begin again?"
Jane had stopped breathing at the
word meerschaum. Now she caught
rffl
"I can tliul my way out of this la-
byrinth till right," said Theseus, as he
availed himself of the clew given iilui
by AdrlS'ine :tltd threaded <he winding
passages unerringly, "luit if you
should ask me to s| 'U the blamed
word you'd have me beat."
TALKS ON AD. ERTISINQ.
The best way to advertise is Just tc
advertise Get at it with a view to hav-
ing the people know what you most
desire to sell, and incidentally lettlnt
them know tbat the specified items dc
not represent your full stock. Say in-
teresting things about Interesting goodi
and have the goods to talk.
Men talk of the secret of successful
advertising, but tt is all very plain. Th«
essentials are to offer what people
want, at fair prices, and to offer it ic
a way that will make readers know
they want it. The art in writing an
advertisement is to speak as the inter-
ested and well-informed merchant
would speak to a prospective customer.
The mere appearance of a buslnesi
man's name and address in every lssu«
of a leading newspaper will do work to
increase his trade. Every business man.
however, is able to give facts about hit
establishment which will encourage
people to deal with him. To state sucb
facts clearly In a newspaper is the prin-
cipal secret of successful advertising.
The idea that it takes a number of
Impressions to make the average ad-
vertisement effective is not new. Forty
years ago an English advertiser said
to the publisher of the Cornhill Maga-
zine; "We don't consider that an ad-
vertisement seen for the first time by
a reader Is worth much. The second
time it counts for something. The third
time the reader's attention is arrested;
the fourth time he reads it through and
thinks about it; the fifth makes a pur-
chaser of him. It takes time to soak
In."
A Dry Joke.—All flesh is grass, but
President Roosevelt's secretary of
state is Ilay.
Mother Gray's Sweet I'owden for Children
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse
in the Children's Home in New York. Cure
Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Dis-
orders move and regulate the Bowels and
Destroy Worms. Over UO.OOO testimonials.
At all druggists, 25c. Sample fkeb. Ad-
dress Allen S. Uluihted, LtKoy, N. Y.
"Where there's a will there's a way,"
That's gospel, however you take it,
For tnost any lawyer—for pay—
A way will discover to break It.
Naturally people want to be WKI..L. for
Christmas, for nothing so promote* hap-
piness and good cheer Therefore, take
Oarfleld Tea n«w: Its uses are manifold;
It cures all derangements of stomach,
liver, kidneys or bowels: It cleanses the
system an.| purines the blood, thus re-
moving the . iuse if rheumatism. gout
and manv rhtonlc diseases. It is good for
young and old and has been held in the
highest r-pute for many years. Physi-
cian* recommend it.
Rev. Marguerite St. Omcr Briggs, 35
Mount Calm Street, Detroit, Michigan,
Lecturcr for the W. C. T. U., recommends
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
" Dear Mrs. Pinkham : — My professional work has for the past
twenty years brought me into hundreds oi homes of sickness, and
I have had plenty of opportunity to witness the sutterings of wives
and mothers who from want, ignorance or carelessness, are slowly
but surely being dragged to death, principally with female weakness
and irregularities of the sex. I belk ve you will be pleased to know
that Lydia E. Pliikhum'a Vegetable Compound hu cur.d
more women than any other agency that has come under my noticc.
Hundreds of women owe their life and health to you to-day, and, there-
fore, I can conscientiously advise sick women to try it."—Marguerite
St. Omer Briogs.
$5000 FORFEIT IF TIIE ABOVE LETTER IS NOT criM INT,
When women are troubled with irregular or minful menstruation,
weakness, leurorrhtra, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that liear-
ing-down fe*ling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, flatulence,
general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration, they should
remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lytllu I'inkliaui's
Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles.
No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and
unqualified endorsement. Mo other medicine has such a record of cures
of female troubles. lie fuse to buy any other medicine.
Mrs. Piiikliatn invitfs all sick women to write lier for uilvics.-
SI10 lius guideil thousands to health. Address, Lynu, Mass.
For Hf ore Than Qnnrfer of r fMlnry the reputation of W. I. 1
Dour I a* 9>i.uuand $d.hu •Iona tor fttyle, • -••t.ifort and aeai .,o « \« r.ted a<i uliu-r
liakt-a fetid mi l.iea* price*. 1 am « v. el lent rrputatUm lm« born won ly inerit L
ti one. W. 1„ Don* la* luwi have to give betivr aaiiftfa«-tioii tiiuu oiber fri.uuund I
|S-U> alloc* U'tauw lit* reputation lor Ute U l fru.UU and 9&.M *fcue* liiUal Lxj j
■nil? .11 tied.
Soid by 63 fyotifjfas Storet in Amrrirtm HHn ielltng dirtctfnm factory to
9rarer at one projit; ami Oett $hoc ft cairt t eiiryttha e,
W. L.DOUGLAS
#3:22 SHOES *5-22
"Just think what w« '<l be misting."
Siilti h>\ "If that ilellxhtud
DlmuVerir of IOhhImk
Ilad had it copyrlgnted."
ONION MADE
'W. L DOUGLAS!
M. 1X1 Ollt Kd
l.ln« < annol
Equaled at Any Price. I
r k> hlrh tti t the w *r r wwlwt mom Tjln* *'*JJ.""1' I
In llif W. I„ ItMittflaa'n.m anil rr.> alinm tlutn li.- .-mn f.-« fl«-wliT- W.I. |
"'Orr $a.< ami £:. .li kilt*-, man any utlur two nutnufiu'turrra in lh« world. V&at Color Eyalata Uaaa.
W. I. Dnn^lai ftrt.OO htmI K1.M aline* n"1 made of the aante hlgh-^rade
leattu-ra uaed lu «.V<tOutid •ti.iKt alioea and are Juat aa good In every way.
Inalat upon having W. I.. Dntiglaa ahnea with name and price atamped.
on bottom. M,o a k-hi a ywti r* on r^ftnt <>f prl< awl r*nla additional for ^
l arnaire. T«*i iii<-i>anr- iiipnta of t, >t aa ahuwn . a' rl* ilr.ir.-il; aim and
"'I. ™ warn i :iin ur t*i> lor; liravy, lunliuui or Utfltl aolca.
t ATALIMi FKKK.
W. L. DOUCLA8. Brockton. Maw.
• MOVED INTO THE HALL*"
her breath, and for once in h*r life
roue to the occasion and didn't put her
foot In It. She aitnply looked up at
him and arailed demurely.
"Oh, I guesaed It." ahe aald.
"It waa the best Riieaa you ever
made. I should hare died laat night
amidst that awful landallde of allppera
If I hadn't amnked about half of that
tobacco. I mettn to keep on smoking
now that la, If you don't object,
dear?"
Jane scored again.
"T rather like the smell of good to-
bacco," aha aald.—Saturday Evening
Post.
Oalv I'reablent Wit Mont aa "A."
■ President Roosevelt la the flrat oc-
cupant of the White House la whost-
name the letter doea not appear
Not only haa that letter appeared in
the namea of all previous Presidents,
but alait In the names of nearly avery
one of the •! Americans who have re-
ceived votea for Prealdant In the elec-
toral college down to William J
Bryan There arc only eight euay-
t Iona to thia rule.
Howa Thlar
Wi' offer One Hundred I)oHart reward for any
cane of Cttntrrh limit-annul be cured by ilali's
Catarrh Cur*.
I'\ J. I lircVEYft CO.. Props Toledo, a
We, the underslKiied, have known P. J.
and tlnanciallv able lo carry oul any obliga-
tion* made by their firm.
West * Truax. Wholesale IJniirRlsts. Toledo,
D : Waldliuc. Kinnan & Marvin, Whuleaale
OrugfflttlK. Toledo. Ohio
Hall s Catarrh Cure la taken Internally, set-
Inif directly upon the blood and raucous > urfac n«
Jf the system. Testimonials sent, free, i'rlue
fic per bottIn. Sold by all druttslsU.
Hall's Family PUN uro the bust
He—It was hard work to keep from
kl tdn{ you Inst night. She — Weil, you
must or • .ireful not to over-exert your-
at If, Jack
A (rwur iiiteed cure for Rhettmntlam:
M irwit ill -> Hern. 1\ for Hheflmoi imiii clout
and N«'ur iltflu. All druggists refund mon-
•y If it fulls.
An Irlchman suys there Is no blessing
like health, especially when you are sick.
Pain, suffering, Wizard Oil could not
live together, so pain and suffering
moved out. Ask your druggist about It.
I Perdlta— I understand Mr. Itlnks plavs
the violin. I.y.In ker You hava been
misinformed, lie works It.
PUTNAM FADKI.KSS DYES are tha
brightest, fastest and easiest to use.
bold by drujfgists. 10c. per package.
A Oerman nerve specialist says that
bad Ktnminor Is a disease. lie might
have added that It Is epidemic.
Mrs. Win-.low « Hoothlng ftyrnr.
Forchltdroa tsethlsg. ...rt na I he «iima, redness ttr
II am uiatioii. allay a |.a n. u r.a wludcoilu. XtcaboMi*
A western Judge has decided that saus-
age Isn't sausnge unless it Is In links.
Plao'a Curs Is the tiest medicine w ever nited
for ail affevUooa uf Ibe Utroat snd luags — Ws.
O Ksosi.BT, Vanhureu Intl . Pub. lu. IWOU.
The mitn who owns but one shirt la,
necessarily, short of change.
Willi All a Merry < brtatmasl
And tell them of Oarfleld Tea. which
rur*a Indigestion and liver disorders snd
Insurrs the return of many Happy Chrtst-
tnss I tinners by removing the cause of
dyspepsia and ill-health
It Is ssld that ninny a fnnl has by
nialntainlng silence made people believe
lo. possessed wisdom This Is a ntls-
I*ike. A fool never knows enough to
keep quiet
Do not suffer the agonies of Kheutna-
tlsm. Marshall's Remedy for Hheutnn
tt-in .(lout and Neuralgia Is guaranteed
by all druggists
Nlrehnv I say t'hawlle. did you tell
Ibe girl I sent her a klaa by youf Char-
lie- T did anil «lie said It Was lltuuh Ulcer
than If you had brought II.
WINCHESTER
"NEW RIVAL" FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
outshoot all other black powder (hells, because they are msde
better and loaded by exact machinery with the standard brands of
powder, shot and wadding. Try them and you will be convinced.
ALL REPUTABLE * DEALERS • KEEP « THEM
CAPSICUM VASELINE
( PUT CP lit CobbAPStUba Ti:tilts >
A substitute for and superior to mustard or
any other plaster, and will not blister the
uioHt dcllcule Hkln. The pain allaying and
curative qualii ies of this article are wonder-
ful. It will stop the toothache st once, snd
relieve head ache and sciatica. We recom-
mend It as the best and safest external
counter-Irritant known, also as un external
remisly for pains In the chest and stomach
and all rheumatic, neuralgia and gouty com-
plaints. A trial will prove what we claim
for ll, and it will be found to be Invaluable
In the household. Many people say "It is the
best of i*l of your preparations. ' price in
cents at all druggists or other dealers, or by
sending this amount toil*.in postage stamps
we will send you a lube by mall. No article
should be accepted hy the public unless the
same carries our label, as otherwise it Is not
genuine. CHtiSI'HINMKiH MHO. CO ,
17 Stale Street, N tew Yuan CiTT.
Denver Directory.
v
ITALITK
low, 4«bil lAted cr
cihaurttd from
mny c*um9CUBS
by the
URVAT AIMTHAI.IAK UKVtHY
To convince min ofiti wootiirful cnty
tiv« rower, we vi I und a
*1 1KI Al, PU kAUr., MtlE.
A pMv*iriAM'S GV>T TO HUMAHITO '
Healed fre# from rare.
I>R. KKUNKR GOULKT.
Department A. t9. Sat hamin ro. OUU
f/HKK with llaOll
Oonitttnmloit Hitch-
en Talile idrawera.
i Hour Mm* and re
m o v « I' I v lirvad
h 'it/d "t • lln • v«i
our r-d iprhta
conch. Wrlta f- r
an c*rjr I i * t and
m a m in o I li eat
al
I THoroptoa't (yi W«t«r.
nPHDCY"^ DISCOVERT. gleet
L/ ^9 1 i|ii|*k relief anil, urea «nrr
raara lii.ik of teaiimonUea anil te Sits- tr**tuiee>
sass. ua. a. a. aun a aoaa. a.a a. tuaatlt u.
SADDLES and HARNESS
Thar eraat j<r notblag for eiaiama-
turn nn .t.•utile harnesa with braeea-
tug for Ut. doaBle taaia baraeaa
wits Braii a o(
form, hi hmM
Horn Stoet as I
die for t! i SM
Steel ti of a .ft II a
double eblaoltt
tor tu Isi bim
be dwoel red l
wortbleaa no'ta
ttona bat Baud
yourordar dlreoa
u.ua an I get tit •
baUtnau ot •>♦
tannel barneaa
foresamlnatloa befori iiar.n* Mr same Catalog-
urn tree All gooita alaiuped S'KKIt MUtu.i.tCH.
MU-U Lariater street bearer. Coloradu
JTHC ?KNVCn TtNT
I and Awning Co.
Flat, Uamntnco, Ur« \tclij
BROWN PALACE HOTEL"".'"',"1;;
| Kuroiaan and American plant, ti Mi ami W and up
U'ANTKIi Mt n hi learn barN>r trade, T<hi|* and
h« M^l flirntabad p«'tltlona nuarauteml Wrlta
for particular* Molura Mar tier 4% ti lienm
OfMCIAL W. Oh W. PINS
FOR CHRISTMAS.
•stiaen. • «tl«1 U K gold II M
•' rolled gold Tt
s l.a'lles lib. aolil It K g .l.t .-.Ml
' rolled gol.| i UC
A s i A k I s M
Pa !e ntanafai'iMrer. TW Mts street
W.VOHHIK,
1 Uaahlnglus. D. * .
EROMO-LAX swssr r.'M.s-
r.irea beeitaeke lea mlniita ea ea no i.a<t
IlkS M'Onis • pretiaratlona *:«• tier ho« He aura
(ml el f.H llr ni 1st trade supplied Sr W.A
Uuttvica a i'ii. lisarer.
i noia i«oia nr nnnia
MHOHTHINII %M rri.M.KU'MV
Kntarprha Hi«h«|i r«iraer« f . h and Champa Sia^
lN«neer. I olu The l.armMi, Ch ipi i. Ilnai. Kn
•loMMnl I-? Ihtnvvr Maichaula. nla fo< U|.t<nra
tad Mlai<aua.
ALI XAMM k. () Ea, 9
Afiftaycr, ChemiM, Mrtallurgltl I
I I Una t««i#d ta car l« a I |m* Mwi.-n. frae I
MiIVHu hI ri. Utiifr On, I
Ee E. BURLINGAME A CO.,
CMCM ICAL
LADORATORV
ASSAY OFRCE
KitsMlahr.l ia Colorado. IISA. Hamplea by MSI I or
♦ •prrai willrecrl.r prompt and < arefol altralloa
Gold fcSllm Bullion
Coaceatratlon Tistt
I7J6-I73S Laaareoee !* Dearer, Cela..
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The Cimarron News. (Kenton, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, December 20, 1901, newspaper, December 20, 1901; Kenton, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc234329/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.