The Messenger. (Drummond, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 8, 1909 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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red tag
granite ware
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SALE
AT
B. M. AUSTIN'S.
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Barr Briefs.
Lois Wilson is just over the
measles.
Clarence Wilson came home in
his auto Sunda3'.
H. E. Gaimer and family visit-
ed Mrs. Garners' parents Sun-
day.
Charley Joines came down
from Wichita and spent Sunday
with his parents.
Dewey H*nthorne, Paul and
Ralph Hane took dinner wi'.h
George Sacor, Sunday.
Eva Farber, Banch Hane, Edi
th Bush and Eunice McCluney
spent Sunday with Ruth Hen-
thorne.
Seme of the Barr, ball boys
went down south to play ball
Sunday, they ought to be asham
ed to play ball on Sunday, we
are sure ashamed for them.
It makes perfect pie crust,
The Alton Goods baking powder.
Miss Zerby who has been quite ,
sick is reported some better at
this date.
The little baby of Mr. and Mrs.
A. C. Bray has been quite ill
the pant few d iys.
Guaranteed not to contain al-
um. The Alton Goods baking
powder.
Mrs. A. J. Alldaffer will leave
Saturday for Kansas where she
will visit relatives for a month.
Henry Bese and sister, Mrs.
W. I mm ell visited over Sunday
with their parents at Enid.
Don't forget there will be Dedi
cation exercises at the Christian
church Sunday. Bring your
baskets and stay all day.
Mrs. Dyer and daughter, Miss
Florence Godfrey, of Pueblo,
jOolo., and I. R. Godfrey and
wife, of Enid, are visiting D. M.
'Carey and wife this week.
An we predicted, J. S. Mitchel
has come back to Garfield coun-
ty and we we: e informed has
purchased a farm six miles east
of Waukomis.
i Johnie Allen went up to Enid,
Saturday and accompanied his
i wife home Sunday. Mrs. Allen
' had been visiting her parents at
Coldwater.
60 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
Patents
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
- ■—rlptlnn maj
whether an
;ommu lc*-
il. HflNUBUun on Pale"1*
3SS5S5!g££St~'-
Scientific American,
A Hlturtrfttei weekly. elr'
MUNN & Co.3B,"""*"'New^orH
Br"" om"r«25 F BU Washington. P.S.
Any kind of a buggy at B. M.
Austin's.
| Miss Dessie Bavin and Miss
| Nobel Oliver who have been
[visiting at Oklahoma City^ the
'{past month returned home yester
i Cleanliness of Amsterdam.
' Amsterdam enjoys an enviable repu-
tation for its cleanness. Owen Felt- ,
ham, who visited Holland in the sev- ^
enteenth century, was particularly im-
pressed by the spotlessness of Its
streets and houses. "Whatsoever their ;
I estates be," he writes, "their houses
i must be fair. Therefore from Amster-
dam they have banfsht seacole, lest it
' Boyle their buildings. Every door
seems studded with diamonds. The
, nails and hinges hold a constant
brightness, as if rust there was not
a quality incident to iron. The r
houses they keep cleaner than their
bodies; their bodies than their soul?.
Goe to one, you shall find the and-
! irons shut up in network. At a sec-
j ond the warming-pan muffled in Ital-
i fan 'cutworke. At a third the sconce
I clad in cambrick."
Tortured on a Horse.
•'For ten years I couldn't ride
a horse without being a torture
from piles," writes L. S. Napier,
of Rugless, Ky., "when all doc-
tors and other remedies failed,
Bucklen's Arnica Salve curei
me." Infallible for Piles, Burns,
Scalds, Cuts, Boils, Fever-Sores
Eczema, Salt Rhtum, Burns. 25c
Guaranteed at D:umrnond Phar-
macy.
There has never been but one com-
plaint about Drummond Highest Pat-
ent Flour. It don't Last long enough.
DRUMMOND M ILL &. ELE-
VATOR CO.
)55
Buy Your Poultry Netting of
B M.AUSTIN
M?k!ng Chang*, in New York.
A thin little man with a long beard
and a big bundle boarded a Secona
avenue car at Fifth street the other
av and when the conductor came
aroun-' Landed up a $1 bill and asked
for a transfer to the Fourteenth street
"rat sen due tor handed the passen-
gr-T a half dollar, a quarter and three
dimes. The thin little man saw the
three dimes and quickly thrust hi.
change In his picket. He didn t wait
until the car got to Fourteenth street,
but alighted at Eighth street. Whem
he had gone a passenger said to the
I conductor:
"You gave that man three dimes in-
stead of two."
The conductor did not smile, but
"••Did 17 Well, he'll have a devil of
a time getting rid of the halt dollar."—
New York Sun.
Turkish Women in Uphill Fight.
In Constantinople a few better-class
women are "feeling their way" in «s
eard to dress, but, like all pioneers,
they suffer for the cause. If the cus-
tomary heavy black veil is 'M°ner if
the hair has an appearance of being
puffed o'lt beneath its covering, if the
rich silk mantle is cut to show the
slender form or more mature curves
of its wearer, she is Immediately an
object of much attention and remark
from Turk and Christian.
For Fresh and Cured Meats Go To
c. L WHITE'S
Meat Market.
He pays the highest market price for
Cattle and Hogs.
Long-Bell Lumber Company.
WHOLESALE AXD RETAIL s
Mound City Paint. Coal, Lime ® Cement.
LUMBER DEALERS,
S. W. Nixon, Local Manager.
Drummond, Oklahoma
W. M, Bassett
Dealer in
electric
bitters
CURE FEMALE ILLS,
STOMACH,LIVER AND
HERVObS DISEASES
auEEwtumCS
SO*&$1-00
ThiM. BOTTLE rate
AND Ai-iTHia'AT AMD tUHG TROUBUS
CUAMNTC
Watches. ClocKs, Jewel-
ery, China Ware and
Optical Goods.
Alao Repairs Watches, CI©oka%
JeweUrjr and Speck*.
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Messenger, D. E. The Messenger. (Drummond, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 8, 1909, newspaper, July 8, 1909; Drummond, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc235078/m1/4/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.