The Cushing Herald. (Cushing, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 8, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, September 26, 1902 Page: 3 of 14
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MCCORD OF THB FACT.
The beet guarantee of the future la
record of the put, and over fifty
thousand pooplo have publicly teetl-
flod that Doan's Kidney Pllla h w
cured thorn of numoroua kidney Ilia,
from common backache to dangoroua
diabetes, and all tho attoadant annoy-
MtN and sufferings from urinary die-
-orders. Tboy bare boon eurod to
atay eurod. Haro la ono eaao:
Samuel J. Taylor, retired carpenter,
xeeidlng at 212 South Third it,
•Goshen, Ind., aaya: "On the «#th day
or August. 1227, I made an affidavit
before Jacob C. Mann, notary public,
stating my experience with Doan's
Kidney Pllla. I had Buffered for
thirty years, and web * compelled at
times to walk by the aid of crutches,
frequently pasted gravel and Buffered
excruciatingly. I took every modi-
-cine on the market that I heard about
and lome gave me temporary relief.
1 began taking Doan'a Kidney PIUb
and the results I gave to the public
in the statement above referred to. At
this time, on the 18th day of July,
1902, I make thia further statement
that during thd five years which have
elapsed I have had no occaplon to use
■either Doan's Kidney Pllla or # any
other medicine for my kldneya. The
-cure effected was a permanent one.'
A FREE TRIAL of thia great kid-
ney medicine which cured Mr. Tay-
lor, will be mailed on application, to
any part of the United Statee. Ad-
dress Poster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.
Y. For sale by all druggists. Price
<60 cents per box.
A man without a single idea Is less
of a hero than a man with only one
Idea. "
Enough is as good as a feast, but
«iost of us want surplus
Defiance Staroh is guaranteed big-
gest and best or money refunded. 10
ounces, 10 cents. Try It wow
It's not the liberal judg> > who gives
the biggest sentences.
The woman who uses cosmetics may
be taken at her face value.
Cheap notoriety gen, nltf hM the
price mark conspicuously displayed.
Widows and widowers ought to be
re-paired.
fltB( Visitors' Cacarsloas via ths Ms-
•oarI Faqtfle Railway
To points in Ohio and Indiana. One
fare for the round trip P1®*
Tickets on sale September tad, tn,
Iftth, and 23rd, good to return within
80 days from date of sale. Excellent
opportunity to visit the old folks at
home. Call on or address nearest Mis-
souri Pacific Agent for particulars.
H C. Townsend, Q.P. AT.Agt.,St. Louis.
A dishonest man suspects every hon-
est man he encounters
Happiness is never preserved in fam-
ily J*** '
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
quantity and superior quality of Defi-
ance Starch is fast taking place of all
other brands. Others say they cannot
sell any other starch.
. Parke In Slg Cities.
vaw York city has a park area of
«760 acres, of which 8,142 la in the
Bronx. Chicago has 2^60v acres, St.
Louis 2,420 Md PhlUdelphiaM76,of
which Fairmount park Includes 2,102,
which ilmja otoc22 aw
he does not have Dofianoe Staroh, you
may be sure he Is afraid to keep it pa-
ill his stock of l2os. pMfcAgeaare jold.
Defiance Starch is not only bettor than
any Cold Water Staroh, but oo«^m
10 ob. to the package and sella for
earns money aa 12 oa. branda.
Dleeovery kf Fameue Mine.
The famous Rat Kale Miaa, Ui tke
S? mSk* ** * ■
"ti
MARKETS CORRECTED DAILY
THE COKKaJOOfiUI.
- 'i
WHAT NtWSPAPIItS OP TH« WM-
TURK WILL S1LIK1.
%
Chicago 14 ve Stock.
....I 7 M
IS
>■>
Chlcas* Orala.
8
St 1Mb Live Stock.
« 4 H5 <n I 7 «> *
*- 8 Uft M , 4 HI
il 70 <§ 4 SJ
A Margins ef tho Msgaslne and the
Dally Paper Se^ns the Meet Prob-
sble—Seme of the Signs Whlsh
Point to This Ind.
ms taaaafa*'
J. H. TURNER
VNLEUll UT. <
Cotton.
HidAltug*
*
Wichita Orala.
CUM Clotw
Open High Low Today Y'lUy
TO&K 70
«*&■<§«
Wichita Live Stock.
HOQB ® '9 • 1
?RN-
LATEST NEWS IN BRIEF.
Sulphurous gases and smoke belch
from Copperas mountain In Ohio.
The volcano Kllauea, In Hawaii,
continues to show unusual.activity.
Fire at Prentloe, Wis., burned one
whole businesa block and part of an-
other.
Prince Ye, son of the King of Korea,
has entered the Ohio Wesleyan uni-
versity.
The oommander of the Canadian ihil-
Itia has issued aa order abolishing the
sword as a cavalry weapon.
Lord Salisbury is sick In Swltsef*
land. He has bpen touring the heafth
resorts of Southern Europe.
No wonder Armour has seut millions
to take call loans in New York, where
they bring 30 per cent just now.
The Santa Fe has been handling an
unusually heavy passenger business
this week, both east and west bound.
The strike at the White House of
painters and decorators was speedily
settled*, the New York men going back
home.
The anniversary of the death of
President McKinley will be appro-
priately observed in the churches of
Washington.
Marconi now is able to send a wire-
less message 1,500 miles and expects to
establish communication aoross the
Atlantic soon.
The American oonsul at Odessa re-
ports that, with the exception of flax
seed, Russian crops this yes* are above
the average In production.
* The submarine telegraph cable which
is to join the United States and Hawaii
as the first link in the system to the
Philippines, has been oompleted in
England.
President Diss, of Mexico, celebra-
ted his attaining to the age of 78 years
on September 15. The diplomstlc corps,
cabinet ministers, etal., oalled to con-
gratulate the president.
The Amerloan Board of Foreign mis-
sions has reoelved gfl7,002 through tho
state department. This is 25 per
oant of the award made for losses on
mlaaion property lb the Boxer outragee
in China.
China la on the verge of another
Boxer uprising which may equal that
of IMO. They are destroying churches
and mlaelone. They uphold their work
by referring to the hoi rivalry between
CathoUe and Protestant silaatosa.
• • ■ " • ' > • , '
They had .boon speaking of the news-
paper of tho future, how it would oe
made, the time that would be saved In
making It and the more artistic ihape
it would aaaume as the result of im-
proved methods of doing newspaper
work in tho mechanical departments.
"One curious feature of the business,
said one observant member of the
group, "Is the fact that the dally news-
paper Is showing a tendency to en-
croach upon what we have regarded
as the province of the magazine, while
the magazine has been showing a ten-
dency* .to usurp the functions of the
owspaper. Now what will be the out-
come of these counter tendencies? W0
can do no more than guess at the re-
sult. We have the facts before us so
far as the tendencies are concerned.
Newspapers have shown a tendency,
especially in the larger editions, for
instance, to.drift far out Into the mag-
azine field by publishing a of
feature matter with elaborate Illustra-
tions.
"Special writers of the very highest
type are now employed on the daily
papers, and they nre grinding out the
character of stuff which formerly be-
longed exculslvely to the magazine
field. On the other hand, the maga-
zines have been showing a 4U|J IJW
to encroach somewhat on what was
supposed to be the province of the
newspfper. We will be convinced of
this fiwst by redacting upon the great
disasters of rdfcent date. Magazines
have been as anxious to get men on
the scene as newspapers, and Jhey
have shown a disposition to publish
as much exclusive information as pos-
sible. They want original
ing that has not been handled thor-
oughly by the dally papers. They want
pictures which have not been used.
They want to bo the first to get and
handle tho particular stuff which ap-
pears In their columns. This is the
newspaper idea, and the men who are
at the head or the more progresses
magazines of the country are good
newspaper men, with the news instinot
developed to a very high degree.
"Here we find a peculiar condition
which, in my Judgment, will finally
bring out a mergence of the news-
paper and the magaklne. Newspapers
aftsr a while will be published in the
form of certain magazines, In which
event they will become higher types
of the art of printing. The result of
the magazine's tendency to encroach
upon tho functions of the newspaper,
and the newspaper's tendency to usurp
some of the functions of the magaslne,
will In time result In a happy com-
promise which will be of much bene-
fit to the reading rublic. .
"Newapapers will be more careful
of the facts they print. They will bo
more accurate because they will am*
ploy a more reliable aet of men. They
will exact of the men who grind out
the news for them aomewhst of the
scrupulous proolaioh of hlatory. At
the same time the magaslnea will drop
tho blaa which too frequently makes
them unreliable. Personal opinion
will bo tabooed. The writer will quit
the business df taking up this side or
fhe other. Ho will quit trying to force
his opinions upon the reading publiQ.
Ho will simply tell what happened
how It happened and when it
red without blaa or favor one way
tho other. The rodnlt will bo
wholesome and the world will sot i
tafaetory eorvice from newapapera
mm ****•■
A mow Mm •*
■attl ik« kMin «to
Iron Joe's Shirt, Ma,
Cause he wants to go to Kansas
City and see the great eleotrleal
Priests of Pallas parade on the
night of Ootober ,1.
ggr ii iiwois Haws as ait 2*nao*m
mMiJoSasia
Esriy fc
night, et etow*
Starch wil bt found always the
•am* always thakat.
Insist en having k, the mcst fas
Satlalaction or money back
.guaranteed. It Is msnulsctursd
1 undsr th«N latest bnprevad cendl-
Sana, It ia up-to date. It Is the
beat. Wc gWt no premiums.
We sett 16 ounces of thaibeat
March made lor 10 centa. Other
brands are 12 ounces fee 10 centa
wfeh a tin whittle.
Manufactured by
THBBWUNCinAWnea,
N*.
gSK#
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Rendall, William J. The Cushing Herald. (Cushing, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 8, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, September 26, 1902, newspaper, September 26, 1902; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc269516/m1/3/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.