The Orlando Herald. (Orlando, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 1, 1898 Page: 2 of 10
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Orlando Herald.
OH DAN DO
CHAR. IIAKKI.RtMO. Tub.
OKLAHOMA.
•Bf.AHOlHA ANIHNW4N
The fusion lata are eon touting Hie
Bounty nuperlnt«ndent and on# county
somiulssloner in Garfield county.
The Hough HUlars arc »U getting
Into bualness. Mo»t«of them will avoid
war hereafter. War isn't what U waa
oraeUeil up to be.
An Oklahoma editor, assisted by the
type-setter, annowneod tlio other day
that it was Jonah who commanded the
sun to stand still.
The tow unite of David in said to have
been given by the whiten to a half-
breed H<|Ua\v in on tier U> keep the In-
- t^nbs from claiming1 it.
It i« charged that the prairie fires in
1'awnee county are net out by a uimK
who plunder while the fire has the
neighborhood out fighting it.
eli IT 1). Scott of Oklahoma county,
formerly 11 Itonffh Kider, will be an
aspirant for sergeant at arms in the
lower house of the legislature.
A man named llnrdaoelts attempted
suicide at Guthrie for no other reason
than that hid colleagues at a boarding
house were constantly making puns on
his name.
.••The railroads knve been socking It to
Oklahoma rather heavily on freight
rates, a fact that the next legislature
will do some talking about aud ought
to take action on.
Phtt Clover accidentally shot his
brother, llube, in the eye, near JefTer-
•on a few days ago. hi the future
llube will see things out of only one
eye. Phil took him for u deer.
Pit King, of Arapahoe, has offered
?."• to any man who will say that he Is
entirely satisfied with the result of the
election iit Custer .county. A terribly
mixed ticket was elected there.
Oklahotnnns are all having a goo<
time this year. It almost Impossible
to pick up a local paper printed any
where In this state that does not
tain notices of enter tain incuts of some
kind.
As a campaign argument ngainnt
Miss Hat tie Dnrnell, candidate for
county superintendent of Payne conn"
ty, it waa charged that she attended a
ball and waltzed. #he was elucted,
though.
Indian Agent Stephens, of the Crow
Creeks, reports that a serious nuisance
and detriment to progress, to correct
which agents would hare to co-operate,
Is international visiting, demoralizing
to the Indians, encouraging Idleness
and nomadic haoita, abandooiaeut of
crops, reckless distribution of property
, as presents and the neglect of stock
Action to minimize this mischief i»
urged.
The Agricultural and Mechanical
college at Stillwater has started col-
lege extension work. A half dozcu
members of its faculty offer courses of
three each, on science or its applica-
tion In literature or history, to be
given without charge, except the ac-
tual expense of the lecturer; to be giv-
•cn in as many places in the territory
as they can be arranged for without
seriously interfering with the work at
the college. Generally the lectures
will be given under the auspices of the
high schools in the places selected.
The first course will be given at Ok la*
horns City, December l-.'l.
The Oklahoma Agricultural and
Mechanical college desires to aid in
the attempt to secure the holding of
good Farmer's Institute in every coun-
ty in the territory during the next
three mouths Members of the ex per
iment station atatT have had large oj
perienee in this work and will giv
any suggestions us to plans for the ir
stitute. So far as it will not seriously
interfere with the work at the college
and station, tbc institution wiH send
a member of lite station staff to each
institute to give on address and afld in
the discussions. This will be done
without charge to the institute. There
is no need of an elaborate organization
or any considerable expenditure. The
idea is to bring ns many as possible of
those interested in any branch of ag-
riculture together, for the discussion
of subjects of direct interest to them.
Generally a meeting beginning in the
afternoon and closing the next after-
noon would Ih» better than a longer or
shorter one. The evening session may
be one designed to interest all classes
of citixena. with discussions of educa-
tional and other topics of equal inter"
est to townsman and farmer. Music
would be an attractive feature. These
institutes are not designed to tske the
place of other organizations of farm-
ers—rather to help them.
There i> a vast amount of feed in
Oklahoma.
R F. Wampter, a boy convict from
Greer count \. serving a year's sentence,
was pardoned upon the showing made
to the governor by the county attorney
Oklahm aaus are liviug in aristocratic
style.
The diphtheria scare ha* abated In
this territory.
Oklahoma live stock ia in the beat of
condition for the coming winter thia
year.
An express wagon ia ran three times
a week between Watonga and King-
fisher.
Hob Lowery writes home that the
Oklahoma regiment will be in Cuba by
February 1.
it Is said that the Frisco will put
rates Into Oklahoma which will make
the other roads nervous.
Game is said to be quite plentiful in
Custer and Heaver counties in the
western part of Oklahoma.
The next legislature in Oklahoma
has a good deal to do unci it should,
above all, begin the practice of thrift.
in all probability the only thing
which would prevent statehood soon
would be another statehood conven-
tion.
•lames Tuekcr, a colored widower of
Noble county, shot and seriously in-
jured Ella Harris, a colored widow,
last Saturday.
In Hennessey alone 8750.'J5 has been
collected for the Koy Cashion monu-
ment fund. This is gratifying. Ah
long as Oklahoma stands by her heroes,
Oklahoma is growing broader and
greater.
In a petition for the incorporation of
Holdenville, presented in Judge Thorn-
ns' court several weeks ago by Dr. J
W. Lowe, the papers are now complete,
and Holdenville is now numbered with
nterprising and growing towns of
the territory
TEMPERANCE TOPICS.
NOTES OF INTEREST TO THE
ANTI-LIQUOR LEADERS.
Four train load* «f ou'.tle were shif
!-ped from Woodward one day last
I week.
!J Hugh Johnson of 'Woods county, is a
| candidate for a aadetahip at West
Point.
Oklahoma was visited last week by
quite a blizzard for this season of the
year.
Oklahoma farmers have better shel-
ter for their stock this winter than
over before.
In Kay county recently a village
held an election to dissolve its incor-
poration. The vote was unanimous
for dissolving.
The Oklahoma merchants arc laying
in immense lines of holiday goods, in
anticipation of a big trade, which has
already begun.
In ora year and a half there will be
a great scrap to see who shall be Mc-
K in ley delegates to the national con-
vention from Oklahoma.
The extension of the Frisco to Greer
county will be a good thing for the
pie of that great section of Oklaho-
ma. It wili also be a good thing for
)k lahoma.
The Choctaw council has passed a
bill Instructing the board of education
of the Choctaw nation to have all pu-
pils now at the different schools in the
states at the expense of the nation re-
turned home by the first of next Jan-
uary.
Albert Crawford, of Oklahoma coun-
ty, sentenced for one year, in April,
1897, was pardoned on the recommend-
ation of the prosecuting attorney and
petition signed by more than one
hundred good citizens of Oklahoma | th
county.
Senator-elect A. J. Biddisou is quo- ! Samuel Failure, who was sent up
ted as saying that he does not favor | from Logan county for six years in
any county in Oklahoma having jmli- March, 1807, for stealing a set of bar-
el til control of the Osage natioti. The ne:,s, was given a pardon on the re- \
senator can expect to meet a delega- commendation of the trial judge |
t ion from Pawhuska about the begin- Frank Dale, and the fact of his forme*
ning of the legislature. good service as a soldier iu the civil
After all, the Noble county liar uur*
should l>c treated more gently. He is I Wheel borrow election bets are beinfl
not any more to blaine for saying that paid now, but they do not attract a?
the meteoric shower had come than is 1 much attention us they once did.
the scientist w ho said that it would There are so many forms of making
come, lie simply had an innocent be- ! election beta now that unless the term*
A Wor<l Picture of l'»th«r Matbew, tb«
World'* (ircHtcit Temperance Reformer
—The Necessity of » Clear lSr»lu—
Our Duty at t'UUeu#.
Incident of the Went.
a week
lief that science is unerring, and rath-
er than go through a meteoric shower
at night he filed his dispatch early and
went to bed.
Major Woodson and fifteen Cheyenne
and Arapahoe Indians have gone to
Washington to interview the great
father in relation to the money which
he Hock Island railroad owes the two
ribes. They have due them the money
which the road agreed to pay them for
the right-of-way through the reserva-
tion, with interest for about nine
ars. and It now amounts to a great
many thousand dollars. Jf they get the
money they will spend .most of it in
Canadian county.
The secretary of the territory, on
November ',MUh. tiled articles of incor.
porutiou of the W c.at her ford Milling
company; business buying and selling
flour aud feed. The directors are Hen-
ry Lassen, Chas. Jack man and John A.
Hook waiter, all of K1 Reno; State Kx-
ehangc llnnk of euthorford, O. T.;
Royal Tribe of Joseph, a fraternal
beneficial order, with list of grand of-
ficers. constitution and by-laws at-
tached. Fred Pfcnder to legal
agent; a natarlal commission to Geo.
W. Hear, of Kingfisher.
Many farmers in Oklahoma succeed
but poorly in keeping sweet potatoes
during the winter months. The hor-
ticultural department has in progress
an experiment to determine the most
suitable temperature for keeping this
product during the winter. Trial tots
are stored in.locations ranging in tem-
perature from 4.*> to 75 degrees. The
temperatures arc noted daily and fre-
quent examinations made to note the
soundness of the potatoes. Along with
the temperature test, the attempt will
be made to determine whether a stor-
age medium, such as sutid, chaff or
charcoal has any influence in preserv-
ing the soundness of the potato.
provide that the loser shall cat a boil* i
ed crow or a raw hop toad, they do not
create much of a ruffle.
The following convicts whose tern:
of sentence is nearly expired, wen
pardoned and restored to citizenship
C. W. Church, Pottawatomie county
sentenced in October, 1894, five years
for bigamy. Mitchell Perry, of Grant
county, sentenced three years fo*
burglary, in May, 1896. Tom Woody,
Grant county; three years for burglary,
sentenced in May, 1898.
Considerable competition exists be
tween Wiley O. Cox. and the Missouri*
Kansas and Texas Trust Company,
both of Kansas City, over the collec-
tion of more than four million dollars
due the Cherokee Indians from the
government, with indications favora-
ble to Cox. The Indians think the
Missouri, Kansas and Texas Trust
company and the Missouri, Kansas and
Texas railroad arc identical and. as
the latter expect to get a large slice of
the Cherokee lands, the Indians are
inclined to be inclined to the trust
company's proposition.
The Osage Indians arc probably the
wealthiest people per capita on earth,
are aristocrats and scorn manual la-
bor, according to Gen. Pollock's an-
More annoyed than for many
before.
We looked on Bill v/har* he lay,
He had sot down nick—an' the livelong
day
Had Rioaned an' babbled an* maybe
swore,
An' didn't he look as he tumbled thar\
An tils as a hosa, uh strung as a b'ar,
Ills face an red as the leaves out whar*
The sun fell last on the canon.
Old iilll was a brick—wild, full of his
pluck;
But somehow deep in his bosom ylt
He'd a feelln* fer man that wui down
bard hit
By the K<*acclcsii thing that we call bad
luck.
An' to hear him there with his eyes shet
fast,
Blabbln' of things that belonged to the
past,
Ills mother an' sisters—we Jest had to
ast;
Turned baby, Bill. In the canon?"
We had no fire; It wan fall of the year;
An' the moon shlned fair on the bowl-
ders—
A white shawl hangln* over the shoul-
ders
Of the mountains that stretched out fer
an' near.
Fer an hour then, not a sound from Bill,
No snarl of wolf, an' no streamlet's
spill;
It seemed God's Htep, ef you'd be right
still.
Mought be heard even down the canon
"Yes, mother, I'm ready to say my pray
er."
He murmured then, in u voice now
faint,
A look on his face no bresh could
paint,
Ho drawn, ylt soft In the midnight air
"Now—I—lay me—down—" then we all
drawed near,
An* the rest of the words fell plain on
our ear—
The sweet old prayer Qod loves most to
hear,
Went up with his soul from the canon.
Jest plain rough scouts, half-feelln' our
way
On the borders of hell for the pio-
neers.
We had little time fer sighs and tears
As we laid Bill under the grass next
day,
But we b'lleved us we turned and left
him alone,
His childish plea reachln' up to the
throne.
Fer his mother's sake might somewhat
atone
For the faults of the dead in the canon.
—Atlanta Constitution.
would be but the outward expression of
an inward grace. Upon the sullen for-
tress of moderate drinking the artil-
lery of the temperance reform must
concentrate in future years. It has
been an incalculable gain to make
drunkenness a disgrace instead of an
amiable peculiarity, as it was a hun-
dred years ago, or a pardonable pec-
cadillo, as It was in the memory of the
oldest inhabitant, or a necessary evil,
as it was a generation back.
.he forces that have worked to thi?
end are precisely the same that must
now be directed against so-called
moderation." We must stoutly main-
tain the pusiton that there is no mod-
eration in the use of what is harmful.
Happily, in taking this position we
have great allies, of which the great-
est is the dictum of the modern sci-
ence?. These declarations of standard
authorities are now being taught to
the children in the public schools, not
only in America, but to a great extent
throughout the English-speaking
world; and their introduction is being
urged in France, and has to some ex-
tent penetrated Japan. It is in the
nature of poetic Justice that Germany,
the greatest beer-drinking country in
the world, should have furnished the
scholars who are perhaps doing most
to undermine the fallacy that intoxi
eating liquors (i. e., poisonous liquors)
taken in moderation, are either harm-
less or helpful in moderation la th<
physical economy of life.—Frances E
Willard.
Blood Purified by Hood's Sarsapn-
riiia and Health la Cood.
«I was a ■ufferer from catarrh. One of
my neighbors advised me to take Hood's
Barsaparilla and I did so. A few bottles
purified my blood and cured me. I have
remained In good health ever since." J as.
T. Adkins, Athensville, Illinois.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $5.
Hood's Pllln cure aU Ltv*r llls- 26 ccnta-
i
Temptation.
A man says, "I do not feel any temp
tation, and I really do not believe that
if I continue to use intoxicating liquor:
that it is at all probable I shall slip
into intemperance. The temptation
is not one of my weaknesses, and
therefore, I do not feel called upon to
join a society such as yours." The
answer 1 would make to that one is
"Very good, if you arc to look cyily to
yourself, but if you are a Christian you
cannot look only to yourself." I would
even go further and say not only if
you are a Christian, but if you are a
man at all worthy of the name, you
must not look only to yourself. If
there is one thing clearer than anoth-
er it is that God when He placed us
here, intended us to look beyond our-
selves and not to be governed by the
principles of selfishness. The question
is not, what will be the best for one
individual, but what will be the best
for society at large; and we believe the
best that could happen to society would
be for the whole of us to be pledged
to total almtinence from alcoholic li-
quors.—The Right Rev. Frederick
Temple, archbishop of Canterbury.
Father Matheur.
Father Mathew s face was gentle, but
lighted up with an animated expres-
sion, in which it was impossible not
to trace the spirit of disinterested
benevolence which actuated him. His
voice was soft and hi* accents winning,
and a suggestion of sympathy and for-
bearance pervaded his whole person;
those he addressed seemed at once to
recognize his authority, perhaps be-
cause there was no assumption of it.
His height was sufficient to be to a cer-
tain extent commanding, but the chief
source of his power over others was
in the suavity and self-command of
his manner, and none, of whatever re-
ligion, who knew how simple and self-
denying were his habits, could help
respecting and esteeming him. Father
Mathew, like most Irishmen, was open-
hearted and open-handed, and far too
generous for his means; he gave away
everything he had at his disposal, and
as another outcome of his Hibernian
character, some things which were not
at his disposal; the consequence was
that one day in Dublin while zealously
administering the pledge, the bailiffs
nual report to the interior department j suddenly came upon him. but instead
They own over 800 acres of land for of tapping him on the shoulder and
each man, woman and child, each re- ■ informing him in their pleasant ^little
ceiving an annuity of over $300 in
cash. As an illustration, if an Indian j
and his wife have eight children the j
annual cash income of the family is
over 52,000. Rather leading his white :
brother in this respect, he prefers the
To meet the ne
give little time
conveniences, luxuries and dissipations
of village life to agricultural avoca-
tion. 11c lives to sing and dance, and
he has plenty of money to support bis
family in idleness.
ds of those who cat
to sehooi work, the
A (pectal dated, Guthrie, Not. Mod. I Agricultural an«l Mechanical collepe
vs: A. C. Springs, vice president of offers the following short course dur-
ing its winter term, beginning Janu-
ary 3: Agricultural work, including
the study of live stock, dairying, vet-
erinary science and horticulture; me-
chanical engineering including ele-
mentary mechanics, mechanical draw-
ing. shop work and mathematics; se-
lected studies, in preparation for
bridge material and steel were bought teaching advanced work in any depart-
to complete the road not only that far. | ment, so far as limitations of time ot
but seventy-five miles more, which : room will permit Student* over 19
will take it to the crossing of the Ar- fyears of npe. showing reasonable prep-
kansas river. lie also says that the arations, may be admitted to these
construction of the line will be pushed courses without formal examination,
with all possible speed to Guthrie and
K1 Kcno. He denies the statement
way that he was "wanted," they knelt
at his feet, and, after asking his bless
ing, showed him the writ obtained
against him by a medal manufacturer
tor a balance of account, and respect-
fully arrested him.—From Mrs. Pitt
Byrne's "Social Hours with Celebri
ties."
pri
the Kansas, Oklahoma Central and
Southwestern railway, returned this
morning from a meeting of the direc-
ts rs and officers of the road, held at
Ooffcyville. Kan. Mr. Springs says
the road is now graded from Caney,
Kan., more than fifty miles in this
direction, and that at the meeting.
Chow of Social Ruin,
In the winter of 1871, at the request
of the late Earl of Shaftesbury, I care-
fully Investigated my lists of rescued
children. I tabulated in various col-
umns the various traceable causes,near
or more remote, which led to their be-
coming candidates for the homes, and
the astounding fact emerged that no
less than 85 per cent of the children
who were admitted to the homes under
my care owed their social ruin to the
drinking habits of their parents, or
grandparents, or other relatives . . . .
I would not now hesitate to affirm
that of all my young clients, the per-
centage who are stricken down in life
through the agency of the drink curse
is nearer the very large figures given
by the late Dr. Guthrie than the esti-
mate I formed in 1871. Dr. Guthrie
stated repeatedly that no fewer than
99 per cent of the children admitted to
his ragged schools were the offspring
of parents whose poverty was due to
their drinking habits.—Dr. Bernardo,
the founder of homes for homeless chil-
dren, as quoted by The Alliance News,
Manchester, England.
FACTS OF REAL INTEREST.
The largest wrought-iron pillar is at
Delhi, in India. It is 60 feet high, and
weighs 17 tons.
Sixty thousand" tons of cork are
used for the bittled beer consumed
annually in England.
In some parts of Italy the govern- .
ment has to spend $3,000 to collect
$2,000 worth of taxes.
Id Lhe reign of Queen Elizabeth ths
ordinary expense of the British navy
was only $30,000 a year.
Bamboo pens still retain their hold
in India where they have been in use
for more than 1,000 years.
A statistician states that half th#
wealth in the United States is in the
hands of some 2,500 persons.
Christian science has finally reached
the City of Mexico, where the fad has
quite a following in the Anglo-Ameri-
can colony.
Probably the oldest operative treaty
is the Concordat of Horns, which has
governed the relations of the Cathollo
church in uermany sinco 1122.
The house of Capet has the longest
unbroken succession in the male line
—from Hugh Capet, King of France in
987, to Louis Philippe's abdication in
1S48,
In times of scarcity the South Afri-
can natives sometimes rob the ants'
nests, and as many as five bushels of
grain have been taken from a single
nest.
Experiments now show that durisg
profound sleep a noise not sufficient to
awaken the sleeper produces a percept-
ible rise in the temperature of the
brain. .
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That
Contain Mercury,
As mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derange the whole system
when entering it through the mucous surfaces.
Such articles should never be used except on
prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the
damage they will do is tenfold to the good you
can possibly derive from them. Hall * Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney Co.,
Toledo. O., contains no mercury, and is taken
Internally, acting directly upon lhe blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. In buying
Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine.
It is taken internally, and mudo in Toledo, Ohio
by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold
by Druggists, price 75c per bottle.
Hall s Family Pills are the besU
Good humor is a good shield, and
also a splendid weapon.
r nervousness after
Some men never do a charitable act
unless there is some one around to ap-
plaud.
I never used so quick a cure as Piso's
Cure for Consumption.—J. B. Palmer,
Box 1171, Seattle, Wash., Nov. 25, 1895.
that the company is about to sell out
to any of the biff rail mad systems.
Itanicl Ryan, formerly a deputy mar-
shal under P. S. Nsgle. I'nited States
marshal, has been fined $300 and costs
by .fudge Burford for falsifying his ac-
counts to the government, llvanjliro
a* Kingfisher.
to the ef
tnduccd
a man t
evil infir
for his
plead gr
cution c
gang bi
'Ct ti
r \Vampler was
en ling gang by
himself and of |
when arrested
i>hn \\\
r*st A pi
*cd for
county
rdoned.
contest
Instead of some of the studies named,
students may select one or two studies
in science, English, bookkeeping, etc.,
with consent of the faculty.
The story is out that an Oklahoman,
while eating oysters in a restaurant,
found a pearl worth 15. it may be
true, of cour-o. but it >ounds more like
an attempt to boom the sale of oysters
One of the funny thing
paign. overlooked until
race for a certain noiui
county office between a
and a Santa-0 veteran
eeired one wound Th
had received twcnt \ -thre
injr the civil +-\r and h«
ted hands down.
The clear llraln.
In this great light for a cleat brain
some of our gocd friends counsel us to
give up the word temperance; but it
is a word too grand and far-reaching
to be sacrificed. Let us all diligently
teach that temperance is the moderate
use of all things harmless and total
abstinence from all things harmful,
Some persons have the sanguine tem-
perament, others the bilious, others the
lymphatic, others the nervous, but now
and then we come upon one who so
combines all these that it may be said
of him. he has the temperate tempera-
ment, he is made up of every crea-
ture's best. So it is with the temper-
ance reform; all the best things of life
are in it; no other word so fully rep-
resents that seu-control which makes
a man great; none so combines con-
serving powers with progressive pos-
sibilities. A temperance man looks
upon his body as the temple of the
Holy Ghost. A temperance man is
chaste, teetotal, anti-tobacco, anti-
gambling; he is for home protection, j thut ever left America."
the emancipation of women, the lift- The W. C. T. 0. of Dover
IIolp« Evil Works.
It is now understood clearly that
there is no evil thing among us that
the drink habit does not aggravate and
no good thing that it does not antag-
onize. More than everything else the
saloon fosters and sustains the drink
habit. It is now mere commonplace to
say, "The saloon is a standing menace
to civilization."—Atticus G. Haywood,
D. D.
Temperance Note..
The grand lodge of California, I. O.
G. T., in session in San Francisco, has
voiced its protest against the army
canteen in a stirring resolution, as has
also the grand lodge of Maine.
The statement is made that the next
legislature in Michigan will be asked
to enact a law, regulating the sale of
liquor by drug stores, and to make it
so strict that it can not be evaded.
The SchlltE Brewing Company ol
Milwaukee, Wis., in a letter to the bat-
tleship commission concerning the
christening of the Wisconsin, makes
the following statement as an argu-
ment in favor of the use of beer In-
stead of champagne; "Only a few
weeks ago nearly half a million bot-
tles of this 'beer that made Milwaukee
famous' were shipped to the men be-
hind the guns at Manila—the largest
und most noteworthy shipment of beer
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care und skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the California Fig Syrup Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par-
ties. The high standing of the Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi-
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given to millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken-
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
84N FKAMCISCO. C»L
LOriSVILLR, Ky. NEW YORK, N.T.
WANTED—Case of bud health that R I P-A M
wl',1 iv : Wneflt. Soud r< cent* to Rlpan* i'henit< al
Co . ? ow N iTk.for 10 samples and l.tXK) it'sUmonl'la-
ing of labor to every opportunity that
Ufe can yield: his eye is clear, his hand
antrembling. and when you meet him
Del., has I
^ PISO'S. c
the cam*
was the
>n for s
I soldier
had re-
lief ;
rou ha1
would
He is
met one or
y in their
brother of g
nds dur-
uomins
j belief we;
! become a
i a degree
vhom the Arabs
?autiful phrase.
Is."—Frances E.
tie hour is to I
inker that he j
If onlj' this ;
would soon
elves to suc£
enactments
passed the following resolution:
Rt sol vt d. That we the members of ,
Dover's ^ C I Union U>Ueve it in w. n. u.—wich ita.-no. 49-1098
patroniie, in : mien Ansucriun Advertisement! Kindly
any w
the li<
his bu
When Answering Advertisements
Mention This Taner.
<
iy„ directly or indirectly, either I
uor-dealer or those who make
;• < «8 possible by signing appli- j A self-made man usually looks like
for lli use to sell intoxicating the kind of n man he would be apt to
make.
- i>ino8s to crurc a corn in one pat
of sign- Tnk»» I.n\;it;vc Hromo s|ui:itao TaV-leta All
A—ti«t« refund the money If 1
t nutno has 1 11 Q. on «
the effe«
tng
i number of the le
»ave been in the JM „
o, • .. st8rol ind the money if it fails to cure.
n" ' ,,u cv. Tho genuine has l \\ Q. ou each tablet.
inaugurated a vigorous boycott, —— —
It looks queer, but the best man at s
wedding isn't the one who gets mar-
ried.
of the resolution is far-reach-
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The Orlando Herald. (Orlando, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 1, 1898, newspaper, December 1, 1898; Orlando, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc404085/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.