Longdale Ledger. (Longdale, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, January 5, 1906 Page: 3 of 4
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,*i*i1v. ma.IK lyrically
lp<*l.irt**i tin* ard**
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mipininn tfir*>uu
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ii-rythina. friciuj«. rela-
t; m-. n mbit ion.
lionor. fortune-
“Didn’t knmv
\ ii had alt tlmie nic*
thing Sporting
I'lllU-r.
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AV1i.it h ah 1 <;<•(
iiti<- of all tin* old men
who r«.»iiId craille
ton acre* of wheat a day
IV lie II
MALARIA? ? ?
Generally That Is Not the Trouble.
Persons with a susceptibility to ma-
laria! influences slioul 1 beware of cof-
fee, which has a tendency to load up
the liver with bile.
A lady writes from Denver that she
suffered for years from chills and
fever which at last she learned were
mainly produced by the coffee she
drank.
"I was also grievously afflicted with
headaches and indigestion,” she says,
‘‘which I became satisfied were like-
wise largely due to the coffee I drank.
Six months ago I quit its use alto-
gether and began to drink Postum
Food Coffee, with the gratifying result
that my headaches have disappeared,
my digestion lias been restored and I
have not had a recurrence of chills
and fever for more than three months.
! have no doubt that if was Postum
that brought me this relief, for I have
used no medicine while this improve-
ment has been going on.” (It was
really relief from congestion of the
liver caused by coffee.)
“My daughter has been as great a
’offee drinker as r. and for years was
ittiicted with terrible sick headaches,
which often lasted for a week at a
ime. She is a brain worker and ex-
cessive application together with the
leadaches began to affect her memory
most seriously. She found no help
n medicines and the doctor frankly
idvised her to quit coffee and use
Postum.
“For more than four months she has
sot had a headache—her mental famil-
ies have grown more active and vig-
irons and her memory has been rc-
dorod.
“No more tea, coffee or drugs for us.
:o long as we can get Postum.” Name
;iven by Postum Co., Battle Creek, j
liich.
There’s a reason. Read the little
took “The Road to Wellville” in pkgs.
SI00.000 for < 1i:s.nW*hI Stmllea.
Ithaca. N. Y.. Dec. 2S.—At the meet-
ing of the management of the Ameri-
can School of Classified Studies in
Rome, Italy, held Wednesday at Cor
nell university, announcement was
made that an endowment of $100,000
had been secured.
Hlinoi.x Hunker Killed l>> Train.
Bloomington. 111.. Dec. *S.—Harry
Collison. a prominent hanker at Ran-
toul and Thomasboro. was struck by a
train at the latter place Tuesday night
and instantly killed.
Hftftl* »ftl
fart Ihi
ttmft**I*** tnrrrBftft* Ml#
r or
and
II,
i r T;
11n,
■ lr
y lit <
>f »*re.
IU- I
l| mil. fun* \eurnex I i»m li’lril.
I'mlr on ()<!(>
hen
been proclaimed In thin city. Tim ]
1 .MU e however, in nearly over Hun-1
i nf atrr-tn have been made.
Warsaw. Ituiwlnn Poland, Dec. 21*.
The attempt by the strikers to stop the
rnilroa<!« In Poland has not been sue*
i {e,-sful and a majority of them are still
running.
K i no. I.lth itHnla. Dee. 21*.—The city
D under martial law and the fleld guns
!n the squares and the machine guns
posted at strategic points have over-
i awed the revolutionaries. Member* of
! the Jewish bund fired on a passing pa- |
1 trol Thursday and the patrol fired a
j volley, KilliUn two persons.
I'lr«t \ntl»nnl IlmiK 1»» \ 1 «l •*»»-
Topeka. Kan., Dec. 27.—Receiver J.
T. Bradley, of the First National bank
of Topeka, stat.-d Monday that a 55 per
! cent, dividend had been declared in fa-
i vor of the creditors. This will he
| made payable alsnit January la.
This will turn into circulation about
$X2"."00 to the .1.000 treditors. The
| deposits amount to about $1,500,000.
I On a dividend of 65 per cent, the fol-
| lowing will he realized on the various
public moneys on deposit: Stale if
Kansas. $100,850; Shawnee county,
$10,500: city of Topeka. $11120.40. This
is the hank with which the late C. J.
Devlin was connected.
To Tie u|l HilNiliiiu Operations.
New York, Dec. 29.—Announcement
was made Thursday by the leaders
of the Housesmiths and Bridgemens’
union that on Tuesday next. January
2, the 1.000 members woult*. strike for
an increase of pay from 5 1 50 to $5.00
a day. This, t lie leaders declare, means
that every big building in course of
construction in this city ant- within a
radius of '") miles on Long Island and
in New Jersey, in which structural
Iron work is being done, will be*tied
up an J indirectly will throw out of
employment, about 75,000 men.
l:lei*trie I ini* for loin* Ivan.
Iola. Kan.. Dec. 10.—Iola has raised
$25,000 for the Kansas Southern Elec-
tric railroad which is to he built be-
tween Iola and Humboldt The sub-
scription was required by St. Louis
capitalists, who agree to furnish the
rest of the money necessary to build
the road to Humboldt.
Heint-ltnil Collision Kills Three.
Minot, S. D., Dec. 30.—In a head-end
collision Friday at Grantville, N. D„,
between eastbound passenger No. 6 and
a westbound freight on the Great
Northern, Fred Barlow, engineer; To-
by Erwin, fireman of freight, and Ed
Gosslin, brakeman, were killed.
y In the
tries Th*
trlct
is »f
and
it to
tnausia:
hi* hr*i
kill Tl
each.
\n Ho ii tl for It i-ii t ro’> Murderer.
judge OWftitft pa n d mti n< <■ U] *n
, » t
C Renfro The trial Jury found hltn
guilt> and recommended life Imprison-
ment Application win* ntii'li- l*w bond
ponding an appeal to the supreme
court, but tt is the opinion of local
attorneys that he will have to go to
the penitentiary to await the yutcome
of his case before that tribunal.
II. <ftil«ft*i$f* for i lifiiitll«*r I'fiMlolllof.
The fight over the Chandler post-
office. which has been one of the hot-
test in the tetrltory for a few weeks
past has been settled by giving rlie
pla*-e to Many Gilstrap. editor of
the Chandler News, the present post-
master and a Flynn appointee. The
thing got too hot to handle, so tar as
the other candiidat.es were concerned.
Kiiiixiik Will Sin* IIiij- County.
John S. Dawson, assistant attorney
tneral of Kansu.. has been in Grand,
•tting copies of records and other
.ita for a suit which the state of
■lnsas will institute In the near fu-
ra for the collection of $<>.10u of Day
ounty bonds, which are owned by
*lte Kansas school fund, and which the
county has refused to pay.
4
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IlrnUtMiinii (ioml Uy :i Stp<»r.
John Elliott, a Santa Fe brakeman,
was fatally gored by a steer at Fair-
fax. The animal had been rejected
for shipment and was turned loose,
when it attacked Elliott, who was
standing near the track, with his back
toward tlie animal. The.steer had to
he killed before Elliott could be res-
cued.
< il> MnrMlutl Kill' d N«*ur«».
City Marshal T. A. Dancer killed
David Johnson, a negro laborer, with
a bowie knife, while Johnson was re-
sisting arrest and had seized the ntar-
shal’s ' gun.” at Maud. A coroner’s
jury exonerated Dancer, but the negro's
ii i-nds ia.u> tai>-> the matt- r up bt fore
the next yarn! jury.
Dropped Dond :il Ilf* ’’’inw*
,T. P. Dile, one of the best ki
men in Pawnee county, dropped
at liis home near Quay from heart dis-
ease. He came to Pawnee county at
tht time of the opening, and has been
prominent both in business and poli-
tics.
| THK M'KINLEY MEMORIAL AS 11
WILL APPEAR WHEN COMPLETED
' guarded by the soldier sentry, wort
purchased. This tract included a
mound some 70 feet in height, which
was thought to be particularly appro-
| priate for the purposes Intended, and
I upon this hill the mausoleum is being
, hullt.
The de-lgn has the unqualified ap-
, proval of the committee in charge, and.
while of severe simplicity, it is fully
believed that it will prove eminently
effective, cltarn* terlzlng the quiet dig-
nity of the life of President McKin-
ley.
It is to be of rink Milford granite,
circular in torm. 75 feet in diameter
at the base and about 100 feet in
height from the foundation. This
structure will be reached by a flight
of approach steps 50 feet in width, in
font runs, with wide landings he
tween, constituting a rise of 55 feet in
all. The hill will be terraced to con-
form with the landings on the stair-
case, presenting on the whole a ter-
raced mound, surmounted by the struc-
ture proper. At the base of the stair-
case there will he built a plaza 200
feet in width, lying transversely to the
axis of a mall or main approach, run-
ning through the property belonging
to tlie association in a southeasterly
direction to Linden avenue, that will
be the natural approach front the
heart of the city to the memorial.
This approach from Linden avenue
to the plaza will he about 1.000 feet
in length. It will be 170 feet in width
at the plaza and 50 feet in width
at. Linden avenue, with a waterway
or “long water,” in the center, run-
ning from the plaza 540 feet south-
easterly, this waterway being SO feet
w’ide at. the base of the plaza and 50
feet wide at its southeasterly extrem-
ity. Flanking the “long water” will be
four rows of trees paralleling drive-
ways, two on either side of the water-
way, thus affording the visitor an un-
obstructed view of the main approach
and the mausoleum from the most
southeasterly point of the association's
property. In a word, a person stand-
ing at the junction of Linden avenue
and the mall be, in effect, at the base
of the monument. The interior will
be circular. 50 feet in diameter.
Itoy Shot by CiiknoTrn Man.
At Shawnee Robert Eddy, aged (1
years, was shot through the leg by an
unknown man who ran up to him in
the dark, fired one shot and ran away.
The fellow was evidently drunk or de-
mented.
11 <* si 'I s S|»::i»InI* Wur Veterans.
Captain Alva J. Niles has been ap-
pointed provisional department com-
mander of Oklahoma and Indian Ter-
ritory for the Spanish War Veterans’
association.
[-,3-==;^
j; crnirra I
CASTOR
•j ANri’rtaUr P» -• p >t lioofarAft
J MitulnithiJ Ik- fowl anti UctJul i ! .Jj
r "re -. <r
|l Pr,»nuxii-.H I >i4.\ftlhtntNviful
u rw> AmiIt ‘i t ‘tti iiit * nrtilrr
f OtK-Mti MurpluiM* iwrMuu’faL
Not Naim otic.
CASTOfilA
For Infantft find Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
i*\\Ht nnrcm#
Wat •
IW *
/*•*- ’
m | jji
iltV*- *w
r$jnw
AperfWi R**jn»*dy forConslijwx
lion. Sour Slonvtrh.Dwrrhvfl
WonuA S onvul-ums .FcvxtiAh
nrss niul Lokhof Sijcki*.
Tac Sunik* Sn{nnlur* of
NEW YORK_
THIS COUPON IS
Upon receipt of your name
Address
Druggist’s Name
His Address
in
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
TMC OfNTAwn COMMNV. RtW FOni* CfTV.
READ
GOOD FOR $1.00 ON PURCHASE |
FREE
GOOD FOR
ONE DOLLAR
PURCHASE
J
And ioc in stumf's or si/?’ft’ to p.Ty post'll*? w* will mail you a sample frc»',
if you have never used Mull s Cinpe Toa:1 . and will also mail you a i<*r*
tificate good for one dollar toward the purchase ot more Toxr.c from your
druggist. Address
MULL’S GRArE TOXIC CO.. 147 Third Ave.. Rock Island, 111.
YOU WRONG YOURSELF TO SUFFER
fH0 WMy suVlor*!r7al'iw11-I'-.'llcss rhaucu-i with cnnv’pcion or stomach troubles wbon there Is a
perfect, harmless, natural, positive cure within your reach
CONSTIPATION AND STOMACH TROUBLE
cau«H» blood poison. *kin diseason. sl<*k headache, hi iousne'S. typhoid foyer, appondicit's. piles
and evt rv k rut of female trouble as we! 1 as many others. \our own physician will tell you tuai
all ibis is true. But don t dru« ur physio yourself. Use
MULL’S GRAPE, TONIC
tho natural .stronethenlmt. harmless remeitv lhar build- nr the tissues of *our■ dIi,v?
ard i• 111 s vutir whole system i n splendid condition to uvercomo all attacks. It Is very pleasant
to taUf. Th-children like it and it does them ureat tfood ot, tima, ..
:;•» cent, tt) cent and $!.U0 bottles at ail dniirtfist . I lio $1 0 bottle contains about s x times ns
much as the:;*) cent bn*t 'e and about three times as much as the 50 cent bottle. I here is a gioao
saving in buying tho Si.UO size.
MULL'S GRAPE. TONIC CO., 147 Third Ave., Rock Uland, Hi.
A FREE £^3
MAGNOLIA BLOSSOM
FOR EVERY WOMAN.
Do YOU suffer with any form ot female complaint?
Then why hot irlve us <a chance to cure you*
It costs you nothing to tost our method j Just w rite to us, W9
will send ycu free, n valuable book, advice from our Indy physl-
clan, .• i:i> 1 n box of this simple safe home remedy with which you
can treat yourself privately in your own home and which will
cure you in so short a time that It will amaze you.
If you suffer from any form of female complaint c-on you pos-
sibly “ any reason f‘->r not accepting this offer?
Writ e to us today* and we will show you how to cure yourself
quickly pleasantly and permanontiy.
Thousands of ladies have already accepted our free offer, have
tested the Magnolia Blossom without nry cost whatever, have
been convinced and have been cured.
ADDRESS WOMANS’ MEDICAL DEPT., 20.
SOUTH SEND REMEDY CO., . South Bend, Ind
PEACE AND COMFORT
Arz Sure to Corns to
Those Who Smoko th3
Prepared, for Alterations.
“I haven’t seen your boy for some
time. At college now, they tell me.
Lemme see. If I remember right, he
greatly resembles you. Has your shape
of nose exactly, hasn't he?”
“I dunno, I haven’t seen him sence
th’ last football game.”—Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
A Hard Thinker.
Redd—Do you ever stop to think
when you are out in your automobile—
Greene—Yes. I often stop, and when
I do I think hard.—Yonkers States-
man.
MiilW,
w _
A. FIRST-CLASS CIGAR MADE OF A-
FINE QUALITY HAVANA TOBACCO
Try Them.
•305” and “Agents” 5c Cigars Are Leaders of the World. L;aLmc“r^fsr'.Lous.
PRICE.
25 Cts.
/TO CURE THE GRIP 7P
'r IN ONE CAY
hA5 NO EQUAL FOR HEADACHE - *
a, c-q
IS GUARANTEED TO CURE
GRIP,BA0 SOLD, HEACAOHE A51D NEURALGIA.
1 won’t sell JLntl-Orl;>ine to a dealer who won't Giiiirnntco
St. ("all f' >r \ r XI OXE V HACK IF IT 1IO \ 'T CCK E.
jp. II . Diemer, Jf. i*„ Manufaoturer,SfiW J<afield, .ilo.
(PILES'^0 CURED
■ OSS. THOSSTOS & HIHOR-^SO QAK 5t. KANSAS CITY, MO. (»»»"< n ocfiix at At toms j
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Doud, George H. Longdale Ledger. (Longdale, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, January 5, 1906, newspaper, January 5, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc406634/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.