The Pond Creek Tribune. (Pond Creek, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 3, 1895 Page: 3 of 4
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To Hi*ii<*III Ilia Victim.
Kindness to uniuml*—although
them uro iiiilmiipily jiltmly of excep-
tions to whirant tliu existence of
•'Urn Wocloty with the l.ung Name"
for tlieir protection lui* always )>««■>
the rule lu ttilacountry: but Increased
public tti'iitlmi'ut In tliolr behalf hit*
brought. with It Increased sensitive-
fleas ami lympalhy Tor otrmt inch 111*
•» w« ml mi It our ilipuli f rl«ii<ln uniat
necessarily undergo. Wo wear fur*
and we out uioiil, hut wo do not wish
to *co the victims of ollber taato
ilaughtercd. and wo ahould think It
■till more aliockiiiu to allow chlldrou
to do ao as an uuiiisciiiout.
In old Glue* the heal people worn
loaa particular. It was the custom
not only for the children ot furthers,
liut of lawyer*, in niatara and country
luuguateH of all kinds to look for-
ward o)i'imiy to hi- k lllng or the
domestic pig us an interesting and
thrilling occasion: unit iney metwltn
no discouragement from their elders
to do ao-
A story, told of the childron of ouo
of the must honored ministers of«old
Newbur, port, leads to the conclusion
that It wus possibly the treatment
which children thomselvo* received
In thu day ot rod and ferule which
rendered them loss sensitive to pain
inflicted upon dumb animals.
Two children of the minister In
question wore looking on ut a pig-
killing. They werp lively youngsters,
whoso plants had frequently earned
them u sharp application or ihe rod.
indicted with the customary us.
mirunco tliut they were w Ippcd for
their good, not for the satisfaction of
parental anger.
As the alarmed pig resisted I lie ef-
forts of his execut oners, si|iicullng
shrilly, the youngest child was moved
to pity and began to cry. The other,
greatly Interested, hut not unmerci-
ful, essayed to comfort her.
“Don't cry!” he .said, soothingly,
without turning away his eye*.
“Remember, it's for the pig's good!"
ffniiNon'* Mucic i orn Mntv*.
Warrants! to euro or mouny rofundoil. Aik
your druggist for it. I’rieo ir» routs.
(Jurorlj enough, flattery never kill*, not-
u ilhhtunding tlu* fact that nvo ho often lira r
Itcoplo praised to the hkiott.
Now Map of Kan huh
For 10 cent* in ntniiiim, nhowingull Kail road*
and ExproHH Coin finny routon in colors*
Sizo22xl«i inches. Just published. Address,
Official Mai* Company, 722 Jackson Street,
Topeka, Kaunas.
Ho: Darling, will you love mo when I'm
gono? She: Yea: if you nre not too far
jone.___
A JSOBLE FIGHT.
AN EMINENT SOUTHERN LAW-
YER’S LONG CONFLICT
WITH DISEASE.
Twenty-live Yean* of Froiperlty. Adver-
•Ity and Buffering.—Tlie liroat Vic-
tory Won by ficlence Over m
Stubborn Dlseiute.
I From the Atlanta, (la.. Constitution.]
Foremost among the best known lawyers
and farmers of North Carolina stands Col.
Isaac A. Sugg of Greenville. Mr. Sugg has
resided in Greenville twenty-two years.
While nearly every one in Pitt county
knows Mr S. s history, perhaps nil do not
know of his return to business again after
an illness of sixteen years. No man has
gone through more than ho and lived. It
was a case of the entire breaking down of
the nervous system, attended bv excruciat-
ing. agonizing, unendurable pain. Opiates
and stimulants only quieted temporarily,
and all treatments failed him. Only bis love
of family and friends prevented suicide.
He told a rcjiortertho following interesting
story;
“I kept at my work as long as I could,
hut nature gave way at last and 1 suc-
cumbed to the inevitable. My entire nerv-
ous system bad been shattered by the
stimulants and opiates I had taken, my
blood bad actually turned to water, my
weight bad dropped from 178 pounds to 128
and it seemed to everybody that the end
was in sight. Why. I could not bear the gen-
tle band of my wife to bathe my limbs with
topi 1 water. J was simply living from hour
to hour. 1 had made my will, settled my
business and waited for the last strand of
life to snup.
•It was at t)iis time that a somewhat
similar case as my own was brought to my
notice. This man hud suffered very much
as I had. his life hud been despaired of as
mine had, and yet he hail been cured.
Think what that little word meant to me—*
CURED. The report stated that the work
had been accomplished by a medicine
known as Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale
People. 1 investigated the report thor-
oughly and found that it was true in detail.
Then! procured some of Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills and began taking them and began to
get better. 1 began to sleep like a health-
ful child, sound, calm and peaceful. My
appetite came hack and my nerves were
soothed and restored to their normal condi-
tion and I felt like a new man. But the
greatest blessing was the mental improve-
ment. 1 began to read and digest, to formu-
late new plans, to take an interest in my
law practice, which began to come back to
me as soon as my clients realized that I
was again myself. After a lapse of ten
years I ride horseback every day without
fatigue.
•‘That Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills saved my
lire is beyond doubt, and I am spreading
tlieir praises far and wide.”
Inquiry about the town of Greenville sub-
stantiated the above facts of Col. Sugg’s
case, and that many others are being bene-
fited by Dr. Williams* Pink Pills.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are for sale by
all druggists, or may be had by mail from
Dr Williams’ Medicine company, Schenec-
tady. N. Y.. for 50 cents per box, or six
1k>xcs for $2.50.
A BONO OF HARVEST.
R«*p, O reapl gather iilul ret,|>.
\Vh»i'i' gulili'ii rl|i|iln. IuiikIi mill run,
For tin' liuali iif luioutiilu, .till mul iluiqs
l.li'H nil llm rllM'liiil cur. liltu mIi'i'|i,
Where corunuiils greet lliv auu.
Lift up >■ '«n r »i'«ry mm, ImlioM
Thu k"!'Ii-ii Hi'i'la. ili" viilili'ii nlr;
'rin> Wat wlml Him It* thu awnyln* gul<|
With liglil mul atimlmv iiiiiiill'ilil,
Alul gold iili'iima every where,
Iti'ilp, O ri'Uji! while thu ali'kh'a ring
Thu hnrvi'al song uf n world ul roat;
Iti'iip with n rhythmic aw cup a ml aw In*
Till ailclK'ii full, with evening,
Alul perti-e I* uimilfwat.
I.lfi up your joyful oyoa mul .•••■
Thu ailrur uliflit, with gliding fuut
Movu from thu auuai't gliimuuriiigly,
Alul, prli'aloa* of tioil'a lullilalry,
llallow thu ifurnuroil wliuat.
‘‘BED JIM.”
Mesa City lay scorched mul brown
lug tMiiioiitii thu liliuo of it July mm.
T! ' will" (tri'ula, flanked hy i'ow'h of
piilufuly now brick stores mul wooilutl
dwelling*, thu court Initial', dly hull,
graded school* mul cliurolii'N, thu dia-
mond Hlinpi'il iilnr.il, Imustlng n <lry
urni'il Moli", mul "Vi'ii tli" dlgcouragod
trees ihm hml I...... |ilmit"il near Hi"
diKiraof thu tempting hii loon*, were olio
m*'.i| nil whli" lii'iicmli iliu nlkiill iliiNt,
and qulvi'ri'il mul hIiIuiidc|'"(I lu thu
burning glare llku thu utiaiulilu city of
n mirage.
Few iiilinliltaiitM vent lin'd forth, for
thu lii'iit wiim tiiiiiMtiiil even fur Now
Mexleo, mid whllu It lasted work tuuat
"nit. Ilut In otto building tlicru Imil
gathered qulto n coticounic, not wI th-
at "dim; thu t"lii|i"i'iitur", mul Judge
Qnry looki'd from tho bench acrotot n
crowded room a* I lu, crier arose and
with aouoroua voice minntinccil the
opening of tho court for tlio trial of
crimlnul carte*.
I,"d hy Sheriff Jack, Ironed nnd n
trltlo pule, James llrownoll was led
Into tho room nnd took Ills place lu tho
prisoner's dock. The murmur of low
conversation, the occasional squeak of
a pen, the xliullllng of foot, nil ceased
ns tho clerk arose to read the Indict-
ment*.
Violation* of tho liquor law*; viola-
tion of the gambling laws; horse steal-
ing, robbery, burglary, nnd last of all
murder. Otto by one tho black record
was spread lrofore tbo court, tho re-
su't of a series of years of Iniquities,
tho work of n hnlf dozen grand Juries;
and now for the first time tho much In-
dicted limn was In the hnnds of the law,
to answer Its repented summons.
Judge Gary looked townrd Brownell.
"How does the prisoner plead?”
"Not guilty to every cuunt In every
Indictment,” replied his attorney, one
of tho younger lawyers lu the city; "and
wo demand u separate trial upon each
charge."
* murmur of disapproval rnu through
t! - room. Was this notorious despera-
do to escape through tho very techni-
calities and delays of the law he hud
defied?
"Then It becomes the right of the dis-
trict attorney to move whichever of the
Indictments ho limy choose," replied
the Judge. “Mr. Arnold, what Is tho
desire on the part of tho people?"
The gray-haired prosecutor for tho
county nroso and In a deliberate and
dignified tanner announced that he
would elect to try under the principal
Indictment.
"'Ii.o greater might be said In tills
case, your honor, to Include the less.
Should the prisoner be convicted of
mm.,i„r j, >v111 relieve both him and the
commonwealth from Ihe weariness nnd
expense of trials for tho lesser crimes;
should lie be acquitted I slmll move an
immediate trial under the Indictment
for burglary.”
Tlio crowd breathed more easily;
Brownell was not to escape after all.
“Old Arnold ’ll do him,” whispered
one listener to another; “the evidence
is a dead sure thing! He’s bound to
bang, an' the sheriff’s posse thought so,
er they’d never n' brought him lu!”
The preliminaries were soon over, a
jury drawn nnd agreed to, the case
opened, nnd tho trial begun.
Witness after witness was sworn In
rapid succession, and the dark story of
the crime with which Brownell was
charged—a street riot, resulting In the
death of one of the rioters—was retold
In all Its hldeousuess. The crowd lis-
tened with eager ears, untiring for
hours, though tlio heat seemed to grow
with the day; the lawyers bent more
closely over their notes, the Judge for-
got to lean back In his clmlr, and even
the prisoner, resting witli manacled
hands upon the rail of the criminal's
box wherein he sat, showed by the
gloom that gathered upon his brutal
face, and tho dull, angry glow In his
eye, that he appreciated the desperate
strait In which he stood.
When the prosecution had rested the
attorney for Brownell bent toward him
and whispered earnestly lu his ear.
The man shook his head. Again the
lawyer addressed him, urging some plan
of defense newly thought of, but still
the prisoner refused his acquiescence,
and at last, with a gesture indicative of
iritation, young Stewart arose and
turned to address the Jury.
The closer the competition, tne
more God is needed for a business
partner.
To love an enemy is the mostlm.
portant service a Christian can ren-
der Christ
TnE sins that pay their rent
promptly are the last ones we want
to give ud. _
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly usea. The many, who live bet-
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas-
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax-
ative ; effectually cleansiog the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
nnd permanently curing oonstipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
mu* with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid-
neys, Liver-and Bowels without weak-
ening them and it is perfectly free from
e ery objectionable substance.
“vrup of Figs is for sale by all drug-
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man-
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whaee name is printed on every
package, also the name. Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will Mt
accept any substitute if oflered
He told them of his client’s early life;
the lack of good influences, tho hard
paths for childish- feet, the tempta-
tions of youth, the struggles nnd fail-
ures of manhood. He told them of the
fight for mere existence agalust fate
and fortune, with no one to lend a
helping hand or breathe n heartening
word; of the frowning face of virtue
and the tempting one of vice; of aspira-
tions smothered, efforts unavailing,
good Intentions trodden under foot, and
at last of hopeless, friendless, despair-
ing wickedness. He warned them
against circumstantial evidence only;
Be spoke of the Inherent right of self-
defense; he prayed tlieir pity and the
benefit of the smallest cloud that
might cast a shadow of doubt; ho
opened and closed his case without a
witness and sat down.
Mr. Arnold summed up for the peo-
ple, coldly, logically, convincingly; and
when, as he closed, the level rays of the
western sun shot through the dusty
windows and lit the waiting faces of
the court and Jury with their glory of
crimson and gold, the prisoner, un-
touched In the falling shadow where
he sat, seemed to the breathless audi-
ence to rest beneath the gloom of a cer-
tain punishment, desperate and with-
out reprieve.
In a few words the court charged the
Jury so clearly, so fairly that even
Brownell raised his ashen face from
the rail whereon he bad bowed It, once
more to study with gleaming eyes the
countenances of the arbiters of bis
fate.
As the twelve left the room there
entered It a child, a wee thing In white,
who wandered slowly In from the door
behind the bar, looking solemnly about
as If in search of some lost friend, until
her gaze fell upon Judge Gary. Then
the little face brightened, and with a
shout of “Grandpa!" she struggled
through the chairs, assisted by the
lawyers, and claimed a scat at his side,
where for some moments she whis-
pered softly to the old man as he wait-
ed for the hour of adjournment
"Grandpa, it’s goln' to min, an' mam-
ma wants 'co to come home! Ze.v's a
great big cloud over zat way, an' It's
swful black!” And with round eyes of
wonder she pointed toward the south.
“But, pet," said the Judge, “grand-
pa's busy now. Who mild that you
could colliu here?"
"No one, only innniW* 'fluid, nit' I
klioweil she wanted 'no, nil' It's a big
cloud, nu' It whirls an' whirls, nu'
wares tne, ton!"
As the Judge was nhont to reply n
slight commotion tttrnctcil Ids atten-
tion. A moment Inter the Jury filed In-
to tlieir box, nnd the foreiiiaii arose ami
faced the court.
A bush fell ti|Miu tho room ns thu
clork culled the roll; ilieti, lu a voice
that shook it little, he said:
"Have thu Jury agreed upoti tlieir
vel'dlel?"
"We hare," replied thu foreiiiau slue
ply.
"How do they find?"
"Guilty, us clmrgi'il lu Ihe Indict-
ment."
A sound that might have been a sigh
ran through the listeners. The Judge
arose alul faced tile prisoner. In 'he
"I DAIlK VK A 1,1, Til Im YKIt WollST.”
| silence Hint reigned tlio voice of u dis-
tant wind, ron ring iifur off, fell upon
I the waiting eiirs, mul Hie last gleam uf
sunlight railed from Hut wall.
Solemnly tho District Attorney moved
Hint sentence now he passed upon Hie
prisoner.
"Brownell, stand up. I luvu you any-
thing to sny why Hie sciiiciico of this
court should not be passed upon you?"
The prisoner bad noted the return of
the Jury and llsteued to tlieir verdict as
one In a drcuin, ns a man stunned by a
thunderbolt watelies the destruction of
his homo wrought by the same messen-
ger from heaven, dazed and unnerved.
As the sound of the Judge's voice beat
upon Ids dull cars lie turned Ids licnd
slowly mill looked nt him wondcrlugly.
"Have you anything to sny?"
The tuna gathered Ills feet beneath
him, mul, with mi effort, arose. For n
long moment he gazed about him, nt
the Jury lu the box, the Judge on the
bench, nml thu dense mul waiting
crowd behind him. Then an ugly
smile spread across Ids face mul a
fierce light burned In Ids heavy eyes.
“Hev I anything ter say? Yus! I
dare yo all to do yor worst! Do yo
think Bed Jim Is ufcard, er tliot yo kin
cowhim? Yo don't know him. Murder,
Is It, fer n man to save Ids own life, an’
ye threaten ter hang me? Do it! Go
on nu’ read out yer sentence. I defy
ye, Sheriff nu’ all! Ited Jim never
squeals!" And with a snarl like that
of an animal lie waved his manacled
arms above his bead.
"I know tin* trouble; ye're all afraid
o’ me, an' ye'd better be, fer ef the
devil lets me live I'll be the curse o’
this thin blooded town, nil’ everyone In
It! I hate It! Curse yo one an’ all, root
an’ branch, young an’ old! What hev
ye ever done fer me? Nothin’ but ter
toiler mo nu' drive me out o' decent
livin’ an’ make me an outcast an' a
criminal us I am! When 1 asked fer
work what did ye give me? Jail!
When 1 found a place, ye told my boss
tliet I’d rob him, nu’ ho turned mo out!
When I tried lo be docent, every man's
hand nu' every woman's tongue in this
black town was agin me, un' I curse ve
all!"
The man lmd worked himself into a
fury. Ills eyes glared, his face was
white ns death, nnd his shackled
hands swung to and fro, clanking the
heavy irons us though they were bells.
His listeners were stunned—all but
Sheriff Jack nnd the Judge; and when
the former would have seized the pris-
oner and conveyed him from the room,
the Justice stopped him.
As Brownell paused for breath tlio
dull roar of the wind sounded louder
In the ears of the people, and the dark-
ness, unusual except as (lie forerunner
of a storm nt this time of tho year,
thickened momentarily. The Judge's
granddaughter had crept into his arms
and hidden her face.
’ "Ye hev forgot tliet I war ever bet-
ter'n the dogs at yer doors, er tlio
snakes at yer heels; but I hev not!
Who saved you from thu Injuns thir-
teen years ago, Tom Bodoln?" he shout-
ed, turning suddenly toward one of the
jurymen and stretching his manacled
arms in his direction. "Who saved yo
nu' yer fnmlily up on the Bios? Bed
Jim! But lie's wiiss nor an Injun now!
Who caught the man tliet tried to steal
yer daughter, Dan O'Neil?” he contin-
ued pointing to another Juryman,
“when he lied shot yer boss under ye,
an' the girl had fainted in his arms?
Who? Red Jim! But ye don’t remem- I
her It! Who went into the engine-room
o' the Last Chance Mine an’ shut off
tlie steam when every d-d coward
had run, an' tlio biler was at the point
o' burstln' an' the cage with fifteen men
would a' gone to the bottom o’ tho
shaft? Bed Jim! But that don't count!
He's a desperado now; hang him!
Uaug hint!”
Ills voice was raised to a shriek, and
sounded shrill through tho gloom above
tho deepening thunder of the storm.
•'An' you, Judge Gary, thet are to sen-
tence me to hang by the neck ontll I’m
dead, I talk to yo with yer grandchild
In yer arms! Who refused her father
AFTER THE CYCLONE.
drink times without number, nu' cared
fer him nights without number? Who i
druv him back to ye when ye couldn't i
git him ycrself, an’ tried to make a man |
o' him? Who saved him from the
hands o’ the men who would a' torn
him In pieces the last night o' his life
fer his devilish work with his knife,
when he hod no friends? Bed Jim!
Who gave yer son a bed to die in, old
man, when ye bed refused it yerself?
Bed Jim! An’ now he braves ye an’
curses ye, one an' all! Curses, double
curses, ten thousand curses on-"
A sudden mighty blow, bursting the
side of the building, a hideous roar like
the voice of an angry ocean, a crash as
If the heavens had fallen, Inky black-
ness blotting out everything, and amid
the rending of wood and Iron, the
shrieks of vicUms, aud the wild trum-
peting of the storm, the cyclone swept
on, leaving a muss of ruius where the
court house had stood.
• • • • •
Half a dozen hours later, as the res-
cuers labored they came upon an open-
ing. a sort of protected chamber, as it
were. In front of the desk where the
bar had formerly been, made by the
great beams falling one U|H>n the other.
And within It were found three pel
sons—Judge Gary, stretched ni»ou the
floor, stuuued but brentbiug; and bead-
ing above him Beil .Tim, holding in his
shackled hands, sheltered close to Ills'
breast, tint little form of Hie Judgu's
gruudduugbter. living und unhurt,
Ilut the ecu trill Iron support of Ilia
court hnuso dome hud fallen directly1
iteross this group, mul Brownell IiikF
yielded Ills life In Iliu effort to protuct
iilul save thu others.
(From n story hy Frimcls l'„ llninllton, In
Muiisuy'* MngitrIn,..i
Hu struck Oil Once.
"I See petroleum tills been discovered
up In Marlon county and a com puny Is
Inlying up all Hie land In the ticlulilmr-
liood," remarked a randier to u riqsirt-
er of Hie Him Francisco I’ih'I, and It
was noticed Hint there was a Huge of
Incredulity In Ills tone,
"Yes, I believe they lllivu slrtlck oil
up Hint way," wits the corroborative
evidence of Ills licnrcr.
"Well, I'll believe it when they com-
mence piping It Into Hie tanks, mid not
ii minute before. I struck oil once."
"Is Hint (lie way you made your fort-
une?"
"Yus, Hint's Hie wuy I matin my fort
title, wills’ll lit the plenum time Just
lack* ♦-,<sk) of being u Illumed cent,
Those are my llulillliies; assets tioinl-
lial, us the papers say."
"How did II happen?"
Well, It wns tills way: I luul a min
era I spring mi my much up lit l.ukr
county, iilul tlm gas tlint enmo out of It
used to kill little Idrds Hmt uiiiuc tc
drink. 'Naturul gas,' says I, and com
Hiciiccd poking around a little with ii
spud". Then a yellow, greasy semi:
formed on top iif Hie water, '('mil oil,1
says 1, and 1 commenced dreaming nt
laiiks of petroleum mul barrels of moti
ey.Igntuclicnp drilling oiiHil ami bored
a bole down about eighty feet, and nil
Hie nnlglibors sal around laughing lit
ill", Inn I reckoned nu having the lust
laugh.
"One morning when I went to work
I Ihe hole smelled awful strong of coal
oil, nnd Hie first lift brought up a lot of
oil thill burned for half an hour. ‘I've
struck oil,' says I in myself, hut I kept
it quiet. I let ii few of my friends in,
wo organized a company, bought up
ull the land around there, got an ex-
pensive outfit, nml commenced drill-
ing. Wo punched tlio ground full of
boles for it bout six mouths and couldn't
| find enough oil to make a grease spot
on a silk dress. Ii broke the whole
crowd of ns."
"How did you chance to strike that
little pocket of oil in the first place?"
“I just found out that one of the
neighbors’ boys poured a five-gallon can
of oil in (lie hole one night to make mo
me feel good, nml If anybody should
nsk you, you cun tell llicm that I am
feeling a blamed sight better than lie
is right now, for ills dad went broke on
It too, aud we took turn about wallop-
ing him."
Nawdusl Ill-end.
Leon Lllienfeld, a young chemist nml
assistant of Prof. Kosscl, has made a
discovery which scientists here deem
of great Importance for the future,
though lu itself it is, perhaps, not of
great moment. He has succeeded in
preparing artificially n chemical pro-
duct which possesses all tlio properties
of soluble peptones, including those of
easy digestibility. Werner von Sie-
mens It was «lio, In 188(1, prophesied
Hint chemistry by and by would be able
to prepare, out of waste material In
nature, food stuffs, suited to the human
palate nml stomach. This discovery by
young Lllienfeld is looked upon here
as the first step in that direction. The
second one, perhaps, Is Hie Invention of
"wood bread,” more correctly speaking
sawdust bread, which is now being
baked In a Berlin establishment at Hie
rate of 200 hundredweight a day. The
mixture is two-thirds to three-fourths
sawdust, nnd one-third or one-fourth
rye flour. By n chemical process Hie
sawdust loses Its texture nud taste, and
liberates Its saccharine and nutritive
elements, which, in combination with
the rye flour, are baked into biscuits
and bread. The price of ibis bread is
live marks (?1.25J per hundredweight.
Thus far it lias been used solely ns food
for the liorses of the large Berlin horse
car company, one horse disposing or
from twenty to thirty pounds of this
delicacy a day.—Evening Post.
A Woman's "Word or Two."
Telegraph tolls are moderately light
ns a rule; but sometimes they appear to
be excessive, ns lu the case told some
years ago of a man whose wife was go-
ing abroad. He asked her to telegraph
him a word or two letting him know of
her safe arrival in London.
In a few hours lie received the follow-
ing message, marked collect:
"Dear George—Arrived here safely
at G: 15. The train was due at ti, but wo
were delayed fifteen minutes while ea
route. Ilad a perfectly lovely Journey.
Do not worry about me; I will get along
all right. And take good Afire of your-
self. Be so careful about taking cold
(his weather. Be sure to lia e the
house open and aired as often as possi-
ble. Bememher what I told you about
your socks and shirts. Do not forget to
keep tlio basement door locked. Write
every day. 1 am sure I shall have a
lovely time. So good of you to let mo
go. You must come over after me soon.
Forever and ever yours,
“MAMIE.”
An hour Inter Mamie was pained to
receive the following reply to her “word
or two:”
"Do not wire from Switzerland. Am
ruined if you do. GEOBGE."
—Argonaut.
An Aluminum Boat.
An aluminum torpedo boat built by
Yarrow for tho French government,
has just had a trial on the Thames.
The boat is «0 feet long, 9 feet 3 inches
beam, und weighs with the water in its
boilers 9 tons 8 hundred weight, the hull
alone weighing just two tons. The ma-
terial used was an alloy of 94 per cent,
of aluminum and 0 per cent, of copper.
A striking result obtained from using
the lighter metal was a gain of 3U,
knots over the steel boat of the’*11110
model, the aluminum boat inakiug-’20Vv
knots; but it was also made posslhjo to
use thicker scantling, which stiffened
the boat so that Hie vibration was not
appreciable. The boat is easier to lift
and more buoyant in the water. The
cost of the metal was over £1,000, or
twice as much as a steel boat of the
same model.—Philadelphia Ledger.
Starting a Bank Account.
Iler Father—Has this young man any
resources to support a wife? Birdie
McGinnis—He is going to save J5 a
week hy giving up cigarettes. That's
enough to begin on, niu't it, pa?—Texas
Siftings. ^
A mother is very “particular” about
tlie company her daughter keeps when
she is sixteen, but she is less particu-
lar every year after that.
Sometimes a man wants a thing so
much that he forgets the other fellow
doesu't want to part with it.
If any oue gives you more thnn he
gets in return, you can rest assured It
is counterfeit.
We often wish people were not go
polite, so we could tell when they are
telling tlie truth.
THE ADVANOe MAN.
An Important I'urauu In the Theatri-
cal World I*. T. llai nuni'M Opinion.
Juat before Iliu dentil of P. T. Bar-
mini the •liowuian remarked that ho
did not know wliut Ida liusIneM was
coining to, im I here were 110 more good
ailvaui'u agents,
"Tlie ad vane* agent," Mr. Ilarnum
was quoted ii* saving, ‘Ik the uiulimtny
of all shows, whether they lie drcuaoa,
dramas, operas, or lectures, ami thu
olllcc Is exclusively an American one."
These remarks were caused hy all ac-
count of a railroad accident in 11 news-
paper that Mr Burtiiiiii was reading.
It described how 11 successful iiillgieluti
011 Hie detailed train lmd taken out a
box of surglml inslruiiionta from Ids
valise and attended to the Injured outw.
"That's too iiiodcHt," hiilit Mr. Ilitr-
1111 in, "mid It shows Hie weakness of
Hie advance mu 11 of to.day. If one of
my old hoy* luul been managing lids
conjurer tlie paper next dny would
havo dcxcrllicd how tin- magician lmd
piiluicd tin- broken rail, pulled a dozen
riihhltx out of ids lint’viiiiI sent them to
near hy towns for inedlcal iiHalaianee."
Willie It Is irile Hint Hill llgellts Mr.
Himiuin referred to have nearly nil dls.
appeared Ii is IqMm means 11 great dls-
fortune, us tlie pew school of doing ml-
Vliuce work Is more reliable ami effec-
tive, That tlie olden (Into ngi-nls were
extremely aide men Is demonstrated by
• lie fa* 1 Hull 1 hey are nearly nil man
Mgers of Hole to day, tin** of Hie most
prominent directors of theatrical enter-
prises Is fatuous fur Ids record of never
gcitlng stin k lu any town, hut lie luul a
close shave in Ogdi-nshiirg, N. Y., once.
I pon arriving In town, In* learned to
Ids sorrow Hint tlie advance sale for
his show was lint $3. The agent was
dead broke. |i was quite necessary
Hint lie should get $2.*>. Yet lie couldn't
borrow from tin* then let- with only 11 $3
sale to the credit of Ills company. He
siuilleil over tlie matter 11 while nnd
walked up-town. Entering 11 drug store
lie called up the theater by telephone.
"Is this Hie thealer?" ho asked.
"Yo*; who ore you?"
"Dr. Raymond, ut tlio drug store."
"Well."
"Have nu- four seals to-night."
"Much obliged."
Then Hie agent went to tlio biggest
dry goods store, nud in the same man-
ner telephoned for four seats. A iinlf-
dozen stores ntul office* were visited
nnd several rows of seats were re-
served. Then the ngeut carelessly
strolled Into tlie theater.
“You nre In lurk, old mail," said the
treasurer in the box office.
"How so?" innocently asked the
agent.
"Why, your sale has jumped up to
$150."
"Well, Hull Is no more limn we de-
serve. .lust give me half of that nnd I
will hurry on to Syracuse."
“Will $75 be enough?”
"You might make It a hundred, ns I
have got to send several cablegrams
from there.”
After the performance there wns Just
$11 lu tlie box office. The treasurer of
tlie company had his troubles In trying
to make a settlement, but the agent
wns in the next town ordering wine.
The theatrical business is now so thor-
oughly systematized Hint opportunities
for sharp tricks nnd Illusions nre lim-
ited. Attractions are now managed as
are railroads, dry goods stores, or other
commercial Institution*. The tour Is
(looked, printing ordered, railroad ar-
rangements made, and a score of little
details are fixed before tlie company
leaves New York. This simplifies tlie
agent's work, yet he must have In-
numerable resources In case of nu
emergency. One of Mr. Frolminn's
managers, Alt Dayman, who Is some-
tiling of a Joker, has applied to Wash-
ington for a patent on an agent’s clock.
It is like the ordinary watchman's time-
piece aud worn at Ihe side like a pair
of field glasses. This clock must bo
wound up by a different key each day.
There are 3ti5 keys, and at tho begin-
ning of a season these keys nre sent to
305 dramatic editors. Then, if tlie
clock stops, tho agent's salary ceases.—
Chicago Tribune.
8lie Smoked Them Out.
Mrs. Outen, of New York, who rents
furnished rooms, lias discovered an
efficient way of getting rid of unde-
sirable lodgers. Charles Burns and
his wife have been living I11 the house
for some time, but fur some reason
Mrs. Outen preferred their room to
their company, mid gave them notice
to quit. They were very comfortable
where they were, and politely Imt firm-
ly declined to vacate. Mrs. Outen does
not have a very fine opinion of tlie le-
gal machinery hy which undesirable
tenants nre dispossessed, so she went
out and procured a lot of sulphur,
which she put into a pan, and putting
It into ti room immediately under that
of her tenants set It on fire. Present-
ly the acrid fumes pervaded the whole
house, and came pouring through the
windows in yellow clouds, to the no
small alarm of the neighbor*, who did
not understand what was going 011.
The tenants stood it awhile, hut human
endurance lias its liudls, aud they were
soon compelled to capitulate. When
they were once outside Mrs. Outen
locked them out, and would not permit
them to enter the house even to get
their belongings.
(Jueer Timekeeper,
To ascertain the time at night, tlie
Apache Indians employ a gourd on
which the stars of the heavens nre
marked. As Ihe constellations rise In
the sky. the Indian refers to his gourd
and rinds out the hour. By turning
tlie gourd around he can tell the order
in which the constellations may be ex-
pected to appear.
The hill people of Assam reckon time
nud distance hy the number of quids
of betel nuts chewed. It will he re-
membered how, according to Washing-
ton Irving. Gov. Wouter Van Twlller
dismissed the Dutch Colonial Assem-
bly Invariably nt the last puff of his
third pipe of tobacco.
A Montaguts Indian of Canada will
set up n tall stick in the snow, when
traveling abend of friends who are to
follow. He marks with his foot the
line of shadow east, nml by the change
In the angle of the shndow the on-com-
ing party can tell, on arriving at the
spot, about how fur ahead the leader
is.
Doubtless the first timekeeper was
the stomach, which notified Its owner
when the hour for a meal arrived.
Multiple Infection for Bacteria.
Interesting results of exiieriments on
the effect of associating virulent with
harmless micro-organisms lu inocula-
tions have le-cu published In France hy
Dr. Dueuscbmaun. Bacterium chan-
voel, the exciting cause ofsymptoinntlc
anthrax, ordinarily kills guinea pigs in
eighteen hours, hut when a harmless
microbe bacillus prodigiosis—was in-
troduced with it tlie effect was delayed
four days. Other observers had shown
that animals are more readily infected
with disease organisms of various kinds
in the presence of bacillus prodigiosis.
The influence itjwm 'disease of two or
□tore varieties of organisms aering sim-
□ltaneottsly Is a subject thus far little
loBshlered.—Invention.
You can make better food with
Royals
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Lighter, sweeter, more wholesome.
ROVAl RASINQ POWDt* CO. 10* WALL »T., KIW-YO**,
£
I
Gull never lull a to promnlO till)
faithful worker.
Ii Is a great misfortune to be blind
to our own Mull*.
Tnv not only to lie good, hut to bo
good for something.
Tins higher u 11 tile man i* lift'd,
tho euiullbr lie look*.
Men cure least for honor when
most, in Aunt ol hreii'l.
I ui.n' r talk about yoiireclf when you
want to he Interesting.
Ii I*, belter to fall In trying iu do
good than it s not to try.
D we could know ull it would not
ho so hard to forgive ail.
Tiie footprint* of godliness always
point toward uu*clii*hne*s.
Fishinii roi cotilDllmcnls I* not
mtieh better than ti lung on Hiindav.
It Is much hauler to lie happy
wlih riches than It Is without mein.
It Is only when we give (’hrmt our
burdens that, we can take II s yoke.
Doi.no wdl never make us Ut lor
Heaven, hut not doing may koop us
out,
The world need* men who will do
right, no matter what is to come
ol it. _ m
"You didii'l enjoy Ming an advance
agent?" "No," replied Hu* young innn, "it
v* ni I no mnnotououA. I lmd to divide my
iiliontion lietwn’n iiitl bunrd* the first of Iliu
week und hoard hill* tin? Inst, mul it grew
wearinoino,"
The I'npiprrted lllirlinrge of m ('nnnou
Clou by would not have u inure dUiurblng ef
feet upon nerve* which are v Igurnns thnn nn
ordinary n> ,*e upon those thut lire weak nnd
unslrunir- A* n nervine, Hostetler'* Sumiueh
lUlter* Is unrivalled. Hy proruotlns digestion
and UHsimlliillun they overeuiue Unit ssstrlc
disorder, which is the mo*t prolific cause of
nervous debility, nud which, so long h* It ex 1*is.
detent* In targe nieii*ure tlie action of sedatives
and opiate*. Such reuiedie*. moreover, novo*
situto the u*o id lucmiiing dose*, and finally
cense to uet altogether, except in dangerous
quantifies. They never reach Ihe fountain
heud of the trouble, nnd qu!ot the nerves only
by senil punilyzlng ihem. Equally objection-
utile arc fiery unnieUleated alcoholic atlmulnnl*
Kidney, bladder und liver trouble, ninlnrlti, con-
stipation and rheumatism arc relieved by tho
Hitlers, which nt*o promotes nppetito and
nightly repose.___
CONDENSED FOODS.
Ihese Thing* Would Certainly Have A * -
ioaf*lied Our Urnudpurent*.
Many artificial baby foods aro
manufactured and sold in cuu en-
trated farm. For example, padurt*
ad crtlsed as “substitutes for moth-
er's milk" are made from cow'* milk,
to which is added a sufficient quan
llty of sugar to correspond with the
constituents o* mother’s milk. The
water Is removed from tho mixture
In vacuo, leaving a line while powder,
which is put up in packages Finely
powdered wheat Hour and nutritious
vegetable elements are added In more
elaborate preparations.
Another commercial article Is con-
densed cide \ which Is made by ovap-
orating tho juice of apples. One gal-
lon of it, costing SO cents, will fur-
nish fifteen or twenty gallons of cider
that is sufficiently strong for bottling
hy the addition of fifteen pounds of
sugar and the requlslto quantity of
water, savs tne St Louis Democrat.
Peach, grape, cherry, and apricot
cider, similarly concentrated, are s dd
for 81 a gallon. Hoot beer is put up
hi the same manner, half ot a pint, of
It making enough to fill sixteen half-
pint bottles.
During tho fiscal year 0,282 gal-
lons of condensed lime juice were im-
ported luto the l nlted States from
Jamaica. For manufacturing this
product the limes are put through a
sqiieo ing machine, and the juice is
strained and filtered so that all the
seeds and pulp shall be removed.
Then It is boiled down to the utmost
possible point of concentratiou in
copper vessels, greatcare being taken
that it shall not be In the slightest
degree scorched or burned, which
would s#oll It by causing the acid to
undergo a chemical change. Finally
it is put up iu bottles. Jamaica dur-
ing 1801 shipped 44,192 gallons of
this lime-juice to Great Britain.
During the same reriod it exported
lo this country its entire commercial
output of sour-orange juice, 1,102
gallons similarly concentrated. This
statement Is taken from a report of
the I'nlted States consul at Jamaica,
just received by the Department of
state at Wash ngton.
Concentrated cocoanut is dow sold
in cans it is a preparation made by
chopping the kernels fine, drying
them, and extracting the flavoring
elements. These latter are made in-
to a syrup with sugar. Vanilla
flavoring for ice cream and other
purposes is precipitated from the
vanilla beans in the shape of a solid.
Extracts of meat have grown enor-
mously In popular favor during the
last few years, and vast quantities of
them are put up in Chicago They
contain little more than the flavoring
portions of the subjects thev repre-
sent, being merely stimulating and
only nutritious in a very small de-
gree. so that It is said a dog will
starve on an unlimited supply of
them.
The tendency nowadays seems to
be to condense every kind of food,
both animal and vegetable. Com-
pressed salt is even provided for
horses and other beasts, a brick of It
being put in a frame above the water
trough, where the four-footed crea-
tures can lick It. It wou’d be inter-
esting to know what results would be
obtained by rearing a human being
trom infancy to adult age on con-
densed forms of aliment exclusively.
If the normal digestive powers could
nut assimilate all that was offend,
they might, uy giving artificial as-
sistance in the shape of that sub
stance obtained from the stomachs
of pigs, which is called "pepsin” ad-
ministered, as is nsual, in compressed
lozenges.—Chicago Evening Journal.
One symptom of blackslidlng is a
lack of thankfulness
Religion pure and undefiled never
works by the month.
There aie no real strong people In
this world but good people.
The truth wi hate the most Is the
truth that hit* us the hardest
Tin more polish you putou a mean
man the better the devil is salted.
Ever tIrne a had qjan throws mnd
at a good man he hit* himself In the
facet
Tlie (fill Mini'* Guo**; Daughter! Hero
|W fl I HIM Ill'll | ill ill till' |MI|H'r MlMHlt “pluck
ini'" Uhtif iirr plurk tin Mitrcn?
Kntlu»ri rm—J tloii'l know dry ipmhI*
niori'H, I |fuo«N. -Now York Weekly*
If (Im llwlijr u rutting Twiil
i Mr»nm an«lu*#thatoM •>• I vrliniH rvmiwlr, MhBi
(mh o* ’■» Hootiiimi Hmr /or ClulUrvti TcvUilutf*
Tlio Mixlrrii HoiiwUxly. Ho: And you
arc willnitf to Ijocoiim? tlm wife of ii pi.nr
man? Mi ; Oh, p-tj Inin truly Uotmiwtiu
in my Inuto*. 1 Mona to only nine club*.
—Now York Wn-kly,
llRKRtinan w < Mmptior lr« witli Olyrwrln*.
i'qri»i iiiniMil |li« tni* it in I ► hit, ToDdor or Koii'
Cltlll'UiiUA, Pll<'», • C U. Clark Co,, Nt'W cu
Ada So Mihh I .anip* mi id rdir would Ih* a
nHirr to you? Lawhoii; ^oh. Ada: What
did you tty lo t imt ? Lawsohi i told hot
ur would ruin proclitic ii ii* 1 call it “aunt/'un
j I wuh too young to Im? her brother,
8.1.00 TO ("iLIFOHXIA
Is our Sleeping Cur llnle ou tlio Phillip*.
Hock 1-lnhtl Tiiuri*! Exeur*iou*. from Kun-
ms t'ily nml kiudred tiislnnl cilia* on tlio
roulo of llil* car. lo San Fraucinco nud Lo*
Angeles. Tie1 mr* have upholstered spring
sent*, nre Pullman build, und appointment*
perfoet.
You 111111- ii special iiiunnger on tlio cur nil
the way, nnd excursion* run once u week,
leaving Kiinsns City every Friday. Save
money by biking lids tuipular mode of trnve).
Addri** for full particular*. A. II. Moffet,
(J, 8.*IV. IJ A., Kunsn* City, Mu, Jno. So-
bustiau, U..P. A., Chicago. .VW-l.it.
"(Joi oven witli my wife.” "How?"
"Smoked the figure -ho gave mo in Ihe pres-
ence of her curtains."
I urn entirely cured ot hemorrhage of the
lung* by Piso's Cure for Consumption.—
Lon** Lispamas. Uelhiiny. Mo., Jun. 8, '94.
Not Eaniiy Done.—lfuusekeo|>or .'cap-
tiously |: 1 liclievc that condensed milk of
yours is mostly water. Manufacturer (qui-
etly): Mnduine, have you ever tried to con-
dense water?—Now York Weekly.
Henry l Whnt a pleasure it is to hear Jab-
wock talk French. Charles: A pleasure!
He never comes within n mile of (lie proper
pronunciation. Henry: That's just it. it's
so English, you know.
When Visiting Kansas City Slop at
t ho Blosbom lint nk opposite Union Depot,
First class in every respect, Bates, $2,1)0 uny.
Cable car* to nil ports of tlio city pass the
door.
Very High Up.—Miss Wayupp: Shall I
invite the Newcomer girl*? Mrs. Wnyupp:
Really, I don't know. Are they in society?
Miss Wnyupp: Oh, thoy musl be. They
never gossip about anyone who does not be.
long to I I.o Four Hundred.—Now York
Weekly.
• 100 Reward SIOO.
Tho renders of this paper will be pleased
to leal a flint there is at least oue dreaded
disease that science tins been I,Me to cure
tu nil its etnges, unit that is Catarrh. Hall's
Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure
known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
being a constitutional disease, requires n
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tlie
system, thereby destroying tlie foundation
of the disease, and giving tlio patient
strength by building up tlie constitution
and assistiiig nature iu doing its work. The
proprietors have so much faith in its cura-
tive powers, that, they offer One Hundred
Hollar* for nny ense that it fails to cure.
8end for list of testimonials.
Address, F. J. CHENEY SCO.,Toledo, O.
£35' .Sold bv Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills 25c.
Making Him Comfortable.—New Bonrder
(shivering I: This stove is too small for this
room. Landlady (kindly): So it is. I’il
have it moved into n smaller room for you.
—New York Weekly.____
Landed.—Ho (contritely) I Are you
angry? She (firmly): Ye*. I ntn. "Be-
cause I kissed you?" “Be-because you
stopped." [No curds.]—New York Weekly.
Found ttie Boy lie Wanted.
Dr. McTavish of Edinburgh was
something uf a ventriloquist and It
Iie’ell that he wanted a lad to a slat
In the surgery who must neceKsarlly
b- of strong nerves. lie received
several applications and when tell-
ing a lad what the duties were, in
order to test his nerves, he would
say, while pointing tu a grinning
skeletou standing upright In a coi ner:
"Fart of yonr work would be to feed
the skeleton there aud while you are
here you may as well try to do so."
A few lads wuuld consent to a trial
and receive a basin of hot gruel and
a spoon. While they were pouring
the hot mesi into t te skull the doc-
tor would throw h s voice so as to
make It appear to proceed from the
Jaws of the bony customer ana gur-
gle out: “Br-r-r gr-uh, that's hot.
Thi* was too much and without
exception the lads dropped the basin
and bolted.
The doctor began to despair of ever
getting a suitable helpmate nntll a
small boy came and wus given the
gruel and spoon. After the first
spoonful the skeleton appeared to
say, “Gr-r-r-uh-r-br, that’s hot!"
Shoveling Id the scalding gruel as
fast as ever, the lad rapped the skull
and lrnpatl ntly reto.ted: "Well,
blow It, litn’tyer, yerould bony.”
The doctor sat down In his chair
and fairly roared, hut when he came
to he engaged the lad on the spot.—
Tii-Bit*._
Equal to th« Gcciwion.—Uomwllo: Oh,
please, inutn, whnt -hull I do? Half the
■nmii i* split, aud tin* Imanlor* ta At tlie
table. Mm. Hllmdlot I firmly) i Empty tho
box of rad popper into what* left. Thera
will l*i enough then,—New York Waokljr.
Found a Fa trifled Kgg.
t,ulte u curloalty Is on exhibition at
the cigar stand of Dawson ,x Burch,
on t edar street, says the Nashville
American. If tlio curiosity I* not a
IHitrlllcd egg, then nature can give
tho fowl creation card* and spards lu
the art of egg manufacture. Tho
freak Is of a perfect oval shape, with
both end* very smoothly clipped off.
A farmer living on Faradlse Kidgu
picked It up iu a field one day aud
started to throw it, when its un-
usual weight attracted his attentiou.
Stooping, he picked up a ruck and
struck the peculiar object a sharp
blow near the middle. The Interior
sholl cracked and three pieces shelled
off, revealing about half of a per-
fectly rounded object nestled away iu
ihe remaining portals of the shell.
The under sphere Is of a plnkiih hue,
and is very grunulur iu Its composi-
tion, something like sandstone. The
first thing a rerson would think of on
beholding it would he the yellow of
nn egg. and the more he looked tlie
more thoroughly he would become
convinced that that was what it was.
Tho concave portion of tho broken
shell fits back perfectly about the
Interior sphere. The shell s exterioi
Is also granular, though perfectly
uniform. It is about one-quarter of
an inch thick and immediately be-
neath the granular exterl ir is of a
(lrabiolor. resembling very much in
composition lava or phosphoric rock.
A close Inspection ot the broken
edges or the shell shows a very thin
exterior shell of about the thickness
of un egg shell. In fact, the entire
eliect produced is the same as that
obtained by taking a hard boiled heD
egg and cracking the shell, part a
section of it with the white adhering
to it, from tho yellow, leavlfig the
sphere nestled in the remaining por-
tion of the shell. The petrified egg I
that is undoubtedly what the freak
is weighs aiiout half a pound and it
ubout the size of a large goose egg,
perhaps larger.
Wk all waste too much time in
figuring on how to earn money with-
out working for it.
PHYSICAL STRENGTH,
cheerful spirits and the ability to fully
enjoy life, come only with a healthy
body uinl mind. The young
man who suffers from nerv -
ous debility, impaired mem-
ory, low spirits, irrita-
ble temper, and the
thousand and one de-
rangements of minrl
m -y and body that
1 ' result from, un-
natural. pernici-
ous habits usual-
ly contracted ill
youth, through
ignorance, is
thereby incapac-
itated to thor-
oughly enjoy
life. lie feels
tired, spiritless,
and drowsy ; his
sleep isdisturbed
aud does not re-
fresh him as it
should; the will power is weakened,
morbid fears haunt him and may result
111 confirmed hypochondria, or melan-
cholia and, finally, in softini; of tlie brain,
epilepsy, (“fits”), paralysis, locomotor
ataxia and even in dread insanity.
To reach, re-claim and restore such
unfortunates to health and happiness, is
the aim of the publishers of a hook of
136 pages, written in plain hut chaste
language, 011 the nature, symptoms anil
curability, hy home-treatment, of such
diseases. This hook will he sent sealed,
in plain envelope, on receipt of this no-
tice with ten cents in stamps, for post-
age. Address, World's Dispensary Med-
ical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
For more than a quarter of a century
physicians connected with this widely
celebrated Institution have made the
treatment of tlie diseases above hinted at
tlieir specialty. Thousands have con-
sulted them hy letter and received advice
and medicines which have resulted in
permanent cures.
Sufferers from premature old age, or
loss of power, will find much of interest
iu the hook above mentioned.
Take Home a Bottle of
ALLEN’S
Lung Balsam
IT CURES COUGHS & COLDS.
K. N. U. T,_5?8-1
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McKay, R. N. The Pond Creek Tribune. (Pond Creek, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 3, 1895, newspaper, January 3, 1895; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc496288/m1/3/?q=library+literature+and+Information+Science: accessed June 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.