The Snyder Signal-Star. (Snyder, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, October 6, 1905 Page: 3 of 4
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tkr nata r«i*a|M Mnl ii-'b ml hl«4-
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mataa ilaw liliaal They iliai‘1 a* I mi ika
taiwi-U. Tbatr don’l M-tliri with raaia
Thr> illlir If an Ilia hk..l
aiiipinki, iiidigv.ll-.ri, m*r*
inn* klanrtlaia, gi-urral wiaknraa ami
• ha imMtilranf growing girl* and Wiimrn
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fmui njiialaa nr hannrnl drag* Hold l.r
all iliacai.it. nr hjr ika Ik William*
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lla Maa aMmtalhc a r’cav aa*1 ***tiu
a r*4 aalMUMIMC »all Ala* Ma a04n
Ik ahnri III aril tha t«r*rf fc* 14
i| b» Ika Carta** uaudit MtifM If
ma® ||a Maa |rrinllf ukllilmaa nf
Ika ihtlra U4 writ Ma *f«**d *a<ll
■ ng nnd aiirhlac ika «airt fur a faa
Mlnula* thru Inatrtl ti i| ktl Clgn*
ih4 aalkr«| tiitiyhi Into lha a alar
lla Ma* klw tire. Iirfurr ha 4l*miiar
ad bla ikai Than k> mad# a break
fur hi* hdhhiaitr Fifteen mlbuira
latar ba rarrinl, Ilirriuntrtj and Milk
a *heep|.h I emit on kl* lira
' Tbai i ruibinc fur alir.nt minded
•*■*.' *aid a i*aih aiiandani. * Wht.
I've bad to *lop loi» of man who atari,
••I oiii to I ha Mater without ihlnklnc
io fun un ibalr battling aulta."—ttrook
Itn Kacla
TENOR MAO FUN WITH “SURE *
Pll|* Mi Milk
"M* ***** -- I--|f I# Ml# **(
I #(t ;n*i ik* fl«k of |H tort• talk ird
| ftw*a Mr I IS br ala taa aid *t tail a1 mi
| w* liar* LM«««a*i t' ti h* aaUMIabatl
I Abd tdlpaf I bar. ft) ft |a |r*t| MnM
9*rfat koM Murk L*d kaflCL red
'A**** ■ ta* MU Irm Milk MI tab
4*kllf 'WliMlitlid ka la L«| td
• kai 4a|liar*d at rrftili rtaiiirf
>*iraMarta* and >bra*a f*al«*l«* We
date nut rat 4*** i
tha |rlrfuyr|iu*l
•Mb milk, but it
Utan ubja li na hair. I
••bar* dull, rhalf k*
PPa. Ou>«. Malta, liable*
b*r. Uaiaa n>ii a. **1*.
if n* i-nianlwr arickt. a *iaad cal
haa b*aa found on om* urraaiu* Mat
tba larc* obfecia ar« of anidmii
oricin of roura* and lb* cblaf and
'ott.iani objr< ihui hna lo k* kisda
•cainai Ika leaner, amr* mnmkm. bul
4011* at drlatarloui foreign Min re
f*rretl to And a bar* aollit objor ’ t • •l*l»f“»ri I hr*
Mai *
RMBA
IN
Ul
A v- »
ha 9mm mp
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Op** Pl^Ud
Proled
The Health
•f ft** Umilpi K tmp|p>f
Maim *| H p4
oft €i
A lO
KC
■•**%•♦* CM 14
’•T.;
U hiatal *
than —r
Itt
(W
A Cilrbrjtad Henar/vout
Thu lal* I* T. Ilarnu-n, a* l* well
known. v« a l’nUi<r*ail«l in fallh.
and wna alno un advnratn uf total alt
■llnnnpo from lnl<iilralinc ll>|tiora. Al
u larg* imlillr It-tnpt-runce nx-ounc tn
llridcitort. Mr llurnum wan nn<- <>r
iho N.-ifukcr* on ih« pint form, ilx- iim
inrtiiilinc a nunitn-r of cirrcyiurn iitxl
oih<-r well known imthoii*. At in-
rlor«> of lb>- mtHttlllg on* of Iho rlorg),
mi-n. a grave and itraiuhl lured ortho-
ting dlvliu*. haIi) to Mr. ll.t run tn: '.*1
huvo hoon plourotl to moot you in font-
IM-rutn-o work. Mr. llurnum, nntl I hope,
■dr, I shall moot you In heaven.” The
gonlul showman, who douhtloRH In-
lorrod frtini the clrrg)'man's innnn<>r
Hint Ihl* hope wna not wholly un-
tnfxod with doubt us to Its realization,
instantly replied: "Oh. you will, sir
-If you nre thi»ro."
BABY ONE SOLID SORE.
Could Not 8hut Eyea to Sleep—8pent
$100 on Ooctora— Baby Grew
Worse—Cured by Cuticura
for $5.
"A scab formed on my baby’a face,
spreading until It completely covered
her from hoad to foot, followed by
bolls, hnvlng forty on her head at one
time, and more on her body. Then
her skin started to dry up and it be-
came so bad she could not shut her
eyes to sleep. One month's treatment
with Cuticura Soap and Ointment
made a complete cure. Doctors and
medicines had cost over $100. with
liaby growing worse. Then we spent
less than $5 for Cuticura and cured
her. (Signed) Mrs. G. H. Tucker, Jr..
335 Greenfield Ave. Milwaukee, Wis.”
Diminutive Boitcnlan'* Stag* Arrest
of Famous Tamagno.
After reading of the death of Tam
agno. a Harvard "grad” la»t evening
rilatod an eipertenr* he had with ihi-
famnu* lenor when a freshman.
With some of the oilier Ik>)» In my
rlusa,” he said, "I used lo go to ihe the-
ater* and act as 'supe,‘ We usi-il lo
think It was great eport Well, one
night half a dozen of iih were to go on
a* soldiers In 'L1 Trovutorc,' In which
Tomagno was singing. I wait told
that at a certain cue I was to go on
the stngc, arrest the tenor uml hail
him off to prison. I was pretty well
coached iind full of self-confidence,
Imt when I got my cue uud saw the
singer I almost decided lo let him go
on with his Binging uml not undertake
to arrest him. ’I uni nothing of a Her-
cules and the burly tenor looked as
though he could lick me with one
hand. However. I went after him, and
what a fight he pul up!
“I knew that we were supposed to
have a sham struggle, hut f hadn't
expected him to thrash around the
way he did. I thought he was going
to wipe up the stage with me.
“Tho perspiration began to pour
over ray grease paint and I was
breathing pretty hard before he final-
ly allowed himself to be overcome
and led awuy to Jail. When we
reached the wings Tamagno looked at
me and laughed heartily. ‘Well, well,
young man,' ho said, slapping me on
the back, 'you licked me. didn't you?
Keep on, we will make a fighter of
you yet.' "—Boston Record.
ar* mi • ommonly found It may b* la-
ken for granted that many aolubl*
coniaminaai* at* pr«*«ni. Wbea cow*
ar* milk*.] with **t hand*, milk be
• one* tainted with dissolved Oltb
which raanut lie removed, and wber*
milking i* done in niiby and dusty
• table* foul odor* are absorbed and
myriad dust particle* aud gi rm* And
their way Into the warm inilk which
la on# of iho best possible mediums
for Ihe growth and spread ttf onm
choir boys •
school edurai
I heir MTV Ices
)' AaAI fit (uf
\\ 4*lt l ‘ I*
•ri-tflAtf IA** AU0I
fti mr ««Hm t «i*
I 'ftf Khiflift $M
Oft lAlflMlitrUil ||
ft|«**t of i|m roHNNlraU
>i b<wi$ oi iblrb i hr
r |l«»n a RcmhJ pufilit
on in <*«**14*rat loti of
as t boll iMijrft,
•an A A A* bf$» « 1
nAl noil IM)
kn$*n na* S |
rmftf l»f 41
¥mU. VkdM
nog I* ski, it imisi a ««*•■>(
»dlOv ini noowL il |io •»>* ilu
tUaiikl ddFlf of p*si«y s»i «flt.
tkmv ltd mmitifwl
BAKING
POWDER
An dMublf pun kakwvg piskt
KNnhlkillf lunikMi chsckc*
ft cent*. Your grusrr wlunii
roof money H yoo iff not ul-
Midi. iWl Atdrpd g iiikslt
Iwlgi TW» 4ft ImpuM end a nun
Add |o kidkK. Ask Iol K C
live vuniariti duality.
II Qu*n<iv*a |h* Lire.
“Your llum e Cure Is lieyond iluubt
Ihe most remarkable rcgirdy for skis
disease* ever formulglrd. For eight
years I suffered alnuoi eoustantly
from an llrblng Irouhli the doctor
called ICcterna my ekln was on fire,
hoi lest iban < ne box of 11 tint • Cure
Milk coming from the udder into rlean - <iucu> bed that Are. Many of
palls. In a clean stable, silll contains friends have since used li on my rec-
a certan proportion of foreign germ* ' "mmemlailon and li never falls Where
or banerla. Where the cow inhabits - 'here'* an llch rub It on. Il d<«a the
1 work—that's all.”
Mrs. Helen Whitmore,
Clarendon, Ark.
The royal ministry of llavarla pub-
| llshc* a warning against ihe use ol
1 colors containing lead in ihe nunu-
' facturr of iranafi ruble pictures. Cltll-
1 dren attach these transferable |dc-
I Hirv* In serap laKiks and girls and
. . In cv‘ry ' womi-n use tbom for ornnnii-nilng
possible wuy lo Instruct his patrons 1
a dirty stable and the milk has to pas*
through dust laden air at milking time
Il Is found lo bo swarming with bac-
terial life when examined under the
mlscroscope of the scleutiat. Wheth-
er milk goes to the home selling pant
or to ihe factory It should bo pro-
tected against contamination as care-
fully aa possible and every factory
manager should endeavor
?'«•* ww Mav* Tried ,|
Will uss (V- elhsf |V*4I|.« Culd W(-
tsr Hl*reh ha* no e-|u*l In vjitahlllL
*r wuallly I* -i for io rent* I'lbsr
trsiid* • ■ iilsln only It v*.
In Midi- part* of the Tyrol a tx-wuit
fill, though rtirloua custom prevail*
When a girl Is going lo lie married
and Just la-fore (be leaves for I ho
I church her mother gives her n hand
kerrhlef, which la railed a leather
chief II Is made of newly spun ami
unused llm-n. and with It the gin dries
the natural leal* sire slid* ou leaving
home The toarkerchlef Is never )
used alter the marriage day. bul Is I
folded up and plared In Ihe Ilm n clos-
et, where II remains uniII the death
of II* owner, when II Is taken from
Its place and spread over her lace.
A Twenty Year Old Fact,
Do you want to slop those (’hill*,
get well, fat and happy? We think
)ou do If so, use Cheatham's Chill
Tonic. Il I* mil an oxt»-rlin< ul. but
a twenty year-old fact. For that num-
ber of yearn II has cured all kinds of
Chills, and still does so. It is guar-
ani ced.
JA9VM Biro.
■ Chiisg*
r ■ICIW—klJCU.
by object lessons, argument and print
ed Information to understand the Im-
portance of clean milk. Such milk
means n better product from the local
factory and Incidentally a better repu-
tation aud price for Its product so tbat
the patron in turn will share In the
reward of cleanliness.
According to the Muskogee Phoe-
nix, there Is over $400,000 worth of
building and public Improvements
now under contract and construction
In the city of Muskogee.
Every housekeeDer should know
that if they will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they
will save not only time, because it
never sticks to the iron, but because
each package contains 16 os.—one full
pound—while all other Cold Water
Starches aro put up in % -pound pack-
ages. and tbe price Is the same, 10
cents. Then again because Defiance
Btarch Is free from all Injurious chem-
icals. If your grocer tries to sell yon
a 12-oz. package It Is because he had
a stock on hand which he wisher to
dispose of before be puts In Defiance.
He knows that Defiance Starch has
printed on every package In large let-
ters and figures “16 nzs." Demand De-
fiance and savs much time and money
and the annoyance cf the iron stick-
ing. Defiance never sticks.
Everything done under color of the
law Is not necessarily Just or honest
Some of the gravest wrongs, the most
oppressive wrongs, the most scandal
ous wrongs, are perpetrated even in
the name of the law. The only means
of correction in such cases Is to ex-
pose the weak places in the law and
bring public sentiment to bear in a
demand for the correction thereof.—
Dallas News.
Recollections.
Jn memory I often look.
Across tho lapse of years.
To where, still hanging on (heir hook,
I see mv father's shears.
O. those were hours for woe unmatched
when be those blades would spread
And leave till stiff and stubbly patched
My would-be curly head.
And when beyond the brink of vouth
To Infancy I peer,
'Tls hard—you will forgive the truth—
To check a rising tear;
For now I see a slipper, warm
As from a foot fresh yanked.
And feel again the passion storm
1 felt when 1 was spanked.
And as my reckless vision speeds
I see a schoolhouse door.
And some one. who. for his misdeeds.
Stands out upon the floor.
And then, ah me, I see again
That ruler, deftly planned.
To bring forth hunks and Junks of pain
From my grime-knuckled hand.
But worst of all those pictures drear
That follow childhood’s wake.
Is that home conjured potion queer
I took for stomachache.
And never mind where memory leads
Or how my thoughts I steer,
I seem to taste these -punkln seeds”
They stewed for me each year.
—Brooklyn Life.
Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Ease.
A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Swollen,
Sore, Hot, Callous. Aching, Sweating Feet
•nd Ingrowing Nails. At all Druggists and
Shoe stores, 25 cents. Accept no substitute
pamp^maned FREE. Address, Allen S.
-'----
Valuable Marine Relic
A fragment of wood from the Na-
’
talie, the vessel on which Napoleon
Bonaparte made his escape from the
Island of Elba to Prance, has been
presented to Secretary Bonaparte by
Edward A. Sherman of Oakland, Cal.
If you expect to get rich you must
ake money during hard times .
. ,- no«r*T routs it
A large Lor. package Red Cross Ball Blue, only
* cents. The Russ Company. South Bend, i nif
T]t> be a man is to be the worry ol
■ome woman; to be a woman Is to be
the worry of some man.
Expurgated.
The handle of the umbrella in ques-
tion was the head and neck of a dog
carved in wood, and the baby belong
ing to the woman in the next seat
was trying to bite the dog's head off.
"Pardon me, madam," said the pro-
fessor, leaning forward, “but do you
know why the dog takes that treat-
ment so quietly?”
"No, sir, I do not."
"Because, madam, when the dog
was made the bark was taken off.'
She stared at him in Indignant sur-
prise, but the professor, serene in the
knowledge that he had shed some
more useful information, continued to •
beam genially on the baby and to puff
at his unlighted cigar.—Chicago Trib-
une.
The Farmer and the Fair.
The usual way with the great body
of the American farmers of to-day
Is to say little, do little and hang
back when preparations are being
made for our autumn fairs, and then
when the fair day comes and the
Jockeys and machine men absorb
most of the space and the chief of
the attractions, these same farmers
are at tho front looking glum, and
grumbling because the fairs of the
fathers are played out and the horse
trots and trades people overshadow
the products of tno farm. Farmers
need not growl In rueful regret about
this state of affairs when they can
so easily remedy it, and should go to
work at once to bring back some of
the best features of the old-fashioned
country fairs. Only think what a
crowding and crowning success a fair
would be almost anywhere In these
western prairies, if only half of the
farmers and a tithe of the farmers’
wives within a radius of twenty miles,
Instead of going empty-handed to the
fair, would co-operate in exhibiting
specimens of the handiwork and prod-
ucts of the home farm. No use, bro-
ther farmers, In playing the absurd
role of gsowly critic about these
degenerate days of horse trot fairs-
the earth Is still yielding its fat and
fourfold increase, and the will to make
a simon-pure farmers' fair can very
soon find a way. It would not be
amiss for every grange to make this
a topic of discussion at the next meet-
ing and plan out practical ways and
means to restore the Interest and use-
fulness of country fairs, as viewed
from the standpoint of the domestic
home circle and every-day farm life._
Farmers' Review.
glaas Jars, liottlc-a, c-lgnr boxes. f:in*
picture frami-M. paper cshcb, boxes
uml many other small receptacles.
It Ik again rumored, necordlng lo an
American dlxpnteh from Madrid, that
I King Alfonso will marry and that ihe
] wedding will hi- relubrated May 17.
' 190U. It Ih understood that the lady
solurtnd as the future queen <if Spain
la <he PrlnceKS Ena ol llulii-nberg.
daughter of Prince Henry of Mullen
berg, and nleoo of King Edward of
England. Offlrlal announcement of
Medicines Have Stood Teet of Time.
"The leading proprietary medicines
that have aloud the text of time ure
of known therapeutic value," suva u
medical authority. “They are prepar
ed in laboratories of tho highest
grade, under the care of skilled pilar- ,hw betrothal, Ihe correspondent snyn,
- I a ... a a*. . - VI/ 111 Ivrv tVltl <lz> ulloall..
maclsls, and they are made from ap-
proved formulas which. In many In-
stances. have been the especial pride
and specific of some successful physi-
cian. They have been tried In the
crucible of public opinion and they
have been found satisfactory by the
people, for otherwise the people would
discontinue using them."
If you wish for truth, you must give
freedom; there must be neither exuo-
llon or tyranny. It is human to de-
sire liberty, aud the yoked human
creature does not express his genuine
opinions.
will be mude shortly.
The season will be here soon when
you can strike at a fly and hit it.
They are about even; the man takes
In iho show and the snow takes In
the man.
Not a Pipe Dream.
Oil—some kinds—are conveyed by a
system of pipe lines, hut the Oil that
makes all other Oils insignificant is
conveyed in bottle. It's Hunt's Light-
ning Oil. and its mission is to cure
your sprains, cuts, burns, bruises,
aches, and pains—and It does It.
More Flexible and Laatlng,
won't shake out or blow out; by using
Defiance Btarch you obtain better rt>- 1
suits than possible with any other
brand and one-third ‘mors for same
money.
The man who makes hay while Ihe
sun shines Is In a position lo lend
money to the fellow who writes
poetry about It.
AITMSRIPIHE
■B CVABAJITUB TO CVU
IWl BAICOU, RUDACIE All liMAIJU.
Jlsi *“11 A all-MrlflM l • a *•«••< *ta> awinsMOIrs
■^^^^^^•rrintMSlIlir »T ISM »-T
ra Jff. Ik, Maaulaetane.
Dainty, Crisp, Dmiy
Summer
Skids
■rwa delight to !h* refined woman every
wbete. In otdet to gel this result are I hat
tha material I* g..»l. that il is cal io Ih*
bum laatiioa and use
Defiance
Starch
in the laundry. All three ihinganre import-
ant, but the Iasi i* absolutely necessary.
No mailer how tine Ihe material or bow
daintily made, Iwd starch and poor laundry
work will spoil ihe effect and rain lb*
clothes. DEFIANCE STARCH in pun,
will not rot tho clothes nor cause them to
crack. 11 tells at 10c a sixteen none* pack-
age everywhere Other starches, much in-
ferior, sell at 10c for twelve ounce pack-
age. Insist oo gelling DEFIANCE
STARCII and be sure of results.
Defiance Starch
Company,
Omaha, Nebraska.
Fatal Equality.
The drawbacks to social equality-
come out in domestic service, if they
appear at all.
A correspondent reports this con-
versation between an American lady
living in Manila and one of her Fili-
pino servants.
"Ramar.” said she, “why is it that
you worked so well for tbe Spaniards,
and did it for so little? They treated
you very badly, and I treat you well.
They paid you only two pesos a
month, and you ask twenty-five of me.
I don't understand it.”
“Ah, senora,” said Ramar. "the
Spaniards were our superiors. You
Americans are our equals."—Weekly
Scotsman.
Evaporation of Soil Moisture.
There has been very little done in
the investigation of soil moisture in
relation to its evaporation. It has
been assumed that. (he evaporation
was from the surface, whether the
places of evaporation were a body of
water or on an area of soil. But some
recent experiments carried on in the
department of agriculture at Wash-
ington bring out an ' entirely new
phase of the. subject. They seem to
show that the evaporation takes place
largely within the soil, itself, that is, in
a soil not saturated but sufficiently
moist to allow every soil particle to be
covered by a film of moisture, there is
a constant escape of that moisture in
the air spaces lying between the par-
ticles. This greatly increases the
amount of evaporation that can take
place from a piece of newly turned
soil, and in fact, any kind of soil ly-
ing above the water level. The experi-
ments referred to seem to show that
the evaporation is approximately pro-
portional to the amount of water pres-
ent in the soil, and not only to the
amount of water at the very surface.
The soli that has the largest possible
amount of water above saturation
gives off more evaporated water than
does the soil that is short of satura-
tion. We can therefore see that per-
haps moisture from our soil is escap-
ing much - more rapidly into the air
than we hare previously supposed.
Some men only need one match to
light their pipes, unless It happens to
be the last match.
Isn't it annoying to keep your seat
In a street car while some woman
stands, and when you get to the end
of your journey discover that the
standing female is an old friend of
Ihe family?
No sooner does a man swear off
smoking than his friends present him
with cigars of every description; be-
fore swearing off he had a hard time
borrowing the “makings" of a cigar-
ette.—Detroit Free Press.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Mere is Heii«t tor Women.
Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, dis-
covered a pleasant herb remedy for women's
f’RFF°r AHHmai1 rn <:ts„ San>ple mailed
S»>y',N ^ ’ 6 Mothur Gr“7 Co.,
It makes a man very proud of him-
self to think how well he gets along
with his wife when she is off on a
visit.
The Worm Turns
The minor poet brooded over his
lemonade.
"Sh," he said, darkly. “Can you
keep a secret?”
“Till death," his companion replied.
“Know, then," said the poet, seizing
the other's wrist, “that I am to bo
avenged at last on the editor of (ho
Trash magazine. I sent him a sonnet
last week, and poisoned tlie gum on
the return envelope.”
And with a harsh, blood-curdling
laugh (he desperate young man passed
out into the night.
W. L. Douglas
*3= & *35? SHOES™.
W. L. Douglas 84.00 Cllt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
*l.S0U«14
SH019
METAL BREAD BOARD.
Insist on Getting It.
Some grocers say they don't keen
pebunee Starch. This is because they
have a stock on hand of other brands
containing only J2 oz In a package,
which they won't be able to sell first,
because Defiance contains 16 oz. for
the same money.
Do you want 16 oz. instead of 12 oz
for same money? Then buy Defiance
starch. Requires no cooking.
Interesting to Student*.
The schools and colleges are now
open for the fall term, and there will
be many self-reliant young men and
women who will he looking for a good
way to earn their expenses. The Four-
Track News, the great Illustrated
monthly magazine of travel and edu-
cation. appeals to intelligent readers,
and students will find it easy to se-
cure subscriptions for it. The terms
to persons soliciting subscriptions are
extremely liberal, and offer a very gen-
erous margin of profit. It will pay
any one interested to write to the pub-
lisher, George H. Daniels, 7 East 42d
street, New York, for full particulars.
B event hi* — No wood
about IL Hygienic,
sanitary, lov-priced.
Cun not creek, sol It nor
warp. Loot* Forever.
Every woman wants
one. Maniple postpaid
__25c. A sente wealed.
LYONS MFG. CO.. 338 MV-3THEET, PEKIN, ILL
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 4d£”iS0£
Decision in Cotton
The best and rarest moral bracer in
the world is the knowledge that some
one has faith in you.
The
that it
worst
takes away
--- I • Sin*lei. nind,er ” The richest heir rltape, fit better, w-eer longer, and are ol
, ............ ^ i. ^otton wil1 be movin8 rapid-
tav™odTc7dePquiXXMo
$10,000 Tp^%7.0,7.«wrnh.T’ ! d° WIth each lot- according to
cc^nt"s^lef Msy'Yi?Un^°end**uVrerior*we*rrtaig CUCUm.StaOCeS of -the
^u^^ch';^!hVh;;'rr;^toY:7c*Y5.!!moment.. • •
: io#e that cost you $5.00 to $7.00— the only
iiicrence Is the price. If I could fake you into
■iy factory at Brockton. Mow., the Jarpest in
‘ie world under -one roof making men's fine
hoes, and show you the care with which every
pair of Dougins »noes l« inede, y ou would realize .
;^ok.c^r„,7S^„sr'ld‘hot* “re ,he b€*‘,lties are at your command, and
III could *how you the difference between the . 1 • , , \
•hoe* made In my factory and those of other y°U Will make ft© mistake' DV
wake*, you would under.land why Oougla.i : , • J
$3.50 shoe* cost more to make, why they hold Snippirur to US.
heir rhape, fit bettar, wear longer, and are ol 1 r «•> * • .v
Our services and our.focil-
No chromos or cheap premiums, but
a. 2Tti,’r 1uallty and one-third more
or Defiance Starch for the same price
of other starches.
For multitudes of young people
there is no home, only a place to
sleep in. ;
There are only a few certainties in
the world. One of them is the mother;
you can always depend on her.
fs&ti Wm. D. Cleveland * Sons.
CAUTION.-Insist upon h ivh gW.Io.lVmg. B,# • ft* JUflS,
III Show.* Take no substitute. None genuine i ]
The idea of self-respect is rather
amusing to those who are well ac-
quainted with themselves.
t upon
_ nb*titn.____________
without his name and price stamped on bottom. {
WANTED. A shoe dealer in every town where
W. L*. Douglas Shoes are not Bold. * Full line ol
samples sent free for ln*|»eetIou upon reqnekt.
Color EyeCoto used; they will not wear brogty.
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall St vise
W. I*. DOUGLAS* ISrocktou. 3Um*
HounIQIL,
Plantation Chil! Cure is Guaranleed
■ u Lure, or
money refunded by your merchant, so why not try It J Price 50c*
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Allison, W. M. The Snyder Signal-Star. (Snyder, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, October 6, 1905, newspaper, October 6, 1905; Snyder, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc496327/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.