Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 183, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 29, 1904 Page: 2 of 8
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Confidence.
I'm taking lif<» right pa»y
•Cause I read the papers »om*
Air I'm baskin’ in tho promia*
Of a better time to come.
The bands have started playin
An* the starry banners float
An* tne only thing that's needed,
Is for mo to east my vote.
They've studied the requirements
With Intelligence and skill
An* If ono don’t niak«* us happy
Why another surely will.
So I’ve got my ballot ready
An’ I sing my little song
If you Judge by what they promis*
There** no chance of goln* wrong.
Washington Star.
n rfSusfoaiMts
ndvice?
I white «n<t pure as a swan.” Silence.
I "So you advise me to—to tell her
there was a queer little1
catch In Sylvia's voice; she'could get
no further. >
“Yes, dear," came ^er husbands
voice, tenderly. "Tell her that per-
haps she made a mistake In thinking
It's all a mistake. A fellow's not as
big-as a woman’s first Ideals of him
are; hut he’s usually ldgger and bet-
ter than she thinks when she's disil-
lueioned.”
Sylvia had buried her face in the
sofa cushion and was sobbing out-
right now. Her husband crossed tho
room and, sitting beside her. began to
smootbo the little curls und tendrils
of her hair. __
"Sweetheart,' be said, choking a
hit *" “tell her to love and be patient
with her husband, as you love and are
patient with me. You do love me?"
wistfully. , , „ , ,
Don’t I, though!" cried Sylvia, joy-
fully, throwing her urnis about Ills
neck and smothering him with neg-
lected kisses. "And you certainly
know how to give advice, Jack!"—Veo
Iji Wee, in New York Press.
"NEW” POTATOES A FRAUD.
•1t ef Fund Nov* •" Hand.
Tho funds In offl-lal custody In
England awaiting claimants amount
to an enormous sum. During the
recent parliamentary session ques-
yfia these unclaim-
ifCT
The sunshine that makes a business
plant grow Is advertising.
Growing a business nowadaysI I
something like growing an apple- roe.
. _ nuked as to these unciaim- gometmng
• Lr,s ts and several returns on | You may select good seed. P »
the subject have been made. The total good soil, water und work withJ
balances In the hands of the paymas-
jSK fTJT L4 ftZE
In tho beginning Sylvia lmd com-
plained to her husband one evening
as ho Slipped on his top cout:
“1 don't tee why you wont ever
wait and see liert. Do you Un< ", »«
hnvc a great deal In common, »t 1
very much alike.”
"As a woman, Sylvia, you r0 11 1
cm," replied Mr. Browne, picking up
his stick. "As a man, you'd be a tame
cat. For myself. 1 don't like eats.
Unfortunately, Mr. Browne was kept
extremely busy at his office these
days, and so Bertram, with his line,
distinguished airs, his poetical tastes,
ids 'immaculate grooming, was able
to make Ids Innings. From the early
discovery that they were affinities it
wasn't a great step to prove to Sylvia
that the laws of Clod and man were
interfering things at times and upon
proper provocation could be set aside.
"Great love, like yours and mine,
ho announced to her one day, "is horn
of the vastness and loneliness of the
, oa, and makes human conventions
utterly pointless."
Mrs. Browne was very unhappy and
miserable In spile of this uplifting an-
nouncement. One morning at break-
fast. as she was dangling a cherry by
its stalk Just above her pretty lips
and making little snaps at it. her eyes
somehow lingered admiringly upon
her husband's chin. It wus such a
firm, manly chin, and. after all. she
was such an undecided, dependent
sort of little body, she sighed to her-
self. Yes, sho would ask ills advice
about the momentous question that
was knocking nt her door for a decis-
ion. , ,
"Jack," she began, gulping down her
cherry, "1 want your advice about
something. A girl 1 know is in trou-
ble. and I—I don't know exactly what
to tell her to do. You don't mind my
not mentioning her name. Jack'.’"
"Much rather you didn't," said he,
He laid down the paper he was read
lug with the disappointed air of a man
who has left the stork mnrkel unread
and began sipping his coffee.
How blunt and uncouth ho was!
But then, for the matter of that, even
' in the old. dear, sweetheart days,
hadn't ho always been that? What
could have been more blunt than the
way he had told her first that she was
the prettiest girl he'd ever seen? Syl-
via tried to compare tho remark un-
tlatteringly with Bert's way of telling
her that "her eyes were pools of pur-
ple, her mouth a scarlet thread."
“Well. Sylvia, what about your
friend? ’ Her husband's voice fetched
her back to tlie matter in hand. Sho
hesitated, pushed her muffins aside,
drew a deep breath and plunged:
"Why, Jack, she's married, you sec,
and she's utterly miserable. Her hus-
band and sho have scarcely a taste in
common. She's really going to leavo
’ Mm, i think; but she's asked my ad-
trice."
••He’s a beast, I suppose? com-
mented Mr. Browne, meditatively bal-
ancing a fork on his finger. “Knocks
on her.) "Besides, you see. there's
another man who loves hor in tho
wav she wishes to he loved, and so
thoy’ro going to find happiness to-
gether and snap their fingers at the
world’s conventions.
Sylvia had risen from the table, and
now Hung herself with an air of dain-
ty. defiant bravado on a couch In tlie
corner. Mr. Browne began stroking
that firm chin of his in a way that
signified nothing to his wife, but even mind.
Westerner Said to Make Much Money
by Shrewd Trick.
The wooden nutmeg or Conneetl-
cut was the first imitation food," said i
a Krocer, "and then canto the mean
Bostonian who dried snow and sold it
for salt. This year we have an Imi-
tation new potnto.
"A Westerner put the imitation now
potato on the market, and they say ho
has made about 80 per cent profit out
of it. 1 am speaking seriously now.
Of course it was in a Joking
ter general were *273,612.305 oa Feb.
28, 1903.
In tho chancery division a large
portion of this great fuad Is dormant,
but as a fund is not considered as
unclaimed until it has rot been adju-
dicated by tho court for fifteen years,
the proportion due to missing owners ,
can not bo estimated, but is an enor-
mous amount. Many persons are neg-
ligent In collecting government securi-
ties and dividends, or have died with-
out leaving heirs who have demanded
the funds. The balance of govern-
ment stock and dividends unclaimed
for ten years in the hands of tho na-
tional debt commissioners on March
31, 1904, was *13.912.005. The govern-
ment has taken over *5,000,000 of this
fund for current expenses.
Similar appropriations of these tin-
| claimed funds were made by the gov-
ernment In 1791 and 1808, and In 1863
Gladstone canceled not less than *!•>•-
000,000 of the unclaimed stock. A
large estate, *720,000. that of Mrs.
Helen Blake, reverted to the crown
in 1883 In default of claimants who
were able to prove their right to the
estate.
the tree will not produce fruit until
another and most powerfu . energy
lng and life giving element Is brought
to bear. You must have sunshine and
lots of It. Can you expect to ripen
apples In the dark? Can you expec
to grow a profit able business plant
nowadays without the sunshine of pu
lie favor produced by advertising.
This I’ostuni plant is a good illus-
tration of that law. It seems but a
short time ago when I put a few men
at work in the carriage house^ of the
barn you have seen to-day, where we
began making Postum coffee.
The seed then planted, less than 9
years ago. was a new kind of apple
seed and it was not altogether certain
how tlio people would like the apples.
We did our work thoroughly and
plenty of It. We knew we had a good
Some thoughtful man might nj tM
If what you manufacture hfts merit,
once you get a trade established peo-
ple will continue to purchase, even II
the advertising Is stopped, but to act
on that conclusion would be a fatal
mistake, for there are always bright
men on the lookout to steal your ap-
ples, and If you give them the chance
they will come in and take the fruit,
sure flight here let us drive a nail,
not a shingle nail but a forty penny
spike. Your article must have merit,
far and away beyond the ordinary un-
advertised thing, ft- should be tha
very best that human intelligence and
ingenuity can produce. Then you have
a foundation to build upon that will
not slip out from under when tha
building grows heavy. There are per-
sons ignorant enough to believe that
a poor article can be advertised lute
a succoss. It cannot and any one who
tries the experiment will pay heavily
for his experience. Critically examine
any well known and advertised article
that has been years on the market and
s"in his office kn;w'.t to be a “-‘ay that I alluded to the nutmeg and
the salt.
Tho Westerner, to accomplish his
sign of deep perplexity.
“And that’s what you wnnt my ad- |
vice about?” he said slowly, at last.
r
W/M
deception, plants on toward the end
of the summer a crop of late potatoes
of a kind that keep well. These ripen
and are dug up just before the first
frost. They are sorted, and all the
bad ones are thrown out. Then the
rest are buried in a field.
"Tho crop lies buried, preserved
from all harm under the soil, till early
spring. About two months before
the first genuine potatoes have ap-
peared it is dug up.
"A great bath of u solution of lye is
prepared and in this bath the potatoes
are dipped. When they emerge from
their plunge their skins are pink and
curly, and their flesh is hard and firm.
In a word, they are to all appearances
new jHitatoes, and they would deceive
anyone. ,
There are many imitation foods,
tho grocer ended. "We have imita-
tion bjutter, imitation syrup, imitation
jellies and jams, imitation coffee, imi-
tation honey anti imitation maple
sugar. Not one of these frauds, though
is as hard to detect as the imitation
new potato."
Lampton in Politics.
When W. J. Lampton, poet-wit, was
learning how he was at a college it.
Ohio. Some months after his matric-
ulation a colored student was ad-
mitted. It was a new departure, and
when the news reached his home his
parents, who were Kentuckians, dbln t
like tho idea. Tlie father, being a Re-
publican, was disposed to take the
medicine administered by tho party
policy. N(>t so the mother. She had
different views, and at once wrote for
her boy to leave college and come
home. The young man wroto that he
would not, because he was a Repub-
lican and he wanted to bo consistent.
Then ho waited for a reply to his let-
ter. It did not come. Instead came
his father, who said that W. J. must
quit and come back home with him on
the spot.
“Indeed!" replied lampton. with
fine feeling. “Are we two men to b<
thus influenced by a lady?”
"I think, William,” said his father,
with much significance, “I think—we
And they w-ere, for the young man
went home with his father.
Pure Food Factories that Make Postum and Crape-Nuts.
6
jA;t
>>■■■
She was so unhappy.
her up against the furnituro—no? He
drinks, then?”
•No—on, no!” Sylvia's tone gave
the impression that any of these
things would have been insignificant
trifles. “But they're thoroughly uncon-
genial. He loves his business and his
cigars and newspapers, und she loves
poetry and romance and-and tho
finer things of life.” She gave a
vaguo. comprehensive little gesture
with her left hand.
"Under such conditions, marriage 13
ruch a mockery," she went on. bur-
riedly. (The argument, was one of
Bert's, and bad made an Impression
“Do you love me?”
“Well, dear, tell your friend that it is
women—nice, clean women—who talk
about ‘snapping their fingers at the
world’s conventions.’ Men don't take
much stock in it. They know too well
what it means." He paused, then went
on measuredly:
“To be sure, Sylvia, if your friend’s
husband wore a beast, or brutal to
her, or didn't support her, she might
get a divorce in conventional order.
For myself. I'm not in for divorces;
though that's a matter of taste, may-
be. But if she leaves him and runs off
with another man—why, do you real-
i7,o what that would mean to a nico
woman?”
"What would it mean?" Sylvia be-
| gan nervously to punch boles in the
' sofa cushion with her scarfpln.
"That for the future her friends
must be among a set of people who
really arc what she is merely called;
that the man for whom she sacrificed
everything couldn t sacrifice enough
for iter to point out to her that duty
was stronger than love. Love isu t
everything, dear--”
There was a certnin big. caressing
tone in his voice which unconsciously
made Sylvia hark back to the old
honeymoon days before sho had ills
covered that marriage with him was
"a mockery." She took out her hand-
kerchief. a ridiculous bit of lawn and
lace, and touched her eyes furtively.
“That’s from the world's viewpoint
ho continued. "Then, there's tho hus-
band. 1 judge from what you say ho
isn't wholly a rum lot. Perhaps—
even if he hasn't very fine, poetic
tastes—perhaps he also realises that
he bores the woman he loves. Maybe
he docs love her in spito of his blunt,
ordinary brusqueness. Maybe be thinks
all day at the office how, if this or
that deal goes through, it'll mean
more dainty luxuries for her. Maybe
lie hurries home after busiuess hours
so that he can put on his dinner
clothes, knowing that pleases her fas-
tidious tastes and makes him a bit
more congenial to her. Perhaps, even
if ho does pick up his newspapers,
and doesn't read poetry to her, it's a
kind of paradise merely to have her
| in the room with him. Sonic men are
made like that, you know."
There w as another furtive mop with
the ridiculous little handkerchief. Why
did her husband’s voice, when it was
tender, always have that mastery over
her?
•'And some evening," pursued that
masterful voice, "when he has hurried
home, perhaps he finds pinned to one j
o. Ills ties a note saying It's all been
a mistake; that at last she's found a
man 'congenial' to her and has run oft
with him. And whllo tho cook, all un-
suspecting, is about to servo the din-
ner for two, be stands there cold and
stunned—turned out of paradise 1 Tho
w-orst of it is,* Jack added, beginning
to pace slowly tip and down the room,
• the worst of It Is, he ll never get rid
Of Interest to Peach Growers.
A bulletin is in course of prepara-
tion at the Department of Agriculture,
it is said, describing a method of ex
terminajiug a peach tree parasite
known as "little peach." The reason
this pest w-as so named is because a
tree bearing large fruit when attacked
by these parasites is affected by the
disease commonly known among peach
growers of western Maryland as the
"go back,” and thereafter produces a
small and bitter peach, instead of tho
former largo and luscious product.
The Agricultural Department experts
have been experimenting with this
matter for ten years, it is stated.
Mr Morton B. Waite, chief of the di-
vision of orchard fruits, reports that
the parasite can be exterminated by
cutting out of the orchard every tree
affected by the "little peach.”
The Victor.
Ho that overcomoth shall
—Uovclutlon. xxi., *.
inherit all
ea was
dared
things.”—ttev
One time the
That men <
No ono could
Yet' one mm
Ono man who . ,
Om* man who fought his dm
And ventured till his dreams
d" the sea
work had bared.
pin
od.
And men gazed at oac
With doubting nod—
Hut one man bra veil •
A Th, ..
Ills way,
Their
s wide—so wide
dec....... ,
llnil its further side,
an dared;
dreamed of things to do.
his doubting erew
is dreams came true
tnT all the sea might hide
Where Buckwheat Cakes Come From.
It were well for the devotee of the
buckwheat, when he sits down to
heaped-up plate of the steaming break-
fast dish, to call down blessings on
the heads ofrthe farmers of New York
and Pennsylvania. If they should sud
denly determine to quit raising buck-
wheat many a buckwheat cake lover
would have to dispense with his favor-
ite dish. New York alone produces
6.200.000 bushels, and Pennsylvania
4.200.000 bushels, the two States to-
gether giving the country all but four
million bushels of its annual crop
The state with tho next largest yield
is Maine (730,000 bushels). Tennes-
see shows the smallest production,
less than ten thousand bushels last
year.
Discipline Strictly Enforced.
Gen. Charles Miller of Franklin, Pa.,
on a very hot day in camp at Somer-
set ordered the adjutant to see that
all the men maintained a soldierly
bearing. “See that they wear their
blouses buttoned,” he said. The
guard war, duly notified of the order.
About 10 p. m. Gen. Miller had occa-
sion to go through the lines, and ho
sauntered along with his coat open.
"Halt!” said the guard. When the as-
tonished officer obeyed, the sentry
said with a poorly concealed grin:
"Button up your blouse, general."
And ho did it.—Pittsburg Dispatch.
apple tree of fine quality but how to
develop our work and turn the apple
tree into a productive and profitable
tree was another question.
It needed sunshine and the kind of
sunshine that is spread by the news-
papers and magazines. It is an abso-
lute certainty that without the pub-
licity thus given—In other words, the
sunshine—tho business never would
havo developed.
You have seen to-day factory build-
ings—thlrteon or fourteen In number
_covering many acres of ground, em-
ploying hundreds of workpeople, pro-
ducing food and drink in an aggregate
of four million packages per month,
which goes to every civilized country
on the globe, and yet tho entire enter-
prise Is less than 9 years old. We
have found it necessary. Inasmuch as
the tree has grown and the apples ma-
tured by hard work and sunshine, to
continue the work and the sunshine
day in and day out, month in and
month out. the sunshine appropriation
amounting to approximately a million
dollars a year for advertising, for ex-
perience teaches that If you mature
the tree under strong sunshine, and
bring it up to a thrifty and healthful
state where it produces profitable ap-
ples, you can not withdraw that sun-
shine else the tree will gradually die.
it will be found to possess exceptional
merit.
In ancient days newspaper publish-
ers considered an advertisement an
evil but a necessary evil, and that It
should be hidden away as carefully
as possible, so that no one would dis-
cover that the paper was trying to
make a little money by inserting pub-
lic announcements. A paper run that
way to-day would fall.
Tho most successful exponents ol
tho new plan of doing business with
Ink and paper are using every possl.
ble means to mako tho announcements
attractivo and sought after by th«
readers.
It is safe to say that thousands ol
women read the newspaper—not the
telegraphic page, but the pages con-
taining announcements of bargains In
stockings, skirts, hats, glsves, pianos,
furniture, food for the table, etc.
You have been Invited to visit Bat-
tle Creek for the purpose of viewing
one of tho most unique advertising
buildings In the world, also to look
over a large business built up, sus-
tained, nourished and kept active by
sunshine, and, at tho same time, have
an opportunity to see one of tho most
thrifty, active and prosperous towns
of its size in the world, built up large
ly by the same kind of sunshine.
Dog Swam Lona
Dogs vary greatly
Distance.
In ability as
Kill Weeds With Poison. ___
Weeds grow so rankly along the j gWjmnters. The water spaniel, re-
Guayaquil & Quito railroad, at the ; trlevcri mastiff and St. Bernard excel
foot of the Andes, in sixty-two miles j a„ othera A retriever known to the
of jungle, that watering tanks filled I writer onCe followed a canoe for nine
with a strong solution of arsenic and J miles Tho dog Was much exhausted,
nitre have to be sent along the track j boweveri when drawn into the boat,
in tho rainy season
no time the plains wero dull and still
And ad umrod. t ^ d,gtant hm
every ten days
to spray and so kill tho vegetation on
each side of the track._
Japanese Alpine Club.
The Japanese Alpine club, which is
the oldest in the world, is also a re-
ligious society, and the ascents accom-
plished by its members are preluded
by a prayer which runs: "May our
hearts be pure, and may tho weather
on tho honorable peak be fine."
Costly Staircase at Glasgow.
The famous marble staircase of the
Glasgow municipal buildings cost
*150,000.____
Sailors’ Baggy Trousers.
Sailors do not wear baggy trousers
for custom's sake. They are “built
wide so that Jack can turn them up
above the knees when necessity de-
mands, which Is often.
But one man
Blazed, pathways
the lonely milDg,
through the forest
i. />U
Mon won'thhls wny In eager flics;
With ehnln and
They marked the place for mart and mill
Upon the soil.
Tho man who is content to rest
Soi iu,1 from harms.
In font' Of toil's tremendous tost
Or war's alarms.
Who lings, untemptod. ids safe hearth.
C.ivos little proof of strength or worth;
Ills pride is strangled in its birth
And sluggard charms
Have haired tho talc of noble quest
From off Ills arms.
—W. lx N. In Chicago Tribune.
, Carried Free as a Curiosity.
Down in the Old Dominion the peo-
ple used to set much store by their
pedigree. An anecdote is told of the
captain of a steamer plying at a
ferry from Maryland to Virginia, who,
being asked by a needy Virginian to
give him a free passago across, in-
quired If the applicant belonged to
one of the F. F. V. “No,” answered
the man, "I can’t exactly say that;
rather to one of the second families.”
"Jump on board,” said the captain, ‘T
never met one of your sort before.’
Railroad Building in Africa.
At the half-yearly meeting of the
Rhodesia railways it was stated that
321 miles of lino had been opened
for traffic. The trunk lines south of
Zambesi wero thus finished, and the
Gwato, Selukwe and Matoppo
branches had nlso been completed.
The total railway system open for
traffic was now 1,309 miles. The
bridge over the Victoria falls was be-
ing erected, tho construction of the
extension north of the river had be-
gun and the permanent way material
was being carried across by a cable-
way concurrently with tho building of
tbe bridge.—London Engineer.
Greatest Living Botanist.
Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, tho
greatest living botanist, has just pass-
ed his eighty-seventh birthday. Ho
was the iifelong friend of Huxley.
Some of his most interesting work
has been tbe result of his studies In
Utah. Colorado, Califctfkia and the
Rockies.
One on the Humorist.
“I called on a charming young wid-
ow not long ago,” said Simeon Ford,
"and was confronted by a strong odor
of disinfectants.
’• 'What Is it?’ I asked. 'Smallpoy
or diphtheria? *
’Neither,’ she answered lightly.
Then: “ ‘I take the precaution to dis-
infect every little while,’ she ex-
plained, ‘for fear I might catch an-
other husband.’ ”
Sweet Sixteen.
Every girl at a certain time In her
life regards herself as some Wild
Caged Thing, pacing a limited space
between dish washing and sewing, try-
ing to get out.—Atchison Globe.
Wanted Congenial Piece.
Tbe London Times publishes the fol-
lowing remarkable advertisement: A
woman, 37, who loves the truth and
hates oppressors, seeks situation as
general servant with bachelor clergy-
man. Address," etc.____
Insist on Getting It.
Some grocers say they
Defiance Starch because they have »
stock in hand of 12 or. brands, which
they know cannot be sold to i‘ ™a o
mer who has once used the 16 oz-
pltg. Defiance Starch for same money.
Giraffe a Wary Animal.
Giraffes are tho most difficult of all
animals to take by surprise.
Worst of the Bunch.
Traveler—Say, don’t yuu gut tireo
answerieg so many fool questions.
Ticket Agent—Sure thing.
Traveler—Which tire you most?
Ticket Agent—Thosu you just
asked.
Seen Everywhere.
Ostend (in museum)—"Pa. why m,
they always have ‘iron jawed’ men it
the museum, but no women?"
Ta—"Because Iron-jawed wemen aiv
no rarity."
Auburn Hair in Disfavor.
In the hope of exterminating or les-
sening what they considered a curse,
the Egyptians, in the time of the
Ptolemies, used to burn a red-liairet.
maiden once a year, so violently op-
posed were they to hair of a br.ght
hue. _____
His Geographical Wound.
An exchange, in noting the acc^
dental wounding of a man said:
was shot In the east end.
paper had stated which direction t
man was going when he received
shot it would be an easy matter to
locate the wound.—Lewlstown (P >
Free Press.____
Pulling a Hair is Mean, Too.
We take some credit for having ac-
quired wisdom with years, because
wo no longer drop a caterpillar down
a girl's back just to hear her scream,
—Atchison Globe. _______
Urban Population Grows.
Half a century ago little more than
one-halt of the population of England
lived in towns. To-day the rural pop-
ulatlon is only one-fifth of the whole.
Snakes Have No Eyelids.
Snakes’ eyes are never closed.
Sleeping or waking, alivo or dead,
they are always wide open. This is
because they have no eyelids.
Camphor Gum Good Barometer.
A piece of camphor gum Is a very
good indicator of what the weather Is
going to be. If when tho camphor is
exposed to the air the gum remains
dry, the weather will he fresh and
dry, but if the gum absorbs the mois-
ture, and seems damp, it is a sign of
rain.
Alcohol in Various Plants.
Powerful alcoholic beverages can !
be distilled from bananas, tho milk of j
cocoanut, rice and peas.
Noiseless Gun a Success.
A noiseless electromagnetic gun
has been successfully tested In Nor-
way. ,
Bananas Are Nutritious.
The banana produces to the ncre
forty-four times more food than the
potato and 130 times more than wheat
Written by a Misguided Bachelor?
The exacting requirements of the
unnecessary ar6 what make life a bur-
I 4ea.—Puck.
Dog Commits Suicide.
W. H. Boyer, a Portland musician,
says his dog, a fine spaniel, committed
suicide because he was shut up in the
kitchen instead of being taken out as
usual for a walk. At any rate, when
Mr. Boyer returned, there lay “Brown
Boy" dead, with his noso against an
open gas jet In the kitchen stove.
There is Ittue warmth in tho tnB'
ten handed to the rejected lover.
Her Way of Putting 1L
Mrs. New Coin (who has been ah
sorbing some of the vocabulary of
her newly made acquaintances)—!
have spent such a tiresome day over
the perusal of wall paper for the
cook's boudoir.
to be the wife of Paul Uevhardt."
. | ouvjt'u mroiigti sprinkling with a »»,lu- I
I tlon of copperas (sulphate of iron).
• — . ,... vM|niM ,,,11*11 |I,| >•
tlon of coffee In this country has In-
creased from S.31 to 10.71) pounds.
stou to grave tbe name of unothcr on
her tablets.
I mon roads. And it Is especially grat-
ifying to find railroad men working
I enthusiastically und devoting their
said Hobson. 'Pin nearly frozen.’"
Reporters on Paris newspapers earn
from $30 to $80 a mouth.
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French, Mrs. W. H. Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 183, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 29, 1904, newspaper, October 29, 1904; Chandler, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc911093/m1/2/: accessed April 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.