The El Reno News. (El Reno, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 28, 1901 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: El Reno American and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THEEL RENO NEWS
GUNN 4 111 SGROVU, Public * ••
It is aai(l that oil has been struck i
MadlU. I. T., at a depth of so feet.
An artesian well at Vlnita has pres-
sure sufficient to raise water 55 feet.
There was cotton picking being done
I nbout Sulphur, I T.. as late as March.
1------- - - 1 —■— ------r~~ The < reek council is called to meet
OKLAHOMA and INDIAN TRKUtTOfiX :it Okmulgee on May • to consider the
new treaty.
EL RENO,
O. T
Blackwell is suffering from an epi-
demic of mumps.
Peach trees are in bloom in many
places in Oklahoma.
The Rock Island is securing right of
way south of Kuid.
The Farmers aud Merchants bank at
< leo has taken a charter.
Amos A. Ewing has been re-corami -
sioned as territorial oil inspector.
(iarlK’r'n list of business buildings
and good residences is growing rapidly.
The students at the Northwestern
normal at Alva, get Iniard for $.‘.‘>0 >
week.
Several business blocks anil a large
numWr of residences are l wing built at
Glencoe.
A gang of horsethieves took a num-
ber of animals from near a church at
Glencoe.
Twenty-one national banks have
}tevn established in Oklahoma in the
past year.
Farmers are taking in their stock
from the wheat fields. The wheat is
looking tine.
I ire at Oklahoma City'destroyed the
Davis house, the Eagle house and a
smaller building.
“Shall we bore a hole** will be voted t!l^-
upon in several Oklahoma cities at the
spring elections.
Current expectation extends the Sa-
pulpa extension of the 1 risco towards
Fort Smith.
Fourteen carloads of machinery have
been unloaded at Madill, I. T., for the
erection of a cotton mill.
Grand river is the clearest in the
country and Fort Gibson people are
filling their cisterns with it.
Win. A. Sullivan, of Oklahoma has
resigned a $70,000 clerkship in the In-
dian department at Washington.
Suits against Kingfisher county for
damages from the falling of the new
bridge will be defended upon the
ground that the county had not ac-
cepted the bridge.
Ponca C ity merchants will quit buy-
ing goods at Kansas Pity unless tin*
squad of men from that city who
are canvassing for retail orders are
withdrawn from the territory,
Oracling on the Choctaw road from
Ardmore to Hartshorne goes on well.
Contractors have more than 100 teams
at work. The inen are used to the
work and every move is toward a finish.
The executive committee of the In-
dian Territory press association has
announced a program for the next
mooting w hich is to be held at Clicco-
Tlicre is lots of solid business in
:
EARNING SAM) PRICES Ith8t
RATE OF WAGES IN DIFFERENT
PARTS OF THE WORLD-
Itie l-'ntt«U Staten Ila*
Coat
than ll Did Ten Year* Ago.
Cmiom
the tints of coin.
for Variation, to tlie Cold oj
French Miniate.
American product* are good
enough for Americans to eat, drink,
smoke, weal and use. and with coffee
possibilities In Porto Rico and tea pos- > „ nlaeed
alMIttlas m South Carolina the day is I Some time ago a f’^^tnanplaced
near a. hand when Amwica need not together a number of go d coins of
call upon any foreign country for a French.mintage of theJ** »»*«■ “{J'
Cou»peu«»tiou In in* United state* na* single article of luxury or necessity, die and end of the last c n *•
l„.r,.a.e.t . udrr Protection, wi.Uo The dinner of the Tariff I^gue at the | was much surprised tow J*»t they
«f i.iviut; Now Average* i.e** Waldorf-Astoria wm a luxurious affair.
, Had it been less luxurious it would
’ have fallen short of furnishing the
' splendid object lesson which It en-
1 forced of the unlimited possibilities of
! strict Americanism.
An examination of the general drift
uf wages and prices during the past
ten years hould prove interesting to j
the Free-Trader who is again con- |
cerned over thif income and expenses ;
of the masses. We take all the tigures
given below from the “American Ag-
riculturist Year Book” for 1901. First,
as regards the comparative wages in
different countries, the average daily
wages paid laborers in 1900 were as
follows:
Pnited States ................... $1.85
Australia .......................... 1.60
AT THE FRONT.
United State* Now LeaiU All the World
In Export Trade.
Having been so many times admon-
ished by free traders that the system
of protection was an insurmountable
obstacle to the extension of our trade
with foreign countries, it is peculiarly
interesting to note the present eom-
, mercial position of the Pnited States
Canada and provinces............ 110 as shown by the official statistics of the
Brazil and Chili...................80 | treasury department. An examination
The South Canadian river is 100 feet
wide anil from 10 to *?() feet deep for 11
I ire at Bl Ken., destroyed the Lony ^ (.n, ( of U)c „f SouUl , una_
music and jewelry store and the room- ■ and H u Kaid thnt there is to bea
in(f house above. j pleasure steamboat put in servico
From I>ecember Hi, 11)00, to February t|ierc>
ft, 11*01« deposits in Oklahoma hanks in- Allotment is progressing rapidly in
creased $943,84.. ! the Comanche country. The Indians
Acting Governor Jenkins has offered ;iri taking lands in strips II miles wide
a reward of $200 for the arrest and along Cache and the two Beaver creeks
delivery* of Ben Cravens. * and as far south as the month of Little
It is said that there has not been a Beaver,
trial in the police court at Pond Creek ( hiekasha has a stoue cottonseed
for nearly three months. mill which cost. $00,000. An opera
The Rock Island has. run 14 freight house is boilig built. I he contract is
trains each way and every day for four ^tfora >'m J001 ho‘cl; to eost
months, through Oklahomn.
.55
.40
.40
.115
.35
.25
.25
.20
.15
I of the complete figures for the calendar
65 I year 1900. the third full year of the op-
eration of the Dinpley tariff, brings
into view the tremendous fact that the
Pnited States now stands at the head
of the world’s exporting nations. The
figures for the calendar year 1900,when
compared with those of other nations,
show* that our exports of domestic
products are greater than those of any
other country. The total exports of
domestic merchandise from the United
States in the calendar year 1900 were
$1,453,013,659; those from the United
Kingdom, which has heretofoie led in
the rare for this distinction, were $1.-
418.348.000. and those from Germany
were $1,050,611,000.
It is especially interesting to note
the phenomenal progress made as an
per cent. The report j rxp0rting nation by the United States
every industry wages | jn lhp pa&f quarter of a century of al-
Grcat Britain and Ireland.,
France and Central Europe
German Empire ...........
Austro-Hungary ...........
Asia Minor ...............
Spain and Portugal.........
Turkey in Europe .........
Armenia and Persia.........
Italy and Malta............
Morocco and Tunis........
Chinese Empire............
Japanese Empire ..........
In April, 1900. there was compiled
for the information of the house of
representatives from reports fur-
nished by labor unions, a tabulated
statement showing the increase in
wages by percentages, in 59 trades,
from 1896 to 1S99. These Increases run
from 3 to 50 per cent, averaging some-
what over 20
shows that in
were increased between 1896 and 1899, j most uninterrupted protection. In 1875
while in 20 they were increased in each ! country stood fourth on the list
of the three years, 1897. 1898. 1899. j of oxporti„g nations. At that time the
and in 35 they were increased in (iorues(ic exports of the United States
both of the two years. 1898 and 1899. j were 5497,263.737; those of Germany,
The report proves an unquestionably j 5(507.096.000; those of France. $747,489.-
substantial increase in all wages from 00(l an(j ti^ose of the United Kingdom
the reductions made necessary during | 510x7,497.000. Today the United
the Free-Trade period from 1894 to . spates stands at the head of the list.
1897. the United Kingdom second, Germany
Now', as to tlie comparison of pres- thir(1 an(i prance fourth, with the Ag-
ent wages with the last Protection ureB afi follows: United States, $1,453,-
period. 1890-2. Using 100 as a basis the . 0l3 c59; r,lile(i Kingdom. $1,418,348.-
rate is as follows: 1891, 100.00; 1892.
differed in color. He set about finding
out the reasons for this difference and
the results of his investigations have
been published lu La Nature. There
is a paleness about the yellow of the
10 and 20 franc pieces, which bear the
effigies of Napoleon I. and Louis
XVI11. that is nut observed in the gold
pieces of later mintage. One admirer
of these coius speaks of their color
as a “beautiful paleness” and ex-
presses regret that it is lacking in
later coins. The explanation of it is
very simple. The alloy that entered
into the French gold coins of those
days contained as much silver as cop-
per and it was the silver that gave the
coins their interesting paleness. Tho
coins of the era of Napoleon III. wero
more golden in hue. The silver had
been taken out of the alloy. The gold
coins of today have a still warmer and
deeper tinge of yellow’. This is be-
cause the Paris mint, as well as that
in London, melts the gold and copper
alloy in hermetically sealed boxes,
which prevents the copper from being
somewhat bleached, as it always is
when it is attacked by hot air, so the
present coins have the full warmness
of tint that a copper alloy can give. If
the coins of today are not so handsome
in the opinion of amateur collectors,
as those issued by the first Napoleon,
they are superior to those of either of
the Napoleons in the fact that it costs
less to make them. The double opera-
tion of the oxidation of the copper and
cleaning it off the surface of the coin
with acids is no longer employed, and
the large elimination of copper from
the surface of the coins, formerly prac-
ticed, made them less resistant under
wear anil tear than are the coins now
in circulation.
The commercial agent of the Rock
Island announces that a mill site will
soon be staked out at Garber.
The offerings for the Kiev pastufw
lands amounted to $20,000 against $0,-
000 for the same acreage in the past.
Emmett ('ox’s lug barn at Fort Sill
burned with 5 horses, n buggy, a stage
coach ana 2,000 cans of canned goods.
J. M. Richards, of Guthrie, has taken
no food except the juice of an orange
daily, since .Ian. 9. lie is near his end.
The Orient Land and Townsite com-
pany has applied for a charter. Its
capital stock is to be $000,000. divided
into 100 shares.
Hour young men were ordained
priests and one u sub-deacon in the
Catholic church at the Auadarko In-
dian agency on March 22.
“Tenderfeet” are giving up their
good money to the grafters under the
promise of being put on a good claim.
The grafters have no claim but they
are slick talkers all right.
The two great brewing companies
which do a wholesale business in Guth-
rie have been brought into court. Their
representatives have been arrested for
wholesaleing liquors without a license.
.Mayor Hensley, of Ml Reno, says he
has $10,000 iu the city treasury that
was not there when he took hold of
the city affairs two years ago. lie lias
also a new brick city jail that did not
cost the people a cent, six miles of side-
walk and a line sewer system.
A little girl of the "Patterson family,
who live, between Watonga and Geary,
was burned to death while her mother
was out of the house for a few minutes.
Matches, it is supposed, was the cause.
A new graft being somewhat success-
fully worked is that where a man
stops at 11 farm and sells his team and
$2(1,000. 'Flie city has nn electric light
plant ami two ice plants.
Charles Thomas, formerly of Ed-
wards county, Kansas, was arrested,
charged with being of the party who
killed Albert Bateman. Farmers
(locked into Perry in large numbers
and lynching talk was heard.
Louis Cohen, of Clareniore, I. T.. has
paid a line of $1,000 at Muskogee for
selling liquors; the largest of the kind
ever paid in Indian Territory, lie was
a wholesaler and had agencies in all
the larger towns of the northern dis-
trict,
T. \V. Triplett, ex -district clerk o!
Tahlequah district, and Albert Taylor,
ex-auditor of the Cherokee nation, have
been placed under bond at Wagoner,
charged with complicity in the Chero-
kee warrant frauds. These frauds arc
said to amount to $194,000.
The Oklahoma Sunday School work-
ers elected the following officers; Pres-
ident, Fred L. Winner, of Guthrie; vice
president. Rev. .1. S. Krehbit. of Geary:
corresponding secretary. Arthur Whar-
ton, of Perry; recording secretary, R.
G. Kinston, of Hennessey: treasurer,
II. Kincaid of Norman.
The killing of Alvin Bateman by
bandits at Red Rock lias stirred the
whole territory to a determination to
rid the country of the robbers. Bate-
man was 3S years old and had been a
favorite in business and social circles.
He was cashier in a bank for a long
time hut a month since was made man-
ager of :i lumber company.
John Maimer, of Bartlesville, planted
a patch of potatoes just after Christ-
inas and in the middle of March was
eating new potatoes as large as hens'
vgg*.
Chickasha claims a population of
4,oi)0. with good schools and churches.
Eight denominations have church
100.30; 1899, 101.54; 1900, 103.43.
Thus, three facts are established:
We are getting the highest wages in
the world; we are not only getting
much better wages than from 1894
to 1897. but even higher wages than
from 1890 to 1892. And it might he
added that more people are getting
these wages than ever before in
history of our country.
000: Germany. $1,050,611,000; France,
$787,060,000. All of the figures, it
should lie remembered, relate to the
exports of domestic products. Thus in
the quarter century the United States
has increased her exports from $497.-
263.737 to $1,453.013.659, or 192 per
cent; Germany, from $607,096,000 to
$1,050,611,000. or 73 per cent; the
^ie j United Kingdom, from $1,087,497,000 to
$1.418.348,000, or 34 per cent, and
But. we are told, the poor farmers 1 Franr0 from 5747.489.000 to $787,060,-
and the poor mechanic have to pay j or 5 per cent lt must astonish
free traders the world over to find that
buy.
for
1899.
85.9
so much more for what they
Well, here are the figures given
the prices of commodities in January,
1890, and July, 1899:
Commodities. 1S90.
Food .....................
Clothing ................. 101.9
Fuel and lighting......... 09
Metals and implements... 106.8
Lumber and building ma-
terial .................. 104.1
Drugs and chemicals.;... 104.5 95.9
House furnishing goods... 100.0 95.7
Miscellaneous ............ 94.1 95.«
AH ....................... 102 92.9
With one exception everything is
cheaper, while the whole cost of living
is about 10 per cent lo.-s than ten ^77
years ago. This is an old time Pro- | JW8....
tection argument exemplified and sus-
tained; More people at work; more | ism.. ..
money for work; more purchases for jgj;;;;
money. Protection wants no better de- p.su.
fense; Protectionists want ao better ar- ’g®
gument.
the greatest strides in foreign com-
merce have been made by the country
in which, more than in any other
country in the world, the protection
principle has been strenuously, per-
89 8 ' slRtentl-v’ scientifically and practically
' enforced.
I The following table, compiled from
9P 9 1 official reports, shows the exports of
domestic merchandise from the United
States, the United Kingdom and Ger-
many in oath calendar year from 1675
to 1900:
United United
States. Kingdom. Germany.
$497,263,737 Jl.OvT 197.000 *607.096.000
ciii cv-k iln iMVi
Y« nr.
wagon. After the man has had plenty buildings, with two more planned for.
of time to change climate another man
comes along, enquires for his stolen
property and gives an exact description
of it. Of course he gets the outfit and
the farmer gets left.
Daniel Annis landed in Kingfisher
county eight \cars ago with three
horses and two cows. 11c now has 90
acres iu cultivation, sixty in pasture,
good buildings and an abundance of j
fruit. Last year he raised 2.000 bush-
< Ik of wheat.
Delegate Flynn has named Earl Kil- :
man, of Guthrie, us cadet at the naval j
academy with <\ X. < ad* . of Shawnee, '
as alternate. »
Francis M. Htetyer. of
again industrial teacher at
Watvr Indian school, Newkirk.
Peter Beelccr. of Pond (’reck has
been again appointed as secretary of
the livestock hoard.
Being only three miles from the new
country to be opened there are. now
many in camp who arc not counted
above, and there, will he thousands
more of them.
Muskogee has been declared a city
of the second class, and officers are tc
be chosen and the city organized iutc
wards.
The head chiefs of the Usages have
arranged with the Uheyenues and
Arapahocs to hold a great- council at
Buffalo Springs, south of Fort Sill on
June They expect 5,000 Indians to
be present, from tribes mimed aud
and from Apaches, Uotnaimhes, * hoc-
El Bcno, is , taws, Uhiekusuws Seminoles and other
the Little : tribes. The Sioux of Nebraska are in-
vited.
.1. s. Shelburne, of Makita; Rankin
A Johnson, of Billings; Martin A, Wil-
son, of Enid; were shippers of stock,
El Her,o feels confident of securing some cattle but mostly hogs, to the
the selection of that place for the rc- Wlcliit* »toekyard» which soli! March
building of the Sacred Heart mission. I 13.
The Mir.eo Minstrel says that the
story of a great Indian council at Buf-
falo Springs is a great big He. with no
possibility of sjieh a meeting.
A painter at Pond Creek fell from a
scaffold and struck the ground on his
a tiJaim in the new country: that bar- head aud shoulders. He was badly
i jarred and internal injuries are feared.
The department of justice lias named
lioonevillc. Mo., as a place to send
juvenile prisoners of Oklahoma for con-
finement
If a man owns 160 acres of land any-
where there is no chance of his getting
AMERICANISM.
PoRSibUitlM li» That Direction Sus«4>*te<t
by the Tariff league Banquet.
Rapidly increasing popularity seem
to attend the American idea so effect-
ively demonstrated and exemplified by
The American Protective Tariff League
at its banquet of Feb. 16. The Phila- ;
delpbia Item thinks the idea can and
should be systematically carried fur- ;
ther. It says:
“The announcement that Mrs. Mc-
Kinley has decided upon an American
gown for the inauguration ball will
make the majority of American people
feel even more kindly toward the first
lady of the land. If Americans would
more generally stick io fabrics of home
manufacture the country generally
would be protected. But unfortunately i
there are many who, while firm for |
the protection theory, do not carry out i
that view in practice”
Still further in the same direction |
the New’ York Mail and Express is
prepared to go. Distinctly commend-
able it pronounces the example set in
preparing the bill of fare at the Tariff
league banquet. Says the Mail and ;
Express:
‘‘It was a commendable example set
by those who made out the bills of fare
for the American League dinner the
other night to name all the good things j
in plain United States. When we stop j
to think how small is our present day j
devotion to France, and how generally
our luxuries for the table are products j
of American land and water, it seems :
rather old-fashioned and hist century- j
fled to go on calling oysters “huitres,”
and to ask for a “roti.” There is still
some excuse for our David Hamms |
when they go forth to see the sights
18S6......
1887......
lSW......
1hM»......
1890 ......
1891 ......
1892 ......
18S3......
1S94......
1896......
1896......
Ib'j7......
\m......
1899 ......
1900 ......
57.».73fi.S04
607.666.496
728,286,821
754.656,766
875.564,076
S14.162.961
749,911,809
777.523,718
733.768,764
(573.593,506
IW9.519.430
703,319.692
071*597.477
814,1‘>4,864
S43.999.603
967.338.651
923.237,315
854.729.451
807.312.116
807.742,415
986,830,080
1.079.834.296
1.233,564,828
1,:i7i3.466,00l)
1,153.013,659
976.410.000
967.913.000
938.600.000
932.090.000
1,086.621.000
1.138.878.000
1.175.099.000
1.166.982.000
1.134.016.000
1.037.124.000
1.036.226.000
1.079 9I4.«)00
1.141.. ".65.000
1.211.442.000
1,282.4 <4,000
1,20!. 169.000
1.106.747.000
1.00. 162.000
1.061.193.000
1.101.452.000
1.168.671.000
1.139.882.000
619.919.000
672.161.000
702.613.000
675.397.000
741.202.0011
724.379.000
776.228.000
796.208.000 I
779.832.000
695.892.000
726.471.IH10
762.897.000
780.076.000
770.537.000
809.810.000
772.679.000
715.806.000 '
733.361.000 ,
720,607,00( ■
X07.32S.000 ;
867.746.000 :
884.186.000 !
1 ' J5.042.00o 894,063.000
I, 2s. :*71,039 1,001.278.000
J, 41S,::48,000 1.050.611,000
THE SCULPTOR AND HIS WORK
rrlghtniptl by Seniltlve riHiit*.
In his “On the Frontier" Mr. Cam-
pion says that while he was cross-
ing the Isthmus of Panama some years
ago the conductor obligingly stopped
the train for him to gather some beau-
tiful crimson flowers on the roadside.
"I refused offers of assistance and
went alone to pluck the flowers. After
gathering a handful I noticed a large
bed of plants, knee high, and of deli-
cate form and of beautiful green shade.
I walked to them, broke off a fine
spray and placed it with the flowers.
To my amazement 1 saw that I had
gathered a withered, shriveled, brown-
ish weed. I threw it away, carefully
selected a large, bright green plant
and plucked it. Again I had in my
hand a hunch of withered leaves, it
flashed through my mind that a sud
den attack of Panama fever, which
was very prevalent and much talked
of, had struck me delirious. I went
'off my head' from fright. In a panic
I threw the flowers down, ami was
about to run to the train. I looked
around; nothing seemed strange. I
felt my pulse—all right. I was in a
perspiration, but the heat would have
made a lizard perspire. Then I no-
ticed that, the plants where I stood
seemed shrunken and wilted. Care-
fully I put my finger on the fresh
branch. Instantly the leaves shrunk
and began to change color. I had been
frightened by sensitive plants."
School Hell Klngn hy Electricity.
Near Itoanokc, 11 L. pear the center
of the state, there is a school teacher
whose ingenuity might not please all
of his pupils—that is, the indolent
ones. E. N. Wheelwright teaches a
district school, and in a district school,
you know—or perhaps some city chil-
dren do not know—the teacher has to
ring the bell and build the fire and
sweep the floor, unless he pays some
ambitious boy to do it for him. But
this teacher does not have to hire a
hoy to riug the bell, nor does he ring
it himself, yet, no matter what he may
be doing at 9 o'clock in the morning,
the bell sets up a clatter that no boy
or girl can escape. Mr. Wheelwright
has arranged a clock which at the
proper hour sets in motion an electric
apparatus that puts the bell to ringing.
The boys of that district have no longer
any hope that the teacher will be so
engrosed iu some task that he will for-
get to call school. Tho bell rings also
at 10:45 a. m., 1 p. m., 2:30 p. m. and
at 4 o'clock.
Trencher Travels 50,000 Mil...
Rev. J. J. C'regsman. pastor of the
Evangelical Lutheran church at Bem-
vllle. Pa., lias resigned after twenty-
four years’ service. He preach'd at
Bernvllle every Sunday morning anc
then drove to Kutztown. twenty-live
miles away, where he held eveninr
services. Fair weather or foul, ho mail*
the journey, besides one or two o lu^.
every week, traveling altogether dot-
ing his pastorate something over o0,-
000 miles.
Stimulants seldom hurt a man -if he
leaves them alone.
TO CORK A COT.O IN ONE HAY.
Take Laxative Hkomo QUimneTaiu i t-. \’i
uruioiisl- refund llie money if It fulls u* cun.
K. W. drove s slanuture is on Iho
The dog in the manger i-n t always
the one with the mange.
Red Cross Ball Blue makes chilis
whiter than snow. Large package 5o.
Toasts arc often drunk yet they are
never intoxicated.
Am You L’llng Allen*!* Foot Kate?
It is the only cure for Swollen.
Smarting. Burning, Sweating
Uorns and Bunions. Ask lor ABctTs
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaknn into
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad-*
dress, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.v
The professional shoplifter isn’t tie
essarily a strong person.
Now that tho Winter season is part,
it is well to cleanse the system and
purify the blood with Garfield 'Tea -
an He rb Medicine good for all.
if you would mend your wavs you
must take a stitch in time.
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Two Big Pains
sef'm lo fie the heritage of the
human family everywhere, viz.
Rheumatism
and
Neuralgia
but there is cut sure and
prompt cure for both, vis:
St. Jacobs Oil
♦
♦
t
4
-♦
♦"
*
♦
4«
•*
♦ .
♦-
*
SEAFARING
r_MEN
KNOW THE VALUE OF
OILED CLOTHING
IT WILL
TjyKEEP YOU DRY
IN THE
n WETTEST WEATHER
Tv L00 It fOR ASOVt TPADL Mr,
^ ON 5ALC EVERYWHERE
— - -t CATALOGUES FREE
5H0WING FULL lFNE OP GARMENTS AND NATO.
A J.TOWER CO..B05T0N.MA55. .
la Thi* :*fi In Oltwrs.
About ten years ago the free traders
declared that tin plate could not be
made in the United States In quality
and price comparable with British
made tin plate. The quality was long
ugo acknowledged to be equal to the
best in the world, and now the English
SEND HO MONEY
If you IIV9 Witkir
tr.’i i iiIph of Miuru
m>oli* iif f ar tk«
n end j-l.ODl.
rut tlii. ud.
O il. an.l Bond
w
oa
O A T 15
If RO ATX’ART
MXIJKU by
fr«'i»rbt O.O. D.
•nbjor.t to ox-
iuatioa. Y<
will uforaira HOC for euch Wt) miles. UT'It HI’.
Sft.75 P’JIC’K i« fiaaod on the ar.tu.il cost •>! "Muiti
f«r*-jre, is |.»w tlufn dealrri c.tn Iniy In <mi-'** id lot*.
TL; i is inn Hiuhwt Grado End Crate iiro. i'vnist Keeriar
v.ade. Mil io for us under contrr-ot l»v ihe best seder
mal-er in Amfti ica. Mr-du from the very heat rnuttnal
that money enu buy; Will now more ctver.l) / : I inr»*
►. .* irfnetorily thp.r nny other T»*i-der uiude. Will sew
MOacreeof wheati»erdiiv,other•-I'cht a: prot'ortifnuiu
rntee. Vory Liitoet .Model for 1901. Km bodies every
improvement «»\-«ry pood point of e»ery other hro«d-
b«r broad
Writo fo
lufmit. Feeding.
A very important thing is the way
the milk goes into the child’s stomach.
The bottles are so constructed that the
milk goes down too fast. Every child
who sucks at the breast has to work
for what it gets. One of the great
troubles in artificial feeding Is, the
milk is cascaded into the stomach and
immediately cascaded back again. The
most of the sick babies are made so by
some prepared stuff being cascaded
into their stomachs in enormous quan-
tities. Quantity is a great element iu
these disorders, and I have known too
much food to make babies sick, even
where the food was fresh milk. I gen-
erally tell the mothers to put a piece
of pure, clean sponge into the nipple,
so that the child must work with its
gums and lips to draw the milk, thus
obviate the too rapid flow.
Misultation true*. Ftvare;i
etlicines lurnishutl. ‘A
• c ----- “
400 LnA^l5;
if they ask for the "table de holy" and , Trade Review warns Welsh tin plate
the “maynoo,” but it is really much
better taste for Americans who give
dinners to call Carolina shad, canvas-
back duck and California oranges hy
their own American names instead of
French travesties."
“American Products for American
Consumers" is a good motto. Already
it has been shown bevond question
manufacturers that they "may shortly
find American tin plate manufacturers
competing in this trade, as in others,
in Great Britain."—"Ottawa (111.) Re-
publican-Times.
An international air is one assumed
hy the man who thinks he owns the
earth.
Slar Discovered toy An demon.
The sudden blazing into view of a
star previously invisible ranks among
the very rarest of astronomical events.
Only fourteen times since men first
began to write down records of the
skies lias such an occurrence been
chronicled; and but once before have
astronomers foimr a "temporary" star
rivaling in splendor Anderson's re-
cent discovery in the constellation Per-
seus.
amiiintiim. Yoa oon ezaatue i<L »' your do
ret. i.nd if found perfectly n'.tiXactor!r. muctij r
represented, end t he equal of uedan that otherm -. i
rinCihitt th** nrioe, th«m ii rv tr» uk«h;< r */ r
t!R fiPECIAl Cr>ER PniCF. $0.10
id frcinlit chitn;9H 'or !oe- il.O'J if !>ont with ordrr.'
hoMooaor about lOd pounds bii-I tb« frulRl.t
ill nvt riuf^ 63o for f. ch Jilt) mi)cm. (Jl'R Hi’Kt lAfi
coat sand nr mode, with th’» defoci** of none. Writ*, f
URiftOPATftV
It-, tlu* new pciencetif detrctlnij nn<l
ctirinq liista '!• ii CMt'Mu. AL
;*nd MICROSCOPICAL:. >of
yijtllt' uritU’. Ht iul 4c‘hts h.r iiiR i'inU-
caw and fiottdo I rut i:u*. Jhuk iiw.
) Consultat itiii fri’o. Fecareii-^'iWifiJe.
*1 d n-ss
M. O
•ibunt. l‘«.
*
AT GfiC‘i ^
with rig tu hoII our lh i’.ti’y Mixuirr: ntralt'KV
salary $15.00 per wee!: uutl exix'nses; ly^pr's
t -. wet lily . i Address .. It1
icl:
i :i:kklvA Met;. <
l.v pay
:o.. Do
Add re:
•pi. 1*. Bast St. i.
FREE ^
* FoIKPI.i* ft Treat....... of Dr. O.
Phel| Rro« n't Creat 1 | t
Flt4.Epil.!p«v and til NrnuU'iTM' . A
O. I'llEI.PH BROWS, t»* Kroa«lway, \owburpi, W.I.
PENSION
lUCKFOUD, Washington, !>. t\. Uf y,
will receive quick implies B.MhN.H.Vol*
^latr-jith rori • Pro^rcui.nz Ciaims &incc 187 8
Your Fortune; Fntute t i.*im- -
lime mid Ih'p afTu r< f<»rrto d. only #ig, mid >"iir
iilrtlidai**. by *•<
Im»hi nutpohiircr llvliiv.
i. r.IngbiunptiG^S. V.
Prof. ftUAIMIH..
SJZEB&SE
mm
Hiclt!
curuj fiiiOikram_______„ .
Bos*. Cough Bjrup. Tastes Good. Lro |
Bold bTdniyglrtB.
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Gunn, L. J. & Musgrove, Clyde. The El Reno News. (El Reno, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 5, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 28, 1901, newspaper, March 28, 1901; El Reno, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc912506/m1/2/?q=del+city: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.