The Daily Times-Journal. (Oklahoma City, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 227, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 14, 1896 Page: 2 of 8
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THE TIMES JOURNAL,.
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show-
Bi Tmra Join*al PrnusHixa Oo.
OKLAHOMA CITY" O.T.
INDIAN '11. K1S I rOllff
j The Kav count)
up with only seven divor* e *tsoH.
! Oklanoma is coming ri^ht to the
; front. County warrants on Oklahoma
J«ounty are now worth loo oenU ->n the
dollar.
i In Wood wan! county .Tamos l'rmllev
i traded a horse for an
Several Oklahoma (tapers uninjruc# i '1 ho nostrils of all birds arc located
wit it pride that, the ice wagons hat«* , on the back of the bill, aud in most
run all tv inter. I birds are so protected by hairs or feath-
A personal in a Kay county |>apcr Is j era as to bo almost invisible.
rn •« ma '4o ' L. Wile, the In f; buyer
OK1.A1IOUA AND
Spring planting- has begun in some ] sold the pun for thirty
tectums of Oklahoma. months' time.
J. C. Ward of Kildare has a ffOOse- IN stmaster oi
frerry bush with preen leaves on it. | roblwd Vwdrn- lay
Since its .settlement,thirty-four mur- ' n,as^< ^ ,m "•
Jl«rs have been committed in Payne
county.
Apparently alimony is not asked in
nue out of ten divorce cases tried In
Oklahoma.
William Sohti and Harry Shortman
have leased eighty acres of mineral
laud In Noble county.
its on
in and
three
of Mink Creek."
Tin* pram1 jury in Oklahoma county
i advised that a bcpamte place for fe-
male prisoners Ik* provided in the eoun-
ty Jail.
The Semitic uose is not. as general-
1 ' supposed, peculiar to Hebrew*."
The same type of nose ift possessed by
several nations of the Orient.
lale was
by two
The robbers nectireU
§72 of postoftiee funds, then stole two
horses aud made their escape.
Oklahoma territory marketed 80.000
bales of cotton last year. About 3,000
hales were bought iu one town alone
in Logan county, for which the buy-
ers paid to the farmers over #100,000.
Mr. Maher has been put in the in-
It is estimated that 30 per cent of
1 \\o of the greatest murder trials iu the iron manufactured by Tennessee is
oklahoma have bc<'ii tried on a change sold outside of the Southern States,
ofvrnm ml In l U fuses un It is said tobo thr favorite iron with
m^.sccuml. j pip,, plow uii : btoTvmukcrs iu th.
East and North.
, ,, • ** i sarc asylum iu ' loveland count >*. He
rhe rnrly bloominp apricot tree has ii( not brilis,;; ,m thecllin. Jt
forced .tself on the public' view in Ok- is uQt ((mt om>
lahoma county, already.
,* . . I The Dawes commission seem deter-
Dug \\artl was released from the ... . .. , .,
* . ,. ,.i i ' mined to upset "the five tribe gov-
Kansas stat«> pevutentiarv last r rid ay. '
,, ' * x- ' * (lU eminent of the Indian. J hey aver
He was sent up for bigamy from Ofcla- . .. ,
^oma that the tribal and national treaties
. .. I on the subject can have no sanction
At Lehigh, O. T . during a family j |n law an(l'moreover, that they- are i .
quart-,!..). C. Thompson shot and killed fl|p(!ct vlo,.ltLoll of , „iu.d statt.a
Joe Vanhorn. lloth an' coal miners. constltulioll.
Thompson has been arrested. <
„ .. ,, , „ ; The followii.i/brceav local was seen
Oaniiner Allen of lV>ttaw tomie -n a livt,, tkluliuimi paper a few days
-mrtjr. has been reieas.J from jail. | . A mn„ ,,)mnuin, orillnary
It was found that he was miny ^ Jf8 sense aud rustling qualities can come
away when the .Time with which he to this country with a wife and child,
was charged was committed. j a wagon and. team and three pood
A young man of Coalgate, who has milch oows. and in tivo years he w !J
sown wild oats for many years, is be- ; become independent
ginning to reap the harvest and the
yield is larger than he anticipated, and
tindft himself daily tempted with some
evil brought on by this caVelcss sowing
in c*rly life.
The present winter is one of the best
Oklahoma has had for the planting of was awakened an
Col 15. F. Conover, a (J. A. I*. miMi
and a well known citizen of Noble
county, was sandbagged Thursday
morning by two masked men who had
effected an entrance into his room for
the purpose of burglary. Conover
A Noble county paper advises its
renders not to brag on Oklahoma's!
winter climate until the month o!!
March has passed.
A boy In an OK la ho ma school read
an essay on "Should Arbor T>ay Be
Observed.'' To a man up a tree it ap
pears that it ought to be.
The district court in Oklahoma coun-
ty has just held that t he eounty can-
not collect taxes so iongns the issuance
•of the patent is prevented.
In a baker's advertisement in Nobl^
county it is annouueed that since th< j
gold excitement it has turned out thai
. lots of people have dough, who wer«
not suspected.
The Foster TIolbrook strung up in
Wichita Falls, Tex., was one of th<
men who got in trouble iu Oklahoma
county for carrying a. *n 'to the Chris-
j tian brothers.
The grand jury of Kay eounty, be-
' sides returning indictments against
i tue eounty commissioners, have now
indicted Dan B. Lawiiead, register oj
deeds, and Virgil IT. Brown, probata
| judge, charging them with malfcas- will be.
Slop. Tliirf:
Stop a eniitll malady, which is steeling
your strength, before it outruns your pow-
er to arrest it. and r« cover What it took
from you. The safest and. promptest re-
cuperator of waning vitality is Ilostetter'a
Stomach Bitter*, which renews vigor, flesh
and nerve4quietudo be- nuse it restores ac-
tivity to those fun«-lions whose inter-
rupt on interferes with general health.
U$e the iiitters for dyspepsia, material,
rheumatic and kidney complaints and bil-
iousness.
Some historians say that the mann
facture of silk was introduced into
Spain by the Moors.
In the eighteenth century silken co-
coons sold in the London market for
•one shilling per pound.
Silk goods are said to take dyes
more readily than any other fabrics.
Every time a ray of sunshine falls
wfross the pathway of the up to date
girl she loses her fur collar, throws
open her heavy wrap and wonders
w hat the spring styles in shirt waists
If a praying machino were .invented
tnany would use it if it did not take
too much tiixfe from business to wind
It ip.
Heard at a public school.—"What
Word or words are svsonymous with
falsehood?" Chorus of Scholars—"Cir-
cus posters!''—Golden Days.
"Did your uncle remember you in
his will?" "Yes, dear old fellow! lie
left me his best wishes in a special
codicil."—Harper's Bazar.
All that is good iu art is the' expres-
sion of one soul talking to another,
and is precious according to the great-
ness of the sou! that utters it.—Ras-
kin.
It is no sure sign that the west is a
polished country because so many
people scour the plains.
A four-year-old child aptly described
imagination as looking at thinga you
cannot see.—Texas Siftings.
"Is Bookman a fashionable tailor?"
"Yes; he gives six months credit."—
Puck.
Sprlsig }
Medicine
Tli® rcTlrlnir poxvorn of Parker's flin^er
Tonic render it indlspunsal-lein every home.
Stomach troublca, colds auJ every form of dUtresa
yield to'lt.
Among the 1,003 persons making up
the population of Alfred, Me., are 24
between the ages of 80 and 90 years.
Get niiKfercorna and «ue It
; If you wrnnt to realize the comfort of being without
; coma. It t«kea them out perf. ctly. 13c. ut druggist#.
trees, and many of the people all over
the country are taking advantage ot it
and are planting orchards and shade
trees in a way that will improve and | Rreinlfn. wasby the grand
more to beautify the country than any-, jurv> of ,;nr|icM (.0„nty, ior failing to
thing they oonld do. Every property -
holder should do a share in the good
work.
Adam Kleinfelder, a businessman of
New York city, has sued for divorse in
Noble county. He alleges that his wife
was cruel to him, that she hit him with
a soup bone and came near killing him
and that she broke down a door at his
father's house called Kleinfelder
. , . . . . . 1 he wonderful strides of dcvelon-
a bum and he anti his sister bad names . ... . , , .. '.
, . . . ment of Oklahoma and kr ' in ierri-
Kleinfelder savs his wife would not let
, . , . , . , tory during the past three vears, and
him enter his house and he was com . . , , . * . ...
.... . , , the rapid advancement of civilization
perled to seek a home elsewhere. .
* anil Christianity in those territories
;>klahoma is suffering from a coal'! during that time, leaves the outlaw
oil monopoly, which has grown out of no longer a resting place on this con-
the well meant,but nevertheless injur- ' tinent. Beautiful cities, rich villages
ious, efforts of the recent legislature ! and the rolling prairies of that eoun-
to protect, the people from a poor qual- try, now teeming with an industrious
ity of the article. The law makes it a class of people, occupy the places
who tinally escaped after assaulting
him, taking a pair of trousers.
U. E. Thompson, postmaster at
deposit postal funds as required by
law. He was arrested and taken into :
court. He pleaded not guilty *?nd the ;
court fixed his bond at 91,500. The
indictment charges him with embez-
zling postoffiee funds to the amount of
seven or eight hundred dollars. It is '
feared he will not be able to give j
bond.
penal offense for any dealer to sell to
any person oil that has not been inspec-
ted by the Inspector of the territory or
his deputies, and the oil handled is for-
feited to the territory. No matter
what the grade is, it must bear the
htamp of an Oklahoma inspector, who
shall, of course l e paid for his service.
Damaging prairie fires having been
raging for the past six days in the
Ponea.Otoe and Osaqgv. In Man countries
s.nd part of the Cherokee strip of
In the Osage country a white
woman was burned to death and half
a dozen houses and much stock des-
troyed. Jack Nail, a farmer
had a fine house, barn and sev-
eral thousand bushels of grain and four
horses burned. U. II. Stewart lost too
tine horses and considerable hay has
been burned and hundreds of miles of
wire fencing damaged by fire,
United States Indian Agent Wisdom
has been instructed by the commis-
sioner of Indian affairs that he will be
required to pay out to the Cherokee
old settlers, as soon as arrangements
can be made, the sum of 9520,961.10,
an amount due tuein from the pro-
ceeds of the Cherokee strip sale. This
is only Gn per cent of the amount, the
balance being held by the government
until a cont ra very can be settled Mr
Wisdom will begin payment as soon
as he can make his bond, and his bond
and the money is placed to his credit
with the assistant treasurer at St.
Louis. This is joyful news to the
merchants, as goods have been ad-
vanced for the largest portion of it.
A delegation of Mexican Kickapoo
Indians from Oklahoma had a confer-
ence with the commissioner of Indian
affairs at Washing ton, Friday. They
did not say what they wanted in an
hour's talk with the commissioner, but
they sprinkled him liberally with com-
pliments on the power and wisdom he
possessed aud the great contidencc they
had in his desire to do them justice.
It is believed,however.that they are in
Washington for the purpose of protest-
ing ngain.-it being forced to take the
allotments recently assigned to them,
and they are altogether dissatisfied
with the treaty which they signed
agreeing to take these allotments.
They have so far refuse*! to lake the
land assigned to them individually and
have not touched a dollar that is now
in the treasury to their credit, for fear
that they will be bound in some way
and thus forced to accede to the de-
mands or commands of the commis-
sioner.
An Oklahoma farmer says the ground
is wet down eight feet and in splendid
condition for spring plowing.
The killing of a man by the name of
Randall has just been received. The
light took place in Walnut township,
Payne eounty, and was the settlement
of an old feud between Randall and a
neighbor named McMinnia
A number of cattle are reported as
having died with the black leg in Ilall
county the past few weeks. Consider-
able apprehension is felt by stockmen
lest the disease should become quite
general.
where such bands were roaming at !
will only a few short year?, ago.
From responsible persons news is {
obtained of considerable excitement j
among halfbreed Osage Indians, ow- !
ing to the refusal of Agent Freeman !
to pay them annually. Last week ;
Agent Freeman was paying full-bloods, j
1,500 in number, 983 per head, but in- J
formation is that he will not pay half-
breeds. because of disobedience to or- |
ders. Half breeds charge Freeman j
with tyranny and arbitrary orders and '
also corruption. Conservative men '
fear that violence will be resorted to I
by the half breeds.
Jake McLaughlin was liaugcd by a \
mob in Potawatoinie county, Monday j
morning, for refusing to reveal the
names of the murderers of Jacob and
•John Mauntz. who were murdered
and robbed near Avoca some weeks
ago. Later information is that the
mob strung up McLaughlin three
times, and when cut down each time
he told the same story, and at that
the nu b turned him over to the jailer.
^McLaughlin was not dead, but serious-
ly injuretl, and nearly scared to death.
Josephine dice Iho-Wal-Lo, an O-
sage Indian woman, has fued her hus-
band, Joe Clie-Iho Wal-Lo, for divorce
in the Noble eounty district court.
She says he is a shiftless, idle, profli-
gate and dissipated Indian, and that
the support of the family lias lvxted
upon her and the govern men t. She
also charges him with adultery. She
has forgotten the exact date, but says j
they were united iu wedlock some J
time in July, 1804, and that he became
tired of work some time during Inst I
September.
Lawyers and all other people of 0k- j
laiiomu are anxious about the bill be-
fore Congress making uniform divorce
laws in every state and territory. Ok-
lahoma county has sent an attorney
to Washington to lobby, and other
counties will do the snme. The laws j
of Oklahoma are about the same as j
those of many other states in the lin- !
ion except as to time of residence be-j
fore suit is filed. Niuety days' resi- j
den"o is required before filing suit,
and then it takes forty-one days for
publication. If trial can then be had
at once, divorce can be obtained in j
five months. The law does not re- •
quire corroborative proof for grounds
of divorce, but all five district judge;: J
will not grant a divorce on plaintiffs' j
evidence only. Judge Hierer holds
that local counsel must malus appear
anco for defendant when made at all. i
There is a sure sign that "times will
be better in the spring." None oi tin-
newspapers lit* predicted it this year
for the first t< aie in five years.
inco iu office and drunkene
Elm clubs must be in great deman<j
• in Oklahoma. One of the leading pa*
pens adHscs its readers to plant shad{
trees nnu adds that "good elms can b<
had at 925,000 per hundred.*' Nq
doubt instances have been known
; in which a good sized water elm. prop
; erly applied, would have been worti
, the money.
Henrv Hoffman, who is alleged
have killed Albert McPeck, a farmej
living in the ludian Territory, lasl
-lune, has been arrested at Columbuj
Kan., and taken to Fort Smith, Ark.,
for trial. Ed. McKinney, an accomi
plice in the crime, is still in hiding,
but the oiHcers are confident they can
find him.
It is reported from some local it ic< j
around Purcell that There is danger oj j
damage to crops from chinch bugs thii
season, as the bugs arc already show, j
ing up in large numbers,having appar
eutly passed through the winter in j
good shape. The farmers should aj.
once take steps to kill this pest out b) j
turning infected bugs loose among
them.
Fx-Mayor F. A. Magowan, of Tren<
ton, X. J., has been granted an abso-
lute divorce from his wife. Oklahoma
county watched this case with muctj
interest on account of the prominency
of the parties interested. Mr. Mago-
wan had no opposition in court having
made a satisfactory settlement witlj
his wife, lie makes no apologies am)
accepts all the blame.
The second an nual session of thy
Oklanoma Live Stock association will
convene at Woodward on Monday,
March 1 c . All stockmen are mosj
cordially invited to attend this meet-
ing. The quarantine question, wliiclj
has been causing so much uneusinesi
among the cattlemen lately, will re.
ceive especial attention. It promise*
to be the most interesting meeting
ever held by the association, and 4
large number of influential stock
raisers will be present.
The laws of Oklahoma are verj
strict about prairie fires. If a settle!
wants to burn off grass from hi|
claim he must give all land owners ad-
joining twelve hours notice, and maky
known the exact time and place hi'
intends starting the fire. He must 1
also plow around the spot he wishes ti|
burn off, aud make a twenty-fooj I
wide fireguard. If through negligence t
and carles.suess the lire spreads ami
damages his neighbors, he i> liablq •
for all damages and can also be con-1
victed of a misdemeanor and fined u<j
less than $10 nor more than 9100 or,
imprisonment not longer than si^
months, or both fine and imprison-
ment. Parties who start campfireg
and leave without extinguishing then
are liable to the same punishment.
During the war the Union xroopis
captured 470,169 confederates and the
confederates captured 212,G08 Union-
ists.
California is shipping oranges to
Florida. This beats carrying coals to
New Castle.
England's naval program for ISM
contemplates an expenditure of $30,-
000,000.
The one prudence in life is concen-
tration; the ono evil is dissipation.-—
Emerson.
A woman working in a factory at
Coloma, Mich., for 75 cents a day, last
i week fell heir to fortune of $G3,0J0
j through the death of an unclc in Ger-
many.
The "five nations of Europe" own
; ?,310 war ships, mounting 38,209 guns
I all icady for "immediate service."
Maine's skunk farm failed.
Cmr.nrrh Can Not lie Cured
With local application? as they oaa-
not reach the seat of the disease. Ca-
tarrh Is a blood cr constitutional dis-
ease, and In order to cui * it you must
take internalremedles. Hall's Catarrh
Cure Is taken Internally, and acts di-
rectly on the blood and mucous sur-
faces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a
quack medicine. It was prescribed by
one of the best physicians in this coun-
try for years, and is a renular prescrip-
tion. It Is composed of the best tonics
known, combined with the best blood
purifiers, acting directly 011 th? mucous
surfaces. The perfect combination of
the two Ingredients Is what produces
such wonderful results in curing Ca-
tarrh. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY Ai CO., Props.,
Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists: price, 7jq,
Hall's Family Pills. L'5c.
And now«the question arises will the
I summer girl learn to dodge her laun-
I dry bill?
I Germany manufactured in 1887, 6.
j 800,000 pounds of silk.
I WfiUOli or DOCCittl ANNUALLY.
| And more could bo made by the farmers
If they would plant Salzer's big crop-
| ping seeds, because Salzer's seeds
| eprout, grow and produce, giving you
from 4 to 6 tons of hay per acre, over 200
I bu. of corn, 110 bu. of barley, 1,200 bu.
j of potatoes, 209 bu. Silver Mine Oats
j and the like per acre. These are pos-
itive facts, all of which can bs substan-
tiated by oath. • Now, the editor asks
why sow poor seeds and get poor yields,
when such big, bountiful yields are pos-
eible? Salzer's catalogue tells you all
about it.
If yon trill etit thta oat And icnd It
with 10 cents postage to the John A.
Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., you
will receive their mammoth catalogue
and 10 samples of grain and grass seeds,
worth $10 to anybody to get a start
from. Cataloguo alone, 5 cents post-
age. w.n.
"And did he say he remembered me
when I was a girl?" "No; lie said he
remembered you when he was a boy.'
—Life.
Your blood in Spring is almost certain tc
be full ol'inipuritics — the accumula-
tion of the winter months. Bad ven-
tilation of sleeping rooms, impure an
in dwellings, factories and ahops, over-
eating, heavy, improper foods, failure
of the kidneys and liver properly to do
extra work thus thrust upon them, are
the prime causes of this condition. II
Is of the utmost Importance that job
Pys*sfy
YourBloOd
Now, as when warmer weather cornea and
the tonic effect of cold bracing air if
gone, your weak, thin, impuro blood
will not furnish necessary strength.
That tired feeling, loss of appetite, will
open the way for serious disease, ruined
health, or breaking out of humors and
impurities. To make pure, rich, red
blood Hood's Barsaparilla stands un-
equalled. Thousands testify to it«
merits. Millions take it as theii
Spring Medicine. Get llood'o, becauaa
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blo«. ?urlfler. All druggets, f 1.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Before the Revolutionary War home-
made Counecticut silk sold at $1 an
ounce.
If Troubled With Sore Kyet
Jackson's Indian Eye Salve will positively
cure them. 25c at all drug stores.
The Supreme Judges of the United
States wear gowns of black silk.
For Lung aud chest diseases, Tiso'sCure
is the best medicine we have used. Mrs.
J. L. Isorthcott, Windsor, Out., Canada.
Henry VIII was the first English
King to wear a pair of siik stockings.
The Imperial Library in Paris has
. tventy books printed on white silk.
"Brown'* Bronchiai* Troches" are unri-
valled for relieving Coughs, Hoarseness
nnd all Throat Troubles. Sold only in
boxes.
In 1714 the first regular silk mill in
England was put in operation at Dcr
fay-
Mrs. Mary C. Miller, who was mar-
ried at Hrovnsvillc, Ky., recently for
the second time, is but fifteen years
Old. She married her first husband
when only thirteen.
On the 10th of November Purcell ha«J |
her great tire. In this fire thirty-si^ j
buildings were destroyed. Despite tin :
discouraging fact that this blow came j
in the midst of winter, when all build- j
ing operations are necessarily conduct- (
ed under great difficulties, twelve -- — ^ - —
build inn*, -n-.. nniv •. nnvnanl.in mnlff. > Be vsru and thut eld a:wl weU-trlwl remrdr. M
LllllUing* .Ui now -ipproiu Illll^., compie* ( Win i.ow'h .tuivj Sviar Tor Clilltlren I'M tfcinif.
tion- one-third of the total number
destroyed already replaced. Each o|
these twelve buildings is an eleganj
structure oi stone or brick and in ac-
tual cost ami value the twelve are
worth more than the entire thirty-six
that were destroyed. Nor is this all.
Contracts arc now being let for several
other buildings by parties who pre-
ferred to wait until spring before com-
mencing work. One fact like thU
speaks more loudly of the staple foun-
dation upon which Purcell is builded
than would columns of braggart boasts.
Will the shirt wnisto girl scorn
made ties?"
If the Buby In Cvtiku* Teelh,
In 1019 the first patent was taken
out in England for the manufactuie
of silk.
.«. PW Kitsaft«T tllM umj.
MarvHouscuros. Treat toe anil f-S trial lH>ttl 'frc V>
k it eases, bcud lo Or. Kiiuc^KU ArchSt..rWla.f ?•
Mr. White wants a divorce from his
wife Hope White, in Oklahoma county
because she bit him 011 the wrist.
Gold in Noble county is found in the
.same kind of rock which has proved
so rich at Cripple Creek.
Ex-Sheriff Claude Parker of Oklaho-
ma, is iu Cripple Creek down with the
common Cripple Creek complaint—
pauunonia.
Oklahoma newspapers are staking
the reputation of Cow Creek against
''ripple as a prospecting site. No
doubt Cow Creek is all right for pros-
pecting.
Nine men were arrested in Wood-
ward county for cutting and hauling
Cedar logs for a church. They were
each bound over to appear at thfl
next term of court.
A Payne county editor has invented
1 a eorti planter that can also be used as
; a churn, incubator and calf weaner. ;
: There is no limit to the genius to th*
1 Oklanoma editor.
All womankind will be as happy as
shirt waists can make them this sum
uier.
The total length 'of the common
roads in this country, good, bad and
indifferent, is estimated by General
Stone, of the Road Bureau of the
Department of Agriculture, at some-
thing over 1,300,000 miles.
Statistics shows that divorces are
increasing in number much faster
than the population of the United
States.^
The Yuma Indians bury large
quantities of watermelons in the sand
so as to have plenty of them during
the winter. They keep melons iu
that way for over six months.
▲11 moths produce some form of sllli
"Reading makcth a full man,"
writes Lord Bacon, but there are some
things nowadays that can double-dis-
count reading in that direction.
j* 11 IVI 1 *re t,ie °",3r p111" to taki
1 "lOOU S I HIS "fc'Uli ilouu'iSur<ayarlila.
ASK YCUR DEALER FOR
Ln Douglas
®3. SHOE beM[d!he
If you pay fi4 to CU for shoes, cz- gg, ^
amine tho W. I.. Douglas Shoe, and ^3
seo what a good shoo you can bu y for ^ a
OVER 100 STYLES AND WIDTHS,
CONGRESS, BUTTON,
nn t LACE, in ado in all
kiiirip of the bolt srlccte'l
leather by skilled work-
men. Wo
111.ike unci
Bt*ll II!oro
S3 Shoes
than any
o t li o r
manufacturer in the world.
None genuine unless nanw and
price stamped on tho bottom.
Ask your dealer for cur H.l,
84. 83.r>o, S i.ao, #•:. :& Hiocj:
84.30, 8~ and 81.73 for boys.
T/iXE NO SUBSTITUTE. If your dealer
cannot supply you, send to fac-
tory, enclosing: price and 36 cent#
to pay carriage. State kind, style
of too (cap or plain), size and
width. Our Custom Dept. will fill j
your order. Send for new ilius- !
trated Catalogue to Box It.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton. Mag®.
Sent cit to
b« ■prnuted
experionu* re-
quired. Direction* for fijiruutinff free.
AddiPM 'I'. J. kKIXXKK, Coluraltnr. Ksa
SWEET PQTfliOESt
*** ™ " on ■Iturca. No ex,
Is
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FIELD AND HOC FENCE WIRE.
28, 83. 42, BO, op 58 inches high. Quality and workmanship th© bast
Nothing on tho market to compnre with it. Write for full information,
UNION FENCE COMPANY. DE KALB, ILL.
—i
'/W*l llll^'WOU
[(<«•
"Pass Your Plate."
PL.U©
Prices of all commodities
have been reduced except tobacco.
w Battle Ax ft is up to date.
Low Price; High Grade; Delicious
Flavor. For 10 cents you get
almost twice as much "Battle Ax"
as of other high grade goods. The
5 cent piece is nearly as large as
other JO cent pieces of equal quality.
A
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The Daily Times-Journal. (Oklahoma City, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 227, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 14, 1896, newspaper, March 14, 1896; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc95217/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.