The Press-Democrat. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 15, 1904 Page: 2 of 8
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THE PRESS DEMOCRAT.
e. risuUK, Pub.
HENNESSEY,
OKLA.
OKLAHOMA'S BUILDING AT THE ST. LOUIS FAIR,
1ERRITOKY TOPICS
"Uno" Barrrd.—The criminal court
at Poteau bays "lino" is intoxicating'.
499 Dkt.kgatbs.—The territorial Re-
publican convention at Guthrie was at-
tended by 499 delegates.
Editorial Association*. 'Republi-
can editors of Oklahoma inet in Ciuth-
rie to form an association.
Skvuovaii's Grave.—E. Faucher, of
Lawton thinks ho lias discovered the
burial place ami bones of Sequoyah,
the great Cherokee scholar.
Sack Fhom Each Mill.—One of the
special features of the Oklahoma agri-
cultural exhibit at the world's fair
will be a sack of Hour from every mill
in Oklahoma.
Killed by Train.— James M. Nolder.
of Blackwell, was instantly killed by
being run over by a double header
freight t rain, the body being ground
into an unrecognizable mass.
Timrrb Cuttino Uni.awfi i. Agent
Shoenfelt has issued notice warning
nil persons not to cut or remove tim-
ber in the Choctaw and Chickasaw na-
tion. from segregated coal lands.
Pink. Timbkr Lands.—The sennte j
amendment proposing the sale of pine
timber lands in Indian Territory upon j
sealed bids, under the dircetion of the j
secretary of the interior is likely to j
fail.
llrsv Hkks.—Red Rock has an or- |
ionization of little girls called Busy !
Itees, the object of which is to build a
church. The girls expect to do this
with the proceeds of sales of their
handiwork.
IIoiisk Win, Act.- It is now gener-
ally regarded as settled that the senate
will not consider the statehood bill at
this session and that, it will not pro-
gress beyond the house, which is ex-
pected to pass it under a special rule.
Frisco Sruvi yino.—The Frisco com-
pany is surveying an extension west- j
ward from Avard, in Woods county,
across the counties of Woodward and
Reaver to Hooker, a town in the ex-
treme western portion of Reaver i
county.
To Sell Coal Lands.—It is believed
that an agreement has been reached
by the conference committee as to the
disposition of the coal lands so as t<>
permit the secretary to sell the un-
leased coal lands by scaled bids, but
no agreement has been reached as to
the disposition of the .lands now cov-
ered by leases. About 12s.ooo acres of
coal lands are held by coal leases.
Financial Conditions —-In Guthrie
and throughout Oklahoma generally
financial conditions are good. The
only reason for the Capitol National's
failure is alleged bad management.
St. Louis banks wired local banks to
call on them for any amount needed in
ease of emergency. There is talk of
Cangressman Dennis T. Flynn and
others taking over the Capitol National
stock and resuming operations.
Trociu.k of Conferek.8.—The con-
ferees in charge of the Indian appro-
priation fail to agree as yet on the dis-
posal of the Sulphur Springs in the
Chickasaw country; the transfer of
citizenship eases to the citizenship
court in Indian Territory and the
Turtle mountaiu treaty seem to be
causing most of the trouble. Mr. Cur-
tis has been authorized to draw an
amendment requiring the secretary of i
the interior to make rules and regula-
tions concerning the leasing of the
fullblood lands.
Si its tub Contractors.—Judge
Hcauchamp granted
restraining further work ou the court
house at Alva. However, the contract-
ors are not worrying, as their material
i> delayed on the road and they will
3fr
•£2 >;-• - e 430
MOVL OF GREAT BRITAIN
LOOKS LIKE LAND GRAB
i- •_' '•'ti M K-V'Sx.
OKLAHOMA
Z3&J,.
The building is 71x72 feet. It cost 815,000. All the ''staff" u*ed in its con-
struction came from Oklahoma. It is lighted by 2S0 iuc.-indcsccnt light-.
There are eighty-live lights in the word 'Oklahoma " Has reception rooms and
parlors for ladies. It is modern throughout. Two piano manufacturers will
each place an instrument in the building. There will be a postotlice and check
room for accommodation of visitors, with writing tables and stationery. In it
will be hung the pictures of the .six governors Oklahoma has had. Also large
portrait of Captain David L. Payne, who led thcoriginal "Boomers.'' The tab-
let in the right corner of the building is of Newkirk limestone and is inscribed
"Oklahoma, the next star on the 11 ig." The tablet in left of same stone reads
"Oklahoma, the baby sister of the Louisiana Purchase."
Tin: Osaok Pa v.mi nt.—While the] Tiie Oi turn: Faii.i hi: The Capital
regular annuity payment of S; 0.000 National bank or" Outline is in the
was being paid to the Osages a tele-i hands of the comptroller of the cur-
gram was received from Secretary reney. It is said that depositors will
Hitchcock turning over the busine > of J be paid in full and that at the present
the nation to Special Agent Conser, time a deal is on to sell the assets of
Only about half of the Indians had re-
ceived their pay when payment stopped
and they will have to do without their
annuity until the next regular annuity
payment, which will be
make application to the
for the money.
For Another Jrnoi.. .fudge Kny-
inond. of Imlian Territory, has spent
some time in Washington promoting
the appointment of another judge, and
came borne with little assurance of the
bill becoming a law. Such a bill was
the institution so that the depositors
inav be paid. When the bank closed
its doors at two o'clock, there were in
assets $1,255,000 with which to pay
in June, or 31.o:;:i,000 in deposit - The failure of
lepartment this strong bank is said to have been a
j result of the failure of the Holdenville,
1. T., national bank. The two banks
were largely controlled by the same
man.
Mkion (inowi:i:s. The Heaver coun-
ty Melon Cirowers' association of Guy-
mon has been granted a charter. This
introduced in the house and received a is another evidence that the melon
very favorable report in the judiciary growers of Oklahoma are getting ready
committee, but has met with strong to take a big part of the melon trade of
opposition in the senate where the | the country. Oklahoma cantaloupes
measure is now sleeping in a pigeon t won their way last year and an im*
hole. ' mensc acreage is going to be planted
Indians May Vote. -The new state- |^,,sJenr-
hood bill qualifies all male persons! * Hawkins Shot.- Colonel J. W.
over the age of 21. citizens of tne l ui- Hawkins was shot at Lawton by L. T
ted States, who are members of any Russell, of the Lawton State Demo-
Indian nation to vote for ami choose . crat. who is being held in the county
delegates to the constitutional conven- j1''- ( olonel Hawkins was sergeant-
tion, and provides for 110 such dele- j at-arms of the Oklahoma legislature
gates, of whom sixty shall be elected j last year, lie is a man of great vital-
from Oklahoma and fifty from Indian j ity and immense frame and is 6 feet
Territory. | ^ inches tall. He insisted that he was
Citizenship Cocrt. — Commencing j not
May 2, the Choctaw-Chickasaw citizen-i Our.anizk thk Rage. All over Ok-
ship court will be located at Tisho- j lahoma there are good roads associa-
mingo. where it will try citizenship tions, horticultural associations, melon
cases. The South McAlester head- raisers' associations and many others,
quarters and court will be discontin An organization known as the I nited
ued, as the Choctaw citizenship cases ! Farmers'association seems to be the
will have been tried by that time. most popular and some of the counties
A IIappyGiri . Miss Maude Wallace. 1,Bve ooulu'ils ' ''voO township.
Cf Ponca City, won the piano in the City Officers Indicted.—The fed-
contest held by the Kansas f ity World, eral grand jury at Chickasha returned
She is said to be the happiest girl in j indictments against the mayor, police
town. judge chief of police and eight alder-
Paid for Itself.—R. P. Dodd. of I men, together with a gaining house
Lincoln county, bought a farm a year ! keeper, charging them with a con-
ago for 82,000. He has already sold spiraey to permit gaming and gaining
S1.94G worth of cotton alone off of it. j houses.
Speed is Confirmed—The senate has Cocrt Reporter.—Shirley T. Joce-
confirrncd the nomination of Horace lyn, of Wichita, has been appointed
Speed as United States attorney for I court reporter in the judicial district
the Territory of Oklahoma. i embracing Woodward. Woods, Heaver,
Amritiocs Yearling.—The town of i
Thomas, now one year old, is talking I
about waterworks and electric lights. ; llaxter is making settlement with ter-
More Cotton. -Fanners about K tutorial schools and issuing warrants
Reno are of the mind to put in more *or salaries and expenses.
While Russia is engaged with Ja
pen In the debatable land of eastern
China, England is fighting her way
into the debatable land of southwest-
ern China. Col. Younghushand, at
the head of a detachment of the Brit-
ish army, has forced his way over
the Himalayas into Tibet and has de-
feated the Tibetans at Guru, not a
hundred miles south of Lhassa, the
Ti 1>^1 an capital.
This advance of tlie British into
Tibet had been more carefully pre-
pared than was the Russian advance
into Manchooria. llhotan, the semi-
independent mountain state lying
south of Tibet to the east of the trade
route from Bengal to Tibet, was
brought under Briti h control in 1865.
British influence in Nepal, the Hima-
layan state south of Tibet, west of
the trade rente, was established in
1815. Between the two lies Sikkim,
a Tibetan state, and a British protect-
orate was established over this in
1890. Control of Sikkim gave the
British possession of the trade route
as far north as the mountain passes.
Meantime Russian agents, Japanese
priests, and Chinese; travelers had
penetrated to Lhassa. A Japanese
priest was the first. man to live .for
any length of time in the mysterious
city, and on his return he published
| mitted the Tibetan people to purchase
. scarcely any tea grown in India.
Col. Younghusband left Darjeeling,
! the outpost on the Indian frontier, in
| October last. He made his way to
| the higher mountain passes, where
I he was confronted by the Tibetan.-,
! who insisted that he should return,
i He held his position, however, and
sent for reinforcements. Then he pro-
| eroded northward by way of Yatong,
! Chumbi, I'harljong, and over the dif-
i ftcult pass beyond into the Tang la
: valley, making a new base at Tuna.
A short distance north of this point,
i the Tibetans, under command of the
gem ral at Lhassa, disputed his pas-
sage. The result was two engage-
ments, in which the Tibetan loss is
reported at 750.
This means war, with as many pos-
sibilities as hang on the outcome oi
the campaign in Manchuria. The
British detachment at Tuna will be
reinforced, and the Tibetans will make
resistance. In the end the British
are likely to capture Lhassa and ex-
tend British influence to all of south-
ern Tibet.
Tibet's standing army is reputed to
be one of the strangest aggregations
of soldiers of modern times. Consist-
ing of about 4,000 men, so far as
known, it presents the features of an
\
s is*.ni ti f.t.v.?* HMwsaasnas
L' vJJJ&u Vteeas
- :L+rr ...
: - 'l;r • s«# , ,> gr V A
his observations. Among the things
he reported was the success of a Rus-
sian expedition to Lhassa bearing
presents to the Grand Lama, or sov-
ereign of the country. Among the
presents was a consignment of Amer-
ican, or Springfield, rilles sent by the
Czar as a personal gift to the Tibetan
ruler.
England's answer to this report of
Russian success was to order Col.
Younghusband with 300 men across
the mountain divide into Tibet. The
expedition was called a commercial
mission, and its object was declared
to be to persuade the Tibetan gov-
ernment to remove the restrictions
on the Indian tea trade. It was rep-
resented that, while Tibet purchased
from China every year tea to the
value of |800,000. the government per-
I army of medieval days. Part of the
force that is opposing the British ex-
j pedition into Tibet is reported to be
I armed with matchlock guns. Most
! of the Tibetan soldiers, however, are
armed with lances, bows and arrows
I and slings. The ordinary Tibetan is
j more inclined to trust to divinations
! and spells of oracles and priests than
i to weapons. The lamas encourage the
■ superstitious beliefs, with the result
■ that the soldiers think their prayers
and incantations will procure them
; supernatural assistance in battle and
J make them invulnerable against bul-
| lets. One of the Tibetan rules of war-
fare says: "See that there are no
; lazy, sick or timid in the ranks, but
i only those who fear not death." This
i explains why so many, 400, died in
the recent battle.
Day and Dewey counties.
Warrants Issued. Superintendent
cotton and less wheat than heretofore.
Labor Exchange. -The town coun-
cil of Vinita has instituted a labor ex-
change.
First in 13 Years.—The failure of
temporary order j the National Bank of Holdenville
Another School Bi ii.dino.—El Reno
i to have another school building to
insist of twelve rooms and erected at
cost of about $3:1,003.
(loot) Roads Delegates.-—Governor
■ls Ferguson lias appointed Fred Wagoner,
fail
L
inen when they begin again.
Ay lksworth Appointed. —A.
Aylesworth, whose resignation as sec-
retary of tne Dawes commission re-
cently went into effect, has been ap-
pointed agent of the land office by the
secretary of the interior.
said to be the tir-t national bank
ure in Indian Territory in 13 years.
The loss in the Holdenville failure will
amount to about 8.10,000, and was
prepare to double the force of work- i caused by bad investments. It is un-
derstood that the depositors will not
lose a cent.
MAll ity Al"to. W. II Nixon, who
carries the mail between Arapaho and j on the n*
Taloga, has ordered an automobile and
expects to ina: e the roun I trip of 80 j
mil s daily.
of Chandler: C. K. Alexander, of Wood-
ward; Harry Meade, of Shawnee; D.
Frank Johnson, of l'alston, and E. T.
Redficld, of Harrison, to represent the
territory of Oklahoma in the national
good roads convention to be held in
St. Louis, May 10 to 21.
R a in fa ll.—The rainfall
of April 4 is reported as
ncral over the larger portion of Ok-
lahoma. It was the most extensive
and beneficial since October last.
GeneraL
TllRI I Ml RDERS
iiner nai
near Krebs with tw
his bead
was known that he
money and none wa
First U. S. Court. A meeting
held in the rooms of the Muskogee miner named Bluv
chamber of commerce ta commemorate ' near Krebs with
the fifteenth anniversary of the open- his bead. Hluva li
ing of the first United States court in
Indian Territory. The meeting was
called by Commissioner T. H. Needles
and Judge N. 15. Maxey. The call
asked that all who were present at the
first opening of the district court in
Indian Territory be present.
Brick From Gypsi m.- At Qnintila,
Ok., gypsum rock is burned and mixed
with water and made into bricks.
Rack Cavort Fire. The editor of
the Chandler Tribune built a fire in
An Italian coal j Indi cation oi Negroes.—In the live
was found dead I civili/.ed tribes the education of the
> bullet holes in negroes is a question of importance,
■d alone, and as \\ I ' here are thousands
had considerable j P«r cent in school is
found on bis per- ! the
nf them and the
very small. In
and Cherokee nations there
son, it is thought th:i
cause of the murder
man w ho has In . n
tr Kre!
'i iii hi
II the
1"
his office and went out a few minutes
When he returned he found that a rack
of about .*10 cases of type was blazing.
Tho lire boys were soon in evidence*
and the fire was extinguished afti r . -
only 8175 damage, which is fully co\ -
ered by insurance.
For Good Roads. The Oklahoma-
Indian Territory Good Roads associa-
tion was formally organized at Guthrie
on April 1 by a large meeting of dele-
gates from the two territories.
enee of bun
Bocher laid
street paving
robbery was the j are se
lie is the third ]1 hoet
ou ml murdered i niit ti
past year. I Cro
imery. That city ex- j Love,
creamery with a e
pounds of butter a da
ration this month.
Brick in the pri
I
parate
crop*
:>f
May.
pt
A II.
nnnl me
he firs
in Sh.i
brie
ev. v laid In ! Anti-ll
Much of !' >'!>
lnletcd ami I elect
about S.'OO
and oth(
hoi
daring t ■
titled to 1 is
not elected.
loiumit
rted a resolution
1 by the house, de-
MeGuire was en- the col
i Win. Cross was manch
chool.s for them, but the
s ami Chickasaws do not per-
i to share their school fund.
Look Wki i -Sheriff J. P.
Kingfisher county, says the
that county look pretty well
strip through the center of
tv that is a little dry.
T. A. Oitut.ik \t the an-
Min<? of the Oklahoma County
rsethicf association at Okla-
City, the following otticers were
1: J. C. Shackleford, president:
nk>ton, vice president; Colonel
secretary: «!. F. W agoner, treas-
urer; Peter Gideon, marshal; O. L
Waner. -fuard.
Ni ( Ror:s Co.mplain. -Complaint has
been tiled with Governor Ferguson that
d children in Hastings, Co-
unty. are not allowed to at-
J. P
M
tend the public school!
One Time He Had Forgotten.
Senator Knute Nelson was tellins
colleagues about his experiences with
a subcommittee in Alaska. They
made a landing at Nome one day when
tho sea was so rough that the passen-
gers were put in a cage and swung
ashore. "And that," he concluded,
"was the only time any man ever had
me in a cage." "Not much," bluntly
interposed Senator Berry of Arkansas,
with whom Mr. Nelson has many a
time and oft fought over the battles :
of the civil war. "We had you in a ;
cage at Port Hudson." And Senator j
Nelson had to admit it. Ho was taken 1
prisoner by the Confederates there
and for a season bold in durance vile j
Reviev/ Was Not Flattery.
In "The Life of Dean Farrar" his i
son. Reginald Farrar, has included
many extracts from "Men I Have ;
Known," for example, tho following j
story of Browning, which is worth re-
calling: John Stuart Mill, happening
upon a copy of "Bells and Pomegra-
nates." sent a request to Tait's Maga-
zine for permission to review it. The
editor answered that, "unfortunately,
he could not Insert a review of 'Bells
and Pomegranates,' as it had been i
reviewed in the last number." Mr.
Browning had the curiosity to see this
"review" and found the following:
" 'Bells and Pomegranates,' by Robert .
Browning: Balderdash." |
Senator Fettus in B^d Plight.
One of the greatest sticklers for
propriety in the Tinted States senate |
is Mr. Pettus of Alabama. The other
day lie arrived minus a cravat and
only learned of his mistake after he
noticed some of the pages snickering ,
at him. The old gentleman hurried
into the cloakroom, where he re-
mained until a messenger brought him
tho tu c ssary article of appar< I.
Condemned Cuns Not Usclessi
Condemned guns are not by any
means useless. There Is at Willets
Point, L. I., a magnet made from two
Dahlgrens. 15-inch pops wound with
eight miles of heavy cable and
charged with electricity.
Nothing Doin'.
Oatcake—Did that air city chap
what wuz up tew your place huntin'
last week manage tew hit anything?
Hayrix—Gosh, no! Even when he
went tew start fer home he missed
th' train, by hen!
Virginian's Useful Life.
Dr. Moncure D. Conway, who re-
cently celebrated his seventy-second
birthday, is a descendant of the Wash-
ington family and was born in Vir-
ginia. He married Miss Margaret
Daniel, granddaughter of Thomas
Stone, a signer of the declaration of
independence. Dr. Conway was a Uni-
tarian minister at Washington,whence
he was compelled to go on account of
his sermons against slavery in 1857.
Going on a visit to England in 1SC3,
he became minister of South Place
chapel in 1SG4, where he stayed for
about twenty years and whither he
returned lor another five years in
1892.
Independent Oklahoma Town.
Andrew Carnegie heard of a little
town in Oklahoma which had no libra-
ry and decided to supply what he re-
garded as a necessity. The multi-
millionaire offered to furnish $5,000
for the library, provided the citizens
would guarantee proper support for
the institution. He gathered a new
Idea of Oklahoma's optimism and in-
dependence on learning that the citi-
zens r sented his offer as an insult.
"Make your offer $20,000 and we may
take it under consideration," wrote
the town officers, but so far Mr. Car-
negie has not decided to do as sug-
Western Pioneer Dead.
William F. Syron, a pioneer of Ore-
gon and Washington, is dead at his
home in Garfield, Wash., aged 81
years. Mr. Syron and his young wife
left Iowa in 3852 with a party and
crossed the plains with ox teams.
When the Syrons arrived in Oregon
they had one ox, the usual prairie
schooner outfit and 25 cents cash. In
1ST7 they moved from Oregon to
Washington.
If
Americans Smoke Much.
our annual output of don
cigars wen to be made into one long
cUar of the usual diameter there
would be produced a "weed" that
would go eighteen times around the
world at the equator.
Proper Definition.
"Say. pa." queried little Johnny
Bumperniekle, "what is self-control?"
"It's something a woman possesses
who never buys anything at a bargain
sale that she doesn't really n^cd,"
replied the old man.
Derivation of Panar^a.
It ls supposed by some that Pana-
ma derived its name from the native
word for butterfly. Explorers of the
interior tell of swarms of butterflies.
which at times rise on slopes of the
mountains in dense clouds, darken-
ing the sunshine. Others maintain
that the name is from an Indian word,
meaning a bo /.din:: in fish.
Hr.lrdreasing a Labor.
Among tho inventions in the old
times for lixing the hair in position
was advertised as follows: "A new
method of stuccowing the hair in the
most fashionable taste, to last with
very little repair during the whole sen
sion of parliament. Price only 5
gulaeas. K. B.—He takes but one
hour to build tho head and two lor
taking It."
Vcr.triicquiai Fowm.
M. Emile Merwert, secretary gener-
al of French Guiana, has sent to the
Jardin des Plantes in Paris two pairs
of ventrlloquial fowls. These oirds
are greatly amusing to visitors to the
gardens, who assemble round their
cage by their cries, which at one time
appear to come from the trees, at
others from the sky and sometimes
from the midst of the crowd itself.
Her Inference.
One day Helen was taken by her
mother to visit an artist who hap-
pened to bo bald-headed. Helen had
never been in a studio before, and
she was curious about everything.
She watched the artist as he worked
for a time; then she picked up one of
the brushes, and. after examining it
carefully, exclaimed: "Oh, now I know
how you got bald-headed, you used up
all your hair to make brushes out of!"
Theater Panic Mortality.
The Gazette Medicale de Paris
states that in a theater panic and lire
About one out of every three speeta
tors perishes. This was tho proportion
at the Brooklyn theater lire in 1876,
with 400 victims; at Nice, in 1880,
with 05 victims; at Smolensk, in )8H;;,
with 380; at tho Opera Comique, at
Paris, in 1887, with 131; the Kxete.r
Theater, England, with 127 victims, in
1887; at the Oporto Theater, in 18SK,
with 80; and at the Iroquois Theater,
in Chicago, where 573 perished
It is easier to brag of one's future
than it is to boast of one's past.
PJso's Cure for Consumption Is an Infallible
ne<licine for coughs anil colds.—N. W. Saul*hi.
Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1'aXX
When money is tight the pawnbro-
ker is apt to take the pledge.
WicjqlcStick laundry iill*.:
Won't spill, break, freeze nor spot clothes
Costs 10 cents and equals 20 cents worth of
any other bluing. If your grocer (loos not
keep it send 10c for sample to The Laundry
Blue Co., 14 Michigan Street, Chic as' .
Shads should be pretty sure
hitig they feel in their bones.
any-
You never hoar any ore complain
ibout. "Defiance Starch." There is
none to equal it in quality and quan-
tity, 10 ounces. 10 cents. Try it now
and save your money.
Mustard plasters come undei
bead of drawing instruments.
t lie
Blot her Gray *8 H\v« rt Pow(li>m for Chl'.ilre ..
Successfully used by Mother Gray, aur« i
In the Children'-; Home in New York, cure
Constipation, Feverishness, Bad K* • narl..
Teething Disorders, move and rej ul.-i- the
Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over .'■0.(100
testimonials. At all druggists, 25<. Sai ipli
FKEK. Address A.S.Olmsted, Le K . N. Y.
The thread of a lo'
winds up with a tie.
story usually
!•>*■• - "W
tli:' •>/; iiA ■ v
' Mw
fpfr
l&i
V ;;;k
/{ Wk ' A \!
■ j; \i
i Miss Kapgood fe!!s how she 'J
escaped an awful operation by
using Lydia 0. Pitikham's Vege-
table Compound.
11 Dt:ak Mrs. Pink it am; — I suffered
for four years with what t">e doctors
called Salpingitis (iuth'.m: i .tion <>f the
fallopian tubes and ovaritb w.';rh in
a moxtdistressing and painful a'. > nfc,
alYecting all the surroundin' parts,
undermining the constitution, ..:i ! sap-
ping the life forces. If yon 1 1 seen
me a year a,to, before I ber ■ t.V.: v?
Lydia E. Pinkliam*s Vegetable
Compound, and 1 id u <. the
sunken eyes, sallow complex; .. and
general emaciated eoaditi m, im«. com-
pared 1 hi * per n wit I me as 1 a'm t o-
day, robust, hearty and well, you
would n< >t wonder that I feel th . ful
to you ar« i \ rir wonderful n> . *:ie,
which restored me to new lif<- ana
health in five months, and iave l mo
from ha awful operath u.M—M iIbj sm
11apcoop, 1023 Sandwich St. Windsor,
Out.' $.r.000 forfait If ,imil cf abavt letter
proving gcnui/ientss cannot be produced.
Ovaritis or inflammation of the
ovaries or fallopian tubes which adjoin
tho ovaries may result fr m sudden
•1 of tho monthly flow, from
inflammation of th« womb, and many
other cau« s. '1>slight 1 i idicatUn>
of trouble with the ftvaricv, ir licated
"by dull t! rol l ':i;'i 1, . !t t • :ic-
companiod "r>yl at a1. ; sh iinj p
should claim your instant at ten' a.
It will not cure itself, and husv Uii
operation, with all ; terrors, nay
easily result from t.e ■ a't.
BEGGS5 BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES cainrrh of the stomaeb.
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Fisher, A. C. The Press-Democrat. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 15, 1904, newspaper, April 15, 1904; Hennessey, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc98409/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.