Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, June 29, 1899, Page 7, Image 7

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    Great Tammany Leader.
I®® Cttarri of Suuttr.]
Congressman Am • J. < ummlnga.
New York, Oct. 11th. IS9B.
1? ru-iiu Drug 1 -M'f'g Co., Columbus, O.
Gentlemen—Pe-ru-na is good for ca
tarrh. I have tried it and know it. 11
relieved me immensely on my trip *c
Cuba, and I always have a bottle in
reserve. Since my return I have not
suffered from catarrh, but if I do I shali
use l'e-ru-na again. Meantime you
might send me another bottle.
Yours, Amos J. Cuinmings, M. C.
Summer catarrh assumes various
forms. It produces dyspepsia and
bowel complaint. It causes biliousness
and diseases of the liver. It deranges
the kidneys and bladder. Summer ca
tarrh may derange the whole nervous
system, when it is known to the medical
profession as a systemic catarrh. Pe
ru-na is a specific for all these forms ol
catarrh. Pe-ru-na never disappoints.
Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio,
lor a free book on summer catarrh.
A SWEET REVENGE.
Clarencp Wn« Weak <m Spelling and
She BrouKiit 11 I'p in
lied Ink.
"Oh, Eleanor, 1 am so glad to find you
here. I went up to yout house, and your
mother said you had come here to be lilted."
and as Eleanor the speaker'" hand
the dressmaker frowned, forslie didn't want
the tit ot the new gown interfered with.
"Well, Daisy,'' said Eleanor, "I am g!ad ;
too, for I see by your eyes that you've some
thing to tell me."
"Yes. This morning 1 went over to see
Krt, and 1 ran up to her room, as we
always do, you know."
ts," assented Eleanor.
"And she was crying. All around her on
the H"or Wire letters, and on the lied more
letters. I said: 'Mercy. Kit, what'- the
matter?' Every now and then she would
make a vicious jab at a letter and appear te
be writing.
"'Oh, Daisy! lam almost wild 1 I'm sc
busy.'
" 'What are you doing?' I asked.
" 'Well,' said Kit, 'you know Clarence and
I have had a quarrel—and I'm glad of it'—
and here she sobbed the gladdest kind of a
sol)—'and—and—he sent all my letters back
--and the silver bookmark—and the lovely
pipe I gave him with his name engraved on
it —and —oh, Daisy! I can't use any of then;
—how can 1? —and so I'm getting his letten
ready to return. I'm—l'm correcting them. 1
and then she laughed and made another jab
with her pen.
" 'Correcting them?' I gasped.
" 'Yes—correcting them. You know Clar
ence is a terrible speller, so I have gone ovei
er.eli letter Hi red nil, and made him see that
it was intentional. Humph! I'll bet he won't
tell another man he broke it ofT!'
"I couldn't help laughing, but wasn't it £
fine revenge?"— London Tit-Cits.
All A I*KII in cut.
Here the voice of counsel for the defense
thrilled with emotion.
"Gentlemen ot the jury," he cried, ";>ou
cannot believe the prisoner to be the cool,
calculating villain the prosecution would
make him out to be! Were he cool and cal
culating would he have murdered his wife,
os he is accused <1 doing? Would he not
rather have spared her in order that slie
might be here at this trial to weep for him
and influence your verdict with her tears?"
Only the thoughtless think lawyers do not
assist the end.- of justice.—Detroit Journal.
Laziness makes all tasks seem hard; in
dustry makes them seem light.—L. A. \V.
Bulletin.
Some people are like clocks; they show by
their faces what sort of a time they are
having.—Goiden Days.
-s l ' ' '
An Excellent Combination.
The pleasant method and beneficial
effects <">J the well known remedy.
SYRUP OF FIGS, manufactured by the
CALIFORNIA FIO SYHUI' CO., illustrate
the value of obtaining the liquid laxa
tive principles of plants known to be
medicinally laxative and presenting
them in the form most refreshing to the
taste and acceptable to the system. It
is the one perfect strengthening laxa
tive, cleansing the system effectually,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
gently yet promptly and enabling one
to overcome habitual constipation per
manently. Its perfect freedom from
every objectionable quality and sub
stance. and its acting on the kidneys,
liver and bowels, without weakening
or irritating them, make it the ideal
laxative.
In the process of manufacturing figs
arc used, as they are pleasant to the
taste, but the medicinal qualitiesof ttie
r-medy are obtained from senna and
other aromatic plants, by a method
known to the CALIFORNIA FIG SVJU'P
Co. only. In order to get its beneficial
effects and to avoid imitations, please
rernemberthe full name of the Company
printed on the front of every package.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
BAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NKW YORK. N. Y.
For salt* by all Druggrifts.— Price 50c. *)er bottle.
Eg) In time. Sold bv virufrglPtH. »|
jp
SOUTH SEA MAIDENS.
They Are Iwyt Clone I'rUonem In
li»ly Wicker Cases I mil Tliey
lleeome llrlclcn.
There are no breach of promise suits
on the island of Mew Britain, in the
South sea, says a New York exchange.
The natives, in their simple Polynesian
way, have solved the problem that wor
ries so many American mothers of
young daughters, and the maidens of
the island never get into bad company
or entanglements of any sort up to the
day of their marriage.
These natives are a simple sort of
folk, if simplicity ean be used in con
nection with a people that renounced
cannibalism only within the last 15
years. They are of a dark brown color,
of medium height, and they would
rather eat than light. It was not so
long ago that a feast followed every
fight on the island, and the edibles were
the roasted or fricasseed bodies of the
worsted combatants in the battle. But
now the tribes 110 longer make war on
one another. Instead, they loaf and
eat. and do as little work as they can.
Their ideas of morality could be given
In a very short chapter —almost as
short as the famous one about snakes
in Ireland —but they are great stick
lers for their complicated and peculiar
marriage customs.
There are two classes, and a man may
not marry out of his class. Girls be
come wives at II or 12 years of age,
and their wedding is literally their
"coming out party."
From the age of one year to the date
of their marriage these poor little
maidens are kept 111 wicker cages in
side the small thatched huts. They are
as rnueli prisoners as any unfortunate
criminal behind prison bars. The
cages, to be sure, are light and airy, and
the occupant is able to see all that is
going on in the free world outside. But
they can't "come out and play," and all
the pleasures of childhood- even a
South sea childhood—are denied them.
This is not. such a hardship as it
would seem at first consideration, be-
I jj
THEIRS IS A HARD LOT.
j etujie the little ones are immured in
I their cages at such an early age that
| they grow up without thinking to rebel
against their enforced captivity.
Once a day only are they taken from
their cages to be washed. Food is given
them through the interstices, which
i are plenty large enough to admit, the
J little fresh air that gains entrance to
! the low cabins. The girls grow fat and
healthy on this sort of life, and these
j are doubtless the qualities deemed
I most desirable in a South sea wife.
But to an American It seems almost in-
I comprehensible that a people living
almost altogether out of doors in an
j equatorial climate should so bring up
I their young females.
Still, the plan has its advantages.
There, is no fear of the frisky maidens
staying out too late at night, nor need
their parents be alarmed lest the daugh
ters get into bad company. When the
ardent young man finds a girl whom
he would like to make his wife he is
compelled to do his wooing through the
bars. Papa's chairs are never broken
because of having to carry double
weight, and all the courting is neces
sarily done in the daytime. As a con
sequence, when the young girl leaves
her cage to become a wife, the husband
is possessed of none of those harassing
doubts that eome with a higher civiliza
tion. And they make good wives, too,
and are ready, should the fates bring
them daughters, to keep them close
within the same cages.
Still, the South sea {rirls of to-dayare
1 luckier than those of 30 years ago.
They were not brought up .".t all then,
but simply killed at birth, and the
young men of the tribe went to neigh
boring islands for wives. So the march
of civilization has the island of New
Britain in its path after all.
Hrtishf 11 te Improves (lie Hair.
The very best brushes should nlwavs
be chosen, and at the very least 100
strokes a day should be vigorously ad
ministered. The bristles of the brush
should not be so hard as to drag the
hair out in case of a tangle obstructing
their eourre. >"or should they he yield
ing. It is useless to brush the hair un
less the skin of the head lie brushed
as well. The friction stimulates it
Rial makes the hair grow. Brushing
the hair with slow and languid strokes
is simply useless. Vigor and intention
are necessary to produce a really good
effect and induce the bright, healthy
gloss that hair should have.—Ladies'
Home Journal.
Knit «.-■■■ Precocity.
An iola girl of 10 who is hardly too
old to be spanked is. according to the
Kansas City Star, a divorced woman
Bad u motlK
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1899
RARE TREASURE BOX.
Cirvrd Cherry stonr, IlroiiKht from
India, ContnJn» Twelve Hoxpm
Solid Silver Spoon*.
A burglar ransacking the old house of
Miss Phoebe Ann West in Nantucket,
the quaint little island off Massachu
setts, would scarcely notive 12 dozen
solid silver spoons, which form part of
the family plate. In fact, no one would
observe them except with the aid of a
powerful magnifying glass, for these
12 dozen spoons are so diminutive that
they are all held in the interior ot a
cherry stone. This statement is as true
CHERRY STONE FULL OF SPOONS.
as it is preposterous, and the cherry
stone, which is of ordinary size, is one
of the most wonderful works of skill
ever wrought by its makers, the Hin
dus. Miss West's father, a sea captain,
brought two of these little curiosities
from India years ago, but all trace of !
the other cherry stone, which contained j
six dozen gold spoons, was soon after
lost.
The cherry stone is cleverly carved
and mounted on a little ivory and sil
ver stand, and the top screws off, show
ing the gross of spoons, each about the
size of a pin head, within. Each spoon,
when seen under a glass, is perfect in
shape.
TO IRON TABLE LINEN.
There 1* mi Art In Glviiist It I.uster |
iind the Sinoothi*c*;* h Admired
hy Housekeepers.
Linen by pood rights should be dried
only enough to make it possible to iron
it well. It is well-nigh impossible to
iron out. wrinkles that have once dried
in; even with good sprinkling this is
a flASlieult task to do, as anyone may
ktuiv who has tried it. After the linen
is washed and rinsed until quite clean,
then let it hang in the sun if possible
until just dry enough to iron nicely, i
Have the iron hot; a luke-warm iron
will not do. Fold the cloth lengthwise,
if at all, for thft first pressing; press
hard and iron smoothly, until the linen
is quite dry; unless it is perfectly dry j
it will not have that luster and bril- j
llance that all well-ironed linen has.
Fold the cloth lengthwise until it is
narrow enough to suit the taste, and
then crosswise folding is allowable. i
The only point*; to be observed are
these: Iron the linen before it is dry
and iron it until it is perfectly dry.
This will insure perfect work.
Avoid starch in linen as you would
upon silk or such fabrics. It is en
tirely out of place.
Table linen should be ironed in tlie
same way as tablecloths, and all fancy j
foldings avoided. Sometimes in hotels
fancy foldings are used, but for the
home table let the napkins be folded
in plain squares and be ironed perfect- ;
ly that their gloss will be an attractive
feature of the tabic decorations.
DAINTY SILK HOSIERY.
Here Are Three- Style* ns Delicate lis
n Spider's Well for (Slrls
Fond of the 11 a nee.
If there is one thought that reigns j
supreme in the mind of the girl who !
is fond of dancing it is her hosiery.
Here are three designs that are worthy
her consideration.
The first is a network of delicate silk
threads of a pale violet hue. The front
PRETTY SILK HOSIERY.
of the caif is embroidered with dark ;
green silk in a succession of loops that
reach nearly to the knee.
| A design to be worn with figured
gowns is the diamond. The back
ground of the stocking harmonizes
with the background of the gown, and
so with the figures.
The half hose is quite the proper
article to wear with fancy high shoes.
The upper part of the stocking is of j
striped silk, the stripes being separated
by a delicate open network.
The Fashionable Stone,
Jade is the newest ornament of fash
ion. The idea is said to have orig
inated in London where jade is a stone
highly valued as well as malachite. We
may see a revival of the latter, too, per
haps, though it does not lend itself eas
ily to articles of jewelry. By degrees
silversmiths have rung the changes on
all the precious stones. Sapphires
used to be sold at a large and prohibi
tive price, it is now comparatively
moderate. Pearls are always dear and
precious; rubies have risen in market
value, while diamonds of ordinary
quality are cheap; large stones of any
sort remaining always the urize ol
millionaires only.
THE ROAD MOVEMENT.
There Ire Severn! Amende* nt Work
Which May Make It n (iri-ut
l'olillenl l»«ur,
Headers who see mentions of the
"good roads movement" do not realize
that in this there may be one of the
great national issues of our polities at
6ome time in the future, possibly with
in a comparatively short time. This
movement was started by the wheel
men through their national organiza
tion, the League of American Wheel
men, and hundreds of thousands of dol
lars have been spent by it in the agita
tion.
The principle of tlie movement, as
advocated by the wheelmen, is that the
common roads of the country are as im-
A A
DO BAD ROADS PAY?
portant as the railway systems, the
statement being made by them, and be
ing easily understood, that there is not
an ounce of any commodity hauled over
the railroads that is not first transport
ed by wagons over country roads or
city streets. It dots not matter i* the
commodity is manufactured articles
that are loaded on cars at the factory;
the raw material liufe first to be hauled
to the factory, llut the greatest haul
ing is done in the farming districts and
there it is that good highways are most
needed.
The subject lias rot been j;iven the
attention and support it deserves, as
yet, for the simple reason that private
capital cannot become interested in the
building of common roads since there
would be no income from the invest
ment such as there is in railways.
Municipal, county, state anil the na
tional government have not had the is
sue brought directly before them in its
full significance because it is necessary
to first educate the people to the neces
sities of the movement. This is what is
being done by the wheelmen at the
present time, and it must be said to
their credit that they have enlisted the
sympathy and support of all the prom
inent fari;iers'j*irganiz:itions in the
movement. With the two classes work
ing together it is only a question of
time until the movement will be made a
political issue and then will come the
desired improvements.
The argument offered in favor of the
improved roads is, that they lessen the
cost of repairs, make it possible to haul
the largest amount of goods with the
smallest animal power, save time and
increase property valuations. No rail
road company would expect to do busi
ness if its tracks and roadbeds were in
such condition as to make it either im
possible to use the tracks at long sea
sons of the year, or in using them have
to lose a great deal of time and have im
mense repairs to make; and yet that is
what the farmers and others using the
common roads are doing in a compara
tive way every day in the year.
They make the most impracticable
attempts at road building and repair-,
ing. and then wonder why there is no
profit in their products, which have
been hauled overbad roads at the great
est expense. It has been estimated that
in the states where the stone roads have
been built the cost of transporta
tion has been decreased to 20 percent,
of the former figures, and that #ie
roads pay for themselves within a few
years. It has been further shown that
the amount lost in the different ways
mentioned will more than pay for the
building and repairs of these roads on
the annual assessments made for the*!,
or that it costs no more each year to
have good roads than it does to have
bad ones.
The I.lfe of I'ench Tree*.
There is no reason for peach treei
dying out in ten years, "bearing-them
selves out," sonic, farmers will say
What they mean is "being starved out."
A peach tree, barruig accidents, should
be good for 2~> years. It should, how
ever, have as good cultivation, liberal
feeding, and as much general atten«
tion as an annual crop. It should be
examined twice a year for borers, and
when its limbs begin to die out and
look straggly so that people ordinari
ly will say it is played out it should
be pruned back severely- -cut way back
—when new vigorous shoots with dark
green leaves will put forth. and the
second year after a good crop may be
looked for. There are many 30-year-old
peach trees in the country.-—Journal of
Agriculture.
Cranberries are indigestible. They
ire good, however, for inllummation,
when applied as a poultice.
Glv« the Children m Drink
lallud Graiu-O. It is a delicious, appetizing,
■otirishing food drink to hike the place of
sofiee. Sold by all grocers and liked by all
who have used it, because when properly
prepared it tastes like the finest coffee but
is free from all its injurious properties.
Crain-O aids digestion and strengthens the
nerved. It is not a stimulant but a health
Guilder, and children, as well as adults, ean
drink it with great benefit Costs about sas
much as c ifTec. 15 anH 2oc.
Frnltlrx* A ii-.li 161 on.
"Did yiu see that pale young man calling
out 'Cash!' at the ribbon counter?"
"Yes."
"Fate's awfully funny, sometime". Ten
years ago. when we were boys together, his
one ambition was to be a mighty hunterand
catch lions with a lasso."—Berlin (Md.) Her
ald.
Do Your Fcrt Artie end IlarnT
Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-Ease,
a powder tor the feet. It maUestightorNew
SSuoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions,
Swollen, Hot, Callous, Sore, and Sweating
Feet. All Druggists and Shoe Stores sell
it. 25c. Sample sent KKEE. Address,
Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. V.
\u Wonder.
"She has a remarkable voice."
"In which respect?"
"In timbre."
"No wonder. She used to call a logging
ramp to dinner."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Lnnr'a Family Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to
be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on
the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head
ache. Price '25 and 50c.
We believe, in spite of statistics, that
more girls kill themselves eating pickles
than kill themselves skipping rope.—Detroit
Journal.
To C'uro a Colli In One Rny
Take Laxative Broino Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure. '.25 c.
Dreamers are the world's great archi
tects; the toilers are its builders. —L. A. \V.
Bulletin.
I cannot speak too highly of Piso's Cure
for Consumption.- Mi?. Frank Mnbbs, 215
YV. 22d St., New York, Oct. 2 'J, IS'JL
It is not creditable for any gill to have
several young men "on the siring."—Atch
ison Globe.
o
"Ma, I'm at the he-ad of my class."
"How's that. Dick?" "Teacher says I'm
the worst of all the bad boys in school."—
Answers.
Why the Minister Sighed.—.Tingso—
"What did the minister eav when the plate
came up?" liingso—"lie said lie •wouldn't
mind so muck if the buttons were all alike."
—Syracuse Ilera.'d.
"I am not at all certain," said the father,
"that my daughter loves y u Buflieicntly to
warrant me in intrusting her to your keep
ing for that." "Well," replied the young
man, "perhaps you haven't had the same ad
\ ant age for observing things as 1 have."—
Plii.udelphia North American.
"What is the meaning of this?" demanded
the customer, hotly, as ny the aid oft ha mir
ror he detected a pucker across the back of
his new coat. "Oh," replied the quick-wit
ted tailor, promptly, "that is—cr —the last
wrinkle, sir." —Philadelphia Record.
A man with a good voice went to oblige
a kirk social the other evening, and the
ruling elder who introduced him equivocally
referred to the artiste as an "amateur gen
tleman."—London Mail.
"Yes, that's the bride." "Very young,
isn't she?" "Nineteen, I believe." "Who
are those midle-aged women with her?"
"Those are her unmarired sisters. She's
chaperoning them."—Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
Ethel (of ivnstoti) —"They sav he is very
rich, but intolerably vulgar." Victoria (of
Chicago)—" You're dead right, there, my
dear, lie's got a load of dough, but he's oil
the 'hog' t-vtry other way."—Judy.
A Profound Thetne. —"What is encour
agement, pa?" "Encouragement? Well,
you can't understand, Dickey. It is some
ti.i»g people don't get, ana rule, until after
they quit needing it." —Chicago Kecord.
Too much good living makes a bad liver
- -L. A. W. Bulletin.
J*rcm 97/zs. Sunicr
io 97frs. ZPinkham.
[LETTER TO MRS. PINKIIAM NO. 76,244]
"One year ago last June three doc
tors gave me up to die, and as I had at
different times used your Vegetable
Compound with good results, I had too
much faith in it to die until I had tried
it again. I was apparently an invalid,
was confined to my bed for tern weeks.
(I believe my trouble was ulceration of
womb).
"After taking four bottles of the
Compound and using some of the Liver
Pills and Sanative Wash, at the end of
two months I had greatly improved
and weighed 155 pounds, when I never
before weighed over 138. Lydia E.
Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound is the
best medicine 1 ever used, and I recom
mend it to all my friends." — 51 ns. Ajjna
Eva Guxter, Higgjnsville, Mo.
Mrs. ISaruliart Enjojs Lifo Onco More.
"Dear Mrs. Pixkiiam—l had been
sick ever since my marriage, seven
years ago; have given birth to four
children, and had two miscarriages. I
had falling of womb, leucorrhoea, pains
in back and legs; dyspepsia and a
nervous trembling of the stomach.
Now 1 have none of these troubles and
can enjoy my life. Your medicine has
worked wonders for me."-- Mi:a. S.
Baknuart, New Castle, Pa.
liraziiiK Belts of West-
R'j ern Catuula and lnfor-
I to 1'
INNLS. No. 1 Merrill Uluck. Detroit, Mich. '
£ TO LOOK Oft THE BRIGHT |
| SIDE OF THINGS, I
> USE I
VV« «•.< «t«.« CC-^C'C 4 '
)! LOOKS \
Poor clothes cannot make |
you look olci. Even pale a
cheeks v;o:i'i do it.
Your household ccrcr, nay 8
be heavy and disappoint- n
merits may be deep, but »
(they cannot make ycu icoi: a
old. ■<
One thing does it and 1
never fails.
It is impossible to look ?7<
young with the color of
seventy years in your hair. jjgj
J| WflE* |>
bhqrqbEEBESI!ES9E3'
MHRr r
TT j *"i i"i i > ~'imui '» --^V
IS permanently postpones the o
a tell-tale signs of age. Used r^f
Ij according to directions it
| gradually brings back the ffl
n color o? youth. At fifty your eJ
S hair rruty iook as it did at $
B fifteen. It thickens the hair j)
B also; stops it from falling ft
Eg out; and cleanses the scalp |
m from dandruff. Shall \vc I
jsj send you our book on the i
g| Hair and its Diseases?
jfi| S r i!o £2eei &i?vi'Go ITftiQ, 8
H&m If you do not obtain all ihc beno. fc
KB fits vi u expected trom the use of ka
tho Vigor, write tho doctor about it. fa
Probably there i* somo diflleultjr Pm
iuEfi with your KfncrrJ tystt-m which y
f*fSl nrtv bo eaullv r'-moveo. Address,
W DR. .112. ('. AY Hit T.owell Mass. \9
| There Is a
I Class cf People |
& Who aro injured by tho uae of cof- ~
fc fee. Recently there has been placed s
£ in all tho grocery stores a new pre- Z
t paration called GIIAIN-O, made of 5
£ pure grains, that, takes tho place of 3
S coffee. 2
fe The most delicate stomach re- 3
ceives it without distress, and but 3
t few can tell it from coffee,
fc It does not cost over as much. Z
fc Childria may drink it with ben. 3
jE efit. 1." conta and 25 cents per pack- 3
P age. Try it. A*k for GIiAXN-O. 3
| Try Graln=o!
£ IriPist that yonr jrrocergives you GEAII'I-O ;2j
p Accept no imitation,
41 .1 f(or K waa Induced to try CASCA
UETti, I will never bo without them in the home.
My liver was in a, very bad shape and my bond
ached and 1 had stomach trouble Now. since taU
ln;r Cascarets. 1 feel fine. My wife has also used
them with beneficial results for sour stomach."
JtfS. K Kit ULi Ml, J'JBl CuiigiCSS St., bt. Louia, AlO.
CANDV
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
GooU. Never Sicker Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 25c.tOc.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Hlcrlinic l.emnly Cum|>iißj. Milenrn. Montrriil. Nf» Yorli. US
Wfi Tfl Rfin Sold and gnoranteed by all drug
lsU 0 i irists to <'l■ EC V. Tobacco Habit.
iiEiincuiiie'tii IVl'iiVi iciYii mVi« una Wtyfe
| Oklahoma
I Offers Opulent |
| Opportunities |
S To those who desire new lands and
fS homes; also unsurpassed chances
:2 for industrial investments by capi
;S talists and manufacturers. •£
:£ Its Farm Products in isos include 5=
25,000,000 bushels of wheat, 140.000
S bal-.'s 01 cotton, ami millions of dol- 2-
45 lai s worth of other grains,fruits.etc.
> Send for free copy of pamphlet
5 entitled "The Truth About Okla- gj
5 homa." At stated times low rate £»
Homeseekers' Excursion tickets 5:
5 are sold via Santa l-e Route to 5^
-5 Oklahoma.
AddresH General PasspntferOffloe. g
-S Ihc Atchison, Tcpeka & Santa 112 © Railway, 3:
JS CHICAGO. J
A. K. K.—C 1760
READERS OK Tlllß PAPEH
DESILUNU TO BUY ANYTHING
ADVKIITISKD IN ITS COLUMNS
SIIOL*L!> InSIST Ul'ON HAVING
WHAT THKT ASK FOB, BKFUBINO
AH. SUBSTITUTES OK IMITATIONS. I
7