Newspaper Page Text
f -, y .i.'f S M Ifte tl&icfcita Sails gaslc": lltitfsfcnj 3$Urcuiug, fJoweittTret 16, 1893. " 3SP1?. Air JwSWiBSmSS mm fSkkkk 5 Agony is concentrate annoyance concentrated. Beecham's !Ss X Worth lea I a Box. (Tasteless) are concentrated remedies for the annoyance of Indigestion or the Agony of Dyspepsia. 25 cents a box. THE- GINKGO. A I.lTinr perlmcn of the Vrjretatlon of Die 3!io7ir l'or.od. There are a few fine specimens of the ginkgo as a fruit-bearing tree from Japan 111 the country, and the cultiva tion of it for its fruit is one of the pos sibilities of Ameiican horticulture. The tree has long been used here for ornamental pin poses, and it makes a magnificent appearance in the garden. JSefore 3877 there was only one ginkgo in this country that had produced fruit, and that one had been growing for twenty years on the grounds of the Kentucky military institute at Farm dale. J'ruit-bearing specimens are now met with quite frequently, and one of the finest is growing in the grounds of I.llw.inger A, I5.ury, a tree that was planted in 1ST.0. and has now a circum ference of si- feel and a height of over fifty feet. It has an avenge from one to two peeks of fruit for the last live years. From all accounts, the ginkgos were at one time a tribe of trees that nour ished jiiit extensively in North Amer ica, and our present type is about the only relic that remains to us of the queer vegetation of Meso.oie period. )U giadual disappearance from the face of the earth lias been due to un known cnu'-e, for, now that it is culti vated here, it flourishes again and mul tiplies quite rapidly. Had it not been for the one survivor in eastern Asia, the type would have entirel3r disap peared, and knowledge of the tree would have been conlined to the fossil remains occasionally dug up in rocks and limestone beds. We would have known nothing of the flavor or general appearance of the fruits, but now we see them displayed oc casionallj' as specimens of a rare plant. They resemble greenish yellow plums very much, and the meat Iias an agreeable nutty flavor. The stones are small, hard and smooth. The trees are not prolific beaiers, but what may be accomplished through cultiva tion remains to be seen. Cultivation of the trees is not difficult when the right situation is given. A rich, sandy soil is best adapted to the nature of the tree, and above all an open sunny space. If crowded in be Iween either trees or shrubbery, the ginkgo refuses to develop evenly and smoothly. To make its ornamental ap pearanco moro striking it should stand alone, for it is capable of beautifying a large space without the, help of other plant specimens. It is a heavy feeder, and improves greatly with a rich, well-worked soil. A light mulch around the roots in very hot ' weather prevents tho roots from being dried and burned. The trees are slow-growers naturally, but under careful training they apppar to ucccleratc their growth remarkably. In France they are found growing in perfection, and many of them aro mod els of beauty, surpassing in some in stance1? those of .lapan. The possibility or making a nrnfifc ' MlfHilSagS; from the trrrs is still very remote. The ' siklc" so often turns out not to be sen fruit is little known in the market s nl- . sible at all. though it is gradually being intro duced, and a demand may eventually be created for it. But hirh nrices must. be obtained if at all profitable, for one ! tree yields only a small crop, and that only after nearly a quarter of a cen tury of growth. At present the trees are for ornament and for curiosity, and the fruits will only add to their pres ent value. Proportion of tUr Sexr. Over the whole world the proportion of the sexes i.s about equal but in sepa rate parts of tho woild it varies greatly. For instance, in this country there aie ninety-eight women to every one hun uid men; in Europe there are rather more than one bundled women to one hundred men. Canada has ninety-five women to one hundred men. In nn civili?ed countries the men are be lieved largely to outnumber the women, this on account of the fact that moro men aro needed to carry on the wars in which such people are con stantly engaged aud because of the rougher ways of living. Waverly Liagaine. Credit and Cjsli. .Tuctge 15. was the attorney for a man in a larceny case, and after a pretty close shave he got his client off in good shape. Naturally, the client was grate ful, and as soon as possible he called at the judge's office. "Well, jedge." he said, extending ids hand, "by the help of Providence und you, I am a free man." "Yes, yes," assented the judge, not nxious for thanks, "3-011 just give all the credit to Providence and give me the cash." and it was settled on that basis. Detroit Free Press. JTeta physics. A Scotch black-' smith's definition of inetanhysica is: "When the pairty wha listens du.na ken what pairly wha speaks meens, and wh.en the pairty wha spunks disua Utcn what he meens hiuifeelf, that 1; metaphysics." How tho Entires UAL SfSfil S3 of tao rnalo rosy bo bi-aUvt to that con dit on essential to h alth of body and ptacs el m.a.l. lio to DEVELOP cEtunted, fesblo organs ivi in. orr netr Trcr.tkr, "PERFECT JwAKKOQD." A simple, infallible, inecnaciccl tnstlicd, ia-ilon-ed by pliyticlaus Cook id ifKEE, scAleu. - Address da confidence). ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, H.Y. SEX m mm ELLEN OSBOEFS LETTER A Disquisition Upon Common Ssnse as Bolated to Fashion. 'Common Sense" Shoes and "Kstior Toed" The Colors and the Cat or tho Season's Gown Talking About Hair and Sleeve. COPYIUOHT, I88& Color, if you can imagine it as be ginning' at the top, has reached tho bottom. Color to particularize is in the plume and ribbon and pompon, color the most vivid and most various, nnd it is in shoes, too. For a number of years back russet and tan footwear has been worn in summer, only to give place to sober black, just when nature's russets and tans arc most pronounced. This year it will be entirely proper to cling to one's colored shoes as late in the season as desired, all winter from pres ent apx)carances, and out of doors as well as in. Tan and bronze and brown are at present the colors most in favor, but there is a prospect that later on al most any color may be worn. If black shoes arr still preferred, as by most people they will be, patent leathers will remain in favor. And as to shape. It is almost impossible to get a stylish and shapely shoe which isn't "razor toed." "Toothpick toes" aren't sharp cnoug-h for these ambitious daj-s. There are a few leading- shoemakers who build broad-toed shoes when by their customers' insistancc they are com pelled to do so, charging an extra price for the incidental laceration of their feelings. "Can't you make my shoes with com mon ense toes?" said one of the bright est literary women in New York to a fashionable foot clothier. "Of course I can, madam,"' he re plied in that low, deferential tone that women like, "but I really shouldn't advise it. You haven't a common sense foot." Was she offended? Xot a bit! It was the subtlest of compliments. And. indeed, the American foot long, slender and pointed does ex plain and justify for those women who possess it the M7or-tocd shoo which is so fascinating to all the se. And, oil ye philosophers! call this "charming" and that "sensible;" which will any woman choose? Do not blame her. It is well that she should cleave to the one; abhoT the .1X1. SORTS OF other. I-r that which is labeled "sen Do you not remember that it U6ed to be thought sensible not to give water to fever patients, or to eat late sup- Pcrs or to sleep with the window open? So of Hhoes. In the dark aces there ' was a prevalent superstition that thick , leather r.hoes wero sensible. To this da3 in England men and women wear, for walking shoes, ponderous hob nailed affairs, which hinder movement v?'7S. .-Srf-ja A XATTV WTXTER WRAP. and impede the natural perspiration of the feet. Nothing could be more mis taken. For walking or for any pur pose ".he thinnest leather is moro healthful than thick. And cloth up- i pcrs ma3' be. for all but the worst of I weighers, better than either. Light ' weight, porous substance, that is the I ideal shoe Let the women who won't be sensi sible hold on to their follies and frivoli ties, and sensible people will come to agree with them. You remember that when Mary Tl Wiikins, the writer of stories, and a sensible woman, surely, came to New York a j-car ago the thing she most ad mired, fresh fromu quiet village home. was "those cunning big sleeves." And now. just rs thekseusible people have made up their minds that the big sleeves are not so very terrible after all. fash ion turns her kaleidoscope just a trille, a subtle change comes over the picture and again the sensible ones are left to "catch up." They will do it quicker and easier this time. From both Lon don and Paris the word is that sleeves must be of moro moderate dimensions. There will b no vory decided change, but the balloon will shrink by degrees into mere modest volume. Note, for instance, the carh; winter dress in tire 'lustration,' who-e sleeves srem moderate enough after what we have seen. A prett3" dress, is it not? . I suudosc bv this time it but vffir iff' lam seventy-seven years old. ar.dhave h.-d my?ge renewed at leact t-Ter.ty jears by tlie use of Swift's breafc. My foot ....? la-r r mv kre was a ninmntT sore for two years, and phvsicians slid it could not be cured. Alter tatting mxH sm xjtties S. S-S. there 13 net a soreonmyun)M.anai Y ve a new lease on ff r F, ?S era .lfe. You ought to V . M m& .- fill cMtTororc Irvwtpr tJ ULti 3 imWkr j : our -wonderful remaiy. Ira F. Stiljs, Palratr, Kansas City. IS A WONDERFUL REMEDY especially for oLl peopis. Jt builds "P tha general health- Treat free. SWIFT SPCIFIC COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga. received the "baptism of publicity as the wearer tripped down the steps of her mother's charming homo on Fifty seventh street and thence along the avenue, and admired it must have been. The material of the gown is a soft grayish brown, the sleeves, the collar and yoke a lustrous dark brown, of course; hat, , brown; shoes, brown; gloves, brown; the girl herself brown haired, brown eyed and rosy cheeked. A vory pronounced and unmistakable overskirt has this costume, and its skirt is but three yards and a half around, which women nowadays call very scant; so do our standards change! Precisely the same sleeves appear on a wrap of fur and velvet, belonging to the same chic costume, with its wide lapels of fur coming clear to the bot tom of the jacket. Why couldn't oh, you had thought of that already, madam, and how nicely tho old fur jacket would "make over?" Well, it isn't often that the modists give us such a chancel And they aro wise, those great modistes. For what woman, with the virtuous consciousness of past econ omy buoying her up, can pass un scathed through the long aisles of beautiful suitings and materials and trimmings which tho season has pro vided? The somber Bun of November sinks carlj' to its rest and the electric lights gleam and blink upon the busy fascinating scene, where the fabrics lie heaped at hazard upon the polished counters like autumn leaves upon the swaid. What wonderful yellows are there, shimmering with pale light, and what warm browns like golden sun light and deeper browns like autumn hillsides when the sun has set, and greens which gleam and glow and greens which dully aerve for foil and background to bright colors, cad whit ish greens likc the beatejigamirji a. FOOTWEAB. nteamers track; smootn rffBrit-i vrrreh shitainor, and rough corduroy and hop Backing effects which absorb the light, bourettes and telours, crepons and whipcords, matelasse and moires, satins for evening dress and velvet for all imaginable purposes, what a med ley and maze of brilliant colorings is it all! The novelties in cut can bo told in a moment; smaller sleeves, ovcrskirts, an item or two about hats and shoes, and behold it all! But tho colors! Borrow the brush of Whistler, the whimsical, if you would paint them! What is more beautiful than red gold hair, hair whose color is deep and strong and uncompromising, with no trace of flax in its rudd3r gleam? Tho girl I saw at the reception in Yonkers last ovening had hair just like that, great masses of it, piled and massed and coiled high up on the top of her head. All about her head little ten drils of the golden hair, rcbelliously escaping or seeming to escape, curled and waved over a neek, forehead and temples of that rare, pure, delicate, yt healthful tint that red-headed girls so often have, and I admired and looked and admired again. And then noxt to Tarrytown Yonkers is New York's most aristocratic suburb H13' eye wandered further afield to see that fantasy was not the exception, but the rule. The coiffure of ISPS has made for itself new axioms. The shortest distance between two points, when one point is a man's heart and the other a maiden's sunny crown of golden hair. is a wave, a curl, a mesh, a tangle of loose, wavy folds: nevera straight line, Loose, wav3. graceful ripples of hair swept low over the brows, high-piled masses, fantastic plaits, ringlets in the most unexpected places, these aru what I saw. And another thing, that grandmother's .high-back comb is. as much the mode as grandmother's big mute and "sprigged" or "wat-red" gown. Ellex Osborx. A "ice Distinction. Binkerton Miss De Lanie's father was of Hibernian descent, was he not? Pilgarlie Oh, no! .lut a common Irishman. The famiby are not at all wealthv. Puck. Architectural Xote. Judges What trade do you follow? Vagrant 1 am a builder. "What do yon build?"' "Castles in the air." Texas Siftings, Street Car Arutnltlf. "I would "get up and give you ray seat, miss.'" said the jollv-faced ni3n in the crowded street car. "but I don't J feel it to be mv duty I am old enough to beyourfather." "You hold vbur agf and your eat re markably well, sir." replied the young f woman, grasping a strap as the car lurched. Chicaarc Tribune - .J rsmm E5T5n i LABORATORY DIAMONDS. !Tne Partial Success of the Dream of Modern Alchemists. The fond hope of the alchemists, the transmutation of the baser metals into gold, has nearly faded from the minds of men, bat thaassidaity of the chem ists in theiirefforts to imitate artificial ly the beautiful products of nature was never greater. Since Lavoisier and his associates, in 1772, proved that the diamond is only a form of carbon, many efforts iiave been made to pro duce it artificially, by the transforma tion of some of the more common forms. These efforts have met with varying degrees of success. Several experimenters have produced the black diamond, but only once he fore has the crystalized transparent va riety been produced. This was accom plished by Hannay, but his method in volved physical arrangements difficult to meet, and has not been pursued. M. Moissan has now announced a new method for the artificial production of the diamond. It has long been thought that if the ordinary forms of carbon could be converted into a liquid I or gas, that they then might be made to solidify as diamonds. isut there is no way known of directly converting carbon into liquid or gas. Moissan took advantage of the prop erty possessed by melted iron of ab sorbing and diffusing carbon through out its mass. He saturated the highly heated iron with carbon by infusing it into a quantity of purified sugar. By suddenly cooling the melted metal he formed a solid crust over the still liquid interior. As the mass continued to cool, the interior gradually solidified, but it was prevented from expanding by tho rigid exterior. The interior was thus compelled to solidify under enormous pressure. During the process of hardening, tho carbon solidified in part, as diamond instead of graphite, as is usually the case in the cooling of melted iron. The quantity of diamonds thus produced was small, and the crystals themselves were small, but they were clear and transparent and seemed to possoss all the beautiful properties of the natural gems. The experiment has already excited the curiosity and interest of many peo ple, and the simplicity of the method will probablj- induce many to attempt the production of the precious stones It is, however, safe to predict that much time and labor will yet have to be expended before marketable-sized jewels can be produced. The scientific import of the discovery is, however, trreat and of immediate j bearing. It is an important success in the efforts of scientific men to repro duce the rarer of the natural mineral products. The diamond, ruby, quartz, feldspar, mica, pyroxene, hornblende, have all been in the laboratory. The experiments are very suggestive as to how the same materials were made in nature. Moissdn's experiment throws strong light oh the condition of the carbon in melted iron, a question or. great practical import. Finally, the1 discovery suggests addi tional information as to the processes going on beyond our earth, which sometimes send meteorites to us laden with diamonds; within the earth, by which reservoirs may be filled with natural gas. The discovery widens the field for the transformation of matter and increases the possibility of inter preting the secrets of the mineral world. Samuel E. Tillman, in Cosmo politan. SHIPS AND WHALES. Many of the Latter Aro Killed by Collision witU tbo Former. The steamsn'ip Petersburg, of the Russian volunteer fleet, had a unique experience near Minieoy, in the South Indian ocean. A sharp shock was felt I by all on board and she stopped as though gripped in a vise. Tho sea was found to be colored with the life-blood of two huge whales, which la3' floating in their last agony. One was cut through b3' the steamer's sharp stem, and the other killed by repeated blows of the screw propeller. The German steamship Waesland, bound from Antwerp to New York, ran into and killed a sleeping whale. A smaller steamer, the Kelloe, collided with a whale near Sea-ham harbor, and wounded it badl3. The celebrated yacht Gencsta uarrowby avoided colli sion with a dead cetacean during the jubilee racelaround our islands. In 15b9 aShields steamship, the James Turpie. nearl3'eut a whale iu two one starlight night. The schooner 0. M. Marrett was almost wrecked by passing whales in North Atlantic Many of the schools struck her repeatedly with such vio lence that her whole hull shook and articles in the officers' rooms wera thrown to the floor. In 1S90, a small sailing vessel, the Ocean Spraj-, bound from Galveston to England, struck a sleeping whale and received damage. On the morning of the 17th of Juby, a whale fifty feet long made his appearance alongside tha steamship Port Adelaide, Capt. C. M. Hepworth, R. N. R., in 42 degrees south, 7,"i degrees east. He followed the vessel for four days, never more than seventy yards away, and gener alU close astern, much to the edifica tion of numerous passengers. He threw up the sponge in 41 degrees south, 97 dejrrees cast, after traveling PSO statute miles, certainly without resting, and apparently fasting. I n November, the ship Earnock, Capt. Parson, was under sail in 29 degrees south, 21 degrees west, when a large whale lashed the sea into foam with his tail, so near the ship that the chief ' officer, who happened to be below for- , ward, came quickly on deck to see what had happened. He actually felt the impact of the xvater against her bows .' In dune, 1S91. while her majest-'s ! ship Immortalite was steaimnjr from j Arosa bay to Gibraltar at the rate of j twelve knot-s an hour, she stopped j short as though a submerged danger J had- been located. It was presently j found that she had cut deeply into a j whale, and it became necessary to go astern in order to get rid of the incumbrance- Four months later the An chor line steamship Ethiopia collided w ith a whale when about eigh. hun dred miles from NjiwYori. At h Theater. j Noodle I find it very hard work to j collect mr thoughts. Maud Papa says it's always difn- cuit to recover small amounts Truth. ,' ' DIRT JN THE HOUSE BUILDS THE HIGH WAY TO BEGGARY." BE WISE IN TIME AND US5 SAPOLIO ALWAYS AHEAD. .tlxrtll'aFW. "wrir..:?4: . v "W? v- S35 V' .? A...A. btnsun o - POROUS PLASTER For "Superior qwllty f Mfttoinl 3l Platters." ThtslCB SJl Highest awards to fa riBllDVft inUMCflM ,9uuni uiinwiii CHEMISTS, MCWVORR. OCT THE & GENUINE OF GENERAL INTEREST. One tribe of the Congo negroes be lieves that the good angels In the heaven to come will spend their whole time pulling off the bills of mosquitos. This belief is said to have its origin in the fact that the' are bothered day and night here on earth with those troublesome insects. Annie Morris, a girl of fourteen, ran away from Halifax, N. S., in 1879 disguised as a bo3 She continued the deception for fourteen 3ears, under the name of Frank Blunt, working at vari ous occupations engaged in onhy by men, and her sex was never suspected until recently, when she was arrested in Milwaukee. Much displeasure was caused by a wedding at Glendive, Montana, because the residents did not approve of the match. Miss Emma Wall, the bride, is a colored girl; and the groom is a white man, named John Orr. The people tarred the groom and whitewashed the bride, rode them on rails, and forced them to leave town. An immense trunk, which belonged to a newly wedded couple, furnished plenty of amusement to passengers at the Baltimore & Ohio railroad depot in Pittsburgh the other daj The trunk was decorated with old shoes, tied with gaj'ty colored, ribbons and two hearts pierced b Cupid's arrow were drawn on the side with chalk. Cotton cloth was first made in In dia, and was in use there as earl3 as two thousand three hundred and fort3r three 3ears ago. About the year 4o0 I J. C, Herodotus spoke of this textile fabric, made from the trees of India, which bore, as their fruit, fleeces sur passing in beauty and delicacy those of the sheep. From India cotton cloth was introduced in Greece and Rome. Six toes were on the right foot of a child born in Zanesville, Ohio. When the child was eighteen months old, it was decided to remove the superfluous toe. As the surgeon was about to per form the operation, the parents turned their heads away. In a minute the surgeon held the dismembered toe in his hand. To the horror of the parents, the3r discovered that the bungler had had taken the toe off the wrong foot- Train robbers were numerous in Mexico some 3ears ago One da3 a train from Vera Cruz for the Cit3 of Mexico was halted 113- highwaymen, who lined both sides of the track. The inmates of the cars arose, seemingly hidalgoes, peons, market women, etc., and from the windows poured a mur derous volle3'. One hundred bandits fell dead and others weie pursued and killed. The inmates of the cars were disguised zouaves. Here are some themes discussed at various meetings by tho Domestic club, composed of 3'oung women of a New York working-girls' society who have married and have households of their own: "What Can Be Done in a Da3',' "How to Train a Baby in Good Habits,'' "How Persons with a Small Salar3r Ma3' Get the most Nutritious Food with the Least Money." Children are welcomed to the societ3 meetings and a committee is appointed to amuse them while their mothers are attend ing to the discussions. Mrs. Crnigie ("John Oliver nobbes'") is b3 birth an American, but as she was taken to London from her birthplace, Boston, when onby three months old, we can hardby in justice claim her. The spirit of her Puritan ancestors makes itself felt, however, for she is in sympathy with the principles and institntions of this country. The real character of the woman is best seen in the fact that, after her marriage at nineteen, she read for a B. A. degree at the London univeisity. She is a clever talker and, though somewhat C3nical and ambi tious, is unselfish and kindly. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. i5. Lombard. Jr. IVesuleiit. J.P.Axi.e, ice President, L.D. Shinier, fUsuior W. H.Livi.nostux. Afctifctuat. CosUio: State National Bank. OF 111 CII1 TA . It A X. TiPITAL, SUICPLlte. $100,000 10J.U00 DlJiECTORS: .tfbn TL Crr. W. r. Green..!. P. Allen. 1 V. .Allm, P. V. Uealy 15. Itr.Unl. J"r A. II Itl-nqtie. L. U. bkiRiier, James U. Lomuard. DAVIDSON & CASE - r ,!ohu Dniidsoii, Pumeer Liiinlienusn of bedgnich Coumy. 1 STiJijJSlIlO) :-: 35.-: 1870 .4 mjJefe Mock of I'lue Lumber hiuie. L-itli, D001-3. sa-li. etc, hIm ays on Laud. Office and yard- on 3Iosley avebe tw eon Dou?!a a e. and Pirst sL and bjflneh jardi; .it L mou City, OUln Jmma City, Kl IEcud, .Mines, I'owt Cifelc anci JLnod, Oklahoma Ictn-ur. mm 2K5 .&ir.b. sr resssf . JC THMM.1 m? ft auavn 7T52J5CL JS SWf&m. 1- aii.J. a WSm, tU-i Xi WICHITA EAGLE Lithographers, Publishers, Printers, Stationers, Binders, And Blank Book Makers. Job Printing:- One of the most complete Job Printis 'Offices 5n the State. Letter Heads, Bill Heads, Cards, Catalogues, Price Lists, Premium Lists, Stock Certificates, Checks, Drafts, Book Printing, Etc. Ifews and Job Printing of all kinds. Lithographing. All lirnnViPQ of T.if Drafts, Bill Heads, Letter Heads,' Cards, Etc. We have first-class designers and engravers.- Eng raving. "Wedding Invitations and Announcement Cards, Luncheon Cards, Galling Cards. Blank Books. Blank Books of all kinds made to order, Bank, City, County and Commercial work a specialty. Sola agents for Kansas, Oklahoma and the Indian Terri tory Tor Bronson's Patent Automatic Level Joint Binding. Endorsed by book-keepers, bankers and county officers. Nothing made equal to it for strength and flat opening" Will open at any page, and he perfectly flat permitting writting across both pages as easily as one. It is the only book that will open out perfectly flat from the first page to the last, thus enabling one to write into the fold as eas ily as any partof the page. Send for circular. Binding. Magazine, Law Book and Pamphlet binding of all kinds, re-binding, etc. Blank Department. All kinds of Legal Blanks for city, county and town ship officers, Deeds, Mortgages, Abstracts, Receipt and Note Books, Real Estate and Rental Agency Books and Blanks, Attorneys Legal Blanks, Justice of the Peace Books and Blanks. Oklahoma. Complete line of Legal, Township and County Blanks Abstracts. Complete outfit furnished for Abstractors, abstract blanks, take-off books, tracers, and all kinds of blanks used by abstractors. Township Officers. We have a complete line of blanks and books sue as are used by township officers. Notary Seals. Seals for Notaries Public, Corporations, Stock Com. ganies, Lodges, Etc. Orders filled promptly. Alf-o tock Certificates for Corporations and Stock Coin panics, either printed or lithographed' Attorney's Pocket Docket. The Lawyers' "Vade Necum," can be used iw any State and in any court. The moct complete and convenient pocket docket ever published, with two indexes an alphabetical index and a diary index; Bhows at a glance just what date a lawyer has a case in court; keeps a complete record of of the rase. Handsomely bound in flexible back, a convenient size to carry in the pocket Endorsed by attorneys everywhere. Price of Docket $1.00. By mail post paid to any address upon receipt of t)J)7. Mimeograph. 300 copies from one original. Writing, Drawing, Music, Etc. Of typewriter letters 1,500 conies can be taken from one original. Recommendeu by over 30,000 users, The Eagle is agent for the sale of toil machine, extra supplies, etc. School Records, Etc We desire to call the attention of County Superin tendents, school district officers and teachers to our line of school publications as jiven below. Our school records and books are now being used exclusively in quite a number of counties, and are superior to any in the market: Classification Term Record, Record of Apportionment of State and franty School Funds, Superintendent's Record of Schcol Visits, (Pocket Size), Record of Teachers' Ability (Poqket Size;,I?ec ord of Official Acts, Annual Financial Reports, An nual Statistical, Reports, School District Clerk's Record, School District Treasurer's Record, School District Treasurers Warrant Register; School District Clerk's Order Book, School Teachers Daily Register. The Daily Eagle. Eight pages Contains the dayand night Associated Press dispatches in lull, and Lat-st Market Reports The Weekly Eagle--$1.00. Eight pages Contains more State and Geneml News and Eastern Dispatches than anv Weekiv Parar in the Southwest The late nour or going io press. ESTIMATES PSOMPTLY FURNISHED UPOX WORK Of AM Kill, (Address all coioiiinication's to R, P. MURD0CK, Bus. Ha'ar. rinnrrrMTi 'Pvnrla IVifvrlr Jitarket Reports up' to hj Ml E. Douglas At Wichita, tka&UwttdB in -"rS,,-, .$. b