The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 25, 1912 Page: 6 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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ARE YOU SICK?
For Poison Blood
Purifies the Blood, Cleanses the Liver,
Clears the Skin, Strengthens the Nerves,
Increases the appetite. For Catarrh,
u Scrofula, Scrofulous Humors, Ulcers,
Humors and Pimples on the Face, Constipation, Headache,
rains m the Back, and all Blood diseases from any cause
For Chills & Fever
Of all scientific Chill, Malaria and Ague
cures, "CHIL-LAX" is the world's great-
est. Absolutely sure, safe and harmless to
the person taking it, yet so extremely fatal
to the malaria germ that in most cases it drives the poison
entirely out of the system in 3 days* A Mild Family Laxative
The New Discovery
For RHEUMATISM and GOUT, deep-
seated and apparently hopeless cases, any
age or condition. Used by Specialists in
„ , . every quarter of the Globe. Pleasant to take
lJon t waste time with compounds, cure-alls and liniments
>Cure Your Kidneys
I'or Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases,
which, if neglected, often leads to Bright's
Disease. KIDNEY FLUSH is a safe, speedv
,?nd satisfactory remedy for long standing
KlUINn, Y trouble, possessing a wonderful antiseptic power
Suternational J&rug Company,
Jort Smith, Jtrk., 11. 3. J?.
REMBDIESJAnU^eXpilS) ""d "* •b°V* mtn,iontd «°° -
KILL-POIS. I For Blood Ailments from any c u«e) $1.00
Ik ^X. I For Chills, Malaria, Fever, Ague) $1.00
(166, I The great RHEUMATISM REMEDY) $2.00
KIDNEY FLUSH, (Kidney and Bladder Diseases] $1.00
Total value $5.00
lb ' w'" SfnJ ,ht olher ** 03 within six months from Ihii date, provided Che Remedies
CURfc above mentioned diseases and are exactly as recommended. 1 am to judge.
Name ..
A ddrcss
cur THIS OUT AND MAIL TO US
Chiropractic Adjusting'
We are making Chiropractic Adjustings
at the place known as the Oberly farm
1-2 mile west and 1 mile north of Cash-
ion, All contracts made between July 11
and August 1 will be discounted. Ex-
amination and Diagnosis FREE. We in-
vite you to call. Phone R 3
DR. J. F. ATWOOD DR. NEVA E. ATWOOD
Lockridge News
Church service next Sunday
night at 8 o'clock preceded by
the Endeavor society.
Mrs. Farman and Mrs. Burton
have been on the sick list for sev-
eral days.
Dr. McCarty has moved his
family to Rl Reno, where he will
reside.
Wheat in large quantity is
brought to the elevator and Mr.
Comstock is kept busy receiving
it. The engine broke down Sat-
urday and no grain could he ele-
vated; the pit was full and the
driveway floor became a massive
heap of wheat. Wheat was
brought in as late as nine o'clock.
The Choice
Of A Husband
is to important a matter for a
woman to be handicapped by
weakness, bad blood or foul
breath. Avoid these killhopes
taking Dr. King's Life Pil]s<
New strength and fine comblex-
ion, pure breath cheerful spirits
—things that men-follow their
use. Easy ,safe, sure. 25c All
Druggists.
We sometimes get the impres-
sion in this age of finance and
reform when everyone is chasing
the almighty dollar and seeking
some scheme of government that
will work automatically, that the
greed for gold has entered the
minds and hearts of the people
and strangled their love for the
fatherland There is, on the sur
face, much pessimism in the
world today. People muse over
the evils that exist and magnify
them to the skies, forgetting that
it is effort upon effort to eradi-
cate an evil of the body politic.
Assertions are made daily by ma-
ny that the country is going to
the dogs. But there are striking
facts that serve to disillusion us
when we are almost convinced
that the people are growing less
patriotic. Whenever the nation-
al airs are played before a large
audience, why is it the people
rise as one man and wave their
handkerchiefs long and lustily?
Is it because they have lost faith
in their country, or is it prompt-
j ed by that love of country called
! patriotism? Surely, there is but
one answer. There come to men
I and weftnen, boys and girls,
J thoughts of liberty and freedom,
| thoughts of the deeds of their
j ofrefathers on every hillside and
| in every dale during the gloomy
j days of the revolution, when fate
and chance hovered malignantly
over the newly conceived and
| struggling nation. They realize
j the price paid for it all—the life-
| blood of patriots who fought and
j died on the immortal fields where
j freedom was born. It is proof
j that Americans have faith in
j their country and their fellow
| men, and if the war eagle should
| scream, calling for the nation's
sons to defend her against the
incoming foreign foes, there is
no doubt but that the strength
and vitality of the nation would
immediately march away to the
sound of fife and drum.--Alva
Pioneer.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Musselman.
of Winston, Mo., enroute home
from Pacific Coast, stopped here
this week for a short visit with
their old friends, Mr. and Mrs:
J. B. Plum,
too
Country Correspondence
late this week for publication
Will publish next week.
For insurance, call on S. S
Cole.
i
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Barnard, W. F. The Independent. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 25, 1912, newspaper, July 25, 1912; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107716/m1/6/: accessed April 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.