Prague Patriot (Prague, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 24, 1907 Page: 2 of 6
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UTTERLY WORN OUT.
LIEUTENANT BOWMAN. PRAGUE PATRIOT
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
1
I HIE STORY OF
Vitality Sapped by Years of Suffering
with Kidney Trouble.
W. S. OVFRSTRftT, Editor and Prop.
The Imminent Airship.
These are the days when the young
aeronauts are seeing visions and the
old aeronauts are dreaming dreams, j
"Human mastery over the air," says
Capt. Ferber, the aerostatic expert of
the French army, "is virtually 1
achieved. None of the startling
achievements of the past, neither
steam, electricity, nor the telephone,
can compare with what the future
now holds in store for us. Not only
will the life of individuals be revolu-
tionized, but governments will be
compelled to devise, in almost every
department, new methods to meet the
changed conditions. This change
will come with amazing suddenness,
and France is taking the precaution
to meet it." In this last sentence,
says the New York Post, Capt. Ferber
doubtless refers in part to the pur-
chase by his government of the fly*
ing machine built by the Wright bro-
thers of Dayton, O., and still credited,
although their demonstration was stv
j cret, with the only sustained flight
ever made by a machine not sus-
tained by gas bags. But he evidently
j has no notion that one inventor or
j one country will monopolize the de-
vices for successful flight. As soon as
one man comes into the open with a
machine with which he can sail about
practically at will, a dozen others will
promptly learn the trick. To-day the
world is waiting to learn the art of
balancing. It may come, as Capt.
Ferber expects, by "a coordinating
central mechanism which will permit
the operator, with an instinctive
touch of tho helm, to right, his ma-
chine when it dips to one side or the
other, as the bicyclist today main-
_ tains his equilibrium by the instinct-
whenever threatened with an attack, j )ye lncllnation of lll8 body." On tho
"Members of my family nlso uso ! th hand tfc mfire human haml
It Tor like ailments. \Vi> are recom-
mending It to our friends." j < eye n'a>' atUlln ,hat «<"<*ne83
—Chas. W. Ilowman. | and dexterity which Llllenthal and
Pllcher lost their lives trying to ac-
quire, but which will make possible
navigation through atmospheric cur-
rents and "blow holes" and whirl-
pools. The every day airship trip, at
best, is likely to be as hard on the
pilot as a run through the Lacliine
rapids.
i CAIN AND ABEL
*
% Sunday School Lesson for Jan. 27.1937 ;.
Vs SptciaU 'irpnred for Thin Paper *
£ $
** * ***** * * * * * * *
I.ESSON TEXT.—den. 4:3-15; Memory
THE GRAND TRUNK PACIFIC RAIL-
ROAD AND WESTERN CANADA.
Will Open Up Immense Area of Free
Homestead Lands.
Capt. J. W. Hogun, former postmas-
ter of Indianola, now living at Austin,
Tex., writes: "I
GOl.DKN TEXT.-'Wh
iH brother ts a murdere
TIME.—Unknown, alth
IN FORTHIGHT HOURS
PE-M-IH CUBED HIM,
Cold Affected Head and Throat-
Attack was Severe.
Chas. W. Bowman, 1st I.ieut. and
Adjt. 4th M. S. M. Cav. Vols., writes !
from Lanham, Md., as follows:
"Though somewhat averse to pat- j
ent medicines, and still more averse
to becoming a professional affidavit j
man, It seems only a plain duty in
the present instance to add my ex-
perience to tho columns already writ-
ten concerning the curative powers
of Peruna.
••I h.i\e been particularly benefited
by Its use lor colds In the head and
throat. I have been able to fully cure
myself of a most severe attack In
forty-eight hours by Its use according
to directions. I use It as n preventive
Atk Vour Druggist for Free Peruna
Almanac for 1907.
1'I.APE.-
I. n probably In
whole rejlon w
TlRrta :t ml Kup
Fl'KIIT! RK
Evil /luting th
lutside the Garden
• in the s:ime r.*-?U
is called Eden.
iruteH rivers.
REFERENCE
Matt. 10:16;
The o
1< . Ifi. lv.21;
1 John 2:10.
New Ttstam
that wicked <
a murderer
Actf
re. —^
13:8-
iow hi
l Light.—<
<1 John
ti. .1:12; Phil. 2::
sacriflc
cry tin
blood :
is giv
God (Jus.
•aketh be
.4; Re
things
lirist's
louder
The railway facilities of Western
Canada have been taxed to the ut-
was afflicted for | terraost in recent years to transfer
years with Jains j the surplus grain crop to the eastern
across the loins markets and the seaboard. The large
and in the hips ; influx of settlers and the additional
and shoulders. I area put under crop have added large-
h a d headache j iy to the grain product, and notwith-
also and neural- ; standing the Increased railway facll-
gia. My right I ities that have been placed at the dis-
eye, from pain, J posal of the public, the question of
was of little use | transportation has proved to be a se-
to me for years, rious one.
The constant flow of urine kept my it will, therefore, be good news to
system depleted, causing nervous everyone Interested in Western Can-
ilillls and night sweats. After trying | ada to know that an authoritative
Origin of Starch.
The art of starching was not intro-
duced into England until the Ingenu-
ity of Dutch women In starching ruffs
Induced Queen Elizabeth to turn to
them when she took to wearing cam-
bric and linen cuffs. In 15G4 Mistress
Dlngheln von den Plasse, the refugee
daughter of a Flemish knight, came
with her husband to London, accord-
ing to an old writer, and set up an es-
tablishment for starching, where Bhe
not only plied her trade, but instruct-
ed English classes In her art.
There is a wild rumor to the effect
I that the concertina is to bo revived.
| The concertina was at one time re-
garded as a musical instrument by
certain eccentric persons who pro-
fessed to enjoy lis alleged tones. !t
| was oven supposed to give pleasure
[• when played by those who understood
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh i ita painful limitations, says Cleveland
that Contain Mercury,
M mercury will surely dentrujr tho tenia of tmell
completely derange tbe whole svatetu when
entering It through the mucous surface*. Hurl)
article# should never he used except > :\ pre*, rip-
Ituna from reputable phyalciana. a« the daiua^.- th.-y
Will do la ten fold to the good you can poealhly de-
rive from them. Hall's Catarrh cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo, <>.. contains no mer-
cury, and la taken Internally, siting directly upon
the blood end iiiuc.>uh surfaces of tho system. In
buylug Hall s Catarrh Cure he sure you get the
genuine. It la taken Internally and marie In To]
--- - Te
Eblo, by F .1 Cheney A- Co. Testimonials froe.
Bold br Drugglata. l'rlce.75c. per bottle.
Take ilall'e Family l'llls for couatlpatlon.
ledo,
Autocratic Revivalists.
The earl and countess of Tanker-
▼ille have been holding crowded re-
ligious meetings in Shropshire, Eng-
land. Both are much Interested in
this kind of work. The countess was
Mi3s Lenora Van Marter, an American
girl, and the earl spent much of his ;
youth In this country. He is an ener-
getic member of the house of lords
and, like his wife, a great lover of art
Starch, like everything else, Is be-
ing constantly improved, the pntent
Starches put on the market 25 years
ago are very different and inferior to
those of the present day. In tho lat-
est discovery—Defiance Starch—all In-
jurious chemicals are omitted, while
the addition cf another ingre llent. in-
vented by us, gives to the Starch a
strength and smoothness never ap-
proached by other brands.
Convict's Peculiar Claim.
A life convict In the Andamans had
served some long period when an or-
der recently came for his release. All
the time he had been In the band, and
had evidently so far forgotten that he
was a prisoner that on his release be
put in a claim for a pension on ac-
count of his long and faithful service
as a government servant.—Madras
Mail. -—
Important to Mothers.
Eltrolne c r*futlr e.ery bottle of CASTORtA,
h >.fe cd .are rcmeiSj for Infant, anil children,
and see I bet It
•ST.",
la I'M For Om 30 Ye.r.,
"i"*1 li.re Aiwa;. Doug tit.
Invention Long Looked for
I Plain Dealer. The concertina Is
Instrument that is unimpressed by
I kind treatment either going or com-
| lng. When it is expanded it queru-
lously walls; when It is contracted it
plaintively moans. When the concer-
tina Is violently agitated It gasps and
wheezes. Sometimes it snorts. Just
why it should be revived isn't at all
clear. It can't be expected to cope
with either the automatic piano player
or the talking machine.
While still duke of Hrabant, before
his accession to Delgium's throne, he
lost his only son, who died after a
mysteriously sudden illness. Crown
Prince Rudolph, of Austria, the king's
son-in-law. met a violent death In the
hunting lodge at Meyerling. In the
latter part of the king's month of
fate. In January, 1890, the palace at
Laeken burned, and Princess Clemen-
tine, who barely escaped with her
life, was so overwrought by the sight
of her governess perishing in the
flames that for many months It was
feared she would lose her reason In
precisely the same manner In which
Leopold's only sister, the ex-Empress
Carlotta. lost hers. The latter's defi-
nite insanity also, curiously enough,
dates from January.
Capt. Brunswig of the Prinzossin
Victoria Luise blew out his brains.
Count Boni De Castellane, victim of
a far worse shipwreck, didn't. So
12:24).
Comment and Suggestive Thought.
"The picture of Cain and Abel por
trays how from the first opposition
has subsisted between good and evil,
between faith and self-will, between
obedience and lawlessness. The two
brothers brought up in the same fani
11 y, became the types, the one of sin,
the other of righteousness."—Ryle.
The Two Sacrifices, True and False
Worship.—V. 3. "In process of time."
An indefinite note of time. It prob-
ably was many years. "Cain brought
the fruit of the ground." The products
of his business, as was natural anil
proper. "An offering unto the Lord,"
Jehovah, who had made himself
known in the garden, and probably
since.
V. 4. "And Abel, he also brought of
the firstlings of his flock." "Either
the first born, which God afterwards
demanded (Ex. 13:32), or the choicest
and best (Job 18:13)."—Cook. "And
the fat thereof." Literally, the fat-
ness of them, i. 8., the t ttest of the
firstlings, the best he had, or, as Dlll-
niann, "their fat pieces," the part to
be burned. "The Lord had respect
unto Abel and to his offering." "it is
impossible to know in what way the
Lord showed his favor, but it was, In
any case, a visible sign of satisfac-
tion."—Keil.
The Anger of Cain. (1) It was
against his brother. (2) It was with-
out good cause. (3) It grew out ol
envy and jealousy. (4) It was inten-
sified by his own consciousness of be-
ing In the wrong, and the desire to
quiet bis conscience by blaming oth-
ers. (5) It was against God. (G) It
was violent, ill-tempered, beyond the
control of reason. (7) It was the feel
ing of hatred in the wicked toward
those who are better because they are
a continual reproof.
V. 8. "And Cain talked with Abel
and his brother." "Hebrew. And Cain
said unto Abel Ills brother;' aftei
which there is, in many of the Hebrew
copies, a blank space lef', as if some-
thing had been omitted."—Bush. He
talked over the matter with his
brother. He went on in familiar inter-
course with him, and it was during
one of these conversations that his
anger was again inflamed. Others rep
resent Cain as asking his brother to
go away from the home into a lonely
field for the purpose of doing evil to
him. "Cain . . . slew him." Whether
he intended to kill, or struck a blow
I in anger, and the result was more j
than he expected, we do not know.
Am I My Brother's Keeper?—Only
Cain-like men ask Cain's question We
all are our brother's keepers. God has
made the circles of family, friendship,
acquaintance, race, humanity, so that
each of us has an Influence in them,
and we are responsible for that inliu-
1 ence. No one lives or dies to himself.
And God gives us wealth, position, in
tellect, not for ourselves alone, but
that we may be better keepers of our
| brother. (1) We are keepers of our
! brothers, not by dictating to them, but
I b.v brotherly love; (2) by helping
them, as the good Samaritan, or as
the righteous in Matt. ?5:31-46; (3) by
I considering their welfare in all our
I business relations; (41 fry using every
j influence for their good, doing to oth-
ers in all relations "as we wouli that
they should do unto us."
The Voice of Abel Still Heard.—
I "The blood that speaketh better things
than that of Abel" |Heb 12:24) He
' being dead yet speaketh"" (Heb. 11:4).
Here is a fine picture of Abel's work.
He ti living and speaking down all
the centuries one long triumphal
march, scattering blessed gems of
seven different climates and using all
kinds of medicine I had the good for-
tune to hear of Doan's Kidney Pills.
This remedy has cured me. I am as
well to-day as I was twenty years ago,
nd my eyesight is perfect."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
••We Hav« Many Similar."
The following Is an extract from a
letter received from Mr. H. H. Mey-
ers, of Stutgart, Ark.: "You would
greatly oblige me if you would intro-
duce Hunt's Lightning Oil at Mlllidge-
ville, 111., as I have many friends and
relatives there, in whom I am much
concerned, and I understand the Oil
is not kept there. I can recommend
it as the best medicine I ever had In
my house. It cured me of a bad case
of the Bloody Flux in less than one-
half hour, and it cured my grand-
daughter of a bad case of Cholera
Morbus in a very short time."
HEADS SHAPED TO ORDER.
Serman Doctor Explains Causes of
Various Formations.
At a recent convention of German
naturalists and doctors Dr. Walcher,
of Stuttgart, in an instructive paper
jit forth a sensational theory to ex-
plain the formation of the shape of
the head of Infants. He maintained
that the head of a child could be
molded artificially. He found by ex-
perience that when a medium-shaped
head is placed in a soft cushion the
child turns on Its back, or rests on the
back of its head, in order to free
mouth, nose and face. In this manner
the head rests smoothly, and a short
head is developed. But if the medium-
shaped head of a child is placed on a
hard under-rest, like a hair mattress
or rolled carpet, the child's head
turns aside, as It cannot stand any
more on Its head than an egg, for the
muscle of the back is weakened.
Therefore, with continued resting on
the side a long head is developed. To
prove his assertions the lecturer pre-
sented a child whose mother and sis-
ter are short-headed. The child at its
birth had a short head, now after 18
months it is long skulled. If the child
had been placed on its back, according
to other experiences its head would
have been short-shaped. Dr. Walcher
did not deny that the shape of the
head was inherited, but asserted that
it could be greatly influenced by the
way the child rested,
SCALY ERUPTION ON BODY.
statement has been given out by C.
M. Hays, president of tho Grand
Trunk Pacific Railway, that that rail-
way will do its share towards moving
the crop of 1907 from Alberta. Sas-
katchewan and Manitoba to tide water,
and thus assist In removing a serious
obstacle which has faced the settlerB
during recent years. Mr. Hays, who
has Just completed a trip from Port-
age la Prairie to Edmonton in a prai-
rie schooner, a distance of 735 miles,
which was covered In eighteen days,
Is enthusiastic about the country.
This will be gratifying to settlers in
the Canadian West, even if Mr. Hays
declines to be bound to a time limit
with tho exactitude of a stop-watch.
The Grand Trunk Pacific road will be
in a position to take part in the trans-
portation of the crop of 1907, and that
will be satisfactory to the settlers In
that country when the harvest is gar-
nered.
The wheat crop of 1906 in Western
Canada was about 90,000,000 bushels,
and, with the increased acreage which
is confidently expected to be put un-
der crop next year, it is safely calcu
lated that fully 125,000,000 bushels will
be harvested in 1907. The necessity
for increased transportation facilities
are, therefore, apparent, and the state-
ment made by Mr. Hays will bring en
couragement to the farmers of the
Canadian West, new and old. The
opening up of additional thousands of
free homesteads is thus assured by
the agent of the Canadian Govern
ment, whoso address appears else-
where.
NOT DOOMED TO SECLUSION.
Austrian Nuns of Noblo Blood Lead
Pleasant Lives.
The "first lady" In the Austro-Hun
garian court is now the abbess of the
Theresian Convent of the Noble La
dies in Prague, a position which is
always held by an archduchess. The
Archduchess Maria Annunciata, the
present abbess, who is a niece of the
emperor, has succeeded to the position
of first lady through the widowhood
of the Archduchess Maria Josefa, wife
of the late Archduke Otto. The noble
nuns of Prague live a very different
life from what is the usual conception
of convent life. They play a leading
part in the society of the city and are
not even compelled to live in the ab
bey, where each is provided with two
rooms and service. Handsome car-
Transformation in New Mexico.
"Three seasons of rainfall hava
transformed New Mexico from an ex-
panse of unproductive territory into a
country of bountiful crops, running
streams and happy, prosperous peo-
ple," is the report which E. W. Fox,
register of the government land office
at Clayton, N. M., brought to Washing-
ton.—Washington Post.
With a smooth iron and Defiance
Starch, you can launder your shirt-
waist just as well at home as the
steam laundry can; it will have the
proper stiffness and finish, there wilt
be less wear and tear of the goodSf
and it will be a positive pleasure to
use a Starch that does not stick to the
iron.
Sixty Years a Lamplighter.
Timothy Boldra, who has died at
Yarmouth, England, at the age of 82
years, had been in the service of the
local gas company more than 60 years,
and before that, as a youth, was em-
ployed to light the street oil lamps
with a flint and steel.
Doctors and Remedies Fruitless—Suf-
fered 10 Years — Completely
Cured by Cuticura.
"When I was about nine years old
small sores appeared on each of my
lower limbs. I scratched them with a
brass pin and shortly afterwards both
of those limbs became so sore that
I could scarcely walk. When I had
been suffering for about a month
the sores began to heal, but small
scaly eruptions appeared where the
sores had been. From that time on- riages with liveried servants are also
ward I was troubled by such severe
there you are. The Teuton showed | truth to all ages, like Prince Siddartha
In bis father's dream in The Light of
Asia.
Cain's punishment eonsistei! (1) In
the strengthening of his evtt charac-
ter. He added lying and selfishness to
murder. (21 He set himself in npposi*
nd his laws, changing
from the light of blessings to the evfls
that are the necessary consequences
of defying God's laws. (3) His life-
Gallic excitability, the Gaul showed
Teutonic phlegm. Possibly the Ger-
man was a descendant of Gauls who j
had anciently crossed the Rhine and
I the Frenchman a descendant of Ger-
mans w ho anciently crossed over Into I "t() Oo(1
Gaul. But that's not the point, says
iloston Transcript. The point Is that [
we make very elaborate fools of our-
i eslves as a rule in our little experl- j
j ments In racial psychology. It's so I
j easy to speak of a nation In an ofT-
i hand, cocksure way, as being volatile
A Paris paper devoted to scientific or stolid or humorous or some other
unpleasant thing It saves thought.
mbjecta announces the discovery ol
a practical method of Bhleidtns
watches and clocks from all magnetic
Influences It is said to be the work
of a watchmaker named Leroy.
Icfianre Starch Is the latest lnvi>n-
<lia.t line and an Improvement
- makes; It Is more eco-
•tter wofx, take* le^a
n any grocer.
Ireland,
tde-mark wttb
. to be stamped,
ted for ita lu
Nearly half of the sheep in the
world are In two thinly populated
countries of tho aonthern hemisphere
—Australia and the Argentine re-
public. Russia has more sheep than
any ullier < uuntry in the northern
half of the globe.
work was a failure. (4) He lost the
bl« sslngs of companionship with the
Hood. He was lonely, estranged from
his kind, an outlaw. (5) Remorse and
the Condemnation of bis conscience.
Practical Points.
The only explanation of the differ-
ence between Cain and Abel lies in
their freedom of choice. One chose
th.. «av of life, the other the way of
d«?ath.
1 yron in hi
t< nil ted l>v Lu
"Will!
Cain, pictures htm as
•ifor to unbelief and re-
providence,
his brother Is a
-l ■
th
nv
The little grapes grown In Greece (
which are sold under the trade name ,
of Zante "currants" In this country, j
I are often nsed In the kingdom where ]
I they are produced to make alcohol
(or cooking aud heating houses. <
wlc
"Knvy Is
Host, the most detestable
sinful passions. A coal f<<
by this time kindled hell in Cain
I heart."—Alexander Whyte.
the dea
of all o
n hell hi
itching that, until I became accus-
tomed to it, I would scratch the sores i
until the blood began to flow. This
would stop the Itching for a few
days, but scaly places would appear
again and the itching would aceom- j
pany them. After I suffered about
ten years I made a renewed effort to j
effect a cure. The eruptions by this
time had appeared on every part of |
iny body except my face and hands, j
The best doctors in my native coun-
ty advised me to ust' arsenic in small
doses and a salve. I then used to
bathe the sores in a mixture which
gave almost intolerable pain. In ad-
dition I used other remedies, such
as iodine, sulphur, sine salve, 's
Salve, Ointment, and in fact I
was continually giving some remedy |
a fair trial, never using less than
one or two boxes or bottles. All ,
this was fruitless. Finally my hair |
began to fall out and I was rapidly
becoming bald. I used 's , 1
but it did no good. A few months
j after, having used almost everything
else, I thought I would try Cuticura
i Ointme-at, having previously used i
1 Cuticura Soap and being pleased with
! it. After using three boxes I was
j completely cured, and my hair was j
j restored, after fourteen years of suf-
fering and an expenditure of at least
$50 or $60 in vainly endeavoring to
find a cure. I shall be gtad to write
to any one who may be interested in
| my cure. B. Hiram Mattinglv, Ver-
j million, S. Dak., Aug. 18, 1906."
American Idealism.
j Since my first arrival in America I
have held that the real spirit Is ideal
istlc and that the average individual
American Is controlled by Idealistic
I Impulses. Those who may contradict
me can not have sounded the depths
of the philosophy of Ralph Waldc
! Emerson, or studied the life and read
; the speechos of Abraham Lincoln, and
considered their far-reaching effect on
J the American people. In Lincoln's
I great character nothing can be more
I striking than the way In which he
combined reality and the loftiest Ideal, |
| with a thoroughly practical capacity (
I to achieve that Ideal by practical
methods. This faculty seemed to give
him a far-sighted, almost superhuman
vision, which enabled him to pierce j
the clouds obscuring the sight of the
keenest statesmen and thinkers of his
age— llaroa Speck von Sternburg, In
Forum.
Want Protection for Bread.
English medical men are demanding
that bakers should dellvar loaves la
oiled papar bags.
provided for their use, and they hav
a box in the opera. Each noble lad
is paid $500 a year, while the abbess
has a salary of $10,000. When they
attend court balls they must wear
black evening dress with a ribbon of
light blue.
6heer white goods, in fact, any fine
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done in
manner to enhance their textile beau-
ty. Home laundering would be equa:
lv satisfactory if proner attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
THE FIRST TWINGE
Of Rheumatism Calls for Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills If You Would Be
Easily Cured.
Mr. Frank Little, a well known citi-
zen of Portland, Ionia Co., Mich., was
cured of a severe case of rheumatism
by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. In speak-
ing about it recently, he said: "My
body was run down and in no condi-
tion to withstand disease and about
five years ago I began to feel rheu-
matic pains in my arms and across
my back. My arms and legs grew
numb and the rheumatism seemed to
settle in every joint so that 1 could
hardly move, while my arms were
useless at times. I was unable to
sleep or rest well and my heart pain-
ed me so terribly I could hardly stand
it. My stomach became sour and
bloated after eating and this grew
so bad that I had inflammation ol
tbe stomach. I was extremely nerv-
ous and could not bear the least
noise or excitement. One whole side
of my body became paralyzed.
"As I said before, I had been suff-
ering about five years and seemed ta
be able to get no relief from my
doctors, when a friend here In Port-
land told me how Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills had cured him of neuralgia la
the face, even after the pain had
drawn it to one side. I decided to
try the pills and began to see some
improvement soon after using them.
This encouraged me to keep on until
I was entirely cured. I have never
had a return of the rheumatism or of
the paralysis.
The pills are for sale hv all drug-
gists or sent, postpaid, on receipt of
price, 50 cents per box. six boxes
$2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine
Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
CARTERS
Want Overshoes Made to Order.
"One peculiar feature of the shoe
trade this season is -the demand for
overshoes made to order," said the
manager of a shoe store. "Many
women are wearing shoes with rather
narrow, pointed toes and the broad
rubbers now on the market are cer-
tainly not a very good fit. What
our customers want is an overshoe
that doesn't look like a gunboat, hence
the frequent orders for overshoes
with graceful lines."-—N. Y. Sun,
Alcohol From Sweet Potatoes.
Sweet potatoes are principally used
In the Azores to make alcohol, ths
yield being ten to 11 per cent. The
present price is about 13 cents (Unit-
ed States currency) per liter (1.0561
quarts).
Old Adage Corroborated.
Corroboration of the old saying that
"the way to a man's heart is through
his stomach" is found in an item
which announces that a western mll«
lionaire is going to marry his cook.
Positively enred by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis-
tress from Dyspepsia. In-
digestion and. Too II u arty
Eating. A perfect rein-
cdyfor Dizziness, Nausea.
Drowsiness. Bad Taste
In the Mouth. Coated
Tongue, Pain In the side,
TORPID LIVER. Ttie?
regulate tho Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
iTTLE
BVER
PJLLS.
CARTERS
llTTlE
I VER
PILLS.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
PIANOS!
$6.00 to $10.00 down, payments.
Talking Machines
Nothing down, $ 1.00 a week.
Guitars, Mandolins, Violins, Organs,
$3 up, $1 weekly, sheet music, etc.
SEWING MACHINES
$5.00 down, $1.00 a week.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
Address DURHAM & CO.,
310 N. Broadway, OKLAHOMA, O. T.
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE
, flit* fruit U IIJ
n i rniit rt> <>|
AS OSHUllN,
\ KKNON, IJ.I.INOltt,
I IM)>J out build
lugoiMl llltnols ti'wn
liter it en h*ri.ll H t<
quirk rpiiuraiMl curwn worm fUMi
uk of t«>tliuonlaiB and 11) d iys trouttnvni KHKlfit
UU 11. ll.UUklk.s ti bUiNa Lui LL ▲ii.amta.Uai
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Overstreet, W. S. Prague Patriot (Prague, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 24, 1907, newspaper, January 24, 1907; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116159/m1/2/: accessed May 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.