The Wewoka Weekly Herald (Wewoka, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, November 23, 1906 Page: 3 of 4
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F\
INSOMNIA CURED
Dr. Williams' Pink Pilli Restored
Wrecked Nerves to Normal Con-
dition and Good Health Followed.
The sufferer from sleeplessness too of-
ten resorts to habit-forming drugs in
order to secure tha coveted rest. But
sleep obtained by (he use of opiates is
not refreshing and the benefit is but
temporary at best.
Mrs. H. A. Fletcher, of 69 Blodget
street, Manchester, N. H., is living evi-
dence of the truth of this statement,
fehe says: "I received a shock of au
apoplectic character. It was so severe
that the sight of my right eye was af-
fected, causing iue to see objects double
X was confined to my bed alwut fou
weeks, at one time being told by t he doc-
tor that I could not get well. When I
could leave my bed I was in such a ner-
vous state that I could not sleep at night.
I would get up and sit on a clmir until
completely tired out and then go back to
bed and sleep from exhaustion.
"I had been under the doctor's care
•for six weeks when my sister, Mrs
Loveland, of Everett, persuaded me to
try Dr. Williams' Fink Pills for 1'nle
People. I began talcing the pills with
tlie result thut I soon ex|)erieiiced relief.
-One night soon after taking them I lay |
awake only a short time and the next I
night I rested well. From that time I I
slept well every night anil soon got well
and strong. I have recommended Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills it number of times,
and iny niece has taken the.n for weak
nerves nnd poor blood and found them
Very beneficial."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have cared
many severe nervous troubles, headache,
neuralgia and sciatica as well as diseases
of the blood such asaniemia, rheumatism,
pale and sallow complexions and many
forms of weakness. All druggists sell
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, or they will be
sent by mail postpaid, on receipt of price,
60 cents per box, six boxes for $-J.50, by
the Dr. Williams Medicine Comnauv.
Schenectady, N. T.
NEST FOR EGG EATING HENS.
A Lake County (111.) correspondent
of Prairie Farmer sends an Illustra-
tion of a nest that he has devised for
egg eaters. Our sketch brings out
the idea fairly well. A false bottom
is put on the middle of the nest box
with a hole a little over two and one-
half Inches in diameter in the bottom.
This hole should be juflt large enough
for an egg to go through. The sides
of the nest is packed with shaving,
leaves or hay and a bit of buiiat
AWFUL SUFFERING.
Section of Nest for Egg Eaters.
tacked about the hole and around the
sides to make the nest.
A lower shelf is made extending
only part way across the box. As
shown in the cut when the egg. A,
comes down through the hole in the
bottom of the nest proper, it strikes
on this padding, slides off from the
second shelf and drops into a lower
compartment and gradually rolls until
it reaches the position of the last egg.
Here it is handy for the hand-hole
when the gatherer comes for the con-
tents of the nest. This device is said
to work very satisfactorily and pre-
vents the hen from eating her egg
simply because it disappears from her
Treatment of Habitual Criminals.
The New Zealand minister for Jus-
tice has introduced the habitual crim-
inals and offenders bill, which pro-
vides that where a person has been
twice convicted of a criminal assault
or four times of wounding, robbery or
burglary, he may be regarded as an j sight at once-
habitual criminal and at the expira- ! .
tion of his sentence detained in a re- ! FOWLS WITHOUT LICE,
formatory. i
After six convictions for vagrancy a ; ^on'* Give Vermin a Foothold, and
man may be treated in the same way. j Your Task Will Be Easy,
Discharge from the reformatory will ! •
l>e secured only on the recommenda- j , r'ast summer the editor of the
tion of the court, while the detained i Farmers' Review visited the Maine
Offenders will be made to work and experiment station. That station has
wages will be placed to their credit ! done a great deal in the way of poul-
From Dreadful Pains from Wound on
Foot—System All Run Down-
Miraculous Cure by Cuticura.
"Words canont speak highly enough
for the Cuticura Remedies. I am now
seventy-two years of age. My system
had been all run down. My blood was
so bad that blood poisoning had set
in. I had several doctors attending
me, so finally I went to the hospital
where I was laid up for two months.
My foot and ankle were almost be-
yond recognition. Dark blood flowed
out of wounds In many places and 1
was so disheartened that I thought
surely my last chance was slowly leav-
ing me. As the foot did not improve,
you can readily imagine how I felt. I
was simply disgusted and tired of life.
I stood this pain, which was dreadful,
for six months, and during this time
I was not able to wear a shoe and
not able to work. Some one spoke to
mo about Cuticura. The consequences
were I bought a set of the Cuticura
Remedies of one of my friends who
was a druggist, and the praise that I
gave after the second application Is
beyond description; It seemed a mlr
aclo for the Cuticura Remedies took
effect immediately. I washed the foot
with the Cuticura Soap before apply-
ing the Ointment and I took the Re-
solvent at the same time. After two
weeks' treatment my foot was healed
completely. People who had seen my
foot during my illness and who have
seen it since the cure, can hardly be-
lieve their own eyes. Robert Schoen-
haucr, Newburg, N. Y, August 21,
1905."
Workman's Pride at Rest.
Joseph Mowbray, who was building
a chimney at the Westwood church,
Kalkaska, having raised it to the
height of 25 feet, and run out of brick
descended to the ground. He had
scarcely done so when lightning
struck the church. The point where
Joe would have been, had he re-
mained, was that at which the bolt
did some of its worst work. Joe feels
grateful for being out of brick, as had
he been killed at work he would al-
ways have thought Providence dis-
satisfied with the job, and Joe prides
himself that no man this side of Jor-
dan can build a better chimney than
he.—Detroit News.
A MISSOURI WOMAN
T>frr$?ftCv?i ™. ,,,h< floor with I
PI IN AM FADELLS8 D\ LS. Ask your
druggist. 10c per package.
To-day Germany furnishes five- |
sixths of the dyes used in tho world.
or toward the support of their depend
ents.
A Well-Known Remedy.
One of the oldest, safest and most
favorably known remedies in the
world to-day is Brandreth's Pills—a
blood purifier and laxative. Being
purely vegetable, they can be used by
old or young with perfect safety, and
while other remedies require increased
doses and finally cease acting alto-
gether, with Brandreth's Pills the
same doso fiays has the same effect,
*>o matter how long they are taken.
' or two pills taken each night for
one troubled with constipation, in-
| ■ iia or ai> ytoi
fhile is the best thing known for
one troubled w
, "* i. dyspcras
lie om I" '.Irltv of «"■
ir-coateSlU
I
Footed Thieves.
Winchester, England, a grocer
to miss money from his till,
[ set his wife to watch. After two
Iks the wife was not able to de-
ft the thief, though money was
Jolen almost every day. There were
wo clerks in the store, and the
Jrrocer finally called them thieves
■ ind discharged them.
When two others had taken their
'places the money continued to dis-
appear, and tho case was given to the
police. An officer who hid under the
counter solved the problem. He
found bits of paper representing
about $50 that the mice had made
nests of. They had entered the till
through a hole in the back and taken
the bills one at a time.
The two clerks who had been dis-
charged for dishonesty brought suit
for damages, and the other day the
grocer was compelled to pay them
(300 each.
try Investigation. Conditions there
are of the very best, with the result
that the enterprise is successful. One
of the surprising things found there
is that there are no lice. Conse-
quently no lice killers have to be
used; the chicks do not have to be
greased after they are out of the
shell; the birds do not have to be fed
enough food to supply both them-
selves and the lice, and the perches
io not have to be painted with anti-
lice paint. All'thls expense and all
this labor are saved.
It is a wonder that consldeij*^^
great losses we experience from lice
we do not take more precaul^^^
entirely rid the" poultry hod
, [e w years ago the ^
'■l-jfi^^^HH^HM^^tinquiries tin
< Ml Mu li
EWtftV-iQVjh
ale. j greatest Jovstk. Most -of I he re,4ifc
s.ild (Mat the greanst losses wore
aWf ~ o lice It may be i.haUt'i',Itce
are due fanrr-,; r losses
have suspected.
We know very little about now con-
tagious diseases are carried fSfflSpTw)
to fowl. It may be that the lice do
more of this work than any other me-
dium. It may be that a louse draws
Infected blood from one fowl and
from It Infects the next fowl on
which he happens to be.
There Is an impression abroad that
there Is little poultry disease where
there are no lice and no dirt. It Is a
good thing to assume this at any
rate, it may le an error, but if It is
the error is on ihe part of virtue.
Prof. Charles Wood, in charge
of the Maine station, was asked by
the writer how he could keep his
fowls free from lice. He replied that
it was an easy thing to do. He start-
ed with perfectly clean pens and
yards. He used incubators that had
never been used before, and he put
Into those incubators eggs that had
no lice on them. The chicks hatched
had no lice, and no fowls are pur-
chased ar.d brought onto the farm.
There has to be a beginning for the
lice infestation, and the problem Is
to prevent the beginning. This is
not a difficult thing to do.
If it can be done at an experiment
station where there are 600 laying
hens and thousands of chicks, it cer-
tainly can be done on any farm.
i
He Knows
the kind of id
Waterproof J i
Oiled Clothing] 1
that stands ttiev
hardest service
DoYmKhowf'
Qtl BRC*®
Made for all kinds
of wet work or sport
SOLD EVERYWHERE
rhe fat he
the pot.
Comb
jured bw if
ind plj
The Hen and the Bees.
Several of our experiment stations
have begun work in earnest with poul-
try.
Cold in the winter does not injure
fowls so much as has been supposed.
Small and young bantams are some-
times sold under the name of squabs.
Summer is the time to make all re-
pairs on the hen house.
More light will improve the condi-
tions in the poultry house.
More attention is being given to
the poultry In
for nothing but
often materially In-
ng it from the hive
fa shipping cases,
to dispose of honey Is
supply grocery men, reg-
n g.
e two or three grades, put-
Ihlng but strictly white honey,
t is termed "fancy honey," Into
1 class. Into No. 2 we put the
iftiIte honey that may have combs
^lightly colored, or those having an
] uneven surface, or i
cells.—Farm Journal.
Tells a Story of Awful Suffering and
Wonderful Relief.
Mrs. J. B. Johnson, of 603 West
Hickman street, Columbia, Mo., says:
"Following an oper-
ation two years ago,
dropsy set in, and
my left sifle was so
swollen the doctor
said he would have
to tap out the water.
There was constant
pain and a gurgling
sensation around my
heart, and I could
not raise my arm
abo re my head. The kidney action
was disordered and passages of the se-
On the advice ,
of my husband I beg%fo-qiiug Voaqh*,
"" 'fjff '
mm. Wln«lov'* Soothing Hyrnp.
For rhUdren teething. •o/teu the Kuni , reduce* ln>
flaummMoa. allaya pain, cure* wind colic. 25c a botUS
Vast Area of Empire.
The United Kingdom measures 121,-
os.9 square miles; the British empire
covers 11,908,378 square miles.
That an article may be good as well
as cheap, and give entire satisfaction,
Is proven by the extraordinary sale of
Defiance Starch, each package con-
taining one-third more Starch than
can be had of any other brand for the
same money,
Japanese Patent Medicines.
The Japanese, having discovered the
possibilities of profit in patent medi-
cines. are extending their markets for
'hem In China, Korea and the south
sea islands.
Fearful Pains
SUGGESTIONS HOW WOMEN MAY FIND
RELIEF.
W. L. DOUGLAS
*3.50&*3.00 Shoes
■ EST IN THE WOftLO
W.LDouglns$4Silt Edga I'm.
cannollie equalled al any price >
This Is So.
We wish to state in as plain and
vigorous way as words can express
it, that Hunt's Cure will positively,
quickly, and permanently cure any
form of Itching Skin disease known.
One box is guaranteed to cure. One
application affords relief.
Intricate Game of Chsss.
Chess, as played by the Japanese,
Is the most intricate game in the
world. The board has 81 squares, 20
pieces are used, and the pieces
change their value when they arrive
at a certain position on the board.
$100 Reward, $100.
The re ad on of thli paper will b« pleatod to learn
that there I* at leaal ono dreaded dlaeaoo that •clenca
has litsea able lo cure la all Its UaRC*. aud thai U
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Curs Is th« oaly positive
cure now kuown to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
foeliitf a constitutional disease, requires a constitu-
tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Curs la taken In-
ternally . acting directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces of the aystem. thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by hulldlng up the constitution ami assist-
ing nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have
so much faith In Its curative powers that they offer
« ne Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to
ure. Send for list of testimonials.
Ad'lress F. ,J. CHENEY >fc CO., Toledo, 0.
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
Taae Hall's Family Pill* for constipation.
Vi
Af/'ssM
A/rs.Ti Hi
Hart
blmc House is the most
complete In tills country
Send/or Cai.tloQ
W hlle no woman is entirety free from 1 Compound sooner; for I have triea so many
periodical suffering, it does not seem to remedies without help.
be tho plan of na
plan of nature that women 141 dreaded tho approach of every month,
should suffer so severely. This is a ns ®°T much pain and Hutlcriiij
severe strain on a woman
When pain exists something
ug lor
id two
1 am
organism.
Thousands of women have testified
in grateful letters to
that Lydia E. Pinkham
Compound overcomes woman's special
pains and irregularities.
It provides u safe and snre way of
*s vitality nu>'but after I had used the ConiixmiHi
t . g is wronir Insist upon having them.
Which should be set right or it will very grateful for wlmtTvdia K SkhaT^ Oo/or uaJ;jh*v will rot
lead to a serious derangement of the Vegetable Compound lias done for me."
whole female organism.
>n have testified , V, tcst,mony should be accepteu
) Mrs. PinUham J5/ as convincing evidence
lam's Vegetable ,Vmt -V(Va E. PinUham a Vegetable
woman's spccial ( "'"Pfund stands without n peer as a
SHOES FOE EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES ,
Mt<n's Shows, $0 to $1.60. B^ys' Shoes, $3
to$1.20. Women's Shoe*. $4 OO to f i.PO.
Mis-t- ' <fc Children's Shoes, $>'.26 to fl.OO.
Try W. L. Doitglutt Wom.n's, Mlsnrs and
Chlhlrcii'H shoes; for Myle, fit and wear
they l otli«r makes.
If I could take you Into my lnr£®
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
arc made, you would then understand
why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer, and are of greater value
than any other make.
Wherever you live, you con Jltiik. W - I..
Douglas shoes. HU naire snd price jtsl * e<S
on the bottom, which protects you against high
prices and Interior shoes. Take no luhxtl-
Ask your denier for W. L. Douglas shoes
Write lor Illustrated Catalog of l-'sll Styles.
W. L. DOLL'LAS, Dept. 12. Brockton,'Mass.
remedy for all tho distressing ills o(
women.
Veteran Driver Has Record.
James H. Johnson of Washington,
who drove the remaining members of
the Davis family at the funeral of
Mrs. Jefferson Davis, in Richmond,
has driven the Davis carriage at the
funerals of each of the members who
have gone before. He drove at the
funerals of Jefferson Davis a^tl Miss
Winnie Davis. He has never missed
attending a Confederate reunion since
the war.
escape from distressing aud dangerous I 1,0 *wccef® of Lydia E. PinUham s
weaknesses and diseases. vegetable Compound rests upon the
The two following letters tell so eon- e^~curuet* flTr*titude of American
vincingly what Lydia E. PinUham s u^"en'
vegetable Compound will do f..r' ) n wo™(*.n are troubled with pain
women, they cannot fail to bring hope or clarities, displacements or ul-
to thousands of sufferers. ceraiion of tlve organs, that bearing-
MUs Knii5« r,AV tv • • feeling, inflammation, backache,
St"et Buffalo N Y write^' ,or <><■>> -
n M ... ' ' *' ' j 1 • indigestion and nervous prostra-
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— tion. or are beset with such symptoms
Your medicine is indeed an ideal medieine as dizziness faint iipkr lnuRitn.i
for women 1 suffered misery for yean, with ( itab litv irrit«> nft ?* 1^88ltude' ex"
painful periods, headaches, and bearing-down • * ,rr nervousness,
pains. I consulted two different physicians sleoPle8sness, melancholy, tiny should
but failed to get any relief. A friend from the remember there is o# o trfi-d and
east advised me to try I.vdia E. Pinkham s true remedy. Lydia *3. Pinkhain's
Vegetable Compound. I did so, and no longer Vegetable Compound at cfice removes
liv!!u d J . Mv')eri(X,®arenatural; such troubles. Refuse top y nnvether
'Phe an"pala *
Don't hesitate to writ* lo Mrs.
Pinkham if there is nnvtfiing
about yo'.ir sickness you do m t
understand. Kite will treat yen
with kindness and her advice is
health ismuchimproved. 1 advise all women
who suffer to Dike Lydia E. l'iukhaiu's Vege-
table Compound
Mrs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, N. D.,
writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:
FARMS THAT GROW
" NO. I HARD" WHEAT
(Sixty-three Pounds to
the Bushel). Are situ-
iited in the Canadian
WrU where Home-
t-f 1M) acres can
be free by
every ««ttler willing
and nt>le to comply
tv it h the lionirht«*acl
kPKiilaiions. During
• the present year a large portion of
New Wheat Growing Territory
HAS IU-KN MADE ACCESSIBLE TO MAR.
KI-TS BY THE RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION
that haa been pushed forward so vigorously by
the three great railway companies.
l-'or literature aud particulars address SUPER*
INTl-NDENT OK IMMIGRATION, Ottawa,
Canada, or the following authorized Canadian
j Government Agent :
I JL S. CRAWFORD, No. 125 w. Ninth Street,
" # ajJ City, Missouri.
Mention this paper.
" I might have l* * n spared many months fr<,e. No woman ever regretted
>r suffering and pain had I only known of tho| writing her and she lias helped
jflleacy or Lydia E. Pinkhain'i Vegetable thousands. Address Lynn, Mass.
\sk Mrs. Plnkhiim's Advice —A Woman Best tlnilsrslanris a Woman's Ills.
FOR
SALE.
Would ytb Vke a home in La Palma the
American CL-fony, located on the Mexican
Central Railwtv iJ the State of Tamaulipas.
Mexico? For in.'wv.^ion and price of land
address H. E. DIEhl lawton, 0. T.. or J.
L. FRIEDMAN, L03 Est? r^* Tam., Mexico.
ney plh'e.
Since ush
my trouble has not reappc-
'\z wonderful, after sulTe:
lold by all dealers. 50 een
^ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Cosmopolitan America.
. is there a type of "average Ameri-
can workman?" Dr. Arthur Shad-
well, an Englishman, author of "In-
dustrial Efficiency," tells how In one
of th<* older towns of Massachusetts
he witnessed a procession of cotton
operatives on strike. "They were
marshaled by nationalities with a cu-
rious effect. Tho different types,
cheek by jowl, stood out in vivid con-
trast—tho French, the familiar Eng
lish, the Celtic, the Scandinavian, the
Slav, the small Portuguese and the
swarthy Greek. Such a sight can be
seen nowhere else. It brought be-
fore my eyes in one living picture the
amazing cosmopolitanism of Ameri-
can labor and made me think with a
smile of that convenient abstraction
but almost mythical person of whom
we have heard so much—the 'average
American workman.'"
American Invasion of Canada.
Within the last 12 years there has
grown up in western Canada
American population estimated
250,000 farmers, growers of wheat,
corn and flax, settlers not only Imbued
with the American spirit of enterprise
but devoted to American Institutions.
During last year tne immigration
from this country to Canada, accord-
ing to official figures, was more than
62,000 persons. To-day in the north-
west, outside of Winnipeg and some
of the older towns, the dwellers who
have crossed the border from the
United States outnumber the native
Canadians, in places, two to one.—
Appleton's Magazine.
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
flble Preparal
similntiHg
ting ttieSloiiadts and
am
J36aifc> tuo
Signature
of
Promotes Digeslion.Che*
ness andRest.Conlains
Opium,Morphine nor Muter
Not Narcotic .
PmfefOMUrSAKUELPmmR
<W-
Mx.Ssmm
kakUUSJ*
Aawf Sr*d
) 'rurp Srnd
Cfwhtd Hi fur
nfiinMM Is
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
Aperfecl Remedy forOonslipa-
fion, Sour S to u.ach, Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Fevrnslv
ness nnd Loss of Sleep.
Pac Simile ^tgnalure of
NEW YORK.
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
THC CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW TORN CITV.
II You fire Losing
<>r a now location to tnnke morn I n fa^m nji or mor-
Jiaiiliiim, or for better iiuultn. Nort h-Went Canada
> the ideal conditions. UnoruioniiKiop pro.iuo-
no crop UiHirw>-evr«n,«iy honllh'H . e*i>w-
for pniipiw from theBonth ororrborty mukliiK ;
•v h«i. write F. L. II A UK is. Lock Itox 1
ltdmonton. Alberto, • —-
you Cannot
t
■vill continue to advance
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con-
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh, uteri necatarrh caused
by feminine ills, soie throat, soro
mouth or inflamed eves by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn
infections by local treatment with
Paxtine r<>ilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs,checks
I ihcharges, stops pain, and heals the
I -Animation and soreness.
J *the 1 nost successful
l/e^Knt f
Thoif,
pa ior "'eeTr!?
co- tioDtua. Mm*.
oltlEennof United Htutes. of Kimd «
mperate hablm. wbo can speak, read and
«llsh. For Information apply t,o KecrtiltlnK j
Ofllner. Post OIBeeBlilg., Oklahoma. Outbrle, Knnl,
Shawnee.O. T..or Bo. MoAlesieraud MuHkouee.l.T.
I Wiinlilngton, D. C.
rl Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Late Principal Examiner IT. S. 1'enslon Hureau.
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 47, 100M
wasting strength
COFFEE IMPORTERS
Publish a Book About Coffee.
There has been much discussion as
to Coffee and Poatum lately, so much
In fact that some of the coffee import-
ers and roasters have taken to type
to promote the sale of their ware1*
and check !? i.o^slble the rapid growth
of the use of Postura Food Coffee.
In the coffee importers' book a chap-
ter is headed "Coffee as a Medicine,"
and advocates its use as such.
Here is an admission of the truth,
m<^t Important to all interested.
Every physician knows, and every
thoughtful person should know, that
habitual use of any "medicine" of the
drug-stimulant type of coffee or whis-
ky quickly causes Irritation of . the
tissues and organs stimulated and
finally sets up disease In the great
majority of cases if persisted In. It
may show in any one of the many
flowers and vegetable for years. turntU orsans of the body and in the great
his attention to pond illes, with the ro&Jority of cases can be directly
result that last suniMdr he had a *
pond of lilies not ei,^ledJJ)y any |
other in New England. wmi. small
compared with soma 11 M^jachu-
sells, being 300 by CO ! U lyleld?
thousands of blooms durltl;^ reason.
During August It lias I'- 1 no Up om-
mon thing tor him to pl<i'<r>0p ikies a
day. "Here Is a ready nutlet (01 the
lilies In the big cities, thoj i>re 3:ling
urice being $4 a hundred. 0
HB
"Hight*Fa1utin" Writing.
A correspondent of an English
church paper winds up his account of
a meeting held at a certain town by
observing that it "must have been
very disappointing to those who were
working the oracle," that It "shows
the whole movement Is a false exotic
which has been worked from London,"
and that the townspeople "value the
bubble at Its true worth."
few unsealed
Growing Pond Lilies.
A Saco, Me., florist yiwNk: ivatlng
traced to coffee In a most unmistak-
able way by leaving oft the active Ir-
ritant—coffee—and U3lng Postum
Food Coffee lor a matter of ten days.
If the result Is relief from nervous
trouble, dyspepsia, bowel complaint,
heart failure, weak eyes, or any other
malady set up by a poisoned nervous,
syBteiu, you have your answer with
the accuracy of a demonstration in
mathematics,
"There'a a reaaoa" for Postum.
"The Armless Man"
Said, "It wasn't money he wanted, |
but somebody to scratch his back." [
There are many with strong arms and J
willing hands that have that same
yearning. Hunt's Cure will make
Back Scratching, or any other old |
scratching, totally unnecessary. It j
knocks out any Itching sensation that |
ever happened, and does it right now.
One application relieves.
Only Real British Birds.
It Is said that only two kinds of
birds are absolutely peculiar to Brit-
ain. These are the red grouse and
the coul tit
Don't Delay.
If you have a bad cold, cough or
sore chest. Go right In to cure it.
You can do bo by using Simmons'
Cough Syrup. It's sure and quick
and will save you money and health.
Revenge as contemplated may be
sweet, but It Is always more or less
bitter when realized.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis-
tress from l>yspep6la. In-
digestion and Too Hearty
EaUng. A perfect rem-
edy for Dizziness, Nausea,
Drowsiness, Bad Tasto
In tho Mouth, Coated
Tongue, Pain In the Side,
TORPID LIVKR. The/
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Musi Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
CARTERS
PILLS.
Women who suffer from unnecessary, disagreeable,'
painful, weakening, female complaints, will find that
Wine of Cardui is a safe and pleasant remedy for all
their ills. It acts directly upon all the delicate, inflamed
tissues, purifying the blood, throwing off the clogging
matter and relieving female disorders such as irregular, ■
scanty, profuse, painful catamenia, prolapse, etc.
Also relieves headache, backache, dizziness,
cramps, dragging pains, nervousness, irritability, etc.
If you need advice, write us a letter, telling us all
your symptoms. We will send free advice (in plain
sealed envelope). Address: Ladies' Advisory Dept.,
The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT IN $1.00 BOTTLES
"I WROTE YOU
taking Cardui, my Female Troubles
were rured."—Mrs.'R. S. Wallace,
Lavaca, Ala. J12
CARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
Likes Her Departure.
"There's one thing about Miss Sharp-
tongue—she looks fine on a horse,
doeun't she?"
"Yes, especially when its headed the
other way."—Detroit Free Press.
It's a Hustler.
Hunt's Lightning Oil is up and do-
ing all the time. It cures your aches,
pains, cuts, burns and bruises while
you sleep. Hub a little on your
misery and feel it disappear.
Terminal facilities of wasps are not
very large, but they are ample for
their purpose.
NO MORE MUSTARD PI.ASTERS TO BLISTER.
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT.
CAPISICUM
VASELI NE
extract of the cayenne pepper plant
A OUICK. SURE. SAFE AMD ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN -PRICE
BYC MAIL ONLRPBSrFl TTfU|?E?s A ,,K,Abfe~DK^GCISTS AND DEALERS, OR
£*,'"ML ON RICIE'pTOI- ISt IN POSTAGE STAMPS DONT WAIT
IILL THE PAIN COMfcS— KELP A TUBE HANDY.
A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not
blister the most delicate skin. The pain-ailavmg and curative qualities of
the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve
Headache and Sciatica. We recommend It as the best and safest external
counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest
and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Couty con plaints, A trial
will prove what we claim for it. and It will be found to be invaluable in tho
household and for children. Once used no family will be without It. Many
people say "it Is tne best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation
of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise It Is not genuine
SEND your address AND we will mail ouk VASE*
LINE pamphlet which will interest you.
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
17 STATE STREET, NEW YORK CITY
i
LA CRLOLE" HAIR NtJT
Booauae of those ugly, grizzly, gray halr . Uuo
i.OO. retail
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lively, R. R. The Wewoka Weekly Herald (Wewoka, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, November 23, 1906, newspaper, November 23, 1906; Wewoka, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc152756/m1/3/: accessed May 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.