The Calumet Chieftain. (Calumet, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, March 24, 1911 Page: 3 of 8
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*
BAD CASE
OP CRIP
Caused Sore Throat and Ton-
silitis. Restored by
Peruna.
Mr. W. II.
Housley,
Stony Point,
Tennessee,
writes:
"Five years
ago I took a
very severe
cold which
resulted In
la grippe. I
never was
eo bad off. I
was In bed
b e v e r a 1
weeks, and
when I did
get up I had
t o n a i 11 tia
and s o r •
throat.
"I tried to cure this for eighteen
months, but It gradually got worse. A
doctor advised me to have my tonsils
cut out, but I did not like the Idea.
Another doctor examined me, and told
me the same thing. I finally got a bot-
tle of Peruna, and after I had taken
one bottle my throat was better. I
bought and used a dozen bottles, and
saw I was going to get well, and I did."
REVIEW
Mr. W. H. Housley,
LAHII" Q mending made ©a sy. 8rml 10c foj
~* ■ fcO package of liupurled mending tts-
RELIEVES
TIRED EYES
DATFIITQ Fortunes aro made In patents. Pro
■ HI bill O teet your ideas. Our (14 page book free
Ir'itzguruUl Co.. ISox Jv, Wuiihingtou, 1>. C.
WAS TAKING NO CHANCES
Chauffeur Had Had Enough Accident*
With People Wearing False.
Teeth.
Pretty Thais X, who has delighted
the audiences of New York's vaude-
ville houses, was called suddenly to
Vermont to visit her sick mother. At
a town a few miles from her parent's
home she hired an automobile and
asked the chauffeur to drive her with
as much speed as possible to her
destination.
The roads were very bad, and the
car, making good speed up hill and
down dale, over rocks and ruts,
seemed bound to shake overboard Its
occupants.
After a little of this Jolting the
chauffeur turned to his fare and de-
manded:
"I say, ma'am. Do you wear false
teeth ?"
"What Impudence!" exclaimed
Thais X.
"Oh, ma'am, It Is not from Impu-
dence," returned the chauffeur, "that
I asked you the question. It is be-
cause the road Is had, the rocks are
hard, and if you wear false teeth, you
would do well to remove them until
we strike the pike. I've had enough
accidents of that description."
Words of Comfort.
"My doctor says 1 must"sleep out-
of doors," said the man who is not
strong.
"Well," replied the friend who
makes painful efforts to cheer up;
"It's all right so long as your land-
lord doesn't say it."
There never was a good war or a
bad peace.—Franklin.
Saves
Breakfast
Worry
A package of
Post
Toasties
on the pantry shelf.
Served in a minute.
With cream or stewed fruit.
DELICIOUS!
SATISFYING!
"The Memory Lingers"
POSTUM CEREAL CO.. Ltd..
Battla Creek, Mich.
Studa; School Lesson for Mar. 26, 1911
Specially Arranged for This Paper
GOLDEN- TEXT—"Happy is that pe(>-
ple whose God Is the Lord."—Psa. 144 1S.
The abject of the first century of the
I divided kingdom and its lessons was
to develop and train a people of God,
I through whom to make the whole
| world a people of God. Salvation for
the Individual and for the human race.
The united kingdom did a great Work
in this direction. But the time came
when there was danger of its failure.
Hence came the divided kingdom,
through which there was a double ex-
periment in the development of the
kingdom of God.
The period covered was about 90 years
B. C., 982 to 893. The country was Pales-
tine, within its usual boundaries. The
course of development runs In two
lines: The royal, the course as repre-
sented by the kings, the civil history,
and the religious development, repre-
sented largely by the prophets.
The kingdom of Judah was about half
as large as Israel. Its capital was Je-
rusalem, and the temple was the re-
ligious center. Large numbers of the
more religious people came to Judah
from Israel. Judah was sheltered
from attack on the north by Israel's
being between them and the nearest
and most dangerous enemies, while a
desert was a great defense on the
south. This position also saved them
from close contact with heathenism
and its degredatlons.
The leading kings were Reliaboam,
17 years; Asa, 40 years; Je-
hoshaphat, 25 years. Under Asa
and Jehoshaphat there were great
religious revivals and religious
reforms, alternating with declines.
Here was a great struggle between
good and evil, and the good seems to
have gained. In a few cases there
were revelations from God. He did
everything he could to keep the people
obedient to his laws, and train them
ix the religious life, that they might
be the kingdom of God to bless the
world. There were a few prophets
of whom little is known save their
names. The conflict of religion with
e\ il In Judah, though not ending in
complete victory, made a decided gain
for the right.
Why do we celebrate and praise our
forefathers? Not simply because they
were stout hearted. Many a freeboot-
er and many a soldier of fortune has
been that. " It is because they were
stout hearted for an ideal, their ideal
and ours, civil and religious liberty;
and whenever and wherever men
and women thus devoted them-
selves to ideal and not ma-
terial things, there the world's heroes
are born, and born to be free.
Some blessings come to us, not in
spite of, but just because of, our hos-
tile environment. The stimulus of
hostile climate produces the robust
race. Where nature always smiles and
everything is friendly there is no such
thing as beneficent discipline, and a
soft, languid race Is perpetuated. The
man of the temperate zone owes his
superior physical vigor, his keener
mental capacity, his alertness, his in-
ventiveness, very much to the climatic
conditions under which he lives. He
Is forced to activity, and so he quickly
outstrips his languid neighbor of the
tropics.
The Kingdom of Israel contained
9,400 square miles. It was a much
more fertile country than Judah. Its
territory lay between Judah and Syria,
so that it was in close /contact on
three sides with heathen nations, who
had the activity and physical qualities
of tribes which loved excursions into
other countries for booty. Of the nine
kings parallel with the four kings of
Judah, it is worth whila to remember
Jeroboam, 22 years; Omri, 12; Ahab,
22. Jezebel, Ahab's heathen queen,
was the most influential factor in the
religious decline. The kingdom was
subject to revolutions, and the nine
kings of this peri<Jti belong to five dy
nasties.
The stories of these hero-prophets
should become familiar in their main
Incidents to all the children, who can
see \vhat brave, ieroic men can do,
when they are in earnest for the right.
Elijah preached God Almighty, his
truth, his laws, his power to help, and
the absolute necessity of being loyal
to him, if the individual or the nation
would prosper by a life worth the liv-
ing.
For all the children the teacher can
make a most profitable review by a
plan used by a successful friend. He
took a large sheet of heavy paper, say
12 by 15 inches, and drawing a line
down the center, on the left hand side
wrote a series of questions in letters
so large as to be easily seen by all the
class. On the right side of the line he
wrote the answers. These questions
were given to the class, and they read
theanswerstwoor three times. Then the
paper was folded in the middle, so that
the answers were out of sight, whilt
the questions were still before the
class, and they were to show how wel
they had learned the lesson. Such a
•«vi«w can be made very effective.
TO ROAST A SUCKLING
Should Be Carefully Cleaned Before
Stuffing and Frequently Basted
While Roasting.
Take a suckling pig about thrw.
weeks old the day It is killed; be par-
ticular to see it Is well cleaned; when
this is done and the stuffing sewed into
the belly—before doing which the In-
side must be well wiped with a dean,
damp cloth—wipe the outside of the
pig, and rub It well all over with some
salad oil; while It Is roasting baste It
well very frequently with dripping, to
keep the skin from blistering, till with-
in a quarter of an hour of Its being
done, when you must baste It with a
little butter. When you serve the
pig the two sides must be laid back to
the back In the dish, with half of the
head on each side, and one ear at each
end, all with crackling side upwards;
garnish the dish with slices of lemon,
and serve It up with a rich brown
gravy In the dish, and also a sauce
boat of the same, with one likewise of
bread sauce, with a few currants In
It.
Some add a little port wine to the
gravy. When the pig is baked, which
Is the best way of dressing it, you
must mix the yolk of a raw egg with a
tablespeonful of olive oil to rub it well
all over, with, basting It frequently
with two or three heaping table3poon-
fuls of butter, and in a piece of clean
•ag.
UP TO PAPA.
Munyon's Cold Bemedy JldloTea the
head, throat and limns almost Immediate-
ly. Cheeks l'evers, «to|>s Discharges of
the nose, takes away all aches and pains
caused liv colds. It cnron <irlp and ob-
stinate Coughs and prevent* Pneumonia.
W'flte Prof. Miiuvon, IWrd and Jefferson
I Pts., Phils . Pa., for medical advice abs
i solutely free.
Now remember this—tho stronger
should never do anything to injure
the weaker!"
"Then why dl3 you lick me?"
KETTLE WITH LID ON SIDE
Removes All Danger of Having Hands
Scalded by Escaping
Steam.
A new teakettle introduced In
/and has its lid hinged and located in
the top near the side, Instead of being
set under the handle In the usual man
ner. The person filling the kettle can
New Position for Teakettle Lid.
lift it by the handle and hold back the
cover with the fingers of the same
hand, while the other hand Is used to
opefate the water tap. With the lid
In the new position, all danger of hav
ing the hands scalded by escaping
steam is removed.—Popular Median
ics.
Leg of Pork, Good as Goose.
Parboil a leg of pork and take off
the skin. Make a stuffing as follows:
Mince two onions very fine; mix with
them one chopped apple, one cup rais-
ins, five ounces of bread crumbs, half
a dozen chopped sage leaves, an ounce
of butter, pepper and salt, with a lit-
tle chopped chili peppers. Hind the
mixture together with one egg, beat-
en; make a slit in the knuckle, put the
stuffing inside it and fasten securely.
Rub it over with flour, pepper and
salt. Put the pork into the oven and
baste liberally. Bake two and a half
hours. Sprinkle over It a savory pow-
der made of two tablespoonfuls of fine
bread crumbs mixed with one table-
spoonful of powdered sage and a lit-
tle pepper and salt. Do not baste the
meat after the powder is sprinkled
over it. Put it int" a moderate oven
half an hour. Serve with brown
gravy and apple sauce.
EYES WOULD BURN AND STING
"It is just a year ago that my sis-
ter came over here to us. She had
been here only a few weeks when her
eyes began to be red, and to burn and
sting as if she had Band in them.
Then we used all of the homo reme-
dies. She washed her eyes with salt
water, used hot tea to bathe them
with, and bandaged them over night
with tea leaves, but all to no purpose.
She went to tho drug store and got
some salve, but she grew constantly
worse. She was scarcely able to look
in the light. At last she decided to
go to a doctor, because she could
hardly work any more. The doctor
said it was a very severe disease, and
if she did not follow his orders close-
ly she might lose her eyesight. He
made her eyes burn and applied elec-
tricity to them, and gave her various
ointments. In the two and a half or
three months that she went to the
doctor, we could see very little im-
provement
"Then we had read so much how
people had been helped by Cutlcura
that we thought we would try it, and
we cannot be thankful enough that we
used it. My sister used the Cutlcura
Pills for purifying the blood, bathed
only with Cutlcura Soap, and at night
after washing, she anointed her eyes
very gently on the outsido with the
Cuticura Ointment. In one week, the
swelling was entirely gone from tho I
eyes, and after a month there was no ;
longer any mucus or watering of the
eyes. She could already see better,
and In six weeks she was cured."
(Signed) Mrs. Julia Csepicska, 2005
Utah St., St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 25, 1910.
1
"Cured
Neuralgia
v Pain"
BC~
me in
writing
ti) you
that I had a "neuralgia pain in
my arm for five years, and I
used your Liniment for one
week and was completely
cured. I recommend your
Liniment very highly."—Mrs.
J. McGraw, 1216 Mandevilla
St., New Orleans, La.
Cured Quinsy Sore Throat
Mr. IIenry L. Caui.k, of
1242 Wilson St., Wilmington,
1 )el., writes :—"I bought a bot-
tle of Sloan's Liniment for the
quinsy sore throat and it cured
me. I shall always keep a
bottle in the house."
Good Customer of America.
Morocco uses about two thousand
barrels of American cottonseed oil
yearly.
Take LAXATIVE IlUllllO Ouinlne Tablet*
] ri sri'fund mom jr If It fulls to cure. iii. W
Gilo V La bi.'uuturo ib on cacti bux. 26c.
Slight exaggerations do more harm
than reckless violations of It.—Ches-
terfield.
Constipjition, indigestion, sick-headache
nnd bilious conditions are overcome bv a
course of Garfield Tea. Drink on retiring.
You can often tell what a woman
really means by what she doesn't say.
gives instant relief Irom rheu
matism, lumba-
go, sciatica, neu-
ralgia, croup,
sore throat, ton-
silitis, hoarsc-
ness and chest
pains.
Pric0s,25o.,50c. & $ 1.00
Sloan'* book on
horses, cattle,
and poultry ieut
(roe. Add ron*
Dr. Earl 8. Sloan,
Boston, Mass., V. S. A.
ROOT
SWAMP. not recommended for
everything; but li you
have kidney, liver or
bladder trouble it will lie
found Just the remedy you need. At drug-
gists In fifty cent and dollar sizes. You
may have a sample bottle of tills wonder-
ful new discovery by mall free, also
pamphlet telling all about It.
Address, Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blnftliamton, N. Y
Indian Sauce.
Put In saucepan a lump of butter
the size of an egg Vi teaspoon of
cayenne peper mixed with saffron (or
kari), a dash of grated nutmeg, 2
teaspoons of flour, salt to taste. Add
1 pint of boiling hot water. Boil up
once and strain. Stir in a little melt-
ed butter and serve with meats, fish,
••Ice, etc.
PleasaiitRefiesliink
Beneficial,
Gentle and Effective,
* Water In Cooking.
All cooks do not understand the dif-
ferent effects produced by hard and
soft water in cooking meat and vege-
tables. Peas and beans cooked In
hard water containing lime or gyp-
sum will not boil tender, because
these substances harden vegetable
caseine. Many vegetables, as onions,
boll nearly tasteless in soft water, be-
cause all the flavor Is boiled out. The
addition of salt often checks this, as
In the case of onions, causlpg the
vegetable <o retain the peculiar flavor-
ing principles
For Dandruff.
A simple, inexpensive remedy for
Jandruff which will also promote tlia
growth of the hair may be obtained
by purchasing SO rents' worth of bay
rum and 25 cents' worth of quinine.
Mix thoroughly and apply to tho scalp
dally
Chill Dough for Cookies.
In making cookies if the dough Is
thoroughly chilled it will not only be
Mgflter but will not stick to the hoard
•vhen rn'ling Pome housekeepers al-i
hill tfceli dcgl nuts before fryvig
• NOTE THE NAME
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
in tfio Circ(e,
on evGrvj- Pacfta£e of tho Genuine.
DO NOT LET ANY DEALER
DECEIVE YOU
SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA HAS CIVEN
UNIVERSAL SATISFACTION FOR MORE THAN THIUTY YEAIiS
PAST, AND ITS WONDERFUL SUCCESS HAS LED UN-
SCRUPULOUS MANUFACTURERS OF IMITATIONS TO OFFER
INFERIOR PREPARATIONS UNDER SIMILAR NAMES AND
COSTING THE DEALER LESSi THEREFORE. WHEN BUYING.
Note tfie Full Name of the Gompami
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS. NEAR THE BOTTOM. AND IN
IHE CIRCLE, NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACKACF..OF THE
GENUINE. REGULAR PRICE SO. PER BOTTLE; ONE SIZE
ONLY. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.
CM TA:'. j iTXTik
CENT. OP A LCOHOL
4 JmW.. CONSTIPATION,
|.? W.SnvyR^om^rLS." u
^ CAUFOR^iA nc"5YRCPC? I
miniature picture
OK PACKA(*E.
SYRUP OF Fins AND ELIXIR Or SENNA IS THE MOST PLEASANT, WHOLE.
SOME AND ELECTIVE REMEDY FOR STOMACH TROUBLES, HEADACHES
AND BIUOUSNES3 DUE TO CONSTIPATION, AND TO GET ITS BENEFICIAL
EFFECTS tT 13 NECESSARY TO BUY THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE.
WHICH IS MANUFACTURED BY THE
California Fig Syrup Co.
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Clayton, J. C. The Calumet Chieftain. (Calumet, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, March 24, 1911, newspaper, March 24, 1911; Calumet, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc167519/m1/3/: accessed June 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.