Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 13, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 4, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
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K i
A Kansas City Woman's Terrible Ex*
perlence with Kidney Sickness.
Mrs. Mary Cogin, 20th st and Cleve-
land ave., Kansas City, Mo., says:
"For years I
was run down,
weak, lame
and sore. The
kidney secre-
tions were too
frequent. Then
dropsy puffed
up my ankles
until they
were a sight
to behold. Doc-
tors gave fr.e
up, but 1 be-
gan using
Doan's Kidney Pills, and the remedy
cured me so that I have been well
ever since, and have had a fine baby,
the first in five that was not prema-
turely born."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a bo*.
Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y.
BANKER F0R80N'8 8ECRET
Work Hard, Live Within Your Income
and be Cheerful
John Far son, banker, who wears red
neckties and was looking for a ser-
vant girl two years to whom to leave
one million dollars, if she filled cer-
tain requirements, recited, on his
fiftieth birthday, the secrets of his
success.
"I have always made it a point co
get in with the right kind of people—
those who know more than you do.
Yfiu know what I mean. Money la
not everything In this world. My home
and my friends are my main sources
of happiness. Look at all the rich
men in this country who won't even
smile. They are absolutely friendless.
-They inspire awe and fear. Their
lives haven't been a success.
"I attribute my success to hard
work, cheerfulness and living within
my income.''
Discovered a New Star
The new star recently discovered by
Miss Fleming, the Harvard observa-
tory astronomer, is in the constellation
of Aquilla, and takes the name from
that—Nova Aquillae No. 2, as it is the
second new star to be found in that
group. It was first found on August
31 by Miss Fleming, who has dis-
covered eight of the last eleven found
in ten years. She was studying the
regular list of photographs, including
the whole sky, which are taken every
night, when she found a new spectrum.
Every international controversy de-
velops a lot of dry goods diplomats.
FUNNY
Psopls Will Drink Coffee When N
"Does Such Things."
'1 began to use Postum because the
Old kind of coffee had so poisoned my
Whole system that I was on the point
Of breaking down, and the doctoi
warned me that I must quit it
My chief ailment was nervousness
and heart trouble.
Any unexpected noise would cause
we the most painful palpitation, make
me fafnt and weak.
"I had heard of Postum and began
to drink it when I left off the old cof-
fee. It began to help me just as soon
as the old effects of the other kind of
coffee passed away. It did not stim-
ulate me for a while, and then leave
me weak and nervous as coffee used
to do. Instead of that It built up my
strength and supplied a constant vigor
to my system which I can always re-
ly on. It enables me to do the big-
gest kind of a day's work without
getting tired. All the heart trouble,
etc., haa passed away.
"I give it freely to all my children,
from the youngest to the oldest, and
It keeps tbem all healthy and hearty."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich.
There's a reason.
Read the little book, "The Road to
•Wallville," la pkgs,
Real Animus of' Movement Against
Remedies Deservedly Popular.
An adroit but plausible scheme by
which it is hoped to prejudice the sale
of proprietary medicines is the propo-
sition to prohibit the sale of any rem-
edy which "contains poison" unless
each package or bottle is expressly la-
beled "Poison." Such bills are also
well designed to impose upon men who
have no familiarity with the subject
matter. The pretense of protecting
the public health put forth in support
of such bills Ls generally the merest
subterfuge; and whenever you hear a
demand for a law of this kind it
originates with those who have
a direct pecuniary interest to serve by
destroying the sale of proprietary rem-
edies.
Some of the best and most widely
used remedies in the world contain
some one Ingredient which, if taken
in sufficient quantities, might be poi-
sonous, and yet the preparation as a
whole ls not poisonous at all. Opium,
for instance, is used in small quanti-
ties in many of the best cures for
coughs, colic, diarrhea, etc., in tooth-
ache drops and in almost all liniments.
To require such medicines to be false-
ly labeled "poison" would be merely a
cunning device to alarm the public
and thus bring about the destruction
of the sale of those remedies, and in-
directly to compel people to procura
the medicine they want by the more
expensive method of consulting a phy-
sician and getting his prescription. In
other words, it is an effort to prevent
them from getting cheaply the reme-
dies which they and their fathers be-
fore them have used for many years.—
Medical exchange.
Cures Rheumatism and Catarrh—Med-
icine Sent Free
These two diseases are the result of
in awful poisoned condition of • the
blood. If you have aching joints and
back, "shoulder blades, bone pains,
erippled hands, legs or feet, swollen
muscles, shifting, sharp, biting pains,
ind that tired, discouraged feeling of
rheumatism, or the hawking, spitting,
blurred eyesight, deafness, sick stom-
ich. headache, noises in the head, mu-
cous throat, discharges, decaying
eeth, bad breath, belching gas of ca-
tarrh,take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B
B.) It kills the poison in the blood
which causes these awful symptoms,
;iving a ;nire, healthy blood supply to
the joints and mucous membranes.
<nd makes a perfect cure for the worst
rheumatism or foulest catarrh. Cures
where all else fails. Blood Balm (B. B.
3.) is composed of pure Botanic in-
gredients, good for weak kidneys. Im-
proves the digestion, cures dyspepsia.
A perfect tonic for old folks by giv-
ing them new, rich, pure blood. Thor-
oughly tested for thirty years. Drug-
gists, $1 per large bottle, with com-
plete directions for home cure. Sam-
ple free afld prepaid by writing Blood
Balm Co.. Atlanta, Ga. De;fribe
trouble and special free medical ad-
vice sent in sealed letter.
Man is timid and opologetic; he is
no longer upright; he dares not say,
"I think," "I am," but quotes some
sage or saint.
That and This.
Twelve years ago I bought my first
bottle of Hunt's Lightning Oil. For
Cuts, Burns, Sprains and Aches it was
the best remedy I had found to that
time. After the lapse of one dozen
years I can truly say, it ls the best
remedy I have found to this time."
John P. Thompson,
Red Rock, O. T.
When you are in a hurry for a thing
how slow it travels!
Consistency is the most contempt-
ible of the*virtues, and the man who
never changes his coat becomes both
insanitary and old fashioned.
THE COMFORTER
A congested vein pressing on a nerve accounts for the swelling, throbbing acha of
Neuralgia
St. Jacobs Oil
frees the circulation, aljays the pressure and soothes away Ilia pain.
Prise. t5s. sad SOc.
=
Prove It
By the Oven fire
Put the wonderful KC Bak-
ing Powder to the test Get a
can on approval Your money
will be returned il you don't
agree that all we claim is true.
You'll be delighted with the der
licious, wholesome things that
Kf\ BAKING
U POWDER
will bring to life in your oven.
K C is worth twice the money charged
for inferior powders that are made to look
like K C, but which leave in the food
harmful substances to undermine your
health. And the cost is no more.
25 ounces for 25 cents.
JAQUES MFG. CO.
Chicago
fiend a postal for
"Boole of Pre «nu.H
in*"''*
fv
Dainty, Crisp, Dressy
ummer
klrts
are a delight to the refined woman avery*
where. In order to get this result see that
' the material is good, that it is cut in ths
latest fashion and use
ttarglh)
in the laundry. All three ihinn are import*
ant, but the last is absolutely necessary.
No matter how fine the material or how
daintily made, bad stsrch and poor laundry
work will spoil the effect sad ruin the
clothes. DEFIANCE STARCH is purs,
will not rot the clothes nor cause them to
crack. It sells at 10c a sixteen ounce pack-
age everywhere. Other starches, much in-
ferior, sell at 10c for twelve ounce pack-
sge. Insist on gstting DEFIANCE
STARCH and be surt of results. •
Defiance Starch
Company,
Omaha, Nebraska.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
roior more
i.n germ
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Hornbeck, Will W. Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 13, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 4, 1905, newspaper, November 4, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc181087/m1/2/: accessed May 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.