The Capitol Hill Weekly News The Oklahoma Fairdealer (Capitol Hill, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 2, 1910 Page: 7 of 8
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Tumi)
OPERATION
prevented
By Lydia E. Pinkham’sVeg*
etaale Compound
Chicago. Hi — “I want to tell yon
what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound did for me. 1 was so sick
that two of the best doctorB in Chicago
said 1 would die if 1 did rot hare an
1 had
' ‘
c table
1
operation,
already had two
operations, and
they wanted me to
go through a third
one. 1 suffered day
and night from in-
flammation and a
small tumor, and
never thought of
seeing a well day
friend
E. Pinkham’s Veg-
aga
told
me how Lydia
able Compound had helped her, and
tried it, and after the third bottle
i n nti ro/l "9 ro A T Irc%T A GnWTiT nyn
was cured.”—Mrs. Ah vena Spehuno,
1468 Clyboume Ave., Chicago, I1L
If you are ill do not drag along at
home or in your place of employment
until an operation is necessary, but
build up the feminine system, and re-
move the cause of those distressing
aches and pains by faking Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,made
from roots and herbs
For thirty years it has been the stan-
dard remedy for female ills, and has
positively restored the health of thou-
sands of women who have been troubled
with displacements, inflammation, ul-
ceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, bearing-down
feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizzi-
ness, or nervous prostration. W* *
don’t you try it?
will cure nny skin disease. That’s
the price of HUNT’S CURE, and it
is absolutely guaranteed.
ALL DRUG STORES
A. B. Richards Ecuteine Co., Sherman,Tex.
Don’t Persecute
your Bowels
Cut out es'lutrtica and rwirotma. Tkwy art braid
—Kerch—unnecanry. i ry
CARTER’S LITTLE
UVER PILLS
Purely regtulJr. A<*
frnily nn li.e livm
ehininat** bile, and Jr"hraf
iotke the dciif
Carters
'.KITTLE
UYAI
menil>’eDe uf.
©f the bowel. j
Cure Cea-
atinslioa. ,
BiKoae* *
Sica Heaiaclit aad Tsdi-Mhon, at million* know.
Small Pili. Small Bose. Small Price
Ga^NUINE mail bear lignalure :
Coming in Relays.
Twins were born to Mrs. O'Brien.
When the first one was born the nurse
called Jimmy and said:
"Tell your aunt to come right over.
The stork has brought you a little
brother."
The aunt could not come over imme-
diately. In a half hour the nurse
called Jimmy again and said:
“Run over and tell auntie the stork
has brought you another brother."
Jimmy ran to his aunt’s house and
said:
"Auntie, the stork has brought an-
other brother. I wonder how many he
will bring before night.”
A Smooth One.
"You say he was brought up in a re-
fining atmosphere?"
“Yes; as a boy he lived In the oil
districts of Pennsylvania."
The average man can't understand
why he has enemies.
OLD SORES CURED
Ilian Ni'lcerln** Sul Yucuraiil I iron If * I rent. l*«na
jlpen,HcrofalouiDlrera.VorlMM9 I’lcers,In-
dent I'lrent.Mfirrnrlal Ulcars, White Swell-
a I all*14 iofw*. PnsIlltflrM
Allan
! I'lrent.Nffirrnnftl Ulcer*.w nitesweil-
IIlk I.er.FexerSoret.tiUMtorwa. r«**Hiwiy■«
* Mil w>«. J F^LUIM JJ>*pt.A^it J*»ttUAin^
Pictures of the
Kingdom
Sunday School Lesson for July 3, 1910
Specially A: ranged for This Paper
LESSON TEXT.—Matthew 13:31-83, 44-
62. Memory versa. 44
OOLDEN TEXT.—“The kingdom of God
Is not meat and drink: but rtghtemisnesa.
and peace, and Joy In the Holy Ghost."—
Rom. 14:17.
TIME.—The autumn of A. D. 28.
PLACE.—In a house In Capernaum on
tue shore of the Sea of Galilee.
Suggestion and Practical Thought.
The Parable or Story of the Mus-
tard Seed.—Vs. 31, 32. "Another par-
able," showing another aspect of the
kingdom of heaven, which the Great
Sower had sown In the field of the
world.
"The kingdom of heaven Is lik« to a
grain of mustard Beed, which a man,”
representing the Son of man as in the
previous parables, "sowed in his field.”
It was thernforo good seed, living
seed that could produce the harvest.
"Which indeed is tile least of all
seeds." Not the least of all seeds
which botanists know, but the small-
est of the seeds the people daily used;
and th-1 smallest of these In contrast
with the plant which grows from It.
"Greatest among herbs, and becometh
a tree.” Not massive like a fir tree
of Lebanon, or oak, but an herb so
large “that the birds of the air come
and lodge in the branches thereof.”
The Teaching of this Parable. (1)
The growth and success In God’s field
of this world of the kingdom he has
planted. I heard a statesman mission-
ary from India say within a week that
the religions of India looked upon the
present as the Iron age. with their
golden age In the past But with
Christianity the golden age Is In the
future, the kingdom Is growing toward
Its Ideal and goal, and growing more
and more rapidly.
The Parable of the Leaven.—V. 33.
Showing the Method by Which the
Kingdom Grows. "The kingdom of
heaven Is like unto leu’’ Some of
the later writers argue from the fact
that leaven is usually the symbol of
evil, a corrupting thing, a species of
putrefaction, that therefore this par-
able represents "the fellowship of
God In service seen to be marred dur-
ing the present age by the Introduc-
tion of a corrupting Influence."—G.
Campbell Morgan.
“Which a woman took.” The Son
of man who puts this leaven into the
meal is here represented by a woman
because breadmaking usually devolved
upon women.
This Parable Teaches that besides
all the visible manifestations of the
Gospel represented by the growth of
the mustard seed, there is a deeper
underlying progress of the Gospel
which operates silently, without ob-
servation. but with constantly increas-
ing pervasiveness till the whole mass
of mankind, all hearts, all nations, all
commerce and business, social life,
and political Institutions, shall be
transformed. The leaven works by
personal contact with those who are
to be leavened, from Individual to in-
dividual. It is personal work, personal
soul in touch with other souls. The
leaven that does the work is a living
organism.
Two Stories of Finding Treasures.—
Vs. 44-46. These two parables were
told to the disciples In the house to
'hich they returned from the sea-
hore.
The Hid Treasure. “The kingdom
of heaven is like unto treasure hid in
a field." The hiding of treasure is
necessary where there are no banks,
where the country is frequently over-
run by marauders and robbers, where
no one can trust another to hold his
treasures or to use them in business,
and where the rulers are rapacious to
obtain the wealth of their subjects. In
the unsettled state of the country oft-
en the owners never returned, and all
knowledge of the treasure was lost.
The Spiritual Treasures in These
Two Parables. There are two quite
different interpretations of these par-
ables, both of which are natural, both
of which may be true, and each one
may imply the other. The movement
of the parables depends on what is
represented by the Treasure and the
Pearl, and who by the one who gave
all he had to obtain them.
The common Interpretation Is that
we are the seekers for the treasure,
and the Treasure and Pearl are the
blessings which are found In the king-
dom of heaven and only there. They
are the treasures of character, useful-
ness, happiness, and peace; treasures
of eternal life, growing more and more
in every good quality of the soul till
we become “angels excelling In
strength," w'lth all the glories, ex-
ternal and Internal, that are portrayed
in the description of heaven.
The Parable of the Draw Net.—Vs.
47-52 contain explanation of the mys-
tery that good and bad are found in
the visible kingdom of God. Instead of
only the good, and a warning that
merely being a member of the visible
kingdom will not save him. There will
be a separation of the good from the
bad, and each will go of necessity to
his own place, and the fate which is
the fruit of his faith and character.
Another interpretation of the hid
treasure, skilfully advocated by Dr.
Wolcott Calkins in his brilliant "Par-
tables for Our Time,” and by Dr. Mor-
gan, is that Christ is the seeker after
the Treasure and the Pearl, which
represent the precious souls of men.
The treasure is often hidden, like the
lost sheep from the ninety and nine,
hidden in publicans aud sinners and
heathen. It is not the search for good
men, but for the lost, for humsn na-
ture in its moral quality and in its
spiritual capacity. To find this treas-
ure. Jesus fr.ade Iris whole life sub-
ordinate! to his finding the treasure.”
[CORN PLANTING IS
OVER
JUNOLS AMENITIES.
THAT CANADIAN TRIP SHOULD
NOW BE TAKEN.
If you had intended going to Can-
ada for the purpose of purchasing
land on which to establish a home and
accompanying some land company,
whose holdings you proposed to look
over or to go up on your own account
to select one hundred and sixty acres
of land free, you should delay no
longer. Corn-planting is over, your
wheat crop is well ahead, and you
have a few weeks' time before you are
required in the fields again. Now
make your Intended trip. Reports
at hand show that the crop prospects
in Canada were never better than
they are today. The cool weather has
not affected the crop, but if anything,
It has been a benefit. There has been
pL. 'y of moisture and those who
have had their lagd properly prepared
look upon this year as likely to be one
of the best they have had. A great
many are going up this season who
expect to pay two or three dollars an
acre more man they ..ere asked to
nay last year. Others who wish to
homestead are prepared to go farther
from the line of railway than would
have been necessary last year. Still
it is worth it. So it will be with you.
Next year lands will be higher-priced
and homesteads less accessible. There
Is a wonderful tide of immigration to
Central Canada now. It is expected
that one hundred and fifty thousand
new settlers from the United States
will be numbered by the end of the
present year, an increase of fifty per
cent over last year. In addition to
this there will be upwards of one
hundred thousand from the old coun-
try, which does not include th se
who may come from the nor l T
countries of the Continent. These all
Intend to settie upon the land. The
reader does not require an answer to
the questions, “Why do they do it?”
"Why are mey going there in such
large numbers?" Western Canada is
no longer an experiment. The fact
that one hundred and fifty million
bushels of wheat were raised there
last year as against ninety-five mil-
lions the year previous, shows that
the tiller of the soil in Central Canada
is making money and it is safe to say
that he is making more money than
can be made anywhere else on the
Continent in the growing of grains.
He gets good prices, he has a sure and
a heavy crop, he enjoys splendid rail-
way privileges, and he has also the
advantages of schools and churches
and such other social life as may be
found anywhere. It is difficult to say
what district is the best. Some are
preferred to others because there are
friends already established. The
Brand Trunk Pacific, on its way
across the Continent, is opening up a
splendid tract oi land, which is being
taken up rapidly. The other railways
—the Canadian Pacific and Canadian
Northern are extending branch lines
into parts Inaccessible a couple of
years ago. With a perfect network
of railways covering a large area of
the agricultural lands it la not diffi-
cult to secure a location. Any agent
of the Canadian Government will be
pleased to render you assistance by
advice and suggestion, and a good
plan is to write or call upon him.
The Government has located these
agents at convenient points through-
out the States, and their offices are
well equipped with a full supply of
maps aud literature.
Or Scrambled It.
Shirts—of the boiled” variety—are
often very refractory, and It takes
more than courage and patience to put
one on. Mr. Jones, one evening, strug-
gling Into his, which was fresh from
the laundry, remarked to Mrs. Jones
that it was a foolish custom,-this wear
lug of stiff 6hirts. A writer in Tit-
Bits tells the story.
"We’ve got plenty of time, dear,"
said his wife. “I guess the only trou-
ble is that the girl boiied it a little
too long.”
“Looks to mo as if she had fried it!”
said Mr. Jones, as his head emerged.
—Youth’s Companion.
Elephant—Say, H! po, close that
submarine opening of yuurs or the wa-
ter will rush In and sink you.
Hippopottamus—Oh, lock up your
trunk aud put a strap round it if you
don’t want to have it b’ ?ted.
DANGER SIGNALS.
Sick kidneys give unmistakable sig-
nals of distress. Too frequent or scanty
urinary passages, backache, headache
and dizzy spells tell of disordered kid-
neys. Neglect of these warnings may
prove fatal. Begin using Doan's Kid-
ney Pills. They cure sick kidneys.
Mrs. M. A. Gam-
b 11 n , Russellville,
Ark., says; "I was
in such bad shape
from kidney disease
that I gave up hope
of my recovery. I
could rest neither
night or day, the
pains in my back
nearly driving me
____frantic. There were
decided dropsical symptoms such
swelling of my feet and ankles and my
heart palpitated violently. After doc-
toring without benefit, I began with
Doan’s Kidney Pills and when I had
used two boxes I was as well as ever,”
Remember the name—Doan’s.
For sale by all dealers. 60 cents a
box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
j!o
it?
,l!o
$
i».0
1
I
s
CASTORIA
For Infan ta and Children.
The Kind You Hava
Always Bought
similatingiheFoodandRegula- I PaorQ tlifl
ling (he Stomachs and Bowels of I -LfOcLlO IdlU
Signature
of
ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT
Avertable Prepara.’ion for As-
Infants /Childkkn
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful-
ness a nd Rest Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narcotic
* isou Drsinveirtrarn
Atmphrn •
Mx Swrnm •
ArAti/* Smftf •
Jnu* SttJ •
AmPtrmimi -
ftmrm Sttd •
dmrVtetl
WimArff+tm /Vrtior
A perfect Remedy for Constipa-
tion , Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsion:, .Feverish-
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of
The Centaur Company.!
NEW YORK.
At6 months old
35 Dost*. JjCents
unrantred under the Pood aw
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
In
USB
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
tub HUT*., nwim, ma TORI arrs
Strong Plea for *he Infants.
Mrs. Julia Ward Howe testified the
other day before the Massachusetts
legislative committee which Is Investi-
gating the milk situation. While giv-
ing her testimony she refused the
chair offered by the committee and
remained standing at the head of the
witness table. In making her plea
for pure milk Mrs. Howe said:
’’There are several parties to the
milk situation, and I think tne prin-
cipal party is the child In the cradle.
There is no substitute for milk in
rearing children. It is a matter of
life and death and should not take
long to settle. I do want that those
who produce this Important food
should have suitable compensation. 1
stand for justice to all parties and
mercy to one, the infant.”
Conquests.
"I have been engaged several times,"
boasted the first summer girl, "to mem
whose names I did not know.”
“That’s nothing,’’ retorted the sec-
ond summer girl. "I engaged myself
last season to a stranger who wig-
wagged his proposal from a passing
yacht.”
Inference.
Ethel (confidentially)—Do you know,
Clara, that I had two offers of mar-
riage last week?
Clara (with enthusiasm)—Oh, 1 am
delighted, dear! Then the report <s
realty Due that your uncle left you his
money?—Pick-Me-Up.
Rod, Weak, V -ary,
Relieved By Mui .e Kv
Murlne For Yo
Like Murine
Watery Eye*.
e Remedy. Try
ur Eye Troubles. You Will
e. It Boothes. 5l)c at Your
Druggists. Write For Eye Books. Free.
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
Surprise for the Deity.
"Papa,” said a little girl, rushing
Into the roc i with the air of one bring-
ing valuable Information, “did you
know that the Brown's little baby was
dead?”
“Yes, dear, I heard of It. Aren't you
sorry?”
“Yes, but, papa, it w'as only three
days old.”
“I know, love."
"And don’t you think God will be
I surprised to see it come back so
! soot?”
Never do anything that involves se-
crecy or the want of candor, or It may
lead to dark methods of inquiry by
your neighbor.—Judge Willis.
RED CROSS B \ 1,1, BLUE
Should lie in every home. Ask your grocer
for it. Large 2 oz. package unly 6 cents.
A girl isn’t necessarily an angel be-
cause she's fly.
Low R££d Fares
via
New York Central Lines
Lake Shore, Big Four Route
Michigan Central
New York, Boston
New England, entire Atlantic Toast and
other Eastern Summer Resorts
Tickets will be on sale daily during Ju
tember. Many free stop-over privileges, and optional boat trip#
June, July, August and Sep-
M and optic
on Great Lakes, St. Lawrence and Hudson Rivers.
We will be glad to send you full information as to fares, berth
reservations and routes, and on request will send copies of our
new 1910 summer booklets and folders.
WARREN J. LYNCH. Passenger Traffic Manager, Chicago
WINTERSMITHS
Oldest and Best Tonic; for Malaria and Debility.
A splendid general tonic.; 40 years’ success. Contain*
arsenic or other roisons. Unlike quinine. It I eavei*
or other roisons. Unlike qu
no bad effects. ^ ;ke no substitute. FREE-*
book of nuzzles sent to any address*
ARTIIUK r&TER * CO., Oa.’l *«••*•,
tOUMVILA*. BV.
rnrr
| ► K 100 pages. KU.iOO words. Actual exper-
1 1 leneo In Twin kali- Country, Idaho.
1 ■ Book worth 11.00. Sunil mimes o
| or more friends Intores'rd in Irrigation u
] book Fltbrfa*. U. L. HoLli.trr a tv., 20* LaSalle
DEFACE ST&RCH
Jotin .. I
»1 names ot t1ve
urid receive
St., (h.iago
Not Sisters
Fiom the Greek.
It Is said of the inhabitants of Iasus
off Caria that when a certain harper
wan performing the people who were
listening heard the bell for the open-
ing of the fish market., and rushed off.
with the exception of one man who
was a little deaf. The harper, coming
up, addressed him thus: “My good sir,
I am much flattered by your staying
to hear me when all the rest ran off
at the Bound of a bell.” “What?” said
he, “has the fish-bell rung? Then I’m
off too. Good-by.”—Strabo.
j Now and again you see two women pas«-
j ing down the ttreet who look like sisters.
You ore astonished to learn that they ore
mother ond daughter, and you realize that
o woman at forty or furty-fivo ought to be
ct her finest and fairest. Why isn’t it boT
The general health of woman is so in-
timately associated with the local hea^h
of the essentially feminine organs that
thcro can be no red checks and round
form where thcro is female weakness.
Women who have suffered from
this trouble have found prompt
relief and cure in tho use of Dr.
rierco's Favorite Prescription. It
organs of womanhood. It clears
eyes and reddens the checks.
No alcohol, or habit-forming drugs is contained in “Favorite Prescription/*
Any 6ick woman may conFult Dr. Pierce by letter, free. Every letter is
held as sacredly confidential, and answered in a plain envelope.
World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R.V. Pierce, Pres.,
'
s>*k*rc,«t«
kill* *11
N*-»l.rir*u, or:i>is-o>
cal owo»- » . nt,cb.»p*
LakU All Saaaaa*
M« * or m- laieaaaoV
spill or u p u*n »UJ
autMlsnaian any
thin*. iisiituwntS
f-culr* Of all A.al*r#
or acniprrp..t4
hAItOLD M0SFK4
I JO ItakaJfc A»a.
BriHskljn, Ir* ImC|
gives vigor and vitality to tho
the complexion, brightens tho
Address!
, Buffalo, N.Y.
Work While
You Sleep
Millions of people have CAS*
CARETS do Health work fold
them. If you have never tried
this great health maker—Get a 10o
box—and you will never use any
other bowel medicine. ,u
CASCARETS loc a box for a week*,
treatment, till druegists. hu gest seller
in the world. Million boms monrix.
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 27-1910*
Men who remain neutral In times
of public danger are enemies to their
country.—Addison.
To love and to serve is the motto
which every true knight should bear
on his shield.—Downs.
Mrs. Winslow’* Soothing Syrup.
Foreblldren toeihing. sofi«*ns Uip gums, reduces In-
|Luiuijaliou,ah<i)r» pain.cuius wind colic. "Akib
How we dislike the dentist who
spares no pains.
Combination Wood and Wire Fence and Corn Cribs
The most practical and economical fence made for yard. lawn,
garden, orchard or-tock. Sold in 75 and 8o-foot inllr »na
painted with the celebrated “Monitor” paint. Easy co erect'
and more durable than ordinary fences. Made in heights ai
three to six feet of selected straight graiued yellow pirn*
pickets. S«*e your lumber dealer or write
THE HODGE FENCE A LUMBER CO., Ltd.. L*k« OuiIm. Lav
HODGE
FENCE
■■a
You Loo
Id
■ -v"
Because of those ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Use LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER. PRJCE. SI.OO, retail.
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The Capitol Hill Weekly News The Oklahoma Fairdealer (Capitol Hill, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 41, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 2, 1910, newspaper, July 2, 1910; Capitol Hill, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc936553/m1/7/: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.