Cashion Advance. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 21, 1907 Page: 3 of 8
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T
VETERAN OF THREE WARS.
A Pioneer of Colorado and Nebraska.
Matthias Campbell, veteran of the
civil war and two Indian wars, and
a pioneer of Colo-
rado, now living at
218 Hast Nebraska
Street, lllair. Neb.,
says: "I had such
pains in my back
for a long time that
I could not turn
in bed, and at times
there was an almost
total stoppage of
the urine. My wife and I have both
used Doan's Kidney Pills for what doc-
tors diagnosed as advanced kidney
♦.roubles, and both of us have been
jompletely cured."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a boi.
Itoater-MUburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Couldn't Discharge Him.
When the jury had filed in for at
least the fourth time, with no sign of
coming to an agreement in the bribery
case, the disgusted judge rose up and
•aid: "I discharge this jury."
At this, one sensitive talesman,
stung to the quick by this abrupt and
111-soundiug decision, obstinately faced
the judge.
"You can't discharge me, judge!" he
retorted,
"Why not?" asked the astonished
Judge.
"Because," announced the talesman,
pointing to the defendant's lawyer,
"I'm being paid by that man there!"—
Lippincott's.
ITCHING RASH 18 YEARS.
Girl's Rash Spread and Grew Worse
Under Specialist's Care—Perfect
Cure by Cuticura Remedies.
"When my daughter was a baby she
had a breaking out behind the ears.
The doctor said that she would out-
grow it, and it did get somewhat bet-
ter until she was about fifteen years
old, and after that she could get noth-
ing that would drive it away. She was
always applying something in the way
of salves. It troubled her behind the
knees, opposite the elbows, back of
the neck and ears, under the chin, and
then it got on the face. That was
about three years ago. She took treat-
ment with a specialist and seemed to
get worse all the time. We were then
advised to try the Cuticura Remedies,
and now I don't see any breaking out.
M. Curley, 11-19 Sixteenth St., Bay
City, Mich., May 20, 1906."
The Eternal Feminine.
"Did your wife scold you much for
Betting in so late last night?"
"You bet she did—for about four
hours!"
"Whew! What did you do?"
"Fell asleep, as usual, during the
lecture."
"But didn't she wake you up?"
"Come to think of it, she did. Want-
ed to know if I loved her as much as
ever—or something of the sort."—
Young's Magazine.
State or Onto, City or Toledo, I
Li'oas Couty. t'
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senloi
farmer of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., d >lnji
ublii**H8 In the City of Toledo. County and Biate
at re h (1. and that said flriu will pay the uum of
ONE III"NDUKL) DOLLAItS for each and every
rise "f Cataiikh that caunot he cured by the use u'.
Hall's Catakku Cukk.
FRANK J. CIIKN'ET.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence,
this c th day of December, A. D.. 1>W6.
j —*— I A. W. GLE ASOJf,
Notary Public.
Hair* C.itarrh Cure Is taken Internally and act*
directly on the blood aud mucous surfaces of the
system. bend for tcsiliu mlal*. free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Bold by nil DruRfMits, lie.
Take Hall's Family I'llls for coustlpatlon.
Troublesome Growth.
"Does the child ever keep still a
minute?" asked the woman as the
youngster sprawled noisily over the
couch in a dozen squirming positions
at once, it seemed to her.
"No," answered tyls mother. "They
are growing when they do that, they
say."
"Will you please ask him to stop
growing," lmi>lored the woman, "just
for this week while he is viBiting me?"
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 will
he less wear and tear of the goods,
and it will be a positive pleasure to
use a Starch that does not stick to the
iron.
A Certainty.
"Every woman thinkB she would
make an actress."
"Not every one."
"Yes."
"There la my wife,"
"Doesn't she think it?"
"No; she knows It."—Nashville
American.
Important to Mothers.
Kxnnilne carefully every bottle of
CASTOHIA a safe and Hure remedy for
Infants and children, and Bee that it
Bears the
Signature
In Use For Over IN) Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
DOCTORS ORGANIZE UNION.
It Is cruelty to the innocent not to
punish the guilty.—Syrut.
Toronto Physicians Fix Higher Scale
of Prices.
Toronto, Ont.—The doctors of this
city west of Yonge street have formed
a union under the name "No. 11 Ter-
ritorial Division of the College of Phy-
sicians and Surgeons." The objects of
the organization are to improve the
condition of tlio profession against
quacks, establish minimum fees and
amend lodge terms. The lowest fee
for medical examination for fraternal
societies has been fixed at while
the minimum fee for minor operations
has been fixed at $10, and that for
major operations at $."i0. For a first
visit to a patient $2 hereafter will be
charged, and $1 for each subsequent
visit, while the fee for night visits will
be doubled, being fixed at f.'l. The
charge for an office visit has been
made $1, including prescription, while
to give anesthetics $5 will bo charged.
Unswallowed.
She had been to Lcr first party and
had indulged not wisely but too well
In delicacies that cause internal woe
when partaken of to excess.
"Why, Geraldlne!" exclaimed the
anxious mother, as she welcomed the
return oi her offspring, "how white you
are looking; do you feel sick?"
"Oh, no," was the eq"able reply; "I
did feel sick after the Ice cream, but I
unswallowed myself and I feel all right
now."
Starch, like everything else. It h*.
Ing constantly improved, the patent
Starches put on the market 25 years
ago are very different and inferior to
those of the present day. In the lat-
est discovery—Defiance Starch—all in-
I jurlous chemicals are omitted, while
j the addition of another Ingredient, in-
vented by us, gives to the Starch a
strength and smoothness never ap-
proached by other brands.
A woman may talk like a book, but
when it comes to shutting her up like
one—well, that's different.
no YOI lt Cl.OTIIKS I.OOK YEl.I.OWt
If so, use Red Cross Hail Blue. It will make
them white an suuw. 2 uz. package 5 cents.
The pope has a million dollar lace
collection.
Simmons Ranch for Sale
95,000 Acres in the Most Fertile Part of South
Texas Now on the Market.
The Simmons ranch, located "6 miles south of San Antonio, has
been divided into farms and is now being sold to settlers. You havo
what is probably tho last opportunity to secure a farm of from 10
acres to 640 acres (including two lots In town) for $210, payable $10
a month without interest. This land will double in value in a short
time.
Such an offer has never before been made and may never b®
again, as good land is getting scarcer all the time.
Write for literature and views of the ranch.
OR. CHAS. F. SIBSMONS,
215 Alamo Plaia, SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS.
NATURE PROVIDES
FOR SICK WOMEN
a more potent remedy in the roots
and herbs of the field than was ever
produced fr jm drugs.
In the good old-fashioned days of
our grandmothers few drugs were
used in medicines and Lydia E.
Pinkliain. of Lynn, Mass., in her
study of roots and herbs and their
power over disease discovered and
gave to the women of the world a
remedy for their peculiar ills more
potent and efficacious than any
combination of drugs.
Z5 "Guars'*
OLD SORES
LYDIA E. P1NKHAM
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
Is an honest, tried and true remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value.
During its record of more than thirty years, its long list of actual
cures of those serious ills peculiar to women, entitles Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded
person and every thinking woman.
When women are troubled with irregular or painful functions,
weakness, displacements, ulceration or inflammation, backache,
flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they
should remember there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound.
No other remedy in the country has such a record of cures of
female ills, and thousands of women residing in every part of the United
States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable compound and what it has done for them.
Mrs. Pinkliam invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has
guided thousands to health. For twenty-five years she has been advising
sick women free of charge. She is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E Pink-
ham and as her assistant, for years before her decease advised under her
immediate direction. Address, Lvnn, Mass.
FED AND
KEPT OPEN
BY IMPURITIES IN THE BLOOD
Whenever a sore refuses to Ileal it is because the blood is not pure ami
healthy, as it should 1h?, but is infected with poisonous germs or some old
blood taint which has corrupted and polluted the circulation. Those most
usually afflicted with old sores arc persons who have reached or passed mid-
dle life. The vitality of the blood and strength of the system have naturally
begun to decline, and the poisonous genus which have accumulated bccaus®
of a sluggish and inactive condition c f the system, or some hereditary taint
which has hitherto been held in check, now force an outlet on the face, arms,
legs or other part of the body. The place grows red and angry, festers ana
eats into the surrounding tissue until it becomes a chronic and stul.liort*
ulcer, fed and kept open by the impurities with which the blood is saturated.
Nothing is more trying and disagreeable than a stubborn, non-healing sore.
The very fact that it resists ordinary remedies and treatments is good reason
for suspicion; the same germ-producing cancerous ulcers is back of every
old sore, and especially is this true if the trouble is an inherited one.
Washes, salves, nor indeed anything else, applied directly to the sore, can
... do any permanent j'ood ; neither will reinov-
I was smloted with a sorn on my • , , 1 ., , ■ . . _ ,.
fnco of four yoarfa' standing. It itlg tae Sole witll caustic plasters or the
was a small pimt>le Rt first but it surgeon's knife make a lasting cure. If
gradually errow lare-pr and worse ... , ... i n t
in every way until I became every particle of tae diseased flesh \ver«
alarmed about it aiul consulted taken away another sore would come, lie-
several physicians. They all A, : , , . , ,, , i .t-
treated mo but tlio Bor© cont'nu^d cnusc t.lC Irotihle IS ill tiiC blood, llTlfl tho
to grow worse. I saw S. S. S. Rd- BZOOO CANNOT BE CUT AWAY.
vertiBed and coirtuencod iti \ s© . .. « .
and nfter taking- it a whilo I wui 1 he cure lrustcome by a thorough clcans-
completely cured. My bl^d is in-r of the Mood. Ill VS. S. S. Will be foutni
now pure and healthy from the ^ , r • . , • i
effect of S. 8. S., and there liua not a remedy for sores and ulcers of every i md.
Wany^n of tho eoro since It is an unequalled blood purifier—one that
goes directly into the circulation and
promptly cleanses it of all poisons and
taints. It gets down to the very lndtoiu of
the trouble and forces out every trace of im-
purity and makes a complete and lasting
cure. S. S. S. changes the quality of tho
blood so that instead of feeding the diseased
parts with impurities, it nourishes th
irritated, inflamed flesh with healthy blood.
Then the sore begins to lical, new flesh is formed, all pain and inflammation
leaves, the place scabs over, and when S. S. S. has purified the blood t!i«
sore is permanently cured. S. S. S. is for sale at all first class drug stores.
Write for our special book on sores and ulcers and any other medical advic*
you desire. We make no charge for the book or advice.
S. S. S. cured it.
THOS. OWEN
Weit Union, Ohio.
PURELY VEGETABLE
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, CAm
IPILES
DM. THOBNTOM u MINOR IMO Oak 3T. KAK3A3 CITY. MO.
MISCELLANEOUS ELECTROTYPES!
wont by (
fit/, XUmuM
Has Bees
Taken la
With Out
§30 AN HOUR
MERRY GO ROUNDS
\V<> also manufacture IUuIp Perries. HtrlkiTu,
II KKSi'll KiiL-Si'l LI,MA N CO., (General AuiutwiDta
clothes nicest, Uuttttters l>ept. M. Nohtii Tonowaslia, K. ¥.
for old people who suffer
from rheumatism.shff joints,goutiumbago
neuralgia,sciatica and paralysis
\ SloMVsLimmmt
y gives quick relief. It penetrates
through me nerves and tissues, relieves the
inflarrlmaHon and[congestion, quickens
^he blood and gives a pleasanr tingling
sensation of^comfort and warmth.
jvery little rubbing.
At all dealers
PRICE 25* 50* & $1.00
Dr.Earl S.Sloan,Boston Mass
Free Advice.
"An old subscriber wants to know
tvhat fur is most economical for poor
people," said the stenographer of a
woman's magazine.
"Tell her bearskin," said the fash-
ion editor, crunklly.—Upplncott'l.
By following the directions, which
are plainly printed on each paekago of
Defiance Starch, Men's Collars and
Cuffs can be inuile Just as stiff as de-
sired, with either kIoss or domestic
Hulah. Try It, 16 oi. for 10c, sold by
all good grocers.
The first use of a menu at a ban-
quet In Germany dates back to 1489.
In the Church.
"Pt course," said TesH at Miss Yer-
ner's wedding to Mr. Tlmmld, "the
bride looks lovely, as brides always
do."
"Yes," replied Jess, "but the brlde-
| groom doesn't. He appears rather run
| down."
"Run down? Oh, yes; caught aftor
a long chase."
Clear white clothe* nre a sign that the
houaekeeper uses Red Crois Itall lllue. |
Large 'J on. package, 5 ccnts.
You can make one kind of an Im-
pression by following a statement with
an apology, but It will not bo a good
one.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 & $3.50 SHOES TS"Jo';..
jfc^ 8H0E6 fOH EVERY MEMUER OF
THE FAMILY, AT ALL PRICES.
125. OOO l £• mn* on3 ■¥#,° can prow W. L.
^avyvvv ) Oouytom domm not matte < mall
Reward izz°rm * 9H.ro
«ivwm V [than any othmp manvfmcturar.
THK KKAHONNV. L. lK>uglaa nIiocm ar wrri bymoi« neoplo
In all walk not life tlim any other inako, 1m broaiino «>r their
excellent *tylo, easy-tilth,g, ami inferior wearing qualities
llie Helwetion of the leathern ami other material* for ca< h pari
or the Hhoe, and every detail of the making i« lnnki'd after .y
thnin#.*t fimpietHDrganizatiori of HiperintenrleiitM.forcnn'uaml
• killed shoemakers, who reeeWe the highest wages paid in the
workmanship cannot ! •« exeelled.
•hoe industry, ami whoso wor
*• 1 " >innniui|i cannot
j if I could take you Into my large faetorles at Brock ton.Ma*.,
ami khow you how carefully W.7,. Donght* shoes are made, vou
would then understand why they Indd their shape, fit tatter.
wear longer and are ol gr**ator value than any other nmV*. • t> -w-«c0—
Shoma amnnoi ba aquallad mi fl/tywlMk
i fu . a ^""i'mTiave \n 1,. I **uul«" nan" and price stamped oiMh it toiirrSK
No Ask your dealer for W. I„ Houghs shoes. If h« cannot sum.lv von
direot to factory. Shoes sent every whore by mail. CaUlog freo. W.L.L>ougla«. Brutkton. f
n°,um °f la os«otrT^7rrs^R,cs,^oo^s
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Woodworth, M. F. & Woodworth, D. G. Cashion Advance. (Cashion, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 21, 1907, newspaper, November 21, 1907; Cashion, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc102970/m1/3/: accessed November 17, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.