The Hennessey Clipper. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 4, 1904 Page: 3 of 8
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MUDGWG A* INLAND SEA.
Stupendous l^iKlnfrrlnp.
We have in times past been told much
of wonderful feats in railroad building,
aud much has been written of the en-
gineering skill and daring that directed
the course of the iron horse across the
plains ami mountains that lie Ik*tween
tiie Missouri river and the Pacific Ocean.
"In t-ii grandeur :t:nl magnitude of tb6
undertaking, the Union Pacific—Central
P&etiic has never heen equaled. The
energy and perseverance with which Ylie
*jork win urged forward, and the ra-
pidity with which it was executed, are
without a parallel in history," were the
statements of the special government com*
nns.iivncis to tne Secretary of the In-
terior.
Uurtv five years ago there was no time
to spend on work similar to that which
has just been completed. Then the woi'.d
wm watching while the builders it the
Uiuon Pacific and Central Pacific raced
for supremacy. It was a magnificent eon-
test, but nowadaya the owners of the
road have been br* • ;ii?ht to consider other
jtoblema. One of t ese necessitaf -l the
solution of the grade question and the
straightening of the track.
One of the most interesting and diffi-
cult feats of railroad engineering ever
undertaken has ius1 been completed by
we owners of "The Overland Rout
Union Pacific and Southern Pacific Rail-
road— the building of a bridge across the
Great Salt Lake between Ogden, Utah,
and Lucin, Nevada.
The work being practically completed,
the new track was formally opened on
Thanksgiving Day when Mr. 10. 11. Har-
nwan, head of the Harriman Lines, and
*/ in r'ar,v. 9^ ra'lroad magnates partook
of Tlianksgiving Day dinner in the mid-
dle nf (Ireat Salt Lake.
The Ogden-Lucin 'Cut Off" is 102
miles in length, 72 miles en land and .'.0
miles on trestle work and fillins over the
waters of Great Salt Lake, ft presents
s practically level track except for a short
distance on the west end near Lucin, Ne-
vada. where a slight grade is encoun-
tered.
Phe use of this cut off will throw out
the trans-cont nental ti iffic over the old
hue from Ogd'*n to Lucin, Nevada, around
the Lake. This strip of track is one
of the most expens've of the Harriman
system, the maximum grade over the
long Promontory hill is 101 feet to the
mile and helper engines are always neces-
sary. I he elimination of the use of t hese
engines will mean the saving of at least
$1,500.00 a day in operating expenses and
also a saving of several hours mi running
time.
Active work was commenced in 1902,
•nd thus the almost impossible task waj
completed in about 22 months. The last
pile was driven during the last week of
October This great work has cost over
$4,200,000.00.
The cut off runs from Ogden west 15
miles over level country before reaching
the lake Proper, then across the east arm
of the Lake 9 miles to Promontory. Then
five miles of solid road bed and then fi
miles west over the west arm of the Lake
toward Lucin and thence across the Great
bah Lake Desert to Lucin. Nevada.
Across the east arm of the Lake, it will
be almost a continuous fillin supported
by trestle. Near the middle of this will
K11!' 0 )0 feet of open trestle work
left for the waters ol the Hear liver which
flow into the arm of the Lake.
Across Promontory Point runs five
miles of solid road bed and here difficult
work was encountered. A cut of 3,000
l°n" 1,1 *yid nm' rof'k barren
bluff being necessary. At this point, the
most beautiful on this inland sea. sur-
veys have been made for an immense sum-
mer resort.
Across the west arm of the Lake is 11
ttw oi trestle work with a fillin ap-
proach at each end of four miles. In
completing th«' work of spanning the Lake,
one gre.it difficulty was encountered across
the east arm by the settling nf fillins and
trestle work. This was caused by the salt
of the flow of the Hear river having col-
lected for centuries over the bottom of
the Lake and having formed a salt wall
of 100 teet. It took l.OiK) tons of rock in
piles which appear to have reached the
bottom of the Lake proper and which has
resulted in a firm and splendid road bed.
in a speech w;!irh he made at the Alta
Club. Salt Lak.- City, on the eve of the
opening of the "Cut Off," Mr. Harriman
•aid:
'The completion of this undertaking
will reduce th*- distance between San
Fmncisco nttf Salt Lake by 41 miles, and
will eventually firing th< time betweeu
the two eiL:c- down to 22 hours.
It ii intended to reduce the running
time from Salt Lake to Chicago to 30
hours, and put passengers into New York
in art hours from Salt Lake.
" 1 hese two udreads I nion Pacific and
Boutheiti Pacific have spent in the last
three years somewhere near $ 130.000,•
OOo.nt) in repa rs and improvements aside
from the expenses of operation or main-
tenance."
A Soft Heart. Kreddy—"Hoohoo! S i - s y * #
^one arid killed that little fly on the win-
tow.' Mother- " I'm glad to *ee my little
rready^ is so tender-hearted." Kreddv—
"it isn t that. I w wanted to k kill it
myself. Pi< k Me l p
DEFENSIBLE SWEARING.
Klnrin That Mar >ut Ce Conoid*
• red an lurilcntirc ut u .Mrt*
fane Spirit.
According to the Antl-Profanlty
League, the habit of swearing is "the
national evil." Undoubtedly the use
3f profanity is extremely prevalent; a
person needs merely to keep his e.irs
iv)pen on the street to learn this. Bit
'whether it is so general as to justify
one in terming it the national evil is
\ matter of opinion, says the Boston
Transcript. Not all swearing, more-
over, is wholly indefensible. There aie
i various kinds of swearers, and it will
; not do to lump them in one class with
| a single label. Besides the nabituai
i and commonplace swearers, whose pro-
j fanity is merely redundant and color-
! less verbiage, and the vulgar and dif-
! fuse swearers, whose oaths are rank
j and noisome, one must recognize also
! as a distinct category the discreet and
J moderate swearers who employ an oc-
j casional oath with fine emphasis and
artistic effect. Many great and good
j men belong to the last class. Even
j the father of his country is said to
have sworn vigorously v/hen the cmsr-
j gency seemed to require departure
I from his customary rule of unvarnish-
. ed speech. This sort of discriminating
j profanity is vastly different from the
j causeless and gratuitous swearing of
i habitual and vulgar oathmongers. In-
LASTING RELIEt.
J. W. Walls, Super-
intendent of Streets of
Lebanon, Ky , says:
44 My nightly rest
was broken, owing to irregular action
of the kidney ;. I was suffering intense-
ly from severe pains in the small of my
back and through th ■ kidneys and an-
noyed by painful passages of abnormal
secretions. No amount of doctoring
relieved this condition. I began taking
Doan's Kiduey Pills and I experienced
quick and lasting relief. Doan's Kid-
ney Pills will prove a blessing to all
sufiorers from kidney disorders who
will give them a fair trial."
Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.,
propt etors. For sale by all druggists,
price 50 eents per box
largest growers of
QNION
i and Vegetable Seeds In the
■arid.
Pnccs
raupe from
60 cents to
SI.5 0 per
pound, and
no boiler
seed is
found on
'J0© &
I!ow ts grow
1,30 0 bushels
OnioM jct aero
with each ounoo order.
_ _ Catalog &e, tor pe«1i|«.
John A. Saizer Seed Co., u cwa,istt-
^ deed, the man who now and then vent_
! his emotions in an oath Is preferable
j to the one who always bottles up his
feelings, however strong the provoca-
tion to break forth. A robust ebulli-
j tion is better than ingrowing profanity.
Silence may be as profane as words
J under certain circumstances. A saying
of Joseph Choate occurs to the Settler
j in this connection. A noted prelate
j was once playing golf with Mr. Choa'9
find after fozzling a tee shot egre-
glously, stood looking at the ball for sev-
eral moments. After waiting for the
bishop to say something Mr. Choate
remarked: "Bishop, that was the pro-
fanest silence I ever hearu."
As for the Anti-Profanity league,
the purpose of the organization is cer-
tainly worthy, but somehow the Settler
cannot develop a high degree of enthu-
siasm in such a cause. He is a b'.t
weary of anti-crusades of all sorts.
Movements for the suppression of this
and that and what not fail to interest
him profoundly. It seems to him that
what is needed in the field of social
reform is not. so much the suppression
of bad things as the promotion of good
things. Reformers should concentrate
their energies on positive and con-
structive work, rather t'-an purely neg-
ative anu restrictive undertakings.
MINIATURE LOCOMOTIVES.
Diminutive Enville, linn l>> Cow
prPMed Air In I *e In Mil-
waukee.
Two miniature railroads, fully
equipped for the business required of
them, are in operation in Milwaukee,
says the Wisconsin. The line at the
gas works is a novelty in many ways,
one of the most interesting features
being that the locomotives are run by
compressed air. The tiny locomotives
aro equipped with powerful "boilers,"
which are in fact air tanks capable of
withstanding a pressure of 1,000 pounds
to the square inch. Air is supplied by
means of a compressor at the plant,
from w hich a pipe line extends along
the entire system. Whenever the air
gauge shows that the pressure is be-
coming low the engineer stops at a
hydrant and air is pumped into the
tank sufficient to run tor a considerable
time.
Unlike many miniature locomotives,
those at the gas works are driven in
exactly the same manner as a steam
locomotive. The power is transmitted
to the drive wheels directly from the
cylinder by means of the usual driving
rods. The engineer's cab resembles the
cab of a mogul engine, but the interior
is much different. There isnoheat.no
stoke hole, no water gauge, no blow
cocks and no fireman. The system is
between two and three miles long,
counting the numerous side tracks and
spurs that reach into every part of the
mammoth plant. The line Is equipped
with tiny flat cars, gondolas, dump cars
and special cars used in transporting
coal to the flrerooms and to the retorts.
At the other plant the railroad is
equipped with steam locomotive and
tiny cars hardly larger than a wheel-
barrow. This line extends from the
mills to the quarry where the rock
from which the cement is made is pro-
cured. The locomotive has a smoke-
stack, something the gas plant engines
have not, but the power is transmitted
to the wheelB indirectly by means of
gears or chains instead of by the piston
and driving rods.
Wliy Pole. Are \nt Germunlxed.
The official mind in Prussia seems to
be gradually coming to the recognition
that the policy pursued hitherto with
regard to the Germanizatlon of the Pol-
ish provinces has been as futile as it is
costly. What happens in Polish Silesia
is seemingly somewhat as follows
With the liberal sums received from thi
Prussian government as the price ol
their estates, the Polish proprietors liq-
uidate their debts and devote the balanct
to founding banking establishments la
the towns, In which they carry on a
lucrative business by advancing money
at reasonable rates of interest to th«
tradesmen and artisans, who lii turn
have laid out the loans so advantageous-
ly that a large and comparatively pros-
perous middle class have been crated,
who have actually been economically
strong enough to push the German trad-
ers to the wall. Hence the fact that the
German population in the Polish prov.
Inces Is weaker In almost every respect
at the present moment than was the
caw ten years ago —The Speaker.
LOST BY A COUGH.
It Uetrnyvrl the IlronchltI* Army *mI
lli** fiyi'lnRc (iuii Rnltrr)
Oprurd Fire.
The gifted clairvoyant who eupplieu
news (or the evening newspaper whose
night edition appears ju«t before break-
fast had a startling revelation while
taking his after dinner trance one day.
His vision, states the New York Sun.
indicated that the gentle art ol warfare
was destined to undergo radical changes
in the dim future.
"I saw what seemed to be the closing
Incidents in a great war between the
United States and the Pan-European
Commercial alliance," the clairvoyant
told a friend.
"My flrst trance picturc disclosed *\n
American camp. Th*- men were tea'..-ti
about in groups, joking and laughing
over their evening meal tabloids.
"Suddenly there was a loud clanging.
A moment later a horseman, beating
sharply upon the ambulance gong at-
tached to his saddle, dashed Into camp
and drew rein in front of the colonel's
tent.
" 'Prescription from headquarters,'
he said, touching his rubber glove to the
lp of his visor.
"The colonel took the paper which the
horseman gave him. and read:
"WAR DEPARTMENT.
Office hours: 10-12 A. M., 4-U P. M.
R Operations necessary.
Take Bllltown before going to bed.
Shake* well before taking.
Gen. Dopely,
Surg. Commanding.
"Orderlies were sent running in all di-
rections; everything was bustle and
confusion. A momert later the band
struck up 'The Feeling of the Pulse,'
and the whole regiment, their white
rubber aprons gleaming in the sun,
marched proudly forth.
"I glanced at the color surgeon's flag.
Twas the colors of the Fifth United
States Lancets.
• • • • * *
'"My next trance picture showed
House S'irgeon Gen. Cutts and his en-
tire division—five repiments of lancets,
two squadrons of scalpelry and a chem-
ical corps—encamped in a clearing sur-
rounded by dense woods.
"That the enemy was close at hand
j was evident from the his?ing of bullets
that from time to time picked off some
; too conspicuous soldier.
j "But just where was the enemy?
Scouts had been sent out, but were un-
; able to diagnose the case. Was there
no way, then, of locating the enemy's
fire?
"Suddenly Dr. Cutts' face brightened.
He began to give orders in a hoarse
sick-room whisper.
"Syringe guns were hurriedly mount-
ed on operating tables and arranged in
a hollow square. They were loaded to
the muzzle with bronchitis germs.
" 'Ready,' commanded the doctor
•Fire!'
"Instantly there was a tremendous
squirt that made the woods rustle froir
end to end.
"The gunners lighted sulphur candlei
and sat down to wait.
"Five, ten. twenty minutes passec
without result.
"The doctor was just about to pre
scribe another volley, when there cam*
from far out of the northwest eome
where a faint bronchial cough.
"Th* doctor placed his hand to his ear
aifd motioned for silence.
"A moment later he was rewarded
with another cough, this time louder.
Then another and another, until finally
there burst forth a whole chorus of
bronchial coughing.
"'Ha!' the doctor cried, '1 thought
those germs would do the business. For-
ward, lads!'
"With that the whole division charged
wildly into the woods.
... ...
'"My third and last vision revealed a
group of jubilant newspaper correspon-
dents In front of the surgeon general in
chief's office In Washington. A small
bit of paper on the door bore this infor-
mation :
"BULLETIN.
"Enemy has suffered severe relapse.
Slowly sinking. Enel near. Cutts. M. D."
'•f!t>- nf the True Onra."
Edward Everett said it was worth a
trip across the ocean to see where the
Potomac breaks through the mountains
at Harper's Ferry; what would such a
lover of nature said had he looked from
th?s9 heights on the distant campariles
of the City of the True Cross—Vera
Cruz? Wide-spreading ferns and gor-
geous morning-glories are banked
against the impregnable basalt snd gran-
ite. As one traveler has observed, the
peculiar charm of this region Is the ver-
dure of the mountain from base to sum-
mit. In the grand canyon of the Arkan-
sas in Colorado we are awed by the
masses of bare rock which tower above
us or yawn below lis, but here we seem
to be floating along on the tree-tops
The moisture from the sea supplies the
vegetation with ample means of growth,
and the mountains are arrayed in green
even though the plains above may en-
joy no rain for months at a time.—
From "Esperan/.a to Orlsaba," by
George F. Paul, In Four-Track News.
The Kiirnlonen.
Out beyond the Golden Gate, but vis-
ible to the naked eye on a clear day from
the shore near 'Frisco, the majestic
brown rocks known as the Karali.tn
rear their heads above the waters of the
Pacific. On the hifc.iest peak stands the
government lighthouse, one of the most
important on the coast, as It Is a guiding
star to all homeward bound ships as
they enter the choppy waters called the
"bar." The bar and the cavernous jaws
of the Golden Gate Itself mark the scene
of many a tragedy, for owing to the cross
currents and the peculiar formation of
the coast line, stanch boats are like
egg-shell3 In the strenjii, the waves.
—From "A Lighthouse and a Honey-
moon," by Harriet Quimby, in Foui
Track Newu.
TWO KINDS OF LAW.
One fur 1.« vr- \ liltl i n k CllUrnii nnd
!>• #lbfr (ifitf roua-.Hpl r I !<•«!
Neighbors.
Georgia ha.« a law intended to induce Rtoek-
owr.eit i«> ktep their annuals in their own
tit Ids. i.a> t.ie Atlanta Constitution. \\ «*n !
1 iariuer tinds hi* neighbor'* cattle in his
sorn, instead of sending them to t e pound
or shooting them, he puts thtin in hu own
corral, am: w.;en the owner coir.«*> tortl.e-.n,
jhaigea him 50 cents a head to pay lor the
;re>pa *.
It r;.:ppened that when the law wasunder
lUcu^Mon two neig Inn.- were very violent,
ti e one in favor oi :t, the other aguiutt it.
lifter the law had been pa>.-ed ihe cattle of
tne man who had opposed it got into t e oth-
er man's field and were captured. I'tieir ,
in.-;- weut lor them.
"A.- 1 am a law abiding citizen," said the :
jther farmer, "and t ere are 14 cattle, it
rill coat you MVtn dollars/'
Tee man whose rattle nad been impounded !
.\:i- indignant, but he paid t e bill. A little
atrr c cap;tiled his neighbor's eai.le in '
Wallet d p eke . ttu onnei thi;
jows tode over to gt t them.
"Well." he 'manned, "how much ilo 1
>we you?"
".Not a cent." replied the other. "1 may
aot be a law -abiding i itizen, but I'm a nt :ga-
PARTY LINE TELEPHONE.
1 Squabble He t ween SiibNerlbera
That W iin Settled Very Speed-
lly and Amicably.
Washington has thousand!* of party line
elcphones. The best of feeling does not
dway> prevail between tho e on the party
me> when both want to u>e the'phone at
:hc sitne time, say ti tne Uochestei Denn « rat
ind I'uronicle. A prominent politician is
>n a party line with a doctor. He was in
fi eat haste to get a friend over the 'phone
tnd began ringing and shouting "hello."
i'ne oth'\r .subscriber wanted to u*e his tele-
phone at the >anie time, with i he result they
were soon ?aying harsh tilings to each other.
"Who are you," demanded the politician.
"I'm Dr. ttlanK," was the answer.
"Oh, pardon inr, docter, you can have
the line It it w:rn't foi yoil I OOtlldn'i
«nal;e a living."
"Well, who are you?" asked the doctor.
"I'm Jones, tho undertaker," was tho a/y
iwer.
A Dcntiftt'n Advice.
Toledo. Ohio, Jan. 25th.—Mr. Ilnrry L.
Lew is, Demist, 607 Sumit street, this city,
says: "I certainly advise anyone no matter
how severe they may fcavc Kidney Trouble
to take Dodd's Kidney l'ills.
"I was troubled with Kidney Disease for
several years and Dodd's Kidut y Pills cured
inc. 1 had ut-ed many so-called remedies
without any benefit. Four months ago, 1
was flat on my back with this painful trou-
ble and must say that I alinostgave up hopes
of ever getting any better. Through a
friend's advice 1 purchased six boxes of
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
"At first I could see but little benefit, but
after two weeks, I could see an improvement.
1 had been getting up several times at. night
and pains in my back were very severe.
When I had taken six boxes 1 felt better
than I had for years. The pain hail all
gone and 1 didn't have to get up during tho
night at all. I continued the treatment
until 1 had used several more boxes, and
now 1 am glad to say that 1 am completely
cired."
Slie 14 new One.
Mr Finnic!;—In all my life, Miss Kgeau.
I have only met two women whom I would
really rare to marry.
Miss Kgeau—And—er what was the
other one's name, Mr. Finuick? Philadel-
phia Public Ledger.
The U. S. Dept. of Ai;rlcnltni'e
lives to Salter's Oats its heartiest en-
1 rsement. Salter's New National Oats
fielded in 19 • from loO to 3(M) bu. per
icre in 30 dillerent States, and you, Mr.
I'armer, can beat this in 11)04, it you will.
Ntl/er's seeds are pedigree Heeds, bred up
through careful selection to big Yields.
s Per Acre.
N-ilzer's Beardless R-«Jey yielded 121 bu.
Saizer's Home Builder Corn... iitK) bu.
Speltz and Macaroni Wheat.... 80 bu.
Balzer'a Victoria Rape 60,000 lbs.
Sal/.er'a Teosinte, the fodder
wonder 100,000 lbs.
Baher's Billion Dollar Grass... 50,000 Ids.
Balzer'a Pedigree Potatoes 1,000 bu.
Now such yields pay and you can have
them, Mr. Farmer, in 1004.
SEND 10c IN STAMPS
and this notice to the John A. Saizer Sec*
Co.? La Crosse, Wis., and you will ge\.
their big catalog and lots of farm seed
samples free. [K. L.J
What's more, peacc hath her victories I
meraZret--UpaaUy oulbu"t of
: i/in TI
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-\v y 'V' *
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To Prove what Swamp-Root, tlic Great Kidney Remedy*
Will Do for YOU, Every Reader of this paper May
Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mai!.
Weak and unhealthy kidneys uro r< sponsible for more
sickness and suffering than any other disease, therefore, when
through neglect or other causes, kidney trouble is permitted to*
continue, latal results aro sure to follow.
Your other organs may need attention—but your kidney* mosT,
because they do most and need attention lirst.
It' you aro sick or "feel badly," begin taking Dr. Kilmer'.?
Swamp-Hoot, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, because
as soon as your kidneys begin t<3 get better they will help all the
other organs to health. A trial will convince anyone*
The mild and Immediate effect of Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, tho great kidney
and bladder remedy, is soon realized. It
stands the highest [or its wonderful cures
of tho inost distressing cases. Swamp-
Root will set your wholo system right,
and the best proof of this is a trial.
14 East 120th St., New Vokk CxtT.
Dear Sir i Oct. 15th, 19qj
"1 hud heen sufTerlnc severely from kidney
troublo. All nymi>toiM8 wcro on hand; my former
otrencth and i ower had left ne; I could hardly
drau myself atone. F.vnu my mental capacity was
living out, nnd often I wished to die. h wa- iht:n
I saw an advertisement of youifl in a New York
paper, hut would not have paid any attention to it,
had it not promised a sworn Knaiantee with evciy
bottle of your medicine, asserting thi* t your Swamp-
Rootis purely vegetable nnd does n t contain any
harmful drugs. 1 am seventy yen rs and four months
old, and with a good conscience 1 can recommend
Swamp-Root to all Eulferers fioui kidney troubles.
Four members of my fr.mily have bat n using
SwamtrUoot for four different kidney di^c.uL^,
with iho name good results."
Willi uian/ thanks to you, I remain.
Very truly j ui .
ROllERT UERNER.
You may have a sample bottlo of this
famous kidney remedy, Swamp-Root,
Gent free by mail, postpaid, l>y which you
may test its virtues for such disorders as
kidney. Madder and uric acid diseases,
poor digestion, being obliged to pass
your water frequently night and
smarting or irritation in paswnfl, 'rick
dust or sediment in the urine, headachy
backache, lame bark, dizziness, sleepless*
nesu, nervousness, heart disturbance da*
to bad kidney trouble, skin eruptions from
bad blood, neuralgia, rheumatism, diahcte.%
bloating, irritability, wornout feeling lacll
of ambition, loss of flesh, sallow coca*
plexion, or Bright's disease.
If your water, when allowed to r maio
undisturbed in a glass or bottle for
twenty-four hours, forms a sediment or
sottling or has a cloudy appearance, it is
evidence that your kidneys and bladder
need immediate attention.
Swamp-Root is tho preat discovery ol
Dr. Kilmer, tho eminent kidney and Ldad-*
der specialist. Hospitals use it *nh won 1
derful success in both slight and severo
cases. Doctors recommend it to tl.eir
patients anil nje it in their own families,
because tliey recognizo in Swainji-Pccl
the greate t nnd most successful remtdy.
Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and il
for sale at drug stores the world over i
bottles of two sizes and two pricis—fft •
cents and one dollar. Remember / *
name, Szvarnp- Root, Dr. Kilmer'
.Stutimp- l\>>ot, and the address,
humtoii, .V. on every 'oottie.
-•;>.• > * \ ■■■ •
i.--' f s'J*- - J?/ "
fc l .! ij>\I lp M '<• ' / W
Mrs. Hughson, of Chicago,
whose letter follows, is another
woman in high position who ow es
her health to the use of Lydia E.
Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound.
44 Dear Mrs. Pinkdam : — I suffered
for several years with general weakness
and beariDp-down pains, eauseti by
w< mb trouble. My appetite was poor,
and I would lie awake for hours, and
could not bleep, until I seemed more
weary in the morning than when I re-
tired. After reading one of your adver-
tisements I decided to try the merits
of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable
Compound, and I am so glad I did.
No one can describe the pood it did me,
I took three bottles faithfully, and be-
sides building up my general health,
it c'rove all disease and poison out of
my body, and made mo feel as spry and
active cs a young girl. Mrs. Pinkham's
medicines are certainly all they aro
ela'med to tx\M — Mrs. M. E. Huoosoir,
.'J47 East Ohio St., Chicago, 111. — $6000
forfeit If original of aho'Jt tetter proving genuine-
i.ccs cannot be produced.
More than a million women have re-
gained health by the use of Ijj ilia E.
rinkliaiii's VejrotnbloCompoiirxl.
If tin*, sliplix'st troubleii|>|M!nrH
wliich you do not understand
write to i\lrn. Pliikli.ini, ut Lynn,
MasK„ for tier u<lvice, und u few
timely words front her will show
you the right thiiiff to do. This
ft rice costs you nothing, but It
<B!'y inenn lilo or haimiuogu or
kttUu
KI>lTORI All NOTM. So sue-
cessful is Swamp-Root in promptly
curing" even the most distressing cases
of kidney, live**- or bladder troubles,
that to prove its wonderful merits, you
may have a sample bottle and a book
of valuable information, both sent ab-
solutely free by mail The book con-
tains many of the thousands upon
thousands of testimonial letters re-
ceived from men and women cured.
The value and success of Swamp-Root
is so well known that our readers are
advised to send for a sample bottle.
In sending yotir address to Dr. Kilmer
& Co , Biughamton, N. Y., be sure to
t V. V '.-*>• i •.&■'
£
I
say you read this generous t ffer m tl.s
The proprietors of this p«iper guar-
antee the genuineness of this i Jer,
COUPON.
Plenso wrltfl or fill in this coupon with r ol
name n:id address and Dr. Kiliner Pt Co. wi'l • |
Ll,-,r.oc llottlo at liwamp-Ktut t..«
Urcflt kidney Ucoicdy.
Name
St. and No.
City or Town
btato... w
+ *■ Ir0)\ ■ T- rfiiePMdk
No lying' about
the nif-rit of CASOARICTtf. MillionM use them and tell t-heir
friends how pood they are. We want to pive baek the pnruliabe
price to anyone who fails to (,-i-t satisfaction from tho uso of
CANDY
CATHARTIC
4 Now that sounds like a liberal offer, but I hese single Ifc salt's alone
don t count for success. It's your euro and your gotxi word for
Casearets that will mal;e them famous in the future as in the
:jf past. Start with a box today. 10c, 25c, 60e, all dmp-gists. I'res
4 aarnple and booklet. Address Sterling Keinedy Co., Chgo. cr N. Y.
? Best for the Bowels
5 410
MOTHER CRAY'S
SWEET POWDERS
FOR CHILDREN,
A Certain Cure for PevcriftbneM*
C'onntipntion, H;uularhe,
JStomuch Troublrn, Trctni
%
h.r <?roy. Worm.. . —
. .. mi in Oblla*
rsn'# liomo 8*n tde metl d FHF.E. A<idre«/ ,
S'bif York Citjr. A. i. OLMUTED. Lc Roy, N Y«
v * Piiorderi*, nnd Drutroy
Vother Amy. Worm*. ThHjBrfak npColdi
:<iriwin Child- *n 94 hour*. At ^1 i>ru«iiij«. 'Jioti.
"AVEHARIUS GARBCUJitUift" PAINT.
Cuaranfeed to prenervc all wood-work
ugainst rot.
Radical Remedy against Chlcken-I!ce.
Suroeaefully f.^r 2o years.
CARBOLINEUM WOOD PRESERVING CO.,
circular* trn>. Milwaukee, V^l?.
BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH
SYRUP curcs cuufihs and a IOji. ^
LADIES V. HO
SUFFER
from Frmau Th< i n>
♦•nn tr «at. il.i'inw'i • • rtitM
Okanuk Lily. Y< u anplj
Ic. dlriM-t to tbw
part*, and it n-.a n#
atnuunt of uiodlclne taken Inwardly cau do
For %umnle and mv t^ imonial, a i ' >o
Mr., tt. II. Frattor, UET1COIT. M Ji II.
PATE NTSte.^ia
FITZGERALD * CO.. llos It. WwJitnBtcij.D. a
Oil LTAfiUfA FARMS. Cataloruo sen* free,,
UALIk UIITI!A (j.M. Wwiton u.. 8anFrnn« i> <o }
A. N. k. il ^X)C
Mm Of w ItlTINO TO ADVKXt'l K9
plca«« Riiite Ihatyau mw lh« AilwtuiM
meat In thla puuer-
Bjrvp
ON SUM
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The Hennessey Clipper. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 4, 1904, newspaper, February 4, 1904; Hennessey, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc105246/m1/3/: accessed May 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.