The Hennessey Clipper. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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THE WORST CUT OF ALL.
GENEBAL WEAKNESS AND FEVER
DISAPPEAR TOO.
'clixg to old ways
MODERN MEXICANS PERPETU-
ATE CUSTOMS OF ANCESTORS.
Bow a Woman Was Frcr.t from Trniibtea
That Hud Made Life Wretched for
Many Yean.
Tho immediate causes of headaches
vary, but most of them como from poor
or poisoned blood. In anaemia the blood
is scauty or thin ; the nerves aro imper-
fectly nourished and pain is tho way in
which they express their weakness. In
colds the blood absorbs poison from the
mucous surfaces, and the poison irritates
tho nerves and produces puiu. In rheu-
matism, malaria and tho grip, tho poison
iu the blood produces like discomfort. In
indigestion tho gnses from tho impure
matter kept iu tho system affect the
blood iu the same way.
The ordinary headache-cures at best
Rive only temporary relief. They deaden
the pain but do not drive tho poison out
of the blood. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
ou the contrary thoroughly renew tho
blood and tho paiu disappears perma-
nently. Women in particular have found
these pills an unfailing relief iu head'
aches caused by anemia.
Miss Stella Blocker recently said: "Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills did me a great deal
of good. I had headache nearly all thn
time. After I had taken three boxes of
these pills I becamo entirely well."
"How long had you suffered?" she
was asked.
" For several years. I can't tell tho
exact date when my illness began for it
came 011 by slow degrees. I had been
going down hill for many years."
" Did you have any other ailments?"
" I was very weak and sometimes I had
fever. My liver and kidneys were of
fectod as well as my head."
" How did you come to tako tho rem
cdy that cured you?"
" I saw in a southern newspaper
statement of some person who was cured
of a like trouble by Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. My physician hadn't done me any
good, so I bought a box of these pill:
After I had taken one box I felt so much
better that I kept on until I became en
tirely well."
Miss Blocker's homo is at Leander,
Louisiana. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills aro
Bilil by all druggists. Besides headaeho
they cure neuralgia, sciatica, nervous
prostration, partial paralysis and rheu-
matism.
Medieval Civilization of Spain Still
Reigns in Many Places—An-
cient Methods iu
Farming.
IT StI Of Sill
STRANGE AILMENT THAT LED
TO A TRAGEDY.
RANDOM YARNLET3.
A schoolboy who had a grasp of the
main facts rather than great facility
of expression produced the following
historical contribution: "Henry VIII.
was brave, corpulent and cruel; he
was frequently married to a widow,
had an ulcer on his leg and great de-
cision of character."
A nice old resident of Brookline,
Mass., recently addressed a class ot
young women at an educational inst.-
tuion and advised them to go In for
the active life. "Go out and do some-
thing, be something," he exclaimed,
"become llshers of men." And he won-
dered why the audience tittered.
"1 admire a liar," said Morgan Rob-
ertson, the writer of sea stories, e\en
when his pervaricatlons strain my
credulity. A friend of mine, who ob-
jects to efforts to pry into his persojal
affairs, recently limped into my work-
shop. 'What's tho matter with your
foot?' I asked, more to be polite that;
because I cared what was the trouble.
Then he gained my everlasting ad-
miration by a display of nerve
mendacity I never saw equaled,
eel stepped on it,' he said.
One night Sir Henry Irving, on get-
ting into a cab, gave the driver a line
Havana cigar. By the time the end
of the journey was reached the cabby
was putting on airs. His hat was on
one side and, sitting holt upright, he
t,as smoking with keen enjoyment
an enjoyment that rejoiced the heart
of the aetor, who told him he was glad
lie liked his cigar. "Yes, I do. I never
dreamed of such tobacco!" Thereupon
Irving gave the Jehu another cigar ot
the same brand, with the injunction
to smoke it after supper. "No, sir,
won't, for the very smell of such a
cigar as this in my house would make
tho landlord double my rent. ^
Gave Her a Start. '
He—Clarice, you know I have
ways thought a gieat deal of you, and
I have flattered myself you think not
unfavorably of me. May I—will you
he my wife?
She—What a start you gave me,
Harry! Do you know, I thought you
were going to ask me to lend you some
money.—Tit-Bits.
HAPPY WOMEN.
Mrs. Pare,
wife of C. It.
Parc.aproml-
i n e 111 resi-
dent of Glas-
gow. Ky..
says: " 1 was
suffering
from a com-
plication of
kidney trou-
bles. Besides
a bad back,
I had a great
deal of trou-
ble with tho
6 e c r e t i cms,
which w ere exceedingly variable, Bonn
times excessive and at other tima
scanty. The color was high, and pass-
ugi s were accompanied with a scalding
sensation. Doan s Kidney Pills soon
regulated the kidney secretions, male
jnfT their color normal and banished
the inflammation which caused the
scalding sensation. I can rest well
my buck is strong and sound and I feel
much better iu every way."
For sale by all dealers, price
cents per box. FOSTER-MILBURN
CO., Buffalo, N. Y
While Cortez destroyed a civilization
tud a people in Mexico, many ot ttiecus-
.oms of the Aztecs have been perpet-
uated by their conquerors and may be
seen and marveled at to-day by the vis-
itor to the land of "the fair god." Not
the least picturesque of these, says the
Chicago Chronicle, is the method of stor-
ing grain in the conical houses which
dot the land for miles around in some
districts and are practically uniform in
size. Instead of increasing the size ot
the house more were built, and in some
places it is difficult to make out at a dis-
tance w hat an aggregation of these huge
cones may be.
One of the questions asked by the ob-
servant visitor is: "Did ihe Mexican,
or rather his Aztec ancestor, design the
grainhouse first and then, pleased with
its shape, pattern his hat after it, or
vice versa?"
Though within a few hundred miles
of the most progressive country in the
world, where little is done by hand that
can be accomplished by the aid of ma-
chinery. there are many places in Alex
ico where the medieval civilization of
pain reigns as completely to- this day
s if there were no modern world out-
side.
History is silent as to the date of the
origin of the primitive bellows which is
iu use ill many parts of the sister repub-
lic. it was brought over by the Spanian
several centuries ago, and it has neve
been changed or improved upon since
then. How many centuries it existed
in Spain in identically the same form
before Columbus sailed westward is un
known, and how long it will be befori
the Mexican realizes that he can buy a
modern bellows not far from home and,
ibove all, will consent to use it, is a
problem.
The apparatus is manipulated by #
boy, who alternately pulls 011 ropes held
in both hands and shoves with his feet.
The bellows itself is directly beneath the
lumbrous frame v. liich supports the op-
erator. The result of the boy 's labors is
about one-tenth the wind that is or-
dinarily supplied by the small rotary
blower used on a modern portable forge.
The Spaniard or his descendants in
the Americas would look with scorn
upon the 3,000-year-old plow of the Chi-
nese agriculturist, but there are thou-
sands and thousands of plows in Central
and South America In daily use which
are built 011 a pattern so nearly identical
with that of the favorite plow of the
iisciple of Confucius as to make it rea-
sonably certain that their orignals both
came from the hand of the same crafts-
man some time in the dark ages.
Oftentimes not so much as a single
aail is to be found in the whole crude
construction, and when used in these
ancient plows it is only present in the
shape of a shoe for the iwint. Made of
lignum vitae, "quiebra hacha (hatchet
breaker), or a wood equally heavy, it
taxes the strength of a good man to hold
the plow upright and guide it, and the
novice who tries it makes about as poor
a showing as a hen does swimming.
Then the services of a boy are required
to tend the team of oxen. At the best
this combination can only go over an
acre or two a day, merely scratching the
surface at that.
That saints are useful in war no less
than in peace has been fully demon-
strated by the number of ikons sent to
the front by .'tun si a in the last few
months. As to their theoretical value
the true believer has no doubt, but it is
he feared that in this instance prac-
tical results are lacking.
An odd custom still followed in Mex-
ico and parts of South America is carry-
ing the image of the patron saint of the
district about the fields to bless the com-
ing crop. It Is gone through religious-
year after year, and no crop could pos-
bly succeed without it. That many fail
spite of it apparently does not de-
rease the efficiency of the blessing in the
first instance, in the minds of the in-
abitants.
In the land of luxurious vegetation
bordering on the equator and as far from
it as ten to 15 degrees north latitude tho
fruits and vegetables of a more tem-
perate zone are at their worst. The
watermelon is a sickly, pale, tubular af-
airof less than afoot in length, the moil-
trous pumpkin northerners are accus-
tomed to hardly attains the size of a
baseball before arriving at maturity,
and so on through the list until one
conies to the potato, which is a mere
marble, so valuable in its diminutive
state that It is sold, not by the peck or
bushel, but by weight. It is seldom that
the entire stock of a dealer in potatoes
vill aggregate more than a bushel.
VICTIM PROBABLY A FUGITIVE
Man and Dog Die from Cold — Foul
Other Men, Similarly Stricken,
Discover Unhappy Fate
of Stranger.
Laehlne, Canada.—Night blindness is
an ailment prevalent among lumber
men who work in shau.ies remote
enough 10 make vegetables an unusual
uxury. In most instances t.ie persons
affected have the normal use of their
eyesight from sunrise to sunset, but
arc sione blind when the sun is below
the horizon.
Sometimes the trouble conies on
slowly, beginning with a dimness of
The dead man was dressed In aity
clothes, some brown < lie l;ed material,
well made, aud In1 had a go.ul gold
watc h. U11 the table were old newspa-
pers of or eight months ago, all
from the I'uited Stat-1-. A lead pencil
lay near the hand of the dead man,
aud a bit of white birch bark. 011 which
was written over -ajul over again.
"Blind!" "Blind!"
Naturally enough, the four men did
not care to make a very close search
for means of identification. They con-
cluded thai the man was a stranger I11
the woods and an American. 11 is their
opinion that the man was atllicted with
ni;ht blindness while in the shanty,
and became afraid to go far away from
It for fear of being overtaken by even-
ing and becoming unable to find his
way back again. His matchit wero
used up, and his ritle cartridges hav-
ing disappeared il was impossible for
him to keep himself warm or to cook
Ills meat. With the thermometer rang-
ing from 15 to :'.fl below zero, it would
not be long before the frost would
claim hoth him and his faithful hound
las victims when without tire or pro-
. visions.
When morning came the shantymen
made a breakfast of the venison in the
0[ als That Knd Brought M'.sfortune
Were Not the Genuine
Stones.
"I think Sir Walter Scott i« largely ro-
up.,ns.hie for the supcrstitition .18 to
upals." said the traveling - desman of jew-
pin- to the Philadelphia Inquirer. "Be that
us * it may. it is -t .11 widespread. There in
a large jewelry house in one of the big
cities which will nut handle opals. This
means a l< *s of thousands of dollars an*
nuallv. The founder of the house put the
bar on opals, and the third generation is
keeping it up. I
"1 was behind the counter of a house ' A
lady came in. and band- >rim
breastpin set with opals, said:
In the "Hole."
It was at the tilst. tee of a fashionable
(tolling resort in the season, and tiadebr
thought lie -aw an old friend in front of
hini, and slapping his supposed friend on
the back remarked:
"Hallo, old fellow! How are yon—who d
have thought to see you here?'
Stranger Confound you, sir How nare
you slap 1 ne in ti at familiar manner? 1
don't know you. You ought to be mora
careful, sir!
Cadsby Really, sir, I must apologize,
but I took you l'or the earl of W
Stranger (greatly mollified) Say no
more, sir! I quite see how the mistake
occurred. Lovely weather, isn t it Will
we have a round? Washington Star.
vision at morning and evening, and in lean-to. an.l then started for their own
creasing until it is impossible for the j shanty to tell their story lo theHel-
patient to stir outside except when the
lows. The foreman and a couple of
ofhers at once set out with one of the
four to bury the dead man in tho
shanty, hut arrived at Ihe lakeside to
find the building in flames, which soon
made total destruction of it and its
contents.
Probably it will never be known who
the unfortunate man was whose body
ered that night by tlio tem-
mark the logs laid upon the ice, and porarily blinded men. Somehow tho
they had worked three or four days in impression has declared itself among
the glaring light of the March situ re- the lumberers that he was a fugitive
fleeted from the clear lake surface with from justice who tried to hide him-
no particularly bad results. Two of self in the woods. A hunter would
them were sufferers from night blind- have had a guide with him. II.ul lis
noss ami had lo be led home at night been used to the woods, he would have
by their comrades, and as their slianty known liow to keep up his fire and
was four miles away from the lake
still is high. At other times, and
pecially in the bright days of March.
when the glare of the sun upon the
snow is trying to all eyes, night blind-
ness sets in suddenly.
There was 11 curious case of this sud-
den coming 011 of the blindness in the
Ottawa lumber district, near Beaver
lake. Four men had been detailed to was diseov
in the
ing me .
" Mr Jones, what will you give me
for these stones? They were an heirloom
in my huiband'i family, I1'.! tin • they
have 1 onte into my possession my husband
and 1 have had "nothing but misfortune j
We have lost our residence by tiro: there
has been sickness in the family all the
time, and he is experiencing business re-
verses. I must get rid of the opals; bo
make an offer for them.'
" Madam,' 1 said, are you sure that
your troubles are due to them?'
" 'Oh, perfectly sure!'
44 'You cannot think of any other
pause?'
" 'No; make me an offer, please.
" 'Madam.' 1 replied, deferentially, '1 re
fret to inform you that those atones aro
nutiit ions.'
Both Sides of the Question.
"There are many things you can't do
with money," said the man who aflccts
philosophy. „
"Yes," answered Dustin Stax. 'Hut
there are a whole lot more things you
cau't do without it."—Washington Star.
Breathed More Freely.
Uncle Dick What is the baby bo
pleased about?
Nurse I expect he heard Mrs Ducie wy
just now that he <luin t look a bit like any
ot Ins relations.- Stray Stories
it
his fin
would have had proper supplies.
was their custom to start back a little
before sundown.
One day they had about finished
their job, and worked rather late to
Bnseballitis.
Employer So you think your
p-and-
catrh-
working politician who has attended
of the sessions of the gas investigat-
ing committee has coined this phrase.
nu* the by produ ta ] tics ami
1 <are not who makes the gas."—N. Y.
Sun.
Watch for It.
It will pay you to watch for tho very
first svmptom of indigestion or liver trou-
ble and to prevent tho trouble from qaiiv
ing headway, bv auickly taking Dr. Laid-
well's (laxative) Syrup Pepsin. Nothing
is more weakening to the system than
chronic dyspepsia, nnd all its complica-
tion*. Nothing will cure it so quickly,
pleasantly and surely as Syrup I ersin.
S. I I by all drum: sts at 50o and $1.00.
Money back if it fails.
So far the Russians have made no
claim that Japan's new volcanic island
u.i- thrown up by a Russian submarine
mine.- Philadelphia inquirer.
A Dainty nnd Useful Gift.
Ladies, send 2c stamp and 10c for 1 Qr.
fine stationery. Our complete outfit, con-
nslinn 1 yi. paper and envelopes pen-
1,older pens, inkwell, blotters, mitia seal.
1 wax, candle, candlestick, Postpaid lor
$100. Specifv initial wanted Warner A
Warner, 41-1 Unity Bldg., Chicago, 111.
|
The Indians who have not succeeded in
obtaining situations with wild west shown
are neany all icsentful and discontented.
Washington Star.
mm
WERE STUNK lJKAl)
and
'An
al-
complete it. To their dismay they
found when they stopped work and
slipped on their coats that all four
were completely blind.
The night was terribly cold and
there was more than half a gale oi
north wind blowing across the lake.
To attempt to grope their way home
would be to risk their lives. Happily
one of the men rememberou that one
oi the great timbers used as a skidway
was a stick of white bircn, the canoe
tree of the Indians.
Cautiously Ihey felt their way to this
log and contrived to tear away a sec-
tion of the paper-like bark. Hastily
rolling this up into what would answer
for a torch, (hey lit it with a match
_„d derived light enough for three of
the four to he able to distinguish their
surroundings.
The Hireh pole was at once com-
pletely stripped of its bark, and while
at this work they decided that it would
be almost madness to try to reach their
own shanty that night, along the nar-
row pathway their footsteaps had
made in the deep snow. Right across
an arm of the lake on a projecting
point was a deserted shanty, and
thither they determined to go.
The journey was difficult
ACTRESS CLIMBS TO
PET A TIGER KITTEN.
Mrs. Patrick Campbell Goes Over Cin
cinnati Zoo Fence While Attend-
ant Turns His Back.
Cincinnati.—"May I hold that little
tiger cub for a moment?" asked a dis-
tinguished looking woman at the zoo the
other afternoon.
1 don't suppose there will be an ob-
jection to your holding the kitten." re-
plied the attendant, "provided you can
get over the fence."
"How can I do that?" queried the vis-
itor.
; "You'll either have lo climb over or
1 crawl under," was the reply.
, "But 1 have a wooden leg." protested
the woman, "and it would be liaid for
me lo do eith.*- "
"Can't help that, ma'am,"rejoined the
man. "It's the only way you can get to
the kittens."
"Well, if you'll turn back I'll try to
climb over," asserted the woman, after
a moment's reflection.
The attendant executed an about face,
there wat, a swish of skirts, and a 1110-
mothcr w,li die soon. Is her d
ing?
Office Boy—Yep; an pitching, too.—
N. Y. Times.
A Tale of Suffering.
Oakley, Mich., May 8th—(Special)-"!
could not sleep or lest in any place, says ;
Florence Capeii, of tins place, m a recent
interview. "1 had a pain in my back and
liips If I sat down 1 could not get up
out of my chair. I was in pnin all the
time. 1 got poor, for 1 did not eat enough
to keep a small child. I could not ie- t
"Then I sent for a box of Dodd's Kid-
ney 1'ills and went to taking them, and
what do you think, that wry night J
went to bed an.l I slept till morning. 1
cot up and thanked God for the night s
Test and Dodd's Kidney l'ills. I know
that Dodd's Kidney Pills aro all that is
claimed for them."
This is only <>ne of the numerous experi-
ences that show the way to build up
run down people is to cure the kidneys.
Thousands of people in every Mate oear
witness to the fact that Dodd's Kidney
l'ills never fail to cure the kidneys.
INso'sCure cannot he too highly spoken ox
as a cough cure. J. \V. O'ltrien, 322 1 nri
Ave., NMinneapolis, Minn., Jan. o, 1 KK>.
Either a man finds fault because he m
taxed or because lie has nothing to l>«
tawd.-N. V. l'rcsi.
LIVING TOO HASTILY
AMERICAN WOMEN BREAKDOWN
Irregularltlos nnd Femals Derange,
monts Itetmlt - Cured by Lydla iu.
Pmkhiiru's Vegetable Compound.
Owing1 to our jnodc and manner ot
living, and the nervous haste of evcrv
woman to accomplish just so tnucu
each day, it is said that there is not
water ij fa
"I have looked the matter over with
reasonable core," said the Prunytown
Philosopher, with his usual acridity, "and
1 have reached the conclusion that it is
not absolutely necessary to send bojs to
college in order to have 'cm act the fool.'
—Tom Watson's Magazine.
MERCILESS ITCHING.
Another SpeeUr Cure of nn Itclilnlt
Humor with Loss of Hair t>> the
Culicuru Remedies.
"For two years my neck was covered
with sores, the humor spreading to m>
l.air which fell out, leaving an unsightly
balu' spot, and the soreness, inilanima
e woman In twenty-five but
suffers with some derangement of tho
| -lit klltll illlll Lllti bUlt-ii1-"'! Jli.iu""" nil i 1 *1 " 1 1 " w , i .
p.on. and merciless itching made ine wild, i f,.malo organism, and tins is the secret
1 itends advised Cuticura Soap and Luti- Gf so lmjiappy homes.
eura Ointment, nnd after a few applica No v,-oraau can be unliable, ltpht-
the torment subsided, to my feat ; hearted and happy, a joy to her bus
Pons
even
TI IKKK WAS A SW1S1I OF" SKIRTS Al
Sllli MOUNTED THE FENCE.
ment later the visitor had the tiger kit
ten in her arms, fondling in. lnduetimi
the attendant was informed that if he
would turn Ills back again Ills guest
with the flaming bark to guide them : wouW (-umb back
the poor fellows found it difficult to; The visit01. acc0mpanlert by a charm-
steer a slraigbt course. It was proba- ^ ()f 1S who had watched the en-
bly near midnight when they pushed I l|re affair with much interest, walked
\ork City.
Russia's "free balance" presumably rep
ents the money the grand dukes have
t yet taken poatossion of. Detroit rree
efis.
Quality Brings the Business.
Seven million (7,000,000) bewis' "Singla
rider" Ptraiyht 5c cigars now sold an
nuallv. Made of extra quality tobacco,
ny who formerly smoked 10c ci^rs are
,v smoking Lewis' "Single Binder.
Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111.
Some people just naturally look hs if
ley eat off a red table cloth.—Washing
ton Star.
In a Pinch, Use Allen's Foot-Ease.
Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease
„ powder. It cures Corns, Bunions, Painful,
Smarting, Hot, Swollen feet. At all Drug-
gists and Shoe Stores. 25c. Sample 1'REK
Address A. S. Olmsted, Ix; Hoy, N. Y.
A good many doctors are much more
skillful ot the autopsy than ot diagnos-
ing.—Chicago Sun.
open the ride wooden hinged door and
entered the shanty.
A fire was quickly started In tho ca-
boose with some of the poles taken
from the bottom of one of the sliclf-
like sleeping bunks, st ill in position all
around the walls. After a time their
slowly away to view other attractions at
the garden.
Inquiry developed that Ihe elderofthe
two visitors was Mrs. Patrick Campbell,
tlio cell brated Knglisb actress, while the
girl with her was her daughter.
In referring to her "wooden leg,
Deepest Gold Mine.
The deepest gold mine in the world is.
,aid to be at Bendigo, Australia. It is
called the New Chum mine, and its
main shaft is sunk to a depth of 3,900
feet, or only 60 feet short of three-quar-
ters' of a mile. The most difficult prob-
lem of working a mine of such depth Is
how to keep the tunnels and general
workings cool enough for the miners to
work. The temperature is usually about
108 degrees, and this is, of course, great-
ly enervating. To make it possible for
the men to work at all, a spray of cold
water is let down from above and kept
continually playing on their bodies.
They are naked from the waist up.
Uncertainty of Automobiling.
"Our friend Heckles.> has an auto-
mobile, hasn't he?"
"I don't know."
"Why, you told me yesterday you
saw him out In it."
"Yes; but thru was yesterday.
Philadelphia Ledger
souse of seeing came back to them as r.impl)pn was making a jocose reference
they sat about the bright fire and they ; ,() Ih(, m(t«r effects of her accidents in
could look about their new homo with Philadelphia, where she broke her knee-
tolerable clearness. As their vision Lap
cleared they made out the figure of sUff
a man seated at the clerk's desk in j . Revives
the corner, with a fine hound at his *££ ten
A little Investigation showed thai '.years old, was l uiJo<l lio.i1 hi*
both rnaq and dog were stone dead and | home, on the Sho . •
•O stiffness. It was evident that head bay, Ihe other daj After a pay
shanty bad been the home of the ilea I Ian had pronounced the boy dead
pair for a considerable time.
The greater part of a fine deer hung
ill Ihe cook's lean to, which was en-
tered l.y a door from the rear of the
shanty. No trace of flour or other
provisions was lo be seen.
The visitors had been prodigal in
their use of matches and now discov-
ered that they had used the last of
their supply. Their keenest search of
the clothing unil stores of the dead man
failed to discover a single one, and.
though they found a line ride In good
order iu the bunk wherein the bel had
been made, not a single cartridge
wherewith a flame might be obtained
could be found. They at once piled
all available fuel near their fire and
determined to watch beside it all night.
i skian had pri
. young Haber recovered consciousness
after several hours and spoke. He
grew better, was hopeful of his recov
ery and lived four more days. Youn
Raber was taken ill a few days ago
and soon became extremely 111. I ha
doctors, as a Inst resort, gave him pow
erful stimulants, but they seemed 111
effective. Soon the patient's flutterin
pulse could not be detected, all the
Itgd of death appeared, ami the doc
tor t dd Mr. Haber his son was dead
An undertaker was called. He threw
open a window to admit fresh air.
When the breeze fanned young Raber's
cheeks he revived. Hut after two days
all the most dreaded symptoms of
spotted fever reappeared and two dayg
later he died.
| spinal" weakness or ovarian troubles.
I Irritability and snappy retorts take
; tlie place of pleasantness, and all sun-
shine is driven out of tlie lioine, and
i lives are wrecked by woman's pi-cat
I enemy—womb trouble.
I Read this letter.
i Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
1 " I was troubled for eight years with iiregii-
laritios which broke down my health ami
brought on extreme nervousness and di«pon-
denev. I.ydi.i K Pinkham's V egfitahle Com-
pound proved to lie the only nwdioino whMi
f„.lp«l me. Day by day I improved in health
while taking It until I waa entirely curod. I
run attend t<. my social an.l household dut e.
and thoroughly enjoy life one, more, a. Lydia
F Pinkham's Vegetable ConqKmnd has tnndt,
me a well woman, without an ache or t wn^
llr3 t 'hester Curry, 42 Saratoga Street,
East Boston, Mass.
At the first indication of ill health,
painful or irregular menstruation,
pain in the side, headache, backache,
bearlntf-down pains, nervousness op
" the blues.'' secure at once a bottle of
Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound and begin its use.
For Infants and Children
In
Usi
For
Over Thirty Years
Tlie Kind You Have Always Bough!
TM* CINTAU
COMPANY, TT MUBMV
icwvon" om.
AsK for a#, QUALITY IS OUR MOTTO!
fOcts
tobacco! f°'vr mcem! c.co.:
"305" and "Agents" 5c Cigars Arc Leaders of ths World. |juiiur*ctmm t. s r. loci&.
PILES
^THORNTON &mNOR, ,T IomBi
im.itj
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Miller, C. H. The Hennessey Clipper. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1905, newspaper, May 18, 1905; Hennessey, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc105420/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.