The Dover News. (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1911 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DOVW. NEWS
Mr*. 8u« Lower, Pub.
Baseball still stands out as the clean
•port-
Flying could almost be classed as
hazardous occupation
When the summer has waned people
rill stop rocking the boat.
Of course a woman Is young at
thirty-five. but not disgustingly young
The French detectives are unlike
Mona Lisa. Tlieir *inlle has come off
The Courtship 9f
Miles Standish
With Illustrations by
Howard Chandler Christy
{Cupyrittht. the lU,bbs.Merrill Cumpaii
Wyoming reports four feet of hail,
shich is apparently nothing to boast
>f
Just after one's vacation the year
ahead looks even longer than the big
Bbh one failed to land.
Because of the katydid's mlscalcula
tlon persons who sleep outdoors have
aot yet begun to boast of il.
Christmas comes only late in De
sember, but one's friends insist upon
letting married every little while.
The California wild man Is not half
o wild as some other Callfornlans be
:ome when their climate is criticised.
Sailing of
the May/lower
Just in the gray of the dawn, as the
tuists uprose from the meadows,
There was a stir and a sound in the
slumbering village of Plymouth;
Clanging and clicking of arms, and
the order imperative, "Forward!"
Given In tone suppressed, a tramp of
feet, and then silence.
Figures ten. In the mist, marched
slowly out of the village.
Blandish the stalwart It was, with
eight of his valorous army,
l^ed by their Indian guid
Meekly, in voices subdued, the chap-
ter was read from the Bible,
Meekly the prayer *aw begun, but
ended in iervent entreaty!
Then from their houses in haste name
forth the Pilgrims of Plymouth
Men and women und children, all hu:
rylng down to the sea shore.
ICager, with teaiiul eyes, to say fit. •
well to the Mayflower,
Homeward bound o'er the tea
leaving them here in the d> •«
"Bathing ear" Is the latest summer
resort disease. Physicians say It can
!>e avoided by giving the water a wide
&erth.
There is always a silver lining. The
report comes from Pennsylvania
that the fool who rocked the boat
was drowned.
The season approaclieth wherein
the nimrods go forth Into the forest I
(lades to puncture the anatomy of the
sluslve guide.
It is only once In a while that
actors can secure as much advertising
out of getting married as they can out
Df being divorced.
A Danish novelist says that the
American husband is not appreciated
At last we've found somebody who
Teels aorry for us.
If a man cannot afford to buy an
automobile he can tell his friends
that he Is waiting until the airships
become Just a little safer.
Boston has discovered a variety of
mosquito that sings and does not bite,
Out wo still Insist that the best moa-
julto is a dead mosquito.
i
• mm
Marriage licenses were issued iR
Milwaukee to three couples where the
brides were near 60. All things coins
to hlin, or her, who waits.
The peaches and corn having sur-
vived, here comes a new Joy-killer
with the announcement that the cran-
berry crop will be a failure.
When permanent world wide peace
comes we recommend that the armor
plate be beaten Into plowshares, the
swords being kept lor cheese knives.
A citizen of Kansas advertises for
a wife who can furnish music, but he
does not mention whether he prefers
the instrumental or the chin variety.
Paris people who decree fashions
are turning out winter Jackets in three
lengths instead of one. This will al
low woman to he even more of an
individualist than she was before
A 17-foot Bhark caught off the Dela
ware breakwater Is reported as hav-
ing an umbrella in Its stomach, though
whether folded or spread the vera-
cious reporter ueglects to say.
A Phlladeiphlan who has thus far
succeeded in keeping out of the hands
of a guardian has had his pet cat bur-
ied In a silk-lined mahogany casket.
Not all of Pennsylvania's silly rich
people reside In Pittsburgh.
Our idea of nothing to look at Is
an aviator two and a quarter miles
up In the air. He closely resembles
an attenuated bacillus as It appears
when one bunts for It without a micro
-cope.
Georgia clergymen want the width
of women's hats limited to two feet,
but most husbands are more inter-
ested in the price than In the size.
It Is said that the people of Chi
cago consume 40.000,000 pigs' feet
every year. Perhaps that accounts for
a whole lot of Chicago's peculiarities.
Cable reports tell us that Paderew-
eki's poultry yard was damaged by
fire, but as long as his flowing locks
remain unharmed he will be able to
eke out an existence.
There Is In Paris a suffragette who
announces that she will never rest
until she has fought a duel with a
man. I>et some Frenchman accommo-
date her. He could do so without be-
ing at all impolite to a lady, pro
vided they fought a French duel.
Take His Musket, and So Stride Out.
"Shall the baby be rocked to
sleep?" Is the question that Is agitat-
ing Boston. In Newport and on Fifth
avenue the paramount question Is:
"How often shall Fldo be maul
rured ?"
An Omaha society woman was blown
over by an ocean breeze and lost her
false teeth. Now we know what Is
meant by the "teeth of a gale."
A Chicago detective, after being re
quired to open a bottle and taste Its
contents In court, told the Judge that
he was satisfied that the bottle con-
tained beer. The Judge seemed to
think that he was good authority.
mok, friend of the white men.
Northward marching to quell the sud
den revolt of the savage.
Giants they seemed In the In 1st, or the
mighty nun of King David;
Giants In heart they were, who be-
lieved in God and the Bible,—
Aye, who believed In the smiting of
Midlanltes aiw* Philistines.
Over them gleamed far off the crim-
son banners of morning;
Under them loud on the tands. the
serried billows, advancing,
Fired along the line aud la regular
order retreated.
Many n mile had they marched,
when at length tho village of Ply-
mouth
Woke from its sleep, and arose, in-
tent on its manifold labors.
Sweet was the air and soft; and slow-
ly the smoke from the chimneys
Rose over roofs of thatch, and point-
ed steadily eastward;
Men came forth from the doors, and
paused and talked of the weather.
Said that the wind had changed, and
was blowing fair for tho May-
flower;
Talked of their Captain's departure.
and all the dangers that menaced.
He being gone, the town, and wMai
should be done in his absence
Merrily sang the birds, and the ten
der voices of women
Consecrated with hymns the common
cares of the household.
Out of the sea rose the sun. and the
billows rejoiced at his coming;
Beautiful were his feet on tho pur-
ple tops of the mountains;
Beautiful on the sails of the May-
flower riding at auchor,
Battered and blackened and worn by
all the storms of the winter.
Loosely against her masts was hang
lng and flapping her canvas.
Rent by so many gales, and patched
by the hands of the sailors.
Suddenly from her side, us the sun
rose over the ocean.
Darted a puff of smoke, and floated
seaward; anon rang
Loud over field and forest the can-
non's roar, and the echoes
Foremost among them waa A
All night he had lain v t
slumber.
irulng and tossing about In the I.
and unrest of his fever.
by Hobo- I lie had beheld Miles Standish. w!
came back late from the council
Stalking Into the room, aud heard hitn
mutter and murmur,
Sometimes It seemed a prayer, and
sometimes it sounded like ■ wear-
ing.
Once he hud come to the bed, and
stood there a moment In silence;
Then he had turned away, and said:
"I will not wake him;
Let him sleep on. It Is best; for what
Is the use of more talking!"
Then he extinguished the light, and
threw himself down on his pallet,
Dressed as he was. and ready to start
at the break of the morning,—
Covered himself with the cloak he
had worn In his campaigns in
Flanders,—
Slept as a soldier sleeps In his
bivouac, ready for action.
But with the dawn he arose; in the
twilight Alden behold hitn
Put on his corselet of steel, and all
the rest of his armor,
Buckle about his waist his trusty
blade of Damascus,
Take from the corner his musket, and
so stride out of the chamber.
Often the heart of the youth had
burned and yearned to embrace
him,
Often his lips had essayed to speak.
Imploring for pardon;
All the old friendship came back,
with Its tender and grateful emo-
tions;
But Ills pride overmastered the nobler
nature within him,—
Pride, and the sense of his wrong.
and the burning flre of the Insult.
So he beheld Ills friend departing In
anger, hut snake not,
I'Strange Is the life of man. and fata*
or fstud ars moments.
Whereupon turn, as on hinges, tho
gates of the wall adamantine!'
"Here I remain!" he exclaimed, as he
looked at the heavens above him.
Thanking the Lord whose breath had
scattered the mist and the mad-
ness.
Wherein, blind and lost, to death he
was staggering headlong.
I "Yonuer snow-white cloud, that floats
in the ether above me,
' Seems ILke a band that Is pointing
I and beckoning over the ocean
j There is another hand, that is not so
spectral and ghost-like,
Holding me, drawing me back, and
clasping mine for protection.
Float, O hand of cloud, aud vanish
away In the ether!
I Roll thyself up like a flst. to threaten
and daunt me. I heed not
Kither your warning or menace, or
any omen of evil!
There is no land so sacred, no air so
pure and so wholesome,
\s Is the air she breathes, and the
: oil that Is pressed by her foot-
steps. '
for her sake will 1 stay, and like
an invisible presence
.ver around her forever, protecting,
supporting her weakness;
' as my foot was the first that
t < pped on this rock at the land-
ing,
OKLAHOMA NEWS
IGNORANCE 18 BUIS.
The girl whose real name was be-
trayed because she wrote It often on
the typewriter should have borne Id
alnd the objection made by some to
the typewriter when It was first in-
troduced: "It gives away your spelllrif
toe badly "
The Common Cares of the Household.
Saw him go forth to danger, perhaps
to death, and he spake not!
Then he arose from Ills bed, and
heard what the people were say-
ing.
Joined in the talk at the door, with
Stephen and Richard and Gilbert.
Joined in the morning prayer, and in
the reading of Scripture,
\nd, with the others, tn haste went
hurrying down to the sea shore,
Down to the Plymouth Rock, that had
been to their feet as u doorstep
Into a world unknown,—the corner-
stone of a nation!
There with his boat was the Master,
already a little Impatient
Lest he should lose the tide, or the
wind might shift to the eastward,
Square-built, hearty, and strong, with
an odor of ocean about him.
Speaking with this one and that, and
cramming letters and parcels
Into his pockets capacious, aud mes-
sages mingled together
How Good You Have Been to Me.
So, with the blessing of God, shall It
be the last at the leaving!"
Meanwhile the Master alert, but
with dignified air and Important,
Scanning with watchful eye the tide
and the wind and the weather.
Walked about on the sands; and the (
people crowded around him
Saying u few last words, and enforc :
lng his careful remembrance.
Then, taking each by the hand, as If
he were grasping a tiller,
Into the boat he sprang, and In baste
shoved off to his vessel,
(Bad in Ills heart to get rid of all this
worry and flurry,
Glad to be gone from a land of sand
and sickness and sorrow.
Short allowance of victuals and plent>
of nothing but Gospel!
Ix>st in the sound of the oars was the
last farewell of'the Pilgrims
O strong hearts and true! not one
went back in the Mayflower!
No, not one looked back, who had Bet
bis hand to this plowing!
Soon were heard on board the
shouts and songs of the sailors
Heaving the windlass round, and
hoisting the ponderous anchor.
Then the yards were braced, and all
sails set to the west wind.
Blowing steady and strong; and the
Mayflower sailed from the harbor.
Rounded the point of the Gurnet, and
leaving far to the southward
Island and cape of sand, and the Field
of the First Encounter.
Took the wind on her quarter, and
stood for the open Atlantic,
Borne on the send of the sea. and the
swelling hearts of the Pilgrims.
Long In silence they watched the re-
ceding sail of the vessel,
Much endeared to them all. as some-
thing living and human;
Then, as if filled with the spirit, and
rapt in a vision prophetic,
Baring his hoary head, the excellent
Elder of Plymouth
Said, "Let us pray!" and they prayed
and thanked the Lord and took
couragf.
Mournfully sobbed the waves at the
base of the rock, and above them
Bowed anil whispered the wheat on
the hill of death, and their kin-
dred
Seemed to awake in their graves, and
to Join In the prayer that they ut-
tered.
Sun-Illumed and white, on the east-
ern verge of the ocean
Gleamed the departing sail, like a
marble slab in a graveyard;
Buried bei eath it lay for ever all hope
of escaping.
Ix>! as they turned to depart, they
saw the form of an Indian.
from the hill; but
CONVICTS LIKE ROAD WORK.
Prefer That Labor to Beinfl oCnfined
in Prison.
Oklahoma City, Okla.—"Recently 1 ;
made addresses to convicts at the
Granite penitentiary, and to a convict
camp in Caddo county," said State
Highway Commissioner Suggs, discuss-1
ing the good road movement in Okla
homa. "The colony working on the
road in Caddo county appeared enthus
ed over the task, for they would rath-
er be out of doors working than to be
confined in prison. It furnished me
an illustration that convicts cun be
well employed on the highways and
the guard* told me they could not !
gather any set of men and pay them
$('•0 a month that would do as good
work us the convicts.
Down at the penitentiary I told the
men to work fuithfully and break rock
as they were instructed to do, and
maybe they would get out of the pen-
itentiary before their time was out A
newspaper in that lot allty probably
wanted to dd me a favor In printing an '
account of my visit there, but in all
seriousness it said that my audienca
at (itanite was the only one I ever had
that stuck until the end. I have been
try ing to figure out whether that was
humor or a roast."
Officers Chosen by State W. C- T. U.
Shawnee, Okla.—Mrs. Abbie Hlller
man of Sapulpa, formerly president of
the Oklahoma territory W. C. T. 1
was elected president of the stato
union to succeed Mrs. Cora D. Ham-
met t of Oklahoma City, who was elect-
ed vice president. Mrs. Hillerman has
been in W. C. T IJ. work In the state
for eleven years and since the organi-
zation of the state union has served as
vice president and state lecturer und ;
organizer. other officers elected
were; Recording secretary, Almira
Straughen; corresponding secretary, 1
Llla 11. Lindsey, Y. P. B. secretary* ;
Mrs. Mary Rankin; L. T. L. secretary,
Mrs. Nellie C Woodson; treasurer,
Mrs. Katy McWethy.
Mostly the routine business occu- i
pied the attention of the union, but a ,
resolution was adopted instructing the
secretary to send to Secretary of Agri-
culture Wilson a protest against his ;
accepting the honorary presidency ot
the International Brewers' convention.
Newspaper Man to Prison.
McAlester, Okla.—Roy W. Hinds,
formerly managing editor of the Her-
ald-Democrat here, pleaded guilty to
embezzlement and was sentenced to
eighteen months in the penitentiary.
Hinds, it was testified, took several
hundred dollars from his employers.
He was found in Utica, N. Y., gave
oail and began working on a local pa-
per. One alternon he obtained a mar-
riage license and later told a friend
that he was intending to leave iii <t '
night, never to return. The bondsnton
were notified and Hinds was re-ar-
rested. Hinds came io McAlester
from the Oklunoman at Oklahoma
City, where he was telegraph editor. J
Medal to Blackwell Girl.
Shawnee, Okla.—Miss Sarah Litch- j
field of Blackwell won the W. C. T. U. ;
grand gold medal oratorical contest
held recently. Those who participate 1
ed were: Miss Sarali Litchfield, Black-
well; Miss Mabel wfngate. Shawnee;
Miss Florence Baird, Billings; Miss j
Hope Flnnicum, Shawnee; Miss Dol- j
ores Peck, Hydro; Miss Leah (Hidwell, '
Helena; Miss Hazel Hogan, Yukon;
Eufaula Von Polt, Okemah; Mr, Gil-
bert Moore, Cleveland.
Electric Lineman Gets Fatal Shock.
Muskogee, Okla—Jesse Jackson, a
'ineman for a local electric company,
received a shock while at the top of
a telegraph pole and when he struck
the brick pavement his skull was
crushed.
.
Miss Old girl—What do you think
rf Fred proposing to me when he
hasn't known me a week?
Miss Fra..k—I think that's the rea-
sou.
A Student of Humanity.
Mrs. Carter and her cook, says the
Brooklyn Citizen, were discussing tne
murder which had harrowed the dusky
citizens of tho countryside.
"Will dey hang him fer killin' or
his wife. Miss Cyarter?"
"We can't tel! yet. Aunt Jinny. The
court will decide. Of course, if they
prove he did it on purpose—"
"Done it a purpose! Law. Miss
Cyarter, in course he kilt his wife a
purpose! Honey, ain't I done been
married? Don't I know men?"
TO I l: I \ K Ol'T M \1. X It IA
V SO i.l I 1.1* I I* Till S\ "TT M
T-ako tho < i - ,,.,1 TASTKI.K>S
I .111.1. TOM! V- .1 know what jruu urn laku*.
'Hi.- I.Tiiiuia is p .ml* printed «n ev.-ry b«.nle.
(huh intf II ;s Simp > (jitlnliK- and Iron In u tust.-lesa
lid th
. fiU i
al fori
To Get
Its Beneficial Effects
Always the Genuine
SnwflGS
EuxrSfNNA
mantladured byiho
(AllFOM feQ $W(0.
<Sold by ol! leading
Drwjqi sts
One Size 0n!>',50{ e Bottle
Umi
SINGLE
BINDER
ttlGHI£ *CIGII!i
You Pay 10c%
for Cigars
Not so Good.
F. F.LEWIS Peoria. Ill J
4
When we look back now upon some J
of the things we used to worry about,
we wonder what the lunacy commls- I
dons were doing all that time!
It's human nature, but bad medi-
cine, to buck about the walk up hill
alter we've enjoyed a good long slide
I 0H OLD AM) YOUNG
Tutt's Liver Pills actus kindly on the child,
the dedicate female or infirm old a«e. as upo*
tuff's Pills
Two-Year Term for Slaying Mother.
Eufaula, Okla.—Billy Phillips. 22
years old. has been sentenced to serve
two years in the penitentiary for kill
ing his mother on May 8 of this year,
:>ight miles west of Eufaula. The kill j
ing occurred about 10 o'clock at night. '
when young Phillips came into the
family home and opening his trunk
took out his revolver and started out |
again. His mother followed him and |
three shots were fired, one of which I
killed the woman. The light sentence j
was Imposed, it is believed, because of I
the doubt as to whether the killing was j
intentional.
When Negroes May Vote.
Enid, Okla.—Negroes of Oklahoma
may vote in elections of federal offl
cers without heed to the "grandfather'
clause of the Oklahoma constitution
decided a jury in the United States
district court here today in convicting
J. .1 Beall and Frank Guinn, election
officers, of conspiracy to preevnt ne
groes from voting in a congressional
Flection in 1910. Beall and Guinn are
liable to puishment of ten years in the
penitentiary.
Into his narrow brain, till at last he
was wholly bewildered. Watching hem
while they spake with each other.
I Pointing with outstretched hands, and
saying. Look!" he had vanished.
Nearer the boat stood Alden, with one
foot placed on the gunwale.
One still firm on the rock, and talking
at times with the sailors,
Seated erect on the thwarts, all ready
and eager for starting.
I He, too. was eager to go. and thus
put an end to his anguish.
Thinking to fly from despair, that
swifter than keel is or canvas,
I Thinking to drown in the sea the
ghost that would rise and pursue
hitn.
Ilut as he gazed on the crowd, he be-
held the form of Prlscilla
Standing dejected among them, uncon-
scious of all that was passing
Fixed were her eyes upon his, as If
i she divined his intention,
Fixed with a look so sad, so reproach
ful. Imploring and patient.
That with a sudden revulsion his j disposition "Tell roe," said an editor
heart recoiled from Its purpose. from El Paso, isn't there some hid
Heard and repeated the sound, the slg As from tho verge of a crag, where den purpose behind this mobilization ?'
nalgun of departure! OB* Step more Is d< Stru< tion. "There Is." replied the lieutenant
Ah! but wiih louder echoes replied Strange is the heart of man. with iu 'We are going to force Mcxlco rr> ta*-
Iho hc-rts of the people! i Quick, mysterious instincts! I hack Texas."
So they returned to their homes; but
Alden lingered a little,
Musing alone on the shore, and
watching the wash of tho billows
: Hound the base of the rock, and the
sparkle and flash of the sun*
shine.
hike the spirit of God, moving visibly
I over the waters.
(TO BK CONTINUED.)
The Hidden Purpose.
A young lieutenant from a N'e*
I York regiment surveyed the Texal
j scenery gloomily and reflected upon
I his great distance from the lights ot
Uroadway. The smoke from a smelt
ei aud he swirling sand from the low
lying hills had spoiled the Ileutenaut'a
Standing Dejected, Unconscious of All. :
Village at Melon Feast.
Tulsa, Okla.—All the residents of
Owasso, a Tulsa county village of 500
people, were guests at a watermelon
feast given by former City Treasurer
Tobs Richardson. Mr. Richardson ha*
a state-wide reputation as a grower of
watermelons and although scores of
crops of kaffir corn, milo-malze and
he said he did not miss them from
the vines. Mr. Richardson says he will
install a watermelon canning factory
next year to take care of his surplus
crop.
Deer a Menace to Crops.
Oklahoma City, Okla—Deer are so
plentiful in Delaware county near Jay,
the county seat, that they are a men-
ace to growing crops, according to a
letter from Dick Walker, who appeals
to State Fish and Game Warden John
!V Doolin, for relief.
Capture 83 Gallons of Whisky.
Vinita. Okla.—Eighty-three gallons
of whisky were captured by the police
here from a man who was hauling it
from Chetopa, Kan., to Big Cabin, Ok
In a farm wagon.
from woman's ailments aro invited to write to the immos mm!
addresses here given, for positive proof that Lydia L. llnkhama
Vegetable Compound does cure fenialo ills.
Organic Displacement*. ,
Black Puck, Minn.—Mrs. Anna Anderson,
Itox 10.
Peoria, 111.—Mrs. Christina R«ed, 105 Mound St.
N.itick, Mas*.-Mrs. .Nullum II. Greaton, 61
North Main St.
MIlwaukoo.Wis.-Mrs. Emma Imwt.Ktt l«t St.
Chioft„'o, 111. Mrs. Alvona Sperling, 14G8L'ly-
l i
i A vi
Oalena, K:in.-Mrs.K.R. ITuey,713Min«ralAT.
\ i t ; . MUfl. M rs Wllllo Edwards.
Cincinnati, Ohio.—Mrs.W. li. lioush, 7 Laat-
view At#.,,, . ,,,
C hange of I.lfe.
Epplnc, N il.® Mrs. Celia I!. Steven*.
Ktreutor, 1.1.— Mrs. J. li. Campbell, 206North
■ Second St.
Brooklyn, N.Y.-Mri. Evens, tW llalsey St.
Noah, Ky.=Mra. Lizzie Holland.
/ athumot. Wash.— M r*. Elva Barber Edwards.
CirclovlllH,okiu.-Mra. AliceKirllii.SXS
Ilunton St.
Salem. Ind.= Mrs. LizzleS. ITInkl*. R.B.N" X
New Orleans, La. Mr(, Cia toullkmdeau,tei2
Terpsichore St.
Mislutvraka, lnd.- Mrs. Ckas. Bauer, Sr., 6_'3
East Marlon St.
Raeln.'.W i«.«=Mrs. Katie Kuhlk, B. 2. Box 61.
Beaver Falls, Pa.=>Mrs.\V. P. Boyd,WlOtttUAv.
Maternity Troubles.
Bronaugh, Mo.■*Sirs. I>. F. Alcsklre.
South Sanford. Me.—Mrs. Charles A. Austin.
Schenectady,N.Y.—Mra.H.Porter,782Albany
8'- _
Tayl irvllle, Til.—Mrs. Joe Grantham, 825 W.
VandoveerSt.
Cinclnnat i, ouio.— Mrs. Sophia Huff, 615 Mo-
Mlcl
i A vi
Big Kun, Pa,-Mrs. W. E. T.vder.
l'SJlu.lcl'dila, l'a.—Mrs. M. Johnston, 210
Sicgel St. „ , ,
Barkarhs.
Peoria, I i 1. Mrs. Clara L. Uauwltz, R. R. No.
4, Box 62.
/ ugusta, Mc.=*Mrs.\Tlnflcld T^ana, B.F. D. 2.
St. l'aul, Minn. Mis. li. M. Schorn, 1083
Woodbrldtfe St.
Pittsburg, Fa. Mrs. Q. Leiaer,B219 Kinkaid
St.. E.E.
Kearnov. Mo.-Mrs. Thomas Asburry.
Blue Island, 111.—Mrs. Anna Schwartz, S28
Uro'
9 St.
East Earl, l'a.—Mrs. Augustus I.yon,R.F.D2.
Operations Avoided.
Klkeston, Mo.-Mrs. Dema IHIinne.
Gardiner, Mo.—Mrs. S. A.Williams, 142 Wash-
Chloago?IU.-Mr«.Wra.AlirenB,S239W.21 tSt.
Bellevue, Ohio.*=Mrs. Edith Wieland,
> St.
a Vespermann.
Camden, N.J.—Mrs. Ella Johnston, 289 Liberty
Chiiv'go. 111.—Mrs. Win. Tully, 2052 Ogdea
Painful Terloda.
Caledonia, WU.- Mrs. Ph. Schattner, R.R. 14,
li x 64.
Adrian, Mo.—Mrs. C. B. Mason, B.B. No. 2
N. Oxford, Mass.—Miss Amelia Duso, Box 14.
Baltimore," >hio.= Mis.A.A.Balenger,K.F.D.I.
Negaunee, Mich.— Mrs. M ar y Sedlock ,Box 1-73.
Orrville, Ohio.—Mrs. E. F. Wagner, Ho* 620.
At water. Ohlo.-Miss Minnie Muelliaupt.
Prairie<lu('hien,Wis.—Mrs. Julia Komoheck,
11. No. 1.
Irregularity,
Buffalo, N.Y.—Mrs. Clara Darbrako, 17Marie*
mont St.
Winchester, Ind.—Mrs. May Deal, R.R. No.7.
St. Regis l-alls, N.Y.—Mrs. J. II. Breyere.
(Jrayville, 111.-Mrs. .I. ssio Schaar, Box 22.
liuds >n, Ohio.—Mrs. Ueo. Stricklor, li. No. 6,
Box 32.
Ovarian Trouble.
MurrayvIlls, DU Mrs. ChM. Moort, R. n. s.
Philadelphia, l'a.—Mrs. Chas. Boell, 2219 N.
Mole St.
Minneapolis, Minn.—Mrs. John G. Moldan,
2115 Second St., North,
Hudson, Ohio.—Mrs. LenaCarmoe1no,R.F.D.7.
Wefltw 1, Md.—Mrs. John P. Richards.
Benjamin, Mo.—Mrs. Julia Frautz, R.F.D. 1.
Female Weakness.
W.Terre Haute, Ind.™ M rs. Artie E. Hamilton.
Elmo, Mo.-Mrs. A. C. DaVault.
Lawrence,Iowa.—Mrs.Julia A.Snow, R.No.8.
1 I'tica, Ohio.—Mrs. Marv Earlwine, It. F. 1 . 3.
Bellevue, Ohio.—Mrs. Charley Chapman, R.F.
I). No. 7.
Elgin, 111.—Mrs. Henry Leiscberg, 743 Adams
it.
Schaetferstown. Pa,—Mrs. Cyrus Hetrich.
Cresson, l'a.—Mrs. Ella E. Aikey
Fair' hance, Pa.—Mrs. Idella A.Dunham. Box
162.
Nervous Prostration.
Tvnoxvllle, Iowa.—Mrs. Clara Franks,R.F.D. I.
Oronogo, Mo.-Mrs. Mae McKnight.
Camden, N.J.—Mrs. V/. 1'. Valentino, 802 Lin-
Muddy, HI.—Mrs. May Nolen. •
Brookville, Ohio.-Mrs. R. Kinnison.
Fltehville. Ohio.—Mrs. C Cole.
l'hiladeli liia, l'a.—Mrs. Frank Clark, 2416 R.
Allegheny Ave.
DeForest,Wis.—Mrs. Aui
Dexter, Kansas.—Mrs. L
These women are only a few of thousands of living witnesses of
the power of Lydia E. 1'inkham's Vegetable Compound to cure female
diseases. Not one of these women ever received compensation in any
form for the use of their names in this advertisement—but are will-
ing that we should refer to them because of the good they may
do other suffering women to prove that Lydia E. Pinlcham ,s
Vegetable Compound is a reliable and honest medicine, and that tho
statements made in our advertisements regarding its merit are the
truth and nothing but the truth.
IHIIIHIIM ■■■■""II I
A Better Score
At trap .shooting or game shooting,
Your ability to shoot true under all conditions is made
greater by the knowledge that your ammunition will do all
that seientifically perfect powder and shot can do.
RCioiN HOOD KH
is loaded with our own smokeless powders that produce a terrific
muzzle Telocity by generating speed all along the barrel. The
absence of the "big explosion" makes for speed, accuracy and
penetration, and practically eliminates the kick.
Your dealer sells Robin Hood shot shells and
metallic cartridges—if not, write us. Ask for our
catalogue.
ROBIN HOOD AMMUNITION CO.
3rd STREET, SWANTON, VT.
J
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Lower, Sue L. The Dover News. (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1911, newspaper, October 5, 1911; Dover, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107025/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.