The Ripley Times. (Ripley, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, January 27, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
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CONSTANT ACMINO.
tl*rb Srfcs** all lb* IlM*- HH**
• i, jI uppc-tll* Ik* M). •*»#»
ii« « ib« an in* I K I4*«) • *-*«♦<> it ail
aa*l |kas i Ki*tii<:l
|*ll|« r«ii*ia ib*l
ciif* 11.
|| |l ||rl*artrf.
ft Sot I l»rf(> Hi ,
l‘«*rtlai»d, Of**. la*
•|k < !>>r u| (rwijtfct
fix ib* TftniC'iin
iitt'uial l*u, ta)a
*'| **«-d than • Kid
n< > I'llla fur lark
|r bo ftl 4 Mb*f
») mpiuttta tif Md
nmy irouhln •hir'li
ha4 ittO'i)(4 mo
fur month*. I think
a rahl vna re«|M>tt*
kittle for the whole (rouble. It teemed
to artflo In my kidney*. Doan * Ki4*
n* y I'llla rooted It out. It la aeveral
month* alnro I 11**4 them, and up to
date there Ima been no recurrence of
tho trouhie."
Donn a Kidney I'llla for ralo by all
dealer*. Price GO rent* per box. Foa
ter Mlltnirn C*o, Buffalo. N V.
A don In the town of (Ydocno
Abrvnt mlndo Jly Knapped at a bojr.ne,
Hut the misguided brute
l!n«l Jutit grabbed hlu own foot:
So the bone that lie snapped wen III*
ogne.
—Philadelphia Press.
Don’t Scratch.
Some proplo dislike to mil It the
Hell, but candor compels me to admit
I had It, and had It badly. Your
Hunt's Cure, however, cured me after
many other remedies totally failed.
One box completed thrt cure—tho first
application afforded wonderful relief.
My advise to those who have to
scratch Is: "Use Hunt’s Cure.”
H. C. Halmorc,
Medford, O. T.
OOUI IN OA»VtONtl MINNS.
CbiWf** ef Amust 6'Mtf, fat* W«** j
Aa*i*4 Wt|f* Pa r 1*,th *»*.*.
Tb* fttaf dt4l* * f »MrS» that* la any I
CAU6HT BY THE GRIP-
RELEASED BY PE-RU-NA.
I *I* -t wr it* fijund af®o*mt in**
■ i(*r - **tr« * unr tiu.cd (rum ibo ru «a ol
I (tatty ton fkrjf are small Icttr* In
I toffs ends nod iv*ay,
raffl'd and mu*i kav* btwa la»ri#ti
Its pinytbins* fur tbs llttt® Ai*|t*ati
1 hildrrn
Tbe milt* gfrD of 9pri* I ad m*eH*n
teal dull*. Tho arms and hut* a eft
noted by pntltns atrtns* much after
10 fashion of juntplrs lacks.
Tho doll* tho cla«alc €}fc*dt * h I4r n
Inyo | with wcr« made of wat and
ley decorated with lifliii* wiltif*. One
Ind had mutable limb* and It* cloth*'
wort* made to take off and put «n
Kt**ry dull had a bed of It* own. Tb- e
lulla reproronted goda and boruca, but
whatotcr they were mndo to repro
*cnt. they wer© dr«*a*od with lotlne
rare by the little (Jr« «-ka.
Aw tlu at* children married when they
were very yours they played with
their dulls until Juat before tho «**d-
ling tiny. Then they mado a sacrifice
or all their toys, dolls and clothe* In-
cluded. They dedicated them ns a
pious offering to some deity. If the
little girl died before she was grown
up her dolls were hurled with her.
Thus It happens thnt tho kind and
fpshlen of dolls which comforted those
ancient children Is known. All the
specimens which are kept with so
great rare behind glass doors In vnr!*
ins museums were taken from some
tiny tomb.
NO LEFT-HANDED CUP3.
Heed Waiter’s Smooth Falsehood Ex-
plained Situation.
It Is understood that a lawyer al-
most shattered tho icy coniposuro of
v head waiter In town once upon a
lime. He went to supper after the
theater with a party of friends and lie
•••••••••a******••*•
••The World
of Medicine
Recognizes Grip
as Epidemic
Catarrh.”—
Medical Talk.
Two Solutions
"Tho south seems divided as to the
negro problem.”
“Yes, the whites want to solve it
by subtraction, and tho blacks by
multiplication."—Life.
A Rare Cood Thing.
"Am using AUDEN’S FOOT-EASE, and
cun truly sivy I would not have been without
it so long, had I known the relief it would
give my aching foot. I think it a rare good
f iling for anyone ha ving sore or tired feet-—
Mrs. MutiUV'. IToltwcrt. Providence, It. I.”
Sold by all Druggists, -3c. Ask to-day.
If horses wore legislators there
would bo a law enacted prohibiting
tho U30 of all whips that were not
boomerangs.
10,000 Plnnta for 10c.
Tliis is a remarkable offer the John A.
Sal/.er Seed Co., La Crosse, \V is., makes.
Sal/er Seeds have a national reputation
ns the earliest, finest, choicest the earth
produces. They will send you their big
Plant and seed catalog, together with
enough seed to grow
1.000 fine, solid Cabbages,
2.000 rich, juicy Turnips,
2.000 blanching, nutty Celery,
2.000 rich, buttery Lettuce,
1.000 splendid Onions,
1.000 rare, luscious Radishes,
1.000 gloriously brilliant Flowers. _
This great offer is made in order to in-
duce you to try their warranted seeds—
for when you once plant them you will
grow no others, and
ALT. FOR BIT 1(>0 FOSTACK,
providing you will return this notice, ancf
if you wiii send them 26e in postage, they
will add to the above a big package of the
earliest Sweet Corn on earth—Sailer’s
Fourth of July—fully 10 days earlier than
Cory, i’cep o’ Day, etc., etc. [\V. hi. U.J
Some of our most advanced think-
ers claim that, from an equine point
of view, the best human societies are
trolleycar and automobiles.
When You Buy Starch
buy Defiance and get the b“st, 18 ox.
for 10 cents. Once used, always used.
"What has become of the old-fash-
ioned man who used to get ’tight’?”
asks the I.tmar Sparks. He is keep-
ing up with the march of progress and
now ^ets iaggod.—Danrer Post.
ordered coffee.
“I’lcaso bring it in a cup with the
handle on the left side,” he said con-
fidentially to tho waiter. “I’m left-
handed and I can’t use any other kind
of a cup.”
"Yes, sir,” stammered tho waiter
“I will, sir.”
Ho was seen to hasten away and
confer with tho head waiter. The
head waiter bore down on the party.
“What sort of a cup vas that you
wanted, sir.” ho asked.
“Cup with the handle on tho left
side. I’m left-handed,” said the law
yer.
The head waiter disappeared, to re
turn a little later obviously perturbed.
“Tho cup you—” he be;,an.
“What?” said the lawyer. “Do you
mean to tell mo that in a first-class
cafe you haven’t such a thing as a cup
with tho handle on tne le.t side? Ab-
surd! Why, I couldn’t possibly use
any other kind. You must have plen-
ty of the them.”
“Well,” said the head waiter, “we
usually has, hut I regrets to say, sir,
'hat. the last we had was broke this
morning.”—Washington Post.
“From the Mouths of Babes.”
Miss Goodly had been laboring with
her Sunday school class of infants to
Impress upon them that the chief crea-
tures of God “are men and angels,”
when tho young curate entered. Af-
ter being told 4he subject of the day’s
lesson he started to catechise the chil-1
dren.
“Well, children, who are the chief
creatures of God?” he asked.
“Men and angels,” came the re
sponse in chorus.
“Now, let us illustrate. Am I one
of the chief creatures of God?”
“Yes.” assented the little ones.
“Why?”
“Because you are a man.”
“But Miss Goodly isn’t a man. Can
she be included among God’s chief
creatures?’
The class was stumped, but present
ly a timid voice resixuided:
“Please sir, she’s an angel.” and in
answer to the curate’s query as to the
class’ opiuion generally the response I
again came in chorus. "She's an J
ang-*I!”—Brooklyn Eagle.
La Grippe is Epidemic Catarrh.
1 T spares no class or nationality. The
A cultured and the ignorant, tho aris-
tocrat and the pauper, the masses and
the classes are alike subject to la grippe.
None are exempt—all are liable.
Grip is well named. The original
French term, la grippe, has been short-
ened by the busy American to read
“grip.”
Without intending to do so, a new
word has been coined that exactly
describes tho case. As if some hideous
giant with awful grip had clutched us
in its fatal clasp.
Men, women, children, whole towns
and cities are caught in the baneful
grip of a terrible monster.
Have you the grip? Or, rather, has
the grip got you? If so, read the fol-
lowing letters.
These testimonials speak for them-
selves as to the efficacy of Pertina in
cases of la grippe or its after-effects:
• A Southern Judge Cured.
Judge Horatio J. Goss, Hartwell, Ga.,
Writes:
“Some five or six years ago I had a
very severe spell of grip which left me
with systemic catarrh.
“A friend advised me to try your
Peruna, which I did and was immedi-
ately benefited and cured. The third
bottle completed the cure.”—II. J. Goss
Cured In a Few Weoki.
Miss Jean Cow gill, Griswold Opera
House, Troy, N. Y., is the leading lady
with the Aubrey Stock Co. She writes
the following:
“During the past winter of 1901, I
suffered for several weeks from a severe
attack of grip, which left a serious
catarrhal condition of the throat and
head.
“Some one suggested Peruna. As a
last resort, after wasting much time
and money on physicians, I tried tho
remedy faithfully, and in a few weeks
was as well as ever.”—Juan Cowgill.
Saved by Pe-ru-na.
non. James R. Guill is one of tho old-
est and most esteemed men of Omaha,
Neb. He has done much to make it what
it is, serving on public boards a number
of times, lie endorses Peruna in the
following words:
“I am 68 years old, am hale and
hearty and Peruna has helped me attain
it. Two years ago I had la grippe—my
life was dispaired of. Peruna saved
me.”—J. It. Guill.
NO MONEY TILL CURED. 27 YEARS ESTABLISHED.
W«89nd FREE and postpaid a 232-pags treatise on Files, Fistula and Diseases of the
Rectum; also 108-page lllus. treatise on Diseases ct Woman. Of tha thousands cured by
our mild method, nono paid a cent till cured—wo furnish thslr names cn application
DRS. TH08HTQS & ISiWOB, ft.
Salzer’s ^
National Oats
Greatest oat of the cenfnry.
Yielded In Ohio 187, In Mich.
Ml. in Mo. 255. and In N. Dakota
I 810 bus. per acre.
You can beat that record in 10G5.
For iOc and this notice
ere mall yon free Iota of farm seed
samples and our big catalog, tell- ,
Ing all about tbis oat wonder and t
thousands of other seeds. jfl
JOHN A. SALZER SEED
^ ^ La Cross*, yM- /
H'i*.
W. N. U.—Oklahoma Ci y—No. 4, 1505
BEGGS’ CHERRY COUGH
5YRUP cures coughs and colds.
THE FARMERS
on the
Free Homestead Land]
of
Western Canada
Carry the bannerfoi
yields of wheat and
other grains fof
1904.
100,000 FARMERS
receive (53,000,000 as a result of their Wheat Cron
alone.
The returnR from Oats, Barley and other pralns, os
well as cattle and horses, add considerably to this.’
Secure a Kroe Ilomest-ad at once, or purchase
from some reilstde dealer while lands arc sclllnc ct
preseu t low prices.
Apply for Information to Superintendent of Immi-
gration. Ottawa. Canada, or to suthorlied Canadian
Government Agent—J. S. Crawford, No. 125 W
Ninth Street, Kansas City. Missouri.
I’leaso say where you saw this advcrtUoment.
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Van Pelt, W. W. The Ripley Times. (Ripley, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, January 27, 1905, newspaper, January 27, 1905; Ripley, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1076013/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.