The Krebs Banner. (Krebs, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 30, 1908 Page: 3 of 4
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Syrup
'^OixirstfSonna
je System Effe't-
I s Lolas ana fiend-
Cloan-sos tin*
uallyiDispol
art la s due to Constipation;
Arts nnturally, acts truly as
a Laxativ e.
Best tot’MrnVomrn and ( laid-
ren-VoiinO and Old.
Io get its beneficial Effects
Always 1juv the Genuine u‘ *
Kas me jitll
1 name
,,pi
,u>
ip Com-
pany
CALIFORNIA
Fic> Syrup Co.
by whom it is manufactured .printed on the
front of everv package.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS,
one size only, regular price 50» per bottle.
THE MEN WHO KNOW
THE SUPERIOR
QUALITIES OF
•\OWER;y \ -
'JiH jrM® \
SLICKERS. SUITS
AND HATS
ore the men who have
put them to the hard-
est tests in the rough-
est weather.
Get the original
Tower's Fish Brand
made since 1636
CATALoi riiiyoR 'fHC ASK/N9
A J TOWte CO. BOSTON. USA
TOW Un»Qi«n Co I ... •! . - .....-O t«N
GENERAL NEWS NOTES
A BRIEF REVIEW OF THE NEWS
OF THE WEEK
Thursday afternoon a tornado de-
stroyed the eastern portion of De-
port. Texas, a town 20 miles south-
east of Paris, killing \V. R. Isbell, a
druggist, and wounding several oth-
ers.
Governor Hughes has filed with the
secretary of state a proclamation con-
vening the legislature of New York
in extraordinary session on'Monday,
May 11. The proclamation does not |
specify any subject which the gov-
ernor will recommend for considera-
tion at the extra sessi.on.
George McLaughlin, a saloon-
keeper of Cleveland. Ohio, shot and
fatally wounded his wife who died a
few hours later at a hospital. The
tragedy was the culmination of two
years of domestic strife in the Mc-
Laughlin home When arrested Mc-
Laughlin begged the officers to
shoot him.
Four men were killed, three seri-
ously injured and loo others had a
narrow escape from death when an
explosion occurred in Mine No. 1 of
the Ellsworth Collieries Company, at
Ellsworth, Pa., Washington county.
I The dead are foreigners. Their bod-
ies were mangled and badly burned.
FROM SUNNY ORANGE GROVES.
The Twice-Told Experience of a San
Bernardino, Calif., Man.
From Sunny San Bernardino, In the
midst of orange groves, writes Lionel
M. Heath, of 15S
Eighth Street: “For
fifteen years I suf-
fered with pains in
my back, frequent
calls to pass the se-
cretions, dropsy, rheu-
matic aches and other
symptoms of kidney
trouble. I could get
no relief until I used Doan's Kidney
Pills. They cured me five years ago,
and this Is twice I have publicly said
so. The cure was thorough.”
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
TOOK TIME.
“--T,---
Two milion, five hundred thous-
and people in Illinois, now living in
prohibition districts would been
I put back in saloon territory but Ttijf
the decision of the supreme court Tn
j the McBride case, declaring constitu-
tional the new local option law aa
passed last year. .
.... . -
A Scotsman, having hired himself
to a farmer, had a cheese set before
him that he might help himself. After
some time, the master said to him:
“Sandy, you take a long time to
breakfast.”
“In truth, master,” said Sandy; “a
cheese o’ tin’s si/e is na sae soon eaten
aa you may think.’
CURE AT CITY MISSION.
Mm
What a Settlor Can Secure In
WESTERN CANADA
160 Acres Grain-Growing Land FREE.
20 to 40 Bushels Wheat io the Acre.
40 to 90 Bushels Oat* to the Acre.
35 to 50 Bushel* Barley to the Acre.
Timber for Fencing and Building* FREE.
Good l aws with Low Taxation.
Splendid Railroad Facilities and Low Rates.
Schools and Churches Convenient.
Satisfactory Markets for all Productions.
Good Climate and Perfect Health.
Chances for Profitable Investments.
Some of the choicest crrain-producinp lands In
Saskatchewan and Alberta tnay now be ac-
quired in these most healthful and prosperous
sections under the
Revised Homestead Regulations
by which entry may be made by proxy (on cer-
tain conditions), by the father, mother, son,
daughter, brother or sister of intending home-
Entry fee In each case is f 10.00. For pamphlet,
'Last BestWest,”p.*irt ioularsas to rates,routes,
best time to go and where to locate, apply to
J. S. CHAWF0RD,
Ho. 125 W. Ninth Street, Kaqsas City, Misoooit
jfunwQiw&-
Will stop and permanently
cure that terrible itching.
It is compounded for that
purpose and is absolutely
guaranteed.
It is a never failing cure
for eC2fc~»*,toug aflectic*£
oi all kinds, including:
I Humid Tetter Herpes
I Salt Rheum Prurigo
Heat Eruption Elavus
____I Rind Worm 0»d Scabies(Itdl)
This last named disease is not due to
Inflammation like other skin diseases, but
to the presence of little parasites which
burrow under the skin. The itching they
produce is so intense it is often with diffi-
culty the sufferer can refrain from tearing
the skin with his nails.
HUNT’S CURE is an infallible remedy
for this aggravating trouble. Applied
locally. Sold by all first class druggists.
Price, 50 Cents Per Box
And the money will be refunded in every
case where one box only fails to cure.
MANUFACTURED ONI.Y BY
A. R. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.
Sherman, Texas
j W N F SAT I 25 SMITH —2—
The Ohio senate has passed a bill
I prohibiting seerpt societies among
j pupils of high schools. The law pro-
j vides expulsion for violation of the
law shall continue only so long as the
j pupils continue to violate it.
I Chas. Barnes, state insurance com-
missioner of Kansas, lias held that
death from wallowing a toothpick
! entitles the heirs of an accident in-
; sura nee policy to the insurance. H.
j S. Myers, of Arkansas City, swallow-
ed a toothpick, it lacerated his
j throat, and blood poisoning set up,
j causing his death.
John T. Booling, president of the
board of elections of New York City,
testified in the proceedings brought
to oust Mayor McClellan from the
office of mayor, that he found in a
loft ballots of the last mayoralty elec-
tion thirty ballot boxes, none of
which appeared to have been sealed, i
He declared that he saw ballots,
stubs and unused ballots scattered
about the floor. Many of them were
marked in either the republican or j
democratic column, but none of those
so found were Independencee League !
i ballots.
Mrs. George W. Stipp, of Welling-
ton, Kan., was the first soldier’s
widow to be pensioned ..nder the wi-
dow's pension bill. Congressman
Murdock received word to this effect
from the pension bureau. She gets
J12 a month, the amount all widows
will receive after this.
Through efforts of Dr. W. T. Ver-
non, registrar of the treasury, the war
department has been induced to
send about 100 rifles and accessories
to the Quindaro negro university iu
Kansas. Hr. Vernon is chancellor of
that institution, but is on an indefi-
nite leave of absence to fill the fed-
eral joli at Washington. He hopes
to build up a military branch at his
school and the war department will
aid him.
Awful Case of Scabies—Body a Mass
of Sores from Scratching—Her
Tortures Yield to Cuticura.
"A young woman came to our city
mission in a most awful condition physi-
cally. Our doctor examined her and
told us that she had scabies (the itch),
incipient paresis, rheumatism, etc.,
brought on from exposure. Her poor
body was a mass of sores from scratch-
ing and she was not able to retain solid
food. We worked hard over her for seven
weeks but we could see little improve-
ment. One day I borght a cake of
Cuticura Soap and a bottle of Cuti-
cura Resolvent, and we bathed our
patient well and gave her a full dose
of the Resolvent. She slept better that
night and the next day I got a box of
Cuticura Ointment. In five weeks this
young woman was able to look for a
position and she-is now strong and weil.
Laura Jane Bates, 85 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y., Mar. 11, 1907.”
Out of the Mouths of Babes.
Little Arthur stood peering down
Into the countenance of his baby sis-
ter, whom the nurse was singing to
sleep.
"Say, nurse,” he finally whispered,
“It’s nearly unconscious, isn’t It?”
The nurse nodded in the afllrmative,
and sang on.
"Then don’t sing any more, or you’ll
kill it.”__
The Plain Plucker
If a burn or a bruise afllicts you rub It
on, rub It on.
Then before you scarcely km u the
trouble will be gone.
For an aching joint or muscle do tbs
same.
It extracts all pains and poisons,
plucks the stings and heals the
lame.
Hunt's Lightning Oil does ft.
No Trouble to Show Goods.
Old Gentleman (to beggar)—What
do you do for a living?
Beggar—I make post holes, Blr.
Old Gentleman (absent-mindedly)—
Yes? Well, I never give charity;
bring me along any you have on hand
and I’ll buy them from you.
. THE LIVING RCOM.
It Should at All Times Ce a “Livable”
Room.
What to do with tho living room 13
a problem that confronts every house-
keeper. The living room should be
In fact as well as In name a living
room—a livable room. It Is the room
in which the most of our time at
home is spent, the hours we have for
leisure, tho time wo have for play,
tho place where wo entertain our
friends and It is absolutely essential
that the walls and furnishings of the
living room should be harmonious in
color, suit able in texture, and durable
in material.
The rich, soft, solid colored walls
are the ideal walls for tho living
rooms. They make a belter back [
ground for pictures, throw tho ftirni- j
ture out in better relief, are less dis-
cordant with rugs and carpeting, and
indicate a higher degree of taste and j
culture than do the colored mon- |
strosities which we paste on when we
npplv wall paper.
M ho ever saw roses climbing up a
plastered wall growing out of a hard-
wood floor? Yet, that is what we |
suggest to tho imagination when we
paste paper covered with roses on
our walls. They are neither artistic j
nor true. Roses are all vory beauti- !
I ful, but they were never made to |
climb up interior walls and they do
j not grow from hardwood flooring.
| The set figures of wall paper are also
: tiresome and eqir'lly disagreeable and
repellant.
The alabastined wall is the only
correct form of a tinted or solid col-
ored wall. Fortunately it is the only
clean way, and more fortunately it Is
the only permanent way; tho only
way that does not Involve the end-
less labor in the future.
In lighting the walls somo thought
must bo given the color. Light colors
reflect 85% of the light thrown upon
them. Dark colors reflect but 15%.
Lighting hills can ho saved by choos-
ing a color which will reflect tho
largest degree of light. In north
rooms use warm colors or colors
which reflect light. In south and
west rooms sometimes tho light can
ho modified by the use of darker
colors. Dark greens absorb the light;
light yellows reflect it; browns mod-
ify it, and so on, through the scale
of colors. Tho color scheme of a
room not only is dependent upon tho
color of tho carpetings but it is also
dependent upon the light of the room.
For Chinese Forest Protection.
The first Chinese school of forestry
has just been opened at Mukden. The
Chinese empire paid no attention in
the past to the destruction of Its for-
ests. _ _
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Doll.r. Reward for an*
of t Atarrh that cannot bo cured by Halt's
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
'Ye, the undersigned, have km wo F. J. Cheney
for the last 15 years, and believe At in perfect.y hon-
orable In all bualneaa irunsacibfls and financially
able to carry out any ..bl!»;atlons made by bln firm.
WALBINO. Kin.nan H aIa»vin,
ti Wholesale Drupn-'an, Toledo. O
Hall a Catarrh Cure Is taken 1 .••rnally, actinic
directly up dt the b|*<»d and n*-;,.0UA aurfaecaof the
iysteui. 1 c tlmonlals sen» .ree. Price 75 ceuts per
bottle. Bold by all I)r.(<uista. I
lake Bali's Kami1, i’Ula for cooatlpaUoB-
ANNUAL SALES OVER NINE
MILLION.
Good, reliable quality is appreciated
by tlie smoker. Over Nine Million (9-
000.000) Lewis’ Single Binder cigars
sold ann-'-'ly The kind of cigar smok-
ers have been looking for, made of
very rich, mellow tasting tobacco. It s
the Judgment of many smokers that
Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar
equals in quality the best 10c cigar
There are many imitators of this colei
brated brand. Don’t let them fool you.
There is no substitute.
Tell the dealer you wish to trv a
Lewis’ Single Binder.
Lewis Factory, l’eorla, III., Originat-
ors Tin Foil Smoker Package.
Genius is but the habit of seeing
more deeply and clearly than most tho
common things of earth.—De La
Raniee.
—
It Cures While You Walk.
Allens i'oot-K.ne is a eertnin cure for
not, sweating, callous, ami swollen, aching
feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't
Garfield Ten, the herb medicine, li*
sure* .1 healthy action of liver, kidneys^
stomach and bowels. Take it for consti-
pation ami sic k-headacln Write Garti«Jd
lea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y., for free sample*.
During the last year tho pxportu of
this country have grown greatest In
tho Items of cars, carriages and auto
mobiles.
Mrs. Wlnslow’N Soothing Syrup.
For children teething. softens th« (Tunis, n ducae to-
tUmmiitlun. allays pair., cures wtod colic. 'idcsoottl*
It Is love and Justice wrought out
In life that makes its beauty.—Brooke.
•rpt am suMitut.-. Trial package VKHF.
Allen Is. Olmsted, I.e Roy, N. Y.
Addrrsa
"Whenever we will what Is good, wo I
are better because wo willed.—How- I.
son.
yi i.row c i.otiii-s mi.; unsightly.
Keep them white with Red t’roas Bull Blue.
Alt grocers sell large 2 o/.. package, 5 ceuts.
True
Carlyle.
valor Is the basis of
W. N. U., MUSKOGEE, NO. 17, 1908.
“OUCH, OH MY BACK”
NEURALGIA, STITCHES, LAMENESS. CRAMP
TWINGES, TWITCHES FROM WET OR DAMP
ALL BRUISES, SPRAINS, A WRENCH OR TWIST
THIS SOVEREIGN REMEDY THEY CAN ’T RESIST
ST JACOBS OIL
Price 25c and 50c
IRRIGATED LANDS
VRITF. US FOR BOOKLET CflNCFRNMi
IRRIGATED LANDS IN THE GREAT TWIN
FALLS And JEROME COUNTRY, IDAHO,
Altitude only 3700 feet above the sea level. Inevhitn.vllblo water «uppl>, taken from
vreat Snake River, the seventh largest river in America. IN,, olkull. in < velooea.
420,(KM) ncrcH of t he tl nr.st fruit ami agricultural land in the Wont.
Tho man who wants a home where everything (rrowRthat inakeH farming profitable—
on easy imns-or tho man who wants land for investmeut should write us, as we auota
nothing but absolutely reliable information. Address H
II. A. STROUD ^ COMPANY,
Twin Fulls, Idaho
WEAR SHIELD BRAND SHOES
Never Kip ’Em seamless shoe for men, boys and
youths. Wears like iron—brass quilled bottoms.
Price, $1.75 to $2.50. If not at dealer ask us.
ELLET-KENDALL SHOE CO. MFCS.
Kansas City, Mo.
. nu*rs
. — K.
Eaeh one does best who does his
he t for one day at a time, and then
refreshes himself with the knowledge
that he can do it better on the next.__
Semplon.
IP YOU USE BALI, BLUE,
Get Red Cross Ball Blue, the best Ball
Blue. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents.
Cauliflower, $900 an Acre
This is What is Being Done on South
Texas Land.
An unsucce:
up the north
sie*
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from un-
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odor*,
which water, soap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do. A „___ —-^
germicidal, disin-
fecting and deodor- iHi'iilseii^
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex-
cellence and econ-
omy. Invaluable
lor inflamed eyes,
•hroat and nasal and
utei ;ne catarrh. At
drug and tofloe
stores, 50 cents, or
by mail postpaid
sful attempt to hold
coast limited traifl,
west bound, the everland flyer on the
Northern Pacific, was made at a point
betwee nWelch’s spur and Home-
stake. Montana, 15 miles east of
Butte, tlie scene of the recent hold-
up in which Engineer Frank Claw
was murdered. lExpIosives brought
the train to a full stop, but when
the time for action came the nerve
of the bandits fahed.
Mrs. Polly Morgan, a negress who
was freed from slavery when she was
62 years old. died at St. Louis last
week at the age of 107 years. Mrs.
Morgan was born in 1801 on the
plantation of Thomas Cox near what
is now Beech folk. Tex. She also lived
with the Cox family when the chil-
dren of her first owners moved to
Macon. Tenn.
Large Trial Sample
WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY” BOOK BENT FREE
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston,Mass,
Great Closing
Out Sale!
Farm Wagons sold at
less than manufactur-
ing cost. Address, or
inquire of,
OLDS WAGON WORKS
FT. WAYNE, INDIANA
The president has signori the bill
providing for reorganization of ibe
medical department of the arm so as
to provide for a medical corps and a
medical reserve corps
Best of All.
R. J. Mayher, No. 406 South Clark
St., Chicago, writes as follows;
"I have kept and used your Hunt’s
Lightning Oil for the last ten years In
my family. It Is the only kind to
have and the best of all.”
It cures Cuts, Burns. Bruises,
Sprains, Aches, Pains, Stings and
Bites. It kills Chiggers, too.
Misunderstood.
Visitor—What lovely cut glass you j
have, Mrs. Chump.
Mrs. Chump (indignantly)—They
hain’t a bit of that cut. We paid full
price for all of it. Wo don’t have to
go to no bargain sales.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that it
In Use For Over BO Years.
The Kind Yon Have Always BoughL
Moore's Greatest Ea
Thomas Moore no er made more
than $5,00f c. year from his work.
Patient endurance attalneth to all
things.—St. Teresa.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cored by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis-
tress from Dyepepsla, Iu- ,
digestion and Too Hearty j
I Kating. A perfect rein- |
edy for Dizziness, Nau-
sea, Drowsiness, Bad
Taste in the Mouth, Coat-
ed Tougue, Pain In the
----JSIde, TORPID LIVER. I
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable, j
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
Dr. Chas. F. Simmons Has Cut Up His Ranch of 05,000 Acres and
Selling Truck and Fruit Farma of From 10 Acres to 640 Acres
(Including Two Town Lots) For $210. Payable
$10 a Month Without Interest.
The TTon. Joseph Daily, of Chillicothe, HI., who owns thousand* of acre*
in the Illinois Corn Belt, says:
“I am one of the heaviest taxpayers on farm lands in Mason and Taze-
well Counties, Illinois, and I have been familiar with the conditions around
Kan Antonia for 12 years. Any thrifty fanner can get rich, and make more
money off of this cneap land, acre for acre, than uny land in the State of
Illinois, that sells from $150 to $225 per acre.”
Investigate this before the land is all sold. For full particulars and beautiful
views of the ranch, write
DR. CHAS. F. SIMMONS,
215 Alamo Plaza. SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS.
W.L.DOVGLAS
SHOES,
r SHOES AT ALL
PRICES, FOR EVERY ^
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY,
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
W. L Doufflam matron and aella morn
mon'm$2.&0, $3.00and$3.50aho— <***
in an any othor manufacturer in the —__
mfurtdw baoauao thrjr hold thoir
mhapo, fit hotter, noar loncar, and
aro of nrtiatcr r*»tuo than any ether a
—— ahooa In tho f+rld to-day. trdi 'i
V. L Doughs $4 and $5 Gill Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At An) Price
•’A l”rIO\. \V. I,. P^tigiaE name and piiw la stumped on bottom. '
Sold by the* U*«t *ho« (Ii-aIpts ••vurv whore. Shota* inodf-t from fr~*— *----
imi«d CaiAioi frwi u> any add ions. W
For
Tnkr Xo Nuliitltiits,
___faoiory to any part of tho world. UIu^
JL. DOllilLAN, Iftrui-ktoii, Aliua
DISTEMPER
Pink Eye, Epizootic
Shipping Fever
iS Catarrhal Fevor
Sum • nre and posItlTcpreYfnttv*. no matter how bor-cK at any age are lnfscted or
1 « I'd.glren on the tongue, arte on tlie Wood aB'l Ulandsi expels tbs
id Sheep and (liolera In
P« amoiitf human belrum
md *10a dozen. 1‘utthleout. Keei
iryou. trot* Booklet, ** l'lsteoiper, Ca.
GOSHEN, IND., U. S. A
v.,.iSAr:.;r„r„T,r
h. b pool a I ag«*nwant eel.
^t. ■
SPOHN MEDICAL CO -
Basing his action on information
I which he has been gathering for the
last six months, James Bingham, at-
torney general of Indiana, will with-
in tlie next ten days file suits against
all brewing companies in the state,!
which have, as will be alleged, been
operating saloons, and in other ways i
transacting a retail liquor business. I
The attorney general contends that I
the conducting of a retail liquor bus-
iness by brewers is exceeding the
powers granted by law. If success-
ful this will put three-fifths of the sa-
loons of the state out of business
When
Run
Down
Nervo Prostration is oho of the great troubles that ooino to weak women, as
a result of neglected womanly ills. Pain acts oh you? nerves, like rust on steel, and
they simply go all to pieces. You ean’t build rusty steel back again, and some-
times you can t renew your nerves, so it’s best to begin in plenty of time to take
Wine of Cardui
It will build up the resistance of your nerve substance.
Mis. J. Bennett, of El Paso, Tex., writes: “I suffered from pains in the
back, and nervous prostration. After being laid up for three weeks, I took Car-
duu Now I am m good health.” Try Cardui. Sold by druggists, everywhere.
WRITE FOR FREE BOOK
ChAttanootA Medicine Co. Chatt
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Vernon, John C. The Krebs Banner. (Krebs, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 30, 1908, newspaper, April 30, 1908; Krebs, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1077906/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.