The Moore Messenger (Moore, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 17, 1913 Page: 3 of 8
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THOSE RHEUMATIC
TWINGES
Much of the rheu-
rnatic pain that
comes tn daiof).
chaoft weather is
the work of nric
acid crystals.
Needles couldn't
cut. tear < r hurt any
worse when the af-
fected muscle jomt
is used
If such attac ks are ^
m.trkr-d with head-
arhe. backache, dix-
yinrs# and disturb '
ances of the urine.
it's time to help the
wakened kidneys.
Doan's Kidney
l'ills quickly help
hick kidneys.
An Ortkon Crnmm
John II Matthews. ilT Kasi Klrst
IM.1.*. t>r«- hit}* ■ M hack «• lie.i
hardly Mt«xip of straighten. Thi kidney seen
WHY THE WOODEN t
MATS Tit LIVE ONE
MILLER PURVIS,
f£ eli Tor o/* "Poult 17/
obllglr
?rui|" h • and the pio >«a«e
u 1 Mr kldnrji'
■trim*
i* for. 1 fc.
N K nil
irdered t h:U I
7 1*11 Ih ho
When bip^Ci-.^;.. .. O!.. '*osts L«s Than a Two-Cent
g,.w !■ tn. year 1897, N wu mm Postage-Stamp
by the magistrate to give his advice An average of leas than a cen* and
wurrnlni th«- taterlptlon to be a third a pair la paid for the use of all
placed on Nelson's monument, then our machines In making two-thlrda of
juat completed The knight recoro the ahoea produced In the United
mended this brief record "lilaago* States—assuming that all our ma-
to Nelson " chines are used. The most that can
"Tnie," said the others, "and a* be paid for the use of all cur ma-
there Is a town of Nelson near us chines In making the highest priced
md foi
peruianeut.
50c a Bo*
KIDNEY
PILLS
FOSTER-MII B'JRN CO.. Buffalo. New Yorl*
DOAN'S
Why Scratch?
"Hunt'sCure"is guar-
anteed to stop arid
permanently cure that
terrible itching. It is
compounded for that
purpose and your money
will be promptly refunded
WITHOUT QUESTION
I if Hunt'a Cure fails to cure
Itch, Ecxema, Tetter, Ring
I Worm or any other Skin
Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mail
A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.. Shirman,
jM* /rxSMv%?jr j\wro
job In this way the eggs are brooded
mostly by the natural mother, and. at
the same time, escape the conse-
quences of her nervous excitement
when the chicks come out.
In this method about four hens
) Nelson
column might
and a nionu
HEAD FULL OF DANDRUFF
1802 Reynolds *• 34th St . Savannah,
Ga.—"My head began to get sore and
all around the edges got white with
the disease until I was quite scared.
I thought all my hair would drop out.
It came out by handful**, and tny head
Itched so I nearly scratched the skin
off It was full of dandruff which
showed plainly In my hair. I also
had trouble with my hand. It peeled
every time I put It In water, and It
was so badly disfigured that every-
body noticed it and asked me what It
was It was red. and burned awfully.
"My mother tried several things but
they were unsuccessful, and it seemed
If nothing did it any good until
shoes Is less than cents a pair-
The average royalty on all kinds of
shoes Is less than 2 2-3 cents a pair.
From this we get our sole return for
the manufacture and use of the ma-
chines, for setting them up In facto-
ries and keeping them in order. You
pay two cents for a postage stamp or
n yeast cake and five cents for a car
fare and don't miss it. Where do yotl
get more for \ our money than In buy-
ing a machine-made shoe?
Write us and we will tell yon all
about It. The United Shoe Machinery
Company. Boston. Mass.—Ad?.
Wise.
doctor
diagnose your
should be set at a time, on fifteen or | ujartpj hm> Cutlcura Soap and Oint-
sixteen eggs aplec
are tested out, tin
to fill the machine
hens may then b<
fresh batch, and so
started four or flv
that, after they
e will be euough
pretty well. The 1
set again, on a
in until they have i
lots of eggs It i
ment. It had lasted about four weeks,
but then It started getting well and
my hair stopped falling completely.
Now it Is cured My hair is now nice
and thick and Is growing to a nice
length I also used the Cutlcura Soap
does not hurt a hen to stay on duty l an(1 ointment for my hand and pom-
direct if he hasn't it. Manufactured only by I
n, Teiai
Honesty never looks better
man than when It comes hom<
roost.
lira Wlnalnw'a Hoothlng Bymp for Children
leethintf. soflena the gtiuia, reduce*
liio h palu.i'ura* w 1 nd co I If Jt*X- .\ bottle
Of course, there are lots of big fish
1n the sea Everybody has seen one
or two slide off the hook.
ikoihtf* Tlir i.ivKit %ni> IM hikikh
TIIK iii.OOI*.
The Old Standard general strengthening umlc.
Ko\ K - TASTBLHS eh "
szysir A&CWP MZS eHse-n&e wc*forest--
N Incubator keeps on work- | H not absolutely necessary to
Ing as long as It Is prop- test the eggs, but It is best to do so.
erly attended to. While the i usually test eggs after the morning
hen often concludes to of the eighteenth day. The chick Is
quit. Anyone who has had full formed by thla time; the eggs do
much experience hatching not need turnlug.
with hens and with incuba I)o not open the egg chamber after
knows for himself that the | the chicks begin to pip the shell. This
eight, ten. or even twelve weeks, If
she has good care This allows the
rest of the flock to attend to the lay j
Ing part of the business, and insures •
be provided and suitable runways and having quiet, persistent sitters
food As soon as the chicks arrive The nests should bo thoroughly
they must be taken from the crate one scrubbed and duBted with sulphur be ]
at a time, their bills dipped in water fore using. If they can be white
and then put immediately into a washed, so much the better The
warm brooder. If they are 48 hours hen, too, should be well dusted with |
old they should be fed with hard boll a good insect powder Moth balls
ed egg and dry bread crumbs, but care and the coal tar preparations, though
strengt
TONIC. -
liver t« anion drive* Malaria out of the Mood a
bnlidt ii|i the system. A true tonic. gur aduita a
children fit*
At the Movies.
Miss Prim (severely)—You allc
smoking here?
I'sher— Yearn Light up'—Puck.
Heading Her Off.
I)o you love me, George?"
Yes. dear, I love you, but go
little light, for 1 won't have a:
money until pay day."
Incubator is to be preferred, for many rule is not invariable, but the only ex must be taken not to give them sloppy death on the lice, are also hard on
' reasons One of these is that it Is j ceptiou Is to take out the chicks when food or to overfeed at any time, they both hens and eggs, on account of
1 no more trouble to take care of an i a very good hatch Is secured and must have plenty of fresh water and their strong smell. It Is better to
Incubator holding 200 eggs than It j they crowd to the light in the door their runways and brooders must be use preventives that have as little
is o care ft? two setting hens; and I Then open the door, roll the chicks kept clean and dry. odor as possible The porous shells
the Incubator is always ready to work, out into a basket and close the door on the other hand. If one Is tn the admit odors, and the sweeter the air
no matter what time In the year it Is ' as soon as possible. poultry business for keeps there Is a can be kept the better.
called upon. ! Won't try to help a chick out of the g00d profit in selling baby chicks After the hens have been sitting
The incubator of today' is a very shell. If it cannot get out without with two or three good incubators one seven or eight days, the eggs should
reliable machine, If properly handled. I help it Is not worth saving. may hatch and sell several thousand be tested By this time It is possible
After long experience I have con- j Don't worry If the chicks gasp and jn a geason with much less labor than to tell pretty closely which eggs will
eluded that most Incubators lack In struggle for breath This Is nature's to raise them to maturity, and with hatch. A good tester can be made by j under the guise of willow cuttings to
pletely cured it." (Signed) Miss
Hattle M Jones. Nov. 8. 1911
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment §old
throughout the world Sample of each
free, with 32 p Skin Hook Address
poet-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston."
Adv.
Willow Switches Given Away.
The 8mall boy whose father has
time to apply the switch should be-
ware with a little more than his usual
caution. The I'nited States govern-
ment is giving away willow switches.
The department of agriculture has
an experiment farm at Arlington, Va
and some parts of It were found to be
too wet for raising ordinary crops.
Therefore the experts Bet willows out
In the wet places, and there has been
bo smart u growth that the govern-
ment wants to get rid of the willow
Bwltches. It offers to give them away
"How long did it take?"
' Not long. 1 wore my shabbiest
suit ' Birmingham Age-Herald.
Its Kind.
1 met a man yesterday who offered
me an unspeakable insult."
"Why was it unspeakable?"
• He was dumb and had to spell It
out ou his fingers."
Good Idea.
As to the low taxes, let's lower the
indirect taxes for example, that tax
of 40 million dollars a year that tu-
berculosis levies in Missouri—St.
lx)uls Dispatch.
Good Polish.
To make a polish for patent leather
tnak*- a mixture of one part of linseed
oil and two of cream. Mix it thor-
oughly and apply with a flannel, af-
ter removing every particle of dust
from the shoes. Then rub the leath-
er with a soft cloth.
| the way of ventilation. By this 1
mean that they are not bo ventilated
1 that the proper quantity of fresh air
j gets Into the egg-chamber. To over-
come this by Introducing more fresh
air seems to be a rather hard task
in machines, but cooling or airing the
eggs rectifies this defect.
I am not a believer In the non mois-
ture feature of some Incubatorfi for
all times and places. When an Incu-
bator Is operated in a cellar it usu-
way of opening up the lungs and giv good profit There Is but little risk in taking an ordinary pasteboard shoe-
ing the chickens strength
Don't worry about the machine. If
the temperature the first week Is be-
tween 101 and 103 degrees It Is good
enough! only try to keep it about 103
It will not hurt anything If the tern-
shipping chicks They have been
known to have been shipped 2.000
miles and to have arrived at their des-
tination none the worse for their jour-
ney.
In March, April and May the supply
perature happens to run down to 95 0f jay qij chlcka never quite equals
decrees some night. 1 the demand, and in July and August
Don't be alarmed If the tempera t^e business Is fairly good. In Sep-
ture gets up to aB high as 105 degrees tember and October it again Increases, as possible
for an hour or bo. Simply take the ^ut later than this we would not ad
ally brings off a gooti hatch without out and let them cool and change V,BG dipping them, as the risk from
the regulator a little. If a very good coj(j too great in northern states,
hatch Is coming off the temperature j In ra|8ing chicks to be shipped great
If We Saw the Beyond.
Now 1 do not for a moment believe
that, if those mysterious portals were
Hung wide, and we could see without
hinderance all the secrets of the great
beyond, we should necessarily be eith-
er better or happier. On the contrary,
the probability is that, average hu-
man nature being what it la, sacred
realities would be degraded to the or-
dinary levels of the human Intercourse
in thle world; In our knowledge of life
we cannot rise above what we are.
What is wanted is a certain quality of
life itself which will carry with It the
assurance of the nearness and sweet-
ness of the best and highest in the
eternal kingdom of love.
Marquess of Sligo in Indian Mutiny.
Lord Altamont. who through the
death of his aged father, the other
day, has become marquess of Sligo,
was through the Indian mutiny His
father, who was in the Indian civil
service, was stationed at Bankipur
when the mutiny broke out.
Ix>rd Sligo's wife r.nd Infant Bon,
seven months old, the new marquess,
were sent for safety to a place which
was surrounded by rebels for a fort-
night The child, however, was safely
taken through the sepoy lines by a
faithful Indian nurse, who dyed his
skin as a ruse to pass him off as heV
ovtn son A long time passed before
the boy was restored to his anxious
parents, who meantime had to go
through a further siege at Monghyr
The new marquess recently celebrated
his silver wedding. On the actual an-
niversary day he had to be in Scot-
land. but he sent his wife a telegram
with the characteristic message,
Twenty-five years without regret."
Despondent?1
Have you frequent headaches. a conted
tongue, bitter taste in the morning,
"heafttrorn," belching of gas, acid ris-
ings in throatafter eating, stomach gnaw
or burn, foul breath, dizzy spella, poor
appetite?
A torpid liver is the trouble
in nine cases out of ten
Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery
is a most efficient iiverinvigoratnr. stom-
ach tonic, liowel regu! .tor and nerve
strengthened
Your Druggist Can Supply Yo«
SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES
A1U'4 *• Foot-Kaso.the antiseptic powder. Itrellexrt
painful.'smart ing. tender, nervous fct.and lnsiani.y
fak'-g the sting out of corns and bunions. It's the
greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's t oot*
Base makes tight ur new shoes feci easy. It Is a
certain relief for sweating, callous,swollen, tired,
aching feet. Always use It to Break In New Shoes.
Try it todry. Hold everywhere, 25 cents. I> n I
itcrpt any nubltitute. For FKKH trial package,
ftddret-s Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Boy. N. Y.
added moisture, but when operated In
a room above ground, especially In a
house where fires are kept up, It Is
without doubt better to supply some
moisture after the tenth day.
To be absolutely fair I want to add
that 1 have some excellent results
from a non-moisture incubator operat-
ed under unfavorable conditions. I
now have and use an incubator which
has a moisture pan In it and I have
never had a poor hatch from it.
1 would not hesitate to buy a non-
moisture Incubator because one can
be used with moisture almost as eas
lly as any other machine. I would,
however, place a yle-tln filled with
water or a fairly large sponge well
wetted, under the egg-drawer about
the tenth day. Again It Is often best
to have as many chicks of the same
size and age as possible, as an even
lot sells better than one of many
sizes.
There are many other reasons why
the Incubator 1b preferable to the
hen as a hatching machine, but It Is
not necessary to go Into this. Some
short rules which have been found
good by long experience will be bet-
ter than a long discussion of the sub-
ject and I give these below:
Start the incubator and operate it 1
a few days before putting in the eggs
This will give the operator a famil-
iar knowledge of the workings of the
machine. Try to keep the tempera
ture In the egg chamber as near 103
degrees as possible. A variation of
one degree either way will not do any
particular barm.
When you have learned how to keep
a comparatively even temperature put
the eggs In the tray. The tempera-
ture will fall at once, but do not try
to change this by putting on more
heat. The cold eggs cause the fall
will rise the last week
In warm weather I have often taken
the lamp away from the machine dur-
ing the middle of the day. At this
time the animal heat of the chicks
tends to Increase the temperature and
104 degrees is common.
Be Bure to get perfectly fresh eggs
from healthy hens. Use only the best
grade of oil. Fill and trim the lamp
In the afternoon rather than iu the
morning and do this every day.
Do not trim the lamp wick with
sclsBors, but gently rub the charred
part off so as to give an even, broad
flame.
If these directions are followed a
good hatch may be anticipated. They
are based on an experience reaching
back to about 1884.
(Copyright, 1913. by C. M. Stiultx.)
care should be taken to keep the
breeding stock strong and vigorous
They should be given plenty of fresh
air and exercise and their food should
be such as will produce bone and inus
cle Instead of fat. Hun down stock
box and cutting a hole In the bottom
about a third Bmaller than the oval
of the egg. The hole should be at
the level of the flame of the lamp to
be used with It.
Stand the box on end, with the bot-
tom towards you. and put the lamp
behind It The sides should be left
on to deaden the outer light as much
Hold the egg up to the
opening, so the light will shine
through it, turning It slowly in the
fingers. If It Is clear It Is Infertile.
If it begins to look black, there is an
embryo chick in It. All Infertile eggs
should, of course, be discarded
The eggs should be tested again
the fifteenth day, when all that are
not almost wholly opaque should be
thrown out
make basketa or bottom chairs, but no
smart boy will ever be deceived by
that kind of talk He may be safe only
In the assurance of the government
that only one hundred of the cuttings
will be given to one person.—Worces
ter Telegram
always produce weak chicks, and weak after starting, leaving the eggs
chicks are an unprofitable Investment onjy partly dark against the light of I
both to buyer and seller. It Is not the tester At the end of two weeks j
advisable to buy eggs from hatchers |t Bhould be all black except the air 1
Dayton Has Had Six Floods.
Dayton. O., lias stood in the shadow
of disaster from flood ever since Its
foundation. No less that six tim
previous to the present inundation
have the rivers which flow through It
left their accustomed courses and
brought death and destruction of prop-
erty upon the town. The first of these
flood occurred in 1805, the very year
that Dayton was incorporated as
town. The sixth was in 189N and th
Sometimes the germ will j others in the years 1847, 1863, 1866
and 1886.
who have mixed breeds and sell
named clicks
A good crate for shipping chicks
may be made of a shallow box five
Inches deep by 12 wide and 30 long.
Some chafT or sawdust may be put in
the bottom and the crate lined with
burlap or some coarse meshed mate-
rial to give the little fellows a foot-
hold.
HATCHING AND BROODING.
By Kathrlne Atherton Grimes.
The *boy with ten to twenty fowls
with hens. But where the breed kept
Is of some non-slttlng variety, the In-
THE DAY OLD CHICK INDUSTRY.
By Elizabeth Clark Hardy.
There is good money In the day old
chick industry, both to the buyer and
the seller In going into the poultry
business the first lesson for the ama-
teur tc learn is to make haste slowly, I cubator becomes almost a necessity,
instead of investing too much money i especially If one wishes to get early
In an untried Industry. A woman may ! chicks -the only ones that pay well,
raise a few hundred chickens on a For a flock of this size, a f>0 eggs
| small lot, without investing In an In- j machine is plenty large enough, and,
cubator and high priced eggs. It will I as these may be had at quite small
be much cheaper for her to buy day cost, it is about as well to use one
old chicks, and in caring for them she of these, and let the hens go on sit
will learn some valuable lessons, and
space In the large end. A little ex
perience will enable one to tell just
how they should look at different
stages.
It is very Important that the eggs
be handled gently while testing A
slight Jar will kill the embryo. Never
test where a draught of cold air will
strike them Chilling will either re-
tard the growth of the germ or kill
it entirely.
Where one keeps only a few hens
it Is best to let them go on laying
and take care of the chicks by hand."
This Is not so hard as it sounds,
will probably do most of hls hatching There In a kind of brooder which doe.
Peculiar Street Names.
Mexico is a country of picturesque
street and house names. In the cap!
tal are streets bearing such names as
"The Ix)ve of Ood Street." "The Holy
Ghost Street," "Pass If You Can
Street," "Lost Child Street," "Sad In-
dian Street" and "Street of the Wood
Owls."
. l ain
i Instantly
wonderful, old reliable i K I'oliT
Tit II KA I.I NO I loves pain and bea.s at
thr •ame tiuip J6«'. AOo, S1.00.
When a woman runs after a man he
tries to lose her, but when she flees
he Is quick to pursue.
A sentimental girl Is lost at a wed-
ding without a dainty handkerchief.
True Love.
"And would you die for me?"
"Certainly not. I would rather live
forever than to give you such a cause
for grief."
not use any sort of artificial heat,
which 1b rapidly gaining in favor, and
those who have used them for several
years say they are far ahead of the
lamp-heated systems, and take Just
as good care of the chicks as the hens
would. They are
and to operate.
One of these brooders will care
for about twenty chicks, so it is well
There's always some man around to
second any kind of a motion—exoept
a motion that looks like work.
FRIENDS HELP.
St. Paul Park Incident.
ting The eggs they will lay while to allow two to every Incubator full
it is doing their hatching for thein will °f They are merely little boxes
soon pay for the machine.
If an incubator Is not used, the best
plan Is to get hold of some-two-year-
old hens, of one of the large, quiet
broods, and keep them Just for sit-
ting If they are fed for eggs from
become warm the temperature will go
back to the proper point.
Learn to keep the lamp flame Just
at the place where it will furnish
of half-inch lumber, sixteen inches
square and eight inches hlght. with a
floor of tarred building paper. They
are covered with a removable top
made of a square of canvas tacked on
a little frame which Just sets down
inside the box. This cover rests on
small nails driven Into the corners of
Rain a fair working knowledge of
poultry business. In the spring there
will always be found advertisements
In the agricultural papers for the sdle
of baby chickens, and these may be
bought with but little risk to the pur-
chaser. for If any should die during
In temperature and as soon as they transportation the seller will always November 011 they will be ready for
replace them free of cost. , business by March Even with a
The price of day old chicks range machine, half a dozen hens of this i 'he box, and is raised as the chicks
from 4 to 20 cents, according to the kind will prove a good investment, for grow.
breed. It is not advisable to buy the reasons which you will see a little The chicks are put Into the brooder
enough *heat to keep" the re&ulator cheapest grade as they usually come farther on. They may be disposed of as soon as they are dry and well fluffed
damner about one-eighth of an Inch from weak parent stock, and Inferior as soon as their work is done, so one out They should be left alone for
above the top of the flue or chimney chicks are unprofitable to raise whetli- need not be out much except their from thirty to forty hours, except hav-
This will give enough surplus heat so er they come from the hatcheries or feed to secure their services during ing a little sip of water given them
the temperature will keep up during are hatched at home. But it is much the hatching season
the night safer and cheaper to buy day old
Turn the eggs for the first time at chicks from a reliable dealer than to perience with incubators tell us that fed every Hire
the end of the second day and after buy eggs for hatching, as in buying hen-hatched chicks
that turn them at least twice a day. | chicks you get a guarantee of safe ar- most vigorous
Recent experiments have shown that
a hen changes the position of her
eggs as many as five times In a day.
It Is not neceBsary that eggs be turned
half over. If they are turned only
part way over the effect will be just
as good.
Keep the larger end of each egg a
little higher than the smaller end.
When turning the eggs do not
rival and full count, while in buying tor is likely to turn out a few weakly
eggs you have to take your chances, or crippled chicks with each hatch
and sometimes they are disappoint- But the machine is far more likely
jng than the hen to behave well at the
In starting In with day old chicks critical time when the fluffy babies are
one must, of course, understand some- coming out of the shell, bo, as the say-
thing about their care and feeding or
things will go wrong, but until one
has had some experience with an in-
cubator things are likely to go
ing is, it is about "six of on
ing a littl
when they are first removed from nest
had considerable ex or machine. After that they should be
or four hours for a
are usually the j few days, and then less often—about
Even the best Incuba three times a day.
The main principle in brooding the
chicks is to keep them warm without I
crowding, and to guard against damp- I
ness. The heatleBs brooder, if cor |
rectly managed, will do this just as
well as the hen, and allow the flock
and half to go on with egg production. The llt-
In a hurry about getting them back wrong, which Is still more expensive,
into the machine. Once a day leave 1 and a chlfck In the hand la worth two
them out to air and cool off. This eggs In the Incubator.
cooling should last from ten to thirty . Of course when chicks have been
minutes according to the state of the ordered preparation for their care
weather. must be made. Warm brooders mtitt
a dozen of the other."
A system that makes out to take
advantage of the good points and
avoid the worst drawbacks of both.
has been devised, and carried out with
good results. The plan Is to put the
eggs under the hens for the first two the hatching, it is
weeks, and then remove them to the j system is not the best.
incubator, and let It finish up the (Copyright, 1918, by C. M. Shults
tie boxes can easily be carried inside
a building on cold nights, and taken
to the outdoor ruiiB again in the morn-
ing They are easily cleaned, and
keep the chickB free from lice. Even
where one has plenty of hens to do
question if this
After drinking coffee for breakfast
asy to make 1 I always felt languid and dull, having | y0U try it?
no ambition to get to my morning
duties. Then In about an hour or so
a weak, nervous derangement of tue
heart and stomach would come over
me with such force I would frequently
have to lie down."
Tea is just as harmful, becauBe It
contains caffeine, the same drug found
in coffee.
"At other times I had severe head-
aches; stomach finally became affect-
ed and digestion so Impaired that I
had serious chronic dyspepsia and
constipation. A lady, for many years
State President of the W. C. T. U.,
told me she had been greatly ben-
efited by quitting coffee and using
Postum; she was troubled for years
with asthma. She said It was no
cross to quit coffee when she found
ehe could have as delicious an
article as Postum.
"Auother lady who had been trou-
bled with chronic dyspepsia for years.
found Immediate relief on ceasing cof-
fee and using Postum. Still another
friend told me that Postum was a
Godsend, her heart trouble having
been relieved after leaving off coffee
and taking on Postum.
"So many
notice that
cause of my
took up Postum. I am more than
pleased to say that my days ot' trou-
ble have disappeared. I am well and
happy."
Look in pkgs. for the famous little
book, "The Road to WellvIIle.'
WOMAN'S ILLS
DISAPPEARED
Like Magic after taking Lydia
E. Pinkham'a Vegetable
Compound.
North Bangor, N. Y. — "Ab I have
used Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable
Compound with
great benefit I feel
it my duty to write
and tell you about it
I was ailing from fe-
male weakness and
had headache and
backache nearly all
the time. I was later
every month than I
should have been
and so Bick that I had to go to bed.
"Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound has made me well and these trou-
bles have disappeared like magic. I
have recommended the Compound to
many women who have used it success-
fully. "-Mrs. James J. Stacy, R.F.D.
No. 3, North Bangor, N. Y.
^ Another Made WclL "**
Ann Arbor, Mich.—"Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound has done
wonders for me. For years I suffered
terribly with hemorrhages and had
pains so intense that sometimes I would
faint away. I had female weakness
bo bad that I ha4 to doctor all the time
and never found relief until I took
your remedies to please my husband,
i recommend your wonderful medicine
to all sufferers as I think it is a blessing
for all women."—Mrs. L. E. WYCKOFP,
112 S. Ashley St, Ann Arbor, Mich. <
There need be no doubt about the
ability of this grand old remedy, made
from the roots and herbs of our fields, to
remedy woman's diseases. We possess
volumes of proof of this fact, enough
to convince the most skepticaL Why
ALBERTA
THE PRICE OF
BEEF
is iiioii and so
is tiu; PiticK of
cattlk.
For yean 'b® Province
of Albert a (Western
« anatla was the Big
KanchlngC ountry.Manf
of these raneb'-s today
aretniinPQiH'ifratn tu-Ms
n ml the rattle haTe
re to the cultivation of
.tit barlt-y and tlax the
change has made niany thousands
«>f Americana. s 'it. «d on tb«-t-«
|.lalnn. wealthy, but It baa In-
creased the price of livestock.
There is splendid opportunity
DOW u> get a
Free Homestead
. of 100 acres (and another as a pre-
T eraptli.nl In the newer districts
* umipriHlnco« thercattleoraraln.
" e rro|« are nlwajs good, the
on i'ostuin. imb
iv such cases came to my f/./' .w'iM ,
I concluded coffee was tile Uf A* ' 'A S
ny trouble and I quit and BJa g\lts3
r Manitoba, Sas-
lnloruiatlon rallwaj rates,etc., to
Q. A. COOK.
125 W. 8th STREET. KANSAS CITY *0.
cr address Superintendent of
Immigration, Ottawa. Ca«ada.
true, nnd full of h«i
They
Tuft's Fills
enable the dyspeptic tn eat whatever he
wishes. They cause the food to assimilate and
nourish the body, iflve appetite, and
DEVELOP I1ESH.
l)r. Tutt .Manufacturing Co.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Smith, Mamie. The Moore Messenger (Moore, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 17, 1913, newspaper, April 17, 1913; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109297/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.