Pauls Valley Sentinel (Pauls Valley, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 19, 1905 Page: 15 of 20
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T
THIN BLOOD-WEAK NERVES
Ono Follows tho Other, tout Dr. W f
liams' Pink Pitis Quickly
Cure Both,
The steady use of a particular set o!
muscles tends to chronic fatigue, which
produces faulty or difficult motion
trembling, cramps issif even paralysis
Writers, telegraphers, tailors and beam-
stresses are among the classes most
threatened in this way with the loss ol
their power to earn a living. The fol
lowing instance shows t hat nerve powei
may be recovered after it seems entirely
lost, if the right means are taken. Mrs.
O. S. Blacksten, of No. 584 North Bow
man street, Mansfield, Ohio, says :
"For years my hands would become
so numb at times that 1 would drop
anything I attempted to lift. I-ater
they became so bad that I could not sew
any longer, and at last I could scarcely
do anything at all with mv hands. At
uight the pricking sensations would
come oil worse than ever, and my hands
and arms wijuld pain so that I dreaded
to go to bed. My family doctor gave me
some nerve tablets. They helped me a
little, but only for a short time after I
had taken them and if I happened to be
without them for a day or two I would
be as bad as ever or even worse. Finally
I got a box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
and began to take them.
"The result was surprising. By the
time I had taken the last pill in my first
box T could see a gain. Tlmnks to Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills, I am now all right.
I can sleep undisturbed by pain, and for
two rears I have been as well as ever.
Di\ Williams' Pink Pills feed the
nerves by making new, Tich blood and
in this way have cured nervous diseases
of every description from simple rest-
lessness to paralysis. They have ban-
ished the tortures of neuralgia, the
weakness of nervous prostration, the
disability and awful pain of locomotor
Ataxia. They are sold by all druggists
or direct by tlie Dr. Williams Medicine
Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
A BASE SLANDER REPUTED
Southerners "Fill 'Em Up" Because
Their Glasses Are Small
"You all up north here have an
Idea that we all down south drink a
whole lot of whisky, but we don't,'
remarked a Georgian in a Broadway
cafe the other day. "I'll admit that
when I'm in New York I drink more
than I do in Atlanta, but that's be-
cause of the size of the glasses they
give you to drink from. With us the
glasses are about half the size of the
ones you get here, and we pour them
nearly full. From force of habit 1
pretty nearly fill a New York glass
every time I take a drink: conse-
quently hero I drink twice as much
as I do at home."—New York Sun.
WILL LIVE IN HISTORY'S PAGES.
MAKING RUBIES FOR A DIME
Perfect Gems Turned Out by Two
Seattle Scientists
In a little dark basement at the cor-
ner of Fifth avenue antl Jackson
street, two French chemists, with the
assistance of Dr. Horace Byers, pro-
fessor of chemistry at the stale uni-
versity, are turning out rubies which
are pronounced as good as are de-
veloped In nature's laboratory, and
at a price averaging ten cents each.
The experiments have been con-
ducted for several weeks, and every
effort has been made to keep the
matter secret.
Some of the gems turned out have
been examined at the university, and
declared to be genuine.
The place of manufacture is fitted
up with modern appliances for chom-
ical analysis.
Until a week ago the chemists
were able to produce a gem perfect
in every respect, except that it lacked
the color of the genuine. It was at
this point that Dr. Byers was called
in.
He took the stone to the university
laboratry and there made an analysis
and discovered the defect. The in-
formation was given to the French-
men and a perfect stone was the re-
sult.—Seattle Times.
The coffee crop of Brazil this year
will be 1,200,000 bags of 133 pounds
each.
Famous Highway to the Southwest
Built Only a Century Ago.
A hundred years ago the eyes of
America were on the southwest. We
were on the edge of the war with
Spain over the closing of the Missis-
sippi, and under orders from Washing-
ton, Wllkiuson, in command of Fort
Adams, held solemn conclave with the
Indians who owned the east bank of
the big river, and by treaty establish-
ed a sacred postroad through their
country.
It left Nashville on the old Buffalo
trace, crossed the Tennessee at Col-
bert's ferry below the Mussel shoals,
and, striking the hills back of the Big
Black, came dowii to Natchez and on
to New (Orleans, with a branch to the
Walnut hills. The road was more
than a military necessity, for so many
pirates infested the Mississippi that
merchants returning from New Or-
leans needed a safer route home with
their money.
After tt was opened It became all
things to the southwest. Methodism
went down that way in the person of
Tobias Gibson; later Lorenzo Dow fol-
lowed him with the camp meeting
spirit. Old Hickory marched his army
down to Natchez over this route in
1813 and marched it back again next
spring. And from that day till nearly
our own it has been the great center
of that country's activity. Now the
railroads have come, the settlers have
moved down into the valleys and
opened up poorer roads in the beds of
branches and through swampy low-
lands. But the Trace Is still there
upon its ridges, the best road of them
all.—Everybody's Magazine.
Claims Cure for Appendicitis.
Dr. Pond of Liverpool, England, has
pdvanced a new theory with deference
to the origin of appendicitis and other
disturbances of the digestive organs.
He calls attention to the fact that
such ailments can often be attributed
to antimonial poisoning, and the
source of the antimony taken up by
man Is said to be the rubber rings
which are frequently used to close all
sorts of bottles.
Dr. Pond has established the fact
that such rings consist of almost one-
third their weight of antimony. The
antimony Is not only dissolved by the
mineral waters containing alkaiis and
organic acids, but these rubber rings,
as daily observation shows, soon be-
come brittle and some of the com
pound falls into the contents of the
vessels.
Dr. Pond claims to have found that
a frequently repeated introduction of
antimony can become the source of a
series of disturbances of the nutritive
and digestive system, especially
through continued weakening of the
muscles of the stomach and intestines.
BOW A FRIEND-
SHIP GREW
THJ DISTRICT SCHOOL
07 SPOTLESS TOWN
CLASS in ALGEBRA
j Let housewife equal X plua B ;
I l,i-t K the sign for Saj>olio lie ;
For dirt let minus X be bad ;
Then all the«e symbols we will add.
i The X and minus X drop out
j (As anyone can see no doubt)
x+8
— X
" B*
The Story
Whether Hand Sapollo got a more
enthusiastic welcome In homes where
Sapollo was an old and tried friend,
or where It was a stranger, la a ques-
tion. Where women had come to rely
on Sapollo for rapid, thorough clean-
ing In every part of the house except
the laundry, they commenccd without
loss of time, to avail of this new prize.
Grubby little hands, and stained, work-
worn older ones, whitened, softened,
and smoothed out as If by magic, cal-
lous spots disappeared, and com-
plexions cleared. • Children ceased
their strenuous objections to the scrub-
bing up process, because it became a
"Still Sweeter Sings My Darling."
The l>ell-blrd -fills Australian shades
With sours likr bubbling fountains;
Tlio redstart thrills the river glades
Beneath Virginian mountains.
Tlio oriole, that soul afire.
I'aurs forth a storm of singing
To the rapt mate of bis desire,
In soft gray hammock swinging.
Ry night, by day, on topmost spray.
Or where the covert hushes.
Plays Nature's weirdest orchestra-*-
The mock bird, king of thrushes.
But all the words of all the birds—
Ay. e'en the songs, magician—
All sweetest notes from singing throats,
Fade, as at dawn a vision.
When, be It catch or lullaby.
Or songs of battle ringing.
Love lays or hymns of liberty,
1 hear my darling singing.
For song each bird hath times prefcrred-
Wlien winter winds are gnarling
Each tender tree the chickadee
Outslngs the housed starling.
But whether blows the summer's rose,
Or winter's winds be snarling.
Be spring abloom, or fall In gloom
Still sweeter sings my darling.
—Henry Austin in Century.
And leave what must the housewife please —
The happy ajmbol we call ease.
the hands and could scarcely realise
how soft and " oomfy " they felt after
the washing.
Then began the excitement of adven-
ture; what would the new soap NOT
do? A girl tried a shampoo. Her
hair, pretty soft and silky " went up "
perfectly, with none of the unmanage-
able ncss that generally exist* for m full
week after the usual prrtct a. A man
used the delightful lather for shaving,
and felt no need for cold creata after-
wards. A pimply face was treated
to a dally bath- Ing with the
full suds, and / promptly be-
came clear. / \ Tartar on
the teeth / \ yielded
to it, / and
feet / \ thai
WHY TAKE DAINTY
CARE of your mouth and
neglect your pores, the myriad
mouths of your skin f Hand
Sapolio does not gloss them
over, or chemically dissolve
their health-giving oils, yet
clears them thoroughly by a
method of its own.
I
had a
ency to-
hardening
regained their
tend*
w a r 4 $
of the akin
natural condl-
(jleasure. It freshened up the handi
after dish-washing, removing the most
disagreeable feature of that necessary
task. It was found to keep delicate
baby skins from chafing better than
salve or powder, and the crowning
note In the song of delight came when
an adult member of the family used It
In a full bath, and realized that a
Turkish Bath at a cost of one dollar
was outdone by a small fraction of the
little, ten-cent, velvety cake.
But, strange though It may seem,
there were people who had n-r>t learned
to prize Sapollo. To these the adver-
tising of Hand Sapollo came as a
surprise. Sapollo, a scouring soap,
tlon, till another family bad Joined the
chorus of friendly acclaim. And so H
Is everywhere, those who know the
"elder brother" welcome the new-
comer, for the sake of the first known,
and those who meet both for the first
time are plunged Into m whimsical
worry as to which they could better
spare If they had to make a choice.
TRY HAND SAPOLIO.
Its steady use will keep the hands
of any busy woman as white, un>
tanned ana pretty as if she was
under the constant care of a city
manicure. It is truly "The Dainty
Woman's Friend," in ths suburbs
or on the farm.
Those ugly dark brown streaks
on the neck, arising from tight
collars, and the line where the
sunburn stops, can be wiped out
by the relvety lather of Hand
Sapolio. It is, indeed, "Tbs
Dainty Woman's Friend."
THE FIRST STEP away
from salf.rcApad la lack ot
cars In personal cleanli-
ness I the iirat non In
hulldlnrf op a proper pride
la man, woman, or child
la a visit to the bathtub.
You can't be healthy, or
pretty, or even 4ood, un-
less you ara clean. (Jaa
HAND SAPOLIO. It
pleaaaa everyoua.
Novel Lighting Plant.
The new Williamsburg bridge, in
New York, Is to be lighted by a mu-
nicipal plant, the power for which will
be developed from the burning of
street sweepings. It is announced
that the incinerating plant has been
installed and that everything will be
Id operation by October 1.
*
adapted for the hands, the face, the
general toilet? Impossible, It would
be horrid. Who ever heard of such a
use ? Finally a bold shopper carried
home a cake. Does it look like kit-
chen Sapollo? So one Is sure, and a
cake of that Is bought, and comparison
made. Behold a family using both the
Sapolios for every conceivable pur-
pose, and comparing notesI After
easily and quickly cleansing a greasy
pan with Sapollo, Jane thought the
other would be gritty, and was aston-
ished at the smofith, dainty lather.
Aaothft wmm certain It would harden
Be Alive
If a boy Is to succeed in life's bat-
tle for bread and position among
those at toe top he must be alive.
If he is a cigarette fiend ho will never
be anything or anybody but a com-
mon drudge, unless he quickly breaks
the habit. Success tells what a young
man must do to win.
"No young man can hope to advance
rapidly who lacks an enterprising,
progressive spirit. Indeed, enterprise
Is a resuisite to employment. No
one wants to employ a youth who
hicks push. He must be alive to
and in touch wi'h the spirit of the
hour, or he is not wanted anywhere.
The enterprising employer wants
every employe lo share his spirit.
The nnenierprl3ing business man
feels all the more keenly the need of
assistance from those who can make
up for his failing. Force, pushing,
dynamic qualities are everywhere in
eager demand, while the dw&dling, in-
competent, unprogressive wait in vain
for a start, for promotion.
Two tnousand tons of ore per week
-.re being shipped out of the Tonoptf
region.
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Shaw & Parham. Pauls Valley Sentinel (Pauls Valley, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 19, 1905, newspaper, October 19, 1905; Pauls Valley, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc110276/m1/15/: accessed June 21, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.