The Noble Weekly Journal. (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, April 21, 1905 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
J.
T
A 1 f
t
Hl« Wealth in Creases.
"One of the greatest fascinations ot
•avlng money.- said the man wbo had
Just treated, "lies in the fact that what
you put aside is bound to develop your
resources. For instance, take this
dollar bill; It's doubled when I place
It in my pocket and in creases when
I take it out."
Every housekeeper should know
that if they will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they
will save not only time, because it
never sticks to the iron, but because
each package contains 16 oz.—one ful)
pound—while all other Cold Water
Starches aro put up in %-pound pack- J
ages, and the price is the same, 10
cents. Then again because Defiance
Starch 1b free Irom all injurious chem-
icals. If your grocer tries to sell you
a 12-oz. package It Is because he has
a stock on baud which he wishes to j
dispose of before he puts in Defiance.
He knows that Defiance Starch has
printed on every package in large let-
ters and figures "16 ozs." Demand De-
fcance and savs much time and money
and the annoyance of the iron stick-
ing. Defiance never sticks.
Many Towns Named Washington.
Almost every state has a Washing-
ton. Washington, Ky., is one of the
oldest towns in the state and almost
contemporaneous with Washington, D.
C. Its old courthouse was erected In
1794.
THE FISH BRAND SLICKER
A VALUED FRIEND
"a good many year* ago i bought a
fish brand Slicker, and it ha> proven
j valued friend for many a stormy day, but
now it is getting old and 1 mu«t have
another. Please «end me a price-list."
(The nam* of thla worfhr doctor, obliirM to b« out In all
•ort« of weather, will be given on application.)
HiyiFSTJ\V\l!I)«IIKI,IISF\IR.l!)OI,
A. J. TOWER CO.
Boiton, u. s. a.
TOWER CANADIAN
COMPANY, Limited
Toronto, Canada
Wet Weather Clothing, Suits, and Hats for
all kinds of wet work or sport
*tfJW£R3
ALL BROKEN DOWN..
No Sleep—No Appetite—Just a Con-
tinual Backache.
Joseph McCauley. of 144 Sholto
street, Chicago. Sachem of Tecumseh
Lodge, says: "Two years ago my
health was com-
pletely broken dow
My back ached and
^ was so lame that at
times I was hardly
able to dress myself.
I lost my appetite
and was unablo to
sleep There seemed
to bo uo relief until
I took Doan's Kid
ney Pills; but four boxes of this rem
edy effected a complete and perma
nent cure. If suffering humanity knew
the value of Doan's Kidney Pills thoy
would use nothing else, as It is the
only positive cure 1 know."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster Milburn Co . Iluffulo. N.Y
0, cursed lust of gold! When foi
thy sake the fool throws up his in
terest in both worlds, first starved in
this, then damned in that to come.—
Blair.
"It Knocks the Itch."
It may not cure all your ills, hut it
does cure one of the worst. It cures
any form of itch ever known
matter what it's called, where th
sensation is "itch," it knocks it. Ec
zema, ringworms and all the rest art
relieved at once and cured by
box. It's guaranteed, and it's namt
is Hunt's ^i'"c
God be thanked for books; they art
voices of the distant and the dead
and make us heirs of the spirtua)
life of past ages.—Channing.
EXCURSIONS
TO THE
Free Grant Lands
OF
Western Canada.
During the months of March and April, tta* n
*ill Ik- rxcursions on the various lines of rail-
way to the Canadian West.
Hundreds of thousands of acres of the best
Wheat and ( razing Lands on the Continent
free to the settlor.
Adjohiing lands may be purchased from rail
way und land companies at reasonable prices.
For information as to route, cost of transpor-
taiion etc . apply to Superintendent of Immi-
gration, Ottawa. Canada, or to authored Can-
adian Government Agent—J. S. Crawford, No.
125 W. Ninth Street, Kansas City, Missouri.
<>0000000000000000000000000
fn a Pinch, Uie ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE.
a powder. It cures painful,smarting, nerv.
ous feet and ingrowing nails. It s th«
greatest comfort discovery of the age,
Makes new shoes easy. a certain cure foi
sweating feet. Sold by all druggists, 25c.
Trial package free. Address a.
Olmsted, Le Roy, n. y.
English Hotel Menus.
In spite of the cordon rouge,
spite of the universal cookery
hibition, the best hotel in England 1
not as good as any second-class French
one, says Food and Cookery.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
nnot reach the
> Is only une way t<
cure deafneaa, and that la by constitutional retuedlea
Deafnean la caua*tl by *n Inflamed condition of tin
raucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. Wben thli
tube la Inflamed you have a ruuibllwj aotind or Im-
perfect hearing, and when It la entirely closed. Deaf
neas la the reault, and unleaa the Inflammation can b<
taken out and thla tube restored to lta normal condl
tlon, bearing will bo demrnyod forever; nine caaei
out of ten are caused by < atarrh, which la n-<thln|
but an Inflamed condition of the mucoua surfaces.
We win give One Hundred Dollars for any caae o1
Deafneaa (caused by catarrh i that cannot bo curec
by llall'a Catarrh Cure, bend for circulars, freo.
F. J. CUENKY A CO., Toledo, O
Sold by Druggists, 73c.
Take flail's Family Fills for constipation.
A Marvel or Relier
St Jacobs Oil
Safe and sure for
Lumbago
and
Sciatica
It Is the specific virtue of penetration in this
remedy that carries it light to tho pain spot
and effects a prompt cure.
Demand for Plows in Greece.
There are now some 10,000 modern
plows in use In Greece, against 14,000
antiquated ones. Greece is said to of
'er a very good market at present for
he sale of agricultural Implements
Miserable Conditions
Of body and mind, always result from
i torpid liver, which leads to bile
poisons being absorbed int" the blood
and poisoning all the ner\„s and tis-
sues. This dreadful state, some of the
symptoms of which are headache, bit
ter taste, nausea, lack of appetite,
yellow complexion, constipation, etc.,
?an be quickly cured by taking dr
Caldwell's (laxative) Syrup Pepsin
it relieves the strain on your liver,
relaxos the tightened bowels, purifies
the blood, strengthens the stomach
nd makes it as clean as a whistle
The result is perfect health, and free
iom from pain and discomfort. Try
It. Sold by all druggists at 50c and
51.00. Money back if it fails.
Good Artist Vs. Bad Man.
Alfred Gilbert, the artist, told his
Royal Academy audience—according
to the report In the London Pall Mall
Gazette that the good artist nevet
was a bad man, and the bad man *ev
er was a good artist. And what does
Mr. Gilbert think of the artistic abil
ity of that champion all-round bad
man, Benvenuto Cellini?
THE SECRET OUT.
The Door Stands Wide Open.
To refute the many falso and malici-
ous attacks, bogus formulas and other
untruthful statements published concern-
ing Doctor Pierce's World-famed Family
Medicines the Doctor has decided to pub-
lish all the ingredients entering into his
"Favorite Prescription" for women and
liis equally popular tonic alterative
known as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery. Hereafter every bottlo of
these medicines leaving the great Labor-
atory at Buffalo, n. y., will bear upon it
a full list of all the ingredients entering
into the compound. Both are made en-
tirely from native roots, barks and herbs.
The ingredients of the "Golden Med-
ical Discovery " being Golden Seal root,
Queen's root. Black-cliorrybark, Man-
drake root, Bloodroot.
Why Is it so many have been strength-
ened and benefited by tho tonic effect of
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery ?
It is because at this time of the year
people feel run-down, nerveless, sleepless
and worn out. Poisons havo accumu-
lated In their body during the long win-
ter. Their blood stores up a lot of wasto
product which poisons the system. That
is why in tho spring and early summer a
tonic is almost a necessity. Dr. Pierce's
Goldon Medical Discovery being made of
mecHcianal plants, is next to nature and
the best tonic you can use. For tho same
reason that vegetables and greens aro
good for tho system at this time of tho
year, so is It truo that a tonic madft up
entiroly of medicinal plants, without the
use of alcohol, is tho proper modlclno to
take at this time. It fills tho blood with
rich, red blood corpuscles. It gives you a
feeling of strength, and It puts unshlna
Into your system as no other remedy can.
That,Is why Dr. Pierce's Goldon Medical
Discovery has been such a favorlto for
the past forty years. He Is not afraid to
woman can bo handsomo who has Im-
purities in tho blood, for it will show in
pimples, boils, and eruptions, in the dark
circles under the eyes and in the sallow
complexion. After taking "Goldon Med-
ical Discovery" you aro bound to havo
pink cheeks and a fresh complexion.
Tho muscles get the good, rich, red blood,
that puts on strength. It is a flesh
builder, but not a fat builder.
As an example of the good results thu3
obtained, noto tho following letter:
"In the year 1899, i had an attack of
indigestion and got so bad that my homo
doctor said ho could not do me any good,"
writes Mr. g. Trent, of Gordonville,
Texas. "i wrote to you and you advised
mo to use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery, so i bought six bottles, and
when i commenced using it i was so
weak could hardly walk about the house.
By tho time i had used one bottlo my
stomach and bowels commenced to heal.
Thero woro strips of the lining of my
bowels as large as a man's two fingers
passed and i had a great deal of misery
in my stomach and bowels, and also in
tho rectum especially. i could not eat
anything without having much distress
afterward, but by the time i had taken
eight bottles of the ' Golden Medical Dis-
covery'i was sound and well, and could
eat anything i pleased without suffering
in tho least. Could also do as much
work in a day as i ever could. i have
not suffered from the trouble since."
n - ^'ood,tcmPe^,3
LSI • rlcrtc o largely a mat-
tor of good
health, and good health is largely a mat-
tor of healthy activity of tho bowels. Dr.
Pierce's I'loosant Pellets euro constipa-
! iin im not bjmm m they aro safe, sure and speedy,
open his laboratory to tho public, and he ! omf"lI♦ ?«pJi?, V>°"^b° tak,e.n
invites every one to visit his Invalids j I' li twni mlM gentle
Hotel and Surgical Instltuto, at Buffalo, j iathar«^ ThTv nSlH n ti j.
N. Y., to see how systematically the sick , Hjj all Pallets
are taken care of and cured, as well as ^ druggists. •
looking over his huge laboratory and see- The selfish seller who urges some sub-
ing the scientific methods of preparing stitute is thinking of the larger profit
ithu wonderful tonic, ^either niau uot I ho'll make and not of your best good.
getting close to evidence.
Proof That Minister Was at Least on
the Right Track.
Lawyer Jones was the pride of a
flourishing seaport village of Maine.
He stood well at the bar of the coun-
ty. and his forensic triumphs reflected
glory on his town. He was an es-
pecial authority on evidence. #
After middle life, in spite of the pro-
fclbitory law, he got Into the way of
tippling and was sometimes Been the
worse for liquor. His good neighbors
bemoaned the fact and decided to get
the popular minister to labor with tho
erring brother.
The minister accepted his delicate
mission, and one morning, meeting
Mr. Jones on tho street, he cordially
took his arm and walked along with
him. After some commonplace re-
marks he said: "My dear Mr. Jones,
>ou are greatly loved and respected in
this community, but i am sorry to say
that some of your best friends are
disturbed by stories they have heard
about your drinking."
"All idle tales," said Jones. "i do
not drink."
Tho minister caught a whiff of his
breath as he spoke, and, with signs of
Irritation in his voice, replied: "Now,
Jones, what is the use of talking
that way? i know by your breath that
you have ben drinking to-day."
"Well," said Jones, "now you are
approaching evidence."
found out all about it.
How Englishman's Thirst for Informa-
tion Was Satisfied.
One day when wo were preparing
the American exhibit at the Paris ex-
position," said Dr. William McMur-
trie, the chemical expert, "i was ar-
ranging some bottles of wine when an
Englishman came along. i would
have recognized him for an English
man in the center of Africa. He
stood and watched me for a while and
then inquired, with the non-repro-
ducable English accent, 'Is that wine?1
"i told him it was. "Did it come
from America?' he asked. i satisfied
his curiosity. 'Do you make wine in
America?' was his next question,
now imagined that he was trying to
guy me, and answered rather shortly
that we did. 'What do you make it
of?' he inquired insatiably. i was
now sure that he was trying to guy
me, so i answered: 'Why, potatoes,
of course. What did you think we
made it of?' a minute afterward
was sorry, for i saw that he had been
perfectly sincere in his thirst for in
formation. With an expression of
childlike admiration he remarked,
'Fawncy! i knew you didn't have any
grapes in America, but i never
thought you were clever enough to
make it out of potatoes.'"—New York
Times.
His torments
fears himself.
are constant Who
•I>r. navld Kennedr'a Favorite Remedy.
Londout.N Y .cur^d ni? *rTi>us khlimv IfvuMw trained
I pwunUa. ' ft. V« arU«ll, btuiu«lua, a. J. a. .*
Nothing better can be gotten than
, firm friend.
i a'wis' "Single Binder" straight .v cigar,
Hade of extra quality tobacco. You pay
loc fur cigars not good. Lewis' Factory.
Peoria. 11l
Help Is
Willingly.
twice pleasant If given
All Upto-Date Housekeeper*
Use Defiance Cold Water Starch, be-
cause It Is better, and 4 oz. more of It
for same money.
To recelvo a benefit is to sell your
liberty.
VSK THE PA MOC8
Red Cross ltull lliur. Large 2-oz. package 5
cents. Th? lluss ('urn panv, South ltcnd, lad.
No hour is good to one which Is
ill to another.
mrs. wi ti alow'a soothing Rjrran,
For children teething, aofteua the kuids, redurea ti>
Mwnifcuuu, allay a p tfu. cure* wind colic. * buiua
He receives a great many benefits
who knows how to return them.
B8ct«.. I8>20 Bust Crayon OSrta. Send Tour
Pli _ HI1.1 y-MH .nil we will ULkr a Idx*i Mil.I ( r*t< r..
Boutbweitern Armti' Awociatjoa. Dall...
You siu doubly when you flatter a
sinner.
"Elberfeld System" of Poor Relief.
This mode of relieving distress is
named after the German city that in-
stituted it. a town is divided into
districts, and each district, under an
honorary agent, is subdivided into
wards, and placed in charge of a vol
t:rtary "helper," usually a person liv
ing close to the part allotted to him
Every application for relief must be
made to the "helper" of the ward in
which the applicant resides, and be
made personally. It is far speedier
ic its working than the English sys-
tem, and also aims at being a pre-
ventive as well as a relieving system,
the particular object being to discov-
ei every case of genuine distress and
ito classify and register them when
known and prevent abuse. It has been
adopted by Leicester and Bradford
among English towns.
Was Taking No Chances.
Attorney General Mayer relates the
story of a gentleman from the coun-
try who visited a hotel in a to n on
the New York Central and read a no-
tice, "Safe in the office." The coun-
tryman went downstairs, and reclin-
ing on a sofa in the office, went to
sleep, where he was found about -
o'clock the next morning by the clerk.
"Here' wake up," said the clerk;
what are you sleeping down here
fcr?" The countryman answered very
mildly: "Well, you see, i have al-
ways had a fear of fires in a hotel,
and when i read your sign, 'Safe in
the office,' i thought i would sleep
'.own here."—New York Times.
Co-Education Abroad.
In a report made about four years
ago it was shown that in the elemen-
tary schools of England boys and
girls mingle together in 65 per cent of
the classes. In Scotland the practice
is almost universal, co-education be-
ing practiced in 97 per cent of the
schools. In Ireland 51 per cent of the
ational schools have a mixed attend-
nee of boys and girls.
European Thrones.
At present the only thrones in Eu-
ope not occupied by a descendant of
ames I. of England are those of Ser-
via, Turkey and Sweden-Norway. But
as Princess Margaret of Connaup' ia
to be married to the Crown P.,nce
Oscar, the throne of Sweden-Norway
may be, in due time, occupied by a
cescendant of James i., like the rest.
i do not bclirve PIno'b Cure for Consumption
hii# an equal for coughs and colds.—John f.
llo Y eh, Trinity Springs, i ml , Feb. 16,1BUU.
Death Is pleasant to the man who
puts an end to the evils of his life.
Much valuable information free about
band instruments; write for tin- new cata-
logue to-day. JENKINS' MUSIC HOUSE
KANSAS CITY, HO. "uuat,
Whoso gives to a worthy man re-
ceives benefit from giving?
Defiance Starch
should he in every household, none so
good, besides 4 oz. more for 10 cents
than any other brand of cold water
starch.
Love is made sweet by compliment-
not command.
Many Children Are Sickly.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children,
used by Mother Gray, a riurse in Children's
Home,New York, Cure Feverishness,Head-
ache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Dis-
orders, Break up Colds and Destroy Worms.
AtallDruggists',25c. Samplemailed free.
Address Allen s. Olmsted, Le Roy, n. y.
We always like those who admire
us, but we do not always like those
whom we admire.—Rochefoncauld.
"Very Soon."
If you have an ache or a pain, a
sprained joint, or cut finger, a burn
or a bruise, other remedies may help
them—Hunt's Lightning Oil will cure
them, and do it soon, very soon.
Primitive Corn-Grinding Methods.
In the old Babylonian 'days, the
wheat and corn were crushed by hand
mills made from two circular flat
stones, the upper stone moving on a
flat wooden pivot, and turned with a
wooden handle.
The Present Rate Law.
The duties of the present Interstate
Commerce Commission are to correct
all discriminations in railroad rates.
If it finds that an unjust rate is in
cffect, the railroad is notified. If it
declines to change it, the Commission
can bring suit in Court and if the
Court decides in favor of the Com-
missioners' finding, the railroad must
obey, or its officers may be brought up
for contempt of court and summarily
dealt with.
Musicians Must Work Hard.
Rubensteln—that thunderer of the
keyboard—is credited with the follow-
ing dictum: "If i do not practice for
a day i know it; if i miss two days
my friends know it; and if i miss
three days the public knows it."
baby's awful eczema.
Face Like Raw Beef—Thought She
Would Lose Her Ear—Healed
Without a Blemish—Moth-
er Thanks Cuticura.
My little girl had eczema very bad
when she was ten months old. i
thought she would lose her right ear. [
It had turned black, and her face was
like a piece of raw meat, and very
sore. It would bleed when I washed
her, and i had to keep cloths on it j
day and night. There was not a clear ;
spot on her face when I began using j
Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and now I
it is completely healed, without scar
or blemish, which is more than i had
hoped for. (Signed) Mrs. Rose Ether, j
291 Eckford St.. Brooklyn, N. Y."
Small Men Intellectual.
Canon Kingsley, not long before his
death, drew attention to the number J
of short men who could be seen in !
a London crowd. He looked on it as
a sign of the deterioration of the race.
But there are those who look at It as
an indication of progress in intellec-
tual lines at least, for many if not
most of the great men of history have
been men below the medium height
PAINFUL PERIODS
Suggestions How to Find Relief from Such
Suffering.
liss/Vellie Holmes
AlrsTt Hi
While no woman is entirely free from I Vegetable Cotn|K>ttn<l sooner; for i have tried
periodical suffering, it does not seem to , 841 many remedy* without h-ln.
5>e the plan of nature that women "} <ir*H'l4Ml tho appro i h or my menstrual
should suffer so severely. Menstrua- : «vwry iii uith, "k it m.-unt . mu. h pain
.. . | , and HUlierinR for me, but after I had used tha
Lou is a severe strain on a woman's imd two months | ^
vitality. If it is painful or irregular | natural and am now iwrftvtlv well and froo
something is wrong which should be ] from pain &tiny monthly periods. i am very
grateful for what Lydia F. l'inkham's Vogo-
table Compound has dono for inn."
Much testimony should be accepted
by all women as convincing evidence
have testified In grateful letters to Mrs. | that Lydia e. Finkham's Vegetable
set right or it will lead to a serious de-
rangement of the whole female organ-
ism.
More than fifty thousand women
Pinkhain that Lydia k. i'inkham's
Vegetable Compound overcomes pain-
ful and irregular menstruation.
It provides a safe and sure way of es-
cape from distressing and dangerous
weaknesses and diseases.
The two following letters tell so con-
vincingly what Lydia e. i'inkham's
Vegetable Compound will do for
women, they cannot fail to bring hope
to thousands of sufferers.
Miss Nellie Holm-js of 540 n. Davi-
sion Street, Buffalo, n. y., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —
" Your medicine is indeed an ideal medicine
for women. 1 suffered misery for years with
1 wiinf ill periods, headaches, and bearing-down
pains. i consulted two different physicians
but failed to pet any reliof. a friend from
tho East advised me to try Lydia e. i'ink-
ham's Vegetable Compound. i did so, and
no longer suffer as i did before. My periods
are uatural: every ache and pain is gone, and
my general hoalth is much improved i
advise all women who suffer to take Lydia
e. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."
Mrs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, n. d.,
writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
" i might have have been spared many
months of suifering and pain hail i only
known of the ellicacy of Lydia e. Pinkham's
Compound stands without a peer as a
remedy for all tho distressing ills of
women.
The success of Lydia e. i'inkham's
Vegetable Compound rests upon the
well-earned gratitude of American
women.
When women are troubled with irreg-
ular, suppressed or painful menstrua-
tion, leucorrhiea, displacement or ul-
ceration of the womb, that bearing-
down feeling, inflammation of the
ovaries, backache, bloating, (or flatu-
lency), general debility, indigestion and
nervous prostration, or are beset with
such symptoms as dizziness, faintness,
lassitude, excitability, irritability, ner-
vousness, sleeplessness, melancholy,
they should remember there is one tried
and true remedy, Lydia e. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound at once removes
such troubles. Refuse to buy any other
medfeine, for you need the best.
Don't hesitate to write to IIrs.
einklinni if there is anything
about your sickucss you do not
:inderBtaii<l. 8lie will treat you
witli kindness mid her advice is
iroe. No woman ever regretted
writing her anil she lias helped
thousands. Address Lynn, .Mass.
Ask Nrs. Pinkham's Advicc A Woman Best Understands a Woman's I Us,
Say Plainly to Your Grocer
Tlmt you want LION COFFEE always, nnd ho,
being a squaro man, will not try to sell you any-
thing else. You may not core for our ojjinion, but
What About the United Judgment of Millions
of housekeepers who have usod LION COFFEE
for over a quarter of a century ?
Is there any stronger proof of merit, than the
Confidence of the People
and ever increasing popularity?
HON COFFEE is carclully se-
lected at the plantation, shipped
direct to our various factories,
where it is skilJiulIy roasted and
careiuiiy packed in sealed pack-
ages— unlike loose collet, which
Is exposed to germs, dust, in-
sects. etc. LION COFFEE reaches
you as pure and clean as when
It left the lactory. Sold only in
1. lb. packages.
Lion-head on every package.
Save those Lion-heads for valuable premiums.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
woolson spice co., Toledo, Ohio.
NO MONEY TILL CURED. 28 tears established?
We tend PREE and postpaid a 320-paxc treatise on Piles, Fistula and Diseases of tb«
Rectum; also lOft-page iHuh. treatise on Dlseasefl of Women. Of the thousands cured by
•ur mild method, none paid a cent till cured—we farntab their names oo spplicatioa.
OB. TNOBMTOM& WlMOfi,
COTTON GINNING MACHINERY
We Make the Best.
We Make the Largest Line in the World.
Wo have more well pleased and happy customers than all other
makers combined, because they are making money. You know the
MUNGER, PRATT, EA(iLE£, WINSHIP and SMITH gooas.
We make them. Write us for prices and catalogue.
CONTINENTAL GIN COMPANY, DALLAS, TEXAS
-Indi.
In Colonial Days.
The Indian—See heap skins-
an Kreat hunter.
The Trader—Yes. Give bottle fire-
\\r.ter for skins.
The Indian—Make it two bottles,
ian great bargain hunter.
That Man Next Door.
Clerk—Revolver? Yes, sir. Six-
shooter?
Customer—Yes, i guess that will do.
If i can't kill him or at least ruin
his cornet six shots i'll give it up.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
*sk°deakTo°°*e *^ oafd^MOr ^an* Dacl<aOe colors silk, *ooi and cotton equally well and is quaranteed to give perfect result*,
dealer or *ewill send post paid at 10c ■ package. Write for free booklet—How to D>e. Bleach and Mix Colors. MOMIUK DHL U CO.. LUlonville,
Nations, like; individuals, live or
die, but civiliztaion cannot perish.—
Mazzini.
"How's Your Appetite?"
Does this weather make you want
to set down and stay set? Does your
food disgust you? If so, you need
Simmon's Sarsaparilla. It picks you
up, keeps you up, and the grocery
, bill tells about your appetite.
i It is very easy for a man to tell
what he would do if placed in the
position of some other man.
Insist on Getting It.
Some grocers say they don't keep
Defiance Starch. This is because they
have a stock on hand of other brands
containing: only 12 oz in a package,
which they won't be able to sell first,
because Defiance contains 16 oz. for
the same money.
Do you want 16 oz. instead of 12 oz.
for same money? Then buy Defiance
Starch. Requires no cooking.
$20 fo S40
Clark, Kimball, Chicago Cottage slightly used,
guaranteed like new; special dcsi-riytions >3
prices for the asking. Write to-ilay.
jenkins' music house, kansas city. mq.
Wbeii writing mention this paper.
w. n. u., Oklahoma City, 16, 1905
Thompson's Eye Water
BEGGS' BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES catarrh ol the stomach.
casts where u el.'e ruiis^.
est lough Syrup. Tatfes Good. Ui
CONSUMPTION
ae c
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Carley & Robison. The Noble Weekly Journal. (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, April 21, 1905, newspaper, April 21, 1905; Noble, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117870/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.