The Nowata Advertiser. (Nowata, Indian Terr.), Vol. 10, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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THE NOWATA ADVERTISER, NOWATA, I. T.
MR. HAYDEN'S VIEWS'
A SUPPLEMENTARY MES8AGE
GIVES HIS OPINION OF THE BEST
TREATMENT FOR PARALYSIS,
Declare* That Dr. William*’ Pink rill*
Kestored the tw of HU Limbs Wliea
All Other Remedies Failed.
The premonitory symptoms of paraly-
sis are: trembling of the hands; sudden
loss of power in arms or legs, frequently
affecting one whole side of the body; stag-
gering; partial or entire inability to use
the fingers; distortion of the features,
sometimes an uncontrollable quivering
of the chin; severe pains; difficulty in
speech. Frequently the first warning is
a vague feeling of headache, vertigo and
muscular weakness.
In a recent interview Mr. W. J. L.
Hayden said : " I truly think that Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills are a great medi-
cine for they cured me when physicians
and other remedies had failed to give
me the slightest relief. Too close at-
tention to business brought on an attack
of nervousness which finally developed
into paralysis. There were times when
it was impossible for me to move my
hands or to get up from a clmir. At
other times 1 had partial control of my
limbs, but I was afraid to go far from
the house for fear I might suddenly be-
come helpless and have to be carried
home.
"While I was in this miserable con-
dition, I was stricken with malariul fever
and confined to bed for four mouths. I
had the best physicians, bat while they
relieved my fever, their treatment did
not entirely drive the malnria from my
system, and they did not help my par-
alysis in the least,
“ I was well, nigh despairing when a
friend persuaded me to try Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills. When 1 had finished oue box
I could see results that encouraged me
My condition kept steadily improving,
and when I had taken seven boxes I was
cured of paralysis and the malaria was
completely driven out of my system.
For two years now I have enjoyed the
best of health and have attended to bus-
iness without auy interruption.”
Mr. Hayden’s home is at No. 252 West
89th street. New York. Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills have cured many similar eases
of paralysis, also locomotor ataxia. They
are sold by all drnggists. A treatment
so simple, inexpensive and successful
should be tried by every sufferer from
partial paralysis in any of its stages.
A process Invented by an English-
man named Powell for treating tim-
ber with a solution of sugar Is de-
scribed In Nature (London), which
says: “The result is that all kinds of
wood are made tougher, heavier and
more lasting, while the softer varie-
ties become more useful and more or-
namental when worked. Besides this
It Is possibel to put fresh and un-
seasoned timber through the process
without delay, and after treatment the
•Poewlllzed’ wood Is ready for Immedi-
ate use, as there is no danger of Us
shrinking or warping. The timber is
placed In cages which arc wheeled
Into a boiler, and after this has been
closed a solution of beet sugar is
pumped in, although an open tank can
be. utilized. The solution takes the
place of air In the timber, and Is ab-
sorbed by the individual fibers, for
microscopic examination fails to dem-
onstrate the presence of sugar crys-
tals between them.’
GRA ItrUL TO CUTICURA
For Instant Relief and Speedy Cure ol
Raw and Scaly Humour, Itching
Day and Night—Suffered
Months.
"I wish you would publish this let-
ter so that others suffering as I have
may be helped. For months awful
sores covered my face and neck, scabs
forming, Itching terribly day and
night, breaking open, and running
blood and matter. 1 had tried many
remedies, but was growing worse,
when I started with Cutlcura. The
first application gave me Instant re
lief, and when I had used two cakes
of Cutlcura Soap and three boxes ol
Cutlcura Ointment, I was completely
cured, (signed) Miss Nellie Vander
Wiele, Lakeside, N. Y.’’
The suggestion advanced by Chas.
A. Parsons at the recent British asso-
ciation meeting, that deep borings
should be made in the earth's crust
for the purposes of investigation of
the earth's interior, and that a shaft
such as this might be sunk to a depth
of twelve miles, has already been no-
ticed in -these columns. Says the
Scientific American: “Another sclen
tist has pointed out that the pressure
of the rock at such a depth represents
some forty tons per sqnarfc Inch and
would render the task Impossible,
owing to the Inward viscous flow of
the rock material. In reply the Hon.
C. A. Parsons suggests an experiment
to solve the problem. He points out
that the crushing stress required to
make hardened steel flow lies be-
tween 120 and 300 tons to the square
Inch, while for tough brass or car-
tridge metal the flow Is at about
eighty tons per square inch pressure.
His experiment would be to take a
column of granite or quartz rock and
carefully fit it Into a steel mold. A
snail hole would then be bored
through Its center, and a pressure of
100 tons per square Inch then applied,
ito observe what shrinkage would re-
sult. Such a pressure as this would
'correspond to that encountered at a
depth of thirty-eight miles.”
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
quantity and superior quality of De-
fiance Starch Is fast taking place of
all other brands. Others say they can-
not sell any other starch.
The homes of a union are the bul-
warks of personal and national safety
and thrift.—J. G. Holland.
Governor Ferguson Sent Message to
Assembly on Quarantine Matters
GUTHRIE: Governor Ferguson
sent to the legislature a supplementary
message, containing an opinion given
the governor by Attorney General 81-
I mons, to the effect that the govern-
ment Is supreme in dealing with mat-
ters in the Osage Indian reservation,
and therefore the Oklahoma legisla-
ture has no authority whatever to pass
a cattle quarantine or any other meas-
ures affecting that Indian nation. Gov-
ernor Ferguson says that the organic
act of the territory deals very plainly
on the subject and no doubts remain
relative to the government's jurisdic-
tion over all matters there. His sup-
plementary message, therefore, dis-
countenances any quarantine legisla-
tion that will Include the Osage In-
dian country. Both the Scott bill !n
the senate and the Taylor bill in the
bouse do include that nation, and the
members have persistently voted not
to eliminate the Osage country. The
government agents are now receiving
bids at Pawhuska, the capital of the
Osage country for pasture leases on
the lands covering a two-year period.
These leases are contracted by the In-
terior department and bring to the In-
dians an income of 8400,000 annually.
MARKET REPORTS
COTTON
Galvaaton Spots
Low ordinary, 3 10-16; ordinary,
4 1-1G; good ordinary, 5 5-16; low mid-
dling, 6 3-16; middling. 6 13-16; gool
middling, 7 3-16; middling fair, 7 9-16.
New Orleans
Ordinary, 4 3-16; good ordinary,
5 8-16; low middling, 6 4-16; middling,
6 12-16; good middling, 7 1-16.
LIVE STOCK
Chicago
CATTLE—Good to prime steers.
$5.4006.20; poor to medium, $3.50®
5.30; stockerB and feeders, $2.25®
4.25; cows, $1.25@4.25; heifers, $2.00
@5.00; bulls, $2.00@3.90; calves, $2.75
@7.25.
HOGS—Mixed and butchers, $4.05®
4.75; good to choice heavy, $4.70@
4.80; rough heavy. $4.55®4.C5; light,
$4.55@4.G0.
SHEEP—Good to choice wethers,
$4.90@5.G0; western sheep, $4.30@
5.50; western lambs. $4.3007.40.
Kansas City
CATTLE — Choice export and
dressed beef steers, $5.00®5.75; fair
to good, $3.50 0 4.85; western fed
steers, $5.50@5.40; Stockers and feed-
ers, $2.75@4.10; southern steers, $3.25
@4.60; southern cows. $2.2503.25;
heifers, $2.7504.25; bulls, $2.50@3.70;
calves, $3.00@6.50.
HOGS—Heavy, $4.7504.82; pack-
ers, $4.60@4.75; pigs and lights, $3.90
@4.80.
SHEEP—Western lambs, $6.00®
7.25; western sheep. $4.2805.50/
shockers and feeders, $3.50@5.50.
CASH GRAIN
Chicago
WHEAT—No. 2 red. $1.18; No. 3
red, $1.10@1.1G; No. 2 hard, $1.13®
1.16; No. 3 hard, $1.05@1.14; No. 1
new soft, $1.19.
CORN—No. 2. 43c; No 2 white, 43c;
No. 2 yellow, 42@43c.
OATS—No. 2 mixed, 30c; No. 2
white, 31@32c.
Kansas City
WHEAT—No. 2 hard, $1.0701.10:
No. 3 hard, $1.0501.06: No. 2 red,
$1.1101.14; No. 3 red. $1.0801.11.
CORN—No. 2 mixed. 43c; No. 3
mixed. 43c; No. 2 white, 44® 45c; No.
3 white, 44c.
OATS—No. 2 mixed. 31c; No. 3
mixed. 30c; No. 2 white, 31c; No. 3
white. 30@31c.
If a man gets rattled there must be
a screw loose somewhere.
Last English Pope
An English pope has been one of
the fancies of fiction In 194, but It is
more than doubtful whether It will
ever be a fact again. The first and
*.ast English pontiff was elected as
long ago as December 4. 1154. Nicho-
las Breakspeares was l*orn the son of
a laborer at Langley near St. Albans,
and lived a? Adrian IV., lo be one
of the most powerful and assertive
of the popes. It was he who com-
pelled the emperor, Frederick Bar-
barossa. to hold Ills stirrup, and when
he died in 1159 he was about to ex-
communicate the emperor. It was
Adrian IV. also who blessed and au-
thorized by virtue of the supposed
papal jurisdiction over all Islands his
old sovereign. Henry II.'s, resolve to
conquer Ireland.
A Remarkable Tomb
Doubtless the most remarkable
tomb in the world Is the Tomb of the
Eleven Thousand Virgins. The
thousands of bones here Interred are
those of St. Ursula and Ibe sisters of
her order. The tomb dates back to
the sixth century after Christ. The
bones are of various shapes and sizes.
Retail Coal Dealers Want Legislation
GUTHRIE; The retail coal dealers
of the territory closed a meeting here
which was held for the purpose of
asking legislation covering the short-
age of coal cars delivered by railroad
companies. A legislative committee
was appointed. This committee will
ask for rates for retail dealers, re-
quiring the railroad companies to de-
liver to the coal dealer the exact
amount of coal receipted for at the
mines. The association will meet
again on May 10.
This My Life
I strive to keep roe In the sun;
I pick no quarrel with the years.
Nor with the fates—not even the one
That holds the shears.
I take occasion by the hand;
I’m not too nice ’twlxt weed and
flower;
I do not stay to understand;
I tak*- mine hour.
The time Is short at best.
I push riaht onward while I, may;
I open to the winds my breast.
And walk the way.
A kind heart greets me here and there;
1 hide from It my doubts and fears.
I trudge, and say the path is fair
Along the years.
—John Vance Cheney In Independent.
Q
(Copyright. 1904. by Dally Story Pub. Co.)
“My dears,” said Mrs. Clark, looking
up from a letter sbe had been read-
ing, "Mollie Mltford Is coming to pay
us a visit She will be here next
week.”
“But. Mamma," said Jane, with elon-
gated visage, “Uncle Thomas will be
here then.”
“There's no danger," . replied Mrs.
Clark, placidly, “Mollie Is crushed.
She's not designing.”
Jane shrugged her plump shoulders
and Lydia turned up her pretty nose,
but Mrs. Clark heeded not these man-
ifestations of disagreement and went
-on with her breakfast.
It was Mrs. Clark’s plain duty In life
to prevent designing women forcibly
marrying her brother-in-law. “He is
not fitted for the matrimonial state.’
she would say to friends and when
Captain Bascom spent his time at her
snug cottage, as he always did be-
tween voyages, he was carefully
guarded against feminine attack. A
rampart of sister-in-law and nieces
sheltered him from even a glance from
some spinster Lnd while he honored
the cottage with his presence It was
“ware hawks” to all unmarried la-
dles. They never crossed the thresh-
old of the Clark residence.
Captain Bascom liked his sister-in-
law and his nieces and enjoyed bis
visits though he was bored at times
over the presence of ancient matrons
who were occasionally Invited to tea.
He sometimes asked, plaintively. If
there were no well favored young
women in Pugsford. blit as he never
received a satisfactory answer he
doubtless imagined that well favored
young women were not indigenous
to Pugsford and that those whom he
occasionally saw on the street were
strangers.
Captain Bascom had two thousand
pounds invested in consols. Of a
verily this sum would come to the two
Miss Clarks on the captain's death,
provided—hut then, Mrs. Clark was
resolved there should be no “provid-
ed" if she could help it. Hence mar-
riageable and well favored spinsters
were rigidly excluded from the Clark
invitation list during the captain's
stay.
With Miss Mltford it was different.
She was not by any means bad look-
ing nor unattractive, but she was
crushed. Years before she bad been
engaged to be married and on the
wedding day the groom had disap-
peared as if the earth had swallowed
him. It was entirely proper that Miss
Mltford should be crushed, and crush-
ed she was. Young girls viewed her
with Intense .nterest as having a halo
of romance around her head and spin-
sters while averring that It served her
right for putting any sort of trust In
man admitted Bhe was most becoming-
ly crushed in her manner.
It was an odd coincidence that Miss
Mltford and Captain Bascom should
come down from London in the same
carriage and become acquainted on the
journey, but Mrs. Clark gave little
weight to this happening. She did,
‘•There’* no danger,” replied Mr*.
Clark, placidly, “Mollle's crushed.”
however, note a change in Miss Mlt-
ford'a manner. There was a faint
gleam of hopefulness about her which
puzzled Mrs. Clark. Miss Mltford had
long ago forsworn man, c-1 it was
scarcely possible that she had become
interested In someone. That some-
thing had happened. Mrs. Clark felt
sure, and she resolved to watch close-
ly for developments. The captain was
ns of yore. He shook tho house with
his roars of laughter and joked with
his nieces. He drank with gusto the
bowl of punch which Mrs. Clark, with
prayers for forgiveness, mixed with
her own hands. Mrs. Clark went to
bed relieved. Evidently Miss Mlt-
ford's change of manner did not re-
sult from anything the captain had
said to her in the railway carriage.
In the morning the development
came. Mrs. Clark beheld Captain Bes-
com and Miss Mltford talking ear-
nestly in the parlor and Miss Mltford
was wiping tears from her eyes. A
conference was held. Again were
Jane's plump shoulders shrugged and
again Lydia's pretty nose upturned.
The flat was pronounced. Miss Mit-
Was wiping tears from her eyes.
ford was to go. In the evening Jane
came breathlessly upstairs. She was
passing the parlor and had overheard
the captain say to Miss Mltford, “Say
yes, my dear.” That was all. but It
was enough and Mrs. Clark felt that
the whole edifice she had so carefully
built about those two thousand pounds
was toppling to the ground.
Miss Mitford left early the next
morning. What Mrs. Clark said to
her man knowetb not. but a woman
can get rid of a woman when she so
desires in a way that is not chroni-
cled. Mrs. Clark saw her go and drew
a breath of relief.
But the house Mrs. Clark had build-
ed about those two thousand pounds
rested on the sand. That evening
Captain Bascom announced that he
was going to London the next morn-
ing.
"When he goes. I’ll go, too," said
Mrs. Clark; there was fight in Mrs.
Clara.
Captain Bascom took the 9 a. m.
train for London. Mrs. Clarl: took the
10 a. ri. train, and on her arrival in
London was driven directly to the
dock*, where lay the captain's steam-
er.
"Yot've Just, missed ’lm," said t^e
mat?, in answer to her enquiry for the
captain. " 'E's took a cab and gone
habcut a half hour ago."
He. however, remembered the ad-
dress given by the captain to the cab
driver, ■».nd Mrs. Clark re-entered her
cab.
“He's taken lodging in Southwark,
my dters," she said, wilh set face.
“He wuuts to be near that designing
baggagtv. I'll break up her game.”
It was an unpretentious house In
Southwa-k at which the cab stopped,
and Mrs Clark, finding the captain
was wlthni, entered.
“ 'E's bwpstalrs,” said Ibe girl who
opened the door. "You can walk
hup.”
Plainly Lic.-e was a woman's voice
coming fiom the room which was
designated as containing the captain,
and Mrs. Clark shuddered and glanced
at her daughters. It was too late, for
the captain himself opened the door
and beckoned them in.
Miss Mitford knelt by a bed and a
thin, emaciated man held her hand.
"That's her lover,” whispered the
captain to Mrs. Clark, "the fellow
who cut and run the day he was to
marry her. It seems there was some
money missing In a banking house
where he was a clerk and they sus-
pected him. His uncle, a proud old
stick, made the loss good and told him
to leave England. He went to Africa,
up the Haut Congo, and saw nothing
but niggers and malaria for ten years.
Well, after he'd gone they found the
robber but they never found the lover.
He was among the niggers. He was
brought down to London to die and I
took him on my steamer so he could
get a breath of God's air. He told
me the whole story and when I met
Miss Mltford in the railway carriage
I remembered the name and I found
out she was the woman. I managed
to get her to come to see him and it’s
all righL His uncle's dead and left
him his money so they can get mar-
ried when he gets well.”
Mrs. Clark walked over to Misc
Mitford.
“Dearest Mollie.’’ Bhe said, “we will
take him out to Pugsford. He'll get
well quickly in that fresh air.”
“She'a a sweet woman." said Mrs.
Clark as she and her daughters left
the house. "There's nothing design-
ing about Mollie.”
A WOMAN’S MI8ERY.
HIS STEAK WAS READY.
Sarcasm of the Wife Not Wasted on
the Delinquent Husband.
Sarcasm loses nothing by awaiting
the psychological moment for its ua-
terance. Also It oftentimes is most
fraught with the sharpness of a two-
edged sword when it is contained In
a simple statement of fact.
A husband given to periodical looks
upon the cocktail when It contains a
cherry, hls glance at such times dwell-
ing thereon for two or three succes-
sive days without interruption, arose
one morning recently with a head out
of all proportion to hls hat measure,
and a throat that felt like a limekiln.
No explanation was needed \vhen he
told his wife he was going out for a
moment to get rid of the olive green
taste In hls mouth; he would be back
right away. All she said was: "Bring
a steak home with you for breakfast.”
He went to a cocktail dispensary
and got his brace. As he was going
out he met a friend, who told him he
would feel better If he had another.
He did feel better, bo much better
that he was prevailed on further to
Improve the state of his physical and
mental being by a third diving after a
cherry. He did not see hls home for
two days.
Again, one morning he awoke with
Iron hands pressing Into his head and
hfs tongue cleaving to the roof of hls
mouth. Hla wife heard him stirring
and went to the door. “Your steak is
ready,” she said.
Revival of the Album.
The photograph album Is about to
be restored to popular favor. For the
past ten years It has been relegated
to the garret, while people have hung
the pictures of relatives and friends
in airy bits of wire known as the pho-
tograph holder. Interjected Into stray
corners of bureaus or dressing tables
and generally maltreated them and al-
lowed them to be subjected to the dust
and grime of the dally atmosphere.
The now general use of the camera
has helped to restore the once passe
picture album to Its former dignified
position on the parlor table.
The new photograph albums are dif-
ferent from those of the days of long
ago. They are far more 'artistic and
easy to handle. Sometimes they are
made of fine leather, sometimes ol
soft kid. but at all events they are not
so likely to jar upon artistic sensibili-
ties as did the velvet and plush af
fairs which were once the pride and
adornment of the parlor tables of all
well-regulated households.
Raconteur.
When TTncle Jabex makes a Joke, It's
mighty hard to tell
'Jen what a feller ought to do.
'Cause if you laugh 'fore he gets
through
It riles him up a spell.
An' then a tireadful silence comes; it's
minutes till It's broke.
Paw holds hls breath
Skeerod half to deujh.
When uncle makes u Joke.
When ordinary people tell us riddles,
there Is fun.
But when folks happen to be .rich
It's hard to tell which thing Is which
That's proper to he done.
An* paw. he says. If Jabcz overlooks us
we'll be broke.
We must laugh right
And be oolite
When uncle makes a Joke.
An' so. In order not lo take a chance,
however small.
Paw has collected the whole lot
An' told ’em over till we've got
To know ’em one an' all.
An' now we laugh exactly when a certain
word is spoke.
Maw needn't nudge.
Paw needn't budge.
When uncle tells a joke.
—Washington 8tnr.
Low Prices in Philadelphia.
An Interesting and amusing Instance
of business acumen on the part of a
German butcher in Philadelphia is fur-
nished by a gentleman in that city.
"One day," says this gentleman. “I
inquired of the butcher the price of
sausage.”
“ 'Sausage iss sixteen cents a
pound,’ replied ho, after a moment’s
hesitation; ‘but to-day I haven't no
sausage already.’
"Whereupon 1 asked why. If he had
not the goods he should quote a price
thereon."
“ 'Der question iss easy to answer,’
replied he, without a suspicion of a
smile. ‘If I had some of dose sausage
den der brice would be dwendy cents,
yes. But I haf no sausage, no; so I
makes der brice low. It glfes me a
reduckshun und it costs me nod-
dings.' ”
Mrs. John LaRue, of 115 Patersoa
avenue, Paterson, N. J., says: “I vu
troubled for about nine years, and
what I suf-
fered no one
will ever
know. I used
about every
known reme-
dy that is said
to be good for
kidney com-
plaint, but
without d e-
rlvlng perma-
nent relief.
Often when
alone In the house the backache has
been so bad that It brought tears to
my eyes. The pain at times was so in-
tense that I was compelled to give up
my household duties and lie down.
There were headaches, dizziness and
blood rushing to my head to cause
bleeding at the nose. The first box of
Doan's Kidney Pills benefited me so
much that I continued the treatment.
The stinging pain in the small of my
back, the rushes of blood to the head
and other symptoms disappeared.”
Doan's Kidney Pills for sale by all
dealers. 50 cents per box. Foster-
Mllburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
Bees' Sting as Medicine
The Idea that the sting of a bee Is
valuable medicinally is very old, and
may seem to some to belong In the
same clasB with the mediaeval belters
in the curative efficacy of snakes'
tongues, rats’ claws, and the like. The
fact Is, however, that bees' venom ta
rich In formic acid, which is of real
value in pharmacy, although It may
be doubted whether Its virtues de-
pend upon Its use in precisely this
way. For some reason there has been
a revival of popular interest in the
"bee-sting cure,” which Is especially
recommended for rheumatism. Some
persons allow the bees to sting the af-
fected parts; others rely on dried
slings, which are collected and sold
by some druggists. One collector, It
is said, scents a rubber blanket with
some odor that is objectionable to
bees, and then gathers the stings that
remain sticking In It after an attack
by the angry insects. Exactly hoar
much of value there is in all this It
Is difficult to say, but it la Interesting
to psychologists. If to no one else.
Apropos of this “discovery” the
"Homeopaths” have used bee-stings,
or Apis minifies, for rheumatism—
when Indicated—for the past half cen-
tury.
IMMENSE TOBACCO PURCHASE.
Forty-Eight Thousand Dollars Paid
for a Fancy Lot of Tobacco.
The biggest purchase of high grade
tobacco ever made in tho West by
a cigar manufacturer was made last
Wednesday by Frank P. Lewis, Peo-
ria. 111., for hls celebrated Single bind-
er cigar. A written guarantee was
given that the entire amount was to
be fancy selected tobacco. This, no
doubt, makes the Lewis factory the
largest holder in the United States
of tobacco of so high a grading.—
Herald-Transcript, Peoria.
The average woman thinks she Is
iraver than her husband bocause she
is the first to hear a noise in the
night.
80 Bn. Macaroni Wheat Per Acra.
introduced by the U. S. Dept, of Agr.
It is a tremendous cropper, yielding io
good land in Wit., 111., Ia.. Mich., Ind.,
O., Pa., N. Y., 80 bu. per acre, and on dry,
arid lands, such as are found in Mont..
Idaho, the Dakotas, Colo., etc., it will
yield from 40 to 60 bu. This Wheat and
Speltz and Hanna Barley and Bromus
Inemiis and Billion Dollar Grass, makes
it possible to grow and fatten hogs, sheep
and cattle wnerever soil is found.
JVSr SEND 10c AND Tills NOTICE
to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse,
Wis., and they will send you free a sample
of this Wheat and other farm seeds, to-
gether with their great catalog, alone
worth $100.00 to any wide-awake farmer.
[W. N. UO__'__
“Do carriage horses and their at-
tendants waiting on zero-Sunday
mornings in front of church buildings
advertise Christianity ” and "Would
a horse trade his tail for a pedigree?”
are the most foolish questions I have
ever heard.—G. T. Evans in Chicago
Record-Herald Sunday Magazine.
Not Actuated by Generoelty.
A precocious youngster of 5 years,
living on the Park Slope, has a littlq
sister, with whom he is compelled to
divide his gifts, very much to hls dis
like. The little girl generally comes
out at the small end of the horn, and
therefore, when, one day recently, he
was noticed eating the smaller of two
applies that had been given to him, 11
excited the comment of his mother.
"How did you hapepn to give Elsie
the big apple and keep the little one
for yourself? Mamma Is glad to set
her little boy growing generous.”
“There was a worm in the big one."
nonchalantly replied Johnny.—Brook
lyn Eagle.
Every housekeeper should know
that If they will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they
will save nob only time, because it
never sticks to tho iron, but because
each packnge contains 16 oz.—one full
pound—while all other Cold Water
Starches aic put up in 94-pound pack-
ages, and the price Is the same, 1C’
'cents. Then again because Defiance
Starch Is free from all injurious chem-
icals. If your grocer tries to sell you
a 12-oz. package it is because he has
a stock on hand which he wishes to
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-
fiance and save much time and money
and the annoyance of the iron stick-
ing. Defiance never sticks.
Many a society woman isn't in the
swiqp deep enough to get her bathing
suit wet.
Common sense is the knack of see-
ing things as they are, and doing
things as they ought to be done.—C
E. Stowe.
It's peculiar how those Cheatham's
Laxative Tablets cure a cold in a day
—but they do 1L
If you would be a leader you must
have a way of laughing at ridicule
and rocks.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Long, Frank B. The Nowata Advertiser. (Nowata, Indian Terr.), Vol. 10, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1905, newspaper, February 3, 1905; Nowata, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1321820/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.