The Talihina News. (Talihina, Indian Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 9, 1894 Page: 4 of 4
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It Is Not
What We -Say
But what HochTh Barsaparllla does that
tolls tho story. The Kfuut volume of evi-
dome in tho form of unpurchased, volun-
tary testimonials provo beyond doubt that
Hood
Saraa-
Be Sure to Get
Hood's
Hood's Pills cure hsbllv.al constipation.
paHlla
Cures
The Oreat«st Medical Discovsry
of the Age.
KENNEDY'S
MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered in one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common Pimple.
He has tried it in over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor). He has now in his
possession over two hundred certificates
of its value, ail within twenty miles of
Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from the
first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted
when the right quantity Is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver or
Bowels. This is caused bv the ducts be-
ing stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking it. Read the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first.
No change of diet ever necessary. Hat
the best you can get, and enough of it.
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed-
time. Sold by all Druggists.
W. L. Douglas
$3 SHOE no sauix'tha.
♦5. CORDOVAN,
f RtNCHa. ENAMEUH) CALF
. FINF CAIF4 KNBNtt
* 3.SP POLICE,3 s0lc9.
*2.*I.7.S BoysSCHWJHSEI
k SEND FOR CATALOGU5
! W-L.-DOUGLAS,
BROCKTON, MASS.
¥•■ ran me money '• Y wrnrlng the
W. L. Doaclas S3.00 Hhoc.
Rernave, we aro tho lanrest manufacturer* oi
*hU grade of *hoes in tho world, and Runrantee thell
▼alue bjr stamping tho name on<l prlco on th«
bottom, which protect you a :alr.st high price* and
the middleman's profit*. Our shoes equal cwtoro
work in style, easy fitting a.id wrarlng qualities.
We hare them sold erery where atl'iwer prices for
the value rl^cn than any other maitn. Take no sub-
stitute. If your dealer cannot supply you. we can.
m
Big Four Route
—to thb
MOUNTAINS
LAKES and
SEA SHORE.
BEST LINE TO
New York and Boston.
ask for tickets via
Big; Four Route.
E. O. McCORMICK, D. B. MARTIN,
runtw Trifle Hintfcr, «•■'! Fu*. * Ticket Agtat,
cincinnati, o.
■eniiuni* i«i g' on
tsr. it \ i.i. >:nthii«i(iat«.
w w v ..jIs ts yonr opportunity. a"-
Ml. NMMOIM IfY <MI \
ippnnnimr. w
iioviKAMi rotMin MVUAZIMC. Prlee
All Newsdealer*: orBKsnt 10th St., New York
mt^ams this
Iely's cream balm cures pr ,t":
■050023
lPRICE 50C£NTS, ALLDRUGGIS
WORKS OF GENIUS.
Paper spindles for yarn spinning aro
now used as a substitute for those of
steel.
Steel barrels, made from sheets
ranging in thickness from one-six-
tee nth to a quarter of an inch, are
coming into use.
A cab shaped like n bathtub, in
which the passengers either sit o,r re-
cline as if in a bed, is in use in llerlin.
It has three wheels and is propelled by
a naphtha motor.
A baby carriage designed especially
for the use of those who live in flats,
looks just like any other baby carriage
when it is in use, but it can be folded
together so that one person can handi-
ly carry it up and down stairs.
It is said that window panes of
porous glass are being made in Paris.
The minute holes in the glass are too
fine to permit of a draught and yet
large enough to cause a pleasant and
healthy ventilation in a room.
A spooni.ess mustard pot is a recent
Invention. By pressing a piston rod in
an air-tight receptacle the requisite
amount of mustard is forced through
a suitable spout. The air Wing ex-
cluded, the mustard is always fresh.
An American physician in Tokio is
doing a rushing business by straight-
ening tho slant in tho eyes of the
Japanese. A fine silk thread draws up
the eyelids and holds them in place. A
few neat stitches are all that are re-
quired.
THE SCHOOL-MASTER.
Mrs. Julia J. Irvine, the new presi-
dent of Wellesley college, is a sister of
Buffalo Bill.
In the Austrian village of Storbech
all the inhabitants are chess players,
and the game is taught in the public
schools.
Prof. Andrew 8. Draper, of Cleve-
land, has accepted the presidency of
the University of Illinois, at Cham-
paign.
Liquor licenses are refused to all es-
tablishments within four hundred yards
of schools and churches in the District
of Columbia.
In a spelling match at Watervillc,
Mo., the superintendent of schools
went down on the word "two." He
spelled it t-o-e.
By a large majority, the faculty of
the University of Virginia voted down
a report favoring the admission of
women to the academic schools of tho
university.
dr. Schele De Vere is still in active
service as professor of modern lan-
guages in the Universiny of Virginia.
He is seventy-four years of ago and
has held the present place for fifty
jjraarfr
HOME HINTS AND HELPS.
- To make vanilla iee cream, boil to-
gether in ft fbrina boiler one-half
pound of siurur and one pint of creartV.
Stir rapidly for about tett mihtttcs,
when retuoVe the fire and set
V. aj* t 'DOl. Add two tablespoonfuls
extract of vanilla, nnd when thorough-
ly cold add an additional oittt t T cream
and frwjf. lAdicft^ Home Journal.
TKi-oUgh papers for pantry shelves
Irtok Vt?ry dainty when fresh, oilcloth in
Nvhite or a light color is much better to
use in every place that is to come in
contact with the food. It can be wiped
as often as dusty or otherwise soiled
without injury. If one chooses, the
tissue-papers used for china closets may
l>c used on the edges of the shelves.
The floor of the pantry, unless of hard
wood, or even close and well-painten\
should also be covered With oilcloth ot
linoleum.
•—Spiced ttiseuii: Sift together on8
pint of flour, one tablespoonful of sugar,
one teaspoonful of 1>hking powder, a
little salt and half a teaspoonful of
ground cinnamon. Rub into the mix-
ture a piece of butter as large as a but-
ternut, and add enough sweet milk to
make a soft dough. Roll thin, cut with
a small biscuit cutter, rub over the tops
of half of them with soft butter, sprin-
kle sugar and cinnamon over, lay the
other half on top nnd bake quickly.
Serve hot.--'C« Utttvy Gentlemen.
Chicken breasts: Trim the breasts
of some ehiekebs resemble trimihed
lamb chops. Stick a leg bone (the
joints cut off at each end) into the end
of each cutlet: pepper and salt them,
roll them in flour, and fry them in a
granite pan with butter. Serve them
ih a circle in a dish with peas, mashed
potatoes, cauliflowers, beans, tomatoes,
or other vegetable, in the center. They
aiv nicer larded on one side, choosing
the same side for all. They should not
be rolled in flour. These fillets maybe
served in u circle, with mushroom sauce
poured in the center. A nice course for
a company dinner. ibkis^UOeper.
—lA'inoh ol- ClaVet itfeliy: Soak one
lw>x of good gelatine in one pint of cold
Water ten minutes: add two pints of
boiling water and one and one-half cup-
fuls of granulated sugar. Stir until
dissolved. Add to this the juice of
three lemons and strain through a jelly
bag. Claret wine added makes a very
grateful and palatable acid jelly,where
the patient craves and the physician
allows neid. If unfermented wine is
preferred, grape juice, which is very
nice and healthful as well as inexpen-
sive, can be procured at the druggists.
When wine is used, leave out a part of
the hot water, a little less than is used
of the wIm.—UpoiI Housekeeping.
SILKS AND RIBBONS.
llow to Itemorr I'r.sljjlitly flpota util IMti-
colorat Iona.
Clean colored silks in a mixture made
by boiling to a pulp old kid gloves as
near the color of the silk as you can
get. Place the gloves in a new tin pan,
in cold Water; when boiled, strain the
pulpy mass, add a little hot water and
ammonia. Wash the silk ribbon in
this and put a little borax and spirits
of camphor in the rinsing water-
about half a teaspoonful of each to a
quart of water; do not iron, but let the
pieces hang until dry. Clean black rib-
bins in Ihe manner described for black
silk. It is said that when the color
has been rtken out by fruit it may be
restored by ammonia, and that when
color has been destroyed by a strong
acid it may bo restored by Wetting thd
spot with ti strong soap lather, to
which a pinch of saleratus has lieen
added. Never try any cleansing fluid on
a gown unless you first experiment
with a piece of the goods, for colors
are curious many times when so treat-
ed and act in an unexpected manner.
From an old r.'cipe book 1 glean that
ribbons may be easily renewed if washed
in a suds of cold water and castile soap,
and ironed, while damp, with a cloth
between the iron and ribbon. Colored
ribbons, neckties, drapery, silk scarfs,
etc., are easily and quickly cleaned by
immersing them in a IkiwI of naphtha,
but remember how explosive it is and
also that it chaps the hands. Silk em-
broidery Upon fancy-work or dresses
may be cleaned with a camel's-hair
brush dipped in soiritsof wine. Many
stains may be removed from light silks
with clear water, rubbing spot dry a4.
once so that the water will not run into
the dust on the edgi- of the spot and
cause a light ring or shading.—Ladies'
Home Journal.
THE FARMING WORLD.
profitable farming.
Wrtfuliy nnd Rotation tlie Prime K.aaen-
tint* to Stireraa.
But very few farms are nowaday*
run profitably Unless on these lines.'
lloiation involves diversity, but it
means a vast deal more. Poor land
means poor crops. A soil which is de-
ficient in plant food cannot ever bo,
tilled to the very best profit, but it is
within the reach of all to enrich their
soil by turning under green crops, and
this Ih one of the easiest and cheapest
methods of applying fertility; and it
should not be overlooked that when
Vegetable matter Is used for fertilising
something is gained beyond the inefd
amount of plant foot! •supplied. The
mechanical effect upon the soil b#
means of which the other plant food
already there is made available, is
often hardly second t<\the direct gain
of manurial elements. One good point
about green manuring is that it may
be done at any season, nnd in so many
ways that some of them are open to
all. Of course clover is the great crop
for tills use, and the seasons at which
it may be sown and used are some-
what arbitrary? but there are a doseii
other things, some of which may bf
sown at any time that you happen tn
have a piece of land vacant, and the>
may be turned under with more Or less
benefit at any period of their growth.
Peas are second to elbver ih adding to
the stores of nitrogen, and they may
be sown the latter part of the summer,
and 3*et make suffloient growth to be a
valuable manurial crop. Rye sown
evun later may be turned under in
spring. Turnips sown in August oi
September and turned under as the
bulbs begin to form are very valuable.
They should be sown thickly, so as tc
make a perfect mass of foliage. Even
weeds are good for green manuring,
although we do not advise gl'oWln^
them f(Jt; that purpose.— Column's
Kural World.
UNIQUE IN DESIGN.
Poultry Ho
Conveniently Cc
The illustration is intended for lltdfett
who may desire lo connect a poultry
house with a barn. The south side of
the barn is shown, and the object is to
also secure a covered run the
barn as a yard. The poultry house at
the east end of the barn is IOaIO feet.
The excavation under the barn occu-
pies a space 10x23 feet, and is 4 feet
deep. The poultry house may be at
either the enst or west Cnd, its pre
ABOUT HAMMOCKS.
fhey Form Part of the Summer tilrl'a Par-
hpliernnltn How to Hani; Tliein.
There is science in the hanging of a
hammock both for comfort and grace.
The hammock should be six and a quar-
ter feet from the ground at the head,
and three and three-quarters above
ground at the foot end.
The rope at the head which fastens
it should Ih* one f *>t, ami at the foot
should measure four feet. It inav sound
as though this made the hammock very
high, but it is just right, as our women
have found out.
For convenience and effect, a hassock
is used on which our fair one steps and
swings herself in place from the foot
end. In this way there are no "tucked
up" skirts, and one's shoes are not more
conspicuous than one's head.
The hammock paraphernalia is now
as important an addition to the sum-
mer girl's outfit as tennis racket cr
parasol, and it requires infinitely more
'•areful thought.
The hammocks themselves are beau-
tiful, being wovejf of strands of col-
ored silks. A brunette chooses a yel-
low and black one with heavy fringes,
while a blonde takes a soft baby blue
and white one. One black-eyed liella
has packed a gorgeous crimson on •.
With the hammock go the pretty va-
ried colored silk blanketsard down pil-
lows made of white linen and embroid-
ered with the owner's monogram, lias-
socks may be made of straw, grass or
any othor appropriate material. These
hammocks are swung on piazzas and
across halls quite as often as on tho
lawn.—N. Y. Sun.
l lntT««ra In the S!"krooin.
A great deal of nonsense bus been
talked about the injurious effect of
flowers in the sickroom. The prcsenco
of flowers with strong odors is usually
offensive to persons in health, and,
of course, is much more so to an invalid
with supersensitive nerves. The pres-
ence, however, of flowers with delicate
fragrance is generally boneflcial. Cer-
tain colors arc said to act favorably
upon the nervous system. Red bios
soma are stimulating, while delicate
blue flowers are soothing.—N. Y. Tri*
bum.
t'nlcl, Nrtt Iced, TeA.
flioeic who do not like to use ice as
prodigally rts some do in beverages,
and yet like "Bold" tea, will flitd that
they can have it without the ice. If
you have no ice at all put the amount
of tea required in a pitcher in the
morning and over it only enough water
to cover it; lot it stand for three or
more hours, ami you will find that all
he flavor is extracted from the leaves.
When you wish to serve, pour fresh
water, as cold as Can t>e ol tallied, ti pott
the tea. and you will have a delightful
glass of tea. with none of the bitter-
ness of "boiled" tea about It and suffi-
ciently bold.—J lost on Post.
The ladles.
The nl en sac t effc t and perfect safety with
which ladies may use the California liquid
laxative Sv i up of Pigs, under all condlli 'as,
m ilcea it their favorite remedy. To get the
true Hn«J Murine artMe; look for the rame
of tli* ( alilorniu FigHyrupUo., itfiiitpdUOttr
the bottom of tlie package.
BARN AM) POULTKY HOUSES.
/erred, or two houses may be used.
Care must be exercised in having the
excavation dry. as dampness may cause
disease. If the barn is on a hillside, it
will be an advantage.
The design is from Mr. S. P. Smith,
Pennsylvania, describing the plan as
used by him, ami out4 tfedilet's may pos-
sibly improve it according to circum-
stances.—Farm and Field.
I-'oreata Are Great Protectors*
It is the ground itself that is most
perfectly protected by the forest of a
country. The roots and rootlets of the
trees bind together par tides of soil so
that it is not readily washed away. As
a matter of course, hills shorn of their
forests suffer most, their soil being
wa-died down into the river or the
valley below. This is the reason why
valleys are generally fertile and why
so many hills are barren The roots
of trees and the accumulated mold
render the soil porous and capable of
holding a great amount of moisture.
The rain and the snow are conserved
and gradually given to the streams and
soil below. Itefore a country has been
denuded of forests its streams do not
vary greatly in size from season to sea-
son. Kain or drought influence thcin
but little, but after tho trees have been
taken away the rivers aro roaring tor-
rents during rains and mere thread?
luring droughts.—Kural World.
Effect of Ov«-rf «•« lilng Hrna.
There is much similarit}' in the feed-
.ng habits of pigs and fowls. Both are
greedy and will eat too much if per-
mitted. And each are subject, u>
result of overeating, to a paralysis of
the hind limbs, due to disease of the
spinal nerves. Fowls thus diseased
are hardly worth treating, as cure is
doubtful and recovery slow. It is bet-
ter to kill the fowl and bury it out of
the way. A blister or application of
turpentine to the loins is often found
effective with pigs, but it is not easy
to apply these remedies to birds. One
ounce of grain food a day is quite
enough for a hen. The larger pi
tion of the food should be made up of
green stuff, as grass, clover, or other
similar vegetable matter, with some
animal food of some kind.
The Prevention of tiapes.
Gapes are tho result of filth ant
dampness, r.nd occur among chicks
that are fed on the ground. Old farms
that have been occupied by poultry for
several years are more or less affected
by the gape worms or their eggs in tho
soil. The disease prevails when
earthworms are numerous, as the con-
ditions for earth worms and gape worms
are the same. To avoid gapes scatter
air-slacked lime freely over the soil tr
be occupied by chicks, spade it and ap
ply more lime, using the lime liberally,
and repeating the application once a
week. If this is properly done, so as
to have the lime cover every available
square inch of the soil, there will I
but a small liability of gapes among
chicks.
How to Promote I-nylng.
When the liens cease to lay a change
A food will sometimes start them to
laying again, and it may be that the
food will supply a want. If the regu-
lar grain ration is given and no green
food can be obtained they will some-
times get constipated, the result being
indigestion. To avoid this and also
afford a change give the hens oil cake
broken into suitable bits twice a
week, allowing a pound of oil cake to
twenty hens. They will appreciate
the change aud be benefited, as the oil
oakc is cathartic in its tendency and
also a highly nitrogenous food.
POWDER'
ff "N, Admitted to be
i ^incsl PrcP"
■rwBai) aration of the
kind in the mar-
ket. Makes the
best and most
wholesome bread, cake, and biscuit. A
hundred thousand unsolicited testimo-
nials to this effect are received annually
by its manufacturers. Its sale h greater
than that of all other baking powders
combined.
ABSOLUTELY PL RE.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL IT., NEW YORK. X
A Max loved a Woinan, hut she laughed al
him. Then, through grldf, ho became ill.
and was like to die, in vcr.v despair of her
iyr. Whereat pity touched her lieart, and
'lly grew to lute. ' When he came to know
this, having imtv lhr> love he had so yearned
to possess, ho rejoiced gently, and arose
from his bed. And ftralfchtway he begau
to love another woman.
"Dost seek the beautiful, sweet maid,
Amid these pastoral scones
Of flowers In richest verdure fr:im«rt*"
She answered, shortly "Greens."
—Detroit Tribune.
lis—"Her heart 1« as hard as glass. .
c«n't make any impression on it." Hhe—
| ''Have \ nu tried a diamond I"—Kate Field's
Washington.
Whkn* an o tress is young she hns her
lithographic likeness, ami when she is old
she d<« s not depart therefrom.—Boston
Transcript
Ma. Blandlt--"Voung Mr. Goodey has a
great many sterling qualities, I notke.M
Miss niaudly "Well, no's discovered that
silver ornaments are very fashionabic, 1
suppose."—Intel Occftfi.
PATnrn—*4W!iy dnn't you marry M.ss
B' nd.-iimicr? she has lota of monev." Son
•llcr family aw opposed to U." Father—
How about Miss IJondclippcr herself!'*
Son - "Well, sho belongs to tho family."—
Texas SifUngs.
Hotel Porter (to gue*t) "Hey, get up!"
Cue .; ! ! ! Hotel Porter- '1 want the
led shoot!'' Guest (in astonishment)—
"What for?'' Motel Porter—"There's a
ptti iv us wants breakfast, and tvo noel a
tablecloth.'
Wonm.kt WinnLES—"1 have a good mind
to have that sal n bouncer who chucked
me out arrested for an anarchist!" Wig-
glcy Wng.rlc-j • \Yh:it charge can you bring
against liim I" Wobblev Wibblcs -"Firing
u bum." Brooklyn Laglo.
"That v.-a -. a clovcr sjKJOch Clipping made
at the club." "Yea; ho received uamber
l'S compliments." "What were they?"
"Every nuo was euro It was not original."
-Inter Ocean.
Mat!! !.a h* ' v. i-.m.l ' Is you in earnest
Mistah .folmsiiig. wid yore matriinonia
nrcpcrslshon!" i Jolmsing—"I am, in
de-d. Mis3 BnowhuH. I 1k-s got < r shanty
aV chickens an' two mcwcls an'crplg, au'
all I needn is or ..ifo ter make mopuucc'ly
happy."
WjuTi:r.« . "Wc'.l, Bridget, did you make
. entiling for UnKi) from tho cook book, as
1 told yotif' Bridget • Sure, ma'am, there
wouldn't'a' b en m ugh to go round, so I
added a few leaves from tho dictionary.'' -
Inter Ocean.
Dora—'"Why r.re you crying!" Clara—
Geo- 1 mean Mr. Mi Nieelollo Id-kissed
mOin tho hall." Dora—"Ho doubt less a-ted
a sudden impulse. 1 wouldn't cry about
that. ' Clara "But 1 1 slapped him for it
—and—I'm afraid I bur— hurt hhn. Bee,
hoo, boo!"
Yonxo man," thofdd man surr.lj asked,
after the youth had asked for Ins da. filter's
liuud, "doyounlav pokcrf "Y « - cr. that
is —I —" blurted the suitor, blushing "That's
;d right," blandly interrupted tho parent.
•< 'au you put me n to a quiet gamor'-Ai-
lantaCo'.istiLu^on.
'tntib f iwb bjr fite
Chock growing infirmity and mjtlgnte the
ill of growing age withHostotter's StomrtcM
Bittors, which relieves these evils. Kbeu-
matism, lumbago, chills and fever, dyspep-
sia, loss of apatite, aro all rou edied by
this helper of tho aged, weak and convales-
cent Provo the truth of this assertion,
which is bstabllsbCd by evidence.
"Tnr. old man run fcr sheriff, didn't he!"
"Yes." "And they bent himf" "Yes; but
he's still ahead." "How's that!" "Feller
shot tho sheriff an' the old man's cor-
oner 1"
a Hook of nook* for 2 Stamps.
A copy of tho "In.rsTitATrn Catalogce"
of tho "Four Track'' Series, New York Cen-
tral Bnrhi snd Kfcihings, tho only book of
its kind ever published, Wi!l be sent free,
postpaid, on receipt of two tWo-cCnt itftfflps,
byGroitoK II. Danifls, General Passenger
Agent, Grand Central Station, New York.
It never cools a man off when the street
sprinkler throws w:.'_. r on him.—Atchison
Globe.
Hall's Catarrh Cure
Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 75c.
Even without p. single stroke of her racket
the tennis pirl thakes a hit.-*-Philadelphia
Times.
Beauty marred by a bad complexion may
be. i-estored by Glenn's Sulphur Soap.
Hill's llair and Whisker Dye, M cents.
Tket live most who love most, llam'i
Horn.
Long Savannah, Jamr* Co., Ttnn.
Da. R. V. Picr.ca, Buffalo, N. V.:
scrvatton of my
life. I was under
tho doctor's care
for three months
villi womb dls-
cas- end a grad-
ual wast lug all ti ic
time. I was bo
weak that I could
not bo mlsed In
bed when I coni-
■ menced taking tlie
••prescription,"
^ an.l hv tho Hnm
('
\\ /'
"•and by the time
I had taken three
_ )ttles I was up
and going wb< r-
ever I nlensed,
and have had good
health nti«l boon
very strong ever bIiico. That was four years
ago. I have recommended It to a good many
er my fri nds. and they bavo taken it and are
Mns. SeniGGS.
O. A. SPRIGGS.
PbERGE q CORE
OR r>!ONCV KCTIRNED.
6*
They Look
Spick And Span New"
VViW.
Clothes
When Washed Wiih
GLAIRETTE SOAP
made
BY
SOLD EVERYWHERE
THE N.K.FA1RBANK GQMPAMY. ST.Louis.
The Genuine
De Long Pat. Hook
and Eye ha3 on the face
and back of every card
the words:
See that
hump?
Rifhardton
& De l^ne Pro*.,
Philadelphia.
Ctiff
Const! m ptlon
What is there to Compare With It
4'jrfHE|dLIVEl|cHiLLEr)|pL0W7IlL
1,250,230 IN USE!!
[t Beats All Other Plow Records
onMearih
Over two Hundred Thousand sold in the If car IS!>2,
and orders come in thickcr and faster every day. Tho
Oliver is made of the best metal on earth, the genuine
Oliver Chilled metal, lhe Oliver is more economi~
cal than any other Plow- li is fitted with the best Share
on earth, the famous Oliver Slip JVose share. See thai
you get the original and only Oliver, made by the Oli~
ver Chilled Plow Works. If your merchant does not
carry the "Oliver" you can obtain the same from
Atkinson Hardware Company.
General Distributing Agent for Western Ark. a nd In-
dian Territory Fort Smith, Ark-
For Sale by THOMAS BROS., Talihina. I T
THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE
THE COOK HAD NOT USED
SAPOLIO
GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS.
SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN.
W1IEN tVBITINO TO Ab * KKTISLUS PLE1SI
•tat* that 70® WW tha A4*«rU*omci la thh
Q. KAUfTAAM E. ADLER, J. A. JOEL
li. Ml & CO.,
Wholesale Grocers,
C©tf@o Pac4or$,
FORT 5AITH, 6[RF).
EJTAEIJnCD. I 666.
Dr, W, E. MILLER,
TAXJUITVA, IND. TER.,
Who Will take Pleasure in Supplying i'ou With
Pure Fresh Drugs
MEDICINES, CHEMICALS,
Toilet and Fancy Articles
BOOKS. STATIONERY, ETC.
PnOPBSSION At. !
All Calls Left at the Drug Store, Answered Day or Night
tey-SiavEXvrOI>TS
l?TASTEESS"'CHILL'>CURE«J
AS PLEASANT AS HOCK CANDAY SYRUP.
f Simmons Liver Purifier
Tlie Safest, Spee'lioft and Surest, (1nsts But- 2ft Oenta per Pncknga
Now Don't be Deceived, but see that tho Package is a
Beautifully enameled Tin Box.
223 "$®S3M Till
This Pill is the ONLY ONR IN THE WORLD put up
111 a beautiful Graduated Medicine Glafs, and when the
Pills are used up you've got a nice medicine glass worth
The 25 cents yon will have paid for the pills. Try one
package and you will never do without them
ALL PREPARED BY
-A. C. SIMMONS,Jr., MEDICINE C0-
Sherman, Texas, and New YOrK.
fou mai.h nv
THOMAS BROS- Talhina Ind.Ter.
Klein &, Fink
WlioleMiiIe ftii<l l{«k 1 iii I
Au<l DealrrN in
Diamonds,Jewelry,Clocks,
Watches, Silverivare, Spec-
tacles, Gold Pens Etc.
Don't send away after Roods'and
get humbugged and Bwiniiled, as a
great many do. Wo can biOI you
goods for less money at home.
Our g oods are of the best qunli
ty and latest styles, and warran-
ted as represented hy us. All or-
ders sent us hy mail, or otherwise,
will receive prompt attention. W«
do first-class work oil watches,
clocks and jewelry and warra nt
it. All goods sold will be engrav-
ed freo of charge.
*void Gold and Silver taken in exchange for Goods,
roiu
t
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Parke & Grandy. The Talihina News. (Talihina, Indian Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 9, 1894, newspaper, August 9, 1894; Talihina, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc137162/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.