Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, October 9, 1908 Page: 4 of 8
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CALLED FOR SOME PUNISHMENT
Prisoner Altogether Too Deliberate fof
Life in Arizona.
Arizona Judge (to defendant in an
assault and battery case)-You say
the complainant called you a liar and
horse thief at least a dozen times be-
fore you knocked him down, eh'
Defendant—Yes, sir.
J,"'8!"": 8ald you were a coward
and quitter?
Defendant—He did.
.h^Ung0~u 1"ur'ght- ni ,et you olT «n
the assault charge; but—don't he in a
hurry, mister—I reckon I'll have to
fine you Jest about $30 for not know-
ing him down sooner! The sheriff
*111 take you In tow and see that you
cough up the dust before you pass
out.—Illustrated Sunday Magazine
COUNTRY IS REAL AMERICA.
Great Cities Do Not Worthily Repre
ent the Nation.
SKIN TROUBLES CURED.
First Had Itching Rash—Threatened
Later With Blood-Poison in Leg-
Relied on Cuticura Remedies.
"About twelve or fifteen years ago
I had a breaking-out, and it itched,
and stung so badly that I could not
have any peace because of it. Three
doctors did not help me. Then I used
some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Oint-
ment, and Cuticura Resolvent and
began to get better right away. They
cured me and I have not been bothered
with the itching since, to amount to
anything. About two years ago I
had la grippe and pneumonia which
left me with a pain in my side. Treat-
ment ran it Into my leg, which then
swelled and began to break out. The
doctor was afraid it would turn to
blood-poison. I used his medicine
but it did no good, then I used the
Cuticura Remedies three times and
cured the breaking-out on my leg. J. p.
Hennen, Milan, Mo., May 13, 1907,"
A Warning.
Handsome Percy Hasbrooke, the
young chauffeur, drew the girl more
closely to him.
"All the world loves a lover, dear-
est," he whispered.
Hut I-otta Golde's red lip curled
somewhat skeptically.
"You haven't interviewed papa yet
Percy," she warned him.
With an ominous moaning sound th
great car sped on.
Free—The New Cook's Book.
Write the Jaques Manufacturing
Company, Chicago, to-day and get
their beautiful cook's book, edited by
Mrs. Hill, it will be sent absolutelv
free to any lady reader of this paper,
fcee K. C. Baking Powder ad. in an-
other part of this paper.
of those sent to the couttry this
summer by a New York fresh-air mis-
s on was a 14-year-old Hungarian boy.
His parents, when they came to
Amorica, had remained in the city
where they landed. They lived in
squalid poverty. The father, mother
and four children all slept in a small
• m "Khted by a single window open-
ing on a foul-smelling alley. The boy
played in the streets, and had to
o ge the club of the policeman who
strove to keep order in the over-
crowded district.
| In the country he found the open
nelds to play in. with no policeman to
interfere. He saw the people friendly,
i ., pr7 and sympathetic, living their
! .e«,!n comfort and independence.
When I get home I'll tell them I've
ound the real America," he remarked
one day.
He was not far from the truth. The
merica which has drawn hundreds of
thousands from the countries of En
lope is not the America which they
find in the densely populated cities.
Tor the foreign-born poor, or the na-
ve poor, either, the large city, with
ts fierce competition, is u hard place
in which to live.
The real France is not Paris. One
thl ,gZ °Ut8ide of London to find
he rea England. The Germany thai
11 *17 rlch and Powerful is a'big
R'-i thing than Berlin. And the real
dUes '6,not.f^overed in her great
s- The ideals of the big city
nation01. th6 ldealS t0Ward which the
nation is striving, and their standard
g ls n°t the standard which
appeals to the people at large. Amer-
fnVui fr°ni ,hp homes and 'he
«n,i r °L 'he smaller communities
and i„T! e„farmh«uses on the hills
south h Ieys of the east and the
Mo.t mkOD <he Plains of the west.
' P ° 1he statesmen who control
congress are country-born and coun-
y-bred. The issues on which elec-
tions are decided are those which
ZZT t0 th° Pla,n' evei>"da>' man
Inn 1,6 natUraI ,lfe °f the les8 POP-
ulous districts.
That immigrant is to be congratu-
lated who discovers where the real
ican^h 'L"81 and ,hat rural Amer"
he 8 that he llves where
he destinies of the nation are shaped
is in no danger of losing his pojse or
' flowing i|sc°ntenW wUh hjg Jot
^xouth s Companion.
His JOD.
"Yes, he doesn't do anything hut
pick up pins ail the time
"Well, well, that's a queer supersti-
tion."
"Not at all. It's an occupation. He's
employed In a bowling alley."
tmportant to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOR1A a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over .'JO Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
It Would Seem So.
"Beauty is only skin deep," re-
marked the party with the quotation
habit.
"And if some portraits of handsome
women are accurate," rejoined the
peevish person, "beauty is quite a dis-
tance outside the cuticle,"
Where Others Failed
' Each spring for five or six years I
broke out with a kind of Eczema
which nothing seemed to relieve per-
manently. Finally I tried a box of
Hunts Cure, which promptly cured
me. Two years have passed but the
trouble has not returned."
MRS. KATE HOWARD,
Little Rock, Ark.
Showed Practice.
"You say she suspects that In
years gone by her husband was a bur-
glar?"
"She feels sure of it."
"Why, in the name of goodness?"
"Because, when he gets up at night
to get the baby a drink he never falls
over the furniture."~Houston Post.
I Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
that Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell
and completely derange the whole system \vhe i
2X2? i ,tlhrou«h I** mucous surfaces Such
articles should never be use<l cxccm on nrp«,< ru
KrT,rePyt?,bl" P1,yslclans' i" the damace they
rive Irnm >' " pSVd<£
rive from them. Hall s C atarrh Cure, manufactured
™ry and ta tTke;/ " ; T'"^°' " 2
rhl .i^7 ,aKoM lnternally, acting directly ubon
buy«X.d« « IrlVZZT ,£
;:--"-
At the Other Extreme.
Just as you, are pleased at finding
fault, you are displeased at finding
oerfection.—Lavater.
Syrupslfigs
^ OixirJfSenna
tleanses the vSy.stom Effect-
ually; Dispels Elds omffieati*
tfii
^uo to Con.stipaTton;
Ai ts naturally, Qcts truly as
aLaxative.
Do.tfo.MenVomrtt and Clulil-
V?1 TVounji „nd Old.
i< get its Beneficial Effects
Always buy the benumeulnch
has the Jul! name of the Com-
Paiy '
CALIFORNIA
Fro Syrup To.
by whom ,t ,* manufacturc-H print, ,t e„ th-
C*r\t r* I 1 °l*V PflrK'l'io.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS,
one Size only, regular price 5Q<P„ Idtlo.
The Oldest Flower.
,hl.® 7i!y is the only flowering plant
that has no poor kin. Every other fine
It left . n "?Iat,Ves in 1™ fe. that
t left behind to worry along in pov
.? whfn il took a start and became
rich and fashionable, the pet of the
florist and the admiration of the ladies
SI*', "" ev r "*'>
k nfolks, has outgrown them so com-
S not tha' thfyflre el,her forgotten
or not recognized as belonging to
eSrlie?eflfan,1Iy- " a'n°"S « «
earliest flowers cultivated. On the
" 000'lea an.dfAssyrlan monuments,
tured fS b6f0re °Ur era' the s™lp.
"red lily appears. It is known to have
imMn10thU,ar in Ellmpe for 2-500 years,
and in the east for a much longer pe-
riod. so it is Justly entitled to the
tivated°Lbelng thB °ldest flower C1"
!S ♦ nZ n,an' There aie probablv
150 to 200 varieties, but every one
oelongs to the same royal family.
|nocu|at,°n picnics in India
The Inoculation of natives against
Iho plague at Bangalore has become
™™°'a s°claI eve°t than something
be dreaded and feared. The na
ives do not like pain ofanyklnd made
I by. nthetln8truments of the English
sahibs but they love music and things
o eat Therefore, a magnifleent
inoculating pavilion has been oref r
! lhe municipality of Bangalore
; 2V.mrrjtmt nativ« of ,he town
A Keen Nose,
Grandmother-Why fe the baby so
happy?
Nurse—Oh, his mother and father
are coming.
Grandmother—I don't see them!
Nurse—Nor i ma'am. But the
c 3 nose is very keen. He smells
the automobile, ma'aml-Harper's
Weekly. K
| gather there, the Indian band d^-
: uenses sweet music, attendants dis
( pense sweet cakes and fruits, and th
paysicians operate to thslr henr>-'
content. ,r %
Starch, like everything else, is b€-
?rt'JL°nStantly imProvefl. the patent
k hes put on the market 25 years
1 tahSo°.r/,ry l!iffurent ;lnd Inferior to
those of the present day. In the lat-
est discovery—Defiance Starch—all in-
jurious chemicals are omitted, while
the addition of another ingredierit, in-
Rented by us, gives to the Starch a
strength and smoothness never an
proached by other branda.
Youthful Criminals,
Two bad little boys were
wel/d6 StHCet COr"er' when another
well-dressed little boy passed „„ hlI
^ £ f „dr"K S,0re ,n bu-v ''andy
Lets take his penny away from
blj v one bad boy ™
No, replied his wicked comnanim.
"It's best to wait until he g0e? in i„,'
buys chocolate with it and ti, "
steal the chocolate Wot^ the ^ "
doin' extra work?" the U8e °r
Sheer white goods, in fact, anv nn«
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way ihev
are laundered, this being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beau-
ty. Home laundering would be emial-
y satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
.™ grta„8r'-
the goods T,? Del""'"'
improved appearance of your work.
The back is the mainspring of
woman's organism. It quickly calla
attention to trouble by aching. It
tells, ^vith other symptoms, such as
nervousness, headache, pains in the
loins, weight in the lower part of
the body, that a woman's feminine
organism needs immediate attention.
In such cases the one sure remedy
which speedily removes the cause,
and restores the feminine organism
to a healthy, normal condition is
LYDIA E.PINKHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
Mrs. Will Young, of 6 Columbia
Ave., Rockland, Me., says:
"I was troubled for a long time with
dreadful backaches and a pain in my
side, and was miserable in every way.
I doctored until I was discouraged and
thought I would never get well. I read
what Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable
Compound had done for others and
decided to try it; after taking three
bottles I can truly say that I never felt
so well in my life."
Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Earl,
Pa., writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
"I had very severe backaches, and
pressing-down pains. I could not sleep,
and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pink-
nam s Vegetable Compound cured me
and made me feel like a new woman."
WWR S!CK WOMEN.
lor thirty years Lydia E. Pink-
ham s Vegetable Compound, made
i cm roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands o{
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, uloera-
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges-
tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration.
Nobody Else Loved Her.
In her new autumn gown she re-
garded her complexion complacently
in the long glass.
1 must confess," she said, "that I
am in love with myself."
I hen you should be happy," said
rival"""11, tarUy' "f°r y°U haven>t a
How often do smart clothes excite
•nabby remarks!
1 ,**T(>-DATE housekeepers
clean and awe*'V"" U makpK ,'lo,hpf'
n and sweet as when new. All grocers.
It makes a pretty girl hopping mad
r a young man declines to dance air
'endance upon her.
uum
25 "Ouara"
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Herbert, H. S. Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, October 9, 1908, newspaper, October 9, 1908; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc142374/m1/4/?q=del+city: accessed June 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.