The Davis Advertiser. (Davis, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 30, 1895 Page: 7 of 8
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NO MORE INSANITY
A SURE CURE HAS BEEN
COVERED.
By Producing a High Fever on tlio
Patient, Recovery Follows Itiipidly—
The Cure Given to the Public—Some
Notable Cures.
N eminent physi-
cian of Vienna,
Prof. Wagner von
Jauregg, hns made
.a discovery which
gives promise of
certain cure in
many cases of in-
sanity. Medical
science has al-
ways been in the
dark when it un-
dertook the treatment of mental dis-
eases. Any remedy, the favorable
working of which can be foreseen and
understood is a novelty, and of inesti-
mable value. Prof. Wagner's discov-
ery. in short, amounts to this, that fe-
ver is the remedy provided by nature
for many and the most common forms
of insanity. He and a colleague have
satisfied themselves that insanity may
be cured by fever produced artificially.
The professor made public his theory
and investigations at a meeting recent-
ly of the Society of Physicians of Vi-
enna. The principal object of his ad-
dress. he said, was to make them ac-
quainted with certain experiments he
had made in his clinic at Graz. He had
been studying for six or seven years
with the object of making fever useful
in these cases. The discovery of
Koch's tuberculine appeared to supply
him with the means he has lacked for
producing artificially the results of bac-
terial illness, or fever, without causing
.the patient to undergo the danger of the
lillness itself. In the winter of 1890-91,
[in the Psychiatric Clinic, at Graz, he
' made experiments with tuberculine on
the insane. In several cases he had ob-
tained favorable results, and in two
cases rapid and complete recovery took
place. It was to be remembered, how
ever, that the clinic at Graz received
only cases of mental affection, in which
the prognosis was favorable, and re-
covery might not have been due to his
treatment, but have merely coincided
with it.
Later experiments have shown him
that the improvement of the insane
through treatment by tuberculine was
in most cases very gradual. Months
passed before the results could be
flained. On this account he had
•en the experiments up, in the hope
renewing them at some future time
under more favorable conditions.
Dr/ Boeck, meanwhile, had resumed
the professor's experiments in this di-
rection at Graz. He had chosen for
treatment cases in which the mental
disease was not complicated, but was
of more than a year's standing, and in
which there was little prospect of re
, covery. By repeated injections of tu-
berculine Dr. Boeck produced succes-
sive attacks of fever, the temprature
not exceeding 39 centigrade. Beginning
with one milligram the dose had to be
continually increased to produce a fever
reaction.
Three cases treated in this way were
completely cured, while others showed
so great an improvement that there
could be no doubt of their ultimate re-
covery.
In the cases of the three cured, an
improvement in the mental condition
showed itself after the first fever reac-
tion. So wonderful was the change that
the sister of a patient, who visited her
the day after the first injection, came
to the doctors and asked what they had
done to her sister to make her sensible
all at once. The first injection, how
ever, was always temporary in its ef-
fects. After each new injection there
was a further improvement, but re-
lapses often occurred. In two of these
cases the insanity was of three years'
and in the third of two years' duration.
The patients treated increased in
weight, and on recovery had a ruddy
complexion. The harmlessness of the
injections was demonstrated.
It was not proved that tuberculine
was the best substance for injection.
The working of erysipelas, typhus and
other fevers on the insane had been
better established than that of tuber
culine. Dr. Boeck had begun further
experiments on the insane with steril
ized cultures of the pyocyaneus bac
illus.
In another part of his address Prof.
Wagner gave a history of many cases
bearing out his theory, and of obser-
vations of other physicians on the sub-
ject.
As early as 1886, he said, he had de-
clared at the Psychiatric Union that
not infrequently through an acute fe-
ver, occurring in the course of a men-
tal affection, the patient was so favor-
ably influenced that a complete cure
followed. In other cases there resulted
not a complete cure, but a great im-
provement, which often was lasting.
Such cures and improvements were ob-
served after typhus abdominal is and
'exanthematicus, intermittent and re-
current fever, after acute oxanthemus,
after erysipelas, after dipbthoritis, after
articular rheumatism, after phlegmon-
ous inflammations, etc.
He had then collected 200 of these
cases from medical literature in order
to investigate the subject as thoroughly
as possible. From these it appeared
that sometimes an acute fever influ-
enced the progress of a mentally dis-
eased person favorably, at other times
not. It was evident that the age of the
affected person was of importance. The
younger the patient the greater was the
possibility that his mental condition
would be improved by a fever. The du-
ration of the mental affection was of
still greater importance. The insane
who had fever in the first six months
after the development of the mental
malady were cured almost without ex
ception, even in cases where most un-
favorable prognoses had been given
But even in cases of insanity of greatei
duration the chances were not entirel)
against recovery. In rare cases after
insanity of two to five years' duration
the patient was cured or showed per-
manent improvement.
The fact that insanity might be cured
through febrile illness appeared at first
sight inexplicable to him. But it lost
some of its marvellous character when
he found that he was dealing with no
isolated cases.
Not insanity alone was favorably af-
fected by febrile illness. The same
thing happened in other diseases, al-
though the cases showing this were few
and scattered. Fever was especially
liable to aid in the cure of chronic dis-
eases of the nervous system. It ap-
peared that in many cases epilepsy was
cured by an intercurrent intermittent
fever. Observations on that matter
were of remote antiquity, for Hippoc-
rates said: "Quartana epilepside vin-
dex." He himself knew a case whero
epilepsy of years' standing ceased after
an attack of malaria.
Prof. Schindelka had informed him
that tetanus of the horse had in several
cases disappeared after an intercurrent
influenza.
He would also recall to his hearer3
that the late Prof. Thaulliner had re-
lated, in an address, that a case of pro-
gressive atrophy of the optic nerve of
years' duration had been cured by an
attack of small-pox.
An experience of his own with a case
of disease of the nervous system was
also in point. There came to the Graz
nerve clinic in 1892 a nineteen-year-old
boy with symptoms of progressive dy-
strophia musculorum (loss of po^er 'n
the muscles). After seventeen days
spent in the clinic he contracted ab-
dominal typhus which, after a course of
nearly four weeks, passed into the
afebrile stage. During the convales-
cence he and his colleagues observed
to their astonishment that the distur-
bances of the motor power and the
atrophy of the muscles from which the
patient was suffering when he came,
were gradually disappearing. Two
months after the cure of his typhus the
patient left the hospital, entirely free
from symptoms of dystrophy of the
muscles.
Renewing Their Youth.
A STRANGE STORY FROM A NB
BRAEKA VILLAGE.
EIGHT SAVED BY A DOG.
Rig? Newfoundland Swam Out to a
Sinking Ship.
Some years ago a vessel was driven
on the beach of Lydd, in Kent, England.
The sea was rolling furiously. Eight
poor fellows were crying for help; but
a boat could not be got off, through the
storm, to their assistance, and they
were in constant peril, for any moment
the ship was in danger of sinking. At
length a gentleman came along the
beach accompanied by his Newfound-
land dog. He directed the animal's at-
tention to the vessel and put a short
stick in his mouth. The intelligent and
courageous dog at once understood his
meaning, sprang into the sea and
fought his way through the angry
waves toward the vessel. He could not,
however, get close enough to deliver
that with which he was charged; but
the crew understood what was meant,
and they made fast a rope to another
piece of wood and threw it toward him.
The noble animal at once dropped his
own piece of wood and immediately
seized that which had been thrown to
him, and then, with a degree of
strength, and determination scarcely
credible—for he was again and again
lost under the waves—he dragged it
through the surge and delivered it to
his master. A line of communication
was thus formed with the vessel and
every man on board was rescued.
An Unusual Proceeding.
At a colored church in New Provi-
dence, Ga., there was an unusual pro-
ceeding on a recent Sabbath. Somebody,
it was asserted, had picked the pocket
of the preacher's wife, and the congre-
gation had to submit to a close search.
The lady's purse was undiscovered.
The TtTIafera Eirlted Over tfte In,
created Health and Vigor of the
Older Inhabitants—The Exper-
ience of Two "Vets."
(From the World-Herald, Omaha, Neb.)
A World-Herald reporter was attract-
ed by the evidence of renewed activity
of some of the older Inhabitants of the
village of Florence, a suburb of Omaha,
Neb., and Inquired the cause. Mr. An-
drew Finkenkeler, who was a member
of Company B of the First Iowa Volun-
teers during the war, made the follow-
ing explanation so far as he himself la
concerned:
"In July, 1866, while my company was
on the mnrch through to Austin, Texas,
I was attacked with rheumatism of the
worst kind in one leg- at Alexander, La.
Being weak, I was sunstruck and re-
mained unconscious for several hours.
Every summer since I have been unable
to stand the heat of the sun, and have
been compelled to give up my work.
There was Jn my head a bearing down
feeling which increased until It seemed
my head would burst, and it caused a
ringing In my ears, and palpitation of
the heart set in, so that the slightest
noise would set my heart thumping.
Several times It has rendered me uncon-
scious for from seven to ten hours at a
time. In addition to this the rheuma-
tism extended up my entire side until
it drew my head down on my shoulder.
I lost my strength and flesh and waa
totally unfit for work.
"For twenty-eight years I have con-
sulted physicians and taken their pre-
scriptions without deriving any mate-
rial benefit. My ailments increased in
Intensity until I was assured that there
was no hope for me. During last year
I went Into the butcher business, but
the dampness from the ice used in-
creased my rheumatic pains to such an
extent that I was not only compelled to
quit the business, but was confined to
my house and bed for nearly six
months.
"I had given up all faith of being a
well man again, when in November last
I read in the World-Herald a case of a
man who had been entirely cured from
the ailments from which I was suffer-
ing, by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills for Pale People. On November 28,
I purchased a box. In a week I was
astonished to know that I felt better
than I had for six months past, and be-
fore I had used half a box I was sure
that I had found a cure for my aliments.
The ringing in my ears began to lessen
in volume, and finally left me. That was
the first effect I experienced aside from
an increased appetite. The pain from
the rheumatism gradually left me, so
that within one week from the time I
took my first pill I was able to sit up irt
bed. On January 1st, I was able to go
out and walk around a little. The pal-
pitations of my heart entirely ceased.
On February 9, I was so thoroughly
cured that I accepted a position as night
watchman in the Forest Lawn Ceme-
tery, remaining out of doors from 6 p.
m. until 6 a. m. I have gained in weight
from 144 pounds, which I weighed in
November last, to 172 pounds, which I
weigh now."
Mr. R. W. Cowan, keeper of a gen-
eral store at Florence, was also seen by
the reporter. Mr. Cowan is also an old
soldier, having been a member of the
144th Infantry, Company C, and later
of Company M of the First Minnesota
Cavalry. Mr. Cowan stated that he con-
tracted chronic diarrhoea while he was
in the army and has never until within
the past few months, received any re-
lief. He stated that he had taken the
wonderful Pink Pills and was now al-
most thoroughly cured, so much so in
fuct that he has discontinued their use.
He was also paralyzed in the left side
of his face, the mouth being drawn up
at the left corner, and he was entirely
unable to move the muscles of his fore-
head or to close his left eye. He states
that he believes it Is owing to the use
of the Pink Pills that he has recovered
the use of his left eyelid, which, prior
to his taking the pills, had been fas-
tened down by a physician so that the
sight would not be destroyed from the
eye filling with dust, und ascribes the
recovery to the Pink Pills. He has
gained fifteen pounds in weight since
last October, and feels healthier and
stronger than at any time since the war.
He intends to recommence using the
pills with the expectation of a complete
recovery from the paralysis.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a speclflo
for troubles peculiar to females, such
as suppressions, all forms of weakness,
chronic constipation, bearing down
pains, etc., and in the case of men will
give speedy relief and effect a perma-
nent cure in all cases arising from men*
tal worry, overwork, or excesses of
whatever nature. Pink Pills are sold
by all dealers, or will be sent post paid
on receipt of price, (50 cents a box, or
■ix boxes for $2.50—they are never Sold
In bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr.
Williams' Medicine Company, Schenec-
tady. N. Y.
LITERARY LIGHTS.
Swinburne is 58 years old, is five feet
high, and has a ghastly face and a head
of unkempt hair.
Aubrey Beardsley, it is said, has writ-
ten a play in which the characters are
to assume, as far as possible, the forms
and features of his drawings.
Walter Besant won't write a line un-
der the settled rate of 10 guineas ($52.60)
per thousand words, and none of the
publishers has struck against It.
According to the Bookman the best
sentence lp Ibs^jj's new play is this:
"Labor and trouble one can always get
through alone, but it takes two to be
glad.''
The pleasant discovery has just been
made at Galashiels, Scotland, of over
a hundred letters written by Sir Wal-
ter Scott to Mr. Craig, the banker. The
letters were discovered in a box filled
with archives of the old Lelth bank.
A reproduction in a lasting material
of the brain of the late Prof. Von Helm-
holtz has been made by Dr. Berliner of
Berlin. The physicians who examined
the brain considered it one of the most
remarkable they had ever seen or heard
of.
George du Maurler and Alma Tadema
were students together at Antwerp, and
In those days resembled each other so
closely that they were hardly distin-
guishable apart until Du Maurler lost
the sight of an eye and began to wear
blue spectacles.
Mrs. Marie Roblnson-Wrlght, the
Mexican traveler and writer, received
the highest price ever paid for a news-
paper article—$20,000 in gold, paid to her
by the Mexican government for an il-
lustrated article on Mexico in the New
York World.
The personal nppenrance of Jean
Rlchepln, who Is described as the most
versatile genius in all France since the
death of Victor Hugo, must impress
the stranger who meets him for the first
time. He is pictured as a tall, burly
man, handsome in a brutal style, with
a low brow, a thick neck, dilated nos-
trils and a general air of athletic calm.
The Kremlin of Moscow contains the
erown* of Poland and all the other
kingdoms and principalities which
Russia has overthrown.
The largest sailing ship afloat Is ttte
remodeled Persiun Monarch, 3,023 tons
measurement. Her iron masts are 184
feet high from the deck.
The beet root sugar crop of the Uni-
ted States is something over 40,000,000
pounds a year, of which California nro-
duces 29,000,000 pounds.
The sura of 310,000 has been sub-
scribed for a hospital for contagious
diseases at Yale. This is the only hos-
pital of its kind in any American Uni-
versity.
Perhaps the largest camelia in exist-
ence is at Piluitz Castle, near Dresden,
Germany. The tree is twenty-four
feet high and annually produce about
50,000 blossoms.
The late John II. Ballentine of New-
ark, was one of the richest brewers in
America, His firm some 40 years ago,
refused an offer of 80,000,000 for the
Ballentine plant.
Milestones on the Road
That lends to health arc marked in tiie memory
of tlioso who. at regular stages and persistently,
have been convoyed thither by llostotters Stom-
ach Hitters, a potent nuxilliary of nature in her
efforts to throw of the yoko of disease. Malarial,
kidney, rheumatic and billious trouble, constipa-
tion and nervousness take their departure when
this bonignant medicine is resorted to for their
eradication.
The municipal elections held April 2
throughout the State of Nebraska,
where the license question was involv-
ed, resulted in 90 per cent, of the towns
declaring in favor of license.
Tobacco Destroys Vitality.
Nervous system paralyzed by nicotlre means
lost manhood, weak eyes, and a general all-
gone look und feeling that robs life ot it« pleas-
uro. Tobacco is the root of many an impotent
symptom, and No-To-Bac a guaranteed euro
that will make you strong, vigorous, and happy
in more ways than one. No-To-Bac guaran-
teed and sold by Druggists everywhere. Hook,
titled "Don't Tobacco Spit or Smoke Your Life
Away." Address Sterling Remedy Co., New
York or Chicago.
Highest of all in leavening strength.—Latest 0. S. Got. Food Report
Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
n;~~
"'8
Of the 110,000 Odd Fellows in Penn-
sylvania, it is said 50,000 will march in
the great parade in Philadelphia, May
21.
Economy requires that in every receipt ca'
for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It
will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter,
of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome,
ROYAL 4ACXQ POWDER CO.. 106 WALL 8T., NEW YORK.
Meade has frothed over,
bottling.
Mr. Cleveland's income is said to be
between 590,000 and 8100,000 a year.
HALL'S CATARRH CURE Is attqtrtt! ant! T*
taken internally, and acts directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system, Write for
testimonials, free. Manufactured by
I-\ J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
From the Patent Office at Washing-
ton comes the report that in the eleven
years since the type-writing- machine
was first put upon the market the 3ales
have amounted to nearly 930,000,000.
"Hanson's Magic Corn Salve."
Warranted to cure or money refunded. A*k your
druggist for it. Price 15 cents.
It is claimed that Lake Erie produces |
more fish to the svuare mile than any
other body of water in the world.
In time of war France puts 270 out of
every 1,000 of her population in the
field; Germany, 310; Russia, 210.
It will take 20,000 yards of carpet
for the steamers St. Louis and St. Paul.
It will be American carpet, too.
The old "blow out the gas" suicide
has passed away, but the '"blow out
the brains" crank is still with us.
Pise's Cure tor Consumption has laved
me many a doctor's bill.—$. F. Hardy,
Hopkins Place, Baltimore, Md., Dec. 2, '94.
It is said that most of the 5,000 horses
shipped from America to Europe re-
cently were intended for slaughter as
food. Electricians think this a sign of
the coming trinmph of electricity as a
motor.
Mothers who have lined I'arker'a Ginger
Tunic
for years insist! t!iat It bcnetlts more than other medi-
cines; every form of distress and weskness yield toil.
The Berlin residence of Dr. Siemens,
the electrician, is fitted from cellar to
roof with electrical appliances, and the
dining room, kitchen and wine cellar
are connected by an electric railway
system.
Himlercorna in a aImple remedy,
but It takes out the corns, and what a consolation it
Is! Makes walking a pleasure. ISc at druggists.
He needs f The hall porter of a London club
! pleasantly admits that his position
brings him about 87,500 a year.
The largest Bible in the world is a
manuscript Hebrew Bible in the Vati-
can, weighing 320 pounds.
The clergymen in Nebraska attribut-
ed the recent hard times to the Sun-
day opening of the Chicago VVorldt
Fair. •
RUSSIAN MILLERS.
They Are Endeavoring to Capture Oof
Floor Markets.
Russian millers have decided to
make a determined effort to capture
some of the great flour markets of the
world. In welcoming the members of
the milling trade at the congress of
flour millers, which was opened at St
Petersburg on Jan. 25 and remained in
session for about eight days, M. Kov-
lovsky remarked that the minister of
finance trusted that the main Item on
the agenda would not be lost sight of.
He referred to the most practical way
of promoting the export of flour from
Russia. Grain was a precious raw ma-
terial, and was one of the richest of
the empire, but the country W6uld nev-
er reap the full value of its harvests
until some means could be found ot
utilizing all the grain raised by the
native farmer. That, he said, might
be asking very much, but it was the
ideal to keep before them, which they
Bhould never lose from their sight. The
government is backing the enterprise,
and will make a reduction in transport-
ation rates to assist in its accomplish-
ment. The query at the convention
was: If the United States could do so
well why not they? True they saw that
the United States enjoys advantages
which have not fallen to the lot of Rus-
sia, but on the other hand, Russia en-
joys three advantages which the Unit-
ed States have not, referring to the
excellence of their raw material, to the
cheapness of labor and to the proxim-
ity of their foreign markets. Before
the Americans managed to make their
flour known in the markets of Europe
millions of dollars were spent in the
aggregate, and Russia feels that If their
mlHers were determined to make such
sacrifices, that they, too, would reap
a reward similar to that of the millers
•f the United States.
Miss Susanna Adams,* who has jus
made a successful bebut at the Grand
Opera House, Paris, is an American
girl,
liegeman's Camphor Ice with Glycerine.
Cures Chapped Hand* and Face, Tender or Soro Feet,
Chilblain*, Piles, Ac. C. (1. Clark Co.. New Haven, Ct
The earliest fanning mill or winnow-
ing machine was erected in China, and
was in use there for centuries while
Europeans were cleaning their grain
by casting it in the air on a windy
day.
If the Bnby la Catling Teefit
Be sure and use that old and well-tried remedy, Mrs.
Winslow's Soothing STB'-'r for Children Teething.
Texas will have no timber in fifteen
years if the present rate of cutting 1,-
000,000,000 feet a year continues.
ONLY ONE AND THAT IN JULY.
Kxcurslon to Colorado.
The Great Hook Island Route will sell tickets
cheap for this excursion to Denver in July, and
you should post yourself ut once us to rutes and
routes.
Send by postal oard or letter to Jno. Sebastian,
O. P. A., Chicago, for a beautiful souvenir issued
by tho Chicago. Itock Island and I'nciQc li'y, call-
ed tho "Tourist Teachor," that tells all about tho
trip. It will be sent free. It is a gem, and you
should not delay in asking for it.
Jno, Sebastian, G. P. A., Chicago.
If one could believe all that is said
about Prince Bismarck at different
times, he would indeed be a most re-
markable man. Among other curious
characteristics related of him, it is
stated that his hatred of any fancy
drapery about his rooms is so intense
that he cannot even bear the sight of
a lamp 6hade.
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
lends to ncrsonal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, who live bet-
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world's best products to
the neeas of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
In the form most acceptable and pleas-
ant to the taste, the refresiling and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax-
ative; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and levers
ana permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid-
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak-
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
fctyrup of Figs is for sale by all drug1-
gists in 60c ana $1 bottles, but it is man-
ufactured by tho California Fig Syrujr
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
aw pt any substitute if offered.
Evidently a Victim of Occult Art*.
Madgo—What would you say if I
told you that Mr. Swellehedde has
actually proposed that odious Misa
Elderby?
Marrette—I'd say that hypnotism is
making tremendous Btrides.—Chicago
Record.
WE^
^qive
AWAY<-
Absolutely free of cost, for a
LiniTED TlflE ONLY,
A loaf of bread 0 feet 4 inches long,
8 inches wide and 2 inches thick, orna-
mented with ribbons, canteen, platter,
knife, fork, cup and spoon, was a cur-
ious feature of the G. A. R. encamp-
ment at Macon, Mo.
Hudnet's pharmacy, a famous New
York landmark, closed its doors on
Saturday night, 27th ult., for tho first
time in 28 years. It will give place to
a sky-scraper.
The coinage at the Philadelphia
Mint during April aggregated 7,094,-
726 pieces, valued at $3,223,972.
As a souvenir of the naval rendez-
vous at Cronstadt, the czar will presnut
to France a vase of jasper bronze, cast-
ing 50,000 rubles. The vase will be
Dlaced in the llotel de Ville, Paris.
The People's Common Sense Medical Ad
viser, By R.V. Pierce. M. D., Chief Consulting
Physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical
Institute, Buffalo, a book of over 1,000 large
pages and 300 colored and other illustra-
tions, in strong paper covers to any one
sending 21 cents in one-cent stamps for
packing and postage only. Over 68o,o
already sold in cloth binding at regular
price of $1.50. Address: (with stamps and
this Coupon) World's Dispensary Mbd
ical Association, No. 663 Main Street
Buffalo, N. Y.
Caller—Is Miss Sweetie at
New Girl—Yis, sor.
Caller—Is she engaged?
New Girl—Wull, from th' crushed-up
look thim big sleeves had phwin Oi
wint in to stir th' foire, Oi shud say
she wuz.—N. Y. Weekly.
2
Q
U
* HIGHEST AWARD*
WORLD'S FAIR.
★ THE BEST ★
PREPARED
F^OOO
' SOLD EVERYWHERE.
if JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. #
Ely's Cream BalmJ^^
Cleanses the ^n6al
Passages, Alloys Pain
and Inflammation,
Restores the Senses of
Taste und Smell.
Ileals the Sores.
Anply Balm into sach nostril.
el.* Bhos.. 66 Warren St., n. Y.
m
4^ For Sprains and Bruises and all Painful Accidents, ...
% St. Jacobs Oil In ALL KINDS OF SPORTS ?
^4 ... Is the professional's first choice of a remedy always.
vj .j. 4.4* 4* 4* 44 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* f
Your
Neighbor's
Wife
Likes
Clairette Soap.
Says it saves time—saves money—makes overwork unneces-
jsary. Tell your wife about it. Your gTOcer sells it.
Made only by
[The N. K. Fairbank Company, St. Louis.
PATENTS
tallied. Write for luveutor'sUuldo
I EWIS'
^ P0W5IBI
.... 98 % LYE
POWSXSID AND FEBrmO
(PATKNTBU)
The ttronoat and purest Lye
made. Unlike other Lye, It balng
11 fine powder and packed in a can
jwith removable llu, tho contents
are always r^adr for use. Will
make the best perfumed Hard 8oap
In 10 minutes without boilina. 11 lb
the beat for cleausing waste pipaa,
disinfection sinks, closets, waahin;
bottles, paints, trees, etc.
PENNA.SALT M'F'G CO.
Uaa. Agents., Phi)** Ft
ntraoiura Washington, I).
§0Successfully Prosecutes Claims,
■ Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau
H 3 y r# I a last wur, 15 udj udicating claims, atty a 111 to,
Corrugated Iron, Standing Searj
Steel anil Fc^ Hooting, Mrial
Shlngleo, St4>el 'ml tat Ion Brick
and Stuue, Building Paper, elo.
Th< Kaniu City Metal lUoGog and Comgiting Conpup
Alt Delaware St., Kansas City, Mo.
ROOFING!
W. y. v., WICHITA—VOL. 8, NO. ti.
When Aaswtrtk( Advertisements PI®**®
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Rutherford, M. B. The Davis Advertiser. (Davis, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 30, 1895, newspaper, May 30, 1895; Davis, I. T.. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc143467/m1/7/: accessed April 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.