The Edmond Sun (Edmond, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 18, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 20, 1907 Page: 7 of 8
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IS
HEALTH NOTES
FOR JUNE.
F O $
I CATARRH-
USSM®6-!
IESSM8W-
■stasjOT
§FAPPIM
Spring Catarrh Is a well de-
fined Spring disease. The
usual symptoms are given
above. A Bottle of.Pe-ru-na
taken In time will promptly
ari'est the course of the disease
known as Spring Catarrh.
Paint Buying
Made Safe
All lean packed
White Lead and
Linseed Oil need
no argument, no
advertising to
maintain them-
selves as the best
and most economic-
al paint yet known to
man. Thedifficultyhas
been for the buyer to be
always sure of the purity
of the white lead and oil.
We have registered the
trade mark of the Dutch Boy painter
to be the final proof of quality, gen-
uineness and purity to paint buyers
everywhere. When this trade mark
appears on the keg, you can be sure
that the contents is Pure White
Lead made by the Old Dutch Process.
SEND FOR BOOK
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
<n whichever qf the follow-
ing cities it nearest you :
New York. Boston. Buffalo, Cleveland,
Cincinnati, Chicago. Ht. LoqIr, 1'hila-
delphla IJohn T. L«-win A Bros. Co. Pitta-
burgh [National Lead £ Oil Co.]
Food
Products
Libby's Vienna
Sausage
unequalled for their delicious
taste. They are put up in most
convenient form for ready serv-
ing, requiring1 only a few min-
utes preparation. They have a
fine flavor and freshness which
will please every one.
An Appetizing Dish.—Drop a tin of
Libby's V lenna Sausage in boiling water
until heated (about IS minute*) and
serve as taken from the tin on a small
plate garnished with lettuce leaves.
Ask your jrr<wor for Llbbr's and
Inulat upon getting Ltl-b;'i.
Llbby, McNeill « Llbby, Chicago
DE
3D
Sheer white goods, in fact, any fine
wash goods when new, owe much o)
Ueir attractiveness to the way thej
are laundered, this being done in &
manner to enhance their textile beau
♦y. Home laundering would be equal-
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
THE EDMOND SUN.
K. D. DAIIEY.
EDMOND,
OKLA.
NEW STATE NEWS
The Washita valley comes up smil«
Ing as usual and says its crops will
be ten per cent bigger than those at
last year.
Miss Nellie May of Chicago, w'ho Is
so fortunate as to own an allotment
near the town of Copan, has appealed
to Commissioner Tams Bixby to sell
part of her land for townsite pur-
poses. Miss May's allotment also
contains rich oil deposits.
Oklahoma has so many distinctions
that one almost fails to distinguish
between them. Now it is the 101
ranch at Bliss, which will entertain a
number of Washington statesmen, in-
cluding Baron Speck von Sternberg,
the German ambassador.
The china plant being Installed at
El Reno has suffered considerably by
floods. It is thought future Inunda-
tions can be prevented and the work
will be ipushed to completion as soon
as possible after the waters again go
down.
A 10-year-old Chickasha boy amused
himself by pouring alcohol linament
on the asphalt pavement. Asphalt is
soluble in alcohol and the damage
was great.
Through the confession of C. A.
Warner, proprietor of the Marschal
house of Tulsa, which was raided for
liquor, 600 pints of whisky was con-
fiscated.
Hicits predicts more cold weather,
says an Oklahoma exchange. Some-
how that doesn't sound as harsh as it
did last month.
The banks of Oklahoma are liable
to show a great increase in deposits
this year when the fruit and vegeta-
ble crops are sold.
A Ponca City man will try to sail
all the way from Oklahoma to Nor-
folk by water to attend the Jamestown
exposition, going down the Arkansas
and Mississippi and around through
the gulf and up the Atlantic.
The Oklahoma and Arkansas coal
traffic bureau, with headquarters at
McAlester, I. T., has filed complaint
at Washington against thirty-six west-
ern railroads charging a conspiracy to
shut Indian Territory coal out of Tex-
by making rates from the Alabama
coal fields Into Texas, giving Alabama
coal mines a monoply of the Texas
trade.
It Is claimed that $400,000 worth of
real estate has changed hands In Ard-
more in the last three months.
The war department has selected
the Fort Sill reservation as a maneu-
vering ground. As a means of moving
heavy artillery from Lawton to the
reservation a carload of elephants has
been unloaded. These are the first
elephants ever brought to Oklaihoma
or the west for si t:h a purpose.
The school board at Oklahoma City
has decided to bar married women
from teaching in the city schools. The
wedded teachers are holding indigna-
tion meetings over tihe order and their
husbands are preparing to cut living
expenses.
Articles of incorporation have been
Issued to the Midland Telephone com-
pany of El Reno, $2,500 capital stock;
incorporators. Elmer N. King, Dr. Rln-
derhagan and Allen Crumpacker.
The new train on the Frisco has
been dubbed by the Hobartites the
Boll Weevil Special."
The Orient railway operator at Ew-
Ing got It into his cranium that he
was a capitalist building a railway,
and was found after three days' ab-
sence near Arapaho furiously driving
stakes for the proposed road.
Wheat harvest is now on In Okla-
homa, and somo surprises are -predict-
ed In store when the threshing ma-
chines are started. Oklahoma is go-
ing to have some pretty good wheat
In sipite of the bears on the market
and the green bugs in the fields.
Mayor Jones of Lawton ha given
notice that he will fire any and all
policemen found intoxicated.
After living for tsn days on water
alone, J. E. Wallace lost thirteen
pounds in weight.
It only costs $6 to ride a bicycle
on the sidewalks at Enid.
Now that the green bugs have given
away to the rains people in Oklahoma
will soon begin to explain why theli
crops were so much better than they
expected.
As the result of a juvenile race wai
at Guthrie, one negro boy is dead, bill
nobody is able to identify the "red-
headed boy" who did the stabbing.
A territorial charter has been la-
sued to the Fanners' Union Co-Opera
live association of Walter, wlthh $3,-
000 capital Btock, the incorporators
For
Family
Ills
A 12
Your liver is the cause of most common family complaints such as headache,
biliousness, diarrhea, sick stomach, indigestion, colic, constipation etc.
Always keep Thedford's BUck-Draught upon the shelf, as it is best to take these
family ills at the beginning and drive them out, before they become serious.
THEDFORD'S
BLACK-DRAUGHT
is the old, reliable, popular, Southern, vegetable liver remedy, tha you have always
used, and should continue to use. It is made from nature's laboratory, of herbs and
roots, is perfectly harmless, never disappoints. Ask for Thedford's. At dealers; 25c.
The Farmer's
95,000 Acres In the "Garden Spot of the World"
is Now Being Opened Up to the
American People.
Qr. Chas. F. Simmons Ranch Just South of San Antonio on
the Market.
You -will never get another chance like thio: $210, payable $10
a month, without interest, buys two lots and a farm of from 10 acres,
for truck and fruit raising, to a 640-acre farm in balmy south Texas,
where the people are prosperous, happy and contented.
Where the flowers bloom ten months in the year.
Where the farmers and gardeners, whose seasons never end,
eat home-grown June vegetables in January, and bask in mid-winter's
balmy air and glorious sunshine.
Where the land yield is enormous and the prices remunerative.
Where something can be planted and harvested every month in
the year.
Where the climate is so mild that the Northern farmer here
save practically all his fuel bills and three-fourth the cost of
clothing his family in the North.
Where the country is advancing and property values rapidly In-
creasing.
Where all stock, without any fesd, fatten winter and summer,
on the native grasses and brush.
Where the same land yields the substantials of the temperate
the luxuries of the tropic zones.
Where the farmer does not have to work hard six months in
the year to raise feed to keep his stock from dying during the win-
ter, as they do in the North and Northwest.
Where there are no aristocrats and people do not have to work
hard to have plenty and go in the best society.
Where the natives work less and have more to show for what
they do than in any country In the United States.
Where houses, barns and fences can be built for less than half
the cost In the North
Where sunstrokes and heat prostrations are unknown.
Where sufferers from Asthma, BronchltlB, Catarrh, Hay Fever
and Th:-oat Troubles find relief.
Whci'e, surrounded by fruits and vegetables, which ripen every
month in the year, the living is better and less expensive than in
the North.
Where the water is pure, soft and plentiful.
Where the taxes are so low that the amount is never missed.
Where Public and Private Schools and Churches of all denom-
inations are plentiful.
Where peace, plenty and good will prevail.
Where it is so healthy that there are few physicians and most
of them, to make a living, supplement their Income from other bus-
iness.
Write today for full particulars and beautiful views of the ranch.
DR. CHAS. F. SIMMONS,
215 Alamo Plaza, SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS.
nnnt*^v NEW discovkkyi 8itm
** • quick relief and cures worst ohbcb.
Hook of testimonials und 10days' treatment FKKK.
Dlt. II. H.QtLEKN'B BON8. Box 11. Ati.anta, Ua.
MISCELLANEOUS ELECTROTYPES
In jrreat Tarletr for rale at the lowent price* by
A. ti .kkLLOitii NBWBPAPKK co«( lit W. Adas.. §1.,Chit**.
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 25, 1907.
RHEUMATISM
CAN NOT BE RUBBED AWAY
It is_ perfectly natural to rub the spot that hurts, and when tlie muscles,'
nerves, joints and bones are throbbing and twitching1 with the pains of
Rheumatism the sufferer is apt ti turn to the liniment bottle, or some other
external application, in an effort to get relief from the disease, by producing
counter-irritation on the flesh. Sucli treatment will quiet the pain tempo-
rarily, but can have no direct curative effect on the real disease because it
does not reach the blood, where the cause is located. Rheumatism is mora
than skin deep—it is rooted arul grounded in the blood and can only be
reached by constitutional treatment—IT CANNOT BE RUBBED AWAY.
Rheumatism is due to an excess of uric acid in the blood, brought about by
the accumulation lti the system of refuse matter which the natural avenues
of bodily waste, the Bowels and Kidneys, have failed to carry off. This
refuse matter, coming in contact with the different acids of the body, forms
uric acid which is absorbed into the blood and distributed to r.'.l parts of the
body, and Rheumatism gets possession of the ry stein. The r.chcs and pains
are only symptoms, end though they may be scattered or relieved f6r a time
by surface treatment, they will_ reappear r.t the first exposure to cold or
dampness, or after an attack of indigestion or other irregularity. Rheuma-
tism can never be permanently cured while the circulation remains saturated
with irritating, pain-produeing uric acid poison. The disease wilf* shift
from muscle to muscle or joint to joint, settling on the nerves, causing
inflammation and swelling and such terrible pains that the nervous system
is often shattered, the health undermined, and perhaps the patient becomes
deformed and crippled for life. S. S. S. thoroughly cleanses the blood and
renovates the circulation by neutralizing the acids and expelling all foreign
matter from thosystem It warms and invigorates the blood so that instead
of a weak, sour stream, constantly deposit-
ing acrid and corrosive matter in the mus-
cles, nerves, joints and bones, the body is fed
and nourished by rich, health-sustaining
blood which completely and permanently
curcs Rheumatism. S. S. S. is composed
of both purifying and tonic properties—
just what is needed in every case of Rheu-
matism. It contains no potash, alkali or other mineral ingredient, but is
made entirely of purifying, healing extracts and juices of roots, herbs and
barks. If you are suffering from Rheumatism do not waste valuable time
trying to rub a blood disease away, but begin the use of S. S, S. and write
us about your case and our physicians will give you any information or
advice desired free cf charge and will send our special treatise on Rheumatism.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
OUR NEW CATALOGUE IS A MARVEL OF ART
Our Cotton Gin Machinery is all that
the Catalogue claims for it.—Write
us for Catalogue—and tell us what
Machinery you are in need of.
CONTINENTAL GIN COMPANY, DALLAS, TEXAS
S.S.S.
PURELY VEGETABLE
Friend
Need
B 10
No friend in need could be more welcome to a sick woman, than a medicine *
that will relieve her suffering, build up her strength and bring back to her cheeks®
their lost bloom. Cardui has done this, for thousands of sick, miserable women.
Composed of ingredients with special, curative action on the womanly organs.
Wine of Cardui
goes to the seat of your trouble and is sure to do you good. J. F. Stone, of
Lawrence, Kas., writes: "My wife suffered for 10 years from female troubles
and was given up to die, but took Cardui, and now she is in good health." $1.
WRITE US A LETTER
Write today for a free copy of valuable 64-pate Illustrated Book for Woeieti. If yoa need Medical
Advice, describe your symptoms, stating age. and reply will be sent In plain sealed envelope. Ad-
dress: Ladles Advisory Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Tenn.
His Idea of a Good Time.
The retired contractor sighed as he
got into his dress suit and thought of
the elaborate dinner and the opera
that were to come.
"Some day," he said, "I'll git real
desp'rit, an' then do you know what
I'll do?"
"Something terrible, no doubt," re-
plied his ambitious wife.
"I suppose it wouldn't look well In
print," he admitted, "but 1 can't help
that. What I'll do will be to throw
away these high-priced cigarB, put on
some old clothes, go out an' come in
by the back'way an' smoke a quarter
pound of cut-up chrwln' tobacco in a
cob pipe while I'm talkin' things over
with the coachman in the barn."—The
Bohemian.
The Plain Plucker.
11 a burn or a bruise afflicts you, rub
it on, rub it on.
Then before you scarcely know it all
the trouble will be gone.
For an aching joint or muscle do the
same.
It extracts all pains and poisons,
plucks the stings and heals the
lame.
Hunt's Lightning Oil does it
Will Fctse.
He—Why are you wearing that ex-
pensive gown at that dinner to-night?
It isn't such a swell affair.
She—I know it, but I don't feel like
talking much and with this gown on I
won't be entirely lost sight of.—De-
troit Free Pre3s.
On the Honeymoon.
"So you were well pleased with the
train on which you took your wed-
ding trip?" said the bosom friend.
"Was it an accommodation train?"
The young man's face beamed with
delight.
"I should say it was an accommoda-
tion train," he confided. "Why, the
porter put the light out every time we
reached a tunnel."
If It Fails, the Money's Yours.
Thousands of boxes of Hunt's Cure
are being sold by the Southern drug-
gists daily, for the simple reason that
people are rapidly finding out that it is
the best cure for any itching disease
ever discovered. The first application
relieves, and one box positively guar-
anteed to cure any one case.
Sad Worldliness.
"Honesty is the best policy," re-
marked Meandering Mike.
"It sure is fur folks like us," an-
swered Plodding Pete. "Our trans-
actions ain't big enough to enable us
to hire de best legal talent."
Ladies Can Wear Shoes
One size smaller after using Allen's Foot-
Ease. A certain cure for swollen,sweating,
hot, aching feet. At all Druggists, 25c. Ac-
cept no substitute. Trial psokage FREE.
Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Let a man overoome anger by love;
let him overcome evil by good, the
greedy by liberality, the liar by truth.
—Buddha.
The Camera Fiend's Wanderlust.
As the sun day by day ascends the
heavens and the actinic value of his
light increases, rhapsodizes the editor
of the American Amateur Photograph-
er, thure seizes us once more the
fervor of the enthusiast From the
high shelf down comes the camera, the
plate holders are loaded, and we tramp
across the green fields looking for pic-
tures—or pretending to. For half the
cause of our wandering has naught to
do with the black box we carry with
us. The primitive instinct for change,
the ancestral wanderlust, It Is, that has
seized us and driven us forth to na-
ture.
$100 Reward, $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn
thai there Is at least une dreaded disease that acleuce
has beeu able to cure la all its stages. and that la
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive
cur.* uuw known to tbe inedlcal fraternity. Catarrh
being a constitution*! disease, requires a conatltu-
tlonal treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken In-
foundation of tbe dUease. aud giving tbe patient
atrengtb by building up the constitution and assist-
Ing nature In doing Its wurlt. The proprietors have
so much faith In Its curative powers that they offer
One Hundred Dollars for any case tbat It falls to
cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address K. J. CHENEV A CO., Toledo, O.
SICK HEADACHE
CARTERS
PILLS.
regulate the Bowels.
Positively cared
these Little Pills..
Tliey also relieve Dl
tress from Dyspepsia, lot
digestion and Too IleartJ
Eating. A perfect reic
edy tor Dizziness, Nausea,
Prowslness, Bad Tasti
in the Mouth. Coate4
Tongue, Pain In the filda
torpid Liver. Ttaj
Purely Vegetable.
No man that Imparteth his Joys to
bis friend, but he joyeth the more;
and no man that imparteth his griefs
to his friend, but he grleveth the less.
Mre. Wtnalow'a Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, aofteoa tbe ffuraa, reduce* tu-
Uunmatlou. allays pain, cure* wind colli. 28c ft bottle.
Men who make good use of
time have none to spare.
their
CARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE,
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
liWiS
SINGLE
BINDER
SMSSCIGHK
You P 7 tOo.
for Cigars
Not ao Good.
F. P.LEWIS Peoria. Ill i
starches clothes nlcesb
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Dailey, A. D. The Edmond Sun (Edmond, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 18, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 20, 1907, newspaper, June 20, 1907; Edmond, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc150102/m1/7/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.