The Wewoka Weekly Herald (Wewoka, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, March 22, 1907 Page: 3 of 4
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■ I
• 1j
V
Secret ef Japan's Success.
Gen. Sir Ian Hamilton of the British
army wrote the evening after one oi
the great battles which he had wit-
nesred between Russians and Japa- >
nese in the recent war in Manchuria:
"To bed! Although it is with re-
luctance that I prepare to lose my grip
of the exciting consciousness that I
have to-day seen the most stupendous
spectacle that it is possible for mortal
brain to conceive—As..a advancing,
Europe falling back; the wall of mist
and the writing thereon." Then as to the
meaning of this retreat of Europe be-
fore advancing Asia: "The more I
think the more certain I am that it
was not strategy or tactics, or arma
ment or information, which won the
battle of Liaoyang for Oyama, but that
tt was rather the souls of the Japanese
troops which triumphed over the less
developed, less awakened, less atimu
lated qualities of the Russians."
JM';
FADED TO A SHADOW.
COVERED MILK PAIL.
New Shape Which Aids in Keeping
Dirt Out of Milk.
The milk pail shown in the lllustra
tion is something like an ordinary
milk pail turned upside down—small
end up. The top Is seven inches in
diameter. A shallow pan two inches
deep fits tight in the top and is fas
teiled there. A few holes one-six-
teenth of an inch in diameter in the
bottom of the pan near the center let
the milk run through into the pail
THREE BOYS HAD ECZEMA.
Were Treated at Dispensary—Did Not
Improve—Suffered Five Months
—Perfect Cure by Cuticura.
"My three children had eczema for
five months. A little sore would ap-
pear on the head and seemed very j
itchy, increasing day after day. The
baby had bad it about a week whec
the second boy took the disease and
a few sores developed, then the third
boy took it. For the first three months
I took them to the N— Dispensary, j
but they did not seem to improve.
Then I used Cuticura Soap and Cuti-
cura Ointment and in a few weeks
tbey had improved, and when their
heads were well you could see nothing
of the sores. Mrs. Kate Keim, 513
West 29th St., New York, N. Y., Nov.
1, 6 and 7, 1906."
Both Kept Bue;
Prof. Burgess, of Boa toft* It filling
♦he Roosevelt chair in the University
oiWllB and while Jie Is Us The °r lhe !>ail ,laa a tiK1,t fit"
;*Bi tlm« I cover' """" *
New Style Milking Pail.
to tn
his wife is devoting I
Diet
One or two thicknesses
uree In the KafseJsfibri<-H j of strainer cloth are slipped under the
copying pictures by Or.uza l'an before is fastened in place, and
the result is a dust and dirt-proof pail.
There is no patent on this pail, says
the Montreal Herald.
The milk strikes the bottom of the
pan, runs through the holes in the
pan, through the strainer cloth and
into the pail, where it is practically
sealed from the outside conditions. It
comes in contact with the air of the
barn only* while it is passing from the
teat to the pan—a distance of perhaps
six inches.
fcTIC TORTP*
Worn Down by Five Years of Suffer-
ing from Kidney Complaint.
Mrs. Remethe Myers, of 180 South
Tenth St., Ironton, 0., says: "I have
worked hard in my
time and have been
exposed again and
again to changes of
weather. It is no
wonder my kidneys
gave out and I went
all to pieces at last.
For five years I was
fading away and finally so weak that
for six months I could not get out of
the house. I was nervous, restless and
sleepless at night, and lame and sore
in the riorning. Sometimes every-
thing wouid whirl and blur before me.
I bloated to badly I could not wear
tight clothing, and had to put on shoes
two sizes larger than usual. The
urine was disordered and passages
were dreadfully frequent. I got help
from the first box of Doan's Kidney
Pills, however, and by the time I had
taken four boxes the pain and bloating
were gone. I have been in good health
ever since."
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn Co., BufTalo, N. Y.
Year's Cigarette Output.
The cigarette output of 4,368,729,016
in the calendar year of 1906 must have
come as a surprise to the bulk of the
trade, but more stunning yet its in-
crease in one year of 842,240.425, an
increase by nearly 300,000,000 larger
than the increase of our cigar indus-
try during the same year. This Jump
is the more remarkable in the face of
the pronounced and unrelenting hostil-
ity of a half dozen state legislatures
which have ostracized not only the
manufacture but also the handling
and consumption of cigarettes with-
in the confines of their respective ter-
ritories.—United States Tobacco Jour-
nal.
Oats—Heads 2 Foot Long.
The John A. Salzer Seed Co., La ( rouse,
Wis., are bringing out a new oats this
year with heads 2 foot long! That's a
wonder. Their cntnlog tells!
Spe*z— the greatest cereal hay food
America ever Haw! Catalog tells!
A Locomotive Engineer Tells How
He Was Cured by Dr. Willlamb
Pink Pills. wBEfc ,
Pain that seems almost unbearable
Is a characteristic of s<;iatHgM€|iima-
tism. In some cases Di0 pai is
knife-like, sharp or shooting; in oth-
ers it is dull and aching.I Scia lea
is stubborn in resisting trea tment and
the patient frequently . iffersl for
years. This was the case.with Mr.
Herbert E. Spaulding, a ooomo -
engineer on the Cincinnati,' New Or-
leans & Texas Pacific Railway, whose
home is at I>ongview, Texas.
"While running an engine some
years ago," he says, "I fell off and
hurt my knee and spine and I have
always considered this to be tho cause
of my Illness. The sciatica took hold
of me from my'heel to the back of
my head. The pain was the worst
I ever suffered ^in my life and my leg
- - ^rere^twilted out of shape.
W^—iiliMteian's oure far
several months an^jfor an mouth.8
could not ret out of feed. I alto went
to Hot springs but came back 1*
worse condition than when I went.
"It was when I was down in bed
that I heard of the case of a Mr.
Allison," a much older man than my-
self, who had been cured of sciatica
by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I began
taking the pills and soon was able
pet out of bed. When I had t«. i
six boxes I was ablo to work abOv-t
the house and yard. I kept right
on with the pills until I was cured
and I have never had any return of
the trouble. I have been running an
engine ever since."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by
all druggists, or sent postpaid, on re-
eelpt of itrlce, 50 cents per box. six
boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams
Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
IDEAL BARN FLOOR.
One Made of Cement Meets All Re
quirements.
I think an ideal floor for a cow to
stand on is cement, writes an Ohio
farmer. You can keep a stable floor
dry if you use plenty of absorbents.
I have been rash enough to say a man
should use land plaster in his stable,
but Prof. Ketch says land plaster has
no power to fix ammonia at all.
Therefore, we must put on lots of bed-
ding, and not allow It to remain un-
der the cow until it is all matted
and when we stir it up find mold
In it; [Keep it working to the gutter
ftfid put on fresh. I have never found
BO goo- an absorbent as good, fresh
horse manure scattered behind the
cows each morning with road dust.
It holds the ammonia, takes up all
the liquids and keeps the cow reason-
ably clean. If a man is going to have
a sanitary stable, he must put In hard
work, and I would recommend a ma-
nure carrier, and to clean out the
stable twice a day.
Our mammoth 148-page Seed and Tool
Catalog is mailed free to all intending
buyers, or semi 6c in stamps and receive
free samples of new Two Foot Long Oats
and other cereals and big catalog free.
John A. Salter Seed Co., Box W, La
Crosse, Wis.
Purely Experimental.
"Why in the world did you order a
Welsh rabbit In this French place?"
they asked her. "Of course, the cheese
is about the same as you get every-
where, but how can you tell what a
French Welsh rabbit will do to you
afterward?"
"I'm not afraid," she informed them,
placidly. "I Just want to see what
sort of ragtime nightmare French it
will speak."
FARMS THAT GROW
"NO. I HARD" WHEAT
(Sixty-three Pounds to
the Bushel). Are «tu-
sted in the Canadian
West where Home-
I steeds of 160 seres can
be obtained free by
every settler willing
and able to comply
with the Homestead
Regulations. During
the present year a large portion of
New Wheat Growing Territory
HAS BERN MADE ACCRSSJBI.K TO MAR
KHTS BY THE RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION
that has been pushed forward so rigorously by
the three great railway companies.
For literature and particular* addrew SUPER-
INTENDENT OF IMMIGRATION, Ottawa.
Canada,or the following authorised Cauadiau
Gorernment Ajjent :
J. S. CRAWFORD, No. 125 W. Ni«tk Street,
Kansas City. Missouri.
Mention this paper.
Positively cared by
these Little Pills.
TUey also rellero Dis-
tress from Dyspepsia, In-
digestion and Too Iloarty
Eating. A perfect rem-
edy for Dizziness, Nausea,
Drowsiness, Bad Taste
In tho Mouth. Coated
Tongue, Pain In the Ride,
. TORPID LI VEIL T txtff
regulate tbo Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMLL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES,
rateh.) issold by all druggists
on a positive guarantee
to cure Tetter, Here ma,
Itch of all kinds, Skin
Eruptions, Ring Worm,
Dew Poison, Chapped
Face and Hands, Pitu-
ples, Dandruff and mil
Scalp Troubles, Corns.
Bunions, Sore ana
SWB*7 l eet, Etc. Sold
everywhere, two sizes,
50c and $ 1.00 Bottles.
Mcil this ad. to us
and we will send you a
trial bottle free.
HOOPER MEDICINE CO., Dallas, Tens.
CARTERS
ITTLE
PIUSv
DARTERS
ITTlt
IVER
PILLS.
Dairy Points.
Oversour cream gives a sour and, of
course, an abnormal taste to the but-
ter.
A dairy thermometer is quite inex-
pensive, and it is certainly a labor-
saving device.
Put a pint of fresh buttermilk into
the cream jar as a starter, and your
cream will ripen sooner.
Get the cow that gives milk all the
year round as far as possible. It is a
great Iosb to dry up cows when it is
not necessary.
Don't sacrifice the good cows and
the young growing stock. Give them
the best care for another year—they
will all be wanted.
The small farm with the small herd
Is better than a large farm with a
large herd, because the small farm
will do more in proportion than the
large one.
A poor cow may even be made to
pay her way by liberal feeding and it
is equally true that a good cow may
be made to lose money by niggardly-
treatment.
It is far more satisfactory to have
the cow in the first flow of milk in
good condition, when the yield may be
stimulated by sufilcient food without
reducing her flesh too much.
Watering the milk in the cow is
often the fact, as the quality of the
milk Is regulated by the food and milk
may be deficient in solids without hav-
'ng water added to it by the dairyman.
Care of the Separator.
In order to have the perfect motion
of the separator bowl, tlu machine
must he set level and be kept clean
and well oiled. The oil should be thin
or light, so it will not gum the wear-
ing parts. A heavy oil will make the
machine run hard and will gum quick-
ly on small high-speed bearings. All
the bearings of the machine should be
frequently flushed with coal oil. It Is
well to make a run about once in tivo
or three weeks, using coal oil on all
the bearings. This keeps the parts
free from gum and washes out'grit
ov sand that may have blown into
them. It is an excellent plan to have
a cover of close-woven cloth or oil-
cloth, that can be kepi over tho ma-
chine while it is not In operation. This
will keep out dust and will add mate-
rially to the lasting powers of the ma-
chine. The separator should he set
upon a good solid floor, so that It will
not m6ve about as the operator turns
the crank.- f%f. E. H. Webster.
Stood the Test
Allcock's Plasters have successfully
stood the test of sixty years' use by
the public; their virtues have never
been equaled by the unscrupulous im-
itators who have sought to trade upon
their reputation by making plasters
with holes in them, and claiming them
to be "Just as good as Allcock's."
Allcock's plasters stand to-day in-
dorsed by not only the highest medical
authorities, but by millions of grateful
patients who have proved their effl
cacy as a household remedy.
Ideal Trade Conditions.
Women should not get credit.
Neither should mea. Cash Is the cure,
Tradesmen, maybe, would have a bad
time for six or 12 months, and many
a lady would have to "lie low," but In
the end we would get both our trade
and our money, and she would get her
dress, and at far less cost.—London
Opinion.
Important t® Mothers.
Examine carefnlly erery bottle of CA8TORIA,
a ssfo and core remedy for Infants and children,
and see that it
i of
Bear* the
Stgsstars
In UN For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You iiaro AJwsjs fiouffbr
Coldest European \fc.nter.
fn the year 1814 the Thames froze
and the English channel was for
time Impassable because of Icebergs
The coldest European winter on rec-
ord was that of 1708-1709. It began
early in October. In 1740 also the
cold was so intense that birds fell
dead to the ground.
TO?
( . Vou may be able to
get elone^ without a
UfS1
WATERPROOF SUIT
OR SLICKER
But can you afford to?
THESE GARMENTS ARE
GUARANTEED WATERPROOF
UGMT • COMFORTABLE DURABLE
LOW IN PRICE
SOLD BY ALL SfiCUaLrOCALraS
AjTowiaca aoroN, u i
AGENTS WANTED
We want a man in your locality to demonatrate
and take orders for the IDEAL BUTTER CHURN.
We prefer a man who can famish his own rij{.
Our machine ia something entirely new in the
war of a churn. If you want to w.ike money
ana lota of it, write to-day for our proposition
We turnifth s aample outfit free to agent
culmnsr
Circulars free.
Jenkins
Ati-auta.
WE CAN
positively
SAVE You
$50 to $150
on i
ING
piano in a
su eei
TONED
VFf also handle the high-jride Baldwin, j
Ivcrs & Pond, Fischer, Smiih & Nixon,
Sohmer add others.
WE DELIVER,
at your station. Write for special terms.
TALKING MACHINES
I.atest Records. Write for terms.
GUITARS, VIOLINS, BANJOS
From cheapest to best grade.
Sheet Music. Write for catalog.
SEWING MACHINES
KMrru DURHAM (B. CO.,
3tO N. Droadwtv, Oklahoma City, O. T.
The greatest cause of worry on
Ironing day can be removed by using
Defiance Starch, which will not stick
to the iron. Sold everywhere, 16 oss.
i for 10c.
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER.
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL CCUNTER-1KRITANT.
CAPISICUM
VASELINE
EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT
A OU1CK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN.-PRICE
15c -in COLLAPSIBLE TUBfcS AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS, OR
BY MAIL ON Ufc MPT OK 15 - IN I OS! AGE STAMPS DON'T WAIT
TILL THE PAIN COMES -KEEP A TUBE HANDY.
A substitute for and superior to ' ustard or any other plaster, and will not
blister the most delicate skin. '1 ..3 pain allaying and curative qualities of
the article are wondeitul. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve
Headache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external
counter irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest
and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuialgic and Gouty complaints. A trial
will prove wlut we claim for it. and it will be found to be Invaluable in the
household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many
people say "it is the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation
of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise It 13 not genuine.
SF.ND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WILL A1AII OUR VASE-
LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU.
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
17 STATE STREET. NEW YORK CITY
[Dll FS NO MONEY,
\r ii* b—t jpr3 thoftwtow "
miscellaneous
If iflletad
"ti nrr\. send ron raer llu butm.
uUKlU Ooum.1 Witri PionmoiT Mu Cj u>
£TJUS*A5 CITY. Mo (MAW" t n.MT3tlu Hj
£ LETCH felt «*r CO..
kW.. I>. C. Ksitt*
81 !
ThomptotT* Ey« Watw
W. N. U.. Oklahoma City, No. 12, TTor*
For Girls
You Need Cardui
At every age, after entering womanhood, girls and vomen need
the strengthening, building,''pain-relieving assistance of Wine of Cardui.
It will carry you over the rough places, ease your hard days and
Increase the comfort and pleasure of living.
What its millions of users think of It, is well expressed In these
words of Mrs. Rosa Lee Cole, of Smithton, Mo., who writes: "I suf-
fered from female troubles (or 7 years. I had pain, low down In my
stomach, my feet hurt so 1 could not stand, and I was so weak and
nervous 1 could hardly do anything. 1 was just sick all the time. At
last I wrote you for advice and you recommended Wine of Cardui,
which 1 took according to your directions. I have now taken
5 bottles of Wine of Cardui, and am feeling better than In the past 7
years. My feet and stomach do not hurt, my female troubles have
gone, I am getting stouter and stronger, can do all my housework, work
In the garden and tend to 260 little chickens."
Wine of Cardui acts directly upon the sick or disordered womanly
organs or functions. It Is a natural, scientific, female tonic. It con-
tains no dangerous minerals, or other deleterious Ingredients, but Is
purely vegetable, perfectly harmless and beneficial to young and old.
Every reliable druggist sells It, in $1 bottles. Try it.
FREE BOOK J1™? 'n .
FOR LADIES
Write.todajr for a frw copy of yajnablr 64-pac«> illmtrnfrd
I Women, if
tsairo. and reply ■w
Jin*. Address: Ladies Adrlsori
(Jhattamxjjfa Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Tauu.
t' you nood M hIh ji! Advice, describe
your symptoms, mat mw a«". ai l reply will he sent in plain
'iddress: Ladies Adv x *
ory I)eyt.. The
Wine of Cardui
Sloaiv's
Lirvimeivt
fi)r Cough Cold, Croup,
Sore Throat, Stiff Neck
Rheumatism and
Neuralgia
At all Dealers
Pri'co 25c 50c, 6 *1.00
V
Sent* Free
"Sloan's Book on Horses
CatHe. Hogs 6 Poultry
Address Dr. Earl S.Sloan
|6I5 Albany St. Boston.Mass
W.
L. DOUGLAS
AND $3.50 SHOES Tlflf WORLD
" W. I. DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOES CANNOT OF EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE.
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRIOES:
* Short*, «r> to S1.50. Hoy*' Mi or*. to SI.2A. ton
Shorn. W4 t* ti.50. Miiim'A < hlldrrn'l HIiom, I'MiS to H.oo.
W. I< Douglas hiioos are recognized by expert juilgen of footwear^
to be the bent in style, fit and wear produced in tliis country. Each
part of the shoo and every detail of the making la looked aft«r
and watched ovor by skilled shoemakers, without regard to n
time or cost. If I could take you into my large factories attfu ' • $
Brockton, Mass., and show you how oarcfully W. L. Douglas
shoos aro made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, tit better,
wear longer, and are of greater Talue than any other makes.
W. I. I>oii«1m 'i*m* unri prlrr ih *Umi>«-<l on the but tom. which protect* the wrarrr *patn*t hl«h
price* n<1 Inferior *lioe*. Ti kr * o Kul.alti.ulr. m-U lyth." i- «l s.n.e .lr |ev. m > e:-.
/'«! Color Evtleti uted txclutxtely. Catalog mailed free. w. I.. UOltil.AM, hnirktuu.M#
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
Relieves
Liver
Troubles
Try It Once.
There Is more actual misery and less
real danger In a case of itching, skin
disease than any other ailment. Hunt'
Oure is manufactured especially for
these cases. It relieves instantly and
cures promptly. Absolutely guaran-
teed.
Pine 200 Years Old.
Charles H. Lord of Dunbarton, N
H., recently cut a large pine tree on
his farm which, from the rings, was
200 years old. Tho tree was 134 feet
tall, measured five feet four Inches on
the stump, and at the height of 60
faet measured three feet in diameter
In a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE. ,
A powder. It cures painful, smart- remedy is permitted to remain unless
Ing, nervous feet and ingrowing nails. , ^ proves beyond a doubt the best to
It's the greatest comfort discovery of Stained for its particular purpose,
the age. Makes new shoes easy. A por treatjDg uu manner of skin trou-
certaln cure for sweating feet. Sold 1
CONSTIPATION
The headache of chronic constipation is but one of the signs that the poisons thua clogged up in your sys-
tem have found their way into your blood.
The results are: headache, backache, biliouaness, indigestion, rheumatism, malaria, tired feeling, bad com-
plesian, etc.
Clean out your clogged canal with
Thcdford's
I3LACK-DRAUGHT
the prompt and succeasful liver medicine, about which you have so often heard.
Pure, reliable, atrictly vegetable, it has many imitators, but no equals.
Mrs. Dema Harding, of Bnghtwood, Ind., writes: "I think I would have been dead, if it hadn't been for
Thedford's Black-Draught. I had been constipated for many years and suffered greatly with the headache, and
other troubles. At last I took Thedford's Black-Draught, which helped me and now I am doing fine. Sold by
dealers everywhere in 25 cent psckagea. Try it.
Northern Democratic 8enatora.
After March 3 the only Democratic
■enators, who do not represent south-
ern states, will be Newlands of Ne-
vada and Teller of Colorado, and their
terms will expire In 1909. Newlands
la a native of Mississippi, aud is a
radical Democrat of the modern
school. Teller has been a Republican
most of his life.
It Will Stay There.
"In my family medicine cheat no
Kc< i ^
calving.
frozen
pectj
thQ
th
|he Cow.
<w the cow neru
nod excuse for
fVheu you cs-
\
khox-stall in
lor such
by all Druggists, 25c. Accept no sub-
stitute. Trial package, FUKK. Ad-
dress A. s. Olmsted. !.<• Roy. H. Y.
Missionary's Large District.
The llev. W. Arthur Noble, of Ko-
rea, has one of the largest districts
in Methodism. Rocently ho walked 300
miles, the churches in one section of
his district being near enough for him
to do this.
Don't It Jar You?
To have a cough that you can't leave
off—even when you go to bed? Put it
away for good by using Simmons'
Cough Syrup. It heals Inflammation
of fhe throat and lungs—gives you rest
and peaceful sleep.
True courage is not incompatible
with nervousness, and heroism does
not mean the absence of fear, but the
conquest of itS—Henry Van Dyk*
bles, such as Eczema, Tetter, Ring-
worm, etc., Hunt's Cure has held its
place for many years. I have failed
to find a surer remedy. It cures itch-
ing instantly."
R. M. SWANN, Franklin, La.
City's Death Rate Reduced.
The London death rate is now near-
ly 30 per cent, lower than it was at
the coming into operation of the pub
lie health act in 1891. In that yea.
the death rate was 17.1; in 1905 It wan
15.1 a thousand.
Character Is that kind of statuary
which a man cuts out with himself aa
both tool and subject.—Sterne.
Take Garfield Tea. tbr herb remedy that
has for its object Good Health! It puri-
fies the blood, cleamtes the system, makes
Deople well. Guaranteed under the Pure
rood Law.
One makes one's own happiness
only by taking care of tho happiness
of others.—C. Doane.
OXLT ONF ••OROHO Qt'llilKK"
That « I,A X A1 IVK llllOMO Otiiii ne. H m larly
named rotuediet sometime* deoelve The first and
or.yii>aI Col<1 Tubie Is iv WH1TM I'Al'KiWK with
bln' k m d red it'ierlUK. aud Loam the n.ynature of
K. W.UHOVK. 'tic.
The surest way not to fall Is to de-
termine to succeed.—Sheridan.
Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar
made of rich, mellow tobuceo. Your
dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111.
The greatest of faults is to be con-
scious of none.—Carlyle.
rtlr*. Wlnslow's Hoathln{ Njrrap.
For rUtldrrr. teething, RofienM tli« Rural. reourM fn-
rtnuiiuuiluu,alUyupain,cure* wladcolic. '<£> atx tUe.
Happy Colors
v.yv.y;
You know that there are colors which signify sadness, others which
indicate happiness but do you ever stop to think how often people aro
made sad or gliul because of the colors?
You know that children and flowers thrive best in
the sunshine. Why not have more sunshine in your
own home, then—why not lot us shew you how to get
it in (he wails by using
Mm
Tho Sanitary Wall Coating
By having? your walls decorated
with Alabustine you will mako
them more artistic, more dur-
able, more sanitary, and will
make your home a more cheer-
ful place to live in. Let us show
y<ui how easy and economical
Alabaatine ii, and how the dif-
ferent tints r-iil stenciled de-
signs can be combined to pro-
duce 'exactly the cffect
you want.1 Write us today.
Accept no substitute—insist
on geHiuit Alabustine.
The Alnbastino Company,
Craucl KapuU, Mich , or 108
Wstsi* St feet. New York City.
\ irtue is the first title of nobility
-E. C. Lefroy
Becaue* of tho e ugly, grizzly, gray halra. Ua« LA CREOLE
HAIR RESTORER. Price, Si.OOv retail
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The Wewoka Weekly Herald (Wewoka, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, March 22, 1907, newspaper, March 22, 1907; Wewoka, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc152769/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.