The Byron Republican. (Byron, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, May 4, 1906 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
“PE-RU-N4 WORKED
SIMPLY MARVELOUS”
Suffered Severely
With Headaches —
Unable to Work
Miss Iucv V McGivney 453 8rd Ave
Brooklyn if Y writes :
For many months suffered se-
verely from headaches and pains In
the side and back sometimes being
unable to attend to my dally work
“I ant better now thanks to Pem-
na and am as active as ever and have
no more headaches
The way Peruna worked In my
case was simply marvelous ”
We have in our files many grateful
letters from women who have suffered
with the symptoms named above Lack
of space prevents our giving more han
one testimonial here
It is impossible to even approximate
the great amount of suffering which Pe-
runa has relieved or the number of
women who have been restored to health
and strength by its faithful use
Physical Culture Orator
After every speech he delivers
BouiMte Cockran is a sore man physi-
cally Any one who has ever seen
him in oratorical action knows why
he is sore The old flagellant monks
were not much more cruel to them-
selves than Cockran Is to himself
His favorite gesture is to slap his
thighs and it is no love pat he gives
them It’s a good beating Cockran
is one of the old school muscular
desk pounding school of orators If
he could not hammer his desk and
thump his thighs he would probably
think his powers failing
Good housekeepers use the best That’s
why they buy Red Cross Boll Blue At
leading grocers 6 cents
Lots of folks imagine that they are
not talked about simply because they
don’t hear it
Mrs Winslow’s Soothing Sjrnp
For ctalldroo teething softena tbo gtiros reducM in
0wnmtioa sUajr pain cure viailooUu a&csbotus
A woman is never a pessimist until
she begins to feel that she is too old to
be handsome
! '
When a laxative is needed nothing can
be more effective than Garfield Tea which
is made of herbs It cares sick headache
constipation and diseases of liver kidneys
stomach and bowels it purifies the blood
cleanses the system and clears the com-
plexion A Commercial King In the Commons
Sir John Brunner' who celebrated
his birthday tVe other day Is looked
vpon as one of the commercial kings
in the house of commons He Is bead
of the largest manufactory In the
world and Is deeply Interested In
science and education generally He
rivals Mr Carnegie In the number of
free libraries town halls and scholar-
ships which he has so generously giv-
en especially in Cheshire the North-
wlch division of which he represents
in parliament He urges that the
young men of the day should be given
a scientific education and says that
every penny he has in the world
comes ‘‘from the application of sci-
ence to commerce”
r -
Guarding Against the Plague
The fact that the steamship Burrs-
fleld from Bombay to 'Philadelphia is
'detained at Reedy Island in the Dela-
ware river with a mysterious dis-
ease on board thought to be the bu-
bonlo plague has awakened the very
active Interest of the marine hospital
service In Washington and the Phlla-
' delphla quarantine officials No Asia-
tic disease is more dreaded than this
one and all possible precautionary
measures will be taken by the govern-
ment to prevent Its graining a foothold
imm3 1
THE FLOWER OP HOPE
The rain ceased at last but the
steady downpour seemed to have
washed the color out of everything and
it was a drab landscape that I looked
upon as I plodded througa the mire by
the sltje of the river The little waves
is usual' were tumbling over one an-
other in the swift-running water but
the white tassels of the bird cherries
that lined the banks now hung limp
and mud-splashed Turning aside from
this depressing sight I began to climb
the path through the pine wood and
leaving the beaten track came upon
beauty Trailing in long festoons
down a steep bank were masses of the
lesser periwinkle the flower of hope
S!( Jtered by the trees overhead the
pritty mauve stars smiled sereney
front their nest of shining green leaves
Clinging to the branch of a tree with
one hand I was able to pick a bunch
of the flowers with the other But a
man suddenly appearing from higher
up almost trod upon my head Star-
tled I let go the branch and slipped
Ignomlnlously down the bank The
man leapt down by my side and begin
to pick up my scattered treasures say-
ing in German: ‘‘Pardon I did not see
you" At first I thought he had been
drinking his eyes were bloodshot and
he had a wild disordered air Then I
recognized him as the b ehful young
peasant who had stood in the tack-
ground while I talked some days ago
with Anton the old working jeweler
in his shop I had taken a brooch to
be mended and Anton was turning or
polishing a gold ring on a wheel but
bad ceased working to attend to me
Seeing the eyes of the 'peasant fl el
on the ring I had guessc 1 that it was
being done for him and had said that
I would wait but the Jeweler had In-
sisted that there was no hurry for
what he was doing Afterwards I had
heard that the peasant Johann was
Bhortly to be married to Liza a girl
at one of the farms
Now I noticed that he held his hat in
his hand and had filled it with peri-
winkles “You too have been flower-
gathering" I said
“Yes I have plucked them to make
a wreath for Liza”
"What a pretty idea how pleased
she will be" I said thinking that he
meant for her wedding
Then to my dismay tears ro'lel
down the man’s cheeks and he began
to sob like a child and as I inwardly
called myself 'a fool he explained:
“Ah WO but the good God can tell
what pleases Liza now we were to
have been married by the priest to-
morrow and she will be burled ineteed
end here when a maid dies wa give
her a wreath of sinngruen"
"And I call it the flower of hope” I
said sadly
Perhaps the man knew how sorry I
felt for him for he s’ammered out:
“If the gracious lady wo Id be so good
as to make the wreath for Liza herself
why Liza would be prou and happy
It she could know lt“
Seeing Johann really wanted It I
helped him twins the wreath choosing
only the perfect unfaded flowers
Later on I saw Liza she looked very
peaceful clothed In white with the
chaplet of flowers on her hair and
tall candles burning at her head and
feet It was difficult to realize that
only a week ago she was tramping
through the fields with her hoe Later
on still I had a talk with my friend
Anton about this sorrowful ending to
Johann and Liza's love tale
“Ah yes indeed" said the jeweler
as he twirled a sliver hatpin In the
flame of his spirit lamp “It - is hard
luck on Johann harder than Fraeulein
knows” -
"How is that?” I asked
"Why for two years Johann could
not make up his mind whether to wed
Liza at the farm or Marie at the saw-
mills He loved the one but the other
had the bigger dowry”
"He chose love?” I questioned
"No Indeed Marie and he loved
each other and that Is where Johann’s
bad luck comes in for he will not get
Liza’s dowry after all”
"Well now he can marry Marie If
she will have him” I said feeling con-
tempt for Johann
But Anton being a man was more
pitiful “Ah the poor fellow that is
Just his hard luck When his wedding
day was fixed Marie married the gar-
dener up at the schloss bo that she
should be a bride before Liza”
So I still call periwinkles uowers of
hope for when I recall Liza’s peaceful
face I do not think she is to be pitied
bock beer fad dyTng out
Goat Pictures Not So Much in Evi-
dence This Spring as in
former Years
Chicago — What has become of the
bock-beer signs usually on display in
Chicago at this season? One may
walk up one street and down another
without so much as catching a glimpse
of the goat rampant which in former
years always was as sure a harbinger
of spring as robin or bluebird Out
from multicolored posters everywhere
it was the goat’s custom to look with
eye of defiance shaking his shaggy
mane and beard at all comers Now
beer sellers say the call for bock beer
is not a fourth as great as it was ten
years ago
Once with the first thaws came
hundreds of calls for bock beer at all
the German bars All brewers pride
themselves on good bock beer
Bock beer according to the Ger-
mans who sell most of it derives its
name from the fact that drinkers of
the brew in Germany manifested a
deBlre to butt defiantly with their
beads at everybody or at anything
whenever 'they' became Intoxicated
from the drink It is made usually
In March to be opened for use during
the month succeeding
ATTACKED THE HEART
Awful Neuralgia Case Cured to Stay
Cured by Dr Williame
Pink Pills
Neuralgia ill nny form Is painful hut
When it attucks the heart itis frequently
fatal Complicated with iudigestiou of
a form that affected the vital organ it
threatened serious consequences in nu in-
stance just reported The case is I hat of
Mr F L Giaves of Plcasnn thill La
who tells of his trouble and cure as
follows :
“ I traveled considerably was exposed
to all kindsof weather nud was irregular
in my sleeping and eating I suppose
this was the cause of my sickness at
auy rate in May 1905 1 had ot so bad
that I was compelled to quit work aud
take to my bed I had a good doctor
and took his medicine fnithfully hut
grew worse I gave up hope of getting
better and my neighbors thought I was
Barely goiug to die
"I had Bmothering spells that It is
awful to recall My heart fluttered and
then seemed to cease bentiug I could
not lie on my left side at all My hands
and feet swelled aud so did my face
After reading abont Dr 'Williams’ Pink
Pills in a newspaper I decided to try
them and they suited my case exactly
Before long I could see ail improvement
aud after taking a few boxes I was en-
tirely cured I am glad to make this
statement and wish it could cause every
sufferer to try Dr Williams’ Pink Pills’
Dr Williams’ Pink Pills do not simply
deaden pain they cure the tronble which
causes the pain They are guaranteed to
contain no narcotic stimulant or opiate
Those who take them mil no danger of
forming any drug habit They act
directly on thebloodand it is only through
the blood that auy medicine can reach
the nerves
Dr Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by all
druggists or will be ’sent postpaid oil
receipt of price 60 cents per box six
boxes for $350 by the Dr Williams Med-
icine Co Schenectady N’Y
Men who try to keer up appearances
often find it necessary to keep np dis-
appearances later on
Don’t spoil your clothes Use Red Cross
Ball Blue and keep them white os snow
All grocers 5 cents a package
Dr Hale’s Story
Dr Edward Everett Hale addressed
the recent divorce reform congress in
Washington He said the apologies
put forward by some opponents of
change reminded him of the remark
made by a gourmet bishop during
Lent The bishop was seated next to
an Irreverent young woman who said
on seeing the bishop attack a plate of
rich turtle soup: “I thought your
grace fasted during Lent” The bish-
op put down his spoon and allowed
his face to become pensive “Ah I
do fast In Lent” he said “1 subsist
chiefly on fish" He swallowed a
lump of meat worth about a dollar
“Turtle” he added “Is a kind of fish’’
piva permanentlYcnrd No iliewnervononeM after
r I I first dav'xiigeof Dr Kllne'soreac Nerve Keator-
er Bend for FKKK 400 trial bottle and treatise
UK It H KLIN E Ltd Oil Arch Street DhlUulelpUia 1 a
Royal Eye Doctor
A commltte has been appointed by
the eye specialists of Paris to draw up
a letter of congratulations to Duke
Theodore of Bavaria brother of Em-
peror Francis Joseph of Austria who
has Just performed his five thous
andth successful operation The duke
enjoys a word-wide reputation as an
oculist and has built a hospital at
Tgernsee where he practices Pa
tlents come from all parts of the world
to be treated The royal surgeon nev
er accepts a fee from a poor patient
but taxes the rich according to their
means
RUNNING SORES ON LIMBS
Little Girl’s Obstinate Case of Eczema
—Mother Says: “Cuticura Reme-
dies a Household Standby"
“Last year after having my little
girl treated by a very prominent
physician for an obstinate case of
czema I resorted to the Cuticura
Remedies and was so well pleased
with the almost instantaneous relief
afforded that we discarded the physi-
cian’s prescription and relied entirely
on the Cuticura Soap Cuticura Oint-
ment and Cuticura Pills When we
commenced with the Cuticura Reme-
dies her feet and limbs were cover-
ed with running sores In about six
weeks we had her completely well
and there has been no recurrence of
the trouble We find that the Cuti-
cura Remedies are a valuable house-
hold standby living as we do twelve
miles from a doctor and where it
costs from twenty to twenty-five dol-
lars to come up on the mountain
Mrs Lizzie Vincent Thomas Fair-
mount Walden’s Ridge Tenn Oct
13 1905”
Men never seem to have any trouble
convincing themselves that what they
do is right
Wanted — The general public to
know that the Santa Fe agent at
Wichita Kansas Is also agent for all
steamer lines both East and West
British Generals as Cooks
It has been said of General Sir Red-
vers Buller that he is such an excel-
lent cook that he would have little
difficulty in obtaining a first-class
chef’s position In a West end hotel
In his younger days before he reach-
ed his high military rank his brother
officers used to say that Redvers Bul-
ler could make an appetizing dinner
out of old saddles when rations were
short on a campaign Another dis-
tinguished soldier who shares with
General Buffer a wonderful skill in
the gastronomic art is Major General
Baden-Poweil
Indian Girl In Law
Laura M Cornelius a fullblooded
Indian of the Oneida tribe in Wiscon-
sin is in New York city where the in-
tends to study law at Barnard col-
lege At a country school she won
e scholarship In a seminary in Fond
du Lac and afterward studied for a
time in Stanford university Califor-
nia Miss Cornelius is unmistakably
Irdian in features and build and is
proud of it Her object in studying
law is to be of service to the people
of her own race “My religion” she
says is this: “I believe in God in
minding my own business and in hust-
ling for what one wants”
Cannon’s Birthday Party
Speaker Cannon’s birthday party
when he becomes 70 years old will
take the form of a great reception in
his honor in Washington early In May
There are those who Bee politics in
the affair But Mr Fairbanks what
ever he sees says not a word He
prefers to be 64
In spite of the fact that man is made
of dust he isn’t satisfied He is al-
ways after more
singis
BINB2E
STRAIGHT ££CIGA3
"You Pay 10c
for Cigars
JMot so Good
FP LEWIS Peoria Ill
“'Brswiif
WAITED
BUTTER EGGS AND POULTRY
If yon make fifteen pounds or more of pood but-
ler a week why not get creamery butter prices ?
If yon hove any poultry to sell don’t fall to write
us before selling We furnish butter tub' end
conon and par exnress ciuirge PEt'K dc
Pfcl'Kt Colorado Mitrings Colorado
$96 AN ACRE
i n Western
Canada is tho
amount many
farmers will
realize from
their wheat
cropthisyear
29 Bushels to the Acre Will be the
Average Yield of Wheat
The land that this was grown on cost many of
the farmers absolutely nothing while those
who wished to add to the 160 acres the Govern
ment grants can buy land adjoining at from $0
to $10 an acre
Climate splendid school convenient railways
close at hand taxes low
Send for pamphlet ‘20th Century Canada
and full particulars regarding rate etc to
Superintendent of Immigration Ottawa
Canada or to the following authorized
Canadian Government Agent — J S Crawford
Ho 125 W Ninth Street Kansas City Missouri
(Mention this paper)
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER
CAPSICUM
VASELINE
thb SCIENTIFIC AMD MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER IRRITANT
A QUICK SURE SAFE AMD ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN
DON'T WAIT TILL TH PAIN COMES— KEEP A TUBE HANDY
IT WILL NOT BLISTER THE MOST DELICATE SKIN
IT IS ALSO INDISPENSABLE FOR CH1LOKEN
VASELINE CAMPHOR ICE
SUPERIOR TO ANYTHING IN USE FOR CHAPPED HANDS
AND LIPS AND TO ALLAY ALL IRRITATION OF THE I
SKIN A SOVEREIGN REMEDY FOH SUN-BUfU
VASELINE
COLD CREAM
KEEPS THE SKIN IN A SOFT AND HEALTH? CONDITION
AND PRESERVES THE COMPLEXION EACH OF THESE
WELL KNOWN PREPARATIONS CAN BE OBTAINED FROM
druggists and dealers or will send by mail
ON RECEIPT OF 15 CENTS IN MONEY OR STAMPS
EXCEPTING CAMPHOR ICE FOR WHICH SEND TEN CENTS
CHESEBKOUGH MFC CO 17 State Street NEW YORK
S
tw -
To
t
sweeten
To refresh
To cleanse the
system
Effectually
and Gently
There is only
one Genuine
Syrup of Figs
to get its bene-
ficial effects
Dispels colds and
headaches when
bilious or con-
stipated For men women
and children
Acts best on
the kidneys
and liver
stomach and
bowels
I ifSttr- I
Always bay the genuine — Manufactured by the
Louisville Ky
S&i Irarvcisco Cad
tewYorkiY
The genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale by all first-class
druggists The full name of the company — California
Fig Syrup Co — is always printed on the front
of every package Price Fifty Cents per bottle
AKS1
Bait your hook with flattery If you
would catch silly women
If love would only remain blind af-
ter marriage — but fudge!
A boy can always have some sort
of a good time if there is a dog or
something to eat around
MOTHER GRAY’S
SWEET PO WDERS
FOR CHILDREN
A Certain Cure for Feverlahneu
Conetlpiat 1 o n Headache
Stomach Trouble Teething
)liordri and Destroy
KOTHkB skat Worn 'fbof Break uy Cold
Nurae In LhU-l’n 24 hour At all UrugtflBts 26oiv
den’a Home8ample mailed fe’RKB Address
Ww YorkCltyiA 8 OLMSTED L Roy NY
DEFIANCE STARCH-::
—other starches only
“DEFIANCE" 19
ounces ta
the package
12 ounces— same price and
SUPERIOR QUALITY
W N U— WICHITA— No 17—1909
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper
nut
Cardui Relieves Pain
caused by curable female diseases It acts directly on woman’s delicate
organs and restores their natural activity By making the organs work
normally pain disappears strength returns to the system roses to the
cheeks ana the frowns and wrinklesof suffering are seen no more Mrs
suffered agonies at
Lucinda Johnson of Walworth Wis writes
every monthly period
Nothing helped me un-
til I took Cardui Now
I can truly say I am
cured” Try it
c Sold by all Druggists
sk
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Howard, J. D. The Byron Republican. (Byron, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, May 4, 1906, newspaper, May 4, 1906; Byron, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1761689/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.