The Tecumseh Leader. (Tecumseh, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, May 4, 1894 Page: 3 of 4
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An Atmovpherlc Family.
" Ah," said the fat boarder, as
wiiDp a spoonful of soup into hb
mouth aud made a successful grab for
tho,ouly pieco of bread on the plate,
"some people have queer ideas about
names. Now 1 know a family out at
New Harmony, Jnd., named Storms.
They had four sons, one of whom was
called North storms, and the others
South, East and West. The daughter's
name is (Jail. '
Vat you call dc fader?" asked t lie
Herman boarder, pausing in the work
luf destroying- a liugv Irish potato.
"His name must be Cyclone," was
the reply.
' Veil," said the (iennan boarder
"his vife vould make a pood sailor, as
sho must be used to squalls."—Louis-
ville Commercial.
T.io Cool ami Airy Cook.
The cook at the boarding1 house, out
on a shopping tour, was chinning the
clerk at the ribbon counter, said clerk
being a boarder where she cooked.
••One of these dry goods stores," she
said, gazing around the place, "issome
different from a boarding-house, ain't,
*.t?
"Well rather," smiled the clerk perk-
ing up his chin.
"Yes," she went on pleasantly, "in
here you see a gcod many things you
don't eat. and at a boarding-liouse you
•at a good many things you don't see,"
and then she walked out. leaving him
to his reflections.—Detroit Free i'ress.
"Delay is dangerous," remarked the
I rain-robber, as he requested the pas-
sengers to hand over their valuables.
Puck.
' "I am sensible of the honor you do
me. Mr. Spoonamore, in the proposal
>f marriage you have .just made." said
the young woman," with a slight curl
of the lip, "but circumstances over
wlrch 1 have no control will compel
iuc t• decline the honor."
••What are those circumstance*. Miss
(irimshaw?" fiercely demanded the
young man.
•• Your circumstances. Mr. Spoona-
more."—< hicago Tribune.
A Possible Ite*ult.
'Hodman- 1 hear Edison's discovered
a scheme for doing away with sleep.
Trowels Hush! For goodness'sake,
don't let the boss hear about it. or he'll
be having us work hours a day.
Chicago Record.
Amusements are to \i tue like bree-
c.t-s of air to the flame: gentle ones will
fan it, but the strong ones w 11 put it
out.
The committee having in charge ilic
work of arranging a program and
naming the place and date for the
convention of the Epworth League,
of the Scdalia, Mo., dist.net is now in
session.
At The Canccrt.
He had gone to the symphony con*
cert expecting to hear "Afterthe Ball"
with variations and "Daisy Hell" with-
out them, but when they turned a
whole raft of con motos an
scherzos and ap. 27s and appoggiaturaa
and other chromatic dingbat# loose on
him, In- began to wonder wbat he was
there for and to spar for an opening to
pet out. He found it nt. the first inter-
mission, and before the well-bred ap-
plause had arisen as far as the balcony,
he was in the lobby.
"Hello," exclaimed a friend coming
in, "the concert isn't over, is it?"
"It's over my head." he responded
and hustled himself on into the open
air.—Detroit Free Press.
State or Ouio, < 'itt or Toledo, i
Lucas County,
Frank Cbbnry makes oath thai be Is
the f-enior partner of the tirni of K. J Chine*
A Co., doing business in the city of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, aiul tbnt 6ald firm
will pay tbe sum <.f ONE HUNDRED DO I,.
LARS for each and every case of Catarrh
(bat cannot be cured by tbe use of 11all'
Catarku Cuke.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, thisGibday of December, a. D. 1W0.
j seal ■ a. w. ci.eason.
1 • Notaiy Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally and
nets directly on tbe blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Send for testimonials,
£i ee. y J. r H KN E Y A: CO., Toledo. 0.
JSold by Druggists, 75c.
Woman's Jealousy.
Wife—Do you really and truly love
me?
Husband—Yi s, dear.
Wife And if you had never saw me.
would you have married that horrid
Bangs girl? Hallo.
Itenl it).
He Is that a love story you art
reading?
She- No. All the people in it an
married. < hiea<jo I nter < >ce;in.
Slitloli i Consumption < ur«*
I«HokI on a piutr.1 n «•••- 1' i-im* InHpkni Coiisuiniv
dun. lti the im-si. Couirli Cure. 25oiw .SOcts. tk. fl.Ul
Oil' His Feet.
"And did the West impress youf avor
ably?" they asked.
"Carried me by storm." answered
the returned traveler, who on one oc-
casion had been wafted across three
counties by a cyclone.—Truth.
SI10 llail Been Him, Too.
Donald (after the ball)- Maj' I call
on you occasionally. Miss Lester*.
We seem as old friends. Have 1 not
seen you before?
Miss Lester (cuttingly) Yes: you
saw me hanging oil to the strap in the
car one day last week while you were
sitting down. Nogue.
The locomotive mileage in the
1") ite i Mates far exceeds that of the
locomotives for all Europe, and the
cost feu* running is also greater.
■ 'ml
Mm
The subject of the above portrait is a
prominent and much respected citizen, Mr.
Robert Manson, of West Rye, N. H. Where
Mr. Manson is known "his word is as good
ns his bond." In a recent letter to Dr. R. V.
Pierce, Chief Consulting Physician to tho
Invalids' Hotel and Surgical institute, Buf-
falo, N. Y., Mr. Manson says :
" Dr. Pierces Pleasant Pellets are the
best pills I ever took for the liver. All my
friends say they do them the most good."
This opinion is shared by every one who
once tries these tiny, little, sugar-coated pills,
which are to be found in all medicine stores.
Tho U. S. Inspector of Immigration at Buf-
falo, N. Y., writes of them as follows:
44 From early childhood I have suffered
from a sluggish liver, with all the disorders
accompanying such a condition. Doctors'
prescriptions and patent medicines I have
used in abundance ; they only afforded tem-
porary relief. I was recommended to try
l)r. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. I did so, tak-
ing two at night and one after dinner every
•lay for two weeks. I have reduced the dose
to'one 4 Pellet' every day for two months.
] have in six months increased in solid flesh
twenty-two pounds. I am in better health
than 1 have been since childhood. Drowsi-
ness and unpleasant feelings after meals have
completely disappeared."
Assist nature a little Ut>T/ and then with a
gentle laxative, or, if need be. with a more
searching and cleansing cathartic, thereby
removing offending matter from the atom
ach and bowels, and toning up and invigo-
rating the liver and quickening its tardy
action, and you thereby remove the cause
<>f n multitude of distressing diseases, such
n* headaches, indigestion, biliousness, skin
diseases, boils, carbuncles, piles, fevers and
maladies too numerous to mention.
If people would nay more attention to
properly regulating tbe action of their bow-
els, they would have less frequent occasion
to call for their doctors' services to subdue
attacks of dangerous diseases.
That, of all known agents to accomplish
this purpose, Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellef* are
unequaled, is proven by the fact that once
usea. they are always 1/1 favor. Their sec-
ondary effect is to keep the bowels open and
regular, not to further constipate, as is the
case with other pills. Hence, their great
popularity with sufferers from habitual con-
stipation, piles, and indigestion.
The " Pleasant Pellets'' are far more effec-
tive in arousing the liver to action than "blue
pills," calomel, or other mercurial prep
tions, and have the further merit of being
purely vegetable and perfectly harmless in
any condition of the system ; no particular
care is required while using them.
Composed of the choicest, concentrated
vegetable extracts, their cost is much more
than is that of other pills found in the mar-
ket, yet from forty to forty-four 44Pellets"
are put up in each sealed glass vial, as sold
I t hrough druggists, and can rxs had at the price
! of the more ordinary and cheaper made pills.
Dr. Pierce prides himself on having been
first to introduce a Little Liver Pill to the
American people. Many have imitated them
but none have approached his 44 Pleasant Pel-
lets " in excellent.
For all laxative and cathartic purposes
the 44 Pleasant Vellets" are infinitely supe-
rior to all 44 mineral waters," sedlitz pow-
ders, 14 salts," castor oil, fruit syrups (so
called), laxative 44 teas," and the many other
1 purgative compounds sold in various forms,
Put up in glass vials, sealed, therefore
always frosh and reliable. One little 4' Pel-
let" is laxative, two gently cathartic.
As a 44 dinner pill." to promote digestion,
take one each day after dinner To relieve
distress from <3ver-eating, nothing equals
them. They tiny, sugar-coated, anti-
bilious granules, scarcely larger than rr.ui-
, tard seeds Every rhilrl wants them
Then, aft^r they are taken, instead of dis-
turbing and shocking the system, they act in
a mild, and natural way.* There is no re
action afterward. Their help lasts.
Accept no substitute recommended to be
| 44 just as good." They may be better for the,
| dealer, because of paying him a letter profit,
I but he is not the one who needs help.
MARRIED LADIES' safeguard, patented.] WORN
"so nndicinc No equal. Money returned |
If not satisfactory. Send 10 cents to Ladies" j
Novelty Co., Kansas City. Mo.
ELY'S cream ba'.M CUB
PRICE 50CENTS. ALL DfUGGIS
B £ ABTIO
truss
NIGHT AND DAY
It olds the tromf rup-
ture with etwunderil
circumstances. lVrfoet
Adjustment. Comfort
and Cure Np* P*Unted
Improvement* Ulu*
trated catalogue nd
nil«*s for self-measure
ment ent securelj
sealed O. V HOlJSl
MKO CO., 744 Bro%d
««7, New Yor* Clt/
A Huiluesi for Bmall M ani.
Wanted—an income: is a frequent
try nowadays, sa.vh Mrs. Ida E. Tilson
in "Northwestern Agriculturist." A
reliable acquaintance told me she
cleared, through eggs and early chick-
ens, 8*0 otT her fowls last year, Marl-
ing wifk forty of them on a village
place (Wthreo or four acres. Now most
women, the writer included, think
quite a \ilum. Hut before all my read
ers wan ing incomes rush into poultry
culture, let me say the friend referred
to above is an energetic. Having woman,
who, according to my favorite ex
pression when describing such thrifty
persons, could get a living on a desert
island. The same industry and intelli-
gence which bring a protit out of [XIill
try ventures, would, if exercised in
most other employments, probably
command higher pay, and no money
at all is to be made in the poultry bus-
iness without much of that pluck, a
pound of which, Hen. Garfield said,
worth a ton of luck. Hut poul-
try culture is available for many whe
can not leave home nor spend time tc
engage in independent pursuits; it
needs only small capital, and as spring
natural and very good time to
start, we better at once take up that
tender subject.the spring chicken, pre-
paring his cage while we have leis-
ure. I lis a common practice to lay a
box or barrel on its side, then drive
down stakes in front, lea dug just
space enough for chicks to run in anc
out, thus keeping their mamma a pris-
oner until such time as they can dc
without her. liens belong to the free
active bird family, so this above plaD
is incongruous, like tho remark of i-
man who asked for an "empty barre
of liour to make me dorg a hin coop.'
Each brood of mine is given a room}
coop, M'.'.V.'O inchcs on its bottom,
inches high in front and 111 inches be
hind, its single slant roof securely
shingled. The coop tloor rests on low
:.'x I pieces, raising it from the dunif
ground two inches, tlius preventing
rheumatism, one of tliose ailment!
human beings hive incorrectly re-
garded as their own peculiar property
A door about two-thirds the height o)
slatted front, buttons up or lies down,
and the coop back unbuttons to let
biddy out. These cojps have been por-
trayed before but 1 find nothing bet-
ter to displace them. If housed during
winter they will, like mine, last years,
;ind in good repair, certainly prove rat,
skunk, and dog proof. A dry good-
box can lie metamorphosed into such a
home; tbe hinges and handles are
leather, the button wooden.
I retlitiK Table Mini*.
A groat loss is sustained on farm*
in general by neglecting to fatten
table birds. Kxcellont authority hays
"the bird is allowed its liberty, and
frequently but a scanty living until
the morning when tlio pot-pic it
wanted, and the. good wife feels of hi*
bony frame and sighs, sometimes even
wondering that it is not fatter. Kvery
bird should be shut up in close, clean
quarters, and fed for seven to ten days-
Kept in confinement longer than this,
most birds begin to pine, lose
their appetite and decrease in
weight. The feeding troughs
should be well scalded out daiiv, 01
every other day if the weather be
cold, and sharp grit kept within reach
of the fattening birds. Sweet iv.t
meal and hot corn meal mash are
among the best tilings to induce rapid
fattening. The feed should be
very slightly scalded. In this way
every bird may be made to gain fron
one-third to one-half in weight with-
out noticeable expense, aud w hether
for selling or the table it. means con-
siderable profit. A little salt in the
food once a day is also advisable.'1
I round .Meat 1(1 lleilrt
The usual way of feeding ground meat
is to mix it with ground grain of some
kind. This is unnecessary. It should
be fed as a variety, and in a way to
a^rt'ord a change. There should be
certain meals, on special days, foi
giving it to the hens. lot
instance, give it at night, on every
other day, in a trough, unmixed with
other food, so that the liens will have
nothing but the grouud meat for that
meal. The next morning give some
other food, as corn, and the following
meal may be of wheat or cut clover.
The ground meat may*be given plenti-
fully, if fed in this manner. Simply
allow the hens to have all of it that
they will eat. and they will relish it
and find it beneficial. If fed on meat
every meal, it may cause bowel ditii-
culty: but given once every two days,
it will not be in any manner injurious,
and will prove of great assistance in
inducing the hens to lay at this season
of the year.—Ex.
I'kafowls. — Peafowls are simply or-
namental and arc not readily salable.
They are not profitable on a farm, as
the male is vindictive aud destroys
chicks and ducklings that may come
in his way. The hen seldom begins to
lay until at least two years old. and
often not until three years of age, lav-
ing from live to sixteen eggs, which
hatch in about thirty days- Tho
youn,r peafowl feathers very rapidly,
aud shculd be fed every two hours the
first month; then four times a ua.y
until ti vce months old. when it should
be given uree meals, icquiringa largo
shaic of animal food, such as meat
pr.d bone. Otherwise they require tho
si:r.e care as young turkeys. Only the
p. a foul can raise them, as common
licr-s wean them tou soon.
K®cn your laying hens busy. That
is, gi/e them exercise by throwing
tho'.- grain feed upon the Moor and
covering with chaff, cut straw and the
like.
We want persistent all year milk-
<i-s. The first year tells the story.
the shortest twilight.
Qoltn.ttip C H| ltal of Kruaior, I.ind* ihr
World in ThU I*ectil!Q'4y.
The period of twilight shortened to
ivard the equator and lengthens to-
ward the poles. In other words, the
less the thickness of air through which
the rays of the setting sun have to pass
the sooner darkness comes. From this
It naturally follows that the region of
• he shortest twilight is the one which
s situated nearest to the equator and
it the greatest elevation.
The two conditions are combined in
he region which strands (Juito, the
•apitol of Ecuador. This plantrau is
nine thousand four hundred and forty-
two feet above the lever of the sea: it
s also surrounded by mountains,
Aventy peaks, eleven of which rise l>c-
,-ond the snow liue. being visible from
the streets of the city. Added to this
'tis only lifteen miles south of the
squator; hence ithasa shorter twilight
han any other spot on 1lic equa
tor. Partly becuusc of the eleva-
tion, and partly because the Western
mountains intercept the rays of the
setting sun and so cause darkness to
follow daylight with greater rapidity
than at any other spot on earth.
Why not Indeed
7
a
For Wninvn.
The womanly side of Queen Victoria
is pictured exceedingly well and ap-
propriately. too, in this the month of
jcr seventy-fifth birthday in an arti-
cle on "The Womanly Side of Victoria."
which Arthur Warren contributes to .
the Slav issue of The l.adics' Home I how you M,'wt your |KH<m*.>
Journal. Among the pictures in tbe 1 Magazine hditor-l guess I may tell
irticle. those showing the Queen at
When the Royal Baking Powder makes
finer and more wholesome food at a less
cost, which every housekeeper familiar with
it will affirm, why not discard altogether the
old-fashioned methods of soda and aonr
milk, or home-made mixture of cream uf
tartar and soda, or the cheaper and inferior
baking powders, and use it exclusively ?
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
Ilow It Ik Done.
The Inquisitive One Would it be a
betraval of an office secret to tell me
breakfast and in her pony carriage,
ire interesting and new. Frank If.
Stockton gives two more of *4 Pomona's"
characteristic letters, showing the I
heroine of "Rudder (iningeM in various j
adventures in her quest for am social
boom among the Knglish aristocracy.
Mr. Howell's literary biography un-
der t-lie title of "My Literary Passions"
holds the interest surprisingly well.
The editor questions whether all this
clamor about this Vicing a "woman's
century" is wise. The biography of
the number consists of sketches, with
portraits of Mrs. Kdward Kvcrctt Male,
the wife of the famous preacher-
author. and Miss Nancy Ihiily. the
wonderful woman indexer of Kngland.
Mrs. 1 hirton Kiogsland takes up the
education and religious development
of "A Daughter at Sixteen," and A lie
you. We first submit them to the jani-
tor. and from him they are passed on
up through the various grades of em
ployccs till they reach the editor in
chief. If the poem is of such cliarae-
! ter that any one of the censors under-
stands it, it is rejected. Indianopolis
Jou rnal.
A Sl: i | Fellow .
"Sharp man, that editor!"
"How?"
"Widow sued him and got judge-
ment fer Slut)."
"Pes?"
"Married the widder. got a divorce
fer sr.o an had $40 left out o' the hun-
dred!" Atlanta Constitution.
Named After h Dutcb Na lajfator.
Cape May takes its name from Carn-
lius Jacobus May. a naviagator em-
ployed by the Dutch West India coin-
pan v. and beneath the name lies the
half-forgotton historic fact that the
region about the point was purchased
of tin4 Indians by the Dutch in 1030. a
period very clow to the time when the.
Indians wiped out in hlood the earliest
Swedish settlement of Swanendaal on
the other side of Deleware bay. The
deed given at the original nurchase of
the Cape May territory is still preserv-
ed at Albuuv.
Sullerers from <'outclinuSore throat,
etc, phouM try "BisownV- IIhonciiiai. I n« .
«iit>,"ii ftlmple lmt sure ruiun«ly. Sold only la
boxed. J'l ieea 2.' ctx.
A n F. itvrt i \ e Keinedy.
"It was a severe punishment.'
the father self reproachfully,
, answers the purpose. It keeps Johnny
Morse Karl, the author of -China Col- j n„ining on the street.
You didn't cripple the boy, did
Forced to it.
I Doctor Have you followed my ad-
vice in regard to eating plaiu food aud
sam keeping quiet at home?
hut it
Jecting in America," gives a delight
fully humorous account of her at-
tempts to secure "My Delft Apothcary
Jars. ' Woman everywhere are re-
membered ill Miss lladley's ' Needle
Honinton for Polished Tables." "The
'Silks of the Summer" and "The Art
of Dressing for Traveling," by Mrs.
Mallon: " Materials for Summer tlowns,
by Kniina M. Hooper, and "Still Life
in <Ml Painting." by Mrs. Haywood.
Thoughtful mothers will appreciate
Mrs. Seovil's "Children and the Sab-
bath," and housekeepers will welcome
the page devoted to "The Strawberry
and its I'ses." n Altogether this May is-
sue is singularly attractive and worth
many times its modest price of ten
cents. Published by The Curtis Pub-
lishing Company, of Philadelphia, for
ten cents per number and one dollar
per year.
The F.r of Afascle.
'1 his i* iin athletic ago. Everybody wants to
he &troug. The craze—for it hHK well nigh
reached that stage effects both he\e« and
even childhood. The pagillslic phase «>f thiw
fad in young America is by no ineiiuH morally
promising liut it is one thing to be endowed
with vigor and another to br Sandowcd with
muscle. Super muscularity is often induced
by physical effort perilous to health and calcu-
lated " to shorten life. The vigor which
ient discharge oT tho
pbvslcal functions, is I ha llrst medium al
which all may safely aim without caustag
ruptures or breaking blood vessels. II< f tel-
ter's Stomach Hitters is largely conducive to
a gain in vigor of this sort, since it stimulates
and assists digestion, promot's regular bilious
secrclion and keeps the bowejs in order.
Sleep, that grand recuperator of nervous
vigor, is encouraged bv it. and it remedies
malarial, rheumatic and kidmy trouble.
A Deserved Fate.
"Why did Gen. Washington cross
the Deleware on a dark, storms night?"
asked the funny man.
♦•(live it up " answered the crowd.
"To get to tho other side." retorted
the. funny man: and then the crowd
killed him gently, but liruily. Hallo.
atient—That's aJI Iv'e been able to
do since you sent in your bill. Yale
Record.
Hkkcham'h 1'ili.s are a certain cure
for weak stomach and disordered liver,
and arc famous the world over. «5
cents a box.
Jones—Oh, what a charming baby!
1 have always taken such an interest
in very young children. A how old
is it?
Mother (with pride)—Only just elev-
en weeks.
Jones—Really! A and is it your
youngest?- Brooklyn Life.
The World's Columbian Kxpositioii
Will be of value to the world by illus-
trating the improvements in the me-
chanical arts and eminent physicians
will tell you that the progress'in medi-
cinal agents, has been « f equal im-
portance, and as a strengthening laxa-
tive that Syrup of Figs is far in ad-
vance of all others.
Not Well I*ut.
She- Am 1 the first woman you ever
loved.
He ^ es. Am 1 the first man who
ever loved you?
She (tempteously)—You are insult-
ing. N. Y. Weekly.
"N'o: I had his mother cut Ills hair
for him. You ought to see the poor
boy," and the oroml father wept bitter-
ly. -Texas Siftings.
Weighed in the Ita'ance.
Taylor -That boy of ours is very
slow.
Mrs. Taylor—How do you make that
out?
Taylor Why, see what other chil
dien have done at his age! I read
that Mozart played tho piano when lie
was five years old.—Puck.
Penelope means a weaver. The first
known Penelope was the industrious 1
wife of I'lysses.
Kindly Directions.
Footpad—Hold up v'r hands!
Lone Citizen I haven't got a cent,
with me. .hist loaned all I had to a
friend.
Footpad (in disgust)-Go ahead
you'll Hnd the idiotic asylum three
squares to th' left. N. Y. Weekly.
Financial Item.
"I want to know w lien you're going
to pay this bill. I can't be a rimnin'
re every < t
bill collector to Dudley Few scads om
morning recently.
"Which day would suit you best?"
"Satu rday."
"Well. theu. you may come every
Saturday, from now on. AlexSweet,
in Texas Siftings.
According to Hit* l.l«ht*.
"How do you like that colored valet
you imported from Alabama'.'"
"He won't do."
'• What's the matter?"
W told him last night to get out
what I needed for the Imll and he
brought me my razor." Life.
' Only in India and tiermany do the
railroads earn more than 5 per cent.
I on their capital, the average being .P. .
" It It t*N
Warranto.) t(
druagiti for It.
> '« IUni(ic *'ori Halve."
• •urenr money refunded. Atk your
1'rice lb cent.>.
•I r.iloiiM.
Waiter - Do you know. sir. that
envy that wine glass of yours?
Diner - Dow is that. 'I liomas?
Waiter You tip it so often
Yonkers Statesman.
l'up' t'oiifsh IV,*-«iii
lathe oldest ami ii will break tin m t'«>ld O'-t* **•
or titan an,\ tiling else. K b it. v. ays reliable. Try U.
In The llofl|iilal.
Valient No. I Happy is the man
\> ho is never born!
Vat ient No. Why do you talk such
nonsense? Mich luck happens only to
«me man iu a thousand hello.
Scott's Emulsion
of cod-liver oil presents a
perfcct food—palatable,
easy of assimilation, and
an appetizer; these are
everything to those who
are losing flesh and
strength. The combina-
tion of pure cod-liver oil,
the greatest of all fat pro-
ducing foods, with Hypo-
phosphites, provides a re-
markable agent for Quick
Flesh Building in all ail-
ments that are associated
with loss of flesh.
Those
Pimples
Are tell-tale symptoms that your blood is not right—full of im-
purities, causing a sluggish and unsightly complexion. A few
bottles of S. S. S. will remove all foreign and impure matter,
cleanse the blood thoroughly and give a clear and rosy com-
plexion. It is most effectual, and entirely harmless.
Chas. Heaton, 73 Laurel St., Phila., says:—"I have had for years a humor in
my blood which made me dread to shave, as small boils or pimples wonld be cut
thus causing shaving to be a great annoyance. After taking three bottles of
1 my face is all clear and smooth as it should be—appetite
splendid, sleep well and feel like running a foot race, all
I from the use of S. S. S.
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, Atlmla. 81.
1 Blo<xl and Skin DilNin mailed free.
Extreme,
Chronic,
Torturing
Cases of
NEURALGIA
vr. n. tj. wintioia vol. 7-io
When AniweringAdv^rtiEcinruts Kind
ly Mention this Papt-r
Matried Ladies
it I 11 (Iif** Km| < r uni.M Loul«. Mo.
ARE CURED BY ST. JACOBS OIL PROMPT AND SURE. PafBHtS Trade-MSfkS
CATARRH!
CATARRH! Have you Catarrh? Do
\tm \>ant to get well? If you <lo.
write to
1 VH> rI^ \ TVr T ^ Winfields noted la-
1 J Ll fl 1 A- J JL t.irrh Specialist lor his
HOME T I IIC-ATMEISTT.
A Special late ot *3.00 for 3 months treatment, incliulii'g all Medicines ami
Appliances, will be given all who apply before lunc 1st. It lias been thorough
ly demonstrated that tills treatment will cure the most obstinate cases in three
months, which hundreds of testimonials will show. Write for question blank
Address all letters to .
Dli. T. 13. TANDY,
1202South Millingtou Streftt. W 'XFIKLD, KANSAS.
l-'xnininatioii mid Advirp nn t<i I'ntpntHhility "f
InvfiiUon. Si-nd f« r ' Invvntor*' UuMe, or How to upi
1 ntpiit PATE 07ABBXLL. TASHnTQ^iT. E. :.
Asbestos RoofingH
M \M I \l TI Ki ll s PKK l>.
•MIIIXS ION-I.I l> -I I'll > < '
I liilon An-.. KANSAS I 111.
VARICOCELE'
i arb v 1
Dr. Co©'® 8aultnrluui. Knu m < itv,
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Mounts, N. S. The Tecumseh Leader. (Tecumseh, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, May 4, 1894, newspaper, May 4, 1894; Tecumseh, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc177755/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.