The Daily Messenger. (Claremore, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 247, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 11, 1901 Page: 3 of 4
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PE RU-NA AVERTS DANGER
In That Critical Time When a Girl Becomes
a Woman.
[MHTmi|iiiiiiiii iiinininiiiiiniiiiiii?mTr
MISS BESSIE KELLOO.
Miss Bessie Kellog, President of the
Young Woman's Club, of Valley City,
North Dakota, writes the following
from First street, South, Valley City,
North Dakota:
"Ever Mince 1 matured I Buffered with
aevere monthly pains. The doctor did
not teem to understand what the
trouble was and the medicine he pre-
scribed from time to time did not help
me. He finally suggested that I have
an operation. One of my friends who
had been cured of a similar affliction
through the use of Peruna, advised me
to give It a trial first, and so / used It
for three weeks faithfully. My pains
dlmlshed vary soon and within two
months I had none at mU.
44This Is six months ago, and during
that time / have not had an ache nor
JM/a. / give highest praise to Peruna.
iBvery woman ought to use It, and I
feel sure that It would bring perfect
health."-BESSIE KELLOO.
The experience of Mfss Bessie Kel-
log, of North Dakota, ought to be read
by every girl in the land. It is a critical
period In a woman's life when she
ceaaas to be a girl and becomes a wom-
an. Very few pass through this period
without some trouble. The doctor Is
yf
called and be generally advises an op-
eration. Perhaps he will subject the pa-
tient to a long series of experiments
with nervines and tonics. The reason
he doe£ not often make a cure is be-
cause he does not —cognize the trouble.
In a large majority of the cases ca-.
tarrh of the female organs is the cause.
Peruna relieves these cases promptly
because It cures t.*\e catarrh. Peruna is
not a palliative or a sedative or a ner-
vine or a stimulant. It is a specific
for catarrh and cures catarrh wherever
it may lurk In the system.
This girl was lucky enough to And
Poruna at last. As she says, the doc-
tors did not seem to understand what
the trouble was and the medicine he
prescribod from time to time did not
help her. Peruna hit the mark at once
and she is now recommending this
wonderful remedy to all the other girls
in the United States.
Thousands of the girls who look at
her beautiful face and read her sincere
testimonial, will be led to try Peruna
in their times of trouble and critical
j>orlods. Peruna will not fall them.
Every one of them will be glad and it
is to be hoped that their enthusiasm
will lead them to do as this girl did—
proclaim the fact to the world so that
others may read it and do likewise.
Mrs. Christopher Fliehmann, Amster-
dam, N. Y., writes:
"I have been sick with catarrh of th«
stomach and pelvic organs for about
five year3. and had many a doctor, but
none could help me. Some said I would
never Ret over it. One day when I read
you almanac 1 raw those who had been
cured by Peruna; then I thought I
would try it. I did, and found roller
with tho first bottle I took, and after
two more bottles I was as well and
strong as I was before."—Mrs. Christo-
pher Fliehmann.
If you do not derive prompt and sat-
isfactory results from the use of Pe-
runa, write at once to Dr. Hartman,
giving a full statement of your case
and he will be pleased to give you hia
valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium. Columbua, O.
Music and women are often loved
but seldom understood.
Plso's Cure is the best medicine wo ever used
lor ull affections of the thront and Iuiikn — W r
O. Kmdsi.ky, Vanburen. Ind.. Feb. 1U, 1600.
STOCKS FGB SHIRTWAISTS.
tome Kami} \rrkwrar That In Kaaily
Made and Laundered at
Hoar,
Sawyer's SSickers
??r,?1 ■1 °p ttrand" Salt.
Ana MioKers ftro tho best WAicrnruiif um r.
went** in the wor'd. Made from { ho best ina-
tn i?2iiilJK^appil,,5ei1 wniorproof.
to atand Um roughest work and weather.
Clubs are places where men go when
they want to get rid of themselves.
FITS Permanently Cured. No nt or nervousno** n rter
(lint day'« use of l>r. Kline'* (treat Nerve IMin-pr,
Seiul for FKFK ff4i.OO trial bottle and treatlne.
Da. K. It. Ki.ink, Ltd., 1M1 Arch St., Philadelphia, 1'a.
iomTnot .I*7our'da*le
U. Jt.
Seme people love soulful eyes,
believe we prefer blue.
We
> for cataloi
• tot catMojrno.
{""i/ssW
i DO YOU
jWOPK IN THE WET?
THE ORIGINAL.
^OWEIty
r
^ OILED
II
SUttWOTlCTION
WK"*NMKflMK URVICL
4?
flMB gffiBStfffi&BPAYiigg
Slefc Nemnr. Lwletaw. Me.i DaeirUii. n. j(
VtM Aaswerfag Jkfrertiseneats Kiidly
Meitioa TkU Faper.
PISO'S CURE FOR
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are aa
easy to use as soap. No muss or fail urea
10c per package. Sold by druggists.
Oldest of tliA ''Iiutuortals,"
The oldest of the ' Immortals," ot
members of the French Academy, is
Legouve, who is ninety-four. The Paris
Gaulois thinks that the best thing he
wrote is this: "It is often said that
God condemned man to live, and gave
him work as a mitigating circum-
stance."
A IiOaer of I>ega.
A young British officer at the front
recently wrote home to his father from
South Africa: "Dear Father—Kindly
send me 1150 at once; lost another leg
In a stiff engagement, and am in hos-
pital without means." The answer was:
"My Dear Son—As this is the fourth
leg you have lost, according to your
letters, you ought to be accustomed to
it by this time. Try to wabble along
on any others you may have left,"—
Argonaut.
IF TOD USB BALL BLUE,
Get Red Croat* Ball Blue, the beat Ball Blue.
Large 2 o>. package only 5 cento.
The summer girl at last has real-
ized that the comfort of her shirt
waist is more than half spoiled by
the discomfort of Iter stiff linen col-
lars, and this year has betaken her-
self to stocks. While some of these
are really very little improvement on
collars, as far as comfort is con-
cerned, others are delightfully soft
aud thin, and the beauty of all is
they are easily laundered and easily
made at home, says Marie Boulanger,
in Chicago Record-Herald.
One of the simplest i: tkc- stock
tie. Take a strip of whit* nainsook,
thin but not too sheer, oi of dimity,
l'/a yards long and 4 inches wide,
and round it slightly at the throat
by a collar pattern that opens in the
back. With a bias strip of colored
chambray or lawn one inch wide bind
the entire tie by sewing one edge
of the bias strip to edge of tie, fold-
ing it in the middle and stitching
down the other edge over the first
<ream.
These ties are worn without any
other collar, and are put around the
neck, crossed in the back and tied
in front, in bow or four-in-hand.
Made with a binding of "olil blue"
•>r "rose," they look well with near-
If any shirt waist, but the color is.
-f course, a mere matter of personal
tiste.
Another, easily made, too, i«; the
ci ush stock of white pique, cheviot
oi even duck, with colored ends.
These have a straight edge at the
to| . which gives a more decidedly
crushed effect when worn. Thev are
made by sewing two thicknesses of
pique together, stitching around
edges and adding any kind of ties
one likes. There are the short ties
for a mere knot, the rounded or
pointed for a small bow and long
ends for a four-in-hand, made of
material of shirt waist with which
stock is to be worn, of solid cham-
bray or linen, or some of the pretty
white shirt waist stulTs sold in the
shops. One of these ties is sewed
only at its extreme edges, so as to
leave a slit for other tie to go through
when put around the neck. Still an-
other very effective one is made from
n lady's linen or lawn handkerchief,
with narrow hemstitched hem and
tiny vine of embroidery. Fi.-st fold
the handkerchief front corner to cor-
ner and cut in a straight line one and
one-half inches from each sid> of the
fold, t ut this strip in two crosswise
nnd you have two bias pieces with
pointed ends, formed by corners of
handkerchief, for ends ot the tie.
Fell these neatly to a straight piece
of lawn 'JO inches long and three
Inches wide and hem both side-;. l's««
the two other corners of handker-
chief for points, which are sewed
*o the middle of top edge of tie and
turned down over it to complete the
handkerchief stock.
Sea-Water a Tonic.
ine Idea has been advanced that
much of .he benefit derived from sea-
bathing Is due to the amount of sea-
water involuntarily swallowed. It la
•aid to be a tonic for the liver, stom-
ach and kidneys, aad of great benefit
ila cases of billousntM.
I'rr«rrveil (nrrniit*.
Take the currants when ripe, let
them remain on the stalks, picking
off the bad ones. Make ti sirup of
sugar, and very little water, allow-
ing a pound of sugar to each pound
of currants. Clarify, /hen put in the
currants, and 'let th-in boil a few
minutes. In the c nirse of a few
days turn the sirup from ihetn. scald
it, and turn it bach", while hot, on to
the currants. Preserved currants,
mixed with water, is an excellent
drink in fevers. Dried currants are
also gootl for the same purpose, if
made into a tea.—Cincinnati Ea-
quirer.
Staffed Kinta Ma j niinnlae.
Cut 12 hard-boiled eggs into halve*
lengthwise. Take out the yolks put
them through a potato rieer aud <uix
them with two tablespoons each oj'
melted Iritter, anchovy pa ;e nnj
chopped .Sam. Add half a tea spoor
of paprika. Press this egg paste into
each white and lay them together.
When ready to serve pour over tb#
dish a tumbler of uiayouuaise.—Good
Housekeeping.
Nebraska Oat of Debt.
Nebraska which haa been enjoylnp a
large share of the general prosperity
since 1S97. has no bonded indebtedness.
During the last two year* what re-
mained of the bonded debt was paid
off. Nineteen of the ninpty counties of
Nebraska canceled wholly or in part
their outstanding bonded indebtedness
last year.—Indianapolis News.
Moonlight liurta Complexion.
A French physician claims to have
discovered that the sun. in all his
glory, is not as fatal to complexion as
bright moonlight. Hardly had he an-
nounced it before shopkeepers had on
exhibition little moonshsdes of double
thickness of mnusseline de soi;?, which
in Paris are now considered indispens-
able at moonlight parties.
Toneli-:ia<l-(io Lat*.
It isn't against the law in Minnesota
to kill a gambler if he has been cheat-
ing end will not return the money to
his victim. At least a ease at Granite
Falls was recently decided to that ef-
fect. Dr. Wintner pulled his pistol and
shot a gambler with whom he was
playing cards, because the gambler had
cheated and refused to pay the money
on demand. A jury declared upon oath
that Dr. W'intner was not guilty of
murder.—Chicago Journal.
A Happy Hoy
Oldenburg, III., Sept. L'd:—The doc-
tors all failed in the case of little thir-
teen-year-old Willie Keil, who suffered
with acute Rheumatism.
For over throe months the poor little
fellow suffered excruciating torture.
His father, w ho had done everything he
could think of. saw a new Rheumatism
Remedy advertised — Dodd's Kidney
Pills. He bought some, and soon his
little son showed signs of improvement.
Three boxes cured him completely, and
he has not a symptom of Rheumatism
left.
This miraculous cure of a case which
had been given up by the physicians
has electrified Madison County, and
Dodd's Kidney Pills are a much talked
of medicine.
Caution la TTnnillliiir Fithea.
In handling fishes it requires a cer-
tain amount of care to avoid befeg
cut by the fins, which in some species
are to some extent poisonous. Tho
Key West fisherman has an unbound-
ed horror of being bitten by almost
any kind of fish, as hn fears blood
poisoning will set in, although accord-
ing to those who have studied the
question, there seems to be very litilj
foundation for this fear.
the Mom* l.miiulry.
There is no reason why the clothes
cleaned at home cannot be ironed up
to the same standard of excellence that
comes from sending them to the laun-
dry. All that is necessary to attain
the desired object is the purchase of
a package of Defiance starch at any
grocery. Use it once and you will un-
derstand why clothes Ironed at the
laundries have that mild, glossy ap-
pearance. All first-class laundries use
Defiance starch. If there is no grocery
in your neighborhood that keeps it
they will send for it on request. Made
by >.e Magnetic Starch Co., Omaha,
Neb.
PAINT IN THE FALL
Fall painting is best; the
paint gets well seasoned be-
fore the hot sun gets busy.
You want your paint to
last, and to protect your prop-
erty. If you use Devoe ready
paint, you'll have both.
Lasts longer than lead and
oil; costs less. Devoe is a safe
name in paint things.
Aak your dealer for Devoe; dont be
satisfied with less. Send for our pam-
phlet about paint and painting; free;
things you ought to know.
' GOOD-PAINT DEVOE CHICAGO.
Al
t
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The Daily Messenger. (Claremore, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 247, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 11, 1901, newspaper, September 11, 1901; Claremore, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc177872/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.