The Darrow Press (Darrow, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 14, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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Joy Is not In things, it ia in us.—
CHANGE IN JUDGES
Charles Wagner, from 'Underneath the
Bough."
A Valuable Agent.
The glyce.i ne employed In Dr. Pierce's
medicines greatly enhances the medi-
cinal properties which it extracts and
holds in solution much better than alco-
hol would. It also possesses medicinal
properties of its own, being a valuable
demulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and anti-
ferment. It adds greatly to the efficacy
of the Black Cherry bark, Golden Seal
root, Stone root and Queen's root, con-
tained in "Golden Medical Discovery" in
subduing chronic, or lingering coughs,
bronchial, throat and lung affections,
for all of which these agents are recom-
mended by standard medical authorities.
In all cases where there is a wasting
away of flesh, loss of appetite, with
weak stomach, as In the early stages of
consumption, there can be no doubt that
glycerins acts as a valuable nutritive and
aids the Golden Seal root, Stone root,
Queen's root and Black Cherry bark in
promoting digestion and building up the
flesh and strength, controlling the cough
and bringing about a healthy condition
of the whole system. Of course, it must
not be expected to work miraclss. It will
not cure consumption except in its earlier
stages. It will cure very severe, obstin-
ate, chronic coughs, bronchial and laryn-
geal troubles, and chronic sore throav
with hoarseness. In acute coughs it is
not so effective. It i9 in the lingering
coughs, or those of long standing, even
when accompanied by bleeding from
lungs, that it has performed its most
marvelous cures. Send for and read the
little book of extracts, treating of the
properties and uses of the several med-
icinal roots that enter into Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery and learn why
this medicine has such a wide range o:
application in the cure of diseases. It Is
gent free. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce,
Buffalo, N. Y. The "Discovery" con-
tains no alcohol or harmful, habit-form-
ing drug. Ingredients all printed on each
bottle wrapper In plain English.
Sick people, especially those suffering
from diseases of long standing, are invited
to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, fret. All
correspondence is held as strictly private
and sacredly confidential. Address Dr.
R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser is sent/rcc
on receipt of stamps to pay expense of
mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamp
for paper-covered, or 31 stamps for cloth-
bound copy.
Largest Man in Pari
Michael Beudin, the largest man lr
Paris, who was known as the "King
of the Draymen," has died from the
effects of being knocked down by a
street car. He was six feet six and
three-fourths inches tall and weighed
392 pounds. His strength was so
great that he could lift easily and car-
ry a barrel containing a pipe (126 gal-
lons) of wine.
Sensible Housekeeper#
will have Defiance Starch, not alone
because they get one-third more for
the same money, but also because of
superior quality.
"We may make the best of life, or
we may make the worst of it, and it
depends very much upon ourselves
No Others.
It Is in a class to Itself. It has no
rivals. It cures where others merely
relieve. For aches, pains, stiff joints,
cuts, burns, bites, etc., it is the quick-
est and surest remedy ever devised.
We mean Hunt's Lightning Oil.
It rather takes the edge off the doc-
tor's bill to be able to tell the neigh-
bors how many nights you had to sit
up with the sick child.
We are tired of hearing the busy
bee and the bustling ant mentioned as
shining examples of industry and per-
severance. There is nothing that
shows such aggressiveness and deter-
mination as a mosquito.
Raymond is Out and Parker Become!
Judge of Northern District i
WASHINGTON: The fight on Judge |
Raymond, of the western judicial dis- j
trict, Indian Territory, was ended,
when {he president sent to the senate j
the names of four judges to be among
which Judge Raymond is not. They
are:
Northern district, L. F. Parker, Jr.;
western district, Wiliam R. Lawrence;
central district, W. H. Clayton; south-
ern district, Hosea Townsend. The last
two are reappointments.
Judge Lawrence was appointed un-
der the law of 1904, as an additional
judge, but is transferred from the
northern to the western district. Park-
er's appointment was assured some
days ago, when the president told
Speaker Cannon that he would not
reappoint his friend Raymond. The
speaker then transferred his allegiance
to Lawrence, who comes from Dan-
ville, 111., which is Mr. Cannon's home,
and had him named to preside over
the western judicial district.
MUSKOGEE: The announcement
that Judge W. R. Lawrence has been
appointed to succeed Judge C. W. Ray-
mond on the federal bench of the
western district, and that L. F. Parker,
Jr., would become associate judge in
the northern district, to fill the place
left vacant by Lawrence, was no sur-
| prise here to those who were on the
inside. This arrangement was made
| more than a week a go. This ends one
' of the hardest fought political battles
ever witnessed in Indian Territory.
Cannon had stood out for Raymond's
appointment. President Roosevelt in-
dicated in a letter to Judge Thomas,
of this city, that Judge Raymond would
be the appointee. Parker, however,
developed such phenomlnal strength,
and brought such strong pressure to
bear upon the president through In-
dian Territory citizens and congres-
sional delegations from the states that
the president finally decided not to re-
appoint Judge Raymond, ai.d deter-
mined that he would give Parker a
judicial plum in Indian Territory.
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullen is Nature's great remedy—Cures
Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption,
and all throat and lung troubles. At drug-
gists , 25c., 50c. and «1.00 per.bottle.
' The happiness of life depends less
upon what befalls us than upon the
way in Vh'ich we take it.—Lavatar.
A guaranteed cure eor piles.
Itching, Blind, l$le <lln(t. 1'rotrudlng Piles. Vrag-
sluts are iltborlzcd to refund money If 1 A£0
OINTMENT f ll W-cure In 6 to 14 day*. 50c.
Happiness grows at our own fire-
Bides, and is not to be picked up in
strangers' galleries.—Douglas Jarrold.
Do Your Clothes Look YellowT
Then use Defiance Starch, it will
keep them white—16 oz. for 10 cents.
Some people are always grumbling^
because roses have thorns. 1 am
mkful that thorns have roses.—Al-
Uonse Karr.
A BRIEF SKETCH OF HER LIFE
How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and
How the "Panic of '73" Caused it to be Offered
for Public Sale in Drug Stores.
THE STORY READS LIKE A ROMANCE
PREPARING TO FIGHT
Stock Food Companies Will Not Sub-
mit to New Law Without a Howl
GUTHRIE: The stock food com-
panies are preparing a fight on the
bill passed by the last legislature,
which demands the inspection of com-
mercial fertilizers, condimental, pat-
ented or proprietary or trade-mark
stock and poultry food, for the regula-
tion of the sale of same and of con-
centrated stock foods. The bill was
drawn by former Secretary J. B. Tho-
burn of the territorial board of agri-
culture and is very drastic. Each ar-
ticle of the above named preparations
must be analyzed annually by the
chemist of the Agricultural and Me-
chanical college of Stillwater,
and heavy fines are imposed
on stock food companies that
violate or attempt to sell
anything but pure siock foods. It was
learned at the office of C. A. McNabb
the present secretary of the board
that such stock food companies are
preparing to fight the new law, which
goes into efTect on January 1. Numer-
ous letters have been received by both
Thoburn and McNabb from such com
panies protesting that their products
do not come under the provisions ot
the bill, and all of them are howling
lustily.
Seminoles Oppose McGuire Bill
WEWOKA: The Seminole council
is in session here, having been called
by Chief Brown, to make an official
protest against the joint statehood bill
proposed by Delegate McGuire, of Ok-
lahoma. The Seminoles are opposed
to the bill for various reasons, but es
pecially upon the grounds of the di-
vision of congressional districts in Ok
lahoma and Indian Territory.
'jpiso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as
a cough cure.—J. W. O'Briek, 322 Third Ave.
N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1900.
A lost fortune grows in proportion
to the passage of time.
Mrs. Wlnalow'8 Soothing Syrup.
for children teething, softens the gums, reduces u
9amwatlou. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a uitue.
You can make people believe in you
by pretending to believe in them.
Try One Package.
If "Defiance Starch" does not please
you, return it to your dealer. If it
does you get one-third more for the
same money. It will five you satis-
faction. and will not stick to the iron.
Every heart that has beat strong
and cheerfully has left a hopeful im-
pulse behind it in the world, and bet-
tered the tradition of mankind. R. L.
Stevenson.
Mother Cray's Sweet Powders for Child rea
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse
In the Children's Home in New York, cure
Constipation, Feverishness, Bad Stomach,
Teething Disorders, move and regulate the
Bowels and Destroy Worms.Over 30,000 tes-
timonials. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample
FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, LeRoy.N.Y.
Soldier's Narrow Escape
August)n Poole, a veteran trainer,
who fought in the Crimea in 1854-56,
was thrown into a burial trench while
wounded after the battle of Tchernava,
but made a slight movement that was
noticed and was pulled out again, died
in England the othe.' day. He Uvea
just fifty years after his first funeral.
OKLAHOMA'S FINANCES
FRANK P. LEWES, Peon*. HL
Originator of the Tin Foil Smoker Pack;
aee The man who has made Lewi.
Single Binder Straight 5c Cigar famous
among smokers throughout the \>est
tow&XVOS? COUNCIL HILL
BECAUSE
HILL SPrrsaJ^°B
ti a new town, but a
few montha old. loca-
ted on the M. O. * G.
railroad. 25 mllea from Muskogee. It Is surrounded
by a vast area ot the best agricultural land In
the Creek Nation. A brick railroad station with
cement platforms, a two-story modem school house,
12-foot granitoid sidewalk* with curbing through the
buslneao section are trot a faw of the substanUal Un-
prov-m nta. Never has there been such an oppor-
tunity for a business location or a profitable Invest-
■lent. For partlcalmre address
Union Townsite Company,
Muskogee, Indian Territory.
COUNCIL
COJNCIL HILL
W.N-.U.—Oklahoma City—No 50. 1905
OEFIINCE STARCH—;;
16 ounce* to
"the package
r.u£r"JtIwU^>~ ni7 « pr'-rc
•DCFIANCE ' IS SUPERIOR QUALITY.
Territorial Treasurer Shows How the
Different Funds Stand
GUTHRIE; Territorial Treasurer
Rambo has filed with the governor his
financial statement for November?
showing on hand the sum of $710,842,-
02. a decrease of $20,911.65 over the
amount on hand on October 31 The
receipts for November were $51,250.03,
and the disbursements $72,101.08. The
largest balance is now in the public
building fund, a sum of $438,406.09 to
its credit. The state university and
normal schools' fund amounts to $65.-
000.74. and the general revenue fund
j to $30,039.54. In the building fund of
the Northwestern Normal school there
: has acumulated $14,969.14 of the $60.-
000 appropriated by the state legisla-
i |Ure for an additional building at the
' school, but none of that fund can be
expended until approved by congress.
Annie McKellop, the daughter of
Joe McKellop, a well known Creek In-
dian, of Weleetka, died last week from
the efTect of a rattlesnake bite which
the received ten days previous
Saved Him.
"It didn't kill me, but I think it
would if it had not been for Hunt's
Cure. I was tired, miserable and well
nigh used up when I commenced
using it for an old and severe case of
Eczema. One application relieved
and one box cured me.
"I believe Hunt's Cure will cure any
form of itching known to mankind."
Clifton Lawrence,
Helena. 0. T.
Carl Heinrich Horix, of Eeilbronn,
Germany, has a noble ambition. Ac-
companied by a band of Alpine guides,
he has gone to India, bent on playing
"Die Wacht am Rhine" on his piccolo
on the summit of Mount Everest, the
highest peak of the Himalayas.
Spending your money as fast as
I you make it is foolish. Spending it
1 faster than you make it is financial
genius.
The Best Results In Starching
tan be obtained only by using De-
fiance Starch, besides getting 4 oz.
more for same money—no cookin* re-
quired.
A Clerical Error
Scene—A recruiting depot under the
shadow of Table Mountain.
Time—Sunday morning parade.
Sergeant addressing the men in re-
sponse to a request for a clerk for the
Quartermaster's stores:
"Any men here that are used to
clerical work, two paces to the front.
No response.
Recruit in rank: "Well, I'm blowed!
I thought we joined for fighting, and
not to be blooming parsons!"
This remarkable woman, whose
maiden name was Estes, was born in
Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, com-
ing from a good old Quaker family.
For many years she taught school, and
during her career as a teacher she be-
came known as a woman of an ale.t
and investigating mind, an earnest
seeker after knowledge, and above all,
she was possessed with a wonderfully
sympathetic nature.
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham,
a builder and real estate operator and
their early married life was marked by
prosperity and happiness. They had
four children, three sons and a daugh-
ter
In those good old-fashioned days few
drugs were used in medicines; people
relied upon nature's remedies, roots
and herbs, which are to-day recognized
as more potent and efficacious in con-
trolling diseases than any combination
Mrs.gPinkham from her youth took a
deep interest in medicine, in botany—
the study of roots and herbs, their
characteristics, and power over dis-
ease; she believed that as nature
so bountifully provides food for the
body so she also provides medicine for
the ills and weaknesses of the body,
in the roots and herbs of the noia,
and as a wife, mother and sympathetic
friend, she often made use of her
knowledge of roots and herbs in pre-
paring medicines for her family and
friends.
Knowing of so much suffering among
her sex, after much study and re-
search, Mrs. Pinkham believed that
the diseases of women have a com-
mon cause, and she set to work to
find a common remedy—not at that
time as a source of profit, but simply
that she might aid the suffering.
How her efforts have been rewarded
the women of the world know to-day.
In 1873 the financial crisis struck
Lynn. Its length and severity was too
much for the large real estate inter-
ests of the Pinkham family, as this
class of business suffered most from
this fearful depression, so when the
Centennial year dawned it found their
property swept away.
At this point the history of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound com-
mences:
The three sons and daughter, with
their mother, combined forces to re-
store the family fortune. They re-
solved to give to the world the vege-
table compound that Mrs. Pinkham
had so often made from roots and
herbs for such of her women neigh-
bors and friends who were sick and
ailing. Its success in those cases had
been wonderful—Its fame had spread,
and calls were coming from miles
around for this efficacious vegetable
compound.
They had no money, and little
credit. Their first laboratory was the
kitchen, where roots and herbs were
steeped on the stove, gradually filling
a gross of bottles. Then came the
question of selling it, for always be-
fore they had given it away free.
They hired a job printer to run off
some pamphlets setting forth the mer-
its of the medicine, now called Lydla
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
and these pamphlets were distributed
by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New
York and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties or
the medicine wer5, to a great extent,
self-advertising, for whoever used it
recommended it to others, and the de-
mand gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts, the
family had saved enough money to
commence newspaper advertising on a
small scale, and from that time the
growth and success of the enterprise
was assured, until to-day Lydia E.
Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound
have become household words every-
where. and thousands of pounds of
roots and herbs are used annually In
making this great remedy for woman's
ills.
Although Lydia E. Pinkham passed
to her reward some years ago, the per-
petuation of her great work was
guarded by her foresight.
During her long and eventful experi-
ence she was ever methodical in her
work and was careful to preserve a
record of every case that came to her
attention. The case of every sick
woman who applied to her for advice
—and there were thousands—received
careful study, and the details, includ-
ing symptoms, treatment and results,
were recorded for future reference,
and to-day these records, together with
thousands made since, are available to
sick women the world over, and repre-
sent a vast collaboration of informa-
tion regarding the treatment of Rom-
an's ills which, for authenticity and
accuracy, can hardly be equaled in any
library In the world.
Another act of foresight on the part
of Lydia E. Pinkham was to see that
some one of her family was trained to
carry on her work, and with that end
in view, for years before her death,
had as her chief assistant her daugh-
ter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pinkham.
Therefore, under the guidance and
careful training of Lydia E. Pinkham,
and a vast experience of her own.
covering twenty-five years, the present
Mrs. Pinkham is exceptionally well
equipped to advise sick women, which
she is always glad to do free of
charge.
The record of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made of simple
herbs and roots, is a proud and peer-
less one. It is a record of constant
conquest over the obstinate ills of
women, greater than that of any other
one medicine of its kind in the world,
and will ever stand as a monument to
that noble woman whose name its
bears.
The Home
of the
Cures Blood, Skin Troubles, Cancer,
Blood Poison. Greatest Blood
Purifier Free.
If your blood Is impure, thin, dis-
eased. hot or full of humors, if you
have blood poison, cancer, carbuncles,
eating sores, scrofula, eczema, Itching,
risings and lumps, scabby, pimply
ekin. bone pains, catarrh, rheumatism,
or any blood or skin disease, take Bo-
tanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) according
to directions. Soon all sores heal,
aches and pains stop, the blood is
made pure and rich, leaving the skin
free from every eruption, and giving
the rich glow of perfect health to the
skin. At the same time. B. B. B. Im-
proves the digestion, cures dyspepsia,
strengthens weak kidneys. Just the
medicine for old people, as it gives
them new, vigorous blood. Druggists,
J1 p*>r large bottle, with directions for
home cure. Sample free and prepaid
by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta,
Ga. Describe trouble and special free
medical advice also sent in sealed let-
ter B B. B. is especially advised for
chronic, deep-seated cases of impure
i blood and skin disease, and cures after
j all else falls.
Wave Circle
KG
jtftOVlHCESj
IV* C„lcAGO t.T'
a- kawS* ,
is the home where good cooking is
loved, where the iamily enjoy the
finest of biscuits, doughnuts, cakes,
and pies and other good things every
day. The baking is always delicious
and wholesome because
K C Baking Powder
—the baking powder of the wave
circle, is used.
Get K C to-day! 25 ounces lor
25c. If it isn't all that we claim,
your grocer refunds your money.
Send for "Book of Presents."
JAQUES MFG. CO.
Chicago.
A sermon is the longest distance be
tween two points—namely, the point | yy.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No 50.
at which it begins and at which it
Thompson'! Eyi W t
1905
....
liT V'
ooeh^y^pjT-w- Goo4.
leaves off.—Punch.
QEF1ANCE STARCH SucSc^ctaSca Blce v
CONSUMPTION f
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Daeschner, Gideon. The Darrow Press (Darrow, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 14, 1905, newspaper, December 14, 1905; Darrow, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc179885/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.