The Eagle City Record. (Eagle City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1906 Page: 4 of 8
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What He Was Sorry For.
Prof. John A. De Camp of Williams
College, now principal of the Wil-
liamstown high school, when a stu-
dent at college, roomed in the house
of a lady who had a very bright little
boy about two years old, whose name
was Dewey. He had just learned to
talk, and Mr. De Camp was very
proud of him.
One day when Mr. De Camp was ,
teasing him he shocked his mother by I
saying: "Keep your old mouth shut!" I
She took him aside and told him that
he must apologize to Mr. De Camp, i
and say he was very sorry he said
such a naughty thing.
That night Mr. De Camp had com-
pany in his room, when the patter of
Dewey's baby feet was heard in the
hall. Then a sad little voice in the.
doorway said: "I's sorry."
"Why, what are you sorry for,
Dewey?" Mr. De Camp asked.
"I's sorry," said Dewey, "that you
don't keep your old mouth shut."—
Boston Herald. '
Menu of the Eagle.
The voracity of the eagle is a
well known fact, but it has been left
to a Swiss hunter to define exactly
the variations which take place in its
daily menu. In a nest in the Alps,
side by side with an eaglet, he found
a hare, freshly killed, twenty-seven
chamois' feet, four pigeons' feet, thir-
ty pheasants' feet, eleven heads of
fowls, eighteen heads of grouse, anri
the remnants of rabbits, marmots and
squirrels.
Guite Harmless.
A young man who is blessed with &
Scottish kinsman need never fear that
he will be allowed to hold too high
an opinion of himself.
"What do you think of my project
to study law?" asked young Witherby
of his great uncle, Robert Donaldson,
a person whom he was desirous to
propitiate.
"I should call it a very harmless
amusement," said Mr. Donaldson
drylv, after a comprehensive survey
of the young man's fatuous face and i
gay attire, "if not carried too far."
New Use For Hypnotism.
"That woman hypnotist out my way
is all right, all right," said the com-
muter. "Yesterday, in the midst of i
her housecleaning a book agent called
en her. She hypnotized him and kept
him out in the back yard seven hours
beating carpets."
How to Succeed.
Keep your liver in good condition
by using Simmons' Liver Purifier. It
corrects Constipation, cures indiges-
tion. Biliousness, stops Headaches,
gets your heart in the right place so
you can smile on your neighbor.
Keep Cats in Church.
Most of the churches in Naples
have three or four cats attached to
them. The cats are kept for the pur-
pose of catching the mice, which in-
fest all the ancient Neapolitan build
ings. The animals may often be seen
walking about among the congrega
tion, or stretched before the altars.
Point Not to Bs Overlooked.
In "sizing up" your man, don't neg-
lect to have your own measure down
to the fineness of a hair; you may
need to know just what it is before
you are doue—John A. Howland.
Clothes and Conduct.
Every man and every woman feels
the influence of clothes and appear-
ance upon conduct. You have heard
of the lonely man in the Australian
bush who always put on evening
dress for dinner, so that he might re-
member he was a gentleman. Addi-
son could not write his best unless
he was well dressed. Put a naughty
girl into her best Sunday clothes and
she will behave quite nicely. Put a
blackguard into khaki and he will be
a hero. Put an omnibus conductor
into uniform and he will live up to
his clothes. Indeed, in a millenium
of free clothes of the latest fashion
we shall all be archangels.—London
j Chronicle. _
To Launder White Silk Handkerchiefs.
| Do not put white silk handkerchiefs
I in the ordinary wash as they are easily
laundered at home. Make a strong
j lather of Ivory Soap and water, but do
! not rub the soap on the handkerchief
or use soda. Rinse and iron while
damp with a moderately ho\ iron.
Eleanor R. Parker.
When Women Were Privileged.
English women once enjoyed politi-
cal equality with men? Ladies sat in
council with the Saxon Witas. In
Wighfried's great council at Becon
celd towards the close of the seventh
century, many abbesses sat and five
of them signed decrees along with the
king the bishops and the nobles.
They Stand Alone.
Standing ont in hold relief, all a'one,
and us a conspicuous example of open,
frank and honest dealing with the sick
and afflicted, are Dr. Pierce's Favorite
I prescription for weak, over-worked, de-
bilitated, nervous, "run-down, Pam"
racked women, and Dr. Pierce s Gokhp
Medical Discovery, the famous remedy
for weak stomach, indigestion, or dys-
pepsia, torpid liver, or biliousness, all
! catarrhal affections whether of the
i stomach, bowels, kidneys, bladder, nasal
passages, throat, bronchia, or other mu-
cous passages, also as an effective remedy
for all diseases arising from thin, watery
or impure blood, as scrofulous and skin
i afEach Jbottle of the above medicines
bears upon its wrapper a badge of hon-
! estv in the full list of ingredients com-
I posW it —> printed in plain English.
This frank and open publicity places
these medicines in a class all by fAem-
selves, and is the best guaranty of their
merits. They cannot be classed as patent
nor secret medicines for they are neither
—bcinq of known composition.
Dr Pierce feels that he can afford to
take'the afflicted into his full confidence
and lav all the ingredients of his medi-
cines freely before them because these
ingredients are such as are endorsed and
most strongly praised by scores of the
most eminent medical writers as cures
for the diseases for which these medi-
cines are recommended. Therefore, the
afflicted do not have to rely alone upon
Dr Pierce's recommendation as to tne
curative value of his medicines for cer-
tain easily recognized diseases.
A elance at the printed formula on
each bottle will show that no alcohol and
no harmful or liabit-forming drugs enter
into Dr Pierce's medicines, they being
wholly compounded of glyceric extracts
of the roots of native, American forest
plants. These are best and safest tor
the cure of most lingering, chronic dis-
eases. Dr. R. V. Pierce can be consulted
free, bv addressing him at Buffalo,
N Y., and all communications are re-
garded as sacredly confidential.
It is as easy to be well as ill—and
much more comfortable. Constipation is
the cause of many forms of illness. Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipa-
tion. They aro tiny, sugar-coated gran-
! ules. One little ' Pellet" is a gentle laxa-
tive. two a mild cathartic. All dealers in
medicines sell them.
' M ; -VI18 S i i f < i
- gjyjgjj/f ~ '1.'
^Vegetable Preparationfor As-
similating ttieFood andRegula-
ting the Stomachs andBowelsof
1Nk \m-Is /( H1LDKKN
Promotes Digestion.Cheerfut-
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor>Iiii£raL
^OT^ARCOTIC.
jtepe a/OUUtSmJELPITCHER
Pumphn Seat"
jtlx.Sauui *
RocktlLt Saiit—
Aair e Seed- <*
tiinnSeed'
Cinnfitd Sugaf
Wutfrryrrtn rtavai
Aperfecl Remedy for Const!pa
Tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions ,Fevensh-
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature oP „
NEW YORK.
CASTON!
For Infanta and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
VI (y-montW ol'l
tyDosts-lsC' Njs
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
p(ACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
TH« CENTAUR «OMMNY. N« YOB« Oft*
METALLIC
wanted kor United States Abmt: able-bodied
uMMniednien, between ages of H and 86; citizen*
of United States, of good obarart^r and temperate
habile, who can .peak. rfad and write EnrfUh. F
fi^form^l^CapidyC"o'
Building Oklahoma, Guthrie, Shawnee, Enid, O.
T.,
or Tulsa, L T.
If afflicted with |
eore eyes, use |
Thompson's Eye Water
For Remington
Rifles
For Winchester
Rifles
For Savage Rifies
For Martin Rifles
For Stevens Rifles
For All Rifles
U.M.C. cartridges
are universally pre-
(erred by sports-
men whowish togettheirfuli money's worth.
Your dealer sells them. Free Catalogue.
U M. C. cartridges are guaranteed, also
standard arms when U.M.C. cartridges are
used as specified on labels.
THE UNION METALLIC
CARTRIDGE COMPANY
BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT
Agencv: 313 Broadway. - - New York
/'EW LAWS
^ SFNTFREE.
Writ^Kathaa^ickford, 914 F St.. Washington, D. 0.
Women would be crying nearly all Q£|>J£[|Q£ STAR6H-
the time if it didn't make their noses
so red.
16 ounces 10
9 mmmmm _ _ the package
other starches only 12 ounces—same price and
'DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY.
_ nor CTADPU easiest to work with and
DEFIANCE STAsouH gtarehes clothee nlceaU
W.N.U., Oklahoma City, No. 16, 1906.
SfllXED FARMING
wheat
raising
ranching
three great pursuit*
have again shown
wonderful results on
the
free homestead lands
of western canada.
Magnificent climate—fanners plowing in tbeii
shirt sleeves in the middle of November.
"All are bound to be more than pleased with
the final results Of the past season s harvest."—
Extract.
Coal, wood, water, hay in abundance-'Schooli,
churches, markets convenient.
This is the era of $1.00 wheat.
Apply for information to Superintendent ol
| Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to authorized
Canadian Government Agent—J. S. Crawford,
No. 125 \V. Ninth Street, Kansas City, Missouri.
IMention this paper.)
"After Suffering for Three Years"
writes Mary E. Shelton, of Poplar Bluff, Mo., "and trying two doctors for female trouble in vain. I was
finally laid up in bed for about five weeks and was near to death, when I began to take Wine of Cardui.
In a week I was up, and have mended ever since. I have only taken three bottles and now I am in good
health and can do my housework without a pain. My custom is now regular. I can truly say that
8 Cardui cured me and I cannot recom
mend it highly enough." "For head-
ache, backache, falling feelings, diz-
ziness, cramps, fitful functions and
periodical pains take
*T ALL DRUGGISTS III XI.GO BOTTLES
C 1
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The Eagle City Record. (Eagle City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1906, newspaper, April 27, 1906; Eagle City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc179917/m1/4/: accessed March 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.