Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, November 17, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
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HAD FAMOUS POISON
OREAD SECRET POSSESSED BY
LAST OF THE BORQIAS.
Simple Mixture Carrying Certain
Death and Impossible of Detection
Came Down to Him from the Middle
Ages—How It Might Be* Well Used.
It i better to be forgotten utterly
than to be. remembered only through
a lot of fool things you have done. i
UOTTT TO KG ET |
A larie Sor. puokaffo Red CrosvBiill Blue, only
5 cents. The Ruas Company, SFuth ilend, lnd.
A woman seldom makes a fool out
of a man; she usually acts as nature's
assistant.
_ _
FROM GIRLHOOD T0 W0MHMQ00
Mothers Should Watch the Development of Their Daughters-
Interesting Experiences of Misses Borman and Mills.
Jttrs. fflniloW* Soothing Ryrnn.
For children teething. softens the kutus. reducos 1ft
^ -. ,I IIHM« wlnil i*n t(<
lorcntidren treining. mc —
11 animation. allay" pain. cures wind colic. 25« a notue.
Blaze de Bury, after reviewing the
oTaims of the wife of a certain Italo-
American to the title of the "last
countess of Borgia," tells a most in-
teresting story about the last male
descendant of the famous poisoning
family, says the Louisville Courier-
Journal.
"He was named Duke Rlario-Sforza,
and a well-known figure in the Paris
grand opera. As our subscription seats
adjoined, I met him there two or three
nights a week, and gradually the duke
began to honor me with his friendship.
One evening he said:
"'If It wasn't for music, my only
passion, I would have dispensed with
life long ago. Burdened as I am with
the knowledge of my family's secrets,
I know little comfort.'
"Then he told me that he was in
possession of the formula for making
'Cutarella,' the poison by which the
Borglas rid themselves of their ene-
mies and of persons whose fortunes or
wives they coveted. 'The secret has
descended from father to son through
ten centuries and more. If I had a
legitimate son I would have to Impart
it to him before I die, says the family
tradition. To avoid that dreadful re-
sponsibility I never married.' The
poison, he explained, was 'rather a
simple mixture,' and It was hard tc
believe that no chemist ever found or
rediscovered the formula. 'The poison,
he said, 'carries with it inevitable
death, but no court of law and no ex
pert physician is able to detect any
symptoms of violence in the victim £
body. Hence the Cutarella Is the
prince of poisons, just the poison foi
statesmen and kings to handle.
" 'My formula provides either fo:
sudden or for lingering death, accord
ing to the poisoner's wishes. I could
make you drop dead iu an instant by
a handshake, or by a drop of liquid
poured in your water or coffee, and 1
might sentence you to perish bj
inches, to burn up alive, etc.' "
Blaze de Bury calls the duke a "the-
oretical philosopher of murder.' He
once said: "The truly great and just
man, a man without egotism and with-
out axes to grind, might become a
great aid to justice by the possession
of the Cutarella secret. The Borgia*
used the poison as a vehicle for theii
t mbition and greed—It might be used
to rid the world of a lot of secret
criminals and vampires, laughing at
the law. Justice, as we understand it,
does not punish one-third of the crimes
committed. Numerous perpetrators
escape by technicalities, by bribery
by accident. Now, suppose that the
possessor of the Cutarella secret hunts
down such men and women and rid
the world of them. Suppose he makes
himself the instrument of vengeance
for wronged women, for men driven to
despair, for children robbed and be-
trayed by their guardians. Suppose
ho would take it upon himself to kiU
faithless kings and ministers that op
press the people. Suppose the Cu-
tarella proprietor would go to Russia
and do the. work of the revolutionists
there. What a grand prospect!"
"Has your grace ever conceived that
mission?" asked the author.
"When I was yotmg I sometime*
considered its advisability." replied
the duke. "But I tvafc never a hero
never a great moralist. Besides, 1
fplt that I had no particular knowledge
of character. I might have executed
more innocent people Ujb guilty ones
And so I concluded to let the secret oi
the vengeance poisoh slwp. Since 1
came into possession of the formula
it was never put in operttlon. And i<
never shall. I won't usfe it even oi
myself. If horrpr of life ever seizet
me 1 shall die by a pistol shot."
Soon aft*>r that the last male Borgi:
actually killed himself with • reyolrer
Often th* girl with false bangs has
tiie most to say about peroxidlzo.t
tresses.
Utivlor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullen is Natures great remedy -Cures
Coughs. Colds. Croup and Consu mption,
and all throat and lung troubles. At drug-
gists, 25c., 50c. and S1.00 per bottle.
Evea the pessimist whJ lots botn
his legs in a railway accident had no
klcU coming.
I do not believe Pino's Cure for Consumption
has an equal for coughs and colds.—John F.
BoYCit. Trinity Spring- nd., Feb. 15, IMO.
A New York man lived two years
with a broken neck, but it wasn't
broken by a rope.
9
MYRTLE MILLS
MATILDA BORMAN
Defiance Starch Is guaranteed biggest
and best or money refunded. 16
ounces, 10 cents. Try it now.
There are many kinds of reform,
but we hope and pray we may never
be so thoroughly changed as to give
the impression that we never were
young.
• * 4. „ I -Hie and as I have heard that you can givs
Every mother possesses information to giri9 in my condition, f am
which is of vital interest to her young | ^r^rtie Mills, Oquawka, 111.
1.1 /Qnnnn.l Tj&ttei°.l
Here is Relief for Women. —— .
► Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, dis-
covered a pleasant herb remedy for women's
ills, called AUSTRALIAN-LEAF. It is the
only certain monthly regulator. Cures
female weaknesses, Backache, Kidney and
Urinary troubles. At all Dru^ists or by
mail 50cts. Sample mailed FREE. Address,
The Mother Grav Co., LeRoy. N. Y.
We are going io sliuJder once more, i
\y,. have been again thinking of the
young mail who Wears coats padd^i
to twice his shoulder width and pos-
sibly condenses his waist in stays.
No Use.
You may have the moral right to do
so, but it is not necessary. Hunt's
Cure will instantly relieve and
promptly cure that itching trouble in
whatever form. It is made solely for
that purpose.
Of course, it's the proper thing for
a man to tun e a backbone, but he
should rememoer that it is jointed.
You never hear any cne complain
about •'Detianee Starch." There is none
to equal it in quality and quantity. 16
ounces. 10 cents. Try it now and save
your money.
Young man, you wil realize some!
day that the folks who talk so much
about the joy of painting the town red
are directly or indirectly concerned in
the manufacture and sale of the pig-
ment used in some decorative efforts.
daughter.
Too often this is never imparted or is
withheld until serious harm has result-
ed to the growing girl through her
ignorance of nature's mysterious and
wonderful laws and penalties.
Girls' over-sensitiveness and modesty
often puzzle their mothers and baffle
physicians, as they so often withhold
their confidence from their mothers
and conceal the symptoms which ought
to be told to their physician at this
critical period.
When a girl's thoughts become slug-
gish, with headache, dizziness or a dis-
position to sleep, pains in back or lower
limbs, eyes dim. desire for solitude;
when she is a nivstery to herself and
friends, her mother should come to her
aid, and remember that Lydia E. I'inlr-
ham's Vegetable Compound will at
this time prepare the system for the
coming change, and start the menstrual
period in a young girl's life without
pain or irregularities.
Hundreds of letters from young girls
and from mothers, expressing their
gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham s
Vegetable Compound has accomplished
for them, have been received by the
Lvdia, E. Pinkham Medicine Co., at
Lynn, Mass.
Miss Mills has written the two fol-
lowing letters to Mrs. Pinkham, which
will be read with interest:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— (First Letter.)
"I am but fifteen years of age, am depressed,
have dizzy spells, chills, headache and baclf
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:- (Second Letter.)
" It is with the feehng of utmost gratl^de
that I write to you to tell you what your
valuable medicine has done for me W hen i.
wrote you in regard to my condition lhad
consulted several doctors. but they
understand my case and I did notrewn e
any benetit from their treatment. I.followed
your advice, and took Lvdia h. Knkl""n *
Vegetable Compound and am
and well, and all the distressing symptoms
which I had at that time have disappeared. —
Myrtle Mills. Oquawka, 111.
Miss Matilda Borman writes Mrs.
Pink h am as follows •
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:--
Before taking Lydia E. Pinkham a Vege-
table Compound my monthlies were irregu-
lar and painful, and I always had §uc&
dreadful neadaches. . .
But since takfcg the Compound my head-
aches have entirely left me, my monthlies are
regular, and I atn getting strong and well. I
am telling all mv irirl friends what Lvdia K.
Finkham's Vegetable Compound has done fa.,
me."—Matilda Borman, Farmington, Iowa.
If you know of any young girl who
is sick and needs motherly a*lvice, ask
her to address Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn,
Mass., and tell her every detail of her
symptoms, and to keep nothing back.
She will receive advice absolutely free,
from a source that has no rival in the
experience of woman's ills, and it will, if
followed, p-'ther on the right road to a
strong, healthy and happy womanhood.
Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound holds the record for the greatest
number of cures of female ills of any
medicine that the world has ever
known. Why don t you try it ?
have dizzy spells, chills, headache and baclf 1 known. W hy aon i you try it r
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Makes Sick Women well.
fell gg MO MONEY TILL
^PiLlLSXDRS.THOBMTOH ft MIWOR-WJ' 0*« ST.KANSASClTV.MQ.(maimHOfrictat3tUwisjl
PRICE.
25 Cts.
ANTI-GRIPINE
IS GUARANTEED TO CURE
GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA.
F. W. Vtemcr. B. D., Utaalm>wxa,aprtngfieU, Ma.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
More Flexible and Lasting,
won't shake out or blow out; by using
Defiance Starch you obtain better re-
sults than possible with any other
brand and one-third more for same
money.
TO CURE THE GRIP
(- IN ONE DAY
lUMPINE
"HAS NO EQUAL FOR HEADACflE
Color
An*
Farmers, Dairymen, Poultry Baisers:
Pure Alfalfa Mcal^
|Best Balance (or Ration* H uh
fl 50 per 100n>, f.o b.
Oklahoma City, Ok 11.
Make mcnay by feeding
TONIC STOCK SALT
Worki both way ■: save* f* ei; increases
raUie*. 12.50 pe«* lOOtbs.: freight allowed.
A<* your dealer. or write direct.
Inland Mfg. Co., Oklahoma City.
■oo SVMP Fud I 01 J O®
Grindir.
I $I4&'
i We raannto-turo all sises
etyles. It will
par TOO to In-
[vestlfrate.Wrlte
for catalog and
I price list.
FOR WOMEN
! troubled with ill. jwculiar to - .
I their sex. used as a douche 1* marvelcsly suc-
1 cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
stops discharges, heals inflammation and local
' oteness, cures leucorrhcea and nasal catarrh.
| la I — (a.m tA K. rficlAlvflul in
I eater,
' -riDomical than liquid antiseptics icr a
LET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 90 cents a box.
I trial Box and Book of Instructions Pree.
TKK 9. Paxtoh Company Boston. Mas«.
Wind Hill.
CURME WHO WILL 00.,
err Seventh St., TqpekaJUnaaa
DEFIANCE STARCH
)TCnC53, curco ivutuilu^a auu vsmuiu,
Paxtine Is in powder form to be dissolved in pare mm riLlihnms Citv—No 46,1905
i inter, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—rMO. ho, iwa
IkI economical than liquid antiseptics for all
I TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL I
mm • J _ ' 1. SA • kn«*
CTIDPU e*«1* t to work with and
DtFIANVL STRnwP stsrche* clothes mceui
i Thompson's lyt Wstsr
tyrup
druKKl ts
CONS U M P T4QN
I
)
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Hornbeck, Will W. Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, November 17, 1905, newspaper, November 17, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc180969/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.