Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 1, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 12, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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A WOMAN'S ORDEAL
DREADS DOCTOR'S OUE8TIONS
Thousands Writ# to MrsPlnkh&m, Lynn,
Mr—. and Baoeive Valuable Advloe
Absolutely Confidential sad Fro*
There can be no more terrible ordeal
to a delioate, sensitive, refined woman
than to be obliged to answer oertsin
Questions In regard to her private ills,
even when those questions are asked
by her family physician, and many
TCWiUadien
continue to suffer rather than submit
to examinations which so many physi-
cians propose in order t% intelligently
treat the disease; and this is the rea-
son why so many physicians rail to
eure female disease.
This is also the reason why thousand®
upon thousands- of women are corre-
sponding with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn,
Mass. To her they can confide every
detail of their illness, and from
her great knowledge, obtained from
Ssars of experience in treating female
Is, Mrs. Pinkham can advise women
more wisely than the local physician.
Head how Mrs. Pinkham helped Mrs.
T. C. Willadsen, of Manning, la. She
writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
"I can truly say that you have ved®y
life, and I cannot exprefes my gratitude In
words. Before I wrote to you telling you
how I felt, I had doctored for over two years
steady, and spent lots of money in medicines
besides, but ifcall failed to do me any good. I
had female trouble and would daily have faint-
ing spell*, backache, bearing-down pains, and
my monthly periods were very irregular and
finallyces**L I wrote to you for your ad-
Had it not been for you I would have been in
mJMountain^ of proof establish the fact
that no medicine in the world equals
Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comr
pound for restoring women s health.
They Are Coming.
The Chills, and Fevers, too. After
all these rains malaria will be abroad
in the land, doing it's deadly work.
Cheatham's Chill Tonic will cure them.
It is safe, sure and quick in action.
One bottle guaranteed to cure any
ease of Chills.
The Windmill and the Milk Trough.
Nearly every termer we visit has a
windmill, but not one in twenty makes
the most use of it. For Instance, the
windmill usually is located near the
barn and the water tank is in «omo
convenient place near the windmill.
Hundred* of gallons of cool fresh
water are pumped each day, but not a
gallon of it goes through the milk
trough when, as a matter of fact, it
all could Just as well flow through the
milk trough as to go where it does.
Most farmer* have a well near the
house and a hand pump In It, from
which the water for house use is
pumped by hand, and if they have a
milk trough the good wife la required
to fill It night and morning and the
whole long, warm summer day the
water In the trough Is of the same
temperature as the air outside. The
result Is that Instead of having good
sweet cream and milk and good, solid
butter, they have sour cream and milk
and strong butter.
If you want to have the full benefit
of your windmill and with it good
milk, cream and butter, build your
milk house near the well at the house,
make a wooden tank about six or
eight feet long, twenty-six to thirty
Inches deep, and about eighteen to
twenty Inches wide. Set It inside of
the milk house and move the wind
mill from the barn to the house. With
the aid of Iron pipes carry the water
from the milk trough to the tank at
the barn and you will have conferred
a great favor not only upon your wife,
but upon all concerned. The milk
trough should be provided with an
overflow pipe that will always keep It
full, but never let it overflow. With
this arrangement all the water that
Is pumped for stock passes through
the milk trough and the milk and but-
ter Is always kept at the proper tem-
perature. We used the Cooley milk
cans and a swinging churn and made
the windmill do the churning. For
the money expended, there was noth-
ing on the farm that yielded so great
a return as the windmill aad milk
trough. The milk house should be
made tight and a place fixed for a
stove, so the milk can be kept there
in both summer and winter. The
farmer who will once try this method
of keeping his milk and butter will
wonder how he ever got along without
it. A. M. Caldwell.
Weeding Them Out
'General Nelson A Miles," said an
inventor, "used to be continually be*
sieged by cranks with pneumatic
rapid fire guns, subterranean rifles,
dirigible wsr balloons, and all such
mridnal inventions. The general
would weed these cranks out with ad-
mirable speed.
"I set in his office with him one
^lay when a servant brought in a card*
"'Oh. send him in,' said General
Miles. 'His business won't take more
than a minute or two.'
So, in came a wtid-eyed, long-
haired man, twisting his soft bat ner-
vously in both hands.
" <GeneraV he said, *1 have here'—•
and he took out a small parcel—a
bullet-proof coat. If the. government
would adopt this—'
" 'Put It on. Put it on,' said Gen-
eral Miles, and he rang the bell. The
servant appeared as the Inventor was
getting into the coat.
" 'Jones,' said the genersl, 'tell the
captain of the guard to order one of
his men to load his rifle with ball
cartridges and—'
" 'Excuse me, general, I forgot
something,' Interrupted the Inventor,
and with a haunted look he disap-
peared."
Sound as a Dollar.
Monticello, Minn., Aug. 7th.—Mr. J.
W. Moore of this place stands as a liv-
ing proof of the fact that Brlght's Dis-
ease, even in the last stages, may ba
perfectly and permanently cured by
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
Mr. Moore says: "In 1898 three
reputable physicians after a careful
examination told me that I would di«
with Brlght's Disease inside of a year.
My feet and ankles and legs wers
badly swollen; I could hardly stand
on my feet and had given up all hopes
of getting cured when a traveling
salesman told me that he himself had
been cured of Bright's Disease two
years before.
"He said he had taken to his bed
and expected to die with it, but that
he had been ciaed by a remedy called
Dodd's Kidney Tills.
"I commenced taking them at once
and I am thankful to say that they
saved my life. After a short treat-
ment I was completely restored to
good health and 1 am
dollar."
It is related that an Atchison wed
ling tour had to be cut short so that
To treat Pimples and Blackheads,
Red, Rough, Oily Complexions,
gently smear the face with Cuti-
cura Ointment, the great Skin
Cure, but do not rub. Wash off
the Ointment in five minutes with
Cuticura Soap and hot water, and
bathe freely for some minutes.
Repeat morning and evening. At
other times use Cuticura Soap for
bathing the face as often as agree-
able. No other Skin Soap so pure,
so sweet, so speedily effective#
tely restored to I
I "iSISJSiTlwwatt tn i«5
ling tour had to be cut short so tnat ... ANTKD._ror tae U. a Army, abia-bodied
.he groom could come back home anu yy unmarried men, between ages ef llaad
Barn money with which to boy him-
ielf some underclothes.—Atchison | writm English. For information appiu>
Jlobe.
Recent measurements show that tne
new moon gives off little heat, the
maximum being at full moon, and that
the heat is absorbed and re-emitted
instead of being directly reflected.
Important to Mothers.
Examine csrefully every bottle of
a Mfe and sure remedy for infsats snd children,
and eee that It
Bears the
Signature of
la UlS For Over 30 Year«. .
The v'*Mi Yon Have Always Bought
Buhi Work.
Buhl work le said to be rery popular
BOW in England. It la furniture made
Of wood, tortoise shell or other costly
material, pierced and inlaid with meta
or pearl. ,
The oldest ship in the Aemrican
qavy is the frigate Constellation,
which is forty-four days older than tha
Constitution , familiarly known as
Old Ironsides. She was built by
David Stodert, at Baltimore, and was
launched September 7, 1797. The
Constitution, built at Boston. war
launched October 21, 1797.
Temperature and Dairying.
A low temperature Is necessary
to obtain the best results in dairy-
ing. The cold is needed for the
keeping of both butter and cream.
In the far south conditions are
not good for the keeping of but-
ter and cream and for this rea-
son dairying finds It difficult to get
a fbothold. Only by artificial refrig-
eration can the best results be ob-
tained. Ice gives a temperature 82
degrees above zero, and this is not
enough to keep butter for long pe-
riods of time. Because of the diffi-
culty of getting temperatures far be-
low the freezing point butter making
on the farm Is for a long time to come
sure to depend on. a market that will
take the product about as fast as
made. Fortunately it is not difficult to
obtain such a market.
Dangerous Garbage.
| Reports from various parts of j
| the country have from time to
time told of strange diseases ap-
pealing among the pigs. When
such a report comes to hand we al-
ways feel that the chances are that
the "disease" is some very simple
trouble, the cause tor which could be
easily removed. In one town in the
state of New York where such a "mys-
terious" disease appeared an lnvestl-
gatlon showed that the hogs had been
- considerable quantl-
Tons of Cheshire Cheese.
In Cheshire, England, and the ad
Joining counties more than 25,000 tons
Cut. unia, or
aM or Gutkri*. Okla.
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention Thia Paper.
Suicides In London.
t ftnhnn haH fewer suicides than any m
other great capital WhU* PjrU£. .""'^'^g powder. that had
400 suicides per million per year, | ^ ^ garbage gathered from
4on has only ninety- hotels.
loiniffg counuee uiwc • -- .imTj
of Cheshire cheese are made annually. | W.N.U.—Oklahoma Clty-^No. 82,19W
Prove It
rBy the Oven Fire
Jot the wonderful KC Bik-
ing Powder to the test Geta
can on approval, ^onr money
will be returned il you don t
agree that all we claim i true.
You'll be delighted with the de-
licious, wholesome thing* tnat
KfS. BAKING
U POWDER
will bring to life in your oven.
K C U worth twice the money charted
'lor inferior powden Out are made to took
like K C, but which have in the food
harmful .ubfUncd to undermine your
health. And the cott ia no more.
25 ounces lor 25 cents.
JAQUES MFC. CO.
Chicago
Sendej>os«al !.
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Hornbeck, Will W. Sentinel News-Boy. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 1, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 12, 1905, newspaper, August 12, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc181066/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.