The Geary Journal. (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 26, 1908 Page: 4 of 10
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vTi
ipation
May be permanently o «co«ne ^pr«f*<r
personal efforts wilKINc a«a stance
of the ow (ruly t?encjic'ial I emotive
remedy, Sjruj> of figfi and M'u'lr ofScana,
wKich enables one I o form regular
habit* 3iai\y so ikat assistance k> na-
ture may be gradually <)ispensf<l*itit
wWn no ion^er needed astKe best of
remedies, wKen required, ate to assist
nature and not to ftupplantthc natur.
Geary- Journal.
GIVES HONOR TO THK SOLDIERS.
GEARY,
OKLAHOMA
olfunctions, vKicb must depend ulti
i «te|yupc
2$ ,
buy the genuine
California
Fio Siraup Co. 0niy
Result of Business Growth.
Recently a livery firm In a southern
town built a one-story frame addition
to Its stable for the accommodation of
wagons, etc. Jerry, the night watch
xn. n, whose long service has con-
vinced him that he is part proprietor
of the concern was overheard explain-
ing the matter to a couple of inmates
in this wise:
"Yes, our business done concreased
so dat we's been obliged to build dis
byar substantial in de reah!"
OKLT ONE "BROMO OtJININK"
SHoS
war to Cur* a Cold In Um iter. Xc.
A beauty sleep iss likely as nod to
bo mlt de mout open.
CARTERS
Copper Mines
A IB FtODUCING MORE FORTUNES THAN
ANY 0THE1 SOIICE Of MINING WEALTH
rkwicrwNiSoy $183,000,000.00
pOPPER property centrally located In
^ a proved DUtrict, beioc developed by
hone«t and competent management, baa
poftilbOltlea tor wealth poaseaaed by no
other claaa of Investment, and It take.t
but a amall tun to aecure a goodly later-
aat upon the rround floor baala.
The (atnoua Grand Encampment Cop-
per DUtHct In Wyomit*. with Ita com-
pleted railroad <acUIt«e*. la making rapid
at ride*, and offcra Just inch a square deal
opportunity tor Inveatment.
S-J/.r ««W /„// frtintur*. DOIT
NOW OK YOU MAY HISS TUB OPPORTUN-
ITY OF A LIFETIME.
STANDARD COPPEI MINING GO.
. IBOS WUUlai ftaUilaj. TaMa. Ohlw
THE MAN WHO SWEARS BY
THE FISH BRAND SUCKER
la the man who
has tried to 9et
the sa its service
out of some
other make
Clean Light Durable
e >300
•lately upon proper nourishment,
^lo get its beneJtciQ( cjjects, always
Viung -men's Chief Fault.
The fault with most young men la
Chat they are Indolent and Inclined to
Shirk their duty. The man who always
tries to get off as easy aa possible, aivl
when working for others does as little
| as possible for the wages that he re-
[ celves, will never advance, and never
amount to anything in life. Ever)
young man should through all his busl-
I nets career constantly keep in mind
the parable of the faithful servant ami
the reward given to him: "Because
thou hust been faithful In a very little,
have thou authority over ten cities."
How many young men nowadays pa>
any heed to this? asks the New York
Weekly. They all want to be great, to
be successful, but they will not take
pains with little things and work their
way gradually to the top. They want
to jump to the top rung of the ladder
right away. They all desire to be-
come Vanderbilts or Rockefellers or
Morgans, but they throw away fool-
ishly whatever money they earn b<*-
cause thry hope' some day to make i
in great quantities. A young man am-
bitious to succeed in life should from
the very start make it clear for him-
self that he must work hard and plod
along, every day accomplishing tha
duties belonging to that day. and If he
does this and leaves no duty undone,
he will be sure to find his reward,
first in a clear conscience, and ulti-
mately In success, but he must not ex-
pect success or wealth to drop down
into his lap without any effort on his
part.
Ymi always get full value in Lewie*
Final* Binder straight 5c cigar. Your
dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria. 111.
Many a man seems to have the coup-
age of a crawfish.
Privates tho Rosl Heroes of Gettye.
burg, According to Gen. Pickett.
The wife of the confederate Gen.
Pickett contributes to McClure's an
article called "My 8oldier," which,
without making any direct statement,
leaves one with a conviction of the ap-
palling imbecility of war.
"My Soldier said one day that ho
1 should be glad to be in every war that
had a Just issue. I had been taught to
| believe that the war with Mexico
| lacked it, and when 1 asked him, he re-
plied: "
" 'At West Point some of us were
reprimanded for expressing doubts of
its Justification. I was one of them.
After we were in it, we had to fight it
through, and, since it had to be done,
1 was glad to do my share..'"
Later on, when the war of secession
broke out:
""I pray God that this direful revo-
ulatlon which has come about because
of misunderstandings, and for which
I see no real necessity, may yet In
some way be averted.' '
When the die was cast, Qen. Pick-
ett naturally, though sorrowfully,
chose the side where were his own
kith and kin. He distinguished him-
self at Gettysburg.
"When he reached Seminary ridge
again and reported to Gen. Lee, his
face was wet with tears as he pointed
to the crimson valley and said:
" 'My noble division lies there!'
" 'Gen. Pickett," said the commander,
'you and your men have covered your-
selves with glory.'
"My Soldier replied:
" 'Not all the glory in the world,
| Gen. Lee, could atone for the wid-
ows and orphans this day has made'
I "Some years later, George Augustus
| Sala asked My Soldier whom he con-
sidered the hero of Gettysburg on the
northern side. He replied:
" 'The hero of Gettysburg on both
, sides was the private soldier.'"
PERUNA EDITORIAL NO. 2.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cared by
these Little Pills.
They alao relieve Dla-
treaafrom Dyapepala, In-
dication and Too Hearty
Eating. ▲ perfect reia-
edy (or Dlixlneae, N a vi-
ae*, Drowalneaa, Bad
Taate In the Mouth, Coat-
ed Tongue, Pain In the
Side, TORPID LIVIR.
They regulate tha Bowele. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Mutt Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
A Fair "Force."
What will the patient, suffering hus-
bands and fathera say to the pending
scheme to make women actual police-
men? The New York club which hfs
the matter in hand Is convinced that
the city of the future must have wom-
an's help to "lead its future citixen
away from the door of the saloon and
induce him to fling away his half-
stnoked cigarette." The feminine po-
licemen are to "exercise a general su-
pervision over children in the streets
and to mingle with their games." it
remains to be seen, says Youth's*
Companion, what will be the effect on
Miss Constable of "mingling" with a
vigorous game of football In a vacant
lot. The gentle art of handball might
be acquired by candidates for appoint-
ment to the "force;" but what about
baseball? Could a policewoman hope
to "mingle" successfully unlesa she
could manage a three-base hit and a
home run? It Is no wonder that the
discussion of these perplexing ques-
tions was postponed by the club to a
later dute—and then the meeting re-
solved Itself into a committee of the
whole to discuss the dress suitable for
the new officials. When the hour for
adjournment came several vifal mat-
ters were still unsettled. For example,
what is the proper angle at which the
helmet should be perched above th°
pompadour, and whether a veil should
be adjusted over the aforesaid hel-
met?
Value of Fruit.
Too much cannot be said In favor of
giving the children all the fruit they
want. Dr. John Tatham, in a lecture
not long ago, made a special plea for
a diet more generally enriched with
fruits for young children. "The pas-
sion of the young for fruits." said Dr.
Tatham, "might perhaps be described
as a relic of our simian ancestry, but
it Is also sn expression of constitu-
tional wanta, and the intense ecstasy
which children enjoy in partaking of
It is something which should not be
denied them without good reason."
The fruit hunger may be taken as
an expression of wants of the system
not to be neglected with impunity.
The banana is one of the most nour-
ishing of all fruits, and has been rec-
ommended as a useful food for typhoid
fever patients, Inasmuch as. although
a solid food for sil prsctical purposes,
contsining as it does some 96 per cent,
of nutritive matter, It does not possess
sufficient waste to irritate the ulcer-
ated mucous membrane. Nearly the
whole amount taken into the stomach
is absorbed. The banana contains
much iron and is therefore recom-
mended to anaemic patients.
One of the ways, it Is said, to "cor-
rupt" an anarchist is to make him
rich. One way to cure a "leader" of
men out of work is to offer him a Job.
In Hoston recently an agitator collect-
ed a band of unemployed, a singularly
well-dressed and not disorderly throng
When they were led up to the free
employment bureau which Massa-
chusetts maintains, only one-quarter
of them filed applications. There ar
lour classes of unemployed—those
who will not work, those who will
*ork only at a special kind of task,
those who cannot work, and those who
are willing to do any honest work.
The first two classes owe sn Immense
debt to society. With respect to the
other, two classes, the debt is on the
other side. We hsve to divide the
classes pretty csrefully before we be
Kin to solve the problem of the unem-
ployed.
Rather Olseoursging.
Mr. Slim (hunting for a new board-
ing house)—Is the lady of the house
in?
Servant—No; Bhe's gone for a po-
liceman.
"What are the terma for board
here?"
"Cash."
"I mean how much a week."
"Ten an' 15 a week, 'cording to
room."
"I presume she makes a reduction
for people who stay a month or two."
"1 don't know. No one ever stays
that long."—New York Weekly.
He Slips Back Who Stsnds Still.
No man in dally life ought to be sat-
isfied with what life now is; he ought
every day to be looking forward to
some of the possible Improvements.—
Everett Hale.
"Mostly of Chicago." Is the way a
man recently described his residence.
His chsracterliatiou aeeiua reanunabi-.
When he was six years old he cut off
one of his toes with u scythe. When
he was eight he ahot off two Joints of
one of his fingers, lie rsu away from
home when he wss 14, sud the frost
of a winter night took off three more
toes and the tip of his nose. At no
lost his entire right foot. A drunken
halfbreed bit off an ear in I he Kloti
dike, a Dakota coru-sheller took hla
left forearm, and since then he ha*
lost three fingers, s Joint from another
anger and oue eye.
Too Late, Too Late.
Sandy, who la painting hla house,
goes to the other end of town on a
borrowing e>i edltloa. He stops at
neighbor Wullle's. Knocks.
"Is Wulllo in?"
"Aye,' replies a woman at ths
door.
"A wad like tae see him."
"Ye csnns."
"Whit wye no? Is na he weel?"
"Oo, pe s Julst deld, puir bodle."
(Long pause.)
"Did he aay onything aboot a pot &
green paint afore he dee'd?"—Harp-
er's Weekly.
Our Peruna Tablet
Is Peruna With
Fluid Removed.
Dr.has claimed for many yew* that Psrnna is an SXCELLXHT
CATABJLH REMEDY. Some of the doctor's critics hare disputed the doctor1!
claim as to the efflcaoy of Perana.
Since the ingredients of Peruna are no longer a secret, what do the modi*
eel authorities say ooncexning the remedies of which Peruna is oomposedf
Take, for instance, the ingredient HYDRASTIS CANADENSIS, OR
GOLDEN SEAL. The United States Dispensatory says of this herbal remedy,
that it is largely employed in the treatment of depraved muoous membranes,
chronic rhinitis (nasal catarrh), atonic dyspepsia (catarrh of the stomaoh),
chronic intestinal catarrh, catan-hal jaundice (catarrh of the liver), and in
diseased mucous membranes of the pelvic organs. It is also reoommended for
the treatment of various forms of diseases peculiar to women.
Another ingredient of Peruna, C0RYDALI8 FORMOSA, is classed in the
United States Dispensatory as a tonic.
CEDRON SEEDS is another ingredient of Peruna, an excellent drug that
has been very largely overlooked by the medical profession for the past fifty
years. THE SEEDS ARE TO BE FOUND IN VERY FEW DRUG STORES.
The United States Dispensatory says of the action of cedron that it is used as
a bitter tonic and in the treatment of dysentery, and in intermittent diseasee
as a SUBSTITUTE FOR QUININE.
OIL OF COPAIBA another ingredient of Peruna, is classed by the United
States Dispensatory as a mild stimulant and diuretic. It acts on the stomach
and intestinal tract It aots at a stimulant on the genitourinary membranes.
Useful in chronic cystitis, chronic dys-
entery and diarrhea, and some chronic
diseases of the liver and kidneys.
These opinions as to the ingredients
of Peruna are held by all writers on
the subject, including Bartholow aad
Scudder.
OF HYDRASTIS, BARTHOLOW
SAYS it is applicable to stoaatttia
(catarrh of the muoous surfaces of the mouth), follicular pharyngitis (oatarrh
of the pharynx), chronic corysa (catarrh of ths head). This writer classes
hydrastis as a stomachic tonic, useful in atonic dyspepsia (chronic gastric
oatarrh), catarrh of the ducdenum, oatarrh of the gall duct, catarrh of tha
intestines, oatarrh of the kidneys (chronic bight's disease), catarrh of the
bladder, and oatarrh of other pelvic organs.
BARTHOLOW REGARDS COPAIBA as an excellent remedy for chronio
catarrh of the bladder, chronic bronchitis (catarrh of the bronchial tubes).
BARTHOLOW STATES THAT CUBES, an ingredient of Peruna,
motes the appetite and digestion, increases the circulation of the blood.
fol in chronio nasal oatarrh, follicular pharyngitis (oatarrh of the pharynx)*
increasing the tonicity of the muoous membranes of the throat. It also re-
lieves hoarseness. Usefal in atonic dyspepsia (catarrh of the stomach), and in
chronio catarrh of the colon and rectum, oatarrh of the bladder, prostatorrhea,
and chronic bronchial affections.
MILLSPAUGH, MEDICINAL PLANTS, one of the most authoritative
works on medicinal herbs in the English language, in commenting upon
COLLINSONIA CANADENSIS, says that it aots on the pneumogastrio and
vaso motor nerves. It increases the secretions of the muoous membranee in
general. In the mountains of Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and Carolina,
oollinsonia canadensis is considered a panacea for many disorders, including
headache, oolio, cramp, dropsy and indigestion. DR. SCUDDER regards it
highly ae a remedy in chronic diseases of the lungs, heart disease and a«*>mi>
These citations ought to be sufficient to show to any candid arind that Pe-
runa is a oatarrh remedy. Surely, such herbal remedies, that command the
enthusiastic confidence of the highest authorities obtainable, brought together
in proper combination, ought to make a catarrh remedy of the highest efficacy.
This is our claim, and we are able to substantiate this claim by ample
quotations from the HIGHEST MEDICAL AUTHORITIES IN THE WORLD.
Snowdrift
Hogless Lard
FOR ALL COOKING PURPOSES
Nature-grown in the fields of the Sunny South; obviously purer and
healthier tban the fat of the hog.
More economical than hog lard; goes farther, much farther, every time.
As good as butter for cake and bread making and for all kinds of cooking
where butter or other cooking fat is needed, and much cheaper, it costs
less in the first place and less of it has to be used.
Its purity and quality jpiaranteed; every pound made under strict
United 8tates Government inspection.
THE SOUTHERN C0TT0II OH. C0^ Use Yark, Hav OHhrk, Smmh, CMei|o
Alabastine
THK ONLY
Sanitary
Durable
f°FARMSs;FREE
Typical F
Alabastine colors are soft, beautiful aad
velvety; never fade and never flake off
Alabastine Is thoroughly sanitary, never
moulds nor mildews on the wall.
Alabastine is carefully packed, proper-
ly labeled and la made in sixteen different
tinta, also white. Each package will cover
from 800 to 450 square feet of surface.
■E
Write for Special
Color Schemes for
your rooms "¥itE£7*
Must Keep in Styte.
Kilderkin—That table Is altogether
too rickety. Why. It creaks If you
put your hand on It.
Shopkeeper—Well, that's all the
style, sir It s built that way on pur-
pose. You can't read an account of
fashionable dinner parties without
not icing how "the tables groaned un-
der the weight of the delicacies." Why,
In the regular way of business ws
ought to charge 96 estrs for them
kind of tsbles, but seeing It's you, etc.
—Btrsy Stories.
ztns&B&SisrJsz JU*-U~
ALABASTINE CO.
m YMK CITY . OKANU RAFIM, MICH.
DR. A. D. YOUNG
NKKVOUS AND MENTAL DISK ASKS.
OSLAHOMA CITY. • • OM.AHOMA.
Lone Dtatame Phone, P. U. X ta
U,
/
g«u
4
Skew lag Stock RiUm ia
WESTERN CANADA
Bumr of tbacholoeat land* for (rain (rowing,
stock raising and farming In the new dia-
tricta of Naakatcbewan and Alberta hare re
cent I}' been Opes** lot SttllesMBt under the
lUvissd Nsmtttsad Ragulatlsai
Entry may now >e made l>y prosy (on cartaia
condition*). by the father, mother, aoti. dkuftk
tor. brother or alaier t,f mn Intending home
■leader. Thonaamla of bnmeat< <U of ISO arrM
each are tbna now eaallv available In the**
(rent (ralu-(ruwiu(, alo<-k ralalng and nlu(
farailti( aeptlona. .
There you will Snd healthful climate, «o«*
nel(hbora. churcb a for family worahip, arhooil
lor your children. (o<mI law*, aplentfld crop*
and rallroadaeonrenlent to mat«et.
Entry fee In each <-aae U llo.OO tor peapb
let. "Laat Heat Weal,' particular* aa to ratea
route*, beat tUa* to go and «hare to I Oca la
arpl}- to
j. s. ctAwroas.
Me. IK W. Math Street.
PATENTS
iMSVBKSv:. *?.
PILES®S8I
■ ■ ■■ ■■ Trltoaa M(., Saw Voaa
"totoe^atTaia I Tktaif sm'i Kyt Water
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hampton, Laurence H. The Geary Journal. (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 26, 1908, newspaper, March 26, 1908; Geary, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc182198/m1/4/: accessed June 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.