Harrison Gazette. (Gotebo, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1905 Page: 4 of 12
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The only high grade tekln* Powdm
mede at • moderate prloe*
Calumet
H
Baking
* Powder
QUE88INQ CONTEST 18 NEW.
Bees' Sting aa Medicine
The idea that the ating of a bee Is
▼aluaft^e medicinally Is very old, aad
may seem to some to belong in the
same class with the mediaeval beliefs
In the curative efficacy of snakes'
tongues, rats' olaws, and the like. The
fact is, however, that bees' venom is
rich in formic acid, which Is of real
value in pharmaoy, although it may
be doubted whether its virtues de-
pend upon its use in precisely this
way. For some reason there has been
a revival of popular interest in the
"bee-sting cure," which is especially
recommended for rheumatism. Some
persons allow the bees to sting the af-
fected parts; others rely on dried
stings, which are collected and sold
by some druggists. One collector, it
is said, scents a rubber blanket with
some odor that is objectionable to
bees, and then gathers ths stings that
remain sticking in it after an attack
by the angry Insects. Exactly how
much of value there is In all this it
Is difficult to say, but it is interesting
to psychologists, if to no one else.
Apropos of this "discovery" the
"Homeopaths" have used bee-stings,
or Apis milliflca, for rheumatism—
when indicated—for the past half cen
tury.
Novtl Entertainment the Scheme of a
Clever Woman.
Here Is a novel entertainment that
was strictly original with the hostess:
Dainty score cards all decorated by
an ekquisitely done woman's head
the gue8ts« "P™
♦Li /!L w folIow,n« lines were writ-
!h v i y 13 given beiow each °ne).
w,.?°8 e88 exPlainlng that the flrsj
« each word was the ,nitIax
letter in some well-known woman's
name.
1—Has Helped Justice.
(Helen Hunt Jackson.)
Z Kindergarten's Dearest Winter.
(Kate Douglas Wiggins.)
3—Mystic Characterizes
(Marie Corelll.)
4 Even Betters Browning.
(Elizabeth Barrett Browning.)
5—Reproduces Beasts.
(Rosa Bonheur.)
6—Ever Spiritually Pondering.
(Elizabeth Stuart Phelps.)
T Little Men's Advocate.
(Louise M. Alcott.)
8—Has Blessed Slaves.
h «. ^arrle' Beecher Stowe.)
v—Faithful Enthusiastic Worker
(Francis E. Willard.)
10—Lessens Every Pain.
(Lydia E. Pinkham.)
11—Courageous Benefactor.
(Clara Barton.)
|I2—Energetically Champions Suffrage.
(Elizabeth Cady Stanton.)
13—Famed for Courtesy.
(Frances Folsom Cleveland.)
,14—Always Parting.
(Adelina Patti.)
£15—Modest Actress.
(Mary Anderson.)
16—Loquaciously Belligerent.
(Lillian Bell.)
17—Charming Nightingale.
(Christine Neilson.)
18—Cheerfully Destroyed Many.
(Catharine D' Medici.)
It is kind of interesting figuring out
if a girl is as thin as she looks.
TO CURE A COLI) IK ONE DAY
Take Laxative Bromo yulnlne Tablet*. AH drue-
Slat* refund the money If It falls to cure. E. W
rove's signature la ou each box. 25c.
No man ever had any real trouble
till he began to build a house.
It's peculiar how those Cheatham's
Laxative Tablets curs a cold in a day
—but they do it.
Common sense is the knack of see-
ing things as they are, and doing
things as they ought to be done.—C.
E. Stowe.
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
quantity and superior quality of De-
fiance Starch is fast taking place of
all other brands. Others say they can-
not sell any other starch.
A boy is old enough to be welcome
in the neighbor girl's parlor long be-
fore his sister thinks he Is old enough
to sit in the parlor at home.
Don't It Jar You
To have a cough that you can't
leave off—even when you go to bed?
Put it away for good by using Sim-
mons' Cough Syrup. It heals inflam-
mation of the throat and lungs—gives
you rest and peaceful sleep.
An old bachelor says there are no
marriages in heaven, because it is
heaven.
fwi h,T' raeei'rt the highest
■ward—the Orand Prfxe-at St. Louis World's Fair,
BRAw?y«ifp«FSIor m«tere of the KISif
BRANpr-SLICKERS. Many of our readera who went
to the Fa*. Win recall their fine exhibit In which
f*nn.ento shown adapted to so many
uses that almost every department of the world's
werk was suggested. Vhe Grand Prlxe was a de?
£Tc£i££Vhe£>u?try ti,#oldeU nuauUcturlng
WOMEN'S NEGLECT
K
SUFFERINGTHESUREPENALTY
Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
How many women do you know who
Are perfeotly well and strong? We
hear every day the same story over and
over again. 441 do not feel well; I am
so tired all the time !"
Generally when a man brags of his
coat of arms some one else earned
for him the one on his back.
CM*rrn '■ •ection of the counter
a*o* P'«t together, and until the last
V to be Incurable. For
mmr reara dortora «• _ > . .. B,r":
SPREADING THE
NEW8 BROADCAST.
That Dodd's Kidney Pills cured his
Disbetes. After long suffering Mr.
O. Cleghorn found a permanent re-
lief in the Great American Kidney
Remedy.
Port Huron. Mich.. Jan. 30th.— (Spe-
cial) Tortured with Diabetes and
Bladder Disease from which he could
apparently get no relief. Mr. G. Cleg
horn, a bricklayer, living at 119 But
tier St.. this city, has found a com-
plete and permanent cure in Dodd's
Kidney Pills and in his gratitude he
..Is spreading the news broadcast.
"Dodd s Kidney Pills made a man of
me." Mr. Cleghorn says. "I was a
sufferer from Diabetes and Bladder
Disease. I was so bad I could do no
work and the pain was something
terrible. I could not get anything to
help me till I tried Dodd's Kidney
Pills. They helped right from the
first and now I am completely cured
I have recommended Dodd's Kidney
Pills to all my friends and they have
found them all that is claimed for
them."
Dodd's Kidney Pills cure all Kidney
Ills from Backache to Bright's Di
eas# . They nev*;r fail to cure Rheu
niatism.
A woman considers herself a natur-
al born financier when she goes over
her bank balanco again and finds it
is a dollar more than she made it the
first time.
Defies Time.
One of the most beautiful women In
America defies the ravages of time by
simply keeping her blood purified with
Dr. Caldwell's (laxative) 8yrup Pep-
sin. It will do the same for you. If
taken at the least sign of bowel, liver
or stomach trouble, It will prevent all
kinds of sickness, keep your circula-
tion clear, and your skin and *om
plexion as fresh and pure as in child-
hood. Sold by all druggists at 50c and
$1.00. Money back If it fails.
I. for one, have lost nil hope of ever
becoming a philosopher deep enough
to explain why drivers who pull the
wrong rein whip us for obeying them, i
Arboreal Aristocracy.
The evergreens are tho aristocracy
of the tree world, writes Anna Bots-
ford Comstock In the Chautauquan.
They represent the oldest families; for
their ancient relatives appeared as
early as the Silurian ace; the ever-
greens were probably at their height
in number of species and magnifi-
cence of development during the Tri-
asslc period. The pines were contem-
poraries of all those plants which
were put to bed in the Devonian age.
and which forms our coal beds of
day. The evergreens are a dignified
remnant of an older tree -«e, which
Is being pushed to the by the
upstarts, the oaks and ma; and oth-
er deciduous trees. They still cling
to the sandy shores where there is lit-
tle to protect other trees and to the
mountains and northern regions where
other trees have not the strength to
endure. Perhaps It Is because they
belong essentially to another geologic
age when the climate was far different
from our climate of to-day, that they
do not shed their leaves In winter like
the adaptable deciduous trees.
Would Be tht Villain.
ken *b®. weather,,« cold and nasty and
my bono* begin to ache.
wr,t* for "dou*h"
in accents blue, *
Which I have to hustle to them, though
I know lt' all a fake— *
*hat'sCdue collect u "lns'« cent
Wh'VX::r,ko^;lr"mp"e "nd
'Tl'' 'urnes' iTeVl Mdm,t tho"e *re th*
Thaplayf ,,ke t0 1,8 th* vUlaIn ln th®
I I'd like to be the \ illaln and I'd like to
cum and shoot. °
And^^d^llke at every turn to set a
And k? ,l iln*.of double out for every
bin mod galoot 7
anywhereV*r 'TOMPd my Pathway
When 1 find misfortune'* bound to kecD
me around beneath her heel—
mea-ln-lmw ha* coma a
month to stay—
dimes' inUfei|*dmlt "• thou* *re the
ThH|, layl "k" 10 lh® v,,,ll,n ,n
°***rrfc to be a constitutional din-
-'!**5<*>"ltiitlonal treatment.
ACe tiudl Oh?^?wBU,?cture- by F J Cheney
3m'£h£,.tawU*.°*ly ca «««utl°aai cure on
Uie market, fi is taken Internally in doses from in
4rnpau>a teaapooafm. It act* dlrectlr on the blood
Ue they offer ^
s."
* «•- Ohio.
y—tly Plin for constipation.
Opportunity, sooner or later, comes
to all who work and wish.—LonLon
Stanley.
More than likely you speak the same
words yourself, and no doubt you feel
far from well. The cause may be easily
traced to some derangement of the fe-
male organs which manifests itself in
depression of spirits, reluctance to go
anywhere or do anything, backache,
bearing-down pains, flatulency, nerv-
ousness, sleeplessness, leucorrhoea.
These symptoms are but warnings
that there is danger ahead, and unless
heeded a life of suffering or a serious
operation is the inevitable result.
The never-failing remedv for all these
symptoms is Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound.
Miss Kate McDonald, of Woodbridge.
N. J., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :
" I think that a woman naturally dislikea to
m*ko hfj" troubles known to the public, but
restored health has meant so much to me that
1 cannot help from telling mine for the sake
or other suffering women.
"Fora long time I suffered untold agony
with a uterine trouble and irregularities,
which made me a physical wreck, and no one
thought I would recover, but Lydia E. Pink-
ham s Vegetable Compound has entirely
cured me. and made me well and strong, and
I feel it mv duty to tell other suffering women
What a splendid medicine it is."
If you are ill, don't hesitate to get m
bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound at once, and write to
Mrs- Pinkham, Lynn. Mass., for special
auvice—it is free and always helpfuL
Important to Mothers.
Bxsmins carefully every bottle of CABTORTA,
a aafe and rare remedy for lafaats sod children!
aad aee that it
Bean the
Signature of
la Usa For Over 30 Teara.
ITie Kind Tou Have Always Bought.
A woman can always put her hand
somewhere about her clothing and
pull out a pin.
PATENTSthat protect
IUK.VUT1 SON3 *0S«H,T.Tr
■ 11
k
Gibraltar Docks.
The new docks in Olbraltar are
law enough to hold the biggest ves-
tal la ths British navy.
Every housekeeper should know
that If they will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they
will save not only time, because it
never sticks to the iron, but because
each package contains 16 oz.—one full
pound—while all other Cold Water
Starches aro put up in \ -pound pack-
ages, and the price is the same, 10
cents. Then again because Deflanco
Starch Is free from all injurious chem-
icals. If your grocer tries to sell you
a 12-os. package It Is because he has
a stock on hand which he wishes to
dlsposo of before he puts In Defiance.
He knows that Defiance Starch has
printed on every package in large let-
ters and figures "16 ors." Demand Do-
fiance and save much time and money
and the annoyance of the iron stick-
Ing. Defiance never sticks.
FREE
Wanted—Indian Base Ball Players
t?"r of Nrbr "k Indian*.
This Is the old. original, reliable Indian team.
In* Sf 01 * thrl hM oul <""ry seaixin
and baa never beaten a player out of a cent.
Leal aeaaon won ISO game*, loat a - Won M
• might I want aober, reliable Llgh c"aS
Players who can hit well. ctt„ u„.
vary beau Pay W. Or—, Um9lm> Nebiaska.
A PAIR of SCISSORS j
Fer Your Name and Adtfrtss
I Send us IS signatures, cut from
I tvSr ,°f Chcrk * Ncal Porto R|™
I w« SHn YnUr namo ,ln,, ^dre*a and
J of scis orr.a'Thi«UiaatjuaTone oMhS*1'
65 PREMIUMS
Given Abaolutely Free
I rn«ia" v* °f Cwerk * NVal Porto Rico I
I t.otfee. \ our choice of such articles am
I a beautiful Dinner or Tea Set Spwlno
I Machiaa, Parlor Clock, Curtate? Tut"
I lery. etc. We want every lady In the land
I to u*e the cleaneht, host drinking nonu-
I Package coffce on the market
nftcY;"Jisv 11 you wia bu^ S 5S
I _ ,.,u, "V : "'v Mb. packages I
I Snt f sbovecut
■ Hold by dealers everywhere Doa't
I mom* "°c Mir At your ^
CheeK O Neal Coffee Co.
Nashville, Teas.
W. N. U- Oklahoma City—No. 5, 1905
BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH
SYRUP cum coughs aad colds.
n**t rough Myrup. TaatS uv'-t.* t'aa
^LtlBne. Mold br aniwi.i.
V
r
m
m
1
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Rehfield, E. T. Harrison Gazette. (Gotebo, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1905, newspaper, February 3, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc184907/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.