The Tupelo Times. (Tupelo, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1906 Page: 3 of 8
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A CURE FOR DEBILITY
Dr Williams’ Pink Pills A Reliable
Remedy for the Weak Ailing
and Bloodless
When tlio body is weak and tbo blood
tbin it is sometimes difficult to find the
cause unless a wasting illness 1ms pre-
ceded or the sufferer happens to be a
girl on the vergo of womanhood
Obscure influences something un-
healthful in one’s surroundings or work
may lead to a slow impoverishment of
the blood and an enfcnblcmeut of the
whole body When a serious stage lms
been reached there seems to bo nothing
that will account for it
Mr C E Legg of Tipton W Va
has found a successful method of treat-
ing weakness and bloodlessness He
says:
“I nseT Dr Williams Pink Pills for
weakness caused by a lingering malarial
fever that began in the spring of 1890
The worst effects of this were indiges-
tion and a bud state of my blood I was
anmmie us the doctors say People
generally would say that I didn’t have
blood enough or thnt I didn't have tbo
right kind of blood mine was too tliin
My kidneys and liver were out of order
I was badly annoyed by sour risings
from my stomach There was a good
deal of pain too in my back and under
uiy right shoulder blade”
“ How long did these tronbles last? ”
“For over two years For four
mouths of thnt time I was under the
care of n physician but his medicine did
me no good Meanwhile I learned of
the cures tlmt mid been wrought by Dr
Williams’ Piuk Pills”
“You owe your cure to these pills ?”
“ I certainly do and I also know that
they are helping others to whom I have
recommended them They have real
merit and I know of juothiug that would
take their place”
For further information and valuable
booklet address the Dr Williams Medi-
cine Co Schenectady N Y
Peda-go-gy or peda gogy are alike
ungainly
Stands Head
There Is something about Hunt's
Lightning Oil that no other liniment
possesses Others may be good but
It Is surely the best It does all you
recommend it for and more For
sprains bruises cuts burns aches
and pains it has no equal on earth It
stands head on my medicine shelf
Yours very truly
T J Brownlow
Livingston Tenn
Village in Crater
About 20000 people live in the crat-
er of an extinct volcano thirty miles
from Kumamotu Japan They dwell
in this pit-like town surrounded by a
vertical wall 800 feet high The In-
habitants rarely make a journey into
the outer world and practically they
form a little community all by them-
selves A Matter of “Nerve"
The belles of the world are women
who make demands which others are
eager to accept Those who wait for
homage have a weary time for it
rarely comes without command
In the Matter of “High” Cheese
A correspondent asks us to tell him
what is meant by “high” cheese The
“high” cheese is so called from the al-
titude of its odor — it smells to heav-
en— and Its price Also to distinguish
It from the domestic or tame cheese
of the United States The high cheese
has never been domesticated and per-
ishes in captivity It has usually per-
ished a long time before it is served
or that is the way it seems to the un-
cultivated nose High cheeses are im-
ported — there is not room enough in
the United States for a high eheese
factory as We prefer population We
have soap factories and skunk farms
hut these are as the odors from the
spice groves of far Cathay as com-
pared with a high cheese factory —
St Louis Globe-Democrat
“COFFEE JAGS”
The Doctor Named Them Correctly
Some one said "Coffee never hurts
any one” Enquire of your friends
and note their experiences
A Phlla woman says
"During the last 2 or 3 years I be-
came subject to what the doctor call-
ed ‘coffee jags’ and felt like I have
heard men say they feel who have
drank too much rum It nauseated
me and I felt as though there was
nothing but coffee flowing through
my veins
"Coffee agreed well enough for a
time but for a number of years I have
known that It was doing me great
harm but like the rum toper I
thought I could not get along without
it It made me nervous disordered
my digestion destroyed my sleep and
brought on frequent and very distress-
ing headaches
“When I got what the doctor called
a ’coffee Jaj’ on I would give up
drinking it for a few days till my
stomach regained a little strength
but I was always fretful and worried
and nervous till I was able to resume
the use of the drug
“About a year ago I was persuaded
to try Postum but as I got it in res-
taurants it was nothing hut a sloppy
mess sometimes cold and always
weak and of course I didn’t like it
Finally I prepared some myself at
home following the directions care-
fully and found it delicious I perse-
vered in its use quitting the old cof-
fee entirely and feeling better and
better each day till I found at last
to my great joy that my ailments had
all disappeared and my longing for
coffee bad come to an end
"I have heretofore suffered intense-
ly from utter exhaustion besides the
ether ailments and troubles but this
summer using Postum I have felt
fine” Name given by Postum Co
Battle Creek Mich
There’s a reason
Restaurant cooks rarely prepare
Postum Coffee properly They do not
let it boil Iona enough
Poultry Notes
One often seeB wood ashes used in
the poultry house in winter either
combined with the manure to keep it
in good condition for use In the gar-
den or scattered on the shelves be-
neath the roosts to ma£e them easy
to clean This is a great mistake as
much of the value of the manure is
lost on account of the chemical change
caused by the union of the two sub-
stances It causes the ammonia in the
manure to be liberated and it passes
off into the air and is lost Not only
that but the ammonia is not a good
thing for the fowls when they are
confined in such close quarters Saw-
dust dry earth dead leaves or coal
ashes may be Bafely used as they
cause the loss of no valuable ele-
ments We feed all nuts left after the sea-
son is over to the fowls cracking
them very fine so that they can clean
all the meats out Walnuts and but-
ternuts are easiest for them to han-
dle but they also get much good from
hickory and hazelnuts The nuts sup-
ply an element that the fowls can
otherwise get only In meat bugs and
worms and being fed in winter when
such food is hard to get forms a
valuable addition to their rations
For a change we often soak the
grain fed the fowls letting it remain
in water for a day or two before feed-
ing Occasionally corn oats and
wheat are roasted so that much of the
grain is charred on the outside
They eat it greedily and besides
changing the diet the charcoal is -a
great benefit to fowls preventing in-
digestion and keeping them healthy
Ordinary charcoal broken In small
bits is also given occasionally being
placed in a hot oven for a few min-
utes before being fed so that all
dampness is removed and the char-
coal put in condition to give the best
results
A' short time ago we had some of
the chickens which are being fed on
milk alone and though the work is not
practical for everybody it is proving
a paying business for those who are
now in it
A large firm In the meat packing
business has a very large farm where
thousands of chickens are raised and
thousands more are purchased from
the farmers when very small They
are fed on nothing but new milk with
all the cream in it the farmers bring-
ing their milk the same as to a cream-
ery and receiving the same price for
it
The chickens are never fed grain on
any other food and are stuffed with
milk as long as they will take it being
fed many times each day It is fed to
them through a small tube attached to
a hand pump the hose being placed in
the chicken’s mouth and the milk
pumped as long as they will take it
It is said that after being fed in that
way a few times the chicks will run
to meet the man when he comes to
feed them fighting with each other for
the first chance
The flesh of such chickens is very
white and tender and we could tell at
a glance that they were not ordinary
chickens The flesh has a very deli-
cate flavor and the fowls bring a high
price in the market being especially
fine for sick people — though they are
very nice I prefer a grain fed fowl for
my own use— Marian Meade in Farm-
ers’ Review
Extreme Claims
A writer on Buff Leghorns says:
“The Buff Leghorns will produce more
eggs any time in the year than any
other breed under similar circum-
stances” This is a sample of ex-
treme claims loosely made for all
kinds of breeds The fact is that this
is merely an assertion that it is im-
possible for any man to prove and im-
possible for any man to deny for the
simple reason that ’statistics on such
matters are almost wholly lacking
Such assertions are of very little
value and they deceive no one Every
man that understands poultry raising
understands that we know little about
the Comparative merits of different
breeds It will take thousands of ex-
periments with multitudes of birds
laying eggs for a series of years to
give data that would be really valua-
ble We advise writers on poultry
topics and writers of advertisements
to avoid these extreme claims which
only serve to put the reputation of the
writer in jeopardy — Fanners’ Review
Mites and Hawks
Two Chicken Enemies — In his lec-
ture before the students of the Ag-
ricultural Department of the Uni-
versity of Missouri T E Orr
secretary of the American Poul-
try association told methods of com-
bating mites and chicken hawks that
might easily be used by every house-
wife: Mites he says may be gotten
rid of by spraying the chicken house
with a mixture of one part of crude
carbolic acid and eight parts carbon
oil This mixture he recommends in
preference to mite exterminators sold
by traveling agents Hawks he
claims may be kept out of the poultry
yard by attaching bright pieces of tin
six by ten inches to the trees and
poles surrounding quarters by strings
two feet long so that the wind will
make the bright metal dance in the
sunlight
Turkeys are becoming more profit-
able every year
Keep a good supply of old plaster
befure the chicks
When a woman Ins nothing else to
do she washes her hair
Cures Cancer Blood Poison and Rheu-
matism If you have blood poison producing
eruptions pimples ulcers swollen
glands bumps and risings burning
itching skin copper-colored spots or
rash on the skin mucous patches In
mouth or throat falling hair bone
pains old rheumatism or foul ca-
tarrh take Botanic Blood Balm (B
B II) It kills the poison In the blood
soon all sores eruptions heal hard
swellings subside aches and pains
stop and a perfect cure Is made of
the worst cases of Blood Poison
For cancer tumors swellings eating
sores ugly ulcers persistent pimples
of all kinds take B B B It destroys
the cancer poison in the blood heals
cancer of all kinds cures the worst
humors or suppurating swellings
Thousands cured by B B B after all
else falls B B B composed of pure
botanic Ingredients Improves the di-
gestion makes the blood pure and
rich stops the awful itching and all
sharp shooting palrts Thoroughly
teBted for thirty years Druggists $1
per large bottle with complete direc-
tions for hpme cure Sample free and
prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co
Atlanta Ga Describe trouble and free
medical advice also sent In sealed let-
ter “BULLS” IN MANY LANGUAGES
Irishmen Can Hardly Be Classed as
Chief Perpetrators
The herding of bulls is not by any
means confined to the Emerald Isle
It was a Scotchwoman who said that
the butcher of her town only killed
half a beast at a time It was a
Dutchman who said that a pig had no
marks on his ears except a short tall
It was a British magistrate who on
being told by a vagabond that he was
not married responded “That’s a
good thing for your wife” It was a
Portuguese mayor who enumerated
among the marks when found “a
marked impediment in his speech”
It was a Frenchman who contentedly
laying his head down upon a large
stone Jar for a pillow stuffed it with
hay It was an American lecturer
who solemnly said one evening:
“Parents you may have children or
if not your daughter may have" It
was a German orator who warming
with the subject exclaimed: "There
is no man woman or child ’in the
house who has arrived at the age of
fifty years but has felt the truth
thundering through their heads for
centuries" — One Thousand and One
Anecdotes
Honesty seems to be an ingredient
that many a self-made man neglect-
ed to mix with the rest of his mater-
ial Antelopes Like the Open
The antelope lives always in open
country unlike members of the deer
family which invariably prefer a
thick dense forest They cannot be
driven into timber cover or thickets
of brush but will literally turn about
and run over a pursuer if necessary
rather than be forced into cover If
they are ever obliged to pass by or
through such places for food and wa-
ter they take a great deal of time to
do so as If they were determined to
see everything that could be seen en
r'-i'te — Century
For Thirty Years
“Inclosed find money order for one
dollar for which please send its
worth In Simmons Liver Purifier put
up in tin boxes I have been using
the medicine for thirty years"
Thos H Reilly
Jonesville La
No comment necessary Price 25c
per box
Kept Hie Word
Biggs — Old Brown died last night’’
Diggs — "Well he was a man of his
word anyway”
Biggs— “What do you mean by
that?”
Diggs—1 "Forty years ago he pro-
posed to an aunt of mine and de-
clared he couldn’t live if she refused
him”
Biggs — “And did she refuse him?"
Diggs— “Yes and now true to his
-"'rd Brown has ceased to live”
Peruna Is Exempt
The Internal revenue commission-
er has decided that Pe-ru-na as now
manufactured is exempt from Internal
revenue license
The highest medical and pharma-
ceutical authorities In the United
States bare passed upon the product
It must be highly gratifying to the
many friends of Pe-ru-na and the local
commercial world that the product
which has carried Columbus' name
into all continents again enjoys the
same fixed status as any other recog-
nized medicine — Columbus Dispatch
The Old Man Did
Wife — Say old man what makes
you scratch so all night long?
Old Man — Well wife I guess I got
that new disease I hear them talking
bo much about they call it eczema
or something like that
Wife — Eczema the mischief it’s the
old-fashioned itch you got and noth-
ing else Go right now and get a box
of Hunt’s Cure it will cure you in a
day or two It never fails ’
The woman wrho really wants to
manage a man first persuades him he
is sick
Don’t find fault unless It is abso-
lutely necessary
Dr Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
Is a powerful Invigorating tonic impart-
ing health and strength in particular
to the organs distinctly feminine The
local womanly health is so intimately
related to the general health that when
diseasos of the delicate womanly organs
are cured the whole body gains la health
and strength For weak and sickly
women who are “worn-out” “run-down”
or debilitated especially for women who
work in store office or schoolroom who
sit at the typewriter or sewing machine
or bear heavy household burdens and for
nursing mothers Dr Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription has proven a priceless
benefit because of its health-restoring
and strength-giving powers
As a soothing and strengthening ner-
vine “Favorite Prescription” is un-
equaled and is invaluable in allaying and
subduing nervous excitability irritabil-
ity nervous exhaustion nervous prostra-
tion neuralgia hysteria spasms chorea
or St Vitus’s dance and other distressing
nervous symptoms commonly attendant
upon functional and organic disease of
the womanly organs It Induces refresh-
ing sleep and relioves mental anxiety and
despondency
Cures obstinate cases “Favorite Pre-
scription” is a positive cure for the most
complicated and obstinate cases of “fe-
male weakness”- painful periods irregu-
larities prolapsus or falling of the pelvic
organs weak back bearing-down sensa-
tions chronio congestion inflammation
and ulceration
Dr Pierce’s medicines are made from
harmless but efficient medical roots
found growing in our American forests
The Indians knew of the marvelous cura-
tive value of some of these roots and im-
parted that knowledge to some of the
friendlier whites and gradually some of
the more progressive physicians came to
test and use them and ever since they
have grown in favor by reason of their
superior curative virtues and their safe
and hurmless qualities
Your druggists sell the “Favoritb Pre-
scription” and also that famous altera-
tive blood purifier and stomach tonic the
“Golden Medical Discovert” Write
to Dr Pierce about your case He is an
experienced physiciau and will treat your
case as confidential and without charge
for correspondence Address him at the
Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute
Buffalo N Y of which he' is chief con-
sulting physician
Nothing seems to please a loafer so
much as his ability to bother a busy
man
1 hid dumb chills and fever writes Edna Rutherford of Atlanta Tex "and suf-
fered more than I can tell 1 tried all the medicines I could think of and four doctors
but nothing helped until I began to take
BLACK-DR
I now feel better than I have in many months and thank God and you for 'your won-
derful medicine” For Constipation Indigestion Stomach Trouble Biliousness Sick Head-
ache Sallow Complexion Pimples Blotches Impure Blood and all troubles caused by an
inactive Liver Thedford’s Black-Draught will be found a safe and reliable remedy
Be sure you get Thedford’s At all Druggists 25c and $100
MAKE EVERY DAY
COUNT-
v no matter bo
bdu the weather
You cannot
afford to be
without a
TOWER’S
Wantkd roa ukxtkd states abet $bl-bodiad
unmarried men between agea of 21 and 35 citinaas
of United States of good character and temperate
habits who can speak read and write English For
Information apply to Keoruitlng Officer Poet
Office Pnildlng Oklahoma Guthrie Shawmoe
Enid O I or Tulsa X T
Jtceyc7uI Thompson’s Eye Watec
Literary Note
“Smith the minor poet" wrote the
literary editor “has abandoned the
linen collar for the paper one He
wears it all day and writes poetry
on it at night”
It is easier to imagine that if you
have the wind the Lord will find the
wings
Usually the man who talks like a
philosopher acts like a child
JVfra fVlnatowa Soothing flyrnp
Forrhlldreu teething softens the irums reduces to
Utixuiitluu allays iudu cut os wind colic 3' a bottla
Beauty Is said to be only skin deep
but many a woman’s beauty depends
upon the size of her bank balance
Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullen is Nature's great remedy— Cures
Coughs Colds Croup and Consumption
and ail throat and lung troubles At drug-
gists 25c tiUc and $100 per bottle
It Is easier to level things by pull-
ing down than It would be by building
up
Worth Knowing
—that Allcock'B are tlio original and only
genuine porous plasters all other so-callod
porous plasters urc Imitations
The phrenologist must always have
a bead for business
Lewis’ Single Binder straight Bo You
pay 10c for cigars not so good Your dealer
or Lewis’ Factory Peoria 111
There Is no man who does not pri-
vately imagine that the law was not
made by him
A Spring Suggestion I
Take Garfield Tea in tho morning ov be-
fore retiring its use Insures pure blood and
a natural action of the liver kidneys
stomach and bowels It has a beneficial
effect on tho entire system It is mude
of Herbs
It is as impossible to reason with
the foolish as it would be to make a
songster of a bluejay
It Matters Not
No matter the name no matter the
place if you are afflicted with that in-
tolerable often excruciating Itching
sensation you want a cure and want
it quick
Hunt’s Cure is Infallible never fall-
ing remedy It cures Only 50c per
box and strictly guaranteed
A bachelor of middle age has an
agreeable way of showing his many
good qualities
In a Pinch Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE
A powder It cures painful smart-
ing nervous feet and ingrowing nails
It’s the greatest comfort discovery of
the age Makes new shoes easy A
certain cure for sweating feet Sold
by all druggists 25c Trial package
FREE Address A S Olmsted Le
Roy N Y
Many a man has wasted his energy
shoveling snow against the wind
PILES N0 MONEY TILL CURED-D3SrPTiVHr®!
ffvlfcuUhJ-DRSTHORMTON MINOR-1031 oak St Ka
OUR NEW CATALOGUE IS A MARVEL OF ART
Our Cotton Gin Machinery is all that
the Catalogue claims for it— Write
us for Catalogue— and tell us what
Machinery you are in need of
CONTINENTAL GIN COMPANY DALLAS TEXAS
TWENTY-FIVE BUSHELS OF
WHEAT TO THE ACRE
Means a pro-
ductive ca-
pacity In dol-
lars of over
$16 per acre
This on land which has cost the farmer noth-
ing but the price of tilling It tells its own
story
The Canadian Government gives absolutely
free to every settler 160 acres of such land
Lands adjoining can he purchased at from $6
to $10 per acre from railroad and other corpor-
ations Already 175000 farmers from the United
States have made their homes in Canada
For pamphlet “Twentieth Century Canada”
and all information apply to Supt of Immigra-
tion Ottawa Canada or to following authorized
Canadian Government Agent— J S Crawford
No 12& W Ninth Street Kansas City Missouri
(Mention this paper)
WNU Oklahoma City No 14 1906
SAVE
HALF
the price Top can't
beat onr bngrpv Job at
any price Here's the
reason: You’re deal-
ing with the factory
30 Days F reeTrlal Two Years Guerantee
Remember we make what weselL We’renotamail
order house That’s why weean (live such a guar-
antee Direct sales direct guarantee a price un-
equalled and 30 days to make up your mind Write
for our vehicle catalog end oomh'-te selling plan
Th Fregnsshrs Vshlcla Mfg Co FL Warm bid
PAINS
AMERICAN WOMEN FIND RELIEF
Tbo Cose of Miss Irene Crosby la One
of Thousands of Cures xnado by Lydia
EL Plnkham's Vegetable Compound
How many women realize that
itis not the plan of natnre that women
should suffer so severely
Thousands of American women how
ever have found relief f rom all monthly
suffering by taking Lydia E Pinkham’a
Vegetable Compound as it is the most
thorough female regulator known to
medical science It cures the condition
which causes bo much discomfort and
robs these periods of their terrors
Miss Irene Crosby of 313 Charlton
Street East Savannah Ga writes:
“ Lydia E Pinkham’sVegetnble Compound
is a true friend to woman It has been of
great benefit to me curing me of irregular
and painful periods when everything eke had
failed and I gladly recommend it to other
suffering women”
Women who are’ troubled with pain-
ful or irregular periods backache
bloating (or flatulence) displacement
of organs inflammation or ulceration
that “bearing-down” feeling dizzi-
ness faintness indigestion nervous
prostration or the blues should take
immediate action to ward off the seri-
ous consequences and be restored to
perfect health and strength by taking
Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound and then write to Mrs Pink-
ham Lynn Mass for further free ad-
vice She is daughter-in-law of Lydia
E Pink ham and for twenty-five years
has been advising women free of
charge Thousands have been cured
by bo doing
PENSIONS
Write Hftthan Bickford 9X4 E Su N aahlngton IX
- KAH5A3 CITY Mo (pwAwtn orrict at Axioms j
WL Douglas
3&3 SHOES5
W L Douglas $400 Cllt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price
W L DOUGLAS MAKES SELLS MORE
MEN'S $360 SHOES THAN ANY OTHEK
MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD
infirm REWARD to anyone who can
I QIUjUUU disprove this statement
If I could take you into mv three large factories
i at Brockton Mass and show you the infinite
I care with which every pairof shoes is mnde yoa
I would realize why W L Douglas $350 aheew
i cost more to make why they hold their (hape
fit better wear longer and are of greater
Intrinsic value than any other $350 shoe
IV L Dougina Strong Mado Shoes foe
Mon $260 $200 Boy’ School A
Droaa Shooa $2 60 $2 $176 $16 If
CAUTION Insist upon having WLlX0e-
las shoes Take no substitute Kone genuiow
Without his name and price stamped on bottom
fast Color Euelets used they uiill not wear brassy
Write tor Illustrated Catalog
Ws L DOUGLASsBrockUiDs Mate
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The Tupelo Times. (Tupelo, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1906, newspaper, April 5, 1906; Tupelo, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2042279/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.