The Indianola Enterprise. (Indianola, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, April 13, 1906 Page: 4 of 8
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Simmons' Liver PurICer is th* most
valuable remedy 1 e* -r tried for con
stipatlon ami disordered liver It doe>
lta *ork thoroughly but does no'
gripe like most remedies of Ira char
actor. 1 certainly recommend It
whenever the opportunity occur*
M. M Tomllnaon.
(Kwi'K«', Kauxai.
Muloch It taken a heroine to he
nomlcal
Important to Mother*.
K*ttnln« carefully e ry ho«ll* «f ( ANTORTa,
a «fr and ur« retail y for liifaut* aud ctiitdrro,
ami M« that II
The difference in view point m \
be defined thin T • man, religion
mean* a reform « f orr t i n; to w«
man, a form of recreation.
Influence of Music.
It wii Hoger Martin who wrote
"Instrumental music and aonx bring*
power am! vigor, stirs up nature and
helps her In all her motions." and
the man who take a dally done of
music will not only live longer, but
better, more satisfactorily to hlmse I
and those alKiut hlrn, than one who
dots not.—Exchange.
Beware of Ointment* for Catarrh
that Contain Mercury,
Rrtflth«
Signature of
Yut Otef 30 Years
1U luuU Yoa liavo Aiwa/a lk*ugtO.
la L *
t tirjr
hro
j Unhandy a statue of Venus
Word from Br'er Williams.
Dry ain't no doubt In de worl' hut
what rictus hrlnfra trouble, but I.aw<l
known It'a (!••■ de sort er trouble I
been longln' fer all de days er my
| life! l.et It come lak a Gregory hur-
ricane! I'la put my arms roun' a tree
I en hoi' fast *tw«U Oabrul blow hit
trumpet! Atlanta Constitution.
Floral Emblems.
The n.i(IonaI floral emblems are
England, rone; (Jreece. violet; Oer
many, cornflower; Scotland, thistle.
Italy. Illy; Hpaln, pomegranate.
France fletirde-lls; Ireland, sham
ro k; Kgypt, lotus; Wales, leek; Can
ada. the maple; Japan chrysanthe
mum.
m
"She's really a lovely girl." h*
A blond*- and extr«*m«*ly fair
With a gracvfull
Ind*-.-J? And
«*mHy
a mall
hat d.d she wear?"
"Her rv* you know e\*ii like mist.
Just the color of nki «- at 'lawn
With lashe* tha loii|(«>*t sllkl#-*!—"
' Ye* ) *a. but. what had she on?"
"I llk«-d her manner It« gentle chana
Kkkk* at. d a soul at
And then her amlle ao iwwt and
warm "
"Good gracious* How wai she dr^a^ed?"
"Khe mu i have wrorn -ome aort of a
> *a that
I <1 not net"
only her m
ie flrldgra
1 cert a li.1 % clear;
t I frankly own—
d«-ar!"
r. J'witland Orftson-
aittl < ••mj'.atrif d«-i«uir« ilin whoia •Mtaru
mi l-ring It through tha muroua aurfacaa. am ti
arti< ; a ah dltl nviar l>t uir I aacvpl u pre««rlp
tlwinfr rn rr(>tj|alila phjralrtana a« tha •Ian a** tl.rj
• III do la tea loid to tlio a<M>«l foil ran p a it-1 jr <1 •
H a fnun thani Hall e Catarrh 1 ure n>auufarturail
bjr r. J. Chrnrf a < Tuiadu, o r luttlna no mar
carjr and la uk*n Intarna117 acting dirariijr u
tha bluud and iinir<>ua surface* of tlia ayatam. lu - -
bu)lii« If a: la < atarrh luri !>a aura r u a« t tha _ . _ „
(•nutii*. It l« taken tntarnailr and maila In loiadu, In Fivor of Patience.
>•" • •'•«h"r ' *""" '"iwn
Tak« iiairaTamiiy ruia for coaaupatioo. >md he thinks that you f«'ll down. Just
I blame no one, but cl*eer up, choer oth
If folks would tell only what they . rs, keep moving and give time n
know, the world would soon be pup chance to prove something From
;ilated with mutes. The Karl Pratt Library.
Women in Our Hospitals
Appalling Increases tn the Number of Operations
Performed Each Year—How Women May
Avoid Theai.
ah* *ou!d be here— nd the hunger of
till heart drove him to leave the
train to come here and see her once
more If only from a distance Aid
he Is a boy no longer, but a man who
has p«t away boyish things forever"
"The heroine," said the woman
very softly, "was also very youne and
had never been taught many things
she should have known. She never
knew about tact and—and—that sort
of thing. She also had a great love
which grew with the years, but did
not know how to express It."
A great light filled the eyes of the
man.
"Don't you think the hero might
have another chance—thai they
might start over again?" be said
eagerly.
The smile she turned toward him
was not the dazzling one sent to the
golden Cupids, but so soft and woman-
ly that the face of the woman was
transformed.
"I>ook here, you two," cried Mrs
Patton, leaning over and tapping each
with her fan. "Pay attention to the
play. Positively, you haven't heard a
1 V/A\l (\\ wor<1 Anybody would think you
CKW4AT7- '(^UiAiLmuu
were lovers Instead of a blase mar-
, .... . rled couple of five years' experience,"
(Copyright. 190S. by Dally Story Pub, Co.)
Young and charming Mrs Curtis I for sustained conversation It might be HAD SEVERAL GOOD EXCUSES.
sat In the extreme corner of the big easier." she said. \
double box which was slowly filling I will," he answered, sharply, turn-
m
f
n /IJireBerryhi
nuby MuilirU
Qolnir through the hospitals In our
l&rge cities one In surprised to find sik-!i
• tom proportion of I ho imticuta h in;'
on tiioso snow-white beds women
and ffir'.H, who am either awniting
or recovering from serious operations.
Why should tins l e the casey Sim-
ply becauso they have neglected "iem-
selws. female troubles aroec'atnly
011 the Increase among the women of
this country -they creep upon them
una wares, but every one of those
patients in the hospital beds hnd plenty
of warning in that bearing-down feel-
ing, pain nt leftor right of the jilulonien,
nervous exhaustion, pain in the Muull
of the back. eli/./, in ess, tlatulenev, tiU-
olacemetitH of the organs or irregular-
ities. All of these bvmptoms are indi-
cations of 1111 unhealthy con lition of
the female organs, ami i' not heeded
tin* penalty has to l>e paid by a danger-
ous operation. When these symptoms
manifest themselves, do notdragaion<|
until you are obliged to go to the hos-
pital and submit to an oj>eratioii—
out remember that Lydiu 10. l'inlc-
ham's Vegetable Compound has savetl
tl.ousands of women from burgical
operations.
When women nro troubled with ir-
regular, suppressed or painful periods,
weakness, displacement or ulceration
of the organs, that l>. a ring-down feel-
ing. inflammation, backache, bloating
(or flatulency), general debility, iudi-
ffe&tion, and nervous prostration, or arc
beset with such symptomaaadimness,
lassitude, excitability, irritability, ner-
vousness, sleeplessness, melancholy,
'* nll-gonjM and •• want to-be left-
The following letters cannot fall to
bring Iioikj to despairing women.
Mis.s Ruby Mushruslif of East
Cbicugo, Intl., writes:
l>t ur Mrs. l'inkhimi:—
" i have Ihs'h njrrest BufTcror with Irregular
l*t ri« tls and female tr.mhle, nud alnuit threo , as Mr, Curtis pravely
with Mrs. Potter's guests and looked
over the great audltnco with languid
Interest. A great part of th* audience
returned the Inspection with evident
relish. It really was a very select
box party and the people out in the
body of the house found a delight
even greater than watching the play
In Identifying the members of the ex-
clusive set whose names so regularly
adorned the society pages of the
newspapers
Among all the distinguished folk In
the box none was so charming an ob-
ject upon which to gaze as young Mrs
Curtis. The go<ls had endowed her
with great beauty and that subtle
charm which may be called person-
ality or a half dozen other things
Her expression was bright as a May
morning, albeit inscrutable
"I wonder if she ever had a care
beyond the selection of her gowns."
whispered a wan little woman in tlie
balcony to her husband
"And I wonder how she would look
If she had some downright trouble and
worry," she added with a sigh a', her
own fading youtJi.
The box was now all but filled One
lone teat remained and it ha| p ns:
to be beside Mrs Curtis.
"Oh. dear," said Mrs. Putter a lit-
tle Impatiently. "How dreadful Here
is Mr. Curtis and the only seat left is
beside Mrs. Curtis. I did not expect
you. sir, and had arranged that seat
j for Baron Sternhold. Now you appear
unexpectedly and I this moment re-
i cclve a note from the Baron that he
is unexpectedly detained. I was sure
| Mrs. Curtis said you would not ho
j here. Well, of all things—that a man
1 and his wife should be seated vis a-
I via at a box party."
And there was a ripple of laughter
ated himself
Ing toward her, "I will tell you the
story of a great love and Its unhappy-
end.
"The hero was but an unformed
boy. thrown Into the realities of life
early because he happened to have
been born into the hot-house atmos-
phere of money and society. He
thought he was mature, experienced
and even blase, when really he was
more ignorant himself than the com-
monest clod."
"Was there a heroine?" she asked.
South Dakota Man Really Unable to
Invite Traveler to Dinner.
Along about noon as I was riding
horseback along a South Dakota high-
way, I came upon a settler at his gate,
and, after he had orought my horse a
pail of water, he asked.
"Strang€*r. did you meet a strap-
ping young man with a set jaw be-
tween here and Ellendale?"
"Yes, I believe I did," I replied.
"Wall, that was my son Jim, going
to town to marry a widder woman 12
years older than he is. Durn his
hide, but he wouldn't listen to me. Did
you also meet a gal about twenty
years old between here and town?"
"Crosseyed and her nose turned
up?"
"Yep. That's my gal, Sal. who's
gone to town to sue a feller for
breach-of-promlse. Dog her cats, but
nobody ever asked her to marry him
or ever will."
"I also met a woman about fifty
years old," I said.
"Red hair and freckled face?"
"Yes."
"That's my old woman. I told her
this morning that if she didn't like
my ways she could take the outside
of the house, and drat her antics, if
she didn't walk off. I was going to as
ask you to stop to dinner, but as
things are as they are—"
I assured him that I wasn't a bit hun-
gry. and that his excuses were all
right, and lent him a chew of tobacco
and left him trying to whistle tip his
spirits.—Rochester Democrat antf
Chronicle.
....-nt ha ago the doctor, nft««r uxing tln>X-Rny „ ,
osi me, sold I had an sboeos and would hare ' He was a hands
t > hitvo mi ojwMHtioii. My mother wanted leilow with his finely 1 is 'd h« :o' so
me to try Lydiu K. Mnklinnrs Vegetable at variance with the almost boyish
< • impound iu* a lust resort, and it not only -t ... , .
a v. d me from ou opt ration but made luuou- 1 " al tfuve I r.
tirely well." , "1: wife, there w re lines <u' care
Mrs. Alloo BerryliPI, of 313 Boyoe I',i ! touches of gray a. . u:
f'trout. Chattanooga, Tcnn., writes: "
D or Mr. r.nkl.ini:- #hd- Cu,t!s IooU® ns though he had
"TUrco } • - h^o life looked dark to ma
T hail ulceration and inllau'ination of the
lein.de organ iin.l wjui in ti s« n< us condition.
• My li alth wrw 001 ij I itely broken dow n
and the doctor told ii" th. t if I wxsnot oj>-
erated u|i u I w. nf i die within mx months.
1 told him I won! 1 have no oiienttion but
woulil try Lvd 1'. 1 u.khams Vegetable
( ompou'itl. lie trj «.l to inlluen< e me against
it InK 1 sent ftir thoni"' < iisa that Knmoday
.ti b'gan to u*«m it /aithfuin . Witlun flv.
lavs I feltreli t but was not euUroly cured
until I used it i'< <r 8onio time.
Yournitvli (no is cevti-.inlv Hue. I have
indu "1 m veral friends and n« i -!d ors t t.ik«*
it and I know mere than a .i. vn who had
f<«male troubl* aiul who today nn as well
and strong ns I um using your Vege-
table C«)inp )URil."
Lvdia E. rinkham*s Vegetable Com-
ixmnd at once removes such troubles.
Refuse to buy any other medicine, fur
you need the l>est.
Mrs. Pinkhaiu, daughter-in-law of
Lvdia K rinkham. invites all sick wo-
men to write her for advice, ller advice
alone " feelings they should remember i and medicine have restored thousands
there is one tried aud true remedy. , to health. Address, Lynr. Mass.
Ijfdla E Ptikham't Vetttable Compound' guccetd Hliert otbers Fall.
THeflovernment of Canada Wb [mm DOUGLAS
""" *3= & ,3~ SHOESMTN
W. L. Douglas *4.00 Cllt Edge Line
j been up against some trouble," whis-
pered a ruddy faced old beau back iu
, Uio box.
! "Or i Ise lie's been going the pace a
i little harder than usual." retorted the
lady beside him carelessly. "Oh, you
1 men cannot go scot free from your
i revels."
! In the meantime as Curtis seated
j himself the color partly faded from
his wife's face. H r fan trembled just
! perceptibly and the eyes still s an-
ning the audience were unseeing eyes
Without looking at him she felt rather
! than saw that his hand resting so
gracefully upon his knee was shaking.
! "Inasmuch as we are on dress pa-
rade and in full public view," he said,
leaning over and whispering in her
ear. "it might he best to act it out
; and display enough decent Interest in
I each other so as not to gratify the
i fierce longing for scandal which per-
vades the kind hearts about u>\"
I "You are quite right," she replied
: coldly. "1 did not expect you. I
Gives absolutely
FREE to every
settler one hun-
dred and sixty
acres of land in
Western Canada.
Land adjoining this can lie purchased
from railway and land companies at from
16 to $lo |s r acre.
On this land this year has been produced
upwards of twenty-live bushels of wheat U
the acre.
It is also the best of grazing land and for
mixed farming it lias no superior on the j
continent.
Splendid climate, low taxes, railways
convenient, schools aud churches close at
hand.
Write for "Twentieth Century Canada" i
and low railway rales to Superintendent of i
Immigration, Ottawa, Canada; or t i
authorized Canadian Government Airent-
J. S t'ruwf rd, Ne. 125 W. Ninth Street,
Kansas City, Missouri.
iMeuiion ibis paper)
cannot bo equalled at any price.
ICE CREAM
Tlie Imprrlxl Irr
renin Co., of Mu -
kngee, I. T., have tlir I a rye it mnl best
equipped plant iu the Two Territories for the
manufacture of Staple and Fancy le® Cream*,
Ices, etr. Correspond with u-. Address
IMPERIAL ICC CREANI CO..
liux ?44, mt sKonn:, i. t.
D0UGC4
fSTA®USHE0
[U .Capital •a.soqooQ
rMCIAM JOHN W. MOKltlM
LHuIVII WaKhln«U>.., l . c.
Successfully Prosecutes Cloime.
I.str Prlnclpsl Kxsmlnfr f. s Pm-t >n purcsu.
3yrt.mclvll *ar; 15s.lJu lkstSn {cu:m«, tty.siucs
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
2MAHFS * 9FLIS MOKC
THANAUr OTHER
mamuractumr in ihe world.
^1 n nnn tn ,n,on, cm
OlUfUUU ditpictithii itilfm nt.
If I could lakr > ou int.t m \ three lurge factories
at tlriHkton, and thtm you tlir inlinlte
care wilh w huh r er\ pnjr« f *hoes Is mnde >t>u
would realire whv >V t.. IV h-Ias f.t 50 shoc«
coat m« re to make, lt thex hold thetr ^hape,
lit K-tter, «e%r longer, and are ol greater
intrinsic % aim-than any other $3.50,«hoe.
•Vjit. OouQf i:m Strong Mttdv Stioom for
Mon. $'*.60, Poym' School A
Oromm i)hacm,*'J.50, $2. $1.1S, 91.61)
CAUTION. I> '*•-! up' n 1 . \ mc W.l. Ikt.c
! > >«•*. r Ao no nuh«t itutC'Minine.
without hit ii.imo and price statn|H*<l ou U>tt<>m.
Oo.i^r 11,-iff* 11.*erf ; thfu u >11 not utnr brassy.
Wrifin for SI:;: tritrd t'ai
\V. L IHM ULAs, llrtN'kiun, ^luss.
W. N. U., Muskogee, No. 13, 11KHI. DEFIANCE STARCH
Young Mrs. Curtis.
thought you started for .Mexico to-
day."
"1 decided to defer It until tomor-
row." he replied. "If It were possible
tor you to smile pleasantly-not at
me. you know, but at somebody in the
r.udience. It mlsht serve to !e$s n the
interest of the dear frien Is about
us."
She flashed a dattlinn smile a: a
golden timtre of Cupid over the s ase
•—a smile which drew .111 expression
"And why did he not go?" asked the
woman.
dropping her eyes from the flare nf
the great theater to the grateful dark-
ness of the carpet.
"There always is a girl," he replied, !
Quietly. "K«ir goodness sake, .Mabel,
don't look solemn. Remember our
kind friends all about.' *
S'ae raised her head and swept the
house wirli the regal manner so char-
acteristic of her.
"Go on," she said.
"Well, this pathetically unequipped
hero fell In love \vi• h the heroine of
course. Yes, he truly fell in love. He
hardly knew it at the time, for he was
a si ltish young animal and little un-
derstood what love really meant. Per-
bepa It was more desire than love.
Anyway he pursued the heroine and
won her for his very own.
"And then you see, trouble began
He was a primitive sort of animal and
his real civilization only began to be
foreshadowe l when he man led the r
heroine, lTp to that .time the whole I
scheme of the universe rested ou the
cornerstone of nn.it he wanted. After
a bit It began to percolate his selfish-
ness that there were desires and '
needs on her part."
"Couldn't you manage to laugh or
look bored or something." she Inter- ;
rupted. "Our dear friends are becom-
ing interested."
He did his best, but it was more a
grimace than a smile. She flashed
full upon him that marvelous smile of
hers.
"Go on," she said, softly.
"Oh. well," he said, wearily, "it is
a dreary story. He demanded every-
thing gave little, and thought less.
Ami all the time he knew that she
loved him. And he loved her, too
more blindly and passionately every
moment that he did the very things
to kill her love.
"Of course the end was bound to
come. There were bickerings and
scenes and there was brutal indiffer-
ence and exasperating slights—heav-
ens. there were scenes between them,
disgusting, inexcusable—and it was
all his fault. He was forming his
character at her expense, and he
was killing her love, which all the
time he was learning to value the
more.
"And finally the crash came. The
bitter things she said in answer to
the bitter things he said rankled in
his heart until he no longer could
stand it. and he determined to go
away and forget. So the hero and the
heroine agreed to disagree and the
hero was to have left for Mexico to-
day—and never trouble the heroine
more."
"And why did he not go?" asked
the woman, flashing the ghost of her
dazzling smile at the golden Cupid
over the stage.
"He went to the train and boarded
it," the man replied, regarding her
steadily, "but the flood gites of his
memory opened and the tide of his
great love swept over him and the
knowledge that there was to be this
Why He Had a Grievance.
Half-time had been called, and, as
usual, the sides were fraternizing. The
goal keeper was talking earnestly to
one of the backs.
"George." he said, "will you do me
the favor of going into the goal, while
I play out in the first ten minutes?"
"Whatever for?" asked the back
"You're doing very well."
"Yes; that's all vuht. Put I've been
looking over the opposition lot, and
and—"
His voice br >l.e for a moment; then
he continued rapidly:
"Many years ago their center for-
ward and I were rivals for the hand of
a beautiful maiden, and for what I
have suffered on his account 1—I
should dearly love to come to an un-
derstanding with him."
"Poor old chap!" murmured the
beck. "You seem to feel it badly. I
suppose he married her and left you
out in the cold—eh?"
"No. he didn't!" snapped the goal-
keeper "He stood aside for me, and
I married lier!"- Answers,
of agony 1.0 his face.
"if you could think of some subject ; box party came to him, and he knew
Chance for a Profit.
The artistic temperament often
leads toward poverty but it frequently
compensates its victim with a saving
grace of humor which makes even the
poverty a source to fun.
A young woman who was possessed
of the temperament and had given
up everything else for it suddenly,
sold a picture for a considerable sum
and made haste to apply the pro-
ceeds as a first payment 011 a small
cottage she had long desired. The
former owner attempted to advise
her about the neighbors.
"Now that couple next door," he
said, warnlngly, "they're al! right—
good neighbors, friendly, and all that.
Hut keep your eyes open. If they see
a t hance to make a hundred dollars
out of you they won't hesitate to do
it."
"Fine! Fine!" cried the young
woman. "I'm going over now and
see If I can't Kot them to do It on
shares."—You.h's Companion.
A Limit.
At th University Club banquet n
night >'■ two ago Secretary Wilson of
the De artment of Agriculture told
about ti ' greatness of the American
hen p. d eulogized the farmer as the
producer of the nation's wealth, says
the Washington correspondent of the
New York World He said he is look
ing for men to help him in the work
of investigation.
"If I can find a man who will dis
cover a plant that will bind desert
sands together so the winds won't
shift them, or who will tell me how-
to plant a hundred thousand acres of
trees in a year." he said with fine en
thuslasm. "1 will pay him—I will pa>
him"
'How much?" asked somebody.
"As much as the govi rnment will
allow me to." he concluded rather
lamelv and everybody groaned.
Tbe Best Guaranty ol Merit
Is Open Publicity.
Every br>ttle of Dr Pierce's world-
famed medicines leaving the trreat labo-
ratory at Buffr.lo, N Y . has printed
upon its wrapper all the Ingredients
entering Into its composition. This fart
aleue places Dr. Pierce's Faintly Medi-
cines in a class all by tksmsrlves They
cannot be classed with patent or secret
medicines because they are neither. This
is why so many unprejudiced physicians
prescribe them and recommend them to
th«lr patients They kn-w what they
are composed of, aud that the ingredients
are th ia endorsed by the most emiueut
medical authorities
Th« further fact that neither Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the
great stomach tonic, liver iuvignrator.
heart regulator and blood purifier, nor his
' Favorite Prescription" Tor weak, over-
worked. broken-down, r rvoq* women,
contains any alcohol, also entitles them
to a place all by theuiselvos
Many years ago, Dr Pierce discovered
that chemically pure glycerine, of proper
strength, is a better solvent and prcserv*
itive of tho modiotnol principles rtsid*
Ing in our indigenous, or native, medi-
cinal plants than is alcohol; and, further-
more, that it {tossesses valuable medicinal
properties of its own, being demulcent,
nutritive, antiseptic, and a most efficient
ontlformont.
Neither of the above medicines con-
tains alcohol, or any harmful, habil-
forming drug, as will be seen from a
glance at the formula printed on each
brittle wrapper. They c,re safe to use and
potent to cure
Not only do physicians prescribe the
above, non-secret "medicines largely, but
the most intelligent people employ them
—people who would not think of using
the ordinary patent, or secret medicines.
Every ingredient entering into the com-
position of Dr Pierce's medicines has
the strongest kind of an endorsement
from leading medical writers of the
several schools of practice. No other
medicines put up frr like purposes has
ony such professional endorsement.
f)r. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con-
stipation. Constipation is the cause of
many diseases. Cure the cause and you
cure the disease. One "Pellet" is a gentle
laxative, and two a mild cathartic. Drug-
gists sell them, and nothing is "just as
good." Easy to take as candy.
Swiss Savings Banks.
Fifty years ago. In Switzerland,
180,000 depositors possessed $12,000,«
000 in 167 savings banks. There are
now 1.400,000 depositors possessing
$ltio,000,000 in more than 300 savings
banks.
Not "Just as Good"—It's the Best.
One box of Hunt's Cure is unfailing-
ly, unqualifiedly and absolutely guar-
anteed 10 cure any form of skin dis-
ease. It is particularly active in
promptly relieving and permanently
curing all forms of inching known.
Eczema, Tetter, Ringworm and all
similar troubles are relieved by one
application; cured by one box.
KEPT UNLIGHTED CIGAR WHOLE.
Stout Man Had Found Novel Use for
Rubber Bands.
The stout man stood puffing at an
unlighted cigar, bandaged tightly with
1 series of rubber bands. Wrapped In
this manner, the cigar gave the ap-
pearance of a fractured limb fresh
from the hands of a surgeon.
"I see you getting ready to ask the
question," said the stout man. "You
want to know what I have my cigar
done up in these rubber bands for.
Well, I'll tell you It is a little trick
of my own invention. I was a cigar
fiend for several years, but I have
now broken off the habit—haven't
smoked one for several years. I am
now trying to break myself of the
chewing habit. This cigar, you see,
gives me a dry smoke and an imita-
tion chew at the same time. If some-
thing does not happen to it this cigar
will last me two weeks. Those rub-
ber bands k- cp it from falling to
pieces."
Foibles of Dr. Johnson.
All great people have had their fol-
lies, whi< h is another way of saying
that all have their weak points. Dr.
Johnson, with all his philosophy, was
not without a superstition. He was
very careful not to enter a room with
his ieft foot foremost. If by any
chance he did so he would immediate-
ly step back and re-enter with his
right foot foremost. He was terribly
afraid of death, and would not suffer
it to bo mentioned in his presence.
DECAYED STARCH.
/
A Food Problem.
An Asheville man tells how right
food did that which medicines had
failed to accomplish
•For more than 15 years." he says,
"I was a filleted with stomach trouble
and intestinal indigestion, gas form-
ing In stomach and bowels and living
me great distress. These conditions
were undoubtedly due to the starchy
food I ate, white bread, potatoes, etc..
and didn't digest. I grow worse with
time, till, 2 years ago, I had an attack
which the doctor diagnosed as appen-
dicitis. When the surgeon operated
on me. however, it was found that my
trouble was ulcer of the pancreas. In-
stead of appendicitis.
Mnce that time I have had several
such attacks, suffering death, almost.
The last attack was about 3 months
ago, and I endured untold agonies.
"The doctor then said that I would
have to eat less starchy stufT, so I
began the use of Grape-Nuts food for
I knew it to be pre-dlgested. and have
continued same with most gratifying
results. It has built me up wonder-
fully. I gained 10 pounds in the first
8 weeks that I used Grape-Nuts, my
general health is better than ever
before, my braiu is clearer and my
nerves stronger.
"For breakfast and dinner, each, I
take 4 teaspoonfuls of Grape-Nuts
with cream, a small slice of dry toast,
an egg soft boiled and a cup of Post-
urn; and 1 make the evening meal on
Grape-Nuts and cream alone—this
gives me a good night's rest and l
am well again " Name Riven by Post-
uiu ('« ,, Martin Creek, Mich
Th« re's a reason. Head the little
"The Hoad to Wallville," in
pk£s.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Williams, B. W. The Indianola Enterprise. (Indianola, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, April 13, 1906, newspaper, April 13, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc269431/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.