The Kiowa Sentinel. (Kiowa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, January 20, 1905 Page: 4 of 5
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MEDICAL EXAMINER
Of the United States Treasury Recommends
Pe-ru-na.
Another Prominent Physician Uses
and Endorses Pe-ru-na.
DR. I.LEWHI.LYN JORDAN. Medl
ral Examiner of Ih« r. S. Treas
ury Department graduate of Co
lumbia College, iilid who served three
years at Went Point, has the follow-
ing to say of Peruna:
"Allow me to express my grati-
tude to you for the benefit derived
from your wonderful remedy.
One short month has brought
forth a vast change and / now
consider myself a well man after
months of suffering, f ellow suf-
ferers, Peruna will cure you."
A constantly Increasing number of
physicians prescribe I'eruna in their
practice. It lias proven in merits so
thorough!) that even the doctors have
overcome Hielr prejudice against so
sailed patent medlcincs and recom
mend it to their patients
Peruna occupies *i unique position
fu medical science. It I* the only In
♦ernal systemic catarrh remedy
known to the medical profession to
4a>. Catarrh. jo everyone will admit.
fs the cause of one-half the diseases
which afflict mankind. Catarrh and
catarrhal diseases afflict one-half of
•he people of U111 ted Stales.
Robert It. Roberta, M D., Wash-
ington, P. C.. writes:
• Through my own experienceI
a* well us that of many of my I
friends and acquaintances whoj
have been cured or relieved of ca- #
tarrh by the use of Hartman'*«
Peruna, I can confidently recom-1
mend it to those suffering from such !
disorder a, and have no hesitation In
prescribing It to my patients,"
Robi rt R. Roberta.
Catarrh is a systemic disease cur-
able only by systemic treatment A
remedy that cures catarrh must aim
directly at the depressed nerve cen-
ters. This Is v/hut IVruna does.
Peruna Immediately invigorates the
nerve-centers which give vitulli) to
the mucous membranes. Tnen catarrh
COULDN'T SELL HIM A LOT.
Cemetery Drummer Amazed at Bride
groom's Lack of Interest.
John F. Carroll brings back from
the other side a story which he is re-
lating with glee to his friends The
tale was told him by a young English
man who had Jus
honeymoon trip
said that as soon
new home then- <
door
"Some friend."
Wife, "who has r;i
JNJVoNiT!ON.
turned from
'he bridegro
ie arrived at
• a I nock at
lie went to the door i
entered.
"(iood veiling," said i
/earned that you had
from your wedding tour
' We got back only
I replied the brlii
ing felicitation^
it the weddlni
Who" Me?
"Not much
i called to scl
lery. one of tli
I in
Dr. Llewellyn Jordan,
Medical Examiner United States
Ti easury.
disappears. Then catarrh is per
inauently cured.
If you do not derive prompt and
satisfactory results from the use of
Peruna. write at once to Dr. Hart-
maun, giving a full statement of youf
case, and he will be pleased to give
you Ills valuable advice grails.
Address Dr. Hartman. President of
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus,
Ohio. *
inly thi: evening."
nun joyously, a wait-
I presume you were
asped the stranger.
, e|" go to WeddiligS
n'oii a lot in the ccine-
best bargains you ever
struck. Soy I can let on have a lot
for only"
"(Jet out of here' yelled the exas-
perated bridegroom "What do I
want of a cemetery lot?"
"Oh, well," replied the salesman. "If
you ami your family expect to live for
ever, or hope the country will bury
you. then we can't do any business. I
wish you a short life and a sad one
Good evening."
As th«' bridegroom is a trifle super
stitiotis. ho nearly has a fit every time
his little wife sneezes. New Yor.V
World.
Clock Without a Key.
Many are the efforts which have
been made recently to improve on
the old spring clock, with its twelve-
hour face, which has been In use for
; a good many years. There have been
! clocks without hands, clocks without
dials ami clocks with springs of such
gigantic proportions that they re-
quired winding but once a year. The
very newest thing in tills Hue Is a
clock which will run forever and nev-
< r needs winding or any other atten-
tion. except, perhaps, occasional reg-
j ulition, for it is possible that the
time-plcce might run a trifle fast or
• low. It will never be in need of
winding, and as a matter of fact,
i here Is no provision whatever made
for winding the clock.
! This clock Is operated by a motor
driven by the changes of the temper-
: ature which are constantly going on
in the air about us. A large factory
is about to be put Into operation at
Knoxvlllc, Tenn., where these clocks
will be made under patents which
were granted to Prof. Weston M. Ful-
ton, who Is the local forecaster In
charge of the United States weather
bureau and observatory at that, place,
and also Instructor of meteorology at
the University of Virginia. The es-
sential feature of the professor's in-
vention is a vessel for containing the
liquids and gases which are acted
Upon by the air. The remarkable
SMALL PEN FOR HOGS.
To Accommodate Two Brood Sovn and
Tneir Fattening Littera.
J. R. H.—Please publish the plan
of a pig pen of suitable size to ac-
commodate two brood sows and the
fattening litters from these. The pen
is to be built of stone and to stand
east aud west.
In the accompanying plan there Is j
provision for a partition In the brood (
sow pens for the little ylgs to go in
to feed, tho partition is one foot from
the floor no that the pigs can go under
to be fed separate from the sow. The
trough should not be over 4 inches
high for the little pigs; the other
troughs should be six Inches high.
The windows In all the pens can be
placed above the doors—that Is, the
upper part a window, and the lower
part a door. It is a good plan to
hang tho doors on hinges at top, so
they can swing either In or out, so
that tho doors will always remain
Free
Bond in 1& signatures,
cut from packages of Cheek t Neill
Porto 1th-o Co IT we will s I y.m post-
Iplld n fin« pair of selaaors absolute freau
make thts and other otters t« net you id'try < i
famous Cheek A Neal It rand Porto Hl.o CotTe.« *ti««-W H**nd ^
richest popular *rloed paeaags coffee <>u the market the
finest coffee for the least money. Moderate In price, but
excellent tn quality.
65 premiums given absolutst v free
toall users of Cheek 4 N««al Porto Wh o Coffee from hiuul- J
Homo Dinner .sets l«> Hewing Miu-hlne*. «ufTre put up in A
Heal.-.l i It' |.ii.•!< . ;•••«. ;i:< uti ' in " i i • I '
sold by di alers everywhere, iluy ii parkago to day
CHEEK <L NEAL COFFEE CO.
NASHVILLC, TENN.
HAD DONE HIS PART.
George Not Willing to Give All Credit
to Providence.
Before Frederick H Smith, the sec
retary of the International eommltte
of tie- Young Men s Christian associa-
tion, set out on his evangelistic tour
[ of the world, he was entertained at
I dinner by a number of his admirers,
j At the end of the dinner Mr. Smith
made an address, choosing for Ills
j subject, "Modesty." Among othei
j tilings he s.iid:
j "Some men are vain and conceit en
r he\oud belief 1 know a man who
j went walking with his wife once on
j ihe bank of a stream, lie was a care
I less, awkward, loose-Jointed man. ami
suddenly, his foot slipping, he lei
( overboard.
I "Though the water was deep and
j cold, the man got out after a few mill j
utes' struggling and grunting, and his
j wife, as she hurried him homeward
said:
"'George, yo. oir?ht to be thankful
Providence that your life was-
h's always been my opinion that
everybody spoke American while the
Tower of liabel was building, and
that the Iiord let the good people
keep right on speaking it. So w'.ien
you've got anything to say to me I tajns with n rapidity equal to tlint
want you to say It In language t.iat the best (rallied cavalrv.
will grade regular on the Chicago
board of trade.—From ' Letters of a
Self Made Man to Ills Soli." by
\ $wift Crowd
The Norw P^n corps of kilters Is
a body of sollders armed with rifles,
who can be maneuvered upon ice or on
skies over the snowfields of the mouti
saved.'
"'Yes. yes.' CJcorge answered. 'Prov
ideiice, of course, w as vi ry kind, but
I was very clever, too.' "
Worldly Indeed.
"A remarkable grace," said Henry
Pliipps, the Pittsburg stei I rnagnat
A.
Txio'*
9X10
n x in
lA X lA-
Ground Floor Plan.
A. brood
pen
IS. pens for litters
for fattening hogs;
feed box; F. feed
George Horace Lorinicr
Kings go to war for the
tint fjols go to law.
Rest and Sleep.
Few escape those miseries <
•r a I Kill cold, a distressing
a In-
nigh.
Miiny remedies are recommend;'!. but :ny last visit there a gnniek <
von
More Flexible and Lasting,
won't shake out or blow <iut. by using
Defiant c Starch you obtain better
nulls than possible with any other
brand and one-third inure tor same
money.
Cheap Substitute
Sawdust Is now used by :;on:o i'aris
restaurants, the Gaulols says, as a
dressing for cutlets, instead of bread
crumbs. It only costs 30 cents a sack.
They sure do knock colds out—
'beatham's Laxative Tablets, guarau
teed.
When the ofliee seeks the man lie
has a strangle hold on it.
No chrome? or cheap premiums, but
a better quality and one-third • more
of Dellunce Starch for the sain.* price
of other starches.
Milekest aud best of all is
Simmon's Cough Syrup. Soothing and
iieiling to the lungs and bronchial pa
-•ages, it stops the cough at once and
gives you welcome rest und peaceful
tie !p.
; Why There Are Spinsters
\ cold blooded stat i. ti can in V\ a h
ingtcn has figured out that t'.ieiv are
l.GOM.OOO more males than females
in this cohntry and sees no excuse for
old maids. Put what proportion of
■ the.-'e males are fit to become bus
! bands, after all? Minneapolis Tri-
bune.
thing about this vessel is that il Is
made of metal and yet has the ca-
pacity of compression ami expansion
to a very great degree without im-
pairing its usefulness. The materials
with which this has been heretofore
done in the construction of bellows
philanthropist, "was once com I und like devices have all had Ih.- dls-
advantage that they were short lived
when any attempt was made to make
them hold certain chemicals which
Prof. Fulton makes use of. and here-
tofore it was nev< r thought that met-
al was available for the purpose. But
iIlls is what the professor has suc-
ceeded in doing, and the vessel he has
designed Is of thin sheet metal, with
deeply corrugated sides. The chem-
icals are sealed within the walls of
this container, and as the expansion
and compression takes place the
movement is transformed into power,
stored up by means of a spring and
made to operate tho clock.
mi In the Scottish highlands. This |
•ilace. with the story of Its cotuposi 1
tion. is s;till repeated In Scotland. On)
- tobli
chile !
with a
Scot ti
man wno
e pea ted it
cha'u
me about
I kle.
' "lie said that
composed ihc m
friend. It ran:
| 'Oh. gl'e us rivers o' whisk
I d< r8 "• snuff, un* tons « tobacco, au
I may our children's children be lords
and lairds to the latest generation.
I "The othei Scot listened let thb
' /race with profound interest. At tin
| end he said, after a moment's sllenci :
; " Weel. It's a goot grace, a \«r>
; ;oot grace, but—man. it's a warldl
"Am '.sii
A R;iro Good 1 hing.
• A1.L1-.N S FOOT F, ASK. ana
cv
it .«•(< lie
. trillv Siiy I >wul«i I'l-t have lieen without^ :;i
had I known the relief It would
cive my a 1 r s feet. 1 Ihlnk il a rare K"od
tiling for anyone havie.g soi e nr tIreil feet.—
Mrs Matil '• lloitwcrt. ProMiienei- K 1."
Sold by all Druggist a, -5c. Ask to day.
Strang? Band of People
V band of curious ImmlRiMiH* is
liijieVi* of Pnitwl Htiite*. of ehnrneter /|ini* tli- authorities of l.ea hill.
t«miM*rnte habith. who eaii *pei\k. nml mul f
information opniv to lie- They arrived on a Batavler boat fiom
Rotterdam on December 1, bringing
four caravans, some horses aud a tar
paulin covered wagon. The band con-
sists of seven men. six women and a
pack of dirty children They speak
a remarkable dialect that nobody has
been able to Interpret After lauding
they camped on Tower Hill and then
tranipel imo Kssex. going through
Whitechapel. Warn tend Flr.ts. Leyton
• 'Miie. Walt ham stow and Cblngford.
They look Jewish, but the Jewish au-
thorities of Whitechap. I do not think
t i.ey are .lew s, esjgeclAlly^ as they eat
11.1con The pelic ajv^fnvltng til
The Star in the West
\\. i 1.1 has lost Its old eontenl
Kinb-d lot us and nervous tiacils
leads on; her sharp comma
ei plains and tal.le lands
win. watered continent.
lis the poor in spirit blest V
i in spirit win their own
the war - shrill bugl.- blow t
the iiic<iii:K baniiei thrown
i .'miiik in the west:
(t" :
un.I temperate
write Knab'h. . - ..
eruitina ottteer. Po-tottii'e builillnv Oklah
I it v Ilk la or Tu Un *i ' Twi Kniil. Shnw
in* ..r Culhrie. Ok 11*
Thompsan'j F.y Watsr
I Who sa> s the
n,e • a 11 b is
strong.
Work for tin
I i inward tie I
life has lost its
ek inherit he
\i ti
wall and «aiil< n ■
-I. all whittle) K"
bails
olto
in A tlai
Many fho formerly snwM IO?CiJars nowsmoVe
LEWIS'SiHGLE BINDER
STRAIGHTS6 CIGAR
vour J.v.iber or dtrp. k frnm I n. lory, t'oorla. Ill
NEW PENSION LAWS "22
BOOK-KEEPING. X";-."
pert". CraduafH pla lor unt
v'fi.ui.1 iti buildtn^N Mini equip: \
CU.MMURCIAL t Ut.!.l lit., DA '..
:iu«tii by
•fuiale.l.
lit. HALI.A^
rEXAst
•a li nn point lo pwlift
•' ♦
MIXED FMMIHB
|,J WMT ilAiSiSE
RiKGHiNG
"
Bicj Teljgrapit^^yineofi
\ -out a tnlUion tVtyVi&e- a'
tiv r the woi M s teliV'taph > - cry ]
: went y-fonr hours. AccorulnR to some
returns recently Issued, the number !
of telegrams dispatched In all conn |
tri v- in I'.kKl ien ! I the eu.umou
total of I S1S.4TI. cireat Uritain
: T^,rr.!'awyags « >• -> w"h •• • .t;. -. <u
Canada thl* yt«r. patches, tile I'lllted S! ' e l- < 'ciri
|fapnli •• l'li*ate Unn- r. ; .w!n* totoplr'lilrt , ,, ,
la i ba • ltd • • ol Huv«mb«r " " 1 • 1 • " •
• \p. are l«ouinltobe more timo pi cased with tli« third Willi 1S. 1 1 1.1 • • (lermutl)
Cn.ii r-.ui'-ot u o i ii-«,. , ijeluiani .n.| ltal\ follow
Cost, vood, water, bay In ebandaeei Beaoou, %
cbu.vbea. market*convntfu'. in lip- o; der tiaUK i It Is -! (> \eai
AMrtffnrlBformsttoBio super!iinm.i.'iu -f .iii^ the tirsi tel.aphlc messagl
mmmii ottawa cibk^i*.P>auiliurtsed LaDiullaa
'..MTijincin Asrcni ' > « r. t••-.!. N< . iw w. Was s nt by the Morse tern irom
N:,,tu«ircii K.iu... D sii-~.it:. lHltlmore to Washliminn.
Plea'c eay where you <ww thin adTertl*Moeat.
Prayer Not Appreciated.
! Kyrle Beilew. the actor, carries a
I uiitdsome sold watch, the gilt ol
fbHirge Tyler, inanagiti)! director ol
! ,1m theatrical firm of Ueblcr A: C«
The watch was presented to Mr Bel
hw shortly after contracts wirt
: imied net ween the actor and tin
I manager Must a little mkep ex
I phlllied Mi Tyler. Mr. Hellew seenieii
j ip.lte overwhefmed and could scareei.%
I i \press his appreciation. "Look in
I .ii|e uke casi-." said Mr. Tyler, there -
little Inscription there. The wntel
is opened, and this is what M- Bel
w read: "God bless
id make him a good ac
Beer Kegs of Old Steel Rails.
A Joliet, 111., Inventor believes tliat
a process of making beer kegs out of
old steel rails is to make liim wealthy.
In his valise this inventor carries a
small model beer keg made out of i>ol-
ished steel, which lie says will within
i a few years do awav with the old and
cumbersome wooden kegs entirely.
! The steel is only one-sixteenth of an
1 inch thick and the kegs weighs hut a
| few pounds. Its inventor claims that
it will stand three times more pres-
sure than a wooden keg and that it
can bo made for one-third the price
; of the latter.
The keg is made in two pieces, the
joint being hidden by a steel band.
The bunghole Is hermetically sealed
| i y a patent contrivance which
quires a key to unlock it. The hole is
graduated to ttt any size of spigot.
: Any kind of steel is used in its con-
struction. but the inventor is now
using old steel rails. The Interior of
the keg is covered with a pitch prep-
aration used in wooden kegs to keep
j the beer fiom tasting of the metal.
Make Cotton of Wood.
, There was a time when cotton
i grew. now it is made. The French
• have acqulr
Hell-
y lei
Time
-ak«
Vmen.
\i
the novel art* of cotton
making, and to do so use the cellulose
of a lit* tree. Can a tig tree bear this-
tles? Perhaps not. but a fir tree can
grow cotton. The fibers of the tree
u;0 pulverized by special machinery •
and treated with steam and bisulphate |
of soda for thirty six hours under a
heavy pressure. The mess iu then
washed and bleached, passed between
rollers to dry it. and reheated with
chloride of zinc and acid, to which*
lias been added a little castor oil to
give a consistent paste. Thins cellu-
ed In;
•titer barrel;
; <J. trough:
closed and pigs can go in or out at any
time. If the doors are required to be
kept open all the time they can be
hung up by a wire to the joist. By
having a windlass above the feed alley
it can be used for a slaughter room
and when not used as such it may be .
closed by having trap doors above.
Planting Acorns and Walnuts.
E. M. II What Is the proper time
ard method of planting seeds of the
oak and the walnut?
Walnuts and acorns should either
be planted as soon as they are ripe
in the autumn or kept where they
will not dry out, and then planted in
the spring, as once they become dry
theii germinating power Is much less-
ened and sometimes destroyed. As
the soil may be now too much frozen
to plant the nuts this year, they may
be put in a box spread out In thin
layers alternately with layers ol j
moist sand. The box should then bt
buried outside to prevent drying out
and to allow the frost to crock the
nuts, or the box may be kept in a
cellar, but with less satisfactory re- |
suit - Another good plan Is to make,
a shallow hole in the ground outside j
spread out the nuts and cover with
two or three inches of soil and leave
them there until spring, in the spring j
the nuts and acorns may either be j
planted where they ar * to remain per j
manently or else in rows three feel
apart. The acorns should not be plant
ed more than two inches deep, and
the walnuts not more than three
inches.
Peppermint Culture.
C. H. H.— Please describe the soi
nnd cultivation best suited to the
growing of peppermint.
Peppermint succeeds best in moist
soil, mucky ground being particularly
suitable for it. It will also succeed
well in rich loamy soil Shallow
trenches are opened about 2,/& feel
apart and the roots or root stocks o
the peppermint are laid along the fur
row which is then closed up. Tin
ground is kept thoroughly cultivate!
during the summer to ensure a goot
growth, and hoeing and hand-weedinf
are necessary to keep out weeds. Tin
crop is cut just when the first flower?
are showing, and the plants cured ir
the same way as hay. Kvery three 01
four vears a new plantation is made
as peppermint exhausts the soil con
siderably.
Butter Will Not Gather.
\. S. I have lost several churning*
because of not being able to get tin
butter to gather in the churn. I have
no such trouble when the cows are or.
pasture. '
C. Glover, Vice Pres. Milwaukee,
Wis., Business Woman's Association, is
another one of the million women who
have been restored to health by using
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
"Dear Mrs. Pink ham : I was married for several years and no children
blessed my home. The doctor said 1 had a complication of female trouble!
and 1 could not have any children unless I could be cured. He tried to cure
me, but after experimenting for several months, my husband became dis-
gusted, and one night when we noticed a testimonial of a woman who had
been cured of simuar trouble through the use of Lyilla K« I*lnkliani*9
Vegetable Compound, lie went out ami bought a bottle for me. I used
your medicine for three and one half months, improving steadily in health,
and in twenty-two months a child came. I cannot fully express the joy and
thankfulness that is in my heart. Our home is a different place now. as wo
have something to live for, and all the credit is due to Lyrilii 10. IMnk hum's
Vegetable Compound. Yours very sincerely, Mas. L. C. Glover, 614 (Jrov®
St., Milwaukee, Wis." Vice President, Milwaukee Business Woman's Ass'n.
Women should not fail to profit by the experience of these two
women; Just as surely as tliey were cured of the troubles enume-
rated in their letters, just so certainly will Lydia K. I*ink ham's
Vegetable Compound cure others who suffer from womb troubles
inflammation of the ovaries, kidney troubles, nervous excitability,
and nervous prostration ; remember that it is Lydia K. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound that is curing women, aud don't allow
any druggist to sell you anything clso in its place.
An Indlnna L«ady Tells of a Wonderful Cures— .
"Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam : It is* pleasuifev'
for me to write and tell what your wonderful,
medicine has done for me. I was rfjek for '
three years with change of life,Hand my
physician thought a cancerous condition of-
the womb. During these three year* l
suffered untold agony. . ''
"I cannot tind words in which to ex-
press my bad feelings. 1 did not expect to
ever see another well day. I read some ct the
testimonials reeomending your medicine and
decided to write to you and give your treat*
ment a trial.
44 Before I bad taken half a bottle of
\/ ' w Lydia K. Pinkliam's Vegetable Com-
, f poiuid, 1 began to sleep. I have taken uow
/ / \ \ six bottles and am so well I can do all kinds
J / j { of work."—Mrs. Lizzie IIinkle, Salem, Ind.
If there is anything in your ease about which you would like
special advice, write freely to Mrs. Pink ham. She can surely help
you, for no person in America can speak from a wider experience
in treating female ills. Address is Lynn, Mass.; lier advice is free
und always helpful.
iflr nnn FORFEIT " wn tminnt forthwith pro«tnc« the original letter* and signatures of
&3UUU
above lealioioiuals, which will i>r
PILES
NO MONEY TILL CURED. 27 V«BS ESJMUSHED.
i application.
x"" •w - - - -Louis. Mo ,
I and la'io Osk St., Kansas City. Mo-
BVII.r>I*0. HE8T XQCIPM rNT.
tfiiJA Path Total KiponaM for Sli Mouth*' Court*
tpOU in MookkMplnj, Shorthand, i'anmanaliip and ,
If yoa ur* willing to work to pay board 1'onltiou« ,
corad. I' r«a u of t«it book* Railroad fare paid
Writa today for full particular* Addraaa
1'Boa Yf Un tk. Praal Oklahoma City, 0. T.
P ATFWTS that PROTECT
M f\ M. JLrfl w J. J 72.P. Book Mailed Free
S. 8. * A. B. LACEY, Patent Att'yt, Washington, D. C.
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment
cured Cats, liurns, Uruines.
ALWAYS
CALL FOR A CIGAR
BY ITS NAME
"cremo"
MEANS MORE THAN
ANY OTHER NAME
BROWH BANDS GOOD FOR PRESENTS
' L*rg*at Scllrr in tha World."
I W. N. U.—Oklahoma City—No. 2, 1905
Tlie failure to butler to smliei
In the churn is usually due to attempt
i K to churn the cream at a low tern
peratlire. The trouble may b? over
mine by slightly raising the tempera
lure, or by ihe addition a littu w.i
t T at a temperature ol 85 or 90 tie
j rces Falir. it is also a good plan tc
add a little dry salt to the cream
| The solution of the salt in the watei
. ... , 1 of tin' creani seems to affect the vis
lose matter is then passed through n , . , ,. , ,, ..
, .. . I cus tv n such a wav that the forma
• I...... .. u liwli iii'iulnnnu n Inriinil I 1
tion of butter granules is greatly fa
ill aw plate, which produces a thread
having an exceedingly close
bjv. .1 lo cotton
St.
Jacobs
Oil
Soreness
and
Stiffness
From cold, hard labor or exercise,
relaxes the stitfness and tho sore-
ness disappears.
The Old Monk Cure Prlcc, 25c. und 50c
?tTTiTtTiTTninimmmiiHrnninnngiiinni
rarami:w.i;
CURES WNERC III CISC FAILS ,
Ileal < uii|fh Syrup. laaina O'Kxl. L
lu time, bold by druimlaU. d
aEKHHEQaEK* j ■
W. N. U.— Oklahoma City—No. 2, 1905
BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH
3YRUP cures couclis and colds.
Politeness in the E^st.
In the battle of Fenghunngeli ;ir
flu Japanese look atnoiiu' their eap
lures two • r.oimous Cliin. r. \a*« > ol
thirteenth centui> \vorkmaii>hip Or
learning thai the> were a pr« >ent u
Cieii. Kouropatkin Otn Kurok
promptly dispatched them to the Uu>'
sian outposts with a polite not end-
Ing "Mav the flowers of frien hip New Motor Ambulance.
blossom high In these vase.- In \ bullet-proot motor-ambulance was
Kouropatkin s t pI> he n fem-d to the inspected on Nov. 24 by the director I
lapanese as • ;i peopb of generous I general of ih« Army Medical Corps,
friends whom I visited in peat e of | tn Kngl-uid. says the London Ulustrat•
magnanimous foes in war. at whosu
hands even defeat is no disgrace •
militated.
The Only Kind.
Victim- I thought you said that
/and was well watered.
Heal Estate Agent—80 it i>.
Victim- Nonsense. There's 110 wa
,'er there at all except cistern
Heal Estate Agent Well, what's
that but well water?
Peace at Last.
He—And are your father and moth
irbn good terms now?
She oh. yes. They are the best
if irlenda since they were divorced.
ed News. The idea is to supply a
first-aid station capable of easy loco-
motion in. the field. When at work
Major 1'uMlser's armor-plates are ex- ~f .he'oiher ih-iw liable'to'be at
tended like wide wings, behind which | (;ke(, ,n glmllar mannw?
the surgeons can work in safetv
Worms or Tuberculosis in Hen.
Recently I killed a L'year-old her
ard on opening her found that tin
whole insldes were covered wilt
small growths about the size of £
bean. I opened the growths and founr
them to be filled with blood and wa
ter. The bowels were hard. Please
tell 1110 what was the trouble. Arc
^16 oz. iqctsy
the ambulance electric lamp (by the
Union Electric Company 1. the carlton*
nie placed low and the radiance is
This may be an intestinal disease
caused by worms, or it may be tuber
culosis. If the latter. Immediate and
throw" hp 10 the large shade, whence | t„orough ,,|filnfectlon of the poultry
it is reflected, affording a diffused and
shadowless light to the surgical oper-
The demise of the oldest inhabitant
can usually be attributed to the fact
that he was born too many years ago.
bouse Is requisite. A symptom of tu
berculosis might be an emaciated ap-
pearance. As a safeguard against the
possibility of worms mix a small quan
tlty of cantonln in the soft food of the
hens If the disease is tuberculosis It
is certainly most contagious.
ITVthe purest ckaneJf starch mad*
H is lm of injurious chemicals.
& car. bemused where ordinarily yooiwould be afraid
to ose starch of any kind.
That's Defiance. Your grocer sells ii
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.,
OMAHA. NEB.'
' li
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Vernon, John C. The Kiowa Sentinel. (Kiowa, Indian Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, January 20, 1905, newspaper, January 20, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc274678/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.