The Oklahoma Safeguard. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 19, 1905 Page: 2 of 4
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Analysis of Medicines Op«n to All.
"There is no public demand and
there la not the slightest public nec-
essity tor a law compelling the publi-
cation of the formula of proprietary
medicine*," says the Committee on
legislation of the Proprietary Asso-
ciation. "Every Health Commissioner
and every Pure Food Commissioner
In the country, as wall an every pri-
vate physician or chemist. If he
pleases, has the right to make an
analysis of any proprietary medicine
and to publish the result and to tell
the public what he thinks, and there
la nothing In the world to prevent
•nch action. But that Is not what the
agitator* for such legislation w%nt,
Their object la to destroy '/ie sala of
such remedies entirely."
Be Alive
If a boy is to succeed in life's bat-
tle for bread and position among
those at he top he must be alive.
If he Is a cigarette fiend he will never
be anything or anybody but a com-
mon drudge, unless he quickly breaks
the habit. Success tells what a young
man must do to win.
"No young man can hope to advance
rapidly who larks un enterprising,
progressive spirit. Indeed, enterprise
is a resuitjlte to employment. No
one wunts to employ a youth who
lacks push. He must be alive to
and in touch with the spirit of the
hour, or he is not wanted anywhere.
The enterprising employer wuucs
every employe to share his spirit.
The unenterprising business man
reels all the more keenly the nee J of
assistance from those who can make
up for his falling Force, pushing,
dynamic qualities are everywhere in
sager demand, while the dwadllng. In-
competent. unprogreaalve wait In vain
for a start for promotion.
OKLAHOMA SAFEGUARD.
C. L BUCHANAN.
GUTHRIE,
OKLA.
NEW 8TATT NEWS
Terlton, In Pawnee county. Is to
have a bank—the State Bank of
Terlton.
The contract for the construction
of the new Scottish Rite temple at
South McAlester has been let to C.
W. Clark of Little Rock for *125,000.
MAKING RUBIES FOR A DIME
Perfect Gems Turned Out by Two
Seattle Scientists
In a little dark basement at the cor
ner of Fifth avenue and Jackson
street, two French chemists, with the
assistance of Dr. Horace Byers. pro-
fessor of chemistry at the state uni-
versity, are turning out rubies which
are pronounced as good as are de^
veloped In natures laboratory, and
at a price averaging ten cents each.
The experiments have been con-
ducted for several weeks, and every
effort has been made to keep the
matter secret.
Some of the gems turned out have
oeen examined at the university, and
declared to be genuine.
The place of manufacture Is fitted
tip with modern appliances for chem-
Untll a week ago the chemists
were able to produce a gem perfect
In every respect, except that It lacked
'he color of the genuine. It was at
this point that Dr. Byers was called
in.
He took the stone to the university
'.aboratry and there made an analysis
and discovered the defect. The In-
formation was given to the French-
men and a perfect stone was the re-
sult.—Seattle Times.
The contract price for a 12-Inch
gun for a battleship 1b $51,644, and for
an 8-inch gun 919,000.
The Japanese government has sixty
million dollars on deposit In the banks
of New York city.
On the Trull
«I followed the
trail from Texas
tuiB * Fish Bnnd ™
Pommel Sticker ***"
when windy, a rain eoat when it reined,
and for a cover at ni* ht if wt fot to bed,
and I wfll mt that I •
comfort out of >
will ey that I have gotten mora
" ~it of your slicker than any other
that I ever owned."
(Tb« Mm* ■ <) «ddr M of the writer of (hie
mnaoliclted l.iwr b«Mn application.)
Wet Weather Oarmenta for Ridinf, Walk-
ing, Working or 8porting.
HIGHEST AWARD WORLD S FAIR. 1904.
BaHpHttiM
A. J. TOWER CO.
sorros, v.s.a.
TOWER CANADIAN
CO., Limited
IEWIS,SINGLE
VM-ir, BINDER
blmwjarcigar always reliable
Tour jobber or direct from Factory, feorta, iu
JAW*
Antiseptic ©
FOR WOMEN
nunrelottily suc-
isfal. thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
•tops discharges, Deals inflammation and local
" "" ~ " 'catarrh.
wived in para
■rater, and la (ar more cleansing, healing, aerencwia)
ind economical than liquid antiseptics (or all
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
* For aale st druggists, 00 cents a box.
Trial Box and Book of lostmctlone Free.
%*£ b. Pastor Company Boston, Mao*.
$16 AN
ACRE
in Western
Canada i9 the
amount many
farmers will
realize from
their wheat
crop this year.
2S Bushels to the Acre Will be the
Average Yield of Wheat.
The land that this was grown on cott many of
the farmers absolutely nothing, while those
who wished to add to the 160 acres the Govern-
ment grants, can buy land adjoining at from so
to S10 an acre.
Climate splendid, achool convenient, railways
close at hand, taxea low.
Send for pamphlet "*)th Century Canada"
and full particulars regarding rate, etc., to
Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa,
Canada, or to the following authorized
Canadian Government Agent—J. S. Crawford,
No. 126 W. Ninth Street, Kansas City, Missouri.
(Mention this paper.)
finest linens.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 42, 1905
A hotel and blacksmith shop at
Mutual were destroyed by fire last
week.
Captain Ira L. Reeves and Fred
Btler, both of Muskogee, will soon
begin the publication of a monthly
magazine called the Southwest De-
velopment News.
A gambling house In Muskogee was
raided lar.t week by deputy United
States marshals and fifteen men and
the paraphernalia were gathered in.
Governor Ferguson last week hon-
ored a requisition from the governor
of Illinois for the return to that state
of Harry Deeds, who Is under Indict
ment for murder. Deeds was located
In Caddo county.
The United States Intruders' court
at Ardmore udjourned after being In
sesslou a week. One hundred and
twenty cases. involving the possessory j
right, to Indian lands, was heard by |
Judge Bennett, who reserved his de-
cision.
The plant of the Shawnee Light and
Power company has been sold to C.
A. Freuoff cf New York city. The sale
was made by the receiver, J. C. Fisher,
on an order from the district court.
The price paid was 1108,000.
Lee Black, a boy of seventeen years,
and Rex Woodruff were arrested at
Lawton upon the charge of selling
liquor to Indians. Black was able to
give bond nnd was released, but
Woodruff was unable to secure ball
and was taken to the federal jail at
Guthrie.
RAISEO FROM A DEATH BED.
Mr. Pitts, One* Pronounced Incurabls,
Has Bson Well Thres Years.
K. K Pitta, 60 Hathaway at., Skow-
Began, Me., saya: "Seven years ago
my back ached and I was so run down
that I was
laid up four
months. I had
night sweats and
fainting s pel la
and dropped to
90 pounds. The
urine passed ev-
ery few minutes
with intense pain
and looked Ilk*
blood. Dropsy
aet in snd the
doctors decided I could not live. My
wife got me using Dean's Kidney
Pills, and as they helped me I took
heart, kept on and was cured so thor-
oughly thai I've been well three
years."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.*
Foster Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
BUSTLE* GOWNS AFFECT GAIT
The Grecian Bend, It Is Predicted.
Will Follow the New Fashion
Soon we shall see whether woman's
walk is to be changed by the wirea
which an "unimpeachable authority"
says are to be faatened in the backs
of the fall skirts to make them set out.
It is predicted the Greciun bend will
come back with the wires, and that
glrl8 will j<o mincing along on their
toes as they did a decade or so ago.
Next week v/lll aet tie the momentoua
question, for at the meeting of the
National Dreasmakers' association
many of those "bustle gowns" will be
exhibited, and It will be interesting
to note how the models move about
in them. Mrs. Baker, the president
of the aa8ociatlon, says that wired
gowns are the latest things in Paris,
and that all the frocks are flounced
and frilled in a most extravagant
way. Two r.r three hundred dollars
Is a mere bagatelle, she says, for
something to cover the female form.
"Nothing to wear" will be the pre-
dicament of irany unless Mrs. Baker
exaggerates.—New York Press.
The Washita Valley Trust company
has been organised at Chickasha, with
a capital stock of 9100,000. The com-
pany is composed entirely of local
men. Besides doing a general trust
company busiueva, inoui ttuce and air
stract departments will be maintained.
The taxpayers' league of Lawton
has employed attorneys to bring In-
junction proceedings to prevent J. O.
Severn* from carrying out a sewer
contract recently granted him by the
city council. The league objects to
the Indebtedness. About 150,000 Is
Involved.
The commissioners of Kiowa county
have voted to release the taxes on
damaged nnJ destroyed property at
Snyder, where a tornado did so much
damage last spring. On destroyed
property the taxes were wiped out en-
tirely; on damaged property, the
taxes were reduced fifty per cent, a
total reduction of $7,037.
An Honest Opinion.
Mineral, Idaho, Oct. 16th.— (Spe-
cial.)—That a sure cure has been dis-
covered for those sciatic pains that
make so many lives miserable is the
firm opinion of Mr. D. S. Colson, a
well-known resident of this place, and
he does not hesitate to say that cure
is Dodd's Kidney Pills. The reason
Mr. Colson is so Arm in his opinion
is that he had those terrible pains and
is cured. Sneaking of thp mattpr he
says:
"I am only too happy to say Dodd's
Kidney Pills have done me lots of
good. I had awful pains in my hip so
I could hardly walk. Dodd's Kidney
Pills stopped It entirely. I think they
are a grand medicine."
All Sciatic and Rheumatic pains are
caused by Uric Acid in the blood.
Dodd's Kidney Pills make healthy kid-
neys and healthy kidneys strain all
the Uric Acid out of the blood. With
the cause removed there can be no
Rheumatism or Sciatica.
OKLAHOMA IS FALLING IN LINE
Merchants of Lawton are fighting an
ordinance passed by the city council
recently. The ordinance In question
Is one prohibiting the display of wares
In front of mercantile establishments.
Some of th^ merchants were using the
greater part of the sidewalks in front
of their places of business to show
goods, and the council sought to rem-
edy this nuisance. A number of ar-
rests have been made, and it is prob-
able the law will be tested in the
courts.
The Chickasaw legislature, in ses-
sion at Tishomingo, is busy consider-
ing the plan of disposing of the segre
gated coal lands in that nation. It
Is estimated that the lands would
bring ten million dollars if sold for
t25 an acre, a minimum price fixed
by members of the tribe.
At a meeting of the territorial board
of health at Guthrie last week the
yellow fever quarantine was raised.
Several months ago the board quar-
antined against Arkansas, Louisiana
and Texas.
Mrs. Anna Rugg. charged with the
murder of her husband at Calumet a
few weeks ago, is still being held at
the federal Jail at Guthrie. The Judge
before whom she had her preliminary
hearing fixel her bail at $5,000, which
she is unable to furnish.
Fire at I .one Wolf destroyed the
saloon of Dunn Bros. Loss, $600.
The Rock Island agent at Red Rock
was held up and robbed a few even-
ings ago by two masked men.
While Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Edwards
were absent from home, thieves en-
tered their residence and stole dia-
monds valued at $1,500.
Twenty-one horses and ten buggies
were burned at Newkirk as a result of
an intoxicated man entering a livery
bam with a lighted pipe.
C. H. Neal of Pottawatomie county,
charged with the murder of J. F.
Fields last December, has been acquit-
ted by a Jury and released from Jail.
A territorial charter has been is-
sued to the Oklahoma and Indian Ter-
ritory Baptists Orphans' home at
Oklahoma City.
The Davis Banking company has
been incorporated at Davis, with a
capital stock of $500,000, $100,000 of
which has been paid in.
It has been announced by the board
Growth of Purebred Business Shows
Advancement
"Oklahoma stockmen are beginning
to show more Interest in purebred cat-
tle," said F. C. Burtls, professor of
animal husbandry at the Oklahoma
agricultural college, Stillwater, to a
representative of the Kansas City
Journal, "an-1 it will not be long be-
fore that territory will make a good
showing in the big Btock shows of the
country. The college at Stillwater is
doing what it can to convince the
farmers thnt fine cattle can be raised
there as well as those of the long-
homed range variety, and we keep
them advised of our successful experi-
ments. A gradual Improvement of the
stock of Oklahoma may be expected.
"One of tho things which we have
to contend with is the old fallacy that
horses cannot be successfully raised
in the territory. Our experiments
have shown the uttery folly of this old
theory, yet every now and then we
hear from men who wish to know
whether It would pay them to ta/.e
their stock to Oklahoma. While we
have experimented with various kinds
of horses nnd had success, we have
been particularly fortunate with Per-
cherons, and from a pair of mares,
bought In Missouri four years ago,
we have secured approximately $5,000
worth of fine draft horses."
COFFEE NEURALGIA.
Leaves When You Quit and Use Pos-
turn.
A lady who unconsciously drifted
Into nervous prostration brought on by
coffee, says:
"I have been a coffee drinker all
my life, and used It regularly, three
times a day.
"A year or two ago I became sub-
ject to nervous neuralgia, attacks of
nervous headache and general ner-
vous prostration' which not only In-
capacitated me for doing my house-
work, but frequently made it neces-
sary for me to remain In a dark room
for two or three days at a time.
"I employed several good doctors,
one after the other, but none of them
was able to give me permanent relief.
"Eight months ago a friend sug-
gested that perhaps coffee was the
cause of my troubles and that I try
Postum Food Coffee and give up the
old kind. I am glad I took her advice,
for my health has been entirely re-
stored. I have no more neuralgia, nor
have I had one solitary headache in
all these eight months. No more of
my days are wasted In solitary con-
finement in a dark room. I do all my
own work with ease. The flesh that
I lost during the years of my nervous
prostration has come back to me
during these months, and I am once
more a happy, healthy woman. I en-
close a list of names of friends who
can vouch for the truth of the state-
ment." Name given by Postum Co.,
grocers.
BUT ONE STATE
SENATOR BEVERIDGE, IN A LET-
TER TO DELEGATE McGUIRE,
SAYS IT 18 THE ONLY WAY
predicts statehood at this session
Calle Separate State Plan "Tomfooi
•ry"—A Scheme to Prevent State-
hood—Oklahoma Cannot be Admit-
ted Singly, Without Indian Territory
PAWNEE: Delegate Bird 8. Mc-
Gulre has received a letter from Sena-
tor Albert J. Beveridge of Indiana, de
daring that he need have no feur re-
garding the paswige of a bill granting
statehood to Oklahoma and Indian
Territory at the coming session of
rongress. Mr. Beveridge is chair-
man of the senate committee on terri-
tories, and is one of the original joint
statehood advocates. The letter to
Mr. McGuIre follows:
"On my return from my vacation
Shipp (Mr. Beverldge's secretary, who
visited Oklahoma at the time) told
me all about your magnificent state-
hood convention, and had many pleas-
ant things to say about you.
"You need have no fear. Oklahoma
and Indian Territory combined into
one state will be admitted as a single
American commonwealth at the com-
ing session of congress.
"By the way. what does all that
"tomfoolery" mean over in the Indian
Territory? Write me about It. It
looks to me like a scheme to prevent
statehood of any kind.
"They know, just as well as I do,
that no bill making Indian Territory
a state by itself can pass. If a bill
making Oklahoma a state by Itself
cannot pass, and it cannot, certainly
a bill making Indian Territory a
state by itself cannot pass. Let me
know all about it*'
Concrete ties for •ailittads which
have been .•-led on the Lake Shore
line have proven a failure.
Tited, Neivous Mothers
He l i"ro«<. Itnll Hlu« I.arm* J-ox package 5 Make Unhappy Homes-Their Condition Irritates
oen'.s The Runt Company. South lW-nd. Ind.
The government ha* ordered tin-J
making of £00.000 dress coats at Philu-J
delphia for the army.
Both Husband and Children—How Thousands
of Mothers Have Been Saved From Nervous
Prostration and Made Strong and Well.
An international exhibit Is to be
opened by the king of Spain at Bar-
celona next May.
"Acetylene Jones."
See his advertisement in this pape>
and write him to-day for free booklet
Diamond drills have bored holes in
the earth in India 2.000 feet. The ob-
ject is to strike coal.
The government of India proposes
to expend 150 million dollars in irri-
gation during the next twenty years.
Do Your Clothes Look Yellow?
Then une Defiance Starch, it win
keep them white—16 ox. for 10 cents.
Italy proposes to exclude all rail-
way building material in order to en-1
courage home manufacturers.
The largest dry dock In the world
will lift a khIp weighing 24.447 tons,
and wus made in Pennsylvania.
Acetylene Gas.
All country people will be interest
ed in reading about it in another par
of this paper.
An observatory In Peru has made a
perfect photograph of Eros, the near-
est heavenlv body to the sun.
I am sure Pino'* Cure for Consumption saved
my life three years ngtt. Mas. Thor. hohbins,
Maple Street. Norwich. N. Y.. Feb. IT. 18UU.
In a letter to S. T. Bledsoe of Mus-
kogee on the same subject Senator
Beveridge says, in part:
"I do not asume to speak for any-
body but myself. And thus speaking,
it is ray emphatic opinion that the
bill making Oklahoma and Indian
Territory one state under the name
of Oklahoma will pass both the house
and the senate, and become a law
very early in the next session. Cer-
tainly no bill making Indian Territory
separate state has the slightest chance
of passage. Most assuredly it ought
not to have. This question has been
thoroughly debuted by the people of
the two territories and overwhelming-
ly decided in favor of the only wise
and rational course—the reunion oK
the two territories under the original
boundaries and their admission when
thus reunited as one splendid Ameri-
can commonwealth.
"At the last session of congress the
house and the senate were for the
proposition to unite Indian Territory
and Oklahoma and admit them as a
single state. I think that even a
larger majority will be in favor of the
same thing at the coming session.
"Men in public life are not surprised
at schemes such as you describe the
separate statehood plan in Indian
Territory to be. Answering ^our
question as to my opinion as to what
effect such manipulation will have on
the next congress. I answer that I
think it will have no effect at all.
Certainly it would not have the slight-
est effect upon myself, and I imagine
other senators and representatives
will feel the same way about it.
"In conclusion I can say that it
Is my firm conviction that Oklahoma
will be admitted at the coming session
of congress, consisting of the new
territories of Oklahoma and Indian
Territory, and that no bill which pro-
poses the admission of either terri-
tory as a separate state can possibly
be passed. It is absolutely sure that
such a proposition as that would be
fought to the limit by a majority of
the senate."
SANTA FE GETS OIL AND GAS
Big Strike Is Reported From Wheeler
Well in Indian Territory
ARDMORE: A report from Wheel-
er states that oil and gas were struck
on the Santa Fe land near that place
Thursday night. The details of the
strike are very meager. It is learned,
however, that while drilling, a cap
rock was struck and that oil and gas
shot up 100 feet above the well. Ef-
forts to control the flow were futile.
Recently gas was struck on the
same property at a depth of 300 feet.
The surface veins of gas were util-
ized in running the machinery for drill-
ing. Prominent officials of the line are
now at Wheeler, sixteen miles west
of here. It is stated that both of
these products will be piped into Ard-
more by the Santa Fe, which is heavi-
ly interested in oil lands In that sec-
tion.
A letter written in a temper may
sometimes come back in a spirit of
vindictiveness.
JUDGMENT AGAINST BANKRUPT
Damages Awarded Against .Shawnee
Electric Llpht Company
SHAWNEE: More than a year ago,
while J. J. Henrv was president of
the Shawnee Light and Power com-
pany, May Sears, a young daughter of
T. M. Sears, was dangerously burned
by a live guy wire on one of the com-
pany's poles. Her life wis saved,
but she will always wear ti'e effects
of the frightful experience. Her
father sued the l'ght company for
130,000 damages, and the case was
tried last week, the jury returning a
sealed verdict, w*>lch was found to
award Judgment to the ptalntlfT for $6,-
G80. As the company is in the hands
of a receiver It is difficult to state
what proceedings will now be taken,
though the case will undoubtedly be
appealed.
Last year the value of copper pro-1
duced in ♦his country was $105,029,-
845.
Oil and Oil.
A little oil poured upon troubled j
waters has enabled many a wear) j
mariner to reach an harbor of safety, j
A little Hunt's Lightning Oil poured j
upon your Burns, Bruises, Sprains, !
Cuts, Pains and Aches will enable j
you to reach that harbor of peace and ;
comfort where contentment is a cer j
tainty and happiness a possibility.
The largest smelter ever built, is lo
be erected in California, and is to
have a capacity of 1,000 tons a day.
A nervous, irritable mother, often on
the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care
for children ; it ruins a child's disposi-
tion and reacts upon herself. The
trouble between children and their
mothers too often is due to the fact
that the mother has some female weak-
ness. and she is entirely nnfit to bear
the strain upon her nerves that govern-
ing children involves; it is impossible
lor her to do anything calmly.
I The ills of women act like a firebrand
npon the nerves, consequently nine-
tenths of the nervous prostration, ner-
vous despondency, "the blues." sleep-
lessness, and nervous irritability of
women arise from some derangement
of the female organism.
Do you experience tits of depression
with restlessness, alternating with
extreme irritability? Are your spirits
easily affected, so that one minute you
laugh, and the next minute you feel
like crying ?
Do you feel something like a ball ris-
ing in your throat and threatening to
choke you; all the senses perverted,
morbidly sensitive to light and sound ;
pain in the ovaries, and especially
between the shoulders; bearing down
pains; nervous dyspepsia, and almost
continually cross and snappy ?
If so, your nerveB are in a shattered
condition, nnd you are threatened with
nervous prostration.
Proof is monumental that nothing in
the world is better for nervous prostra-
tion than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound; thousands and thou-
Mrs. Chester Curry, Leader of the
Ladies' Symphony Orchestra, 42 Sara-
toga Street, East Boston, Mass., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
" For eight years I was troubled with ex-
treme nervousness and hysteria, brought on by
irregularities. I <*ould neither enioy life nor
sleep night*; I was very irritable, nervous
and despondent.
"Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
was recommended and proved to be the only
remedy that helped me. 1 have daily
iinuroved in health until I am now strong
ana well, and all nervousness has disap-
peared."
Mrs. Charles F. Brown, Vice-Presi-
dent of the Mothers' Club, 21 Cedar
Terrace, Hot Springs, Ark., writes :
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
" I dragged through nine years of miserable
existence, worn out with pain and nervous-
ness, until it seemed a* though I should fly.
I then noticed a statement of a woman trou-
bled as I was, and the wonderful results she
derived from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
< 'ompound, I decided to try it. 1 did so, and
at the end of three months 1 was a different
woman. My nervousness was all gone. I was
no longer irritable, and my husband fell in
love with me all over again."
Women should remember that Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is
the medicine that holds the record for
the greatest number of actual cures of
female ills, and take no substitute.
Free Advice to Women.
Mrs. Pinkhain, Lynn, Mass., invites
all sick women to write to her foradvice.
Mrs. Pinkham's vast experience with
female troubles enables her to tell
you just what is best for you, and
she will charge you nothing for her
advice.
sands of women testify to this fact.
Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advice—A Woman Best Understands a Woman's Ills.
Important to Mothers.
Kxamtne carefully every bottle of CABTORTA. I
a safe and euro remedy for infants and children,
and ui! that it
Beard the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind Yoa Have Always Bought.
The Pullman Palace Car company
has just ordered 200 carloads of
Washington fir to be worked up into
cars.
Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Ease.
A powder. It rests tho feet. Cures Swollen,
Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet
and Ingrowing Nails. At till Druggiais and
Shoe stores, 25 cents. Accept no substitute.
Sample mailed FREE. Address, Allen S.
Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
mixed riubpiiai olcin
At a recent examination for thp Hp-
pointment of a junior medical officer
in an English workhouse, three of the
five applicants were women. The
board of guardians, composed in pari
of women, after an animated discus-
sion, decided to admit to examination
only the two men. The women guar-
dians, although in a small minority,
made a hard fight for equality of the
sexes. The women were debarred
on the ground that experience had
shown a mixed hospital staff to mean
much less efficiency than one com-
posed entirely of one sex or the other.
Although the women guardians at-
tributed the action to prejudice and
jealousy on the part of the men, there
Is undoubtedly considerable force in
the arguments against coeducation in
hospital staffs.
Send postal for
'"Book of
Presents
Do
you know
the secret of
the Wave
Circle ?
Wonderful!
Send
for K
right a-
way. It's
purer snd
more efficient
than any Bak-
ing Powder that
costs three times
as much.
Lion i delay
another
dav i
\m\\
25 oz. for 25c.
A11 grocers
statb or Ohio, citt or Toledo, i
Lcaab cocjctv. (
Frank j. Chunky makes oath that he la senior
partner uf the fir in of F. J. CXS £ V & Co.. i/.r.g
bualncs* In (be City of Toledo. County and State
aforesaid, aud that Hald Arm will pay the sum of
one hundked DOLLAKS for each and every
ra*e of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of
hall's L'atarku Cubic.
frank j. cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my prcs-
ence. this 6th day of December, A. I). 1884.
seal -
a. w. gleason,
Notabt Public.
i
Hall's Catarrh Cure 1* taken Internally and acta
directly on tbe blood and mucous aurfacea of the
•yuan. Send for testimonials free.
F. ,1. CHENEY & CO.,Toledo,0.
Sold by all DrufnrlstR. 7!*c.
Take Hall'a Family Pllla for constipation.
Ever Notice the Flavor?
Little Johnnie doesn't like to be
kissed, but sometimes he is com-
pelled to by some gushing friends of
his mother to submit to the ordeal.
The last time they called he went
through the operation as gracefully
as possible, but after their departure
he remarked, vigorously rubbing the
powder from his face meanwhile:
"Mamma, I dont' like to have them
kiss me. It tastes Just like kissing
a marshmallow."—Llppincott's.
Jaques Mfg. Co.
Chicago
jmj
QSjl "jBX ""223- vHI j£3x *xS-
w
m
m
U IT'S Jyg*
CHILLS I
VOL ilAVL, IT'S
OXIDINE
It's Everywhere.
The Huts of the poor, the Halls of
the rich,
Are neither exempt from some form
of itch;
Perhaps a distinction may be made
in the name,
But the rich and poor must scratch
just the same.
O, why should the children of Adam
endure
An affliction so dreadful, when Hunt's
Cure does cure?
All forms of Itching.
The Pennsylvania Railroad com-
pany is about ordering 18,000 addi-
tional cars, most of them to be of
steel.
m
m
m
m
VOL NEED.
50 gents per bottle.
You will will find a large number of Imitations which the manufac-
turers claim are the same as OXIDINE. We caution you against
such statements. There ii only one OXIDINE and we are the sole
manufacturers. These «mltator« are merely trying to sell their cheap
Imitations on the strength of Oxidine's record.
$1000 in gold
AN® CeftT Or ANALT&I& will be J «ld to eni| person whe can find a
trace af Arsenic, Strychnine, Korfihlne, or any other |>oi onoua or
Injurious drugs lo
oxidine
Patton-Worsham Drug Co.
MANUFACTURERS
DALLAS, TEXAS and MEMPHIS, TENN.
m
m
m
m
m
The Peruvian government has or-
dered a twenty-four knot battleship
to be built as soon as possible.
The Orientals are learning to chew
and smoke tobacco like the Ameri-
cans.
rtin °?S« P Food I C< J 00 (Iiiislnd 1
1 #IU Brlsdtf. | ^I4T£iI Wild Mlll-jT\
We manafe-
I CURRIE WIND MILL CO., /|M/
^ SS7 Seventh St., Topeka, Kaniu /A V''
Storekeepers and Hotelkeepera
Should investigate acetylene gas
Write "Acetylene Jones" to-day.
The Mexican Central Railway com-
pany has arranged to place forty oil
burning engines on its line.
^[Thompson's Eys Watsr
When Answering Advertisement*
Kindly Mention Thl Paper.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City, No. 42, 1905.
he attends to business
who goes straight to work
to cure
St. Jacobs Oil
and saves time, money and
gets out of misery quickly.
Hurts, Sprains, Bruises
by the use of
The Mexican Central Railway com-
pany has arranged to place forty oil
burning engines on Its line
XZ'ESi
Ut tide, bold by drufKlaw.
ezebeeheg
Prlco. 23c. and 50c
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Buchanan, C. A. The Oklahoma Safeguard. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 19, 1905, newspaper, October 19, 1905; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc275611/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.