The Oklahoma Safeguard. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 9, 1905 Page: 3 of 4
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The German afflrros that every
daughter of Eve would rather be beau-
tiful than good.
IF YOU ARE A WOMAN
I" They Should.
"My heneat conviction, based upon
my own experience and that of my
friendt. la thai 'Hunt's Cure' will cure
VVhet Mra. Ford Saya Conearnlna Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills will Suraly
Interest You.
"I wish I could help other women get
rid of certain physical troubles ooui-
* pletely as I have succeeded 111 gotting
s larger per cent of skin troubles, es- of"mi|le „ -id Mrg B. B Ford, of
peclally of an Itching variety, than 1>ughm.,ahUf Mlss ,
recently. "You
any other remedy. Certainly kuow," she continued, "that a woman ■
afflicted with any form of Itch should hmUh cllleHy oll ,hB roff.-
t'S' It." J- O. MONROE. inritj of just one function. If sha
Atchison. Has. . f^ ^ tlmt propel.iy r,.Kulnte<l sha
Some churches that claim to be ha*no end of physical misery. 1 suf-
working for men are only working fered from that one cause for two
' wretched years, during one of which 1
waa kept in bed all tlrn time. 1 tried
~~~———————— ■■ medicines enough to cure any illness,
but nothing gave me the slightest beue*
fit nntil I began using Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills for Pule People. Tliey cured me.
Why, I was suffering all the time prue-
tion.ly from sickness of the stomach,
dizziness or swimming ill uiv head and
in iuv back. Now I am entirely
Around the World
•4I have used your Fish
Brand Slicker# lor years
In tha Hawaiian Islands
and found them the only
article lhat suited. I ana
now In this country
(Africa) and think a great
deal ol your coats."
(namc on application)
HlfinEST AWARD WORLD'S FUR. M4.
The world-wide reputa-
tion 9I Tower'«_Water-
proof Oiled Clothing
ig _ _ _ _
the poacive worth ot i
& vsrTJrsz
A. J. TOWER CO., Boston, V. S. A.
7GV* CK CANADIAN CO., LIMITED,
IS3 Toronto, Canada.
o
Good Teeth ffii Good Temper
Are characteristic of the
Atkins Saws always.'
That is because they are
made of the best steel in the
world — Silver Steel — by
men that know how.
Atklna Ssws, Corn Knivei, Perfection Plooa
Scraper*, etc., are told by all food hardware
dealers. Catalogue on request.
E. C. ATKINS ca CO. Inc.
Lsrgrst Saw Manufacturer* in the World
Factory snd Executive Offices, Indianapolis
Branches—New York, Chicago, Minneapolis
Portland (Oaegon), Seattle, San Francisco
Memphis, Atlanta and Toronto (Canada)
Accept no substitute—Inilst on the Atkins Brand
mm
free from discomfort of that sort. 1 am
not only able to keep on my feet, but to
do my work as a teacher, and to enjoy
the pleasures that come through the
possession of sound health.
I •• Within three weeks after beginning
the us* of Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills I ex-
perienced such relief that I knew they
littwt be adapted to the needs of mv case.
After using them for a short while longer
1 became and have since remained a
well woman, and the reason whv Is sim-
ply that I took Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
These pills make uterine action reg-
_ ularand painless, banish headaches, lan-
— guor, nervousness, create appetite, pro-
mote digestion, put color in the com-
plexion, bnikl up strength and health.
Every woman should send to the Dr.
Williams Medicine Company, Schenec-
tady, N Y., for a Taluable booklet, en-
titled •• Plain Talks to Women." It will
be mailed free in sealed envelope to the
address of any applicant. Dr. Williams
Pink Pills uro sold by all druggists.
It Is a curious thing that nobody
thinks It Is wrong for a girl to kiss a
man until she reaches the age when
it is interesting.
LESSON SEVEN—NOVEMBER 12.
TEXT—The hand of our God Is upon all them for good that seel
I. The Desolations of Zion.—The
nthusiasm aroused by the leaders
and the prophets Haggai and Zechar-
iah (Lesson V.) culminated in the
completion of the Temple, and then
gradually declined Into a deadened re-
ligious condition. The Temple had
been built, but the opposition had
been so great that the walls had not
been restored and the rubbish still
standard, the 050 talents being a little
over $630,000. By the heavy standard
It would be twice thai. "Of gold an
hundred talents." A gold talent was
worth about $14,542. making not quite
$1,500,000 in gold, light standard; so
that the whole amount of money
would be about $2,000,000 or $4,000,000
according to the standard used.
27. "Drams." Darics, worth about
arose In long-itretcblng minimis. The | an Engltoh sovereign, or a little over
Paymtnt of 140 Per Capita When
They Are Completed
Dana H. Kelsev, Indian agent, ha*
commenced work on a roll of Mis-
sissippi Choctawa in til*1 Choctaw na-
tion for the purpose of making to
them the payment of 4u per capita
to which they are entitled, and in
which the regular Choctawa und
Chickasawa particiimied last year.
This payment represents money re
eelved from the sale of town lots in
government townsiles. There are
10.20n Mississippi choctawa on the
rolls, and it will take about a week
to complete the rolls, after which
they will he forwarded to Washington
for approval. Most of the Missis-
sippi Choctaws live easi of Durant,
and payments will be made In Hie
I towns most convenient to them. '1 he
time and places of the payments have
not yet been designated.
■ Don't you know that Defiance Starch
1 besides being absolutely superior to
any other, is put up 16 ounces in pack-
| age and sells at same price as 12-
ounce packages of other kinds?
] The life of a man Is less than r.
(,pan, for It falls Into the River of
ileaath at the end.
llON'T FORIiKT
The worst about convincing a worn-
j an you love her is when you have to
I live up to It.
I Fai
Farmers, Dairymen, Poultry Baisers:
Pure Alfalfa Meal
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
a cough cure.—J. W. O'Hhzkh, 828 Third i.ve.
N., Minneapolis, Minn.. Jan. 6,1W0.
Kent Balance for Itations Kn
Make money by feeding
" TONIC STOCK SALT "™
Works both wsjh . pave f<ei; increases
values. $2.00 per lOOtbs.: li eight allowed.
At k your dealt r. or write direct.
Inland MIJ. Co, Oklahoma City.
Coney Island Souvenir Post Cards.
Six beautiful colored scene* forMc. Coney Island
Postal Card Co., Coney Island, N. Y.
W.L. Douglas
•3= & *3= SHOES he"
iV. L. Douglas *4.00 Cilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled atany price.
When we marry life takes on a
great purchase; we may win out or
lall under the mortgage.
A TRULY IDEAL WIFE
HER HUSBAND'S BEST HELPER
Vlgoroua Health Ib the Oreat Sourc-e of
the Power to Inspire and Encourage
-All Women Should Seek It.
One of the most noted, successful nnd
| richest men of this century, in a recent
article, has said, 44 Whatever I am ami
whatever success I have attained in
this world I owe all to my wife. From
tht day I first knew her she lias been
an inspiration, and the greatest help*
mate of my life."
'-ISMC0
Bessie /finsley
¥.L. DOUGLAS MAKES AMD SELLS
MORE MEM'S $3.BO SHOES THAM
AMY OTHER MAMUFAOTURER.
C1I1 nnn REWARD to «nyone who c«n
$IUfUUU disprove this statement.
W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoe# have by their ei-
iellen* style, easy fitting, and r ' '
qualities, achieved the largest i
.shoe In the world. Thev
those that cost you $ff.OO .. _
difference Is the price. II I could take you Into
my lactory at Brockton, Mass., the largest In
the world under one roof making men's fine
shoes, and *how vou the care with which every
pair of Douglas shoes Is made, you would realize
why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best
shoes produced In the world.
III could show you the difference between the
shoes made In my factory and those of other
ma'tes, you would understand why Douglas
$3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold
their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of
greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50
shoe on the market to-day.
W. L. Doug/am Strong Mada Shoaa for
Mart, $2.SO, $2.00. Boy a' School A
Draaa Shoaa,$2.60, $2, $1.7B,$1.BO
CAUTION.—Insist upon having W.L.Doug-
las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
without his oame and price stamped on bottom.
WANTED. A shoe dealer in every town where
W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of
samples sent free for Inspection upon request.
Faat Color Eytleta used; they will not wear bratiy.
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Malta.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 45, 1905.
To be such a successful wife, to re-
tain the love and admiration of her
husband, to inspire him to make the
most of himself, should be a woman's
constant study.
If a woman finds that her energies
are flagging, that she gets easily tired,
dark shadows appear under her eyes,
she ha.s backache, headaches, bearing-
down pains, nervousness, whites, irreg-
ularities or the blues, she should sta
at once to build up her system by
tonic with specific powers, such as
Twydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound.
Following we publish by request a
letter from a young wife:
Dear Mrs. Pinknani:
41 Ever since my child was born I have suf-
fered, as I hope few women ever have, with in-
flammation, female weakness, bearing-down
pains, backache and wretched headaches. It
affected my stomach so I could not enjoy my
meals, and half my time was snent in bed.
" I- yd in E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
made inea well woman, ana I feel so grateful
that I am glad to write and tell you of my
marvelous recovery. It brought "me health,
now life and vitality." Mrs. Bessie Ainsley,
till South 10th Street, Taeoma, Wash.
What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound did for Mrs. Ainsley it will
do for every sick and ailing woman.
If you have symptoms you don't un-
derstand write to Mrs. Pinkham, at
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free and
always helpful.
a webster pocket dictionary
free with every pair*
WEBSTER
SCHOOL SHOE
FROM SIZE ELEVEN. UP.
Made Especially for the Bui/ Young
0ne«. It hai
STRENGTH, STYLE AND COMFORT
DOWN TO A CERTAINTY. IT IS
FOOT EDUCATION
FOR THE BOYS AND OIRLS.
It's a CLOVER BRAND SHOE.
talons of glory had faded. Poverty,
oppression, hardnhlp and disappoint-,
ment had settled down on the little !
Jewish community, which now found j
itself far worse off financially than !
the captives at Babylon. They benan
to make alliances with the Gentiles, |
the leading families intermarrying
with the heathen, till the land became
defiled with the filthiness and abom-
inations of idolatry. The religious
home life was being destroyed. I.ax-
Ity of morals, religious Indifference,
desecration of the Sabbath, moral ig-
norance. were In the ascendancy; the
spiritual declined, and high ideals
grew dim. Such was the condition of
things seventy-eight years after the
first joyous Return.
II. Ezra, the Man for the Times.—
Our sources of information are Ezra
7-10; Neh. 8-ltl. and the two books of
Esdras (— Ezra) In the Apocrypha.
Ezra was of a priv*• 11y family, and his
•great work was that of a scribe; not a
mere copyist of the I.aw, but a dili-
gent student and interpreter of the
I.aw. He grew up amid the culture
and Intense literary activities of Haby-
lon. The literary activity of Greece
was nqxjar away. He grew up also
in the consciousness of the humilia-
tion of the captivity, as a punishment
for sin. He saw that the only way to
save the nation was through the pow-
er of their l.aw, and of obedience to
It
III. Preparations for a New Relig-
ious Movement.—First. The exile was
Indeed a punishment, but it was also
a discipline for a better life. Foreign
culture and literary activity made
their Indelible impress on the Jews.
The scribes copied the Law. comment-
ed, recast and wrote. They "saved
the people from the worst of all possi-
ble calamities—from ignorance of its
own past."
Second Preparation. In the year
465 B. C., Xerxes was murdered in a
palace conspiracy, and his son Artax-
erxes Longimanus reigned in his
stead. He was a young man and had
reigned six or seven years when
Ezra had it in his heart to go up to
Jerusalem. ThiB king granted the de-
sired permission to Ezra (11 perhaps
because of his natural amiability and
bonhomie, (2) because of the powerful
Jewish influence at the court where he
was trained. Mordecai. Esther. Nehe-
miah. ai..l probably others had been
favorites.
Ezra needed three things—"men,
money and authority." The king gave
the latter two, and permitted the men
to volunteer.
Third Preparation. Volunteers. By
the decree no one was compelled to go
an unwilling sacrifice, but whoever
"were minded of their own free will to
go" (Ezra 7: 13). About 1,7(10 persons,
including heads of families and their
retainers (Ezra 8; 1-14). priests, Le-
vites and 220 Nethinlm, or the serv-
ants who assisted in the work about
the Temple.
Fourth Preparation. Fasting and
prayer (vs. 21-23.) The rendezvous
was (21) "at the river of Ahava,"
probably one of the many canals run-
ning into the Euphrates, and not very
far from Babylon on the north. "Then
I proclaimed a fdRt." Fasting, as a
religious act would seem to have its
basis in (1) a grief over sin so deep
and intense that all desire for food is
taken away. (2) In the aid to devo-
tion furnished by a body unburdened
with food, so as to leave the mind and
heart in their most active and free
condition. (3) It is the natural ex-
pression of deep sorrow for sin. It is
not enough for the heart to feel deep-
ly; it needs to express its feelings,
though the proof that the fasting is
sincere lies in forsaking the sin re-
pented of and doing deeds of right-
eousness.
22. "For I was ashamed to require
of the king." There were many dan-
gers on that four months' Journey,
particularly from the robbers and Be-
douins of the desert. Ezra' had told the
king that God was with his people,
and against their enemies; and. there-
fore, to ask a guard of soldiers might
seem to the king to contradict his as-
sertions, and bring disgrace on God's
cause.
23. "And he was intreated of us."
Ezra had the assurance that his
prayer had been heard.
Fifth Preparation. Means for car-
rying on the work.
24. "I separated twelve," etc. He
committed the treasure into the hands
of twelve chief p.lests of whom* the
first two are named. These men would
take special charge and be responsible
for the safe keeping of the treasure.
Besides, it would relieve Ezra of all
possible Bcandal in regard to it.
25. And weighed unto them the sli-
ver," etc. We may gather from this
that the silver and gold were in bars
or Ingots, and not in coined money.
26. "Six hundred and fifty talents
of silver." A talent of silver, accord-
ing to new Oxford Bible tables (1903)
was worth about $970, by the light
AsK Your Dealer.
lUrrtltPimfr-dwartH
$6.00.
28. "A freewill offering unto the
Lord God." The money was for re-
ligious purposes, and would be a great
help to the people at Jerusalem as
well as smooth the way of Ezra to the
needed reforms.
29. "The chambers of the house of
the Lord" are the rooms placed on
either side of the main building (see I
Kings 6: 5), partly as chambers for
the priests, partly as storerooms (see
Neh. 13: 5).
IV. The Journey to Jerusalem—Vs.
31, 32. The returning exiles left their
homes and the city, and began to as-
semble for their Journey on the first
day of Nisan (March-April), the begin-
ning of the Jewish sacred year (Ezra
7: 9), but actually (v. 31) "departed"
from Ahava "on the twelve day of the
first month," about the time of the
Passover (the 14th of the month), our
Easter, about the first of April. "And
the hand of our God was upon us," the
hand that defends, the hand that
gives, the hand of friendship.
32. "And we came to Jerusalem,"
after a journey of four months, arriv-
ing there the first day of the fifth
pionth, or about the middle of July.
V. Ezra's Work at Jerusalem.—
Chaps. 9. 10. He brought the Book of
the Law Into prominence. He rein-
forced the ritual of the temple and the
order of the priests. The deeply relig-
ious spirit of Ezra is notable. "His
one ambition was to glorify God. and
to be of service to his nation." "He
was a Puritan of the Puritans." "He
was deadly in earnest."—Hunter. Con-
sider his prayer before the assembled
people. (Ezra 9: 6-15.) Ezra is re-
garded as having had much to do in
collecting, arranging and revising the
Old Testament, and In bringing the
knowledge of the Bible to the people.
His work, with that of Nehemiah, was
a turning point in the history of Is-
rael. The chief reform of Ezra was
the abolishing of mixed marriages
with the surrounding heathen. After
fasting and prayer, at a public solemn
a .'eting, the nobles, the priests and
the people put away their heathen
wives.
The course of the Israelites was
ruining and degrading the nation. The
whole history of Israel previous to
the exile was an argument against it.
The mixed race of Jews and Samari-
tans, with their half-heathenish cus-
toms. was a living warning of the re-
sults of their course. There was only
one alternative—to purify the church,
or to let it go to ruin.
The suffering caused by this course
was the fruit, not of Ezra's work, but
of the wrong-doing. The physician is
not to blame for the bitterness of his
medicine, nor the surgeon for ampu-
tating the limb.
This course is not narrow, It is sim-
ply wise statesmanship for the pres.
ervation of our country. There are
things that must be shut out, unless
they will change, and soipe in our own
day need to learn this lesson.
True liberality is both Christian and
wise. But even the wisest reformers
would not Include rumsellers in the
Christian Temperance Union, nor
think that town blessed that did not
say to saloon keepers, "Repent or go-."
The choir Is not narrow because It
does not include those who can only
make discords, nor is the sheepfold
Intolerant that refuses to* include
wolves, nor the medical society that
excludes quacks, nor the church that
does not Invite the unrepentant wick-
ed to its communion.
The Heart of the Lesson.
In this section of history we can
study the progress and method of a
great revival of religion.
We see the power of a single man, a
deep student of the Bible, a keen ob-
server of the times, filled with the
Spirit (•' God, and ready to sacrifice
himself for the redemption of his peo-
ple.
Note the means used. (1) The call
was to volunteers. (2) The prepara-
tion was through an awakening Bible
study. (3) The timeliness of the move-
ment. (4) Prayer and fa3tlng, re-
pentance, putting away sin. (5) The
splrti of heroism and consecraticn.
(6) Free giving to the cause. (7) Hard
work in spite of great opposition. (8)
Concerted action. One ember alone
will not make a good fire. Two are
more than twice one. A hundred to-
gether are ten times a hundred sep-
arate individuals.
It was an ethical revival; a revival
of purer morals, of better living; of
putting away wrong at the greatest
cost. We sometimes hear it said that
we do not need no much a revival of
religion as a revival of honesty, of
truth telling, of kindly deeds. I have
seen several revivals of religion, and
never knew one that was not also a
revival of morality. The religious re-
'vival was like a springtime to the
moral nature, awakening it to new
life. No power known can do so much
to uplift the moral character and de-
velop a righteous life, as a real revival
of true religion.
Hi« Idea of Touristr
Burton Holmes, the famous traveler,
tells of an amusing incident that oc-
curred during a recent trip through
the Yellowstone park. It shows that
the Inhabitants of Interesting places
are apt to make a distinction between
tourists and people who are traveling
for business.
"We were riding leisurely along the
big, fine government road," said Mr.
Holmes, "when at a sharj turn we met
one of these Inhabitants* coming to-
ward lie on muleback. We stopped =
and piled him with questions about i
the park for almost an hour, and a |
we turned to go he said: Rf I nin^t -
too inquis'tlve, be you fellers goln'
Bomewhar or air you Jest a t ravelin ?"
Ask Your Neighbors.
Gelatt, Pa., Nov. 6th (Special)—
Mrs. H. W. Sterns, a well respected
resident of Gelatt, tells In convincing
words, what Dodd's Kidney Pills have
done for her. She says;
"I was a great sufferer from Rheu-
matism, caused through my Kidneys
being out of order. I was subject to :
it for years. It would take me with !
out wurnlng, and while the attack \
laHted I was so lame I could not get
around. So I had to send for Dodd's
Kidney Pills. I took them for three ;
days, but didn't feel much benefit, but j
on the fourth day I noticed a great
change, the lameness In my back was
gone, and the pains I used to suffer
were less. I kept on with Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills and now I am glad to say
I have no lameness nor pain of any
kind. I feel as If 1 didn't know what ;
Rheumatism was. I shall never be
without Dodd's Kidney Pills In the
house, and I bless the day I first heard
of them. .
As soon as Raney was inside the |
cage the man whose door was open ;
rushed out. He opened the doors to
the other cells and the men over-
powered Raney, took possession of the ;
keys and walked out at their leisure.
UNCLE SAM—."A Remedy Tbst Mas
Such Endorsements Should
Be In Every Nome."
Election Returns That Interest All Parties.
r ll r-CJ NO MONEY TILL CURE3 In i iHki
pi|_c.53 int. chas p. victims c;ii.
FISTULA
VETERINARY REMEDIES
are a necessity to every
Farmer & Stockraiser.
MAILED FREE. hi
Sloan's Treatise on the Horse, "
and Sloan's Advice on the
Care of Horses, Cattle, Hogs and
Poultry. Send your address to
DR. EARL S. SLOAN, 616 ALBANY STREET, BOSTON, MASS.
/TO CURE THE GRIP,
' IN ONE DAY /Vf
MIGRiPINE
HAS NO LQIIAL f OR Hf-AtytHE [
ARTI-6RIPINE
15 GUARANTEED TO CURE
GRIP, BAD GOLD, HEADACHE AHD NEURALGIA.
1 won't 11 AntUOrlplne to a tlralnr who won't OnuranU a
It. Call for your MONEY HACK IP IT DON'T CCHH,
Jt\ If . Vicmert St. #>. Manufacturer,Npringjfielti, 1fo.
Every housekeeDer should know
that If they will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they
will save not only time, because It
never sticks to the Iron, but because
each package contains 16 oz.—one ful/
pound—while all other Cold Water
Starches aro put up In % pound pack-
ages, and the price Is the same, 10
cents. Then again because Defiance
Starch Is free from all Injurious chem-
icals. If yrtir grocer 'rles to sell you
* 12-oz. package It Is teoa".se he has
a stock on hand which he wisher to
dispose of before he puts in Defiance.
He knows that Defiance Starch has
printed on every package in large let-
ters and figures "16 mb." Demand De-
fiance and Bav3 much time and money
and the annoyance cf ♦.he Iron sticifr
Ins:. Defiance never sticks.
The Corsican says: "Just as a
good and bad horse both need the
spur, a good and a bad woman bot h
need the stick."
m
m
m
m
i*6 'MS'
"X2J. MmiX
if irs>
chills 5
VOL HAVE, IT'S A
0\SB!yF
It la tolil under n
YOU NEED.
nil if
, AnSOI HTI. «;|TAKANTKK,
ujiglftt will return! j
t yon nrr n
Mnile In
Wohl by all <li u'KgtMtN for
regitInr ami Ultelcu for
60 CENTS PER BOTTLE.
You will will find l r,;e numtar.oMmltttluJi which lh« jntnur«c^
turers claim .re the > e OXIDINE We cotton ,00
such ftalementB. There I. onl, one OXIDINE « d we .re he .ole
Iimuufacturers. These 'mtt lors are ;nerely trying to jell their che.|)
Imitation* on the strength of Oildlue'i
1 record.
er. Send for Flll.k Si.OO (rial bolim
Dtt. H.U.KLIN K, Ltd..
after
e Keator-
treat I a*.
. I'liilaUoliitiia. Pa.
The Spanish rhyme has it: "Were a
woman as little as she is good, a pea-
pod would make her a gown and a
hood."
Important to Mothert.
Examine carefully e^ery bottle of CASTORIA,
n afo and furc remedy for lufaata and children,
end >ec that It
Bear* the
Signature of
In Uac For Over Years.
The Kiud You Llave Always Bought.
There could be no life in its truest
significance without death.
Let your life be such that death
shall have no terror for you.
m
"•Ws $1000 IN GOID
1KB rMT or ANAI IMS Hill be |>ald to <ni| |>er-4on H'tio can find a
U-arr of Arsenic, Strychnine, Morphine. «' «""r M"-- "
M OXIDINE
Patton Worsham Drug Co.
•jUrt manufacturers
DALLAS. TEXAS and MEMPHIS, TENN.
~W 106 W W
dS. \LZj- 'mSL •2*55.
i SA1ES AND BANK NX I URLS
We buy. Bell aad exchange
hand Mafia and bHiik (latur*
Write u* for <>atalogu« and pri<MH
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Write n 41 odav I
f. I. l onger S*!e Co., Oklahoma t.iiy
FOR WOMEN
Happiness and Work.
Few persons realize how much of
their happiness, such as it is, is de-
pendent upon their work, upon the
fact that they are kept busy and not
left to feed upon themselves. Happi-
ness comes most to persons who seek
her least and think least about her.
It must follow, and not lead. It must
overtake you and not you it. How
Important is health to happiness, yet
the best promoter of health is snt* e-
Ihlng to do.
Balm for All Wounds.
There is a balm that cures the
worst wound. There is a light that
will kindle up the worst darkness.
There is a harbor from the roughest
ocean. There is one passage of Scrip-
ture every word of which is a heart-
throb: "Come unto Me all ye who are
weary and heavy laden, and I will give
you rest." Then there Is another pas-
sage just as good, "Cast thy burden
on the Lord, and He will sustain
thee."
If you don't get the biggest and best
It's your own fault. Defiance Starch
Is for sale o.^rywhere and there is
positively nothing to equai It in qual-
ity or quantity.
Life has less of awe than Deatn,
but it is not so res'ful.
No man has a right to shoVten his
life by making It excessively happy in
its brevity.
Cures Rheumatism and Catarrh—Med-
icine Sent Free.
These two diseases are the result of
nn awful poisoned condition of the
blood. If you have aching Joints and
bu<-k. shoulder blades, bone pains,
crippled ha nils, legs or feet, swollen
muscles, fhlftiiiK. sharp, biting pains,
and that tired, discouraged feeling of
rheumatism, or the hawking, spl ing,
blurred eyesight, deufness, Ht:k stom-
ach. headache, noises In the head, mu-
cous throat, discharges, decoying
teeth, bail breath, belching gas of ca-
tarrh. take Botanic Hlood Halm (B.
B. B.). It kills the poison in the blood
which causes these awful symptoms,
giving a pure, healthy blood supply to
the joints and mucous membranes,
and makes a perfect cure of the worst
rheumatism or foulest catarrh. Cures
where all else falls. Blood Balm (B.
B. B.) is composed of .pure Botanic In-
gredients. good for weak kidneys. Im-
proves the digestion, cures dyspepsia,
A pei feet tonic for old folks by giv-
ing them new, rich, pure blood. Thor-
oughly tested for thirty years Drug-
gists. SI per large bottle, with com-
plete directions for home cure. Sam-
ple free and prepaid by writing Blood
Balm Co., Atlanta. Ga. Describe trou-
ble and special free medical advice
sent *.n sealed letter
troubled with ills peculiar to
their sex, used aa a douche it a-.trvelo"
cesaful. Thuruughlv cleanses, kills disease germs,
stops discharges, heals inflammation and local
witness, curesler.corrbcea and nasal catarrh.
Paxtina is in powder lorrn to be disvolved in pure
wMr.r, and is tar more cleansing, healing, gtmiiciiiid
nd economical than liquid antiseptics ior all
TOILET AND WOMEN'S 8PECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 00 cents a box.
T rial Box and Book of Instruct Iona Free.
*mc ■. Paxton Company Boston. Mass.
Wantkd roa unjtxd Statu /ihmt, able bodi*l
unmarried man, • *twi n i K'w< f?l mni 36. ciilaeua
of Pnited Statw, of ilinriu>t«r and utmpnrat*
habit*, who can p*ak road and writo Knifliah. For
information apply to Recruiting Oflleer, I'oat-
Ol fiiti UuilSihK Oklahoma, Outhrie. ShuwaM.
Eli id. O. T., or Tulsa. L T.
n $ $ $
yUBA
Tha ,1. L. IIKAD CO. > Head
: ilea1 Estate. Loans. All H,vftno
| r 1 asmc* lands. ea« b I'rov 1 "«vana
I lnce. Offices,O'Kellly )a. ! Cuba
MIXED FARMING Decision in Cotton
raising
RANCHING
three great pursuits
hav strain shown |
wonderful results on, |y from now OI1| an(J yOU wl||
Cotton will be moving rapid-
FREE HOMESTEAD LANDS
OF WESTERN CANADA.
Magnificent elimatc-fartners plowing in theii
shirt hleeveR In the middle of November.
"All are bound to be more than pleased with
the final results of the past season's harvest.
Extract.
Toal, wood, water, hay In abundance—schools
churches, markets convenient.
This is the era of $1.00 wheat.
Apply for information to Superintendent ol
1 mini if ration, Ottawa, Canada, or to authorizes
Canadian Government Ajrent—J. S. Crawford.
No. 126 W. Ninth Street, Kansas City, Missouri.
(Mention thia paper.)
have to decide quickly what to
do with each lot, according to
the circumstances of the
moment.
Our services and our facil-
ities are at your command, and
you will make no mistake by
shipping to us. p
niiuev umtilrv 1 ,-lt a pleasure. Iflo■/. pkif. 10. ■ WlH. D. Cleveland & Sons,
•% Texas
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 45, 1905. Houston.
" Words are
Tho Arabian declares:
women; deeus are men."
Many a life la unpleasant because
ol r failure to diagnose blllouam -s.
■•MS
In tluie. Bold by dro«Ki«ts
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Buchanan, C. A. The Oklahoma Safeguard. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 9, 1905, newspaper, November 9, 1905; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc275730/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.