The Orlando Clipper. (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, February 7, 1908 Page: 3 of 10
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THOS. GALE, OF ALASKA,
MEMBER OF U.S. CONGRESS
Well Known on the Pacific Slofe. His
Washington Address is 1312 gth St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
CONGRESSMAN THOS. CALE.
Hon. Thos. Cale, who was elected to
Congress from Alaska, is well known on
the Pacific slope, where he has resided
His Washington address is 1312 9th St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
Washington, D. C.
Peruna Drug Co.. Columbus, Ohio.
Gentlemen: I can cheerfully recom-
mend Peruna as a very efficient rem-
edy for coughs and colds.
Thomas Cale.
Hon C. Slemp, Congressman from
Virginia, writes: "I have used your val-
uable remedy, Peruna, with beneficial
results, and can unhesitatingly recom-
mend your remedy as an invigorating
tonic and an effective and permanent
cure for catarrh."
Man-a-lin the Ideal Laxative.
jitmm Qire-
Will stop and permanently
cure that terrible itching.
It is compounded for that
purpose and is absolutely
guaranteed.
It is a never failing cure
for eczematous affections
of all kinds, including:
Humid Tetter Herpes
Salt Rheum Prurigo
Heat Eruption Flavus
Rind Worm irJScables(IM)
This last named disease is not due to
inflammation like other skin diseases, but
to the presence of little parasites which
burrow under the skin. The itching they
produce is so intense it is often with diffi-
culty the sufferer can refrain from tearing
the skin with his nails.
HUNT'S CURE is an infallible remedy
for this aggravating trouble. Applied
locally. Sold by all first class druggists.
Price, SO Cents Per Box
And the money will be refunded in every
case where one box only fails to cure.
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.
Sherman. Texas
ANAKESIS gives instant
relief. P081T1 VELY-CUKKh.
#1 at druggists or by mail.
Sample FREE. Address,
"ANAKESIS"
Tribune Bldg., New York.
If you want to hatch every fertile egg, you Bhouid get a
fVSandy Lee Incubator
because it's the machine that is "built that way."
N^no other like it. Catalog tells how and why. Send
for it today -NOW. GKO. II. LKK CO., Omaha, Nebr.
HURT HIS SENSE OF JUSTICfe.
ELECTROTYPES
1 In (treat variety for Bale at the lowest prices by
I WI'.STKllN KKtVSPAPER IMOX, Kansas City, Mlenourl
LIVE STOCK AND
MISCELLANEOUS
DEFIANCE STARCH
"XomiSiThompson's Eve Water
Youngster Considerably Puzzled Over
Distribution of Rewards.
Having finished her afternoon's
philanthropic work in the East side
tenements, the voluntary helper
started for home. Before she had pro-
ceeded far, however, she discovered
that a small purse, which contained
the remainder of her money, about
four dollars, was missing from her
handbag. So, surmising she had either
carelessly mislaid the purse or been
robbed of it, she retraced her steps to
the tenements. Her search over her
recent working field availing her noth-
ing, she was about to turn again
toward home, when a tear-stained, sly-
acting youth came out of one of the
tenements and accosted her.
Say, missus," he sniveled, point-
ing across the street, where another
boy crouched in a hallway to exam-
ine something, "if y -re 1ookin. fer
> pocketbook, dat kid over dere's
got it!"
Acting on this declaration, the lady
hurried over and cornered the lad he-
tore he was aware of her propinquity.
Seeing no chance of escaping with
he purse and its contents the boy
complied with the lady's demand and
handed over the pocketbook.
"Now, my honest lad," she then
said, turning to the first boy, who had
followed her across the street, "there's
a dollar for pointing out the thief'"
As this boy ran off clutching his re-
ward, the second lad squinted hard
at the lady.
"Say, missus," he said, "don't I get
nothin?"
"Not a penny!"
"Gee," he rejoined in a kind of per-
plexity; "an" I stole de pocketbook
from him!"—Illustrated Magazine.
Selling Bread in Old London.
Bread, which, like coals, is advancing
in price, was also formerly a matter of
state regulation. In the thirteenth
century, for example, an enactment
was in force that the profit of the
baker on each quarter of wheat was to
be, for his own labor, six cents and
such bran as might be sifted from
the meal. Again, in London, only
fat thing and half-penny loaves were al-
lowed to be made, and it was a serious
offense for a baker to sell loaves of
any other size. Nevertheless, other
kinds of loaves were sometimes smug-
gled into the market, hidden in vari-
ous ways—under a towel, in the folds
of a garment or beneath the arms. A
curious ordinance in the city of Lon-
don forbade the baker, if he sold by re-
tail, to sell bread in or before his
house, before the oven in which it
was baked, or indeed anywhere but
in the market assigned to him. There
seems to have been a strange preju-
dice against bread made in South-
wark. one reason given being "because
the bakers of Southwark are not
amenable to the justice of the city."—
London Chronicle.
Expressing a Thorax.
Dr. Leopold Jaches of Cornell's med-
ical school recently returned from a
study of the use of the Rontgen rays
abroad. Pausing in an account of his
tour. Dr. Jaches said:
"Abroad, as here at home, the great
public's knowledge of the rays con-
tinues rather vague. Investigators re-
ceive all manner of queer letters and
requests. Thus I heard in Berlin of a
man who wrote to a specialist:
" 'Dear Sir: I have had a bullet In
my thorax for 11 years. I am too busy
to come to Berlin, but hope you will
come down here with your rays, as my
case should be worth your while. II
you cannot come, send a packet of
rays, with instructions as to use, etc.,
and I will see if I cannot manage to
work them myself.'
"The specialist replied:
''Dear Sir: I am sorry that my
engagements prevent my coming to see
you, and that I am out of rays just
now. If you cannot come to Berlin
yourself, send me your thorax by ex-
press and X will do the best I cai
witb if "
Effects of the Trade.
"A shoemaker is a poor sort of crea-
ture."
"Why so?"
"Because he is by trade a heeler,
and there is not a time when he is not
willing to sell his sole."
"But you must admit he has one
virtue." *
"What is it?"
"He will stick to the last."
Laundry work at home would be
much more satisfactory if the right
Starch were used. In order to get the
desired stiffness, it is usually neces-
sary to use so much starch that the
beauty and fineness of the fabric is
hidden behind a paste of varying
thickness, which not only destroys the
appearance, but also affects the wear-
ing quality of the goods. This trou-
ble can be entirely overcome by using
Defiance Starch, as it can be applied
much more thinly because of its great-
er strength than other makes.
Rapid Rise.
"Pa," said Mrs. Hardapple, as she
opened the letter, "the man who ran
over our old crippled cow with his
automobile wants to know how much
she was worth."
"Tell him about six dollars,"
drawled Hiram Hardapple. "Let me
see, it was that poor village doctor,
wasn't it?"
"No, Hiram; it was a city feller."
"Was, eh? Well, by heck, tell him
she was a first-class critter and worth
every cent of $50."
"A.nd come to think of it, Hiram,
hit, automobile was almost as long as
a steamboat, with glass windows, six
lights and a horn that you could hear
five miles."
"What? Then write and tell him
the cow he killed was a genuine im-
ported prize-winning Holstein and
worth $500, and if he doesn't settle up
every cent in cash I'll put the law on
him."
DIFFERENT.
More proof that, Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Veg-etableConipouiul saves
woman from surgical operations.
Mrs. S. A. Williams, of Gardiner,
Maine, writes:
"I was a great Guffei-er from female
troubles, and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound restored me to health,
in three months, after my physician
declared that an operation was abso-
lutely necessary."
Mrs. Alvina Sperling, of lf>4 Gey-
bourne Ave., Chicago, 111., writes:
" I suffered from female troubles, a
tumor and much inflammation. Two
of the best doctors in Chicago decided
that an operation was necessary to save
my life. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound entirely cured me without
an operation."
FACTS FOR SSCK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera-
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges-
tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration.
Why don't you try it ?
Mrs. Plnkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
THE ONLY
Sanitary
Durable
"Do you believe in art for art's
Bake?"
"No; I sell my pictures!"
PANTRY CLEANED
A Way Some People Have.
A doctor said: —
"Before marriage my wife observed
|n summer and country homes, coming
In touch with families of varied means,
culture, tastes and discriminating ten- i
dencies, that the families using Pos- j
turn seemed to average better than ■
those using coffee.
"When we were married two years !
ago, Postum was among our first order
of groceries. We also put in some cof- j
fee and tea for guests, but after both
had stood around the pantry about a |
year untouched, they were thrown !
away, and Postum used only.
"Up to the age of 28 I had been ac-
customed to drink coffee as; a routine
habit and suffered constantly from in- ;
digestion ana all its relative disorders.
Since using Postum all the; old com-
plaint^ have completely left me and I
sometimes wonder if I ever had them."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to
WellYlllo," in pkgs, "TUcre's a Reason,"
Suitable for any room, never*
molds, mildews or drops off the
wall. Comes in dry powder. Add
cold water. Brush on wall with 7
inch flat brush.
Alabastine is in packages, cor-
rectly labeled ALABASTINE,
Each package Rovers from 300 to
450 square feet of wall.
SIXTEEN BEAUTIFUL SOFT.
VELVETY SHADES
THAT NEVER FADE, AS WELL
AS A CLEAR BRILLIANT WHITE
Alabastine is absolutely sanitary
and thoroughly beautiful. Try it
this fall. Your dealer has it, if
not, write to
ALABASTINE CO.
New York City - Qrand Rapids, Mich
liio
•opswieo Feed I M 00 Galvanized
Grinder. I 014 Steel Wind Mill.,
SMR
C
I Wo mantifacturo fill sicca
styles. It will
pay you to in-
vestlKate.Write
for catalog and
I prico list.
CURRIE WIND MILL CO
628 Seventh 8t„ Topelia, Kansas
" "PZSKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanses and beautifies the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Falls to llestoro Gray
Hair to ita Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases Si hair fuliiL'^.
6O0, and $ 1.00 at Druggists
SEED
THAT'S PURE-.
All our iced Is tested
and warranted to be
— reliable. Write for
our new Catalogue. It's FREE.
J. J. H. Gsebort 6 Son, Marblekiao, Mats.
nrriAMPr 67ARPU easiest to work with and
UbrlnNbb cinflwn 0ur-.Utta elutUee ulwsfc
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The Orlando Clipper. (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, February 7, 1908, newspaper, February 7, 1908; Orlando, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc305795/m1/3/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.