The Duke Times (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, September 13, 1912 Page: 2 of 4
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THE DUKE MS. IRRtGAIION HOT HEW REDUCED RATES 10 STWE MIR
FROM ill POINTS IN OKLAHOMA
A VAMATUm.
U I liHI.
fMMttbr ! |;*m I thl*l
°uebio Indians Uttd and Dug
Gr#at Canals.
Pniere»l i
TW .*W
mail matter
> ihr
Kit* *
m«mji
f>rH lilWMll §mpffme»t •» Am
(Mill ■" IM An.
I; «»§"•»■ »*»•»»«
M*«« by IM »
AS »*:»«»J• MI' itil mUMM I'MJ l*l« »w «K« UkUl
1 Kl^HkMi
♦
«t #1*1* Kail sad
, • ill I
fut«fii|Hi>4l l'»hr • H» IVJtlf
l*r >r»r ui Dhamr.
I)n|>)4t Atltrrtutittf Iw |«et Whit,
t wili <U |trr I t..r
OKLAHOMA W WS NOUS
ll l» reported Ib«| Ueatera Oil*
hum* r(u|w art- tb» b«"»t f»r fite <-art
Ihr (Irinlow schools a III op+t>
let* her It * ii h thiri sea tearbers
Hillmii ban 'ha all feter mid drill
itib «kill ba started immediate))
t ba store of Hoiara brother# m
Ashland. ron fain I nit Iba |N«iulRr«
ass ewered and No tafcen
S-m luieber mill Ml llruken Arrow
la now shipping out fiot»hed products
b.» I lit* carload
Hammon township ia already pra
partnis tor Ita imrtiun of tti<* dlspla)
of Kc^>-r M111* county at the state fan
Una way to make Oklahoma straw
votaa popular, placa mint julap at tba
Olbar end of iha starw
A aeventeen year old boy living
near Idabel could not tnarrlad in
Oklahoma ao ba want lo Arkansas
Tba poa tuttle a at Copeland hua been
ordered dlaeontlnuad and mail dia
trlbutad from Lehigh.
Oklahoma Methodist university an-
nounces it will open in tha ronven
lion ball at Guthrie next month.
3k lahoma yet desire* to know
whether the tariff board has any tig-
urea on the coat of cool living
J. A. Rucker. the father of H5 chll-
Iran when 48 yeara old died at hia
home at Arnett. He had been married
26 yeara.
Not one person has died at Wynne-
wood in more than four months ac-
cording to report. Some healthy town
that.
Prosperity and pool halls in Okla-
homa towns seems to operate in re-
verse order, less prosperity usually
means more pool halls
One hundred and f.rty business men
and citizens of Norman have signed a
petition calling for a reorganization of
the Norman chamber of commerce.
In a runaway accident at Rock
Creek near Duncan, Mrs. B. F. Morris
was thrown from the buggy and reTid-
?red unconscious for two days, but
ifterwards recovered.
A bank at Collinsville announces
that it opened 1,200 new accounts dur-
ing August. Shows what the Okla-
homa farmers have been doing this
lummer.
Bartlesville declares that it will
make an effort this year to enforce
more strictly the truancy laws, which
it is admitted have been obesrved
with some laxity heretofore.
In the short space of one month,
the town of Hickory has gained a
newspaper, cattle loading pens, new
switch tracks and a commercial hay
barn.
Only one murder has taken place in
Lincoln county in two years. It is
said prohibition law enforcement has
made such a remarkable record possi-
ble.
It has been said that the peach crop
in the vicinity of Coyle was so large
that bare mention of the word peaches
now brings a tired feeling to the citi-
zens around there.
Courtship started a couple of years
ago while both were attending the
state university, ended in the mar-
riage at Chandler of Thomas Denyer
adn Miss Nellie Duninire.
Value of Kiowa county broomcorn |
yield will approximate $25,000. It is
said more of it will be planted next
year. The chamber of commerce pro-
vided the seed free for this year's
crop.
E. F. White of Denver, who while
climbing a mountain in Colorado was
recently killed by falling rocks he
had loosened, was formerly interest-
ed in the Grady County Star of Ok-
lahoma.
Loose wheel on a car of beer en-
route to El Paso. Texas, caused a
wreck on the Wichita Falls and North-
western railroad near Blair last week
and eight cars were derailed Mora
prohibition argument.
The Missionary society of the
Methodist Episcopal church at Alva
is already preparing a Christmas box
to be sent to India in time for the I
children at its place of destination to J
receive its gifts at Christmas
j IUH Uk» CM/, t'fsfc—lt«*4ra«l»
! ti IbuttMbd* at arte* at tamable
I aad ha»- been reclaimed in lb* arid
Ural UiMik I bo a>e«*»a at Irrtgailoa
| lb* ttM>ui>ia i« airr*N>a bata bra*
* . J a: J -hr.t ! .. <. | •
1 iriiata *ast '«wti of ana dried Ml
irval elseirtralli drltea pump* bata
mm IumIM to rata* millions utf
•tuitions ft aalluoa uf ««t»r from lb»
Irpiba of fbo aianb <o ba ft«**J-«l otar
j ba 4ry lands la order lo stimulate
1 ha groain* rropa
t I'ui II must not bo forgotten that
i rrtssiion in tba la nothing now,
. although many ot these reoent sys-
lama ara numbered amonit tb« alaan*
ia engineering venture* of the world
Tba Ural systematic employment of
irrigation In iha arid »«ti by Knallah*
•pmklni paopla t>aa mad" by (ho
Mormoua. «ho. aspallod from thrlr
oarllor aaitlrmanta In Iha Ml**laaippl
tallo) aouabt r« fuao m tb« unknown
loaort rantona. and at laal. aftar ax-
bariondnK araat bard»blpa. war*
Him palled, through nacaaaUy. IO halt
tnd aettla on tha ahoraa of tba tiraat
Salt lake Hera tha anil was found
\o bo ao barren that cropa could not
grown by. ordinary means, and.
| bata awl bat Ural § i«|« ml law <a*l« «
| tailac wbo b m a^«>i«lrtt lo wm
taolbir4 lata Its Iba IMlM Hip. Iioa
i ail fatiaia ia (blakaaw. tta wrmM of
, iba tiblaboMM iMaia Pair atal Kaptaai
' «a. Ublab«*«»a (Hi, IbH^kM :« lo
Urtobar I, |»|3
Tlrbata wub a Miaimun aollma
1 prtca of ti taill be u* aala a« all palaii Oklahoma t'tiy
rtum Hr|>iruibaf yi, ibo 4a» i » u» u« Inwo Mailtu**! I'o f ti iarkaon,
• ba wpaoing of Iha big Male l air ai»*l .litiatow paaaabget agent, tnlrwl
i Ktpuriiuxt. until and larltming Maiur {itwg. tiblabuata fill
ibMaaiM raMHhUg HIM
Un-ifbtl ow aniitaila* lo ibo
Mlttwlag or la tba Iwtal agra! of any !
ol *b# Ibtaraoiad Ha**
Itorb UUad l.lbaa hi) IbaaHak,
gxialoa paaMagar agra* 15a U Maig
it*, ttkiabwiua t ut
Mania l*a Hailmad I'o ton Itoilaa.
iickrt agani. I#r llurbiba lluict,
CaMaatua Haoaaaaa»i«>
Mm lfaglt*b pmpmt latta ml an
laaai ia c«4la«ilto i«at.»»»|rt| »w
ana« >• baown a* HiaM <l»rt»« '4
lag* tba doailiag boaaa* rwaiaia ato
liapfotalbanla r»ra|g a bllrbm tlrWl*.
fat »i>i|bdi a*» r««»brA at a a*-
ual ball aa4 aut> oiibaf b> eata*
i brio a«ai boa» A Ioarntaiaa-
j tllaaor tana uall I abllliag and C
l4a*o bortabla «ra •Mppll'd "b»a
i i.r«ir4 ih>a iba ron Hal ball ai I
rial ut aboal laa oaaia aa boar
If «Moiiia a ao< aba I ii »»"ail4 ba
MaW'la k Aol»|'i*< l< abaci*
»la • • .i>«. ukll»|\K aUI «W
11 t»a»
I Iba abtfc. - —,—
am ib«ga«MM i>4 mo <4 Malaiia aad gaa-
a'aiiy lo.(.»«««iiai ..aollibai
Oraw«»# Vatatiao
la yoar buaband anp'ting bis rata-
i uoaf
Not aa avk aa f ant"
"Voar buabaad fra«joruii> miaaaa .
bia dinaar" Hut a raally rlavar woman ta too
"Vaa Wbaaatar thara la a ball rlator to thus It.
game in loan ba datota* bimaolf lo —
Pnding fault aitb iba umpira maiaad
of »ltb iba cuol "
RE0. ROUGH HANDS
SOFT ANO WHITE
Ininienae Grand Kiaml Oklahoma'Hi at o Fair - la front ot uhirb I'olonal
ltooae«i-ii a ui apeak lo tba paopb- of (iklabonta on Tuaaday, Sepi 34.
day. October h. tba i-loalnu day of tbet Mia»ourl. Kunaas h 'lesaa Goorga
„ \ big aliow. The final reiurti limit will III lleckar, divlalon paa»eitKer agent,
'orced through fear and privation be midnight of Monday. October 7, or! 12 N Broadway, Oklahoma City.
'.o adopt and extraordliiary d«-
/I»»b, they turned the watera of tha
Jttlo canyon atreama upon tha
(round where Salt Lak« City now
Hands After many years of scant
luocesa or disheartening failure they
•ucceeded In mastering the art of Ir-
rigation. and under the wisdom of
.heir leaders they have become a
prosperous people.
long before the Mormons came,
however, small sections of the dryer
portions of the greast west were be-
.ng cultivated through irrigation The
ancient canals of the town-dwelling
Pueblo Indian tribes may still bo
*een in the broad valleys of the arid
portions of New Mexico and Arizona.
Dn the mesas, or highlands, of south-
western Colorado and the adjacent
lections of I'tah, Arizona and New j
the Fair and Kxposi
owing lo the fact that all the roada
have made a reduction for the Mtata
Fair and Exposition, it will not ba
necessary for the arrangements com-
mittee in i-hurge of the program for
two days aft
Hon.
Confirmation of the rate has been
received at all the Oklahoma City of-
fices of the interested lines and agents
in every city and town reached by tbelt'oionel Roosevelt's visit, to make ap-
railroads will be officially notified In plication for rates. Colonel Rooxevelt
circular letters sent out from the Okla- j will be in Oklahoma City on Tuesday,
homa City offices as well as in tariff ISeptember 24. and speak at tha
sheets issued by J K ilannigan. j grounds of the State Fair and Exposl-
chairman of the Southwestern Passen- ition on the opening day. The special
ger Association, at St. I^>uis. The rales go Into effect on Monday, Sep-
Missouri. Kansas A- Texas tariff sheet 1 tember 23. enabling every one desir-
for September has already been issued j ing to come to see Roosevelt to get
and contaius notice of the reduced! the benefit of the low fare.
Once Arid Portion of Arizona.
Mexico are to be found the remains
of the wonderful cliff dwellings, and
in the little near-by valleys are the
irrigating ditches Used by the inhab-
itants of a thousand of more years
ago.
The descendants of these tribes till ;
portion of the lands which were j
supplied with irrigating ditches and |
canals at the time when the Spanish ;
first came into the region. They fol- :
low many of the practices of theii j
ancestors, having been influenced but j
slightly by contact w ith white settlers j
who, rather, have learned from them
how to successfully cultivate the soil
The Mexicans of mixed Spanish
and Indian blood gradually pushed up
into this region, and from the neces
sities of the situation adopted irrigat
ing methods. Ditches dug by them
are to be found along the Rio Grande
as far north as Colorado and the trib-
utaries of the Arkansas river. The
early Spanish missions of the Pacific
coast also practiced irrigation, and in
southern California particularly, are
still to be seen the ruins of substan-
tial masonry dams and headwork&
which were constructed by Indian
labor.
SAVAII CRATERS ARE QUIE*
t VIOLENT ERUPTIONS IN SAMOANthas becu that they have found liti
ISLANDS HAVE vantage ground from which to punmaa
SUBSIDED I (heir work. The ebullitions have nT
San Francisco—The volcanic out- so continuous that it has been imp!
bursts that for over six years have J Bible to w itness the phenomena
terrorized the Island of Savaii, in the 'heir results except at long range. j
Samoa 11 group, have ceased at last. There was no volcano where these «
These eruptions have been almost in- eruptions, beginning in August, 1906, )
cessant, and there is no record of any | were centered. All the many vol- j
other volcanic center that has been 1 canoes in the island had been quies-
so violently active for so long a time, j Cf,nt tor over a century. Suddenly j
All the terrific energy of the Mata- j volcanic vents were opened on the !
vanu volcano seems now to have been floor of a deep valley about eight j
expended. ®r. K. Sapper, Dr. W. Gre- miles from the northeast coast of Sa- j
vel and other students of volcanic phe- vaii- The whole valley was soon filled I
nomfina express the opinion that there | lava. The ejecta built up a ridga I
probably will be no other eruption of I of lava- about 1,000 feet thick, whera j
Matavanu for another century and per- the valley had been; and above tha I
haps never. ridge arose a mountain of outpourings j
The ground for. their belief that the 2,000 feet high, to which the nam? of (
volcanic energy has been entirely ex- Matavanu was given. Over 30 square j
hausted is that since the first month miles of* the islanJ were finally cov- !
of 1911 there has been a gradual and ered to various depths with 1)1^ fluid I
uninterrupted decline of energy, until lava, destroying many native houses
eveiy trace of it finally disappeared in with their areas of cultivation.
For red, rough, rhapped and bleed-
ing hand*, dry, flaaured Itching, burn-
ing palma. and painful flnger-enda,
with abapaleaa nalla, a una night Cull-
rura treatment worka wonder* IM
re<!Ion* Hoak tha hand*, on retir-
ing. In hot water and Cntlcura Soap.
Dry. anoint with Cutlcura Ointment,
and we«r aoft bandagea or old. looaa
gloves during tha night Thete pur*,
aweet and gentle emollients preserve
the handa, prevent redness, roughnesa
and chapping, and Impart in a singly
night fbat velvety softness and white-
ness so much desired by women. For
, those whose occupations tend to In-
jure the hands, Cutlcura Soap and Cu-
ticura Ointment are wonderful.
Cutlcura Soap nnd Ointment gold
I throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32 p Skin Hook. Addresa 1
post-card "Cutlcura. Dept. L. Boston."
I Norwegian Scientific Expedition.
A Norwegian expedition will study
the natives, flora uud fauna of al- 1
most unknown regions of northern 1
and central Asia.
The czar of Russia has 102 vast pal-
.aces, employing a staff of 32.000 serv- •
ants, with an aunual payroll of fl,-
jWOO"
THREE-YEAR
M,0E HOMESTEAD
LAW
IN THE
GREAT
NORTHWEST
To prevent Malaria ix far better than
jo aura It. In malarial countries take a
dijgc of OXIDINK regularly once e«rh week
save yourself from Chills and Fever and
[her malarial troubles.
Ancient Idea of Dancing.
Dancing was originally a meana of
expressing religious feeling.
Full TUU to 320 or 160
Acre* in 3 Ytar$
Take the Great Northern
—ice with your own eyes
these fertile lands. Crops
this year biiju'r than ever!
Also wonderful opportun-
itiesinsale of 300,000acres
rich Montana gtafe lands
at low prices. Terms:
15% down, balance in
20 years.
Low Fares
Great Northern Ry.
dally. Sept. 25 to l v-t. \<r. >30.25 from
Oklahoma City to m*ny p«.int» in
Montana—$33.25 to Idaho. Wushlng-
tvtfi. Oregon and North Pacific Coaat
point*. Liberal stopovers.
Ticketa on Kale dally. Sept. 25 to
Oct. 10. For details addreu
E. C. LEEDY
Geo. Immigration A«t.
Dept. T.
Great Northern Rr.
St. Paul. Mina.
Ponama-Parifie Inlernaiiomt,
Hxposilion.ianFroncifco. 1915
A baseball player may be sluggish
without being a slugger.
Keep on trying; It's often the last
key of the bunch that opens the door.
ffwis'iiXSiE
BfSTQuant* DiniLVCIK
STRAlfilfl&CIGAR always reliable.
IF IT'S YOt'R EYES -
PETTfrS EYE SALVE i. what you need
Nothing keeps a man so busy as the i
attempt to idle away his time.
THESE SIX LETTERS
From New England Women
October last
In August last the lake of molten
lava was covered with a hard crust,
but cracks in its surface still revealed
It has been estimated that at times
the outpouring of lava from the center
of eruption amounted to from 2,000 to
3,000 tons a minute. The coral reef, !
; the rosy light of the superheated mat- about five miles from the shore, is the |
I ter below, and through one or another outer boundary of the lagoon between j
! volcanic vent a little smoke was still the coast and the reef. The lagooo '
| rising. Three months later a cold sur-I has been entirely filled with lava for
face covered everything. There was j a distance of about five miles along j
not a trace of smoke, not a sulphurous I the coast and a long lava ridge v.as
odor, no sign of fluid lava, nothing ex- built up in the sea beyond the coral
cept a little steam here and there. I reef. The neighboring salt waters be- |
So this is the end, perhaps for gen-j came a superheated calHron. killing :
erations, of the remarkable phenom- millions of corals and fish: and many i
ena that specialists have traveled fish, thus cooked, were collected and
from Europe to study. The trouble ] eaten by the natives.
DYING, GALLOPS TO BLAZE
Hoof Pulled Off^ by Railroad Track,
Horse Makes Last Run on Three Legs
New York—In running to a fire Ben,
BUILDING PIGEON ASYLUM
Col. MacAuley of Louisville Starts
Something New in Philanthropy
SUFFRAGISTS TO DARN SCCKS
°t>ve Domestic Proficiency at State
Fair in Minnesota—Also Adopt
Slogan in Rhyme.
Minneapolis, Minn.—In order to dis-
alpate the Impression that women who
yearn to drop their ballots In ballot
boxes at real elections don't know the
first elements of housekeeping. Minne-
sota suffragists will maintain a booth
at the state fair where every man,
whether married or single, may have
bis hose darned. The following war
. cry also haa been adopted:
During the month of August shliy ! ^ t..
■ ,|r Darn the government; darn the socks,
menta from Weatherford aggregated Thats* the way to the ballot box.
160 carloads of which 154 cars were j Patch the holes In hubby's i (•*<>.
mill products. There wer» fire cars \ M*rc" 10 tht P011* vo4c* our wo<*-
of rattle and one car of melons, ac- j T^ae campaign
cording to report
Louisville. Ky.—This city boasts 1
.. _ . ... - ... what is perhaps the first asvlur., for
the off horse of the fine team pulling L, , . . .. ' „.
v 6 homeless pigeonB in the country. The !
: hook and ladder No.'21. caught a hoof j philanthropy is the idea of Coi. Toiin
of his forefoot in the tracks of the T. MacAuley, veteran theatrical man-
New York Central railroad at Tenth ager, who has built the hospital on the 1
avenue and West Thirtieth street. cot|fi;e plan, capable of accommodat-
The hoof was torn off, but the big ) ing thousands of birds, in the rear of j
horse galloped at full speed on the j his theater in the heart of the busi- j
stump to the fire at 526 West Twenty- j nes district. Destruction of numer-
eighth street, and as the truck pulled lous landmarks recently, incident to an i
up fell moaning with pain. extension of the retail and office dis- j
The blaze amounting to nothing j trlct, has distributed the ancestral j
the firemen sympathetically grouped j homes of legions of downtown pi^eona
around the horse and its driver, Char-j and their bewildered flights in search
lie Smith, who made no attempt to [of new habitation attracted the bfnev- i
hide his tears. A veterinary was sent jolent eye of Col. MacAuley. who imme- j
for, and after a careful examination Idiately set carpenters to work on the
announced that Ben would have to be ' asylum.
destroyed. Smith refuse^ to drive the
truck to the engine house and stayed
by the injured horse until a bullet bad
put it out of ita miaery.
These campaign measures were
adopted at a meeting of tbe suffragist
executive committee here recently.
More than two hundred boy scouts
from Tulsa. Maskogee. Bartlesvii!»-
Wagoner. Fairfax and the cities of
Kastern Oklahoma »-nt into camp at the ©Meat alumnus of New
WrtUgria lake. t«ent?-ooe ■>>!•*• east York university and t"r.io« TbeoS<*1caI
of Tula* • |nary, waa struck dumb wbile oo
Sixty Cie cars of wheat, totaling Ti.- cup*leg the pnlplt of his aoa'a eh^trh.
•oe bushels have been shipped this He is etghfT-ntne ya*r* «M and haa
aeaaon from Rocky * The may I heen a nJalster for aver aeeenty
•oond "rocky" bet conditions rather years
Indicate Ansae la I stability Id that se* i
Imo mt Oalahems
Filla tbe Bill
I "A aentence with the word expos-
i are." the teacher demanded, and a
I sturdy boy put up his hand. "If you
Struck Dumb In Pulpit. ' fellows don t quit yonr grafting I II
Port Jefferson, L. I.—Rot. Henry R. j exposure." be quoted grandiloquently
from the noted reform lecturer he
had beard
New Zealanders consume more than
seven pounds of tobacco per capita
per year.
Explaining Away the Facts
Well-bred people now do not tilk
about "the world, the fl-rh and the
devil"; they speak of th<- ' environ-
ment, heredity and circumstances ]
D. L. Moody.
Where the Court Erred
Complaiaing at Toaer bridge «
V«ey Ancient Fort* o* Respect ,Alr<pn i r , ,r„ f,
The bow as a mark of reepect ia a i—lni ll Madam, yon
etastom used by nearly ail nations, married to a Una Giovanni'
aad one that had ita orfcia la aacteat j pttcant Indeed sir. I am t nothl^
of the sort'"—Load>a Standard
by Ufee
ay be
The ap
Prove that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound Does Restore the Health of Ailing Women.
Boston, Mass.—"I was passing through the Change of Life and suffered
from hemorrhages (sometimes lasting for weeks), and could get nothing to
check them. I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
(tablet form) on Tuesday, ana the following Saturday morning the hem-
orrhages stopped. I have taken them regularly ever since and am steadily-
gaining.
" I certainly think that every one who is troubled as I was should givo
your Compound Tablets a faithful trial, and they will find relief."—Mrs*
Oeobqe JuBr, 802 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
Letter from Mrs. Julia King, Phoenix, R.I.
Phoenix, R.I.—"I worked steady in the mill from the time I was 12 year*
old until I had been married a year, and I think that caused my bad feel-
ings. I had soreness in my side near my left hip that went around to my
back, and sometimes I would have to lie in bed for two or three days. I
was not able to do my housework.
M Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has helped me wonderfully in
every way. You may use my letter 1or the good of others. I am only too
glad to do anything within my powev to recommend your medicine."—Mrs.
Julia Kmo, Box 282, Phoenix. B.I.
Letter from Mrs. Etta Donovan,Willimantic,Conne
Willimantic. Conn.—" For five years I suffered untold agony from female
troubles causing backache, irregularities, dizziness, and nervous prostra-
tion. It wr.s impossible for me to ttulk ap stairs without stopping on the
tray. I was all run down in every way.
"I tried three doctors and each told tue something different. I received
no benefit from any of them but seemed to suffer more. The last doctor .
eaid it was no use for me to take anything as nothing would restore me to
health again. So I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
to see what it would do, and by taking seven bottles of the Compound and
other treatment you advised, I am restored to my natural health."—Mrs.
Etta Donovan, 762 Main Street, Willimantic, Conn.
Letter from Mrs. Winfield Dana, Augusta, Me.
Augusta, Me.—"Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has cured tha
backache, headache, and the bad pain I had in my right side, and I atn
perfectly welL"—Mrs. wis field Dana, R.F.D. No. a, Augusta, Me.
Letter from Mrs. J. A. Thompson, Newport, Vt.
Newport, Vt.—"I thank you for the great benefit Lydia E. Pinkham'a
Vegetable Compound has done me. I took eight bottles and it did wondera
for me, as I was a nervous wreck when 1 began taking It. I shall alwaye
apeak a good word for it to my friends."—Mrs. Jons A. Thompson, Box 3,
Newport Center, Vermont.
Letter from Miss Grace Dodds, Bethlehem, N.H.
Bethlehem, N.H.—" By working very bard, sweeping carpets, washing.
Ironing, lifting heavy baskets of clothes, etc., I got all run down. I waa
aick in bod every month.
" This last Spring my mother got Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com-
pound for me. and already I feel like another girL I am regular and do
not have the pains that Id id, and do not have to go to bed. I will tell all
my friends what the Compound is doing for me."—Miss Ubacii B. Donna.
Box 1JS, Bethlehem, N.ii.
For HO year* T.rriia F. Pinkham'a Vetretable
Com|Nnind ha«l»een tl»e «t.ni<l:trtt remrdt f«»r fe-
male ill*. No one nick with wntnanSallraenK
doe* ju»tio»- to beraelf wbo will not try this fa-
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The Duke Times (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, September 13, 1912, newspaper, September 13, 1912; Duke, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc403771/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.