The Lincoln County Journal. (Stroud, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 17, 1907 Page: 4 of 8
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LIEUTENANT BOWMAN.
t
RUSE OF THE
GIBEONITES
A ItOMY or tltt CONUUllT
or CANAAN
Bp IW mp4 fnwkM
UTTCRLV WORN OUT.
ViUllljr Sapped by Vurt or Suffering
wllti Kidney Trouble.
THC GUANO TRUNK PACIFIC RAIL- 1
ROAO ANO WESTERN CANAOA.
•I n
III!
WO
in il><
•if ili<
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tkrl
tor r.
■lur
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ni i
It la h
III FORTY-EIGHT HOURS
PE-BU-M CUHEO HIM.
Cold Affected Head and Throat-
Attack was Severe.
Char. \V. Bowman. 1st Lieut. and
Adjt. 4th M. ti. M. Car. Vola.. write*
from Lanhum. Mil., ns follow*.
“Though somewhat averse to pat-
ent medicines, and mill more averse
to becoming a juofomdonal atlldavlt
man. It seems only n plain duty In
the present instance to ndd my ex-
perience to the columns already writ-
ten concerning tho curative powers
of Peruna.
•'/have been particularly benefited
by Ita use for colda In the heed and
throat. I have been able to fully cure
myself of a most aevere attack In
forty-eight hours by Its use according
to directions. / use It as a preventive
whenever threatened with an attack.
“Members of my family nlso use
ft for like ailments. We nro recom-
mending It to our friends.”
—Chas. W. Bowman.
Alt Your Drugglat for Free Peruna
Almanac for 1907.
Origin of 8tarch.
The art of starching was not Intro-
duced Into England until the Ingenu-
ity of Dutch women In Btarchlng ruffs
Induced Queen Elizabeth to turn to
them when she took to wearing cam-
bric and linen cuffs. In 1564 Mistress
Dlnghein von den Plasse, the refugee
daughter of a Flemish knight, came
with her husband to London, accord-
ing to an old writer, and set up an es-
tablishment for starching, where she
not only plied her trade, but Instruct-
ed English classes in her art.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
that Contain Mercury,
i mercury will eurely destroy the *en*e of emell
end completely del-ansa the whole i>retcm when
entering It through the mucoua •iirfauee. Such
article* ehould never he ueed except on pre*crlp-
tlon* from reputable phyelclani, a* the damage they
Will dole ten fold to the good you can p.waihly do-
»lvs frnm Ihsm Mnll'r *’-*---*- "— m
five from th*in. Hall'* Cntarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney 4k Co., Toledo, O., contain* no mer-
cury. and Is taken Internally, acting directly upon
the blood and mucous surface* of the system. In
tlliwlna II all's falavali li a ■■■..
buying llall'e Catarrh Cure be eure you get the
genuine. It ta taken Internally and mad* In Tu
Ohio, by F. J Cheney ds Co. Teatlinonlala free.
foledo,
Sold by Drugglat*. Price, ?5c. per bottle.
Take Hall'* Family Fllla for conaUpatlon.
Autocratic Revivalists.
The earl and countess of Tanker-
▼111© have been holding crowded re-
ligious meetings in Shropshire, Eng-
land. Both are much Interested lu
•this kind of work. The countess was
Miss Lenora Van Mnrter, an American
Cttrl, and the earl spent much of his
youth In this country. He Is an ener-
getic member of the house of lords
and, like his wife, a great lover of art
' Starch, like everything else, Is be-
'Ing constantly improved, the patent
Starches put on the market 25 years
ago are very different and Inferior to
those of the present day. In the lat-
est discovery—Defiance Starch—all in-
jurious chemicals are omitted, while
the addition of another Ingredient, in-
vented by us, gives to the Starch a
strength and smoothness never ap-
proached by other brands.
i> —— -
Convict’s Peculiar Claim.
\ A life convict in the Andamans had
^served some long period when an or-
*der recently came for his release. All
tfe© time he had been In the band, and
had evidently so far forgotten that he
was a prisoner thiJt on his release he
put In a claim for a pension on ac-
count of his long and faithful service
as a government servant.—Madras
Mail. _
Important to Mothers.
Xxunlae carefully every bottle or CASTOHIA,
m aafe end aure remedy for infante end children,
and eee that it
SERMONETTE.
“And they asked not counsel
’ si Ihs mouth of the Lord.”—
Thseo words explain why Isrstl
fatlod to keep herself tree from
unholy alliances, and It Is the
saplanation of every misstep of
tho Chrietlsn today.
Tha world Is sblo to bam-
booilr the children of God be-
cause they look on tho evidence
which the world submits, rather
than looking to God who glveth
wisdom to ell men for the ask-
ing.
To Israel tho case seemed so
plain, I suppose, that It seemed
positively silly to ask God about
It. Like the little boy who
prayed for the protection of
God only at night, because dur-
ing the day he could take care
of himself, so the Israelites
thought that in the present situ-
ation they needed naught but
tholr own Judgment In deciding
their course of action.
And It was Just when they
felt the wisest and moat able to
take care of themselves that
the enemy turned the trick upon
them.
Life Is full of mistakes and
tragedies because everybody
else and everything else is con-
sulted rather than the source
of all light and all wisdom.
But how Is God to be consult-
ed about everything?
By subordination of the per-
sonal inclination and the con-
scious recognition of a higher
will and higher purpose than our
own.
By diligent use of our God-
given powers, while at the same
time there is an appreciation of
the limitations of human wis-
dom and judgment.
By the exercise of patience.
Take time to decide a point at
issue. A misstep is taken
through haste which prevents a
clear reading of the sign-post at
the intersection of the ways.
By the spirit of prayer per-
vading the life. Pray without
ceasing is the Scriptural admo-
nition. How? Surely not stay-
ing on bended knee in the se-
cret chamber and audible repe-
tition of words and phrases.
4 Surely not by going about with i
T closed eyes and mind absorbed ♦
2 in spiritual contemplations. Sure- £
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♦ -
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♦ I
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4 |
♦ t Is-
♦
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ml. I.»t
au<! thus
us i
save
mu hi
I |>n
hsl-
llAku
mu
I.<<•■<!. for
tli< would l>«
IMPS With lai
Uvea and our rlt>
”llut,” quickly intsn>oiM-d several
voices, "have you not lo-ard that Is-
raid will make no league with any of
tho Inlinhllnnta of tin' land, saying
that their Ood has forbidden II?"
''True.” assi-nii-d lh« old sage, un-
perturbed by tho amuitlngly Inxur-
mountable dlffli'ulty, "but let ns dls-
itiilsn mirsidvi’N nml mine to tIn-m as
from a far country. Wo shall put
old sio'ks upon our awe, and old
shoos nml old garments iiimui us, and
we shall lake old and rent wine ln>t-
and dry and moldy bread, and
we will come to them, and toll them
that wo have hoard in tho far coun-
try tho fume of their Hod nml ln<w
mlgliilly he has wrought ami wo have
come to puy homage to him nml to
worship him. Horadvenlure they will
hear us and will muke league with
in. former post mss-
»w living at Austla,
Tea., writes: “I
was afflicted for
ywgra with i«Ibi
norms tho loins
and in tbo hips
and shoulders. 1
had headache
also and neural-
gia. My right
oyo, from pain,
waa of little us*
to me for years
The constant flow of urine kept my
system depleted, causing nervous
“hills and night sweats. After trying
seven different climates and using all
kinds of medicine I had the good for-
tune to hear of Ikitin'a Kidney I'llla.
1 bis retm-dy has cured me. 1 am as
well today ns I waa twenty years ago,
(ml tuy eyesight Is perfect.”
Hold hy nil dealers. 50 rents a bos.
Koster-Mllbum Co., Ituffulo, N. Y.
HEADS SHAPEO TO ORDER.
Will Open Up Immense Arse of
Homestead Lands.
t
Bears the
Sipitare of
Sa USS For Over 30 Years.
Xha Kuul You Have Always Bought.
Invention Long Looked for.
A Paris paper devoted to scientlflo
subjects announces the discovery of
a practical method of shielding
watches and clocks from all magnetic
Influences. It is said to be the work
of a watchmaker named Leroy.
Defiance Starch is the latest Inven-
tion tn that line and an improvement
on all other makes; It is more eco-
nomical, does better worn, takes less
time. Get it from any grocer.
Trade-Mark for Ireland.
Ireland now has a trade-mark with
which her products are to be stamped
penalty may be inflicted tor lla in
ly not by any outward cloak of
sanctimoniousness. No. What
then? Prayer is communion with
God. And that communion con-
T sists in the conscious and un-
2 conscious domination of God in
2 the life. It marks the perpet-
4 ual attitude of the soul, so, that
^ whether immersed in business
■4 for the time being, or what not,
4 God’s spirit is operative In the
4 life. This is prayer without
2 ceasing.
♦~444-4444444444444444*44-44V
THE STORY.
'T* HERE seemed no way but for the
(1 Gibeonites to joint forces with the
federated kings in the proposed war
upon Joshua and the armies of Israel.
Never before had the entire country
between Jordan and the great sea
beet so aroused as at the present
time. Tidings of the coming of the
hosts of Israel had reached the land
while yet the Israelites were in the
wilderness far to the south and west,
but since the miraculous crossing of
the Jordan and the destruction of Jer-
icho and Ai the vague fears which
had filled the minds of the inhabit-
ants had taken definite form in the
desperate resolve to unite and give
battle to Israel.
That very day a deputation from
the kings of the Hittltes, tho Amor-
jtes. the Canaanites. the Perlzzltes,
tlie Jebusites, and others of the less-
or tribes of tho country urged them
to make alliance In the common cause
against Israel.
It is plain." the messengers said,
"that these Hebrews seek war. They
arrogate unto themselves great lm-
portance, and have openly declared
contempt for our gods. They have
destroyed Jericho and Ai with the In-
habitants thereof, and they would do
so to us. And because of this. oh.
men of Gibeon. the kings of all the
country to the north and south and
along the coast of the great sea are
raising a great army to give battle to
Israel, and have sent us to urge that
your lighting men join them in this
war.”
This speech of the messengers was
received with evident favor hy the
chief men of Gibeon who had boon
called together in council, and they
would at once have given assent to
the plan, had not old Second-Thought.
he was called—because «f his In-
variable habit of saying:
haste! Think it ov<
—counseled delay!
*'\Ve will be Iv
answer in the rnori
This plnn nt once mat the approval
of the chief men of Gibeon. and tlm
next morning when they had sent the
messengers of the kings away they at
once begun preparations to carry out
the plan.
And they went to Joshua unto tho
camp at Gllgal. Their arrival created
no little stir, and quickly Joshua and
the chief men assembled, and tho
strangers were admitted to tholr pres-
ence, nml to the statement thnt they
had come from a far country. Joshua
made answer:
"Our God has commanded us saying
that we should not mnke league with
any of the Inhabitants of the land.
I’eradventure ye dwell among us.'
"Nay, hut from a far country are
thy servants come,” they replied, "lie-
cause of the name of tlie Lord thy
God are we come. We have heard the
fame of him and all that he did in
Egypt, and all that he did to the
two kings of the Amorites that were
beyond Jordan, to Sihon king of
Hesbon, and Og king of Iiashan,
which was at Ashtaroth. Wherefore
our ciders and all the inhabitants
spake to us, saying: ‘Take victuals
with you for the journey, and go to
meet them, and say unto them: We
are your servants. Therefore now
make a league with us.' ”
"Nay,” interrupted Joshua, “but
how do we know that ye have come
from a far country?”
Dramatically they turned, and lift-
ing the covers from their provision
baskets, they said:
"Behold the evidence of our long
journey. See this our bread we took
hot out of tlie ovens on the day we
came forth to come hither, and behold
now it is dry and moldy. See those
bottles of wine! When they were
tilled as we started they were new,
and behold, now they be rent. And
behold our garments and our shoes,
for they have become old and ragged
by reason of the very long journey.”
Such seemingly indisputable evi-
dence quickly swept away all doubt
from the minds of tlie men who stood
with Joshua, and they persuaded him
that it would be well at%once to make
league with these people.
Joshua therefore made peace with
them, ami made a league with them to
let them live. And the men gathered
with him, the princes of the congregt-
tion, ratified the league.
During all this time the people of
Israel were talking one with another
concerning the coming of these
strangers, and as they saw them depart
and learned that a league had been
made with them, they selected some
of their number to follow these men,
a tiling which had not occurred to
Joshua or to the princes with him
to do.
As a result on the third day when
these men returned they reported that
tiie strangers had dealt with them dc-
oeitfully and had not come from a
far country, but were really their
neighbors living only a short distance
from Gllgal. And they were wrcCli
with Joshua and tho princes for mak-
ing the league and wore for going at
once against the Gibeonites, for. said
they: "There is rich spoil in their
cities which should be ours." But
Joshua and the princes because of
their oath which had been given,
would not permit them so to do, but
made the Gibeonites servants, that
they would work for them continually.
Makes Great Gains.
Cheering news comes to hand of
the progress in Japan. Bishop Har-
ris. who has charge of the American
Methodist Missions in Korea and
Japan, says that during the recent
war the churches made great gains
in membership, and that they are
now unusually active In evangelistic
efforts. As regards audiences, minis-
ters of churches, baptisms, and the
circulation of the Scriptures, things
German Doctor Explains Causes of
Various Formations.
At a recent convention of German
naturalists and doctors Dr. Walchcr,
>f Stuttgart, In an Instructive paper
put forth a sensational theory to ex-
plain tho formation of tho shape of
tho head of Infanta. He maintained
that tho head of a child could bo
molded artificially. Ho found by ox-
perlenco that when n medium-shaped
head Is placed In a soft cushion the
child turns on Its back, or rests on the
hack of Its head, In order to free
mouth, noso and face. In this manner
the head rests smoothly, and a short
head Is developed. Itut If the medium-
shaped head of a child Is placed on a
hard under-rest, like a hair mattress
or rolled carjiet, tho child’s head
turns aside, as It cannot stand any
more on Its head than an egg, for the
muscle of tho back is weakened.
Therefore, with continued resting on
the sldo a long head ts developed. To
prove his assertions the lecturer pre-
neiited a child whose mother and sis-
ter are short-headed. Tho child at its
birth had a short head, now after 18
months It is long skulled. If the child
had been placed on its back, according
to other experiences Its head would
have been short-shaped. Dr. Walcher
did not deny that the shape of the
head was inherited, but asserted that
It could bo greatly iulluenced by the
way the child rested.
SCALY ERUPTION ON BODY.
Doctors and Remedies Fruitless—Suf-
fered 10 Years — Completely
Cured by Cuticura.
"When I was about nine years old
small sores appeared on each of my
lower limbs. I scratched them with a
brass pin and shortly afterwards both
of those limbs became so sore that
I could scarcely walk. When I had
been suffering for about a month
the sores began to heal, but small
Bcaly eruptions appeared where the
sores had been. From that time on-
ward I was troubled by such severe
Itching that, until I became accus-
tomed to it, I would scratch the sores
until the blood began to flow. This
would stop the itching for a few
days, but scaly places would appear
again and the itching would accom-
pany them. After I suffered about
ten years I made a renewed effort to
effect a cure. The eruptions by this
time had appeared on every part of
my body except my face and hands.
The best doctors in my native coun-
ty advised me to use arsenic in small
doses and a salve. I then used to
bathe the sores in a mixture which
gave almost intolerable pain. In ad-
dition I used other remedies, such
as iodine, sulphur, zinc salve, -'s
Salve, - Ointment, and in fact I
was continually giving some remedy
fair trial, never using less than
one or two boxes or bottles. All
this was fruitless. Finally my hair
began to fail out and I was rapidly
becoming bald. I used -'s -,
but it did no good. A few months
after, having used almost everything
else, I thought I would try Cuticura
Ointment, having previously used
Cuticura Soap and being pleased with
it. After using three boxes I was
completely cured, and my hair was
restored, after fourteen years of suf-
fering and an expenditure of at least
$50 or $00 in vainly endeavoring to
find a cure. I shall be rflad to write
to any one who may be interested in
my eure. B. Hiram Mattingly, Ver-
million, S. Dak., Aug. 18, 1906.”
Tbs railway facilities of Western
Canada Lav* been taxed to lb* ut-
termost In recent years to transfer
tb* surplus grain crop to tbo eastern
markets and tb* seaborn a. Tb* large
Indus of settlers and tb* additional
area put under crop have added large-
ly to tbo grain product, and notwith-
standing the Increased railway facil-
ities that bavo been placed at tb* dls
pooal of tbe public. Hie question of
transportation baa proved to bo a aw
rlnua one.
It will, therefore, bo good news to
nvoryone Interested In Western Can-
ada to know that an authoritative
statement has been given out by C.
M. Hays, president of tbo Grand
Trunk Pacific Hallway, that that rail-
way will do Ha shnro towards moving
tho crop of 1907 from Alberta, Has
katchewan and Manitoba to tldo water,
and thus assist In removing a serious
obstaclo which baa faced tho settlers
during recent years. Mr. Hays, who
baa Just completed a trip from Port-
age la Pralrlo to Edmonton In a prai-
rie schooner, a distance of 735 miles,
which waa covered In eighteen days.
Is enthusiastic about tho country.
This will bo gratifying to settlers In
the Canadian West, oven If Mr. I lays
declines to bo bound to a time limit
with the exactitude of a stop-watch.
Tho Grand Trunk Pacific road will be
In a position to take part In tbo trans-
portation of tho crop of 1907, and that
will bo satisfactory to tho settlers In
that country when tho harvest Is gar-
nered.
Tho wheat crop of 1906 In Western
Canada was about 90.000,000 bushels,
and, with the Increased acreage which
Is confidently expected to bo put un-
der crop next year. It Is safely calcu-
lated that fully 125.000,000 bushels will
bo harvested In 1907. Tho necessity
for Increased transj)ortatIon facilities
are, therefore, apparent, and the state-
ment made by Mr. Hays will bring en-
couragement to tho farmers of the
Canadian West, new and old. Tho
opening up of additional thousands of
free homesteads is thus assured by
tho agent of tho Canadian Govern-
ment, whoso address appears else-
where. _
NOT DOOMED TO SECLUSION.
“W#
Tb* folk
letter rvet
era. ot Htutgai
greatly oblige i
dure Hunt's U
dll*. Ill, ss 1 I
relative* there,
concerned, end
Is u»t kept the
It ss lh
my houi
Hats Many tlmllsr.*
wing Is on vitrsci from
>1 fr
Arl
> If
Mr. II
li
(to UK
In wh«
I und«
ere. I can recoi
best medicine 1 ever bad la
It cured mo of a bad css*
II. Mey-
U would
Jd luiri*
Millldgwi
<nda and
I am much
ind the Oil
recommend
of th* Hloody Flux In Imrs than one*
half hour, and It cured my grand*
daughter of a had case of CholcrA
Morbus In a very short time.**
Transformation In Now Mosleo,
“Thro* »ea»<>n* of rainfall have
transformed Nuw Mexico from an ex-
panso of unproductive territory Into a
country of bountiful crops, running
streams and happy, pro*|H»rous poo
pie.” Is the r*i>orl which E. W. Fog*
register of tbe government land office
at Clayton. N. M.. brought to Waahiug>
ton.—Washington Post.
With a smooth iron and DeflaO'vl
Starch, you can laundor your shirt*
waist Just as well at homo as tho
steam laundry can; It will hava tho
proper stiffness and finish, there will
bo leso weur and tear of the goods,
and It will be a positive pleasure to
use a Starch that does not stick to thg
Iron.____
Sixty Years a Lamplighter.
Timothy Holdra. who has died at
Yarmouth. England, at tho ago of 83
years, had been tn tho service of the
local gas company more than 60 years,
and before that, as a youth, was em-
ployed to light tho street oil lamps
with a flint and steel.
Austrian Nuns of Noble Blood Lead
Pleasant Lives.
Tho “first lady” in the Austro-Hun-
garian court is now the abbess of the
Theresian Convent of the Noble La-
dles in Prague, a position which is
always held by an archduchess. The
Archduchess Maria Annunclata, the
present abbess, who 13 a niece of the
emperor, has succeeded to the position
of first lady through the widowhood
of the Archduchess Maria Josefa, wife
of the late Archduke Otto. The noble
nuns of Prague live a very different
life from what Is the usual conception
of convent life. They play a leading
part in the society of the city and are
not even compelled to live in the ab-
bey, where each is provided with two
rooms and Bervice. Handsome car-
riages with liveried servants are also
provided for their use, and they have
a box in the opera. Each noble lady
is paid $500 a year, while the abbess
has a salary of $10,000. When they
attend court balls they must wear
black evening dress with a ribbon of
light blue.
Sheer white goods, In fact, any fine
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beau-
ty. Home laundering would be equal-
ly satisfactory if proper attention waa
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
Want Overshoes Made to Order.
“One peculiar feature of the shoe
trade this season is <the demand for
overshoes made to order,” said the
manager of a shoe store. "Many
women are wearing shoes with rather
narrow, pointed toes and the broad
rubbers now on the market are cer-
tainly not a very good fit. What
our customers want is an overshoe
that doesn't look like a gunboat, hence
the frequent orders for overshoes
with graceful lines.”—N. Y. Sun.
for a lo
receiving
American Idealism.
Since my first arrival in America I
have held that the real spirit is ideal-
istic and that the average individual
American is controlled by idealistic
Impulses. Those who may contradict
me can not have sounded the depths
of the philosophy of Ralph Waldo
Emerson, or studied the life and read
the speeches of Abraham Lincoln, and
considered their far-reaching effect on
the American people. In Lincoln’s
great character nothing can be more
striking than the way in which he
combined reality and the loftiest ideal. •
with a thoroughly practical capacity
to achieve that ideal by practical i
methods. This faculty seemed to give
Mm a far-sichted. almost superhuman
vision, which enabled him to pierce j
the clouds obscuring the sight of the
keenest statesmen and thinkers of his
age—Baron Speck von Sternburg. In
Forum.
Want Protection for Bread.
English medical men are demon ding
that bakers should deliver loaves in (
oiled paper bags.
Alcohol From Sweet Potatoes.
Sweet potatoes are principally used
in the Azores to make alcohol, tha
yield being ten to 11 per cent The
present price is about 13 cents (Unit
ed States currency) per liter (1.0567
quarts). _
Old Adage Corroborated.
Corroboration of the old saying that
“the way to a man's heart is through
his stomach" is found in an item
which announces that a western mik
lionaire is going to marry his cook.
THE FIRST TWINGE
Of Rheumatism Calls for Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills If You Would Be
Easily Cured.
Mr. Frank Little, a well known citi-
zen of Portland, Ionia Co., Mich., was
cured of a severe case of rheumatism
by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. In speak-
ing about it recently, he said: "My
body was run down and In no condi-
tion to withstand disease and about
five years ago I began to feel rheu-
matic pains in my arms and across
my back. My arms and legs grew
numb and tbe rheumatism seemed to
settle in every Joint so that I could
hardly move, while my arms were
useless at times. I was unable to
sleep or rest well and my heart pain-
ed me so terribly I oould hardly stand
it My stomach became sour and
bloated after eating and this grew
so bad that I had Inflammation of
the stomach. I was extremely nerv-
ous and oould not bear the least
noise or excitement One whole side
of my body became paralyzed.
“As I said before, I had been suff-
ering about five years and seemed to
be able to get no relief from my
doctors, when a friend here in Port-
land told me how Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills had cured him of neuralgia in
the face, even after the pain had
drawn it to one side. I decided to
try the pills and began to see some
improvement soon after using them.
This encouraged me to keep on until
I was entirely cured. I have never
had a return of the rheumatism or of
the paralysis.
The pills are for sale hy all drug-
gists or sent, postpaid, on receipt of
price, 50 cents per box, six boxes
$2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine
Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively enred by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis-
tress from Dyspepsia, In-
digestion and Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem-
edy for Dizziness. Nausea,
Drowsiness, Bad Taste
in tho Mouth, Coated
Tongue, Pain In the Side,
TORPID LTVER. They
regulate tbe Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
CARTERS
llTTLE
IVER
PILLS.
CARTERS
■ iTTLE
WlVER
| PILLS.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
PIANOS!
$6.00 to $10.00 down, payments.
Talking Machines
Nothing down, $ 1,00 a week.
Guitars, Mandolins, Violins, Organs,
$3 up, $1 weekly, sheet music, etc!
SEWING MACHINES
$5.00 down, $1.00 a week.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
Address DURHAM & CO.,
3IO N. Broadway. OKLAHOMA. O. T.
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE
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Hubbard, J. H. The Lincoln County Journal. (Stroud, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 17, 1907, newspaper, January 17, 1907; Stroud, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc405117/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.