The Hominy News-Republican (Hominy, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, June 5, 1908 Page: 2 of 6
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HOMINY MEWS-REPUBLICAN
W. J. REMALL
HOMINY
OKLAHOMA
OKLAHOMA STATE NOTES
The state treasurer has -withdrawn
all state funds from the national
banks of Oklahoma City who would
not comply with the state guaranty
law. This has reduced the state
funds in Oklahoma City from over
$10,000 to $19,000. There are a few
state banks in the metropolis that
have copiplied with the state law and
these retain their state deposits.
The official returns of the county
seat elections in McIntosh, Grant and
Wagoner counties has been filed with
Governor Haskell. The victory in Me.
Intosh is claimed by Checotah, by a
majority of 63 votes. In Grant Med
lord won by 250 and in Wagoner the
town of Wagoner was 170 votes to the
good. Medford was made the tempo
rary county seat of Grant county but
later Pond Creek was substituted
FARMERS WAKE UP. Your last
chance to buy a farm in the Garden
Sp«it of the United States, in Atascosa
County, Texas, near San Antonio.
Prom 10 to 640 acres and two town
lots for $210. Write for literature and
views. Dr. Chas. F. Simmons, San An-
tonio, Texas.
Youth the Time to Build Wisely.
Youth is the best time for the
building of character and the forming
of principle, and the future depends
on the decisions and actions of the
present.—Rev. G. Denton.
BAD ITCHING HUMOR.
Governor Haskell has named as re-
gents of the girls’ industrial school
created by the Stewart bill, recently
passed, but not yet located, Captain
A. S. McKennon of McAlester, Mrs
Katherine Patterson of Muskogee,
and Miss Anna B. Stewart of Antlers
Upon his arrival home from the
legislature, Senator J. J. Williams oi
Weatherford was met by a brass band
and a large gathering of citizens. The
occasoin for this celebration was the
appropriation of the $100,000 for the
erection of a new building for the
Southwestern Normal located al
Weatherford.
Limbs Below the Knees Were Raw-
Feet Swollen—Sleep Broken—
Cured In 2 Days by Cutlcura.
“Some two months ago I had a ho
mor break out on my limbs below my
knees. They came to look like raw
beefsteak, all red, and no one knows
how they itched and burned. They
were so swollen that I could not get
my shoes on for a week or more. I
used five or six different remedies and
got no help, only when applying them
the burning was worse and the itching;
less. For two or three weeks the suf-
fering was intense and during that
time i did not sleep an hour at a time.
Then one morning I tried a bit of
Cutlcura. From the moment it touched
me the itching was gone and I have
not telt a bit of it since. The swelling
went down and in two days I had my
shoes on and was about as usual.
George B. Farley, 50 South State SL,
Concord, N. H., May 14. 1907.’’
SERIAL
STORY
LANGFORD
of ihe
THREE
BARS 5)
KATE AND VIRGIL D. BOYLES
3
JUST A TOUCH OF SATIRE.
The Oklahoma Central railroad, op-
erating ISO miles of road between
Lehigh and Chickasha, has gone into
the hands of a receiver. President
Carter of the company says radical
legislation is the principal cause foi
the assignment.
The state corporation commission
has issued an order abandoning all
railroad hearings until after July 15
The Reason assigned is to allow the
railroads to recuperate the tremen-
dous'losses from the recent floods.
Governor Harkell has appointed
these engineers and coal operators as
members of the state board of mines;
W. T. Evans, of Dow; T. W. McLaugh-
lin, of Haileyville; P. R. Allen, McAl-
ester; David C. McAlpin, Chant; Al
exander Mount, Henryetta.
Mrs. M. E. Barnes, wife of ex-gov-
ernor C. M. Barnes, died at her home
in Guthrie last week. Mrs. Barnes
was one of the leading club women
of the state.
Two hundred and fifty members 6f
the order of Elks attended the annual
meeting in El Reno last week. The
next meeting will be held at Shawnee.
Little Note That Probably Made Mean
Employer Wince.
Prof. Charles Zueblln, the brilliant
and original sociologist of the Uni
versity of Chicago, enunciated before
the League of Political Education in
New York a superb epigram:
“He who begins with saving to pro-
tect his family may end with neglect-
ing his family to save.”
Discussing the dangers of immod-
erate saving Prof. Zueblln said the
other day:
“It's by saving immoderately that
we come to Inserting want advertise
ments like one I saw recently—
‘Wanted, capable office boy; salary,
$1 a week.’
"A young man of Seminary avenue,
noticing this advertisement, couldn't
resist replying to it. His reply ran:
“ ‘I beg to offer you my services.
Should you require a premium I could
furnish $500. You do not mention
Sundays—should I have to work on
that day? Neither do you state
whether the applicant must be clothed
or not, but I have concluded that he
must at least wear trousers, or he
would be unable to carry home his
wages.’ ”
H. L. Browder, who was recently
appointed liquor dispenser at We-
woka, has resigned. He declares that
the job does not pay a man to devote
his time to it.
It is rumored that the superintend-
ent and his force of clerks and the
dispatchers and trainmen of the Rock
Island now stationed at Geary will
he moved to El Reno June 1.
The Rock Island has re-instated
nearly all the men laid oft at the
shops in Chickasha during the months
of March and April. It is believed
that the re-instatement Is permanent
Superintendent Cameron rules that
women are entitled to sit on school
boards In Oklahoma. He maintains
that the right to vote at school elec-
tions carries with it the right to hold
school offices.
Governor Haskell says that four
hundred Oklahoma convicts will be
brought from the penitentiary to work
Ion the roads of the state
Triumph of Mind.
Victim of Delusiou—Doctor, I'm
awfully afraid I’m going to have brain
fever.
Doctor—Pooh, pooh, my dear friend!
That's all an illusion of the senses.
There is no such thing as fever. Yog
have no fever, you have no br—h’m—
no material substance upon which
such a wholly imaginary and suppo-
sitious thing as a fever could find
any base of operation.
Victim—Oh, doctor, what a load you
have taken from my—from my—I
have a mind, haven’t I, doctor?
Food as Church Tlthea.
Bernaldo in his Calendar says that
In medieval times there was more food
than money given for church tithes.
He that will lose his friend for a
Jest deserves to die a beggar by the
bargain.—Fuller.
THE FIRST TASTE
Learned to
Drink Coffee
Baby.
When
Oklahoma Gets Additional Judge
WASHINGTON: Under the provi-
sions of an omnibus bill passed by
ithe house, three additional federal
judges are authorized, one each for
Alaska, Oklahoma and New Mexico;
the pay of district attorney and mar-
shal of Oklahoma is fixed at $4,000
per annum, and certain records of the
territorial court of Oklahoma and In-
dian Territory are directed to be turn-
ed over to the federal court of Okla-
homa.
Bank Increases Reward
ALVA: An additional reward of
$1,000 has been offered by the officials
of the Back of Commerce for the ar-
rest of J. H. Westfall, who was con-
nected with the bank and who left
here last January. The first reward
was $500 and the bank officials have
waited for the state to make an offer,
but having been informed that the
governor has not that authority, they
increased their own reward.
Sent Obscene Matter Through Mail
CHANT: For sending matter
through the mail that contained state-
ments derogatory to the character of
Mrs. Wiliam Boterous, Peter Kistui-
tis, a Pole, was arrested at Fort
Smith and brought here. He admitted
writing the letter containing the
statements that are a basis for his
arrest and was released on bond
peading grand Jury investigation.
At Lawton. Lulu Remer, a pretty
seventeen-year-old girl, charged with
boot-legging, was acquitted by a jury.
If parents realized the fact that cof-
fee contains a drug—caffeine—which
is especially harmful to children, they
would doubtless hesitate before giv-
ing the babies coffee to drink.
“When I was a child in my mother’s
arms and first began to nibble things
at the table, mother used to give me
sips of coffee. As my parents used
coffee exclusively at meals I never
knew there was anything to drink but
coffee and water.
“And so I contracted the coffee habit
early. I remember when quite young,
the continual use of coffee so affected
my parents that they tried roasting
wheat and barley, then ground it in the
coffee-mill, as a substitute for coffee.
“But it did not taste right and they
went back to coffee again. That was
long before Posturn was ever heard of.
I continued to use coffee until I was 27,
and when I got into office work, I be-
gan to have nervous spells. Especially
after breakfast I was so nervous I
could scarcely attend to my corre-
spondence.
"At night, after haring coffee for
supper, I could hardly sleep, and on
rising in the morning would feel weak
and nervous.
“A friend persuaded me to try Post-
uin. My wife and I did not like it
at first, but later when boiled good
and strong it was fine. Now we
would not give up Postum for the
best coffee we ever tasted.
“I can now get good sleep, an free
from nervousness and headaches. I
recommend Postum to all coffee drink-
ers.
“There’s a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek. Mich. Read "The Road to Well-
viile,” In pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
interest.
(Copyright by A. C. McClurg <1 Co., UW7.)
SYNOPSIS.
Cattle thieves despoiling ranches of
South Dakota. George Williston, small
ranchman, runs into rendezvous of
thieves on Island in Missouri river. They
have stolon cattle from Three Bar ranch
Langford visits Wtlliston and hts daugh-
ter and Williston reports what he has
seen to I.angford, who determines to rid
country of thieves. Jesse Black heads out-
laws. Langford fulls in love with Wlllls-
ton's daughter, hut does not tell her so
Louise Dale, court stenographer, and
niece of Judge Dale, visits Kemah ut re
quest of county attorney, Gordon, to take
testimony In preliminary hearing. Gordon
falls In love witti iter. After preliminary
examination Wllllston's home Is attaeked
and defended by his daughter and him-
self. Outlaws tire building Just as Lung-
ford and his cowboys arrive. Outlaws
carry off Williston hut Langford rescues
the daughter. Without Wlllistion evidence
against Black is meager, and case seems
to be going against the state. Gordon
takes a night ride and finds Williston,
who lias escaped from captors. The
courthouse at Kemah burns at night
Williston holds a tea party In his room
following court house lire, and Mary Wil-
liston and Ixniise Dale attend.
CHAPTER XVIII.—Continued
cur. A strange elation toqk possession
of him. She was here. He thought of
last night and seemed to walk on air.
If he won out maybe—but, fool that
he was! what was there in this rough
land for a girl like—Louise?
“Oh, no, that will be too much
trouble,” gasped Louise, in some alarm
and thinking of Aunt Helen.
“Thanks, old man, we’ll stay," spoke
up Langford, cheerfully. “He makes
excellent tea—really. I’ve tried it be-
fore. You will never regret staying.”
Silently he watched his friend In the
inner room bring out a battered tea-
kettle, fill it with a steady hand and
put it on the stove in the office, com-
ing and going carelessly, seemingly
conscious of nothing In the world but
the comfort of his unexpected guests.
True to her sex, Louise was curious-
ly interested in the house keeping ar-
rangements of a genuine bachelor es-
tablishment. Woman-like, she saw
many things in the short time she was
there—but nothing that diminished
her respect for Richard Gordon.
The bed in the inner chamber where
both men slept was disarranged but
clean. Wearing apparel was strewn
over the chairs and tables. There was
a litter of magazines on the floor. She
laid them up against Langford; she
did not think Gordon had the time or
inclination to cultivate the magazine
habit. She did not know to whose
weakness to ascribe the tobacco pouch
and brier-wood pipe placed invitingly
by the side of a pair of gay. elaborate-
ly bead-embroidered moccasins, cozily
stowed away under the head of the
bed; but she was rather Inclined to
lay these, too, to Langford's charge.
The howling tempest outside only
served to enhance the coziness of the
rumbling fire and the closely drawn
blinds.
But tea was never served in those
bachelor rooms that night—neither
that night nor ever again. It was a
little dream that went up in flame
with the walls that harbored it. Who
first became conscious that the tang
of smoke was gradually filling their
nostrils, it was hard to tell. They
were not far behind each other in that
consciousness. It was Langford who
discovered that the trouble was at
the rear, where the wind would soon
have the whole building fanned into
flames. Gordon unlocked the door
quietly. He said nothing. But Paul,
springing in front of him. himself
threw it open. It was no new dodge,
this burning a man out to shoot him
as one would drown out a gopher for !
the killing. He need not have been ;
afraid. The alarm had spread. The j
street in front was rapidly filling. |
One would hardly have dared to shoot
—then—if one had meant to. And be
did not know. He only knew that
deviltry had been in the air for Gor-
don' that night. He had suspected
more 'than he had overheard, but it
had been in the air.
Gordon saw the action and under-
stood it. He never forgot it. He
said nothing, but gave his friend an
illuminating smile that Langford un-
derstood. Neither ever spoke of it,
neither ever forgot it. How tightly
can quick impulses bind—forever.
Outside, they encountered the Judge
in search of his delinquent charges.
“I’m sorry. Dick,” he said. “Dead loss
my boy. This beastly wind is your
undoing.”
"I'm not worrying. Judge," respond-
ed Gordon, grimly. "I intend for some
one else to do that*”
“Hellity damn, Dick, hellity damn!”
exploded Jim Munson in his ear. The
words came whistling through his lips,
caught and whirled backward by the
play of the storm. The cold was get-
ting bitter, and a fine, cutting snow
was at last driving before the wind.
Gordon, with a set face, plunged
back into the room—already fire-lick-
ed. Langford and Munson followed.
Ther*} sat the little tea-sendee star-
ing at them with dumb pathos. The
three succeeded in rolling the safe
With all its precious documents ar-
ranged within, out into the street
Nothing else mattered much—to Gor
don. But other things were saved
and Jim gallantly tossed out every:
thing he could lay his hands on before
Gordon ordered everybody out for
good and all. It was no longer safe to
be within. Gordon was the last one
out. He carried a battered little tea-
kettle in his hand. He looked at It in
a whimsical surprise as If he had not
known until then that he had It In his
hand. Obeying a sudden Impulse, he
held It out to Louise.
"Please take care of—my poor little
dream,” he whispered with a strange,
intent look.
Before she could comprehend the
significance or give answer, the judge
had faced about. He bore the girls
T
7
Gordon Unlocked the Door Quietly.
back to the hotel, scolding helplessly
all the way as they scudded with the
wind. But Louise held the little tin
kettle firmly.
Men knew of Richard Gordon that
night that he was a marked man. The
secret workings of a secret clan had
him on their proscription list. Some
one had at last found this unwearied
and doggedly persistent young fellow
in the way. In the way, he was a
menace, a danger. He must be re-
moved from out the way. He could
not be bought from it—he should be
warned from it. So now his home—
his work room and his rest room, the
first by many hours daily the more in
use, with all its furnishings of bache-
lor plainness and utility, that yet had
held a curious charm for some men,
friends and cronies like Langford—
was burning that he might be warned.
Could any one say, “Jesse Black has
done this thing?” Would he not bring
down proof of guilt by a retaliation
struck too soon? It would seem as If
he were anticipating an unfavorable
verdict. So men reasoned. And even
then they did not arise to stamp out
the evil that had endured and hugged
Itself and spit out corruption in the
cattle country. That was reserved for
—another.
They talked of a match thrown
down at the court-house by a tramp,
likely—when it was past midnight,
when the fire broke out with the wind
a piercing gale, and when no vagrant
but had long since left such cold com
fort and had slept these many weeks
in sunnier climes. Some argued that
the windows of the court-room might
have been left open and the stove
blown down by the wind tearing
through, or the stove door might have
blown open and remains of the fire
been blown out, or the pipe might
have fallen down. But it was a little
odd that the same people said Dick
Gordon's office likely caught fire from
flying sparks. Dick's office was two
blocks to westward of the court-house
and it would have been a brave spark
and a lively one that could have made
headway against that northwester.
CHAPTER XIX.
The Escape.
The little county seat awoke In the
morning to a strange sight. The
storm had not abated. The wind was
still blowing at blizzard rate off the
northwest bills, and fine, icy snow was
Ewirling so thickly through the cold
air that vision was obstructed. Build-
ing were distinguishable only as shad-
ows showing faintly through a heavy
white veil. The thermometer had gone
1 many degrees below the zero mark. It
was steadily growing colder. The old-
er inhabitants said It would surely
break the record the coming night.
An immense fire had been built in
the sitting-room. Thither Mary and
Louise repaired. Here they were
joined by Dale, Langford and Gordon.
“You should be out at the ranch
looking after your poor cattle, Mr.
Langford,” said Mary, smilingly. She
could be light-hearted now—since a lit-
tle secret had been whispered to her
last night at a tea party where no
tea had been drunk. Langford bad
gravitated toward her as naturally
as steel to a magnet. He shrugged his
big shoulders and laughed a little.
“The Scribe will do everything that
can be done. Honest, now, did you
think this trial could be pulled off
without me?”
“But there can be no trial to-dav.“
“Why not?”
“Did I dream the court-house burned
last night?”
“If you did, we are all dreamers
alike.-’
“Then how can you hold court?”
“We have gone back to the time
when church and state were one and
inseparable, and court convenes at 10
o'clock sharp in the meeting-house,”
he said.
Louise was looking white and mis-
erable.
"You are not contemplating running
away, are you?" asked Gordon. "This
is unusual weather—really."
She looked at him with a pitiful
smile.
"I should like to be strong and
brave and enduring and capable—like
Mary. You don't believe it, do you?
it's true, though. But I can’t. I’m
weak and homesick and cold. I ought
not to have come. I am not the kind.
You said it, you know. I am going
home Just as soon as this court is
over. I mean it.”
There was no mistaking that. Gor-
don bowed his head. His face was
white. It had come sooner than he
had thought.
All the records of the work yester-
day had been burned. There was noth-
ing to do but begin at the beginning
again. It was discouraging, uninter-
esting. But it had to be done. Dale
refused positively to udjourn. The
jurymen were all here. So the little
frame church was bargained for. If
the fire-bugs had thought to postpone
events—to gain time—by last night’s
work, they would find themselves very
greatly mistaken. The church was
long and narrow like a country school-
house, aud rather roomy considering
the size of the town. It had precise
windows—also like a country school-
house—four on the west side, through
which the fine snow was drifting, four
opposite. The storm kept few at
home with the exception of the people
from across the river. There were
enough staying in the town to fill the
room to its utmost limits. Standing
room was at a premium. The entry
was crowded. Men not able to get in
ploughed back through the cutting
wind and snow only to return present-
ly to see if the situation had changed
any during their brief absence. So
all the work of yesterday was gone
over again.
So close was the pack of people that
the fire roaring in the big stove in the
middle of the room was allowed to
sink in smouldering quiet. The heavy
air had been unbearable else. The
snow that had been brought in on
tramping feet lay in little melted
pools on the rough flooring. Men for-
got to eat peanuts and women forgot
to chew their gum—except one or two
extremely nervous ones whose jaws
moved the faster under the stimulus
of hysteria. Jejise Black was telling
his story.
Along toward the 1st of last July
I took a hike out into the Indian coun-
try to buy a few head o’ cattle,
trade considerable with the half-
breeds around Crow creek and Lower
Rrule. They’re always for sellin' and
If it comes to a show-down never hag-
gle much about the lucre—It all goes
for snake-juice anyway. Well, 1 landed
at John Yellow Wolf's shanty along
about noon and found there was oth-
ers ahead of me. Yellow Wolf always
was a popular cuss. There was Char
He Nlghtbird, Pete Monroe, Jesse Big
Cloud and two or three others whose
mugs I did not happen to be onto,
After our feed, we all strolled o«t to
the corral. Yellow Wolf said he had
bought a likely little bunch from some
English feller who was skipping the
country—starved out and homesick—
and hadn’t put ’em on the range yet.
He said J R was the English feller’s
brand. I didn’t suspicion no under-
hand dealin’s. Yellow Wolf’s always
treated me white before, so I bar
gained for this here chap and three or
four others and then pulled out for
home driving the bunch. They fed at
home for a Bpell and then I decided to
put ’em on the range. On the way I
fell in with Billy Brown here. He
was dead set on havin’ the lot to fill in
the chinks of the two car loads he was
shippin’, so I up and lets him have
’em. I showed him this here blll-o’-
sale from Yellow Wolf and made him
out one from me, and that was all
there was to It. He rode to Velpen
and I turned on my trail.”
(To Be Continued.)
KNEW WHAT THE JOB MEANT.
Angry Citizen Put Ordeal Up to Street
Car Company.
Not long ago there entered the office
of the superintendent of a trolley lino
in Detroit an angry citizen, demand-
ing "justice” in no uncertain terms.
In response to the official’s gentle
Inquiry touching the cause of the de-
mand, the angry citizen explained
that on the day previous as hiB wife
was boarding one of the company’*
cars, the conductor thereof had
stepped on his spouse’B dress, tearing
from it more than a yard of material.
“I can’t see that we are to blame
for that,” protested the superintendent.
"What do you expect us to do, get her
a new dress?”
“No, Bir, I do not,” rejoined the
angry citizen, brandishing a piece of
cloth. "What I propose is that you
people shall match this material.”—•
Harper’s Weekly.
NEEDED A LONG STEM.
“Wot did you do wid dat breakfast
food de lady up at dat house gave
you?” g
"It’s In me pipe. I’m smokin’ it!”
WRITE AT ONCE to Dr. Chas. F.
Simmons, San Antonio, Texas, for in-
formation how to buy from 10 to 640
acres and 2 town lots of the best land
in South Texas, for $210 payable $10
per month.
Germany's Export of Feathers.
Germany sends 29,000,000 feathers
a year to England for millinery pun
poses.
GIRL LAWYER FREES HERSELF.
Charged With Vagrancy, Wellesley
Graduate Secures Quick Release.
St. Louis.—Evelyu Dorothy Clark,
graduate of Wellesley, who later stud-
ied law at Vassar and whom the police
charged with vagrancy, so skillfully
defended herself In court here that
she won her discharge. It was charged
she failed to pay her bill at the Plant-
ers’ hotel.
"What were you doing In St. Louis?”
asked Assistaut City Attorney King.
"I refuse to answer on the ground
that my answer might Incriminate
me,” she replied.
"Objection sustained,” pronounced
the court.
“Who is ’Ned,’ the Harvard student
who wrote that acquaintance with you
was so expensive that he had to get
a Job as telephone operator to recuper-
ate his finances?” asked King.
”1 decline to answer on the ground
that the question is Incompetent, ir-
relevant and immaterial.”
"Objection sustained,” ruled the
court.
“Have you studied law?”
"Have you?" she parried.
"The prisoner is discharged,” Inter-
rupted Judge Tracy, who had listened
to the legal duel with impatience.
It Cures While You Walk.
Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for
hot. sweating, callous, and swollen, aching
feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don’t
accept any substitute. Trial package FRttfi.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
The virtue of prosperity Is temper-
ance, but the virtue of adversity is
fortitude; and the last is the more
Bublime attainment.—Bacon.
Set the allowance against the loss
and thou shalt find no loss great;
he loses little or nothing that reserves
himself.—Quarles.
GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS.
Use the best. That’s why they buy Reef
Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers 5 cents.
A pretty woman's smile often wrin-
kles a man’s purse.
Cornered at Last!
Scientists have been grubbing pa-
tiently. almost feverishly, for years
in the hope of tracing the etiology or
source of the growing scourge of can-
cer, and although no convincing data
have yet been brought forward, it is
a general suspicion that the rapid
prevalence is due to overindalgenc*
in meats.—Detroit News.
You won’t tell your family doctor
the whole story about your private
illness — you are too modest. You
need not be afraid to tell Mrs. Pink-
ham, at Lynn, Mass., the things you
could not explain to the doctor. Your
letter will be held in the strictest con-
fidence. From her vast correspond-
ence with sick women during the
past thirty years she may have
gained the very knowledge that will
help your case. Such letters as the fol-
lowing, from grateful women, es-
tablish beyond a doubt the power of
LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
to conquer all female diseases.
Mrs. Norman R. Barndt, of Allen-
town, Pa., writes:
“ Ever since I was sixteen years of
age I had suffered from an organic de-
rangement and female weakness; in
consequence I had dreadful headache!
and was extremely nervous. My physi-
cian said I must go through an opera-
tion to get well. A friend told me
about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound, and I took it and wrote you
for advice, following your direction!
carefully, and thanks to you I am to-
day a well woman, and I am telling
all my friends of my experience.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard reined}' for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
dLsplacenients,inilamraation, ulcera-
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that hear-
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges-
tion, duzinessjornervous prostration.
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The Hominy News-Republican (Hominy, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, June 5, 1908, newspaper, June 5, 1908; Hominy, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc405370/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.