The Altus Plaindealer. (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1898 Page: 4 of 4
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What a atrnnap world this la. Whan
»•* are poor necessities are luxuries;
when rich, luxuries are necessities.'
Sailors ami their (irlmnniti.
The grievances of sailors examined
by the authorities in ports of entry
are often greatly exaggerated. Vio-
lence ia always jhjoctionable, and
pointedly so, when exerted upon an un.
fortunate liver, stomach or bowels by
dosing with purgatives which weaken
the intestines. I sc Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters.
Longing to die is often overcome by
a square meal.
Purified Blood
Was Weak and Nervous But Hood’s
Made Him Healthy and Strong.
“I was feeling very dull and could not
sleep at night. Alter I had taken two
bottlee of Hood's Sarsaparilla I felt more
like myself and was soon healthy and
Strong. Hood’s Sarsaparilla purified my
blood and did mo much good.” Rot M.
Dale, Hammond, Minn.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is America's Greatest Medicine. Jl; six for $5.
Hood’s Pills cure indigestion, biliousness.
A doctor seldom pays for a cigar at
a drug store.
We I*ay Suspenses
and liberal commissions, refund the cash for
all goods not giving I he consumer satisfaction.
Long terms of e-edit. First-class scheme
salesmen wanted. No bond required Sales
made from photographs. We guarantee 160.00
permonthon mal. orders. Address withstamp,
Brenard Mfg. Co., Iowa City, liwa
The satisfaction of living in one's
own house is great.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Casrurets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 26c.
JfC. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
Nearly every man wears a straw hat
too long.
Don't Tobacco Spit .-nd Smoko Tour Lito Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, bo mag-
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor take No-To-
Bac. the wonder-worker thr.t makes weak men
strong All druggists. 60c. or )l. Cure guaran-
teed Booklet ana -ample free. Address
Sterling Kemedy Co.. Chicago or New York.
People talk about some men easier
than they do about others.
Try Allen'* Foot-Ease.
A powder to be shaken into the
shoes. At this season your feet feel
swollen, nervous and hot. and get tired
easily. If you have smarting feet or
tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-Ease. It
cools the feet and makes walking easy.
Cures swollen and sweating feet, blis-
ters and callous spots. Relieves corns
and bunions of all pain and gives rest
and comfort. Try it today. Sold by
all druggists and shoe stores for 25c.
Trial package free. Address Allen S.
Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
A bedbug does a successful business
on "tick.”
A bath with COSMO BUTTERMILK
BOAP, exquisitely scented, is soothing and
beneficial. Sold everywhere.
The American flag has even appeared
on hosiery.
No-To-Hac for Fifty Cent*.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, make* weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c. SI. All druggists.
Dewey has been honored by having a
garter named after him.
THE ILLS OF WOMEN
And How Mrs. Pinkham Helps
Overcome Them.
Mrs. Mary Bollinger, 1101 Marianna
St., Chicago, 111., to Mrs. Pinkham:
“ I have been troubled for the past
two years with falling of the womb,
leucorrhoea, pains over my body, sick
headaches, backache, nervousness and
weakness. I tried doctors and various
remedies without relief. After taking
two bottles of your Vegetable Com-
pound. the relief I obtained was truly
wonderful. I have now taken several
more bottles of your famous medicine,
and can say that I am entirely cured.”
Mrs. Henry Dorr, No. 806 Findley St.,
Cincinnati, Ohio, to Mrs. Pinkham:
“For a long time I suffered with
chronic inflammation of the womb,
pain in abdomen and bearing-down
feeling. Was very nervous at times, and
so weak I was hardly able to do any-
thing Was subject to headaches, also
troubled with leucorrhoea. After doc-
toring for many months with different
physicians, and getting no relief, I had
given up all hope of being well
again when I read of the great good
Lydia E. Pinkbam s Vegetable Com-
pound was doing. I decided immedi-
ately to give it a trial. The result was
simply past belief After taking four
bottles of Vegetab/e Compound and
Ming three packages of Sanative Wash
I can say I feel like a new woman 1
deem it my duty to announce the fact
to my fellow sufferers that Lydia
IS. Pinkham's Vegetable remedies have
entirely cured me of all my pains and
Buffering. 1 have her alone to thank
St»r my recovery, for which I am grate-
ful. May heaven bless her for the
good work she is doing for our sex."
A RIFFIAN HORSEMAN.
fh* Feat #f Threading • Needle on
Horseback While Going at Gallop.
"The greatest feat of horsemanship I
ever saw performed was by a Riffian
Irregular cavalryman,” said Capt. J. E.
Rathbone of Txts Angeles, Cal. This
was in reply to a story related by an
ex-confederate, who had served with
Gen. J. E. B. Stuart In the valley of
Virginia. The latter told how, on
more than one occasion, Turner Ashby-
had ridden up to an opposing cavalry-
man, seized him around the waist, lift-
ed him out of the saddle as If he had
been a child, and taken him back on
his own horse into the confederate
lines. It was agreed that this was
more of a feat of strength and display
of courage than horsemanship. "I
have seen Cossacks snatch a baby from
its mother's arms at full gallop, toss It
into the air, catch It, and repeat the
performance,” said Capt. Rathbone. 'T
once saw an Indian rider in the far
west spring from his pony's back while
the animal was moving at full gallop,
pick up an arrow, and remount in-
stantly in a standing posture. I have
seen other performances all over the
world, but for a neat, clever, clean-cut
feat, this Rlffian exceeded the mall, I
think. Several of us had been at Gi-
braltar and found ourselves at the town
of Mlilia, on the Riffian coast. We
were entertained by the Spanish com-
mander. who did the honors finely. One
morning we rode outside the town and
reached a level stretch of sand, where
there were a number of Riffian horse-
men. They were fine looking fellows,
with gleaming faces of bronze, white
teeth, and attired in snow-white bur-
nouses. They were mounted on small
animals, slight, hut quick and wiry, of
the thoroughbred Arab barb type. We
were amused some time by their charg-
es and evolutions. They would throw
their swords and matchlocks in the air,
catching them by the hilts and stocks
infallibly. Finally it was announced
that something of unusual interest
would be accomplished. One of the
men produced a needle and a piece of
thread, possibly two or three feet in
length. They were both handed
around for inspection. I suppose the
needle was a cambric one, and the
thread 50 or 60 fine. When we had du-
ly inspected both, one of the men sig-
nified he would thread the needle. He
galloped his horse down the sand about
400 yards or so. He finally wheeled his
horse and remained stationary, facing
ns. The one who held the needle and
thread waved them in his hand and
rode toward the other. When he had
covered about two thirds of the dis-
tance he halted and waved his hand to
the further one. Immediately the lat-
ter spurred his horse into a gallop and
came toward us at full speed. As he
passed the other he took the needle
and thread from his companion, bent
over for a moment and pulled up when
he reached our party, holding the
threaded needle triumphantly over his
head.”
A Baby In Rattle.
Among the Chinese present at one of
the battles between the two Asiatic
nations in the late Chinese and Japan-
ese war, was one spectator of an unu-
sual kind. After the capture of a small
fort by the Japanese, and the retreat
of such of their enemies as had not
been taken prisoners, a healthy-looking
Chinese*baby was found by the victors,
lying on the ground in their line of
march. The captain of a division pick-
ed him up, and did his best to ad-
minister consolation, and presently
called one of the prisoners, to whom
he offered his liberty on condition that
he should take the child to his parents.
The captive joyously assented, but the
baby raised a noisy objection. He lift-
ed his voice on high and cried so loud-
ly. when the attempt was made to take
him from his Japanese friend, that the
latter saw no resource but to submit.
So, holding the baby on his left arm,
while he grasped his sabrp with the
right. Captain Higttchi marched on to
the capture of the next fort, receiving,
meanwhile, a bullet through his rap.
The baby looked on wonderingly while j
the fort was taken in gallant style, and !
seemed to be quite unmoved by the din |
and uproar of battle, so long as he
could rest upon his captain's Bhoulder.
When the fight was over, the captain j
gmve the child to some of his troopers, i
who bore the little creature to a Chin-
aae house near by.
Merely an Afterthought.
Lady Bicyclist (hysterically)—“Oh,
Mr. Officer, Mr. Officer, somebody haa
stolen my bicycle.” Officer—“What
kind of a bicycle was it?” Lady Bi-
cyclist—“Why, it was a high-geared, j
hollow axle, self-oiling, detachable
tires, movable spoke studs, double ball
bearings, and—oh, yes, now I come to j
think of it—my baby was attached to ■
the handle bars.
Polne Beat* of a Healthy Man.
The average pulse of a healthy man
should beat seventy-two times a min-
ute.
FAULTLESS
STARCH,
THE BEST FOR
Shirt Waists.
Shirt
Fronts,
Collars,
Cuffs ud
Delicate
Clothes.
1. x j^Read our
Booklets,
Laugh
and
Learn*
DEVIOUS DEFINITIONS.
Key-ring—The sound issuing from a
piano.
Kleptomiss—A girl who deals kisses
from a man.
Revenge—A gun that kicks harder
than it shoots.
Jealousy—The greatest vice of the
smallest minds.
Heir—One who has money left him
every time It Is spent.
Matrimony—About the worst joke a
woman can play on a man.
Politician—A man who shakes your
.and one day and you the next.
Sensible—The man who is frank i
«nough to admit his lack of sense.
Luck Something most men get In I
large quantities of the wrong kind
L’h i id less The woman who thinks
her na07 U not aup*nor to »!i ethery, I
A FATALITY AVOIDED.
(From the Dsmocrat. Goshen, Ind.)
When neuralgia is accompanied by a
dull, heavy pain near the heart,frequently
becoming intense, it generally terminate*
fatally. Mrs. Nancy Flynn, who lives near
| Goshen, Indiana, survived such an attack
and her advice is worth heeding.
“In the fall of ’92,” *he said, “I began to
to have trouble with my heart. There was
a sharp pain In my breast which become
rapidly worse. The doctor was puzzled and
put me under the influence of opiates.
Thesesharji attacks followed one another at
intervals, and I became weak and had a
haggard look. I was constantly in pain,
seldom slept and had no appetite.
“At the end of two years I was confined
to my couch most of the time and the
doctors agreed that my death was only a
matter of a short time.
“One day 1 noticed in a newspaper an item
about a wo-
man having
been cured of
neuralgia of
the heart by
Dr. Williams’
Pink Pill*
for Pale
People, and
I concluded
to trv them.
“When I
had finished
one box I
noticed an 1m-
_ . provement ia
A Serious Time, my condition,
and when 1 had token twelve boxes I was
completely cured. ‘Those pills have done
for you what we could not do,’ said ono of
my physicians, ‘they have saved your life. ’
‘•That was two year* ago and my heart
has not troubled me since. 1 believe 1 owe
my life to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pal*
People, and I tuke pleasure in telling others
about them.”
Among the many forms of neuralgia are
headache, nervousness, paralysis, apoplexy
nnd locomotor ataxia. Some of these were
I considered incurable until Dr. Williams’
' Pink Pills for Pale People were formulated
! Today thousands testify to having been
cured of such diseases by these pills.
Doctors frequently prescribe them and
all druggists sell them.
Depend on a woman in business to
keep her appointments.
lipaaty is It I <>ixl Keep.
Oran blood means acleau skin. No beauty
/itbout it. Casearets, Candy Cathartic
cleans your blood and keeps it clean, by
wirring up the lazy liver and driving all im-
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Casearets.—beauty for ten cents. All drug-
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
Wet weather usually causes excite-
ment in frog circles.
For a perfect complexion and a clear,
healthy skin, use COSMO BUTTERMILK
SOAP. Sold everywhere.
Threo cheers from young ladies
should make soldiers gal-lant.
1MPHATIC
Statements
Letters from women
cured of female
troubles byPe-ru-na
Lucy L. Wilson,
Nashville, Tenn.,
s.\A writes:
“I now consider
myself well and do
give you great
thanks for it; your
wonderful medi-
cine, Pe-ru-na, has
done me all the
good. I had tried
a great mxny
doctors and did
not find any re-
lief from any of
them, but now
I can say that I
am well. I feel
like a new person all over. May God
bless you and be with you always.”
Mrs. A. C. Hildebrand, Milton, N. C.,
writes:
“ I was very low and pronounced in-
curable by two of the best doctors in
this county when I commenced the use
of your medicine. I have used nine
bottles of Pe-ru-na and I think that I
am perfectly well.
“Of course, Pe-ru-na is what did the
work, and I consider it the grandest
medicine in the world. Mine was a
noted case in this county and every-
body thought I would die. I never
lose an opportunity to praise your
medicine. You may use this letter as
a testimonial and make it as strong aa
you can.”
Qm*| Da* ■
Chainlets
Bloyles
MAKE HILL CLIMBING EASY
Columbia
Chain Wheels. *75
Hartfords. - - 50
Vedetles. (40 & 35
Popi Mfg. C«.
Hartford,
best STOCK....
SADDLES
[ A Stf) «" World. We «end tb*tn <
W# fiend th»m C.
O. D with the privilege of In-
*pertiDg saddle* before paying
for tame. Send for free catalog.
The J. H. Wllson Saddlery Co- Denver, Colo.
nOHDCV NEW DISCOVERY: *•«.
U g% Ww ¥ j*it« k reand * ure* wwrat
<m*e» Send for book of mt'monial* *ni lO days*
treatment t ree. u.M.ofttfk •Mtst. aiimi*. a*.
kb;a As»»eni
Real
W~H~U.~DAl.LAW
>1-.crtr-rm-«t*
This Taper.
hmdly
NO.-*« l«9«.
THE TRADE IN OLD BOTTLES.
A New Fork Firm That Dandlrs Hair a
Million a Day.
From New York Sun: Almost half
a milliqn old bottles are handled every
day by x single firm in New York city.
Most of them are wine and boor bottles,
but there are also hundreds of bottles
used for catsup and other table sauces.
The mineral waters furnish a large
proportion of the full number. None
of these bottles is washed or cleaned
by the firm that collects them, but
they must not be old and "gummy” or
they will not be accepted. They are
shipped all over this country, and a
good many of them are sent hack to
Europe. Those reshipped across the
water are mostly ginger ale bottles
sent to Ireland, some beer or ale bot-
tles sent to England, and wine and
liquor bottles sent to France. Of course
these are re-emplo.ved. The dealers
here say that, the French bottles are
the best made. The English come next,
the American next, and then the Ger-
man. Comparatively few bottles are
lost ir ^nsit, either on hoard cars
or in the collecting wagons. When a
wagon Ij loaded with cases of
“empties" the driver puts a straw
wrapper on each of the corner bottles
at the end of the wagon. It doesn't
seem as If this would be a very great
protection, but it does servo as a
slight buffer in case of passing rubs
and knocks. The bottle shops of New
York are not especially picturesque,
hilt in New Orleans there is one which
has become noted. It is visited by-
most tourists, many of whom carry
away some squat, queer-shaped liquor
bottle by way of sourvenir. "The Bot-
tle Man of Conti Street” owes his fame
to Mrs. M. E. M. Davis, one of New
Orleans’ literary women. Mrs. Davis
lives only a block or two from the
I haunt of the bottle man, over in the
old French part of the city. When
Eugene Field visited there several
years ago Mrs. Davis took him around
to Conti street to see the bottle man
and his treasures. Field and the bottle
man were mutually delighted over the
meeting. The shop is a great high
sort of shed, reaching from the street
hack 150 feet into the block. It is
piled with stack on stack of crates
full of empty wine bottles, while from
the ceiling hang rows of dusty demi-
johns and jugs. There are shelves
occupied by a medley of quaint cor-
dial bottles, bright green and blue, pot-
bellied, flat-sided, eccentric, freakish
things. Field delighted in these
shelves, and used to poke around in
the dust and the shadows hunting up
new shapes, which he carried off to
add to the miscellaneous lot of stuff
he shipped home from there. But there
was one bottle with which he was es-
pecially delighted. It was a brilliant
blue In color, with a very long, thin
neck and a fat body, pressed into a
four-sided shape. In the middle of
one side was a seal, stamped in the
glass. Every visitor in Conti street
nowadays hears about Field’s visits,
and is permitted to gaze upon—or pur-
chase—one of the Field bottles. After
liis return to Chicago Mrs. Davis wrote
the poem, “The Bottle Man of Conti
Street.” and sent it to him. Field re-
plied in his usual happy vein, and
these autograph verses are among Mrs.
Davis’ treasures today.
One Red Roue Rent for a Cliurcli Site.
A unique celebration occurs in June
of every year at Manheim, Pennsylva-
nia, according to the Ladles’ Home
Journal. It is known as the feast of
roses, and is held to commemorate the j
benevolence of Baron Stiegel.who more j
than a century and a quarter ago leased
a tract of land at Manheim to a con-
gregation for a church site at an an-
nual rental of one red rose to be paid
in June of each year. After Baron
Stiegel’s death the rent was never de-
manded until a few years ago, and now
it is formally paid to one of the baron's
descendants. The occasion is known
as "the feast of roses,” and the quaint
ceremony attracts the greatest Inter-
est.
Handwritlo^.
Purk: "Before we were married
you used to write me three letters a
day.” “Did I, really?” “Yes, you did;
ard now you cut up just because I ask
yoti to write me a little bit of a
check."
INDIVIDUALITIES.
Lord Rothschild carries insurance
policies on his life aggregating $1,260,-
000.
Rosa Bonheur is one of the two
French women who are legally author-
ized to wear man's attire.
Anthony Hope and Edward Rose
will collaborate in the dramatization
of Mr. Hope’s “Simon Dale."
The widow of George Augustus Sala
has gone into bankruptcy through at-
tempting to liquidate her late hus-
band's debts.
Queen Elizabeth of Rottmania, better
known to the world a* Carmen Hylva,
has recently received a doctor'* de-
gree from the University of Buda-
pest h.
The eldest son of Sir Henry Irving
has recently published a life of
"Bloody Judge Jeffreys,” in which he
undertakes to rehabilitate that gen-
tleman's somewhat frazzled rharaeter.
The son of Queen Natalie of Servla.
for whom his father, the dissolute
King Milan, abdicated the throne, has
bhown traits of imbecility. Queen
Natalie, crushed hy the bitter sorrows
of her life, is about to withdraw to the
solitude of a convent.
Upon his arrival at Uapetor-^.
Afrlea, recently. Mr. Rudyard Kipling
and his family were very warmly re-
ceived, and Mr. Kipling presented with
a set of verses addressed to himself by
a private in the ranks. The title of
the poetical effusion ia “An Expert
l« Initiation “
AN OLD BULLY.
People who live in fear of his attacks.
How to avoid him or beat him off.
If biliousness isn’t the bully of the body
then what is? When once biliousness gets
the upper hand you don’t dare say your
stomnen is your own. ** Don’t you dare eat
that dish says biliousness, or you’ll see
what I’ll do.” You take the dare and you
do see or rather feel, the weight of the
bully's revenge. The head aches, not a
regular ache, but an open and shut ache.
The eyes ache, not witli a dull, tired «.che,
but with an agressive ache, as if they were
being bored by a gimlet. The stomach
trembles with nausea. "The whole head
is sick and the whole heart is faint.” There
are scores of hundreds of people who live
so under the dominion of this bully bil
iousnes# that they don't dare eat or drink
without his permission. There’s no need
of such slavery. Dr. J. C. Ayer's Pills
effectually cure biliousness.
‘‘For fifteen years I have used Dr. J. C.
Ayer’s Pills, and find them very effective
in all kinds of bilious complaints. They
are mild in operation and easy to take. I
prefer them to any other pill, and have
yet to see the case where they have failed
io cure."—A. Swanopr, Texarkana, Ark.
"I have used Dr. J. C. Ayer’s Pills in
cases of biliousness and general disorders
of the stomach and bowels and have found
them to be always reliable. They are les*
liable to gripe than other purgatives, and
_ raife
. era)
1 Stockport, Texas.
although rnifd in action, they are thorough
---- They are t.he best jfamn^r
ufb
operation. They are the best family
ic that can be had.”—Pktbr J. DuffV
‘‘Having used Dr. J. C. Ayer’s Pills for
ears aud thoroughly tested them, both as
preventive ana oure for biliousness, f
truthfully say that I believe them to
be the best medicine for the purpose and
they do all that is claimed for them.”—
Jno. IC. Kui.il Shark, Ark.j
Biliousness is in general but a symptom
of a more stubborn disorder, constipation.
Constipation is the root of almost all phys-
ical evils, and Dr. J. C. Ayer’s Pills cure
almost all these physical evils by going to
the root. They cure constipation, and the
consequent mnludies. biliousness, heart-
burn. palpitation, shortness of breath,
sleeplessness, nervous irritability, fowl
breath, coated tongue, and a score of other
miserable maladic* that have their origin
in constipation. Dr. Ayer’s Pills are the
surest aud safest remedy for all diseases
of the liver, stomach, aud bowels, fiend
for Dr. Ayer’s Curebook and read the story
of cures told by the cured. Free. Address
the J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.
i
A Beautiful
Present Free
For a few months to all users of the
celebrated ELASTIC STARCH, (Flat
Iron Brandi. To induce you to try this
brand of starch, so that you may find out
for yourself that all claims for its superi-
ority and economy are true, the makers
have had prepared, at great expense, a
fS^FARCHj
J RCAiRRfSKOCOOKINO.
fttauMCSKoeooKiNO.
RAXES COLLARS AW fiCffS SHF AMI Rtt
A3 IHfl DOT EC'JMT MW.
OKI POUHO Of THIS STARCH WILL 00
AS FAS A8 A PQUN0 AMB A HALF
0* ARY OTHER oTAHCR
vlWWraCTL’R(OONiv#y
"O.C.HUBINUER BROS C?.
series of three
tKUIOIXJCM. HwHavui
Game Plaques
exact reproductions of the $10,000 originals by Muviile, which will be
given you ABSOLUTELY FREE by your grocer on conditions named below. These
Plaques are 40 inches in circumference, are free of any suggestion of advertising
whatever, and will ornament the most elegant apartment. No manufacturing concern
ever before gave away such valuable presents to its customers. They are not for sale
at any price, and can be obtained only in the manner specified. The subjects aret
AMERICAN WILD DUCKS, AMERICAN PHEASANT,
ENGLISH QUAIL. ENGLISH SNIPE.
The birds are handsomely embossed and stand out natural as life. Each Plaque is
bordered with a band of gold.
HOW TO GET THEM:
All purchasers of three 10-rent or six
5-rent packages of Elastic Starch (Flat
Iron Brand'. are entitled to receive from
their grocer one of these beautiful (lame
Plaques tree. The plaques will not be
sent by mail. They can be obtained only
from your grocer.
Every Grocer Keeps Elastic Starch.
l)o not delay. This otter is for a short
time only.
Elastic Starch
has been the standard for 25 years.
TWENTY-TWO MILLION pack-
ages of this brand were sold last
year. That's how good it is.
Ask Your Dealer
to show you the Plaques and tell
you about Elastic Starch. Accept
no substitute.
“A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR-
GAIN.” MARRY A PLAIN GIRLIFSHE USES
SAPOLIO
A home-sick man calls his old home
“God's country.”
Mrs. Wlnalow’H Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the guin». redurei In-
flammation, allay* pain, cure* wind colic. 25c a bottle.
Every woman believes that she can
make good bread.
Fobt Flournry writes: "I can with confi-
dence reoommebd Or. Moffett's TXEthina
(Teething Powders) as the b«»t and surest
medlcln? I ever used for Teething children
and the Bowel disorders of our Southern
ooun'rv," Tkkthina Aids Digestion. Regu-
lates the Bowels and makes teething Easy.
Matting rugs are said to be decidedly
att ractive.
Two bottles of i’iso's Cure for Consumption
cured me of a bad lung trouble.—Mrs. J.
Nich( is, Princeton, Ind . March 26, 1896.
The coolest ladies get excited over
?ceiving a telegram.
linll's Catarrh Car*
is taken internally. Price, 75c.
Women go crazy twice a year over
house cleaning.
i OSMO BUTTERMILK TOILET SOAP j
makes the skin soft, white and healthy
Sold everywhere.
A man shows grit when he goes shop-
ping with Ills wife.
Kdurnt* Your Bowels With Casearets. j
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. \
10c.25c. If fail, druggists refund money
War does not seem to affect the June
weddings.
YELLOW FEVER
PREVENTED
“Our Native Herbs”
THE GREAT
Blood Purifier, Kidney and Livar Regulator.
200 DAYS' TREATMENT, *1.00.
Containing a Kegistered Guarantee.
Hr mail. postage paid. -C-page Book and
I i-siimunials. FHKK. *<>ld only by Agents for
GROVES
TASTELESS
CHILL
TONIC
13 JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE 50 ct».
THE BEST PRESCRIPTION
FOR CHILLS AND FEVER
I, a bottle of GHOVITg TASTELKSS CHILL TONIC.
It never imu to rare, i h-n wby rxperliueni witli
worthiar«« aaJV;U rxr. At ail drug*l*u.
Biliousness
THE ALONZO 0. BLISS CO.,Waskingt*i,D.C
“1 h«ve used tout vain*blc CAACA*
RKT4 an<l find them Couldn't do
without them. I have wed thorn for MOM lima
for Indigestion and biliousnFMs and am now com
pletely cured. Recommend them, to every one.
Once tried, you will never be without them !■
CURE YOURSELF!
'Vriit*''
rlm I ’• i ^
flMIMIHd
ret t# Hfunr*
^ CHmtatOo. °T
LQ’HCHMUTi.O.r—] 1
v. •. a. T r rr ,a p|*,d
I n Big <1 for uneatonl
discharge*, toflaiumatlona.
irritation* or uherntiana
of mu*'R]#mfcrsnaa.
ratulom, ud not utrtt*
k? •iproat. r»Hld, foJ
•t on. or 3 $2 7%.
Circular teat on r*qi*4
ir .un.—i • Tiionepsoii’s Eyt Vattr*
•nr* eyu, uan fc 1
Recommend them, to every one.
3d. you will never without them 1b
the family. Edw. A Marx, Albany. N. Y.
MAAN MMTIMO
Fleaaant Palatable Potent. Taate Good n#
Good. Newer Slckeu. Weaken, or Gripe. Mr. »c. On
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
* CVleaf*. Intrwi, Rrw Tar*. Stl
IQ-TO-BAC au^YkTfjSgsa.’Uy
fllTFNTe it. s. * a n uikt,
PATENTS 'zssBaSKSii
l ■(Miio .qMimlwIrui Rfn.«B
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The Altus Plaindealer. (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1898, newspaper, July 21, 1898; Altus, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc497853/m1/4/: accessed March 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.