The Canadian Valley News. (Jones City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1905 Page: 3 of 4
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KIDNEY TROUBLES
Increasing Among Women, Bat
Sufferers Need Not Despair
THE BEST ADVICE IS FREE
Of all the diseases known, with which
the female organism is afflicted, kidney
disease is the most fatal, and statistics
show that this disease is on the increase
among women.
Air J Em m a Sawyer
Unless early and correct treatment ia
applied the patient seldom survives
when once the disease U faatened upon
her. Lydia E Plnkham's Vegetable
Compound is the most efficient treat-
ment for kidney troubles of women,
and is the only medicine especially
prepared for this purpose.
When a woman is troubled with pain
or weight in loins, backache, frequent,
painful or scalding urination, swelling
of limbs or feet, swelling under thi
eyes, an uneasy, tired feeling in the
region of the kidneys or notices a brick-
dust sediment in the urine, she should
lose no time in commencing treatment
with Lydia E. Pinkham k Vegetable
Compound, as it may be the means of
saving her life.
For proof, read what Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs.
Sawyer.
" I cannot express the terrible suffering I
had to endure. A derangoinent of the female
organs developed nervous^ pn*tr tion and a
serious kidney trouble. ' *
me foi
I Wl
totry"L"ydia "E. "Plnkham's Vegetable Com-
pound as a last rosort, and 1 am to-day a well
woman. I cannot praise it too highly, and I
tell every suffering woman about my case.
Mrs. Emma Sawyer, Conyers, Oa.
Mrs. Pinkham gives free advice to
women ; address in confidence, Lynn,
Mass.
SONGS IN CITY STREETS.
Glasgow Authorities Prohibit Certain
Mournful Strains.
The London public has generously
decided to dignify the noisier type of
professional mendicant by the title of
"singer/* and still more generously
has decided to put up with their reci-
tations and even to pay them moneys
for delivering them. We are glad to
see that this is not the case in Glas-
gow. The inhabitants of that city
have Just risen in protest against an
individual who gave out the following
stanza: "The scene was a peaceful
one. The children at play. The larks
above with songs of love, Joined In the
harmony. The foul assassin then ap-
peared. And stopped the joyous fun.
And In another moment He his hellish
work was done."
The lines, we believe, were topical,
and referred to a tragedy that had
taken place in the town. Twenty-one
days' imprisonment was what the
singer received, and nobody can Ray
that it was too much. We have quoted
the song in full as an instance of how
the street Binger turns naturally to
gloom. A rollicking comic song would
be less painful, but the street mu-
sician rarely rollicks. What he likes
is a slow, mournful b&llad, with plenty
of breathing space in between the
lines, so that he can stop and look
around for coppers—in both senses of
the word. A drunken man. singing
with real gusto, is gathered in by the
police before the end of the second
bar. A professional beggar is allowed
to massacre any hymn he pleases,
choosing his own time.—London
Globe.
The doctor attended
I
Complete Externa! and
Internal Treatment
, ONE DOLLAR
Consisting of warm baths with
t «?
The Gentle Milker.
is not often that I "rush into
print," but just now I feel like say-
ing something In favor of gentleness
In milking cows. L. have seen hlrec
men that did not know how to handle
a cow, or else they did not put their
JET BLACK ROSES GROWN
Color Said to be Caused by Chemical
In ftcil
Florists are greatly interested in
Florists are greatly interested in
the announcement that an English-
man has discovered how to grow jet
black roses, a feat which has been
vainly attempted for many years. If
a dozen of them could be offered for
sale today in this city the leading
florists agree there would be no dif-
ficulty In obtaining $1,200 for the
bunch.
No secret has been more closely
guarded by German gardeners than
special occasions, but what ingredient
has been put Into this soil to bring
about this abnormal color has not
been told even to close friends.
It Is said by florists here that un-
doubtedly the color Is the result of
some chemical Introduced into the
•oil, but what it Is may not be known
generally for years. If at all. The
same principle, however, is supposed
to be Involved as in the development
of blue hydranges, which are produced
by putting them into the soil in which
the plants are grown.—San Francisco
Call.
CARE OF NOSE AND MOUTH.
Prominent Woman Physician Gives
Advice to Mothers.
In the Delineator, Dr. Grace Peck-
ham Murray has some remarks on the
care of the no.se and mouth that will
be read to their profit by all mothers.
Of proper breathing she says:
there are obstructions In either the
mouth or the nose which prevent the
free introduction of air. the blood is
not aerated as ii should be, and the
whole bodily nutrition suffers in con-
sequence. The trouble occasioned by
such a condition Is much greater in
a child than in an adult. If a child
is not growing well, if he Ls pale and
puny, the nose and mouth and throat
should be examined to discover If
there are any obstacles to free breath-
ing. Between the nose and the throat,
and generally out of sight, are spongy
growths called 'adenoids.' They inter-
fere more effectually with the free en-
trance of air than anything else, and
as they exist unseen they are often
the unsuspected cause of a child's ill
health. If the child breathes with the
mouth open, and not through the nose,
they are likely to be present. If there
are many of these growths they give
rise to catarrhal discharges from the
nose, and they will also Interfere with
hearing. They sometimes occasion
the swelling of the glands of the neck
and cause inflammation which results
in open sofes. Children suspected of
having these growths should be taken
to a surgeon to be examined. The
main thing to be borne In mind is that
the only proper way for a child to
breathe Is through the nose."
knowledge Into practice. I think some ' th.tof developing even a comparmtlve-
men are so sour-tempered and so >V Mack roae. T. Isllora are allowed
brutal In their make up that it would | to look at the bushes and buds on
be practically Impossible for them to
treat a cow as she should be treated.
They sit down to milk as if it were
something they didn't like and for
which the cow was to blame. They
would grab the teats and squeeze
khem so hard at the outset that the
cow, if of a nervous temperament,
would hold up her milk as much as
possible. If they spoke to the cow It
would be in a gruff voice in a tone of
command with the evident purpose
of inspiring fear. The cow would stop
eating and stand wide-eyed till the
milking process was through. I doubt
if that will give good results In the
waf of milk.
The really good milker ls the one
that is naturally gentle. He speaks
kindly to the cow because he wants
her to feel that he is her friend, which
ho is. By that telepathy that exists
bat ween minds, the cow knows that
he is her friend and goes on eating
or chewing her cud. The pressure of
the hands of the gentle milker is light
on the teats, Just hard enough to draw(
the milk. There ls no jerking, which
always means hurting the teat or at
least making it feel uncomfortable.
The gentle milker is the only one
that should he allowed to touch the
teats of a cow; but the trouble is that
-we are so short of hired hands that
we have to take any kind of a milker
we can get. I have read in the Farm-
ers' Review that one of the objections
to the mechanical milking machine is
that It ls non-Bympathetic. Well, 1
think It cannot be more unsympa-
thetic than some of the milkers I have
known, and if It comes my way I will
give It a chance. If It dries up the
cows, I know of men that can dry
them up quicker. I have in mind one
man that worked for me. He was not
a swearing man, but was one that
kicked the cows atod pounded the
horses whenever they did not act to
suit him. He spoiled the temper of
one of my horses and destroyed the
confidence of some of my cows. If
we get the milking machine it will at
least not "curry the cows with the
milking stool."—George Ellis, Cald
well Co., Ky., In Farmers' Review.
NAMES BEST DOCTOR
MR. BAYSSON PUBLISHES RESULTS
OF VALUABLE EXPERIENCE.
A Former Pronounced I>yapeptlc lie Now
Hrjolm In Perfect Frwdom froui
of lndl|villoB.
Thousands of sufferers know that the
reason why they are irritable aud de-
pressed and nervous and sleepless is be-
cause their food does not digest, bnt how
to get rid of the difficulty is the puzzling
question.
Good digestion calls for strong diges-
tive organs, and strength comes from a
supply of good rich blood. For this
reason Mr. Baysson took Dr. Williams'
Piuk Pills for the cure of indigestion.
•' They have been my best doctor," ho
says. •' I was Buffering from dyspepsin.
The pains in my stomach after meals ,
were almost unbearable. My sleep was
very irregular and my complexiou was
sallow. As the result of using eight
boxes of Dr. "Williams' Piuk Pills, about
the merits of which I learned from
friends in France, I have escaped all
these troubles, aud am able again to take
pleasure in eating."
A very simple story, bat if it. hnd not
been for Dr. Williams' Pink Pills it
might have been a tragic one. When dis-
comfort begins with eating, fills up the
intervals between meals with pain, and
prevents sleep at night, there certainly
caunot be much pleasure in liviug. A
final general breaking down must bo
Especially for Women.
Champion, Mich., July 24th.— (Spe-
cial)—A case of especial interest to . I
women l that ot Mrs. A. Wellett. wife >"ere!y question of time.
" „ , . . . , Mr. Joseph Buvssou is a native of
of. wen known photographer here, it bnt uow rcsillcs
is best given In her own words. | ^ u „ ^ 1B,0,
•I could not sleep, my eet were cold ^ of B ,mmber wlln
and my limb* cramped Mrs. \\ ellett ^ ^ tQ (he remartable efflcacy of
.tales. I had an awful hard pa n . willmms'Pilik Pillalu the trentmout
across my kidney*. hadtoget up ob,tlu#te dilopders of th. atomach.
three or four times In the night I If you would get rid of nauaon, jiuin or
wu very nervous and fearfully de- m tl„^tomncll, Tortig£ „er.
sp™Tely. . ., ., . ... . yousuess, insomnia, or any of the other
•■I had been troubled In this way for „ dyspeptic, get rid of the
SIS/*'™ p.iST.-h th« weakness of Ihe digestive organ, by the
Dodd s Kidney Pills, and wbat they ^ Dr wiuiam(. pink pjlls. Thl,y
to cleanse the skin of
crusts and scales, and
sciten the thickened cuti-
cle; CUTICURA Oint-
ment to instantly allay
itching, irritation, and
inflammation and soothe
and heal; and CUTI-
CURA Pills to cool and
cleanse the blood.
A Single Set, costing but One Dotlaf,
Is often sufficient ta cure th« mod tortur-
ing, disfiguring skin, icalp, sad blood
humors, eczemas, r&xhet, itching*, and
irritation , with loss of hair, from Infancy
tc age, when «U else fails.
Reld thro«jk*«1 U, vmis. Cotlenrm Soap, Me , OUl-
thfft. Mc., Htaolvcnt, 40c. ( !■ Una f Chrwo at. < oal.J
rill,. 'JAc. par lal of «>). Dapaui Laadoa. ti I'hMtv-
soum £q.; Parti. • Rut 4a u Pall | BoM,\ ItiUlaaku
4>i Potter Drue <t Chtm. Corp., Ma Pnpa.
mr R* 4 for ,rHo lo Cur* Twturluc, UUfiffurUf
biub«<i boa Intone/ to ▲(*"
WELL DRILLING
MACHINERY.
I'OKTA HI.E and drill my depth,
by steam or horse power.
48 DIFFERENT STYLES.
We challenge competition.
Head for fro* lllaifrated (alalofM No. 4.
KELLY £ TANEYHIIX CO,
4 Chestnut St.,Waterloo, Iowa.
SMOKERS. FIND
LEWIS' SINGLE BINDER
Sf Citar better Quility than most 10! Citar.
Sour Jobber or direct from Factory. Peoria. Ill
Expresaions Made to Order.
"A remarkable fact in my profes-
sion," said a photographer, "Is that
we portrait artists can give to a sit-
ter any expression that is desired. A
bland look, a noble look, a serene look
—it ls no trouble to us to put any one
of these expressions on the most
wooden face.
"The matter is achieved by the rep-
etition of certain words. If you, for
instance, came to me and said you
wished to look distinguished I would
pose you in a distinguished attitude
and then I wotild get you to say
'brush' just before I snapped the shut-
ter. For some inexplicable reason
the pronounclation of the simple word
'brush' gives to the mouth an air of
the most striking nobility and distinc-
tion.
"If you -"want to have in a photo-
graph a look of serenity you must say
'bosom.'
"If you want to make your mouth
Iook small say 'flip.' If you want to
make it look larger say 'cabbage.'
"To have an expression of melan-
choly It Is necessary to say 'ker-
chunk.'
"To have an expression of pride or
hauteur it is necessary to say 'pho*
n|X •—Chicago Chronicle.
Paying for Social Mention.
The expenditure that comes as the
greatest shock to Americans who rent
London houses and expect to break In-
to royal society and tap the prince of
Wales playfully with their fans Is the
amount of money it takes to get one's
social activities "noticed" in the
newspapers. To get the announce-
ment that "Mrs. Rocks of New York
has taken Lord So-and-So's May fair
residence for the season" Into the
chilf London dally and weekly jour-
nals costs more than $500. The fash-
ionable Morning Post alone charges
$25. The newspaper ruls on thla
point is a hard and fast one and the
only exception to It Is royalty. This
rule seems to an cutsider a good one.
There's money in it for the newspaper
and it keeps a lot of cheap peewee so
clety out of the public eye.
|l Antiseptic tgj
!*«•
be is msrvelootly sue-
FOR WOMEN
troubled with Ills peculiar
their sex, used ss a doucho ■
cessfol. Thoroufhly cleanses, kills disease jerms.
stops discbarges, heals inflammation and local
koreness, cures leucorihma and nasal catarrh.
Paxtine is in powder form to be diaolved in pore
inter, and is far more cleansing, healing, eermictdal
and economical than liquid analeptics (or all
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
For ule at druggists, SO cents a box.
Trial Bos and Book of Instructions Pre*.
tmi «. PaXTOH company BOSTON. Mat*.
Mt C ouirb riyrup. Tsste* < «od. Lse
Value of System in Work.
It Is wonderful to see how many
hours prompt people contrive to make
of a day; it Is as though they picked
up ihe moments which the dawdlers
lost. And if you find yourself where
you have so many things pressing
upon you that you hardly know how
to begin, take hold of the first one
that comes to hand, and Vou will find
the rest all fall in line and follow
after, like a company of well-drilled
soldiers; and, though work may be
hard to meet when It charges In
squads. It is easily vanquished if you
can bring it Into line.—Exchange.
Sklmmilk for the Calf.
Skimmilk is a profitable feed for
dairy calves if It is fed properly. This
means if it is fed warm and while
still sweet. One dairyman says that
It is worth 25 per cent more than cold
milk If It is fed while the animal heat
is 8till in it. The great trouble in
feeding skimmilk is to feed a small
enough amount, as a large amount
causes digestive troubles with the
calves, which troubles are accentuated
when the milk is fed after it has be-
gun to sour. Sometimes a farmer will
lose a number of calves with scours
before he learns that It is not the sep-
arated skimmilk that has made the
trouble, but the overfeeding of th«
milk.
Overfeeding of any food will result
in trouble, but on some feeds cows
and calves find It Impossible to over-
feed. One of these ls hay. Milk in
any form may be used in too great an
abundance. The calf owner usually
figures that the cream having been
taken out of the milk it is therefore
very poor stuff, and he therefore tries
to double up on thq amount. This ls
the first and great error. The milk In
being skimmed has not been deprived
if very much- of its nutriment, and
the amount given should certainly not
be increased. If anything, It should
be decreased In quantity, as It ls not
are sold by druggists everywhere.
caused to come from my kidneys will
hardly stand de8CJ"ipt,°"' . Proper diet is, of course, a great aid in
KMni, p,n. Tured forwaVdtag recovery once began, wd
of Dodd 6 Kidney Pills 1 -was cured. ^ ,,whatto Bnd How t0
Now I e.n leep well, my limb, do not ^ whQ
cramp. ' to not get u c night and r;quefit ,or it ,1V writing to the
I feel better than I have in years. 1 JL u u„i
, ... T, ... Dr. Williams Medical Co., Schenectady,
owe my health to Dodd s Kidney __ , . .
p i „ ' N.Y. This valuable diet book contains
, ... , . n. ft" important chapter on the simplest
Women s ills are caused by Dis- fnr th nnrn of constitution.
eased Kidneys; that's why Dodd'a
Kidney Pills always cure them. 80 Different
" " . Uncle Wlnthrop—And what do you
The department of agriculture ha® desire to he when you have become a
announced that a large per cent of
the lamb chops Berved In fashionnb'e
hotels and cafes is nothing more than
the slices carved from the anatomy
of the William and the Nanny goat.
Think of this, ye epicures, and re-
member the joy now gone forever af-
forded by the luscious chops which,
after all, were but the result of a dl^t
of gum shoes, tin cans, rag carpets
and the dump heap.
Phoenix
man, Emersle? When I was your ago
I wanted to be a pirate.
Emerson Lowell Backbeigh—The
aspirations of modem youth are so
different, uncle. Now, I should like
to be a promoter.—Puck.
15 YEARS OF TORTURE.
Itching and Painful Sores Covered
Head and Body—Cured in Week
By Cuticura.
"For fifteen years my scalp and
forehead was one mass of scabs, and
my body was covered with sores.
Words cannot express how I suffered
from the itching and pain. I had giv-
en up hope when a friend told me to
get Cuticura. After bathing with
Cuticura Soap and applying Curtl-
cura Ointment for three days, my
head was as clear as ever, and to my
surprise and joy, one cake of soap and
one box of ointment made a complete
cure in one week, (signed)
Franklin, 717 Washington St., Alle-
gheny, Pa."
When a man is engaged In beat-
ing a carpet It Is up to his wife to be
around and see that he doesn't put his
thoughts into words.
Have You Chills?
It cured your Pa and also your Ma
of chills in the long ago and it will
cure you now. It has been tested by
time and Mb merits have been proven.
WHY DO AMERICANS SUCCEED?
Why do we lead all the nations of
the earth in prosperity, happiness and
Muskogee Individual contentment?
Why are we, c.s a people, regarded ns
an invincible power of impregnuble
strength?
And why do we compel the admira-
tion of the whole world—at times
grudgingly given, but given, anyhow?
It is because we are free and inde-
; endent in the truest meaning of the
vords.
We think for ourselves, act for our-
selves. govern ourselvea more than the
people of any other nation.
We are absolutely self-reliant, a na-
tional trait that renders us independ-
ent of all other nations. Independence
iB the keynote of our supremacy.
And this Is the reason why up-to-
date grocers and storekeepers appreci-
ate the fact that Americans of both
sexes have strong wills of their own,
and do not need Interested advice.
Every up-to-date grocer knows per-
fectly well that for more than a quar-
ter of a century Lion Coffee has been
the leading package coffee and a wel-
come drink at the tables of millions of
H. B. I American homes.
He knows—and everybody else knows
—that it has always kept its old
friends and rteadlly made new ones.
(iood, reliable, trustworthy grocers
willingly acknowledge this, and all In-
dependent housekeepers will insist up-
on having Lion Coffee and no other, no
matter what kind of an argument gro-
cers of obstinate principles may ad-
vance.
Americans want the best, and they
get tl.e best and purest in Lion Coffee.
digestible with the butter fat taken We «««"*«' one bottle to cure any
6 1 one case of Chills. If it fails your
M
out as it was with the butter fat in.
Oilmeal is sometimes added in very
small quantities to take the place of
the cream, but it Is not a certainty
established that this oil takes the
place of the natural butter fat In aid
ing the digestive processes.
Profit In Protein.
Protein is the most expensive ele-
ment of food we can use for dairy
cows, and for this reason there is a
strong tendency to feed very little
protein and a good deal of the staratiy
matter. But It ia quite conclusively
proved that if the protein ls properly
compounded with the other elements
of the food it will render the whole
ration cheaper than if the protein had
not been used. This ls because in the
usual ration, out of proportion as it
Is, the waste of the fat-forming ma-
terials ls great. At the Storrs Ex-
periment Station recently tasta have
been made to see If a ration could be
Increased in protein and decreased in
cost. This was proved to be possible.
The protein was increased, and enough
fat-forming material taken off to more
than equal the value of the protein
put In. The result was a slight in-
crease in the milk production at a
slightly lessened cost.
The principle is an important one,
and it is one to which the Farmers'
Review has frequently called atten-
tion. Every keeper of cows can well
afford to get down to the study of the
components of feeds, by which he will
be able to save money on his feeds,
while not decreasing the production ot
milk from his herd. The animals, too,
are left in better condition than they
wotild be if fed what is known as a
"wide" ration
One of the wittieit of the epigrams
of the commencement season was
that quoting men whose actions ara
much open to criticism ap saying: "1
like to do right. I do as I like. There
fore, I always do right."
money is cheerfully refunded—and Its
name ls Cheatham's Chill Tonic.
The charitable man is kind to the
weak, and the wise man is courteous
to the strong.
8enator on Investigating Tour.
Ex-Senator Cockrell of Missouri,
now interstate commerce commission-
er, and one of his colleagues on the
commission will start for St. I^uis The sultan of Turkey has ordered 1
and the southwest in July to make a pack of British-bred man-trackint
study of transportation questions, dogs to safeguard his person In hie
This study will be exhaustive and ' palace at Constantinople and to^hunl
will deal with important branches of ; Turkish criminals. ""L,_
the rate problem.
This seems
1 slande* oa Constantinople's "finest"
Dr. DtTld Rcnnfd;'* Fkvorlta R«m(i«tj,thfl
OrMl KM .) Mid IJwCur* World Faraou*. Wrtt« I>T.
K«nu®>1j i bona, &oudt> t. ti. Y., (or fr « MUnpJ* boUl*.
Some girls grow up and become
happy wives and mothers, and some
become lady novelists.
Hera is Relief for Womm,
Mother Gray, a nurse in New York,
discovered a pleasant herb remedy for
women's ills, called AUSTRALIAN-
LEAF. Cures female weaknesses. Back-
ache, Kidney, Bladder Urinary
troubles. At all Druggist* or bv mall
50c. Sample mailed FREE. Addreaa,
Ths Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y.
Some Hen do good deeds ftr publi-
cation and not as a guaranty of good
faith.
Storekeepers report that the extra
quantity, together with the superior
quality of Defiance Starch makes It
next to Impossible to sell any other
brand.
No woman who ls true to her sex
ls afraid of the man she is married to.
But few men ever live long enough
to realize their own unimportance.
Important to Mothars.
Examine carefully e*ery bottle of CASTORIA,
a nafe and an re remedy for infants and children,
and mc that it
Bear* the
Signal are of
la Use For Over 30 Yeara.
The Kind You Ilave Aiwaja Bought.
Probably more men would drink
soda water if It weren't for the name
of the stuff.
Let Common Sense Decide
Do you honestly believe, that coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed
to dust, germs and insects, passing
through many hands (some of
them not over-clean), '•blended,"
you don't know how or by whom,
is fit for your use ? Of course you
don't. But
LION COFFEE
Is another story. The green
berries, selected by been
ludges at Ibe plantation, are
skllllully roasted at our lae-
torles, where precautions yon
would not dream ol are taken
to secure perfect cleanliness,
fllavor, strength and unilormity.
_From the time the coffee banes
the farUtry uo hand touches it till
it is opened in your kitchen.
This has made LION COFFEE the LI AD El OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEEL
Millions of American Homes welcome LION COFFEE ilaily.
There i8 no stronger proof of merit than continued and mere"
ing popularity. "Quality Burvivea all opposition."
(Sold onljin 1 lb. p rkRRc«. Uon-beiul on etury | okag«.)
(Save your Lion-heada for valuable premmuia.)
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOWON 8P10E CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Special Offer
The name and address of your
ahoo dealer and 16c to cover
cost of mailing, etc., will aecure
one of the handsome rolled
gold pins illustrated above.
Enameled in colors and will
wear for years. These pins
were secured bythouaands of
World's Fair visitors.
Only a few hundred left.
Write Quick.
Roberts. Johnson $ Rand
SHOE CO. ST. LOUIS
MANUFACTURERS OF
STAR BRAND SHOES"
\\J ANT1CD.—For th* U. 8. Army. nbl bo ll«d
\Y umnarnml men, b«tw*«n of 21 nd
•ft;eitix*nN of Unitra St mo*, of good c.htractar
Mittl i«<ni|>**rni« habita. whoi-an n|i«ak, r««l and
Krite Eneli*h. For information applr to Re-
fruiting Ofllear. Po«toflac« building. Oklahoma
WHERE?
We may be able to mselst yon In
deciding. There are any number of
desirable trips —cheap too —which
you can make this aummer to the
Mountainapf Colorado, the Lakes of
Michigan and Wisconsin or to the
Portland Exposition. Let va send
yon rates and particulars. Free*
aooacas
QEORGE MORTON
I P. and I. A., M. E. & T. Ry.. ST. LOMI. MO.
rot rasT time tiki mtt fitii."
W. N. U. Oklahoma City—No. 30, 1C05
THE 0 AISY FLY KILLER SEMIS lit,#
uorna In dlnlnir-room, rleeplntr r
People who live In the same square
don't always move In the same circle.
Pino'a Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as
a cough cure.—J. \V. O'Brisk. SSS Third Ave.
N., Minneapolis. Minn., Jon. fi, 1900.
When Anawering Advertisements
Kindly Mention Thia Paper
Send postal for
" Hook of
Presents
Do
you know
the secret of
the Wave
Circle ?
Wonderful!
Don't delay
another
Send
for K C
right
way. It's
purer and
more efficient
than any Bak-
ing Powder that
costs three times
as much.
23 oz. for 25c
All grocers
]agues Hfg. Go.
Chicago
Cigarettes do not affect the brain
-for obvious reasons.
toll F CN0 MONEY TILL CU RED -
DBS THOfrMTOW * MlWOW-wa' 0" *▼. KAHaA3 CITY MO. ( *«■■ or rat
Splitting HeadacAe
Can be often relieved by a nerve seda
tlve, but the scientific way of treat
ing a headache ii to go right down to
the real cause, or root of the trouble,
and cure It with Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin. It is the ouly perfect cure
for headache, dltxlneaa. constipation,
aad la tree from the dangerous after-
effects, which so frequently follow the
use of headache powders. Try it.
Sold by all druggists at 60c and $1.00.
Meney back If it fails.
Before asking a favor of a man
wise woman gives him a good dinner
—with a little flattery on the side.
If you doa't get the biggest and beet
It's your own fault. Defiance Starch
ia for Bale everywhere and there
positively nothing to equal it in qual-
ity or quantity.
It Is a criminal offense to stuff a
ballot box, but there is no law pre-
venting the stuffing of a contribution
box.
Beyond Expreaaion.
G. W. Farlowe, East Florence, Ala.,
writes: "For nearly seven years I was
afflicted with a form of skin disease
which caused an almost unbearable
Itching. I could neither work, rest or
sleep In peace. Nothing gave me per-
manent relief until I tried Hunt's Cure.
One application relieved me; one
box cured me, and though a year has
passed, I have stayed cured. I am
grateful beyond expression."
Hunt's Cure is a guaranteed remedy
for all itching diseases of the skin.
Price 50c.
Never censure people because they
happen to be rich. They may be Just
as respectable as you are.
This Is What
HasNoEqual
Catches Me!
iic-Thlril Mors starch.
m\
iisraaa
FULL
POUND
No premiums, but oncihird
more starch than you get of
other brands. Try it now, for
hot or cold starching it has no
equai and will not stick to the iron.
Plantation Chill Cure
To oyre, or mohey refunded by your merchant, so why not try it T Price 50c.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Keyes, Chester A. The Canadian Valley News. (Jones City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1905, newspaper, July 28, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc87715/m1/3/: accessed May 25, 2022), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.