Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, November 10, 1911 Page: 4 of 12
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■EMWMMj/irw TJ«J ■
Chest Pains
and Sprains j
Sloan's Liniment is an ex-
cellent remedy for chest and
throat affections. It quickly
relieves congestion and in-
flammation. A few drops
in water used as a gargle is
antiseptic and healing.
Here's Proof
" I have used Sloan's Liniment for
year* and can testify to its wonderful
efficiency. 1 luve used it for sore throat,
croup, lame back and rheumatism aaa
in every case it gave instant relief."
REBECCA JANE ISAACS,
Lucy, Kentucky.
SLOANS
LINIMENT
is excellent for sprains and
bruises. It stops the pain
at once and reduces swell-
ing very quickly.
Sold by all dealers.
Prico, 25c., SOo., $1.00 I
HOW INDIANS MADE HISTORY
"1
Sloan's
Treatise
on the
Horse
sent free. |
Address
Dr.
Earl S. Sloan |
Boston.
Man*.
w
ffoA
wo jet
Grain urrowinr«niU«<l farm*
rig, t ut tl« rulhinu ami <luiry-
_n** are all profitable. Free
I I o nicut«'i «lw of I UO ariTH are
to he liail Iii- llie veiy l «hi
ilistrirtN; 1 flo a«*re |ire-eii y-
t loi n a t 3.00 per acre w II li-
lt) c Ttnln area*. S« IiooIhan
«'li iirrl)«'H In ever y neff le-
nient, rlln ate iinex«'elle«l.
Mill t he rl« he*t; n ooil. m ater
an«l h ii I I ti i ii £ material
i* i«' ti 11 r ni.
For particulars as to location,
low railway rates ard
descriptive IllvstraliU piimpblet.
"l^ist Best W« st," and other In-
formation. rite to 8r pi of immi-
gration, CM taw a. Canada, or to
Canadian (jov eminent Agent,
W. H.ROGEPS
125 W. Ninth St., Kansas City. Mo.
1'leaM write to the agent nearest you
Tult's Pills
The dyspeptic, the debilitated, whether from
«xc«ssof work of mind or body, drink or ex*
poaureln —
MALARIAL REGIONS,
will find Tutt'a Pills the most genial restart*
live ever offered the suffering invalid.
FEATHER BEDS $10
MEW FIRST CLASS 40 tb. FEATHER BEDS
THE STOKES FURNITURE COMPANY
BORUNGTON NORTH CAROLINA
Splendid Crops
In Saskatchewan (Western Canada)
800 Bushels from 20 acres
of wheat was the thresher's
return from a Lloyd-
1 mil ster farm in the
leason of 1910. Many
field® in that as well as
other districts yield-
1 ed from 25 to 35 bu-
shels of wheat to the
| acre. Other graius in
[ proportion.
LARGE PROFITS
are Ibuv derived
fro in 1 Ii e I*' It K I!
O M E SI E A D LANDS
_f Western (lanoiln.
This excellent showing corses
prices to advance. Land tallies
should donblein two years' time
Truth of Their Tradition* Instanced
by On# Story Fram Annals of
the Beavers.
If we could only get at the facts of
the history of our. IndiaD tribes. It
would be of Interest to compare these
with what Is related as the fortune
of most civilized nations It >s only
In tradition that the history ol the In
dian lives, and only one version of
the story is ever heard Sometimes
this is so true to nature that no room
for doubt can be lound Such is the
following chapter, from the annals of
the Heavers, a Canadian tribe
One day a young chief shot his ar- j
row through a dog belonging to anoth-
er brave The brave revengeo the
death of his dog. and instantly a hun-
dred bows were drawn Ere night
had fallen some eighty warriors lay
ciead around the camp, the pine woods |
rang with the lamentations oi the
women: the tribe had lost its brav- .
est men.
There was a temporary truce The
friends of the chief whose arrow had
killed the dog ye; numbered some
sixty people, and it was agreed that
they should sepearate from the tribe
and seeii their fortune in the vast
wilderness lying to the south
In the night they began their j
march; sullenly their brethren saw '
them depart, never to return They !
went their way to the shores of the
Lesser Slave Lake, toward the great
plains which were said to be far
southward, by the banks of the swift-
rolling Saskatchewan
The tribe of the Heavers never saw
this exiled band again, but a hundred
years later a Beaver Indian, who fol-
lowed the fortunes of a white fur- j
hunter, found himself in one of the
forts of the Saskatchewan Strange
Indians were camped about the palis-
ades; they were members of the great
Rlackfoot tribe, whose hunting- j
groundB lay south of the Saskatche-
wan Among them were a few braves
who, when they conversed, spoke a
language different from that of the
others; ti' this language the Heaver
Indian recognized his own tongue —
liar per's Weekly
THERE WITH A REPUTATION
Doubtful and Humiliated Hubby Now
Probably Believe* Wife Can
Keep a Secret.
The late William Rotch Wister,
the father of American cricket, might
also be said to have been a godfather
of the feminist movement," said a
woman wri'er at the Acorn club In
Philadelphia.
"Mr. Wister," she continued, "abomi-
nated that type of husband who treats
his wife like a child, refusing to take
her into his confidence. I once heard
Mr. Wister tell a story about a Ger-
mantown man of that sort.
"The man came back from a busi-
ness meeting wherein the future wel-
fare of himself and his family was
vitally Involved, but he declined to
tell his wife what had been the meet-
ing's outcome.
" 'Oh, no,' he sneered, 'I can't tell
you anything. You'd repeat it if I did.
You, being a woman, are Constitu-
tionally unab'e to keep a secret.'
"But the wife, with a quiet smi'e,
retorted: 'George, did I ever tell the
secret of how you were led astray
that summer the church conference
met In Chicago and got arrested in a
saloon for biting off the bartender's
ear?'"
• A Change of Opinion. i
"Talk Is cheap," chuckled the poll- '
tfclan with the telephone frank in his
pocket.
After talking $20 worth, he pulled
out his frank and found it had ex-
pired. "By heck!" he muttered rue-
fully, "that guy was right when he
said that 'Sl!enoe Is golden.'"—Judge
CPRING FAG,
^ Stretchy, Drowsy,
stupid, tired, head-achy
—"not sick, but don't
feel good."
Just a few signs that
you need that most ef-
fective tonic, liver-stirr-
ing Spring Remedy—
OXIDENE
—a bottle proves.
Ti p Specific for Malaria, ChiTlsand
Fever, and a reliable remedy tor
all diseases due to a torpid
liver and sluggish bowels
ord kidneys.
EOc. At Your Druggist*
Tub miKim DXTTQ CO.,
W co, Texas.
Overdoing It.
"This Is the fourth season I have
met you at this watering-place. Miss
Brown, and every time you appear ten
years younger!Frtegende Blaetter.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put
up 40 years ago. They regulate and invig-
orate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-
coated tiny granules.
Some men are so small that a Ave
cent cigar looks big to them.
wmmm
Frank
PXTflA OUAl/Tr
r>iv
TONIC
He Had a Past
"1 can't, I can't, I can't!" he groaned.
"Can you not?" she said sympathet-
ically The girl loved him
"No." he cried "I have a past, and
it is only fair that you should know i
I would marry no girl on false pre- ;
tences She might find it out after
ward 1 have a past"
"Reveal It," she cried softly "I |
could forgive you anything " For the I
girl loved him
"I told you that I left my home town '
to seek my fortune." he said hoarse-,
ly 'That Is not true I had to flee it."
"One day—about six o'clock, it was,
well I remember the time—a fellow
townsman passed me with his little
boy Suddenly the child fell, slipped,
stumbled, to the street
"'Ah. I see It Is son down!' I re-
marked. gazing up at the sky
"A number of citizens heard me;
i the news spread, and—well, to make a
short story shorter, the town got too
hot for me. Can you forgive me for
that ?"
Shuddering, the girl shrank away
from htm Her lips moved, but tho
power of speech had deserted her.
Sadly he reached for bis hat
Too many homes have all the mod- DEFIANCE Qa!d Water Starch
ern inconveniences.
Qi&ites .auadry work i* .pieasuro. lt5 oz. pktf lUo.
ft
*
TAKE A DOSE OF
piscpg
fci- THE BEST MEDICINE
for CO UC H S 6 COLDS
"Wireless" Lighthouses.
The French government has de-
cided to Install wireless sending ap- 1
paratus on the lighthouses near Cap6
Finlsterre and" on a lightboat. station- j
ed near the mouth of the Seine river. j
for the protection of vessels during j
fogs These "wireless lighthouses" will
i each emit a characteristic signal, con-
veving no special meaning, but calcu !
lated to be easily "beard" and intend
j ed only to enable vessels to locate, by
| means of the Bellini Tosl radio-com ;
I ass. the direction of these lighthouses
relative to th« ship, and to set tbctf
courses accordingly.—Popular Me
i&auio*.
I For a Cold
#
the doctor prescribes a gentle purgative, or bowel and
C liver eleanser, to free your blood from the poisons that
• cause the trouble. He realizes that cleanliness, inside
J the body, is necessary for health, and prescribes a
j laxative the first thing.
^ At the start of any sort of an ailment, from a
common cold to the more dangerous diseases and
$ fevers, a safe and reliable treatment, always, is
Thedford's Black-Draught. There are really very
• few diseases that would not be benefited or relieved
• by the use of this great liver medicine— ®
THEDFORD'S
BLAck-DraugHT
*
e
#
a
a
«
«
Mrs. G. Nussbaum, of New Orleans, La., says:
"In the winter, 1 had the measles and then the grip,
which left me in a bad state. I could not rest, day
or night, and could not eat much, as I could not keep
it on my stomach. I was almost crazy. They
thought I was going to die. At last 1 took Thedford's
Black-Draught, and now ! weigh more than I ever
did before, and feel like a new woman." Pleasant
and simple to take. Gentle but certain in action.
Try it Sold everywhere. Price 25 cents.
*
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Herbert, H. S. Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, November 10, 1911, newspaper, November 10, 1911; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc87811/m1/4/: accessed March 26, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.