Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1914 Page: 4 of 8
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CARNEY, OKLA., ENTERPRISE
"OH! I FEEL
SO THANKFUL"
Sincere Gratitude Expressed by Lady
After being Delivered From
a Very Low State.
Hayne, N. C.—"I feel it my duty,"
says Mrs. Z. V. Spell, of this place, "to
tell everybody how much good Cardui,
the woman's tonic, has done for me.
I^ast spring, I suffered dreadfully
from womanly troubles, and was In a
very low state of health, was not able
to be up to attend any of my duties.
We finally consulted our family phy-
sician, and he advised me to try Car-
dui, the woman's tonic, which I did,
and soon I began to feel better. After
using seven or eight bottles, I was
able to do my housework.
I am now able to do all of my work
and take care of my children. I feel ;
so thankful for the benefit I have re-
ceived that I shall heartily recommend
Cardui to all similarly afflicted
women."
If you, lady reader, suffer from any
of the numerous Ills so common to
your sex. try Cardui. It has been
helping weak, nervous, worn-out
women for over half a century, and
will help you, too.
Cardui is a perfectly harmless, vege-
table extract, of mild acting, medici-
nal, tonic herbs. It is the ideal,
strengthening medicine for women.
Cardui regulates irregularities, tones
up the womanly organs, and brings
back the brightness of health.
Get a bottle today.
N. B.— Wrtk to." Ladies' Advisory Dept., Chatta-
nooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., for
Si*elal liutructlonj, and 64-pajfe book,"Home T reat-
ment for Women." sent in plain wrapper, on
request. Adv.
Keeping Her at Home.
Wife—Don't you think you might
manago to keep house alone for s
week, while I go on a visit?
Husband—I guess so; yes, of course
"But won't you be lonely and mis
erable?"
"Not a bit."
"Huh! Then I won't go."—New York
Weekly. ,
SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR
DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIR
Look Yeara Younger! Try Grandma's
Recipe of Sage and Sulphur
and Nobody Will Know.
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound-
ed, brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff, itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Years
ago the only way to get this mixture
was to make it ut home, which la
mussy and troublesome.
Nowadays we simply ask at any
drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul-
phur Hair Remedy." You will get a
large bottle for about 50 cents. Every-
body uses this old, famous recipe, be-
cause no one can possibly tell that
you darkened your hair, ae it does it
bo naturally and evenly. You dampen
a sponge or soft brush with It and
draw this through your hair, taking
one small strand at a time; by morn-
ing the gray hair disappears, and
after another application or two, your
hair becomes beautifully dark, thick
and glossy and you look years younger.
—Adv.
The average man thinks he has the
wisdom of Solomon, but his actions
show that he Is entitled to another
think.
S CHILD CROSS
VILLA THREATENS TO MURDER
TERRAZAS UNLESS RAN-
SOM IS PAID.
UNDERGOES TORTURE BY REBELS
Already Has Surrendered $650,000;
Big Additional Sum Demanded
As Price of His Life.—Held
Prisoner By Rebels.
i
El Paso.—Genera! Luis Terrazas ap-
pealed to Marion Letcher, consul at
Chihuahua, now in this city awaiting
instructions, to save his son Luis
whose life has been made-the forfeit if
$500,000 pesos ransom money* is not
paid over to General Francisco Villa,
the rebel leader.
Consul Letcher declared himself
deeply moved by the appeal of the oc-
togenarian head of the great Mexican
family, whose wide possessions have
been confiscated by the constitutional-
ists, but he had to reply that he was
helpless in the matter.
While General Terrazas did not say
as much, the interview left the infer
ence that he is not now in possession
of the sum demanded. Luis, the son,
is about 50 years old and for several'
months has been held prisoner by the
rebels.
Tortured by Rebels.
At the time of his arrest the rebels
demanded $650,000 gold as the price of
his life. The sum was slow in being
paid and Luis was taken out and a
noose adjusted about his neck. Then
he was gently hoisted from his feet.
The torture was repeated until he sig-
naled that he would pay the sum de-
manded—all that he had in the Chi-
huahua bank.
After this incident he was removed
from the palace, where he had been
confined and allowed to live under
guard with his family in one of his
father's houses. Women relatives
some time later appealed to Villa to
release hini but Villa was adamant.
Fortune Fades.
Personal appeal to Secretary Bryan
was suggested, but the old man merely
shook his head. An appeal, however,
may be made unless it is possible to
raise the ransom money. The great
bulk of the Terrazas fortune, normally
estimated at $40,000,000 gold, was tied
up by the confiscation order and mot
of the money available in foreign coun-
tries has been sepnt in the last three
years.
The most serious obstacle in the
way of a settlement of the matter is
Villa's refusal to allow*Don Luis to
leave Mexico after the money is paid.
General Terrazas, in replying to
Villa, made payment of the money con-
tingent on his son being brought to
the center of the international bridge
here while the sum was changing
hands. •
This Villa flatly declined to do. Gen-
eral Terrazas regards any other ar-
rangement as folly, as his son, he
thinks, doubtlessly would be used
merely as a means of further extor-
tion.
! Look, Mother! If tongue
coated, give "California
Syrup of Figs."
Children love this "fruit laxative,"
and nothing else cleanses, the tender
stomach, liver and bowels so nicely.
A child simply will not stop playing
to empty the bowels, and the result is
they become tightly clogged with
waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach
sours, then your little on. becomes
cross, half-sick, feverish, don't eat,
sleep or act naturally, breath is bad,
system full of cold, has sore throat,
stomach-ache or diarrhoea. Listen,
Mother! See If tongue is coated, then
give a teaspoonful of "California
Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all
the constipated waste, sour bile and
undigested food passe^ out of the sys-
tem, and you have a well child again.
Millions of mothers give "California
Syrug of Figs" because it is perfectly
harmless; children love it, and it nev-
er fails to act on the stomach, liver
and bowels.
Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle
of "California Syrup of Figs," which
has full directions for babies, children
of all ages and for grown-ups plainly
printed the bottle. Adv.
Magnificem
CrOJDS mali\
Western Canada
Doing It.
'Why do you mix with all those
university professors?"
"My doctor says I must live in a
dry atmosphere."
W.All parts of the Provinces of
Manitoba, Saakstchewan and
Alberta, have produced won-
derful yields of Wheat, Oats,
Barley and Flax. Wheat graded
'from Contract to No. 1 Hard,
weighed heavy and yielded from 20
to 45 butheli per acre; 22 bushels was
'JI about the total average. Mixed Farm- I
in« may be considered fully as profit- *
able an industry as grain raising. The J
excellent grasses lull of nutrition, are \
the only food required either for beef 1
or dairy purposes. In 1912, and again in
m i 1913, at Chicago, Manitoba carried off
■ '/. the Championship for beef steer. Good
schools, markets convenient, climate ex- I
cellent. For the homesteader, the man \
who wishes to farm extensively, or the \
investor, Canada offers the biggest op-
portunity of any place on the c ntinent.
Apply for descriptive literature and
| reduced railway rate* to
Superintendent of
Immigration,
f Ottawa, Canada, or to
G. A. COOK
123 W. eth Street
Kansas City, Mo<
Canadian
I Government Agent I
THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. Not. No2. N A
THERAPION Hospitals witb
Xreat success, cukes chronic weakness, lost viooft
VIM, kidney. bladder. diseases. blood POISON,
files. either no. druggists or mail ti- post 4 ct
fouqeraco. 90. BEEKMAN st. hew york or lyman BRO®
toronto. write por FREE book to dr. le CLERQ
Med.Co,HaverstockRd,Hampstead, London, Eno-
TRY new dragee (tasteless) FORMOP BASY TO TAK*
SAFE AND
_ _ lasting CURB.
0BS that trade marked word ' therapion* is oh
BUT. govt.stamp apfixbo TO all genuine PACKETS.
1KI navr uHAuaavtnai
THERAPION
IF YOU HAVE
DEEP CRACKS ON JOINTS
P. O. Box 378, El Paso, Texas.—"My
trouble began December, 1911. It com-
menced on me by causing a scurf-like
skin and my toe joints, finger joints
and lips commenced to crack and
split open. My finger cracks would
bleed all day long; the cracks were
very deep and my thumb seemed to
be cracked to the bone. My hands
were so bad that I had to sleep with
gloves on. The cracks in my lips
would bleed often during the day and
I used to put adhesive plaster across
them to try to keep them closed. My
toes would bleed, and I would find
blood in my socks when the day's
work was done. The skin around the
cracks was red and inflamed. I wore
shoes one size too large on account of
my feet being so sore. I used to be-
come frantic with pain at times. My
hands and feet used to smart.
"I suffered agony for four months.
I went to town and got some Cuticura
Soap and Ointment. From the time I
commenced with the Cuticura Soap
and Ointment until completely cured
was just nineteen days." (Signed)
Jack Harrison, Nov. 19, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-
card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.
An excess of "bracers" will unbrace
anybody.
Malaria or Piles, Sick Headache, Costive
Bowels, Dumb Ague, Sour Stomach, and
Belching; If your food does not assimilate and
you have no appetite,
Tutfs Pills
Will remedy these troubles. Price, 25 cents.
|
Free
320 acre level Colorado r&lnbelt home-
steads: good corn land; reasonable
location fee. Write today. Maxwell,
Cooper Building, Denver, Colorado
Oklahoma Directory
Pll F*k Cured without knife. Flstulaand Flssurs
• without chloroform or ether and do con-
finement In hospital. Located 1U yeara lnOkla.City.
Hundreds of saustled patientsfrom all parts of Ok -a.
and no failures Write forl26-pujje booklet. Dr.Chaa.
P Vickers. Formrrlv Chief Ataf. to Urn. Thorn ton A
Minor. Bassett Bldg., 116^ N. Broadway, Okla. City
For beat results ship
Dale - Stickney
Commission Co. iVS>™
Lire Stock Exchange Bonding
Slock Tarda. OKLAHOMA CITT
Markets furnished by 'phona
or telegraph when desired.
President '°n THE HUSTLERS Manager
JOHNSON & HURLEY
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION COMPANY
Okla. City-Ft. Worth-Hanaaa City
Salesmen: Cattle, J. B. 8TRIBLINQ. Hoes and
8heep, H. J. HURLEY, R. N. COLE
CONCRETE SILOS
Built especially for Oklahoma climate and
built under an absolute guarantee not to crack,
burn or blow down, and to keep the siloae in
perfect condition. WRITE FOR PRICES.
Oklahoma Concrete Silo Company
720-38 Insurance Building, Oklahoma City
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 10, 1914.
From
Girlhood
T^HE change may be critical and cause antold
Buffering in after-life. The modern - young
woman isoften a"bundleof nerves"-"high strumr*
—fainting spells—emotional — frequently blue and
i dissatisfied with life. Such girls should be helped
over this distressing "state in life—by a voman'i
tonic and nervine—that has proven successful for
over 40 years. "
the law building is oedicated dr. Pierce~«jFavorite Prescription
Governor ^rur.it MaUe* Prinrinal AH. -BB—
M t I1
M E AIXD
_SOAP
Governor Cruce Make* Principal Ad-
dress at State University.
cures ECZEMA
GUARANTEED
OIL SOo-m SOAP 90c
Send ten ouli for sample*
j£c-2ene co., st. paul, minn.
I nf)K 8°njeth1ng new. Agfnta 110day. Ktratghtsal
LUUI\ arj u> right agent to tell greatest article OTef
Invented The Midget Collapsible OanueQt hanger
for men, women and children, carry In teat pocket
'ocket book Bend25c /impu> outfit. Satisfaction or
Mooaj «ci untied fti4g« him l««tM ti., iMU^WMk
Norman.—The University of Okla-
homa law school was conceived In mis-
fortune, born In adversity and has
struggled against huge obstacles since
Its formation, but today it is housed
In one of the finest structures in the
country devoted to the training of
lawyers and probably has experienced
the most remarkable growth of any
like institution iu the entire nation.
is a keen enemy to the physical
regular graduated physician of unu
Carefully adapted to work in harmony
It is now obtainable in liquid ol
•druff store—or tend 50 one-cent st
fcvery woman may write fully and confidentially to
Dr. Pierce and his staff of physicians and Specialists
•t the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo,
N. Y., and may be sure that her case will receive care-
ful, conscientious, confidential consideration, and that
experienced medical advice will be Riven to her free.
OK. PIERCE'S PLEASANT PELLETS regulate
and invigorate etomach, liner and bouielt.
Sugar coated, tin} granule' taty to tmh« a* ca<x
nesses or woman. A medicine prepared by
'n treating woman's diseases-
most delicate feminine curmtUuUon,
ar-coated tablet form at tho
1} for a trial box, to Buffalo!,
omanhood
4
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Herbert, H. S. Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1914, newspaper, March 13, 1914; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc87930/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.