Cimarron Valley Clipper. (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 14, 1905 Page: 3 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cimarron Valley Clipper and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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A Valuable Agent.
The glycerine employed in I)r. Tierce'*
medicines greatly enhances the medi-
cinal jiroperties which it extracts and
holds in solution much better than alco-
hol would. It also possesses medicinal
properties of its own. being a valuable
demulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and anti-
ferment. It adds greatly to the efficacy
of the Black Cherryhark, Golden Seal
root, Stone root and Queen's root, con-
tained in "(iolden Medical Discovery ” in
subduing, chronic, or lingering coughs,
bronchial, throat and lung affections,
for all of which these agents are recom-
mended by standard medical authorities.
In all cases where there is a wasting
away of flesh, loss of appetite, with
weak stomach, as in the early stages of
consumption, there can he no doubt that
glycerine acts as a valuable nutritive and
aids the Golden Seal root. Stone Coot.
Queen’s root and Black Cherryhark in
promoting digestion and building up the
flesh and strength, controlling the cough
and bringing about a healthy condition
of the whole system. Of course, it must
not be expected to work miracles. It will
not cure consumption except in its earlier
stages. It will (giro very severe, obstin-
ate. chronic roughs, brolichia! and laryn-
geal troubles, ai d chronic sore throat
with hoarseness. In acute coughs it is
not so effective, it is in the lingering
coughs, or those of long standing, even
when accompanied by bleeding from
lungs, that it has performed its most
marvelous cures. Send for and read the
little hook of extracts, treating of the
properties and uses of the several med-
icinal roots that enter into Dr. Bierce's
Golden Medical Discovery and learn n)i)/
this medicine lins such a wide range of
application in the cure of diseases. It is
sent free. Address Dr. Ii. V. Tierce,
Buffalo, N. Y. The "Discovery” con-
tains no alcohol or harmful, habit-form-
ing drug. Ingredients all printed on each
bottle wrapper in plain English.
Sick people, especially those sufforin
from diseases of long standing, are invite
to consult Dr. Tierce by letter, free. A.
correspondence is held as strictly privafc
and sacredly conlidenWal. \ddrcss l)i
11. V. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y. ,
Dr. Tierce's Medical Adviser is sent /Vo
on receipt of stamps to pay expense tr
mailing truly. Send ill one-eent stamp!
for paper-covered, or 111 stamps for clotu-
bound copy.
-Xjfyy
FRANK P. LEWIS, Peoria. 111.
Originator of the Tin Foil Smoker Pack-
age. The man who lias made Lewis’
Single Binder Straight 5c Cigar famous
among smokers throughout the W est.
$16 AN ACRE
!3
6
1
KNEW THEY WERE NOT GHOSTS.
Words the Old Lady Overheard Settled
That Matter.
"During llio trials of the James gang
in Independence, Mo., in 1881,” said
the Missouri man, "an old woman tes-
tified for the state that she saw the
prisoner, one of the notorious James
brothers, (he night before the robbery
and heard bin* talking about ibis rob-
bery to her husjjand. When counsel
for the defense took the witness for
cross-examination he began as fol-
lows: *
• “'Now, Mrs. Blank, tell us again
bow it. happened (hat you saw the
prisoner that? night.’•
“ ‘Well, lie came to the house along
airly in the evening, and asked me
where was my old man. 1 said out-
doors somewheres, anil he went out to
find him. After a while I reckoned I'd
better go out and see if he found him.
I beard voices in I lie cornpateh and
went along and looked through the
fence and saw ’em.’
" ‘Mrs. Blank, I want to*know if you
believe In ghosts—in spooks?’
“ 'I don’t know as it’s any of yotit
business whether 1 do or not.’
’’ ‘You must answer*!he question.’
* “.’Well, then—I do.’
“ ‘They’ve been seen around your
house, haven’! they?’ *
‘‘‘Yes, sir, they liev; I’ve seen ’em
myself.
“ ‘Ghosts have been seen walking
about outside by you and members of
your family, haven’t they?’
“ ’Yes, sir, they hew’
“ ‘Well, Mrs. Blank, I want to know
how can you swear It wasn’t ghosts
you saw in the cornfield that night.
How do you know*it wasn't ghosts?’
“ “Cause they war a-cussin',’ said
the old woman.”
1 in Western
Canada is the
amount many
farmers will
realize from
their wheat
cropthisyear.
25 Bushels to the Aero Will bo tho
Avorago Yield of Wheat.
The land that this was grown on cost many of
t*e farmers absolutely nothing, while those
who wished to add to the 160 acres the Govern-
in' nl grants, can buy land adjoining at from it!
to $10 an aerr.
Climate splendid, school convenient, railways
close at hand, taxes low.
(-end for pamphlet “20th Century Canada"
ami full particulars regarding rate.ustc., to
Super.ntcnUont of Immigration, Ottawa
Canada, or to the following authorized
Canadian Government Agent—J. S. Crawford,
No. IJj \V. Ninth Street, Kansas City,Missouri
(Mention this paper.)
Sell Water from Paris Fountains.
One would uot think that in such
an up-to-date city as Paris it was still
possible to buy water; that is to say,
to go out and pay so much for a buck-
et of water. Yet so it. is.
In ten different streets in the city
there are as many different fountains,
where for a penny’you can buy twen-
ty-two gallons of watex or fill your*
bucket for a centime, the tenth of a
penny. There was a time when these
fountains did a brisk business, for in
1860 the income from them was £28,-
000. In 1882 it had dwindled to £1,-
600, and to-day the water sellers dis-
pose of about a bucket a month. .
The fact, is,that the guardians of
the fountains have really nothing to
do, and this nominal employment is
given to ex-employes of the Paris water
company, so that they may end their
years, without fatigue, on a pension of
£20 per annum and a modest lodging.
—London Globe.
DEFIANCE CfiSd Water Starch
Waive iuuttvlrv vi fk it pleasure. 10 <m. pkg. luc.
AILING WOMEN.
Keep the Kidneys Well ’and the Kid
• neys Will Keep You 'Well.
Sick, suffering, languid women flro
learning the true cause of bad bac^s
and *how to* cure
them. Mrs. W. G.
Davis of Groesbeck,
Texas, says: “Back-
aches hurt me so I
could hardly stand
Spells of dizziness
and sick headaches
were frequent and.
thr* action of the
kidneys was irregu-
lar. Soon after I began taking Doan's
Kidney Tills I passed several gravel
stones; I got well and the trouble has
not returned. My hack is good t and
strong and my general health better.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., •Buffalo, N. Y.
AMERICAN GIRLS TOO RESTLESS
California's Famous Sheriff
Benjamin K. Thorne, a native of
New York, nephew of United Senator •
T. Platt, aged 75. and classed jis
the infest fearless ^Sheriff In California,
died recently. As sheriff of Calaveras
county ho was leader in the most fam-
ous man hunts in the state’s history.
No chance was too desperate for him
to take and lie took many desperate
chances in his fifty years of service.
AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR.
Covered Head, Neck and Shoulders—
Suffered Agony for Twcjity-five
Years Until Cured by
Cuticura.
Artists Pained at Their Unnecessary
Gestures and Fidgeting
It no longer Is considered fascinat-
ing for women lo go to the extreme of |
vivacity in bohayior. Perhaps this is
duo to the criticism of an artist who
recently visited these shores and who |
was much distressed at the way in
which American women fidgeted and
gesticulated. *
"As most of the athletic women of
today have large hands,’ he said, "it j
they emphasize every utterance with a
gesture the effect is bound to be un-
pleasant.* The delects are made more j
conspicuous. Nervousness is often
the cause of this restless motion ot
the hands. It is bound to bore tlie
observer, even when the woman is
pretty. Indeed, it would torture one
\yho was* compelled to look at It for a
long time.”—New York Press.
The Mist.
A sombre grey enshrouding mist,
Blots out the heather hill.
Where late the golden sun had kissed
The dfep pink bells at will. •
And creeping down the grassy steep,
It gains the stony shore;
Where plow the billows of the deep,
With sullen hostile roar.
I .watch this brooding presence, as
It works its icy will.
Still ever forging on ahead.
With penetrating chill; ,
Like every despair it casts about,
A spreading humid blight,
Embodied silence, shutting out,
Earth's beauties fiom my sight.
Come here, my fii >•draw near an<*
see!
All brightness Appear,
How close it loom-, surrounding me,
This dread curtain of tears.
Jline - yes the mists of sorrow blind,
Fierce rolls the angry main,
Clasp firm my hand, and help ill" find,
The sunlight once again.
—Annie Oddlet.
No More Baggy Trousers.
It is a matter of wonderment to
friends of one of me best-dressed
young men of the city that his trousers
never bag at the knees. “How is it?”
one asked, “pn you keep a valet who
presses your clothes every day?”
Tho well-dressed mvi smiled.
"No, I keep no valet,” he said. "But
I have all my trousers made with silk
knee-caps.”
“Silk knee-caps? W'liat are they?”
"They are squares of silk covering
the knees of the trousers inside. They
take the strain off t i cloth when you
sit down, lienee no kneeing your
'tiadBerB always keep their shaps."
Woman Oil Operator
Mrs. Mae O. 11. Russell, of Bloom-
lrfgton, 111., is tho only woman oil op-
erator in Kentucky, and, perhaps, in,
the United States. Since the discov-
ery of oil there have been but one o*
two women who ventured into the
business on a large scale, and so far
as is- known this yeying woman of
some 28 years old is* today rated
among the largest operators In Ute
country.
A BRAIN WORKER. *
Must Have the Kind of Food That
Nourishes Brain.
"I anna literary man whose nervous*
energy is a great part of my stock in
trade, and ordinarily I have little pa-
tience with breakfast foods and the
extravagant claims made of them.
But I cannot withhold my acknowledg-
ment of the debt thaf I owe to Grape-
Nuts food.
"I discovered long ago that the very
bulkiness of the ordinary diet was not
calculated to give one a clear head, the
power of sustained, accurate thinking.
I always felt heavy and sluggish in
mind as well as body after eating the
ordinary meal, which diverted the
blood from the brain to the digesti\ro
apparatus.
"1 tried foods-easy of digestion, but
found them usually deficient in nutri-
ment. I experimented with many
breakfast foods and they, too, proved
unsatisfactory, till I reached Grape-
Nuts. And then the problem was
solved.
"Grape-Nuts agreed with me per-
fectly from the beginning, ^satisfying
my hunger and supplying the nutri-
ment that so many other prepared
foods lack.
“I had not been using it very’ long
before I found that I was turning out
an unusual quantity and quality of
work. Continued use has demonstrat-
ed to my entire satisfaction that
Grape-Nuts food contains all the ele-
ments needed by the brain and nerv-
ous system of the hard working public
writer." Name given by Postum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
There's a iflason. Ur-ad tho little
book. "The Hoad lu WelklUe.” tu pkgs.
"For twenty-five years I suffered ag-
| ony front a terrible humor, complete-
| ly covering my head, neck and shoul-
ders, discharging matter of such of-
| fenstveness to sight and smell that I
became an object of dread. I con-
sulted the most able doctors far and
near, to no avail. Then I got Cuti-
cura, and in a surprisingly short time
1 was completely cured. For this I
(hank Cuticura, and advise all those
suffering from skin humors to get it^
and end their misery at once. S. P.
Keyes, 149 Congress Street, Boston,
Mails."
Largest Man in Pars
Michael Beitdin, the largest man in
Paris, who was known as the "King
of the Draymen,” lias died from the
effects of being knoeke I down by a
street ear. He was six feet six and
three-fourths inches tall and weighed
292 pounds. His strength was so
great that he couhplift easily and car-
ry a barrel containing a pipe (126 gal-
lons) of wine.
• No Others.
It is in a class to itself. It has no
rivals, it cures where others merely
relieve. For aches, pains, stiff joints,
eftts, burns, bites, etc., it is the quick-
est and surest remedy ever devised.
We mean Hunt’s Lightning Oil.
Little drops of water, little grains
of sand, increase the grocer s* profits
to beat the village band.
99 ®€ «*©e »« 99999 £ 99999
■
THE OLD MONK CURE
if
§
9
TRADE
MARK.
St. Jacobs Oil
has traveled round the world,
and everywhere human
Aches and Pains I
have welcomed it and blest
it for a cure.
9
Price, 25c. and 50c.
. #
199999999 =83j>99999«9999g—
COJNCIL HILL
toSre« COUNCIL HILL
BECAUSE
COUNCIL HILL* SPft£5LF,iOR
Is a new town, but a
few months old, loca-
ted on tho M. O. & <r.
railroad, 23 miles from Muskogee. If Is surrounded
by a vast area of the, best uirriculniral land In
tho C rec If Nation. A brick railroad sritlou with
cement platforms, o two-story modern school bouse,
I,’* foot prunltoid sidewalks with curbing through the
business* noction are but a few of the substantial lin-
proven]'nts. Never lias there been such an oppor-
tunity for a bi^lue.F" location or a profitable lu\ est-
' uiejjfc. For particulars a l iresa
Union Townsite Company,
Muskogee, Indian Territory.
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Garner, E. J. Cimarron Valley Clipper. (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 14, 1905, newspaper, December 14, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc911846/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.