Cimarron Valley Clipper. (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 1, 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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'"Backache, “”
Both Symptoms ..of Organic Derangement in
Women—Thousands of Sufferers Find Relief.
ataxia is Durable
REPORTED OUEE STANDS TEST Of
PULL INVESTIGATION.
A Former Victim of Loroinotor Ataxia
Now Frco from Sufferin'* ami *
Actively at Work*
“Yes,” said Mr.Wntkills to arcp< rrfcer,
“ it i.i truo that I ltavo lioen cured of
ataxia bj,j Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.”
“Aro you suro you had locomotor
ataxia?”
“ Tho doctors themselves told mo bo.
Besides I recognized the symptoms.”
V What were they?"
*' Well, the lix'ist indioatipns were a
stiffness about the knee joints that came
on about four years ago. A few months
after that appeared, my walk got to ho
uncertain, shalcy-like. I lost confidence
in my power to control tho movements
of my legs. Once, when I was in tho
cellar, I started to pick up two scuttles
of coal, nud my legs gave way suddenly,
and I tumbled all in a heap in a basket.
I couldn’t close my eyes and keep my
balance to save my life. Than I lmd
fearful pains over my whole body and 1
lost control over my kidneys and my
bowels.”
“ How about yonr general health ?”
“ Sometimes I was so weak that I had
to keep my bed and my weight fell off
twenty pounds. Things looked pretty
bad for mo uatil I ran across a young
man who had been cured by Dr. Wil-
liams’ Pink Pills and who advised me to
try them.”
“Did these pills help you right away?”
“I didn’t see much improvement un-
til I had used six boxes. The first bene-
fit I in.bleed was a better circulation and
a picking up in strength anil weight. I
gradually got confidence in my ability
to direct the movements of my legs, and
in tho course of seven or eight months
all tho troubles had disappeared.”
“ Do you regard yourself as entirely
well now?”
“ 1 do tho work of a well man at any
rate. I can close my eyes and stand up
all riglrt and move about tho same as
other men. The pains aro all gone ex-
cept an occasional twitch In the calves
of my legs.!'
Mr. James II. Watkins residesat No. 72
Westerlo street, Albany, N.Y. Dr. Wil-
liams’ Pink Pills can be obtained at any
drug store. They should T>e used as soon
as the first signs of locomotor ataxia ap-
Do u' in u peculiar numbness of the feet.
Had No Use for Water.
An English writer tells of a Ken-
tish farm worker whose horny hand
ho grasped. “Good Kent dirt,” said
the man, catching a critical glance.
“Haven’t had time to wash jour hands
before tea?” was the question. “Wash
my ’ands!” exclaimed the man. Then
he becamo explanatory. “I never
washes my ’ands. When they gets
’ard 1 iles ’em.”
I am sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved
Iny life three years ago. Mbs. Thus. Uohbins,
Maple Street, Norwich. N. Y., Feb. 17. 1U00.
Grit.
am thinking seriously of getting
married,” au ‘Atchison widower sjid
to-day, “for no other reason than
hat my children say I shall not do it.
want to show them that I am ray
n master. 1 really haven’t any one
mind, hut I can find some one. Pm
fctoo old.”—Atchison Globe.
1(fltarrh Cannot lie Cured
I In* h At A I’PLICA 1’IONS. tin they cannot reach
tutlotf the. disease. Catarrh Ih a blood or constl*
intern chm\ anil Inonlor to cure It you mum take
tornnlinedles. Hall's Catarrh Cur.v Is taken In*
surfin' pi arts directly on the blowd nn<t iuucouf
clue. Hill's Catarrh Cure Is not a quack modi*
In tLine vrescrlbed by one of the best pliynlclani
It is c un for years ami Is a reicular prescription,
with the V of tho be t tonics known, combined
mucous a nlood purl Hers, noting directly m tht
two Ingrodh. The perfect combination of the
milts In cut wfint produces such wonderful re
.1 arrh. semi for ti .monlnls, free
Bold by Dri ll F.\ K\ & CO., Props., Toledo, ()
Take Hall's . price 75«\
v Pills for constipation.
Many a ——— --——
, , life lias left a black
mark bchim
vat*----—■
Knl Cross Ha'.l C FAMOUS
unis. The Kusil.tiri'i* To/.. padtngc 5
____tuny, South ilcud. I Lid.
The .fellow wh
* fe never pushed"^111'1 for money
. . . . »’io front.
PAID PENALTY FOR HASTE.
Messenger Boy's Speed Resulted in
Spectacular Tumble.
A district messenger boy emerged
from a big office building on Nassau
street and to the amazement of pass-
ersby, began to run. He had not gone
far when his foot caught in some ob-
struction and he fell. It was not (he
ordinary fall. It was a .picturesque,
acrobatic performance, lie landed on'
his stomach with hands and legs out-
stretched.
• It had just stopped raining and the
asphalt was slippery. In addition,
there is quite a down grade at Cedar
street, where the sudden drop of mer-
cury took place. So when ho struck
the roadway he kept on going tobog-
gan fashion, for a foot or two, his
hands and,feet being used as brakes.
When tho headway finally was
checked, the messenger boy arose,
slowly and sadly. His once natty
blue uniform was a finished study
black from collar to the ends of his
trousers. There was some bark off
his hands and a gash in one knee of
his trousers seemed to open its dumb
mouth to protest against such treat-
ment.
“That's what I get fer runnin’.”
said the boy sadly, as he entered a
convenient hallway to cleanse himself
with a “latest edition” handed to him
by a sympathetic observer.
A Memorial Day Memory.
The sentry rhaltenged at the open ‘-ate
Who passed him by, because the hour was
late:
“Halt! Who goes there?” ‘‘A friend.”
"All’s W( 11.”
"A friend, old mate.” A friend's fare-
well.
Ami 1 had passed the gate;
And then the long last notes were shed,
And shrilly clarion's echoes dead;
And sounded sadly as 1 stood without *
Those last sad notes of all? “Eights out.”
. "Lights out."
Fatewll. companions. We have side by
side
Watched the hlst'ry's lengthened shadows
past us glide.
And worn the blue, and laughed at pain,
And many a year has died.
And toil and hardship have we borne.
And followed where the flag has gone;
But all. the echoes answering round about
Have bidden you to sleep: "Lights out.”
“Lights out.”
And never more for me the bay’net's
flash. ,
The trumpet's summons. Oh, the crum-
bling ash
Of life is hope's fruition; fall
The withered friendships, and they all
Are sleeping. Lay. by day
The fabrics of our lives decay.
And change unseen, and melt away—
Aye, perish like the accents of a call,
Like martial warnings from Life's grim
redoubt;
Like those last notes of nil: "Lights out.”
“Lights out.”
—John It. Itathom.
Cost of Railway Mail Service.
Americans pay more for transporta
tion of mail than all the other peoples
of the world combined. 'In the last
year for which comparative figures
aro available (1901) it cost us $38,-
500,0Q0 for railroad transportation of
mail alone. All the other countries
in the world paid for transportation
by all means only $37,000,000, tor $1,-
500,000 less than we alone paid.
Freight and passenger rates have gone
down. They are cheaper here than
abroad; express companies pay the
railroads about half the rates they
charge the government, and yet the
postotfice department continues to
pay for the transportation of mail just
as much as it paid thirty years ago,
while all other transportation rates
have greatly decreased in that time
—Public Opinion. ,
McClellan Hard to "Rattle.”
A citizen who is intimately ac-
quainted with George H. McClellan,
mayor of New York, declares that he
has not a nerve in his being. "I have
seen hint in some close quarters, but
have never seen him change color or
appear Ihc least concerned,” lie adds,
“lie may have wounds to nurse and
nurses them, but if he does he goes
into a back room to do it. Just once
since he has been in office*has he
quailed at any proposed ordeal. The
health commissioner wanted him to
take a rid A in a new model ambulance,
but tho mayor declined, saying he was
afraid. ‘But there is no danger.’ ‘No
danger!’ said the mayor. ‘I guess you
don’t know about the jokemakers of
the American press? Excuse me.’”
IIow often do we hoar women say: “It
seems as though my back would break,”
or “Don’t speak to me, I am all out of
sorts?” These signi Heartt rerna rks prove
that the system requires attention.
Baekaeiig and “ the bines” tire direct
symptoms of an inward trouble which
will sooner or later declare itself. It
may be caused by diseased kidneys or
some uterine derangement. Nature
requires assistance and at once, and
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable' Com-
pound instantly asserts its curative
powers in all those peculiar ailments of
women. It lias been the standby of
intelligent American women for twenty
years, and the ablest specialists agree
that it is the most universally success-
ful remedy for woman’s ills known to
medicine.
The following letters from Mrs.
Holmes and Mrs. Cotrely are among
.the many thousands which Mrs. Pink-
ham has received this year from those
whom she has relieved.
Surely such testimony is convincing
Mrs. J.G. Holmes, of Larimore, North
Dakota, writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“ I have suffered everything with backache
and womb trouble—I let the trouble run on
until my system was in such a condition that
I was unable to he about, anil then it was 1
commenced to use Lydia E. Pinldmm's Vege-
table Compound. If I had only known how
much suffering I would have saved, 1 should
have taken it months sooner—for a ’few
weeks' treatment made me well and strong.
My backaches and headaches are all gone and
I snffer no pain at my menstrual jterioils.
whereas before I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound I suffered intense pain.”
Mrs. Emma Cotrely, 109 East 13th
Street, New York City, writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“ I feel it my duty to tell nil suffering women
of the relief 1 have found in Lydia K. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound. When I com-
menced taking the Compound I suffered
everything with backaches, headaches, men-
strual and ovarian troubles. 1 am complete-
ly cured and enjoy the best of health, and I
owe it all to you.”
When women arc troubled with irreg-
ular, suppressed or painful menstrua-
tion, weakness, loucorrhoea, displace-
ment or ulceration of the womb, that
bearing down feeling, inflammation of
tlie ovaries, backache, bloating (or
flatulence), general debility, indiges-
tion and nervous prostration, or are be-
set with such symptoms as dizziness,
faintness, lassitude, excitability, irrita-
bility. nervousness.,sleeplessness, mel-
ancholy, “’all gone ’’ and “want-to-be-
left-alone” feelings, blues and hopeless-
ness, they should remember there is one
tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound at once re-
moves such troubles.
No other medicine in the world has
received such widespread and unqiinl-
fied endorsement. No other medicine
has such a record of cures of female
troubles. Refuse to buy any substitute.
FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN.
Remember, every7 woman is cordially
invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if
there is anything about her symptoms
she does not understand. Mrs. Pink-
ham’s address is Lynn, Muss., her
advice is free and cheerfully given to
every ailing woman who asks for it.
Her advice and medicine have restorer!
t» health more titan one hundred thou-
sand women.
▲sk. Kirs. Pinkham’s Advice—A Woman Best Understands a Woman’s 111*.
»A CHILD Can Use the QUICK. MEAL.
\v4th perfect safety—it’s proof against forgetfulness, Ignorance, hired girls tin* Insurance
Companies have tested it to their full satisfaction every way they could think of. The
Quick Meul is simplicity itself—no Clearing parts —nothing to clog or get out
of order - nothing to burnout. It is made from heavy sheet steel and brass,
and will[last almost a lifetime— and it will do as good work the last year
as it did the first■ Kitchen work is a delight when you have a
QUICK MEAL (Evaporator) GASOLINE RANGE
for you never have to wait, even a minute, for your fire—it’sa/7/'<?yj
piping hot, hut your kitchen is cool, for the heat is under the kettles,
where it ought to be. And there are no kindlings—no ashes—no
dirt—no bother—just convenience, economy and safety, and vonr
dishes done and the kitchen cleaned up before you know it. Tho
Quick Meal is a city convenience you can have and to
have. If your dealer doesn’t carry it ask us—we'll sell you.
wori.n TOP LIKE A I'KKMKHTI—Wotvlll acml you something unrful mine*
thing you'll like it you'll Him ply tell us ymir dealer s nanio ami any whether
ho carriers quirk Meal. Sign your namo plainly no it will roach you safely.
Ringen Stove Co. Div.. Makers, 6th Street. St.Louis, Mo.
i iKadi: jiakk
• - f. WOMEN'S >
j PATRIOT v MAYFLOWER
#«»sHOE -anSBrnK
These Shoes were Awarded
Grand Prize at St. Louis World’s Fair
Tho PATKIOT SHOE for Men is made from all leathers,
over stylish yet comfortable lists, to 111 any foot. They are
Goodyear welts, which moans flexible 8<»leH. with no wax or tacks
to Irritate the foot. Tho MAVI bOWKIt BIJOK for Women
is madelo welts and hand turns. Ia stylish, durable and comfortable.
Ask your dealer for them. If ho does n-»t handle these shoes,
write us direct. They will please you and you will save from 50
cents to $1.60 per pair In prices usually charged lor shoes of
this character.
■* vjgTAI? BRAND 3CHPKS ARE BETTER V
RoBtrtT^ 4oftNS0^4R £ndShoE Co
NO MONEY TILL CURED. 28 YEAR, tSTABLISHtM
We srad fKfcli and postpaid a 352-pafe treatise on Piles, Fistula and Diseases of the
Recitin'; a so 132-page lllus. treatise on Dlieasesof Women Of the t on ands cured by
ou m id method, none paid .1 rrut till cured we furnish their names o i ni>pliiat*»n
Drs. Thornton h >|iB0r,^3KMt,*kl%ABomfej
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Barger, George S. Cimarron Valley Clipper. (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 1, 1905, newspaper, June 1, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc913219/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.