Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 201, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 21, 1903 Page: 3 of 8
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HAPPY WOMEN.
Mrs. Pare,
wife of C.
B. Pare, a
promine n t
resident
of Glasgow,
K.v., says:
■ "1 war. suf-
fering from
a compli-
cation of
liidnoy trou-
bles. Be-
sides a bad
back 1 had a great deal of trouble
with the secretions, which were ex-
ceedingly variable, sometimes exces-
sive and at other times scanty. The
color was high, and passages were ac-
companied with a scalding seusation.
Doan's Kidney Pills soon regulated
the kidney secretions, making their
color normal and banished the inflam-
mation which caused the scalding sen
satiou. 1 cau rest well, my back is
strong and sound and 1 feel much bet-
ter in every way.”
For sale by all dealers, price 50
cents per box. Fosler-Mllburn Co*
Buffalo, N. Y.
OF APPROVED VALUE
DEAS OF INVENTORS, BOTH NEW
AND USEFUL.
Spiral Spring for Carriage Bodies Has
Much to Recommend It—Portable
Bathing Apparatus—Protection for
Propeller Blades.
• New Vehfcle Spring.
Tho accompanying illustration will
convey graphically better than words
can tell a recently patented method
of mounting vehicle bodies which al-
lows the utilization of the familiar
spiral springs in the place of the flat
ones now so generally used for this
purpose. The front and rear axles
A Kansas farmer was supposed to
have died, and the Ottawa Indepen-
dent relates that the body was put
in a crematory to be reduced to ashes.
The attendants loft him an unusually
Jong time and when they opened the
door the corpse bobbed up: ' Have the
hot winds hurt the corn?” was the
first remark.
“Now, my sister-in law,” said the
it ranger, "has led more women to
become regular attendants at church
jthan—” “You don t tell me!” ex-
claimed the Rev. Mr. Priestly. "So
|she is an evangelist?" "No. but she's
the most fashionable milliner in
•own.”—Philadelphia Press.
"Will you be mine?" is a catch ques-
tion for girls.
Don't you know that Defiance
Starch besides being absolutely supe-
rior to any other, Is put up 18 ounces
in package and sells at same price
as 12-ounce packages of other kinds?
Mother—“I hope that young man
never kisses you by surprise?”
Daughter—“No, mamma; he only
thinks he does."—Judge.
Hunt's Cure Is not a misnomer. It
does cure Itch, Ringworm, Eczema,
Tetter and all similar skin diseases.
A wonderful remedy. Guaranteed.
Price 25 and 50 cents.
Teacher—“Johnny, you may define
the first person.” Johnny—"Adam.”
—Town and Country.
AMERICA IN THE LEAD.
America is the leading commercial
nation of the world and is offering
great Inducements to the young peo
pie who desire to make a success of
life. Our commercial trade with for-
eign nations and our great home in-
dustry demands special preparation
of the rising generation, such as they
would get by attending some up-to-
date practical commercial school, like
that of Tyler College, Tyler, Texas.
This Is a commercial age and no
young person’s education is complete
without a thorough, practical and ex
tensive commercial course.
Write for free catalogue. Address
Tyler College, Department B., Tyler,
Texas.
To hear a woman describe the menus
of a dinner party a man could sup-
nose they ate nothing but clothes.
They were trying to tease the girl
-with the umbrageous pompadour con-
cerning her newest young man.
f‘What’s his politics?" they asked her.
‘‘Sort of Fusionlat, 'isn’t he?” "No,"
j she said. "Middle-of-the-road Pop. Wo
j were taking a buggy ride when he
j proposed."—Chicago Tribune.
support upright standards, which are
suitably braced to give greater rigid-
ity to the under frame. The body of
the vehicle is supported from each
standard by means of helical springs,
which are inclined inwardly toward
the center of the carriage body, thus
exerting radial pulls to prevent lateral
swaying without interfering with their
vertical yielding movement.
Improved Propeller Blades.
Covering steel propeller blades with
thin sheet brass or copper to protect
them from corrosion has been suc-
cessfully accomplished by an English
shipbuilding firm. The sheathing is
closely imbedded to the surface be-
neath, with specially constructed
joints at the leading and following
edges of the blades. While the ex-
periment was made simply to over-
come corrosion it hail been found by
actual tests that the steamers of the
Clan Idne which have had their pro-
pellers thus sheathed have shown con-
siderably better speeds with less coal
consumption than sister vessels fitted
with cast iron propellers. This is
probably due to the decreased friction
of the water under the action of the
revolving blades.
Beware of Sweet Breakfast Foods
Many of the breakfast foods upon the market are sweetened with gluside, a drug substitute for sugar.
The direct interference with the gastric digestion and the assimilation of food caused the french
Government to prohibit its use as a dietetic substitute for sugar. Children love it because it is sweet,
hence the danger. In selecting foods for daily use
WHEAT FLAKE CELERY
Didn’t you have a pleasant voy-
age?” he asked. "Oh. yes,” replied
Miss Greatblood. “except for the vul-
gar trade winds we encountered.”—
Philadelphia Hedger.
The Doctor's Statement.
St., John. Kan., Nov. 16.—This town
aas a genuine sensation in the case of
a little boy, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
William McBride. Dr. Dimes, the at-
tending physician, says:
"Scarlet Fever of a very malignant
type brought this child very near to
death and when the fever left him he
was semi paralyzed in the right leg
and right arm. He also lost hearing
in Ms right ear, and his mind was
j much affected.
“His parents tried another treat-
ment for a time and when I was re-
called I found that he was having
spells very like Epilepsy and was very
bad and gradually growing worse. I
advised the use of Dodd’s Kidney Pills
and In a short time the child began to
improve. Inside of a week the nerv-
ous spasms or epileptic seizures
ceased altogether."
Mr. and Mrs. McBride have made a
sworn statement of the facts and Dr.
Jesse L. Limes has added his sworn
statement saying that Dodd's Kidney
Pills and nothing else cured the fits.
' You Haven't held office very long,
have you?” asked the stranger. "What
makes you think so?" returned the
new incumbent. “I see you are work-
ing just as though you expected your
salary to be cut off if you didn’t earn
it."—Chicago Record-Herald.
is the one tnat will be found free from all injurious substances—safe for the children—Joj’.ail, sick of
well. Prepared by a physician and chemist whose name on any article is a positive guarantee of iti
purity and healthfulness. Served hot or cold.
Palatable—Nutritious—Easy of Digestion and Heady to Eat
My ji/f nature on
e%Jery pac KaJ *.
vlcQjeJ
t'or jo/i
by alt grocer*.
Dr. Price, the creator of Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder and Delicious Flavoring 1 xlracts.
A oook book containing 78 excollant receipts for using the Food mailed tree to any address.
Prepared by PRICE CEREAL FOCi CD., 34 Cast Street, - - CHICAGO, ILLIKOIS.
BALL
RELIABLE SALESMEN.
We have good positions for a number of good
men. fash each VMk. Steady work. OUT
new contract the best, for an honorable sales-
muu ever pul out. We want men who are ro-
und energetic, and are willing to pay
ience in agency work a
y. We furnish full in-
iviug tho Dameei of four
spoi
for
nsiblc and energet
that kind. Experiet
lessity
help but not a net
struotions. Write.
>. gi
business men as references.
LAllOMA STATE
NURSERIES,
l’erry, Oklahoma.
In the United States the distance ot
the average railway journey is twenty-
nine miles; in England it is scarcely
ten miles, while in Germany it is fij
teen miles, in France twenty-one miles
and in Russia sixty-five miles. •
Portable Bathing Apparatus.
In the illustration we show a wom-
an’s invention, which should be great-
ly appreciated by those who are un-
able to rise from bed long enough to
take a bath. As is well known, one
of the greatest aids in restoring the
health is cleanliness, and thorough
bathing of the skin to remove the im-
purities which have exuded from the
pores will often have as good effect
Used every washday will make vour clothes white as snow and as beautiful as when new. The most competent housekeepers in^th,
country use Red Cress Ball Blue and no other. Just try it once and you will see the difference. All grocers sell it. Large package _5c.
An innocent man dreads no eye and
fears no tongue.
USE
Carpets can be colored on the floor
with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES.
There’s nothing better in this world
than usefulness.
OKLAHOMA MANUFACTURED PRODUCTS
>Ir*. Wlnilow'* Sootlilni
For children teething, soften*
flaminatiou. allay s psTu. cure* w
ohlng Syrup.
the gums. reauct
lad colic, 25c a b
es In
shottle-
When living on hope
hustle for a meal ticket.
it is well to
SENSIBLE HOUSEKEEPERS
will have Defiance Starch, not alone
because they get one-third more for the
same money, but also because of su-
perior quality.
The signal corps claims to be the
nerve system of the army. Telegraphy,
telephony, ballooning and heilography
are its specialties. It is also charged
by law with garnering and transmit-
ting information.
Ask You Druggist for Allen's Foot-Ease.
"I tried ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE recent ly,
and have just bought another supply It
has cured my corns, and the hot, burning
and itching sensation in niv feet which was
almost unbearable.and 1 would not be with-
out it now- Mrs. W. J. Walker Camdea,
N. J." Sold by all Druggists, 25c.
In 1880 the south had but 20,500
miles of railway. In 1900 there were
over 54,000 miles, representing a new
influx of capita! to the amount of $1.-
500,000.
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
quantity and superior quality of Defi-
ance Starch is fast taking place of all
other brands. Others say they cannot
sell any other starch.
The new Pennsylvania railroad
bridge across the Delaware at Trenton
will bring Philadelphia twenty minutes
nearer New Y’ork. The total cost is
83,500,000.
Oft in the stilly night a racking
cough doth rob us of that sweet sleep
which nature seeks to give. Simmons’
Cough Syrup is an infallible cure; un-
troubled sleep and pleasant dreams it
doth assure. Guaranteed. Price 25
and 50 cents.
You’ve got the real tiling when you
get Hunt's Lightning Oil for Burns,
Bruises, Cuts and Sprains. Tho most
penetrating and healing liniment
known. Guaranteed. Price 25 and 50
cents.
•Jack proposed to me this morn-
ing!” "Did you accept him?” "Yes.”
"Then your prophecy has come true?"
"What prophecy?” “Why, last night
you said Jack was foolish enough to
do anything!”—Brooklyn Life.
They never diet fail; they never will
fail. What? Cheatham’s Laxative j Build
Tablets—to cure a cold at once. Carry
them in your vest pocket. Always
ready. Guaranteed. Price 25 cents.
That keeps
Oklahoma
Money in
Oklahoma
Where It’s Seeded
To
' Up a
Great
The lazy man would rather sit down
and hope than go after a certainty.
A fool and his automobile are soon
arrested.
Inflated Tubes Surround Edges.
as the medicine taken internally. This
bathing apparatus consists of a water-
proof sheet, with a surrounding air
tight tube, which can be inflated to
form a raised wail around the edges
of the sheet high enough to contain a
considerable amount of water. When
the tubes are deflated it is a compara-
tively easy' task to roll or lift the pa-
tient onto, the sheet, as the tubes lie
flat on the* bed. After the inflation is
completed the water can be poured
in, or a line of hose can be connected
with the hot water faucet in the bath-
room or washbowl to fill the "tub” to
the desired height. After the bath the
water is drained off through a short
section of hose beneath the pneumatic
tubing.
Mosquitoes and Malaria.
In view of the recent attempts made
in New Jersey to destroy the mosqui-
toes by the use of petroleum on the
standing water of the lowlands, and
also on account of the experiments
made by experts in Cuba to show
that, mosquitoes carried malarial and
fever germs, the report of Major Pen-
ton, principal medical officer of the
Soudan, is of especial interest. Only
a short time ago mosquitoes were so
thick in his locality that the use of
nets to ward off the pests was a neces-
sity, Lilt now these can be dispensed
with almost entirely. Several marshy
swamps surrounding the town have
been filled up by gangs of workmen,
thus leaving no breeding place for the
insects. With their disappearance
there has also been a marked de-
crease in malarial fever, all the medi-
cal officers of the district agreeing
that this has been the healthiest year
on record, and it is probable that
when the work has been completed
malaria will have disappeared from
the region altogether.
A woman wants to be told you love
her as regular as the milkman comes
or she wont’ believe it.
Nothing makes a girl so indignant
when she kisses a man as to forget
to do it against her will.
Ever notice how thoroughly a dog
appreciates a kind word? A man ap
preciates a kind word just as much.
We don't know' what It means to
"bow to the inevitable” unless it
means to take off one’s hat to one’s
wife.
Of course, you know that very few
people can make a suggestion to you.
A sensitive dog will follow the track
of a man who is wearing his master’s
boots and will reject the track of his
master if he has on strange boots.
ARE your clothes faredt
Use Usd Cross Ball Blue and make them
white again. Large 2 oz. package, 5 cente.
Mrs. Flatleigh—”1 see you still have
the same cook." Mrs. Urbanite Yes,
indeed. We have been with her near-
ly six months now.”—Chicago Daily
News.
Census of Krupp Works.
A recent census taken for the firn
shows that the Krupp works in Ger-
many employ in all 41,013 persons, of
whom 4,046 were classed as mana-
gers, clerks, bookkeepers, overseers,
etc., and 36.967 as workmen. The to-
tal number of persons supported by
these works, including employes, their
wives, children and other dependents,
was ! 17.613. The average wages paid
last year were 4.52 marks, or $1.08
per day.
A man should dress so that his gar-
ments will neither attract nor offend
the aye.
When you have been a guest so long \ Common-
ihat the hostess quits apologizing for
the spots on the tablecloth, your wel- j
ne is worn out. ^ ^
If you wish beautiful, clear, white clothes
use Red Cross Ball Blue. Large 2 oz.
package, 5 cents.
Sometimes, when a woman gets her
husband's life insurance, we can’t help
thinking that she has doubly and tre-
bly earned it.
AN OLD TIMER.-
Has Had Experiences.
A woman who has used Postum
Food Coffee since it came upon the
market eight years ago knows from
experience the necessity of using Pos-
tum in place of coffee if one values
health and a steady brain.
She says: “At the time Postum was
first put on the market 1 was suffer-
ing from nervous dyspepsia and my
physician had repeatedly told me not
to use tea or coffee. Finally I de-
cided to take his advice and try Pos
turn and got a sample and had it care-
fully prepared, finding it delicious to
the taste. So I continued its use and
very soon its beneficial effects con-
vinced me of its value, for 1 got well
of my nervousness and dyspepsia.
“My husband had bern drinking cof
fee all his life until it had affected
his nerves terribly. I persuaded him
to shift to Postum and it was easy to
get him to make the change for the
Postum is so delicious. It certainly
worked wonders for him.
"We soon learned that Postum does
not exhilarate or depress and does
not stimulate, but steadijy and hon-
estly strengthens the nerves and the
stomach. To make a long story short
our entire family have now used Pos-
tum for eight years with completely
satisfying results as shown in our
fine condition of health, and we have
noticed a rather unexpected improve-
ment in brain and nerve power.
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich.
Increased brain and nerve power al-
ways follow the use of Po3tum in
place of coffee, sometimes in a very
marked manner.
Look in each package for a copy of
the famous little book, "The Read to
Well villa." -,
Mother Oray'i Sweet Powder* forChtidrem
Successfully used by Mother Gray. nurs.
In the Children's Home in New York, cure
Constipation, Feverishness, Bad Stomach, I
Teething Disorders, move and regulate the \
Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 80,000 tes-
timonials. At all Druggists. 25c. Sample
FREE. Address A- 16. Olmsted, LeRoy,N. X.
Prevalent Craze.
Rivers (dipping Ills pen in the ink
for a third time)—Brooks, how would
you particularize or clasify this age
of the world?
Brooks (looking up abstractedly
from a sheet of paper covered with
figures)—Ann’s age.—Chicago Tri-
bune.
How to Succeed in Business.
Keep your liver In good condition
by using Simmons’ Liver Purifier (tin
box.) It corrects constipation, cures
Indigestion, Biliousness, stops Head-
ache, gets your he-.rt in the right
piacc so you can smile at your neigh-
bor.
Evidence.
“Then the organization is really
non-partisan?”
"Oh, yes; no two of the members
want the same thing.”—New York
Times.
OtUAnOMASOAp
OIL CO.
PURELEX
OKLAHOMACITT
OKLAHOMA SOAP
AINP
OIL CO.
OKLAHOMA CITY
OKLAHOMA SIMP
AMD
OIL CO
SNOW FLOAT.
OKLAHOMA CITY
OKLAHOMA 60AP
Mo Goods
Made are
Better than
Ours
Your Grocei
Has Them
Factory on
Broadway
Corner
OKLAHOMA CITY
OKLAHOMA 50AP
AND
OIL CO.
lO.H. tarTI
OKLAHOMA CITY
Choctaw
Street,
Oklahoma
City.
OKLAHOMA SOAp
And .
OIL CO.
BY-HAPTHA
■»■■■■■■■« .......
OKLAHOMACITT
§
y%
Sherman’9 Specialties
Complete ginning sy-tsms bride plants
flour mill spoeiltiea, gasoline well drilling and
pumping out fltK, boilors, steam and gas engines
steel Wains and architectural cast iron work
All kinds of steam and water fitting and up
plieF. Mill rolls ground and corrugate 1. T.arg
eat foundry, black-smith and machine shops
west of the Mississippi River.
N.S. SHERMAN M’OH’YCO.,
Oklahoma City. Oklahoma.
Pueblo, Colo.: The Colorado Lithia
Water Co. of this city are making Pueblo a
noted place. They are shipping their water
all over America, especially to Eastern doc-
tors and specialists. Physicianseverywhere
are realizing that nothing will cure Bright s
Disease or Kidney Troubles so quickly.
Sent in jugs or bottles to any address.
A little tot hoard at Sunday school
that God was with her everywhere
she went. One day her pet dog per
sisted in following her to Sunday
school, when she impaUently drove
it home, saying she did «not need it
and “Dod” both tagging after her
wherever she went.—Ex.
Every tidy housekeeper appreciates nicely starched
clothes and linens. No starch under the sun gives
so good a finish as Defiance Starch. It is absolutely
free of the chemicals which other starches contain: It
never sticks to the iron or causes the clothes to
break. It does not rot them. For 10 cents you get
16 ounces of the best starch that can be made
Get Defiance
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.,
OMAHA, NE3.
\
TbP’*e is a time for all things. The
time Iti take Simmons' Cough Syrup is
when afflicted • witli Sore Throat.
Hoarseness, Coughs or Colds. It is i
guaranteed to cure you. Price 25 an<! ;
50 cents.
You don't necessarily have to be a |
La nrud*»»A. ,
CAPITAL CITY
BUSINESS COLLEGE
€
A rid res:
R. A. GAFFNEY, 1'reaiUent.
GUTHRIE, O. T.
I Largest Business Col-
yb-g« in the ventral south-
I west. Enroll at any
’ time. Position* proi id*(J.
Correspondence Solicited
LEWIS’SINGLE BINDER
> STRAIGHT 57 CIGAR
sirs 00,000
Your Jobber or direct from Far'orv. Peoria. Ill
C&PSICU85 VASELINE
(err re i?t collapsible tubes
A substitute for and superior to mustaj
other plaster, and will not blister l
delicate skin. The pain-allaying and
qualiti
PUT UP lit COLLAPSIBLE TUBES)
nd superior to mustard or any
the most
ate skip. The pain-aliayinc und curatiyo
tier, of this article are wonderful. It will
stop the toothache at on e, and relievo head-
ache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best
and safest external counter-irritant knowu. also
as an external remedy for pains in the chest
and stomach and all rheumatic, neuralgic and
guuty complaints. A tii.il will prove what we
claim for it. and it will bo found to be invalu-
able in the household. Many people say "it. is
the best of -11 your preparations.” Price 13
cents, at all druggu ts or other dealers, or by
this amount to us in postage stamps we
i ..... * >.jbe by mail. No article should
W. N. U.—Oklahoma City, No. 47. 1903 V,
nts.
id in
will se
H be accepted by tho pit
I carrier our label. a ; otherwise it is no' geauina.
CHESEUROUOtl MFG. CO..
17 State Street. New York City. J
l WH*m "*■ t i m tm
you a tube by mail. No a; tide s
-pled by tho public unless the
herwisc it is
aanv
lulus
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French, Mrs. W. H. Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 201, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 21, 1903, newspaper, November 21, 1903; Chandler, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc913270/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.