The Post. (Buffalo, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, January 3, 1908 Page: 4 of 10
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jyruptffk
^’’©ixtrsf'Serma
,i acts £entlyyet prompt*
‘ V onthe bowels, cleanses
tne system pfinrb i n) k,
sfe<
assists one in overcoming
aalntual constipation
ri permanently. To get its
- oenej'icial ejects bay
the genuine.
Wed by the
’OENIA
f^G Syrup Co.
SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS-504 p^BCTTLE
Nature's Management.
1 ^,,ere iS DO way’ is there* to keep
wnakies from showing?”
, . "1J0W/,?Ian there be whea wrinkles
1C] are head-liners?”
ITCHING RASH 18 YE:ARS.
-GjtPs Rash Spread and Grew Worse
Under Specialist’s Care—Perfect
a Cure by Cuticura Remedies.
“When my daughter was a baby she
I had a breaking out behind the ears.
The doctor said that she would out-
4grew it, and it did get somewhat bet-
Pter until she was about fifteen years
;oM, and after that she could get noth-
ing that would drive it away. She was
always applying something in the way
of salves. It troubled her behind the
jknees, opposite the elbows, back of
e neck and ears, under the chin, and
l^eU* 11 ** on the faee- That was
about three years ago. She took treat-
ment with a specialist and seemed to
^get worse all the time. We were then
advised to try the Cuticura Remedies,
and now I don’t see any breaking out.
J1*19 Slxteenth St., Bay
City, Mich., May 20, 1906.”
A bright woman who is also a pretty
jWomaa has the world in a sling.
^\\\
-- W T-wr«
mDODDS
£5 m
KIDNEY
THOSE CONTEMPLATING CHANGE
OF RESIDENCE 8HOULD
READ THEM.
n#Pe °#tbf y the Writer waa In the
1 , if Canadlan Government at
St. Paul, Minnesota. On the windows
of thedmilding were signs to the effect
that homesteads of 160 acres were
given free to actual settlers, and in
the windows were displays of wheat,
oats, barley, other grains and vege-
tables, which he was told were grown
in Western Canada. This coJd be
readily believed for in no other coun-
try on the Continent would it be pos-
Theew? mT SUCh 8P,endid ^linens.
th-it Tn ? 8 n°W Pretty wel1 advised
that in the growing of such cereals
as have been named and vegetables as
*e Provinces of Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and Alberta have no
competitor. For several years uast
spec1 mens have been exhibited at
Sta e FairS throil^out the
m-nn / T exhihit* looked
Thev hn °nf °f the chief attractions,
hey have demonstrated what can be
done in the climate of a country pos-
KfthatV011 Wi" grow
But that it was possible to grow vege-
a es such as were seen there seemed
to create some doubt. But it was
the case And apples too. Not of
course the splendid fruit grown in
countries more congenial to such cul-
ture, hut they were in evidence
Throughout Indiana, the hoosier farm-
ers were forced to stop and think.
V\hen a similar exhibit was placed be-
fore them during the past few weeks
many of them were forced to stop and
remark: “That is much ahead of any
thing we can do. The quality of the
gram we have conceded, for has not
so-and-so sent us samples grown on
his own farm the like of which we had
never seen before. But to think of
e vegetables—and such vegetables.
Why, we thought everything was
frozen up there, and these turnips,
cabbages, cauliflowers, beets, man-
golds, pumpkins, and squashes are
a way ^ ahead of anything we ever saw
grow. That is the story everywhere.
Thousands of Western Canada home-
steaders, formerly United States citi-
zens, are growing just such grain, just
such vegetables, which yield them a
splendid profit with little outlay on the
farms that they have secured from the
Government of the Dominion of Can-
ada at the nominal cost of $10 for 160
acres. If adjoining land is wanted it
can be secured from the railway com-
panies or from private individuals at
moderate prices and reasonable terms
By placing your name and address on
a postal card and addressing it to the
Canadian Government Agent, whose
name appears elsewhere, a copy of
Last Best West” telling you all about
It will be sent you free.
nature provides
FOR SICK WOMEN
produced from drugs.
In the good old-fashioned days of
our grandmothers few drugs were
used in medicines and Lydia E.
I inkham. of Lynn. Mass., in her
study of roots and herbs and their
power over disease discovered and
gave to the women of the world a
remedy for their peculiar ills more
potent and efficacious than anv
combination of drugs. LYDIA ETpINKHAm"_
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
[ aDur™riVreMrdno/'morrr.Tdy » therapeutic value
cureaof those serious ills neeuli-ir itsJ°ng list of actual
Vegetable Compound to the -nf « (*nen- entitles Lydia E. Pinkham's
person and every thinking woman * Coafidence of every fa* minded
weakXWdUpr™ta°U^Lt‘S irregular or painful function,,
flatulency, general debilitv inrii °r ln^ammatlt>n, backache,
lutes bear wifling
ham;* B. Huh.
^imiMsTancMoPSale
95,000 “ a*r,h?sr.r- ^
beenTdrv,d^Tr,rr”„C3h;i°dC^end0;8 Eft °* 5“
2S S aft* ^c!ul“S rr? * S-ofTK
Smme°nth W“hOUt ,nterest-
again,"as g?od°® nd^fgefJng scarcer alfBeVer *
Write for literature and views of the ranch
—~ c"*8-F- -------
OLD SORESk^?^
BY IMPURITIES IN THE BLOOD
heal&TshouH L° ° ^ **'**>«»
blood taint which has corrupted andnolwS? V?lso*on* Z?™* or some old
usually afflicted with oTd^?cfa?e i^ tdh if clrculatloa- Those most
die life. The vitality of tChWt Pf ? wl3° have cached or passed mid-
be-un to decline, and the poisonoi^re^wK 7 £“ E7Stem have natnndljr
of a sluggish and inactive condition rf the c ^ baVG accuraulatcd because
which has hitherto beenheldTnCW-t1^f fy m’ °r fIne hereditar7 taint
legs or other part of the body TWif rCC aaJoutl^t oa the face, arms,
eacs into the su^oundL- tfs^ue unC U f °WS red and anT^ festers and
ulcer, fed and keot open by ^ * bfl°mfs. f chromc and stubborn
Nothing is moretryfn- ^ Whl? t^e blood is saturated.
The very fact that it resists ordinary -medies and'trcih™’ S°re*
,Washes- ^ z-
afflicted with ft sore on my ?° an7 permanent good: neither will remov
inhthe.sT pi rS
fa^vero7 wOW iar??ir arad vorse surgeon s knife make a lasting cure If
sksyjsa jKEi isssa r,ery partic,e of the aSTiJ.
PhveictYns. They all taken away another sore would come h*
™be trouble is lu the bloS.Zd' the
ra+nt•con?menc<rd it3 use CANNOT BE CUT AWAYm
compietely kc|i|df “«st c° me by a thorough cleans-
StPoffl !no Wealthy from the mg of tie blood. In S. S. S. will be found
a remecy forsores and ulcers of every kind.
S. S. S. cured it. Jt 13 an unequalled blood purifier—one tha*
West Union, Ohi<?S*OWEN f*3 fjrecUy into the circulation and
— Promptly cleanses it <5f all poisons and
4P% Jt£retfdown totbe very bottom of
the trouble find forces out every trace of im-
d* »
PURELY VEGETABLE
Then the sore begins to heal new* fl«h witb h.ealthy blood,
leaves, the place scabs over* and when ^ pam. and inflammation
sore is permanently cured ’ S S S fnr Purificd the blood tha
Write for our special S n 7 Sale at, a11 first class drug stores.
J-ou desire. _ We make no charge for the bZhT^Ze.0^ adTic#
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC go., ATLANTA, 64
*G
jfICK HEADACHE
a. C - — - Sk 1 1 m a
Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis-
tress from Dyspepsia, In-
digestion and Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem-
edy for Dizziness, Nau-
sea, Drowsiness, Bad l
Taste in the Mouth, Coat-
ed Tongne, Pain in the 1
MALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PR!1'?.
IjTTLE
IVER
PILLS.
« tSSJSJR
i
lo^iVER
lerd. pILLS.
REFUSESUBSTITUTES.
it W* N* U*» WICHITA, NO. 47, 1907.
Very Near It.
Ail moonshine.”
DOCTORS ORGANIZE UNION.
Toronto Physicians Fix Higher Scale
of Prices.
Toronto. Ont. The doctors of this
city west of Yonge street have formed
a un.on under the name "No. li‘ Ter-
ritorial Division of the College of Phy-
sicians and Surgeons.” The objects of
the organization are to improve the
condition of the profess.on against
Z°H’,efab"Sh mlDlmUm A** Md
amend lodge terms. The lowest .e«
for medical examination for fraternal
the m^i haS fbGen fiXGd at $2' while
“* “ ?e f°r mlDOr °l,erations
has been fixed at $10, and that for
major operations at $50. For a first
visit to a patient $2 hereafter will be
charged and $l for each subsequent
blS1H Wm ^ thG fee f°r night visits wil>
be doubled, being fixed at $3 The
charge for an office visit has been
made $1, including prescription, while
to give anesthetics $5 will be charged.
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Forster, William. The Post. (Buffalo, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, January 3, 1908, newspaper, January 3, 1908; Buffalo, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc942475/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.