The State Herald. (Claremore, Indian Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 29, 1905 Page: 3 of 12
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ITS MERIT IS PROVED
RECORD OF A_fiREAT MEDICINE
▲ Prominent Cincinnati Woman Telle
How Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound Completely Cured Her.
..Th* frat poo,i Lv(,ia E Pinkhnm's
Vegetable Compound is doing among
the women of America is attracting
the attention of many of our leading
scientists, and thinking people gener-
EASY TO TELL A STORY.
The following letter is only one of
many thousands which are on file in
the Pinkham office, and go to prove
beyond question that Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound must be a
remedy of great merit, otherwise it
could not produce such marvelous re-
sults among sick and ailing women.
Dear Mrs. Pinkham' —
“ About nine months ago I was a great suf-
ferer with womb trouble, which caused me
■AVArA twin avtnnn» ___________
neartily recommend your Compound as a
iplen< id uterine tonic. It makes the monthly
periods regular and without pain ; and what
a blessing it is to And such a remedy after so
many doctors fail to help you. I am pleased
to recommend it to all suffering women.”—
8*r“ Wilson, 31 East 3d Street, Cincin-
If you have suppressed or painful
menstruation, weakness of the stom-
ach, indigestion, bloating, lcucorrhoca,
Hooding, nervoua prostration, dizzi-
aess, faintness, “don’t-care” aud
‘ want-to-be-left-alone” feeling, ex-
:itability, backache or the blues, these
are sure indications of female weak-
ness. some derangement of the uierus
pr ovarian trouble. In such cases there
is one tried and true remedy—Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Ezra Kendall Gives Illustration o
Simple Working.
_ "Nothing is easier,” explained Ezrt
Kendall to the attentive reporlei
than to tell a story. Now, for in
stance, just suppose yourself travel
ing on a railway train, no dining cat
{■nd the worst kind of eating rations
You are up against it, but the man
ppposito you has the food problem
}.eaten to a frazzle. You say to the
fuidieneo that he opened up the garni
ivith a homemade combination sand
>vich. Perhaps one person laughs
perhaps all—it all depends on theii
knowledge of sandwiches. Put right
here you turn to the audience and
ask it if it ever had a homemade sand
wich. Then you repeat the question
laying the foundation for joke num
ber one: ‘Ever had one of ’em, cvei
had a homemade combination sand
wich?’ you ask, ‘with everything in it
they don’t want at home.’ Then yoi
say quickly: ‘Everything In the ic<
box that wants to leave quickly trav
els in that sandwich.’ Now you have
impressed the man’s sandwich or
your audience and you begin to use s
few illustrative gestures. You go on:
’The first thing he did was to unbut
ton the sandwich’—with a pause jusl
long enough to let that work In—‘thoD
he lifted the lid and took out a cou
pie of pkikles and a stove lifter and
closed It again.’ A short pause. ‘Thqn
he opened his mouth’—and you get in
a little side quip, such as ‘I never saw
such an alcove in a man's face be-
fore.’ Continuing, you say: ‘After
he’d eaten the sandwich he began to
devour a mince pie, and after that
he began to double up and shut like
a Jackknife.’ Here you place your
hand on your stomach and move back-
ward and forward a little. ‘I asked
him what was the matter,’ you say,
and he rejoins, ‘I think my wife put
some nuts in that pie without crack-
ing them.’ You say then: ‘Can you
crack ’em that way? If so, I’ll eat
mine with the shells on and crack ’em
when I feel like it.’ And there you
are.”
ARMY CHAPLAIN
SE\ ERE KIDNEY
AND
BLADDER TROUBLE.
Thousands of People Have Kidney Trouble
Don't Know It Is Catarrh.
Mr. David L. Javcox. Chaplain
Clarinda, I. O. <!. T., and Chaplain
<1. A. R., 803 Broadway, Oakland,
Cal., writes:
“/ am an old war veteran. I con-
tracted severe bladder and kidney
trouble. / spent hundreds of dollars
and consulted a host of doctors, but
neither did me any good.
“Perunahas proven the best medi-
cine I ever used. My pains are gono
and I believe myself to bo cured. I
feel well and would not be without
a bottle in time of need for ten
times its cost.”
S&” $3.50 SHOES STa.
JT'J" 5t?nAj,*,,r,*be*and sells more
Men I 03.50 inois than nnv of her
is^aByasns* is.
■re the
Fitzsimmons on Courage.
Bob Fitzsimmons, who recently gave
President Roosevelt a silver horse-
shoe, does not believe that moral is
greater than physical courage.
Moral courage Is no finer than the
other sort,” he said. "Sometimes I
half believe it is not as fine. Well, I
don’t drink, and I don’t find it half
a<: hard to let rum alone as it is to
pitch in and whip a big, ugly, two-
hundred pound man.
‘So, when these pale, narrow-chest-1
ed chaps tell mo It takes more rour
age to refuse to fight than to fight, l|
| laugh to myself and say nothing.
“I gave ono of theso moral cour-l
age chaps a sly dig tho other day,
though. I don’t know whether he
noticed it or not. I hope he did. But [
I maybe it was too subtle for him.
"He said to me:
“Would you call a man a coward
I beeauso ho won’t fight?’
“I said to him, smiling a little:
”‘I might, If I was quite sure he I
wouldn't.’ ”
Hundreds of war veterans have kid-
ney and bladder trouble.
Impure drinking water, sleeping on
the ground, and mil manner of expo-
sures to wet end cold weather produced
catarrh ot the kidneys and bladder.
They have
doct o r c d
w i t li every
coneei vable
d r u g, have
consul ted
a 1 1 schools
of medicine.
11 was not
until lYru-
na came in-
to use, how-
ever, that
theso old
soldiers
found a remedy that would actually
cure them.
More cases ot catarrh of kidneys and
bladder have been cured by Peruns
than all other medicines combined.
Address Dr. S. B. Hartman, President
of The Ilartman Sanitarium, Columbus,
Ohio, and lie will be pleased to give you
the benefit of his medical advice gratis.
All correspondence held strictly confi-
dential.
M YOU ft
And pay only for what you get. It is your
dealer's duty to give you the best thing he can
get in footwear. Make it a point to ask for the
“ALWAYS JUST CORRECT’’
CLOVER BRAND SHOESl
Just a little bettor than you have been used to getting, combining
WEAR. SERVICE, STYLE and COMFORT with ECONOMY
“>»t cost fron.
•ft.00 to 117*00. TI»o only differs net* Is
cost more to make, hold their shape
SSimIk™1, 1 outer, a n<I are of greater
Si?k..h!UL?n,r °™erJ*34?# shoe on the
DoUlflM (IMS
antes. their value bjr stumping his
“ J*ce on the bottom of ea. lt
shoe. I-nok for It. Take no substitute.
•n.ao shoes ere sold
IlJTi retail stores in thcprln-
»ElLC *0*' *n<* by shoe deslrrs every-
wnere. No matter where you live. W. L.
Douglas shoes are within your reach.
EQUAL $0.00 SHOES.
Dougin, thnri fnr
I •n<* wear looser than other makes.
oe (ns priest patent lent her produced.
Fast Color Eyelets will not wear Bra,my.
JUsslrmted Catalogue of tipring titulet.
L MMMIAS, Brscklsa, Nats.
The Valley Road.
At eventide I shade my eyes
And peer Into the west.
Where, winding down tho shining ntain
And round each wooded crest ^
The highroad goes the sunset ’way
Upon the endless quest. ’
full many a traveler I have seen
(And one was passing fair)
3o down the valley from my door
And swiftly vanish there.
Some I have sped upon their path
And lightened some of care.
Dne day I too shall take my staff
And down the valley go,
For one who went was passing fair
And waits for me. I know, *
\nd I shall find her—O my soul'—
Beycmd the sunset glow!
Mado by
tertlfnmpr-JiauartH (En,
LARGEST FINE SHOE EXCLUSIVIST3
ST. LOUIS, U. S. A.
-Jiifr.r-s Owen Tryon
Magazine.
in New England
Loving Cup for Texaa Statesman.
Just before congress adjourned the
nembers of the Texas house delega-
ion presented Samuel Bronson Coop-
er. who goes out after long service,
vlth a handsome Bilver loving-cup!
The presentation occurred at the ways
md means committee room, the
ipeech of presentation being made by
lohn H. Stephens
COTTON GINNING MACHINERY
We Make the Best.
We Make the Largest Line in the World.
We have moro well pleased and happy customers than all other
makers combined, because they are making money. You know the
MUNCJER, PRATT, EAGLE, WINSHIP and SMITH goods.
We make them. Write xis for prices anil catalogue.
CONTINENTAL GIN COMPANY, DALLAS. TEXAS
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Starr, Emmett. The State Herald. (Claremore, Indian Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 29, 1905, newspaper, March 29, 1905; Claremore, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc956840/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.