The Arrow-Democrat (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, April 22, 1921 Page: 3 of 8
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THE ARROW-DEMOCRAT. TAHLEQUAH. OKLAHOMA
Prominent Roche«ter Citi-
zen Tried Ten Years To
Get Relief, But Tanlac Is
Only Thing That Helped
Him.
One of the latest to testify regard-
lng the powers of Tunluc, the cele-
brated medicine which has been ac-
complishing such remarkable results,
Is James J. Beusley, 102 Elmdorf
Avenue, Rochester, New York. Mr.
Beasley has been chief record keeper
for the Department of Water Works,
city of Rochester, for thirty years
and is a well known and highly re-
spected citizen. In referring to the
remarkable recovery of his health by
the uso of Tanlac, Mr. Beasley said:
"I have been trying for ten years
to find relief from a case of dys-
pepsia. Nothing ever helped me to
amount to anything until I got Tan-
lac. This Is saying a great deal, for
I did everything it seems that a man
could do to find relief. Of course, I
wns hardly ever sick enough to go to
bed and was most always able to
keep going, but I Just never felt
right. At times during those ten.
years, my stomach would become
sour like vinegar. I would have an
uncomfortable Tdoated up feeling af-
ter <*ttng that would last for hours.
1 suffered a treat deal from nausea.
At times my heart would flutter and
palpitate and I would become alarmed
over my condition. My nerves were
on edge all the time, and I became
Irritable, nervous and restless. I had
no strength or energy to do anything.
In fact I wasn't like myself at all.
Even a week or two ago It was an
effort for me to get out of my chair
and I felt as stiff and clumsy as an
JAMES J. BEASLEY
Of Rochester, New York.
'old work horse.'
"It is really remarkable what Tan-
lac has accomplished in my case. It
has relieved me entirely of Indiges-
tion, 1 never have that distressing
feeling any more after eating, and I
feel perfectly fine In every way. I
will always feel grateful for what
this wonderful medicine has done for
me and 1 am only too glad to give it
my heartiest endorsement."
Tanlac Is sold by leading druggists
everywhere.—Adv.
What to Do
for CONSTIPATION
I CARTER'S!
1ITTLE
1R
JS
IVEI
The Leopard Spots.
On a crowded Broad Hippie street
car a mother was attempting to inter-
est her son. The lad bad a little
wooden toy leopard in liis hands.
"What are all those round things
cn your leopard, dearie?" she asked.
"They's life savers, mama," he en-
lightened her.—Louisville Courier-
Journal.
Take a good dose of Carter's Little Liver
Pills—then take 2 or 3 for a few nights after.
They cleanse your system of all waste matter
and Regnlate Vour Bowels. Mild - as easy to
take 33 sugar. Genuine bear tlgnature—
Small Pill Small Dose. Small Price.
DIDN'T WANT ACT "CRABBED"
The Voice of the Pack
By EDISON MARSHALL
CHAPTER I.—Continued.
—16—
Into a little hollow In the bark, on
the underside of the log, some band
bad thrust a small roll of papers.
They were rain-soaked now, and the
ink had dimmed and blotted ; but Dan
realized their significance. They were
the complete evidence that Hildreth
had accumulated against the nrson
ring—letters that ban passed back and
forth between himself and Cranston,
a threat of murder from the former if
Hildreth turned state's evidence, and
a signed statement of the arson activ-
ities of the ring by Hildreth himself.
No ugly, grimy streaks on the
clothes when Red Cross Ball Blue Is
used. Good bluing gets good results.
All grocers carry it—5c.
Rays a sage: "Give me the man
who whistles at his work." All right,
old chap; you can have him.
Never use the expression, "It makes
me sick"; it doesn't sound well.
KILL RATS TODAY
By Using
the Genuine
Knockout Comedian Feared Caruso
Might Trespass on Territory
That Belonged to Him.
At a benefit In New York In which
many theatrical stars appeared for
charity, a well-known knockabout
song-and-dance man was to go on at
9 o'clock so as to get back to the roof
garden for his regular stunt at 11. As
I he waited In the wings, he noticed a
heavy-set man walking to and fro,
with an air of impatience, on the oth-
er side of the stage.
"Who Is that guy there?" he asked
the stage manager.
"Why" — the manager looked sur-
prised—"why, that Is Caruso."
"Does he go on here tonight?"
"Sure, he does. He Is going to sing
a couple of songs."
"Well," said the knockabout man a
little sourly, "tell him to sing anything
he likes, but to lay off 'The Darktoun
Strutters' Ball.' I use that for an
opener and I don't want It crabbed!"
STEARNS'
>ELECTRIC PASTE
ThBRuarantoed-'klller" for Hats, Mice.Cockroach"**,
Ar.t* and WaUrbogs—th« greatest knowr carrli-rs
of <1.arose. Th«jr destroy both food and property.
Steams' Hleetrlc Paste forces th -s« pests to n:n
fn.in the building for water and fresh air.
KKADT FOR USE—H1CTTKR TH AN TRAPS
Directions in 16 languages In every box.
TWO tlies, %o and 11.60. Bnongb to kill 60 to 400 Ma.
(7. 8. Government buys It.
Cuticura Soap
For the Hands
.Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, TsIcm 2dc.
OXIDINE IN HOT WATER
New Method Discovered for Waxdiag
Oif Co Ida and Fiu.
Put a t.ibl "spoonful of OXIMNKln ahrif glasa
of hot wuter a:id drink In the same mauner aa
Iou would a hoi toddy. It will make you feel
ottor almost Immediately aixl a aiml'ar dose
throe tlmea a day will purify your blood and
strengthen your res|«tanee to a very xnarkod
dogruo. OX I DINK tones up the entire systcuu
•Oc at your druggist's. Adv.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
leveaOanaraffRtopaBairFalltng
Restore* Color and
Bsaaty to Cray aadPaded Halt
_ toe. and $M% atpratrrlata,
fflWJlClinfcWHI'Mdnmn.H.T.
INDERCORNS
. sea. etc., stops all pain, ensures eoaifort
WOOLEN CLOTH
Valour*. Palo Cloth
Sport Skirting., «te,
VarbMpMMM. Uni|Uli iblr food udJi
r FROM THE MILL
. and MraplM NOW. Youwfllb.
inn^maiv.lr you CM bur DMHIW
Woolen Mill. D«pt g. KmN. H.
OB
126 MAMMOTH JACKS
I km . Mnii for ?o«, <*>■ auto*.
w-u tsE
How He Won Her.
Rnstns, meeting bis lost Eliza on the
street, reproached her for golug with
another man.
"Does be give you any bettah pres-
ents than I used to give you?"
"No," replied Kllza calmly.
"Does he show von any bettah time
than I used to show you?"
"Don't know as he does."
"Does he buy you any bettah din-
ners than I used to buy you?"
"Dinners, man!" exclaimed Eliza.
"Why, that man found an toppetlte on
me that I didn't know I had."—Boston
Transcript.
Catarrh Can Be Cored ,
Catarrh is a local dlseaao greatly influ-
enced by constitutional conditions. It
therefore requires constitutional treat-
ment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE
Is taken Internally and acts through
the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of
the System. HALL'S CATARRH
MEDICINE} destroys the foundation of
the disease, gives the pailont strength by
Improving the general health and assists
nature In doing its work.
AU Druggists. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio,
Their Method.
"In the days of the cave ma*,* re-
marked the man on the car, "the girls
wore their hair loose down the back,
so they would be eusy to catch."—To-
ledo Made.
No Pep.
"Galahad was the perfect knight."
"What a frost he'd be among girls
today."—Louisville Courier-Journal.
Ntrfht tad Mornlatf,
Havm Strong, Healthy
Eye*. If tbey Tire,Itch,
Smart or Burn, If Sort,
Irritated, Inflamed or
Granulated, use Murine
often, foothee. Refreshes Safe for
Infant or Adult At all Druggists. Write for
Free Bye Book. RMfrfMyCMlto*
Some Hand Had Thrust a Small Roll
of Paper.
Tbey were not only enough to brenk
up the ring and send Its members to
prison; with the aid of the empty shell
and othet circumstantial evidence,
they could in all probability convict
Bert Crauston of murder.
For a long time he stood with the
shadows of the pines lengthening
about him, his gray eyes in curious
shadow. For the moment a glimpse
was given him into the deep wells of
the human soul; and understanding
came to him. Was there* no balm for
hatred even in the moment of death?
Were men unable to forget the thenu~
and motives of their lives, even when
the shadows closed down upon them?
Hildreth had known what hand had
struck him down. And even on the
frontier of death, his first thought was
to hide his evidence where Cranston
could not find It when he searched the
body, but where later It might be
found by tlie detectives that were sure
to come. It was the old creed of a
life for a life. He wanted his evidence
to be preserved—not that right should
be wronged, but so that Cranston
would be prosecuted and convicted
and made to suffer. His hotred of
Cranston thut had made him turn
state's evidence in the first place had
been carried with him down into
death.
As Dan stood wondering, he thought
i he heard a twig crack on the trail be-
hind him, and he wondered what for-
est creature was still lingering on the
; ridges at the eve of tlM snows.
e e e e • • e
The snow began to fall in earnest at
midnight—great, white flakes that al-
most in an instant covered the leaves.
It was the real beginning of winter,
and all living creatures knew It. The
wolf pack sang to It from the ridge—
a wild and plaintive song that made
Bert Cranston, sleeping In a lean-to
on the Umpqua side of the Divide,
swear aud mutter in his sleep. Kdt he
didn't really waken until Jim Gibbs,
one of his gang, returned from his
secret mission.
They wasted no words. Bert flung
aside the blankets, lighted a candle
and placed it out of the reach of the
| night wind. Ills face looked swarthy
and deep-lined In Its light.
"Well?" he demanded. "What did
you find?"
"Nothin'," Jim Gibbs answered gut-
torally. "If you ask me what I found
out, I might have somethin' to an-
swer."
"Then—" and Ben, after the man-
ner of his kind, breathed an oath—-
"What did you find out?"
His tone, except for an added note
of savagery, remained the same. Yet
his heart was thumping a great deal
louder than he liked to have it. Ileal1*-
lng that the snows were at hand, he
had sent Gibbs for a last search of
the body, to flnd and recover the evi-
dence that Hildreth had against him
and which had not been revealed either
on Hlldreth's person or in his cabin.
He had become Increasingly appre-
hensive about those letters he had
written Hildreth, and certain other
documents that had been In his pos-
session. He didn't understand why
ilujy hadn't turned upt And dow tte
snows lind started, and Jim Gibbs had
returned empty-handed, but evidently
not empty-minded.
"I've found that the body's been un-
covered—and men are already searcli-
In' for clues. And moreover—I think
they've found them." He paused,
weighing the effect of his words. His
eyes glittered with cunning. Rat that
be was, he was wondering whether the
time hud arrived to leave the ship. He
had no intention of continuing to give
his services to a mnn with a rope-
noose closing about him. And Crans-
ton, knowing this fact, hated him as
he hated the buzzard that would claim
hiiu in the end, and tried to hide his
apprehension.
"Go on. HI at it out," Cranston or-
dered. "Or else go away and let me
sleep."
It wns a bluff; but It worked. If
Gibbs had gone without speaking,
Cranston would have known no sleep
that night. But the man became more
fawning.
"I'm tellin' you, fast as I can," he
went on, almost whining. "I went to
the cabin, just as you said. But I
didn't get a chance to search it—"
"Why not?" Cranston thundered.
His voice re-echoed among the snow-
wet pines.
"I'll tell you 7v*by! Because some
one else—evidently a cop—was al-
ready searchln' It. Both of us know
there's nothln' there, anyway. We've
gone over It too many times. After
a while he went away—but I didn't
turn back yet. That wouldn't be Jim
Gibbs. I shadowed him, Just as you'd
want me to. And he went straight
back to the body."
"Yes?" Cranston had hard work
curbing his Impatience. Again Gibbs'
eyes were full of ominous specula-
tions.
"lie stopped at the body, and It was
plain he'd been there before. He went
crawling through the thickets, lookln'
for clues. He done what you and me
never thought to do—lookln' all the
way between the trail and the body.
He'd already found the brass shell you
told me to get At least. It wasn't
there when I looked, after he'd gone.
You should've thought of It before.
But he found somethin' else a whole
lot more Important—a roll of papers
that Hildreth had chucked into an old
pine stump when he was dyin'. It was
your fault, Cranston, for not gettin'
them that night. This detective stood
and read 'em on the trail. And you
know—just as well as I do—what
they were."
"E>—n you, I went back the next
morning, as soon as I could see. And
the mountain lion hnd already been
there. 1 went back lots of times since.
And that shell ain't nothing—but all
the time I supposed I put it In my
pocket. You know how it is—a fellow
throws his empty shell out by habit"
Gibbs' eyes grew more Intent. What
was this thing? Cranston's tone, In-
stead of commanding, wns almost
pleading. But the leader caught him-
self at once.
"I don't see why I need to explain
any of that to you. What I want to
know Is this: why you didn't shoot
nnd get those papers away from him?"
For an Instant their eyes battled.
But Gibbs had never the strength of
his leader. If he had, it would have
been asserted long since. He sucked
In his breath, and his gaze fell away.
It rested on Cranston's rifle, that In
some manner had been pulled up
across his knees. And at once he was
cowed. He was never «o fast with n
gun as Cranston.
"Blood on my hands, eh—*nme as
on yours?" he mumbled, looking down.
"What do you think I want, a rope
around my neck? These hills are big,
but the arm of the law has reached up
before, and It might again. You might
as well know first as last I'm not goln*
to do any killin's to cover up your
murders."
"That comes of not going myself.
You fool—If he gets that evidence
down to the courts you're broken the
some ns me."
"But I wouldn't get more'n a year
or so, at most—and that's a heap dif-
ferent from the gallows. I did aim at
him—"
"But you Just lacked the guts to pull
the trigger!"
"I did, nnd I ain't ashamed of It
But besides—the snows are here now,
nnd he won't be able to even get word
to the vaLleys for six months. If you
want him killed so bad, do it your-
self."
This was n thought Indeed. On the
other hand, another murder might not
be necessary. Months would pass be-
fore the road would be opened, and in
the meantime Cranston would have a
thousand chances to steal back tho
accusing letters. He didn't believe for
an Instant that the man Gibbs had
seen was a detective. He had kept
too close watch over the roads foi
that
"A tall chap, In outing clothes—
dark-haired and clean shaven?"
"Yea?"
"Wears a tan hat?"
"That's the man."
"I know him—and I wish you'd
punctured him. That's Falling—the
tenderfoot that's been staying at Len-
nox'a He's a lunger."
Copyright. 1920, by Little. Brown &
"He didn't look like no lunge to
me "
"But no matter about that—It's Just
as I thought And I'll get 'em back—
mark my little words."
In the meantime the best thing to
do was to move at once to his winter
trapping grounds—a certain neglected
region on the lower levels of the North
Fork. If at any time within the next
few weeks, Pan should attempt to
carry word down to the settlements,
he would be certain to pass within
view of his camp. But he knew that
the chance of Dan starting upon any
such journey before the snow had
melted was not one In a thousand. To
be cauaht in the Divide in the winter
means to be snowed in ns completely
as tire Innults of upper Greenland. No
word could puss except by man on
snowshoes.
Yet If the chance did come, if the
house should be left unguarded, It
might pay Cranston to make an Im-
mediate search. Dan would have no
reason for , supposing that Cranston
suspected his possession of the let-
ters; he would not be particularly
watchful, and would probably pigeon-
hole them until spring in Lennox's
dusk.
And the truth was thnt Cranston
had reasoned out the sltuntlon almost
perfectly. When Dan awakened In
the morning, nnd the snow lay already
a foot deep over the wilderness world,
he knew thnt he would have no chance
to act upon the Cranston case until
the snows melted In the spring. So
he pushed all thought of It out of his
mind and turned his attention to more
pleasant subjects. It wns true thnt he
read the documents over twice as lte
lay In bed. Then he tied them Into a
neat packet and put them away where
they would be quickly uvailable. Then
he thrust his head out of the window
and let the great snowflakes sift down
upon his face. It was winter at last,
the season that he loved.
He didn't stir from the house that
first day of the storm. Snowbird nnd
be found plenty of plensant things to
do and talk about before the roaring
fire that he built In the grate. lie was
glad of the great pile of wood thnt
lay outside the door. It meant life It-
self, in this senson. Then Snowbird
led him to the windows, nnd they
wntched the white drifts pile up over
the low underbrush.
When finully the snowstorm ceaied,
five days later, the Whole face of the
wilderness was changed. The buck-
brush was mostly covered, the fences
were out of sight; the forest seemed
a clear, clean sweep of white, broken
only by an occasional tall thicket and
by the grent, snow-covered trees.
When the clouds blew nway, nnd
the nlr grew clenr, the temperature
began to fall. Dan had no way of
knowing how low It went. Thermome-
ters were not considered essential at
the Lennox home. But when his eye-
lids congealed with the frost, and his
PROVED EFFECTIVE BY A
FIFTY YEARS TRIAL
The most widely used remedy In the
world lo overcome the rtasnsdne
effects of catarrh. Catarrh
silent tod insidious ia its
ravages. Invade* nearly
every household and
hover* like a pesti-
lence every*
where.
#
It strlkee at the root of ca-
tarrhal troubles by stimulating |
W the digestion, enriching the blood,
toning tn tho nervous system end
soothing the r?w and inflamed mucoas j
membranes. Pe ru na sets every organ lo I
working aroperly and gives strength, vigor I
snd pep to the whole body. Try it and like
thousands of other*, learn what it meanetots welL f
'sold EVERYWHERE TABLET8 OR LIQUID
Sounds Plausible.
"How did the impression get about
thnt George Washington never told a
lie?" asked the inquisitive person.
"Sotne people credit the cherry tree
story for tlmt," said Mr. Dubwalte,
"but I suspect George's reputation for
veracity Is due to the fact that he
never salt!, "I've had my car six
mnn the and It has never been In a
repair snop."
Important to all Women
Readers of this Paper
Thousands upon thousands of women
have kidney or bladder truuble and never
•u pect it.
Women's complaints often prove to b«
nothing else but kidney trouble, or the
result of kidney or bladder disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy con-
dition, tliey may cause the other organs
to become diseased.
You may suffer pain in the back, head-
che and loss of ambition.
1'oor health makes you nervous, irrita-
ble aud may be de.pondent; it makes any
one so.
Hut hundreds of women claim that Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restoring
health to the kidneys, proved to be just
the remedy needed to overcome «uch
conditions.
Many send far a sample bottle to see
what Swamp Kemt, the great kidney,
liver and bladder medicine, will do for
them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer A Co., Hinfchamton, N. Y., you
mny receive sample size bottle by Parcel
Post. You can purrhnne medium and
large size bottles at all drug stores.—Adv.
Snowshede as Highways.
The wooden snow sheds of the
Southern Pacific railway across the
Sierra Nevada mountains may become
highways for motorists. It has been
proposed to reconstruct these of con-
crete and frame the tops as roudways
for automobiles.
OLD STANDBY, FOR
ACHESJW PAINS
Any man or woman who keep#
Sloan's handy will tell you
that same thing
Especially tho« frequently
attacked by rheumatic twinges.
A counter-irritant, Sloan's Lini-
ment scatters the congestion and pent-
IraUs without rubbini to the afflicted
part, soon relieving the ache and pain.
Kept handy and used everywhere
for reducing and finally eliminating the
pains and aches of lumbago, neuralgia*
muscle strain, joint stiffness, sprains*
bruises, and the results of exposure.
^ ou just know from its stimulating,
healthy odor that it will do you good I
Sloan's Liniment is sold by all drua-
gists—35c, 70c, |1.40. 8
Sloa:, ,
Linimeniaa
FRECKLES
Now Is the Time to Rid of
These Ugly Spots.
There's no longer the ■lightest need of
feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othlns
—double strength—Is guaranteed to remove
these homely spots.
Simply get an ounce of Othlne-—doubls
■trength—from your druggist, and apply a
little of It night and morning and you
thould soon see that even the worst freckles
have begun to disappear, while the lighter
ones have vanished entirely. It Is seldom
that more than one aance Is needed to com-
pletely clear tho skla and gain a beautiful
clear complexion.
Be sure to ssk for the donbls strength
Othlne, as this Is sold under guarantee of
money back If It falls to remove frecklea.
Different Anyway.
"Sure It's a great compliment the
foreman paid me today," boasted Cas-
sidy.
"What did he say, Mike?"
"He said that I carried more osseus
mntter above the shoulders than nny
other man in the works."—Host on
Transcript.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
OA STOMA, that famous old remedy
for Infants and children, and see tbut it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Caston*
16799
DIED
in New York City alone from kid-
ney trouble last year. Don't allow
yourself to become a victim by
neglecting pains and aches. Guard
against this trouble by takiiig
GOLD MEDAL
The world's standard remedy for lddn«y
liver, bladder and uric add troubles*
Holland's National Remedy lines 1006b
All druggists, three sizes.
Leek for die asms Gold Medal ea every hem
aad accept ae imitatioe
Vaseline
Reg U S.Pat Off
Carbolated
An antiseptic
dressing for cuts;
sores, etc.—
A necessity
where there
are children.
AVCID SUBSTITUTES
CHESESKOtMS MF& COk
Stat« Street ** New Yarb
His Value.
"Every mnn I.- good for something."
"Tell me what good Yuseless Is."
"Well, he counts one In every cen-
sus, anyway."
To Insure gllstenlng-whlte table
linens, use Ited Cross Ball Blue in your
laundry. It never disappoints. At all
good grocers, 5c.
There Is always room at the top of
n stepladder because people are ufruld
to stand there.
"You Just Lacked the Guts to Pull ths
Triflger.*
mittens froze to the logs of firewood
that he carried through the door, and
the pine trees exploded and cracked In
the darkness, he was correct In Ills
belief that It was very, very cold.
But he loved the cold, and the si-
lence and austerity that went with It.
The wilderness claimed him as never
before. The rugged breed that weri
his ancestors had struggled through
such seasons as this and passed a love
of them down through the years to
him.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Wedding RlnQi Use Much Qeld.
More than 7,000 pounds of pure
gold, says an authority, are required
each year to supply the wedding rings
for brides,
Feel All Worn Out?
Has a cold, grip, or other infectious
dmuHe sapped your strength? I)o you
suffer backucbe, lack ambition, feel dull
and deprfegfeed? Look to your kidneys!
Physicians agree that kidney trouble
often results from infectious disease.
Too often the kidneys are neglected be-
cause the sufferer doesn't realize they
have broken down under the Htrain of
filtering disease—created poisons from
the blood. If your back is had. your
kidnevt act irregularly, and vou feel all
run down, use Doan't Kidney Pills.
Uoan's have helped thousands. Atk
your neighbor J
An Oklahoma Cat*
John 8. Uadxer,
Pawnee, Okla.,
says: "1 had a
constant, dull ache
through the small
of my back. When-
ever I stooped over
I felt a twitrhln*-,
pain dart through,
my kidneys and i
could hardly
straighten up. I
didn't suffer long
however, but when'
1 learned of Doan's Kidney Pills I
bought some. This medicine gave me
relief from the nrst. I kept on taking
It and It permanently cured me."
Gel Doan's at Any Steve, 60c a Reg
DOAN'S VJftV
POSTER • MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
All Run Down
NowFeelsFine
Estonia Ended
His Trouble*
"Eatonic l« the only thing I hav
found to Rtop uiy heartburn aud I
think It has betn n crciit help It*
nervous spells," writes (J. C. Johnson.
An upset stomach inny cause lots*
of suffering all over the body. KatorUC
helps In such cases by removing tho
cause of tho misery, been use It takes
up and carries out the excess acid
nnd gases and keeps the digestive or-
gans In natural working order. A
tablet after meals Is all you need. Big
box costs only a trifle with drugglit'
guarantee.
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 14-1*21.
ARE MEN VAIN?
Of course they are, just like
women, except they don't let on
so much. Every man and woman
wants three things—health, good
looks and money. Good looks
depend upon health, and health
depends largoly upon the blood.
If your blood isn't pure and
plentiful, you need Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery, the
reliable blood tonic, invigorator
and purifier. Nothing but veg-
etable ingredients in it—posi-
tively no alcohol. It is safe for
every one in tho family to take.
Send Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel
in Kuifalo, N. Y., 10c for trial
package Tablet*.
KREMOLA
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Glaze, Bascom. The Arrow-Democrat (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, April 22, 1921, newspaper, April 22, 1921; Tahlequah, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc97192/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.