The Marshall Tribune. (Marshall, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
1 w
t
i
J *.
i
MllS. EMMA FLEISSNER
Suffered Oi>er V wo ] 'cars—Health J fas
In a Precarious Condition—Caused
By Pelvic Catarrh.
111!
EASY TO MAKE THINGS RIGHT.
HEALTH AND STRENGTH
RESTORED BY
PE-RU-NA.
Mrs. Emma Fleissner, 1412 Sixth
Ave., Seattle, Wash., Worthy Treasurer
Sons of Temperance, writes:
••I suffered over two years with Ir-
regular and painful periods. My health
was in a very precarious condition and
I was anxious to find something to re-
store my health and strength.
"I was very glad to try 1'eruna and
delighted to lind that it was doing me
good. I continued to use it a little over
three months and found my troubles
removed.
"I consider it a splendid medicine
and shall never he without it, takings
dose occasionally when I feel run-down
and tired."
Our files contain thousands of testi:
monials which I)r. Hartman has re-
ceived from grateful, happy women
who have been restored to health by
his remedv. Peruna.
Beautify Your
Walls and Ceilings S
A Rock Oentejif
ai
in white
and beautiful
tints. Docs not rub <>r scale. Destroys dis-
ease germs and vermin. No washing of
walls alter once applied. Any one can
brush it on—mis with cold water. Other
finishes, bearing fanciful names and mixed
with either hot or cold water, do not
have the cementing property of
Alabastino. They are stuck on with glue,
( • other animal matter, which rots,
feeding disease germs, rubbing,
scaling and spoiling walls, cloth-
ing, etc. Such Finishes must be washed
off every year—expensive, filthy work. Buy
Alabastino only in five pound pack-
ages, properly labeled, lint card,
pretty wall and ceiling design, " Hints on
Decorating" and our artists' services in
making color plans, free.
ALABASTINE CO.,
G/and Rapids, Mich., or 105 Water St., N. Y<
Just the green food you've
been looking for.
Pure Alfalfa
Jb
Manufactured by
INLAND M'F'G CO.,
Maniifn-turers of the Celebrate;! Tome
Stork Silt for horss*, cuttle, aho p and
hoi**. It your dealer «loe.n not cuiry our pro-
duc'K write us direct for price* and full in-
formation
Inland Ml*., Co., Oklahoma City.
«ur r CTDSPU easiest to work with and
DEFIAnUL bTAKUH DtarcUeo clotUes nicest.
Little Girl Knew Simple Way Out of
Difficulty.
The Hotel Belleclaire houses one of
those rare anomalies—a woman who
does things contrary to the advice of
her husband. One of the things to
which that unreasonable man objects
is the occasional "touching up" of his
wife's hair. Notwithstanding his
forcibly expressed opinion on the sub-
ject, the rejuvenating process was
undergone one day last week at the
hands of a professional hairdresser.
Bessie, the four-year-old daughter, was
an interested observer of the opera-
tion.
"Now, Bessie," said her mother,
when the hairdresser had gone, "I
don't want you to say anything to your
father about mamma having had her
hair dressed. Do you understand? If
you don't tell him perhaps he won't
notice it."
Of course Bessie promised to main-
tain a discreet silence, which she did
up to 6 o'clock, when, meeting her
father at the corner, the secret was
promptly sacrificed on the altar of
filial affection. The man was mad and
lost no time in saying so. After he
got through talking Bessie was inter-
view by her other parent.
"Bessie," said her mother, sternly,
"what made you tell? I told you not
to."
"Oh, that's all right," said Bessie.
"Don't worry. I can easily lie it back
again."—New York Times.
Saw Possible Victory.
"Miss May Sutton," said a tennis
player, "never gets actually excitea
in a game, but bad playing by a part-
ner will often arouse a sarcastic
humor in her.
"I don't pretend to play well and
when I found myself one day in Cin-
cinnati paired with the young cham-
pion in mixed doubled I expected to
do little and I didn't disappoint my-
self.
"To tell .the truth, I played pretty
badly. But Miss Sutton did unusually
well and politeness obliged me to
shower a continuous stream of com-
pliments on her. At a critical point
she saved a game with a remarkable
back-hand stroke and I shouted:
"'Bravo! Beautiful! Well played
Indeed!"
Miss Sutton smiled grimly.
"'That's right,' she said; 'you ap-
plaud and let me attend to the bail
*nd we'll win yet."
Call on a Lynn Bank for Beer.
A business institution like a bank
sees little of the humorous side of
life, although now and then some-
thing happens to vary the routine.
The employes of a certain national
bank in Lynn., Mass., noted for the
elegance of its furnishings, such as
desks, marble floors, etc., were in the
midst of their daily labors when an
individual rather the worse for wear
and liquids entered, leaned against
and rolled along the shelf reaching
the whole length of the bank to the
teller's window, where he deposited a
nickel and stood rather unsteadily.
When asked what he wanted, he said:
Glass (hie) of beer." When informed
it was a bank desk he was leaning
against and not a saloon bar, he hast
ily murmured an apology and sham
bled out.
CENTURY'S TIN IN ALASKA
Deposit of Cassiterite 25 Miles Long j
by Ten Miles Wide
H. W. Hammond has recently re- |
turned from the tin fields of Alaska,
and is enthusiastic over the future of
tin mining in that territory, lie says
that the placer deposits of tin ore, or
cassiterite. near Cape Prince ot'
Wales, are spread over an area of
twenty-five miles long and ten miles
wide.
"In this field," he says, "there is
enough placer tin in sight to equal
for a century the present world out-
put of 97,000 tons annually. Outcrop-
pings of the ore from which these
placer deposits have come have been
located at various points in the York
mountain range, to the eastward, but
thus far the main ledges have not
been uncovered. The placer fields
themselves are so large, however,
and so easily worked that quartz
mining is not likely to be necessary
or advisable for decades to come."—
San Francisco Bulletin
When a man is devoted to his wife
she is generally devoted to having
him devoted to her.
Magnesite Hills.
In the neighborhood of Malelane
and Kaapmuiden, 10 miles from Lour
enco Marquis, In South Africa, large
deposits of magnesite, said to be
equal to the best Grecian article
have been found. The veins are of
varied width, in many places being
more than 10 feet in thickness, but
the central hill near what is known
as Salt Creek appears to be one vast
deposit about 2,000 feet long by -200
feet wide, and upwards of 300 feet
high. According to the estimate made
by the consulting engineer, the depos-
its of magnesite at this particular
point exceed a million tonB. The top-
ographical position of the magnesite
hills is such that the deposits can be
Quarried at a very low cost.
Good News for All.
Bradford. Tonn.. Oct. 23d.— (Spe-
Mal.)—Scientific research shows Kid-
ney Trouble to be the father of so
many diseases that news of a discov-
ery of a sure cure for it cannot fail
to be welcomed all over the country.
And according to Mr. J. A. Davis of
this place just such a cure is found in
Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr. Davis says:
"Dodd's Kidney Pills are all that is
claimed for them. They have done me
rrvre good than anything 1 have ever
taken. I had Kidney Trouble very
bad and after taking a few boxes of
Dodd's Kidney Pills I am completely
cured. I cannot praise them too
much."
Kidney Complaint develops into
Bright's Disease, Dropsy, Diabetes,
Rheumatism and other painful and
fatal diseases. The safeguard is to
cure your kidneys with Dodd's Kidney
Pills when they show the first symp-
tom of disease.
Henry Labouchere of London has
been discussing in his paper the start-
ling topic, "How to Thrash a Wife."
The brilliant cynic is outspoken as
psual. He holds that even the best
af wievs at times stand in need of
correction, but advises that the mat-
ter "should never be undertaken with-
out care and deliberation." Canes,
pokers and other similar instruments
are held to be dangerous, but "Labby"
strongly intimates that a strap may
be used to advantage.
TORTURING HUMOUR.
Body a Mass of Sores—Treated by
Three Doctors but Grew Worse
—Cured by Cuticura for 75c.
, L. Douglas
S3-I?&*3'=°? SHOES™.
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
yl V OOUG145
SHOES
ALL
WORK
< -•
I II Established
ID July 0, 1876.
w.!-.DOUGLAS MAKES AND SELLS
MOKE MEN'S SHOES THAN
AMY OTHEfi MANUFACTURER.
*1(1 nnn REWARD to anyone who can
0 > U)uiiu disprove this statement.
W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their ex-
cellent sty le, Otisy fitting, and superior wearing
.vialiiies, achieved the largest taie of any $.t.SO
:ioe in the world. They are lust as iood a*
I'tnse that cost you $5.0() to $7.00—the only
difference Is the price. If I could take you Into
•iy factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest In
'ie world under one roof making men's fine
iioes, and show vou the care with which every
pair of Douglas sfioes is made, vou wou Id realize
■vl'y W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes ure the besl
.••hoes produced 111 the world.
li i could show vou the difference between the
shoes made hi my factory and those of otliei
-mikes, you would understand why Douglas
$3.50 shoes cost more to make, w hy they hold
heir shape, fit better, wear longer, and are ol
•router Intrinsic value than any other $3.50
thoe on the market to-day.
IV. L. Strong Malta Shona for
filsn, ti, $.2.00. Boy a' School A
VrvBS Shoos,$2.SO. $2, $1.7G,$1.BO
CAUTION .—Insist upon having W.L.Doug-
las slices. Tako no substitute. N'^ine genuine
without Ills name and price stamped on bottom.
WANTED. A shoe dealer in every town wher«
w. I,. Douglas Siloes are not sold. Full lino of
samples sont tree for inspection upon request.
Fast Color Fijelets used; they will not wear brassy.
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styloa.
XV. It. DOUGLAS. Uroukton. IVlu&a.
The World's Standard
600,000 In Use.
Ten Times
All Others Combined.
1
Save $10.- per Cow
Emry Year ot Use
over all
Gravity Setting 8ystem . {
and $5.- per Cow
over all .'i..grT'"- "
Imitating 8ep:rator3.
Bead tor sew Catmlogvo.
THF. RE LAVAL SEPAHfiTOH CO.
CAnal 6l Randolph Sts , i 74 Cortlandt Mr-set,
~ CHICAGO I NEW YORK
OVRR &.000 (1HA"''II(C ANf> t/>TAl. AMENTUM
"My little daughter was a mass of
sores all over her body. Her face
was eaten away, and her ears looked
as if they would drop off. I called in
three doctors, but she grew worse.
Neighbors advised Cuticura, and be-
fore I had used half of the cake of
soap and box of ointment the sores
had all healed, and my little one's
skin was as clear as a new-born
babe's. I would not be without Cuti-
cura again if it cost five dollars, in-
stead of seventy-five cents, which is
all it cost us to cure our baby. Mrs.
G. J. Steese, 701 Coburn St., Akron,
Ohio."
The essence of friendship is entire-
ness, a total magnanimity and trust.
It must not surmise or provide for
infirmity. It treats Its object as a
god, that it may defy both. •
* SAIES AND BANK FIXTURLS
C We liuy, sell and exchange new and
C second hand safes and bank fixtures.
« Write us for catalogue and prices,
f Safes sold on email monthly pay-
€ mmts. Don't pay liig prices for safes.
C Write us todav.
< I. L. Conger Safe Co., Oklahoma City
VW«/<
TITI ltr Tj A UWV Oldest school
1 JLLLUKArn I in Oklahoma.
Good position sure on a now railroad if you
learn in Olda. Get cataloguo. Oklahoma
City School of Telegraphy.
llOVT FORGET
A lar^e 2 oz. package Ked < 'ross nail Hlue, only
5cents. The Russ Company, South liend, lud.
The people who find happiness are
not thwe who seek it, but those who
put most into life.
; i C°'
When a man marries we are told
he takes the fatal plcnge. At any rate,
he puts his foot in it.
jjfGBANDl ^
MAKERS OP
/Waterproof oiled clothihg:.
/SLICKERS.POMMEL SLICKERS AND HAT5.1
F-OLLOWING OUil SUCCESSES
AT PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO
AND OTHER EXPOSITIONS
WE WON THE:
iHIGHEST POSSIBLE AWARD,
THE ST. LOUIS WORLD'S JAJR^
l>^*rrVT\. A J TOWER COj _
v rl -WGCAND ,
'lHW P*11 \ Wf '1
f . ' <0 LIMiTtO., VSIW*4"-?
9EFIAB6E STflR6B &TSHZ
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 43, 1905
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Marshall Tribune. (Marshall, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1905, newspaper, October 27, 1905; Marshall, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth349339/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.