The State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1917 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 19 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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THE MULHALL STATE JOURNAL
CUEL WHEN BILIOUS? NO! S10PI
AGES LIKE DVNAMITE ON LIE
I Guarantee "Dodson's Liver Tone" Will Give Yeu the Best Liver
and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Had—Doesn't Make You Sick!
Stop using calomel! I' makes ycu
sick. Don't lose a day's work. If you
feel lazy, sluggish, bilious or consti-
pated, listen to me!
Calomel Is mcrcury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when it comes Into contact
with sour bile, crashes into It, breaking
It up. This Is when you feel that aw-
ful nausea and cramping If you feel
"ail knocked out," if your liver Is tor-
pid and bowels constipated or you
have hoadache, dizziness, coated
tongue, If breath is bad or stomach
eour Just try a spoonful of harmless
Dodson's Liver Tone.
Here's my guarantee—Go to any
drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. Take a
spoonful and If It doesn't straighten
you right up and make you feel tine
and vigorous 1 want you to go back to
the store and get your money. Dod
son's Liver Tone is destroying the
sale of calomel because it Is real liver
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore
it cannot salivate or make you sick
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to work and clean your
bowels of that sour bile and consti-
pated waste which is clogging your
system and making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone will keep your entire fam-
ily feeling fine for months. Give It to
your children. It is harmless; doesn't
gripe and they like Its pleasant taste.
—Adv.
W. L. DOUGLAS
14the shoe that hold* its shape"
$3 $3.50 $4- $4.50 $5 $6 $7 8c $8 ANSrwomen
Save Money by Wearing W. L- Douglas
shoes. For sale by over 9000 shoe dealers.
The Best Known Shoes in the World.
W. L. Douglas name anJ the retail price is stamped on the bot-
tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and
the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. 1 lie
retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San
Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the
price paid for them.
The quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more
than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart
styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America.
They are made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Mass.,
by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under die direction and
supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest
determination to make the best shoes for the price that money ^
can buy. // A
Ask your aline denier for W. T«. Honplns shoes. If lio can- If V
not supply yoif with the kiml you \rant, tuko no other [
make. Write for lutcroHtlng booklet explaining ho
for IriteroHtlns booklet explaining now 10 w 17
tret aline* of the hlghoMt standard ol quality tor the price,
by return mail, po*tugo free.
LOOK FOR W. L. Douglas
name and the retail price
stamped on the bottom.
Boys' Shoes
* . * Best in the World
$3.00 $ 2.50 4 $2.00
l'roatitent " XV. I,. T o«|jla Shoo Co.,
1«5 Spark St., Brockton, Mans.
Ut'tll KUCt't
satisfaction.
(insists in achieving
This Kidney Medicine Is
a Winner
About fourteen veara ago I commenced
nelliiig Dr. Kilmer*" Swamp-Root, kidney,
liver nd bladder remedy, and during all
that time my customer* have spoken on'iy
words of praise for tlie medicine for what
it accomplishes for them. \\ • are pleased
to handle such an excellent preparation
and regard it as an excellent seller.
Very trulv vours, jj,
AIM I j'N K DRUG CO.,
A. R. Christopher, Prop. I
Jan. 7, 1910. Abilene, Tex.
Prove Whit Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Ringhanuon. N. Y., for a sample size bot-
tle. It will convince anyone. You will
also receive a booklet of valuable infor-
mation, tidling about the kidneys and blad-
der. When writing, be sure and mention
this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one-
dollar size bottles for sale at all drug
atores.—Adv.
IT GETS THEM ALL IN END
Belated Speed Germ Manifests Its
Presence in Centenarian About to
Take First Auto Ride.
Kitty Oneta, one hundred yours old,
mid her brother, Igny Knrlsch, iwly
ninety-eight, resolved that they would
never go to an institution for the need.
True, the wind that had blown the roof
from their squatter's shanty was
sweeping coldly over the meadows
near ltosodale. I.. T., where they lived,
mid they had nothing to eat. Hut they
weren't going to leave their homes lust
for that. Spring would be coming soon.
Kitty left her nightdress on all day
to foul the police, for she reckoned
they wouldn't take .a lady through the
streets in her nightdress.
Then they heard a purring sound,
which grew louder, then seemed to stop
just outside their door. They tottered
out and saw a large, sleek automobile.
"I've come to take you for a ride," a
police sergeant announced. "We're
fining to Kings County hospital." Kilty
had never been in an automobile he-
fore, and as she looked at. the big ear
a belated speed germ Infected her soul.
"Say." she demanded, "how fast can
we get to that place?"—New York
1'rlbune.
Quite Satisfied.
"Are you trying to make a fool of
me?" "Oh. no. I never try to Im-
nrcive on nature."
After getting the short end of It a
| wise man says nothing but proceeds
to even things up.
WHY HAVE CHILLS AND FEVER?
| "Plantation" Chill Tonic is guaran-
teed and will do the work in a week.
'■ Your money cheerfully refunded by
I dealers if it falls after giving it a
J proper trial. Price f>Oc.—Adv.
Walked Off With It.
I "This dog took tlrst prize at the cat
show." "llow's that?" "Well, be took
cat."
SEVEN DAYS
OF HEWS
THE WORLD OVER
War News.
French forces hn\© pushed forward
In the neighborhood of Saucy and
Jouy, on the Reitns-Soissons battle
tront, but on the rest of the front Ni-
velle's men apparently are taking
"time ouk" for a breathing spell be- ^
fore again hurling themselves against
the German lines.
. + + +
The British troops fighting in j
France have made additional gains
between Arras and St. Quentin and
also southeast of Loos, in the latter
district taking prisoners, according to
an official communication.
+ + +
The flame of battle is spreading still j
further eastward along the front in j
France. The French troops have be-
gun an offensive movement in the Ar-
goniie region, carrying two lines of
Herman trenches anl inflicting heavy
losses.
+ + +
The big Frr.nco-BrUish offensire has
so disrupted Von llindenhurgs plans
that the contemplated offensive
! against Italy has been abandoned.
Italy in thus free to undertake an of-
fensive of her own in co-operation
with the British and French.
+ + +
The French success in the forward
| movement was much more consider-
j able than indicated by the published
! rej>ort8 or the army communiques, I
' which narrate a very sober tale of the
events. There is 110 intention of re-
1 laxing the pressure on the Germans
who are opposing a tenacious resist-
i ance without avail.
+ + +
! South of Lens a German bombing at-
I tack upon one of the British advanced j
positions was successfully beaten off
The total number of guns captured to
date is 228
+ + +
I The French, in the fare of tprrifh' j
counter attacks, have been able to
extend their gains all along the front
of their attack in the West. At one
point the Germans launched forty
thousand men against the new French
positions, but they were beaten ofl
with great losses.
+ i* +
Since the beginning of the great
French drive 011 the southern end of
the battle line the French have cap-
1 tured seventeen thousand unwounded
j prisoners, together with seventy-five
cannon, according to the official state-
! ment issued by the war office.
A surface cave-in along a fuu. into
an enormous worked out stope, which
let the waters of (lastii.^i'i Channel
into the lower workings. 1 as forced
the abandonment of the Ala ka 1 read-
well, the Alaska United and the Alas-
ka Mexican, three of the largest unit9
of the famous Treadwell group of
mines.
+ •♦• +
A bill to authorize the Fresident
during the war to proclaim prohibi-
tion against the sale, manufacture,
gift, transportation, importation or ex
portation of all alcoholic spirits, malt
or vinous liquors or any other intoxi
rating drinks has been introduced in
I the House.
+ + +
; Cancellation of fun and frolic and
elimination of all social features at
the 1917 session of the imperial coun-
j (il of the Ancient Arabic Order No-
j hies of the Mystic Shrine for North
i America, to be held in Minneai>oli3
I June 26, 27 and 28. has been deter-
mined upon.
+ + +
Six persons are dead and a score
are suffering from minor injuries as a
result of a fire, said to have resulted
from an explosion of moving picture
films in the office of a film exchange
I at Indianapolis.
4- + +
I All doubt that a submarine actually
tire.I at the I'. S. Destroyer Smith was
swept aside when a report direct from
the Smith said the officer on watch
actually saw a periscope four hundred
yards from the vessel.
I + +
The War Finance Hill providing for
issuance of 7 million dollars In secur-
ity the largest single war budget in
the Nation's history, has been passed
unanimously by the Senate.
•I' 4* +
Men of military age who have mar-
ried since a state of war against Ger
many was declared will not escape
their obligation of military service, un-
der a War Department policy formally
j announced recently.
+ + +
Fifty thousand cans of condensed
milk for the babies of Northern France
were shipped the other day by the New
York Chapter of the American Ked
1 Cross.
Allen's Foot-Jiase for the Troops,
The untlmptic powder to i>e Hiuiken Into tlie
shoes or until in the toot-bath. Youug men mi
every community are usiiit! Alien's Foot-hane
In their drills tor Military Prepare,InesH. 1 -e,l
l,y the Allied, French ami EnnlUh troops be-
catnte It rests the feet, takes the friction .rom
the Bhoo and makes walking easy.- Ail*.
HIS VOICE FROZEN TO POST
At Least This Is Deduction of Wyom-
ing Weather Observer From a
Very Peculiar Phenonenon.
j Scoffers have arisen from time to
time lo say that United States official
weather reports are a Joke In so far
as they tleal with the future; but their j
descriptions of the present and past ^
are admittedly serious and accurate, j
Therefore one must not read in too i
jovial a frame of mind the report of
Iiavltl Moore, observer at Castle Itock,
W,vo„ where they have been having
i some very cold weather. Mr. Moore
cites In his report that one night two
! men stopped at his cabin, and the next
I morning he tried In vain to call one
i of them. Who was at the barn, to come
to breakfast. Hut the man (lid not
! come. So the two sat down to break-
I fast without him. In about ten min-
i Utes the man in the barn strolled Into
j the house.
"Why didn't you cull me when break-
j fast was ready?" he asked.
"I did," w as the answer.
j That was during the cold snap. A
thaw bit Castle Hock a few days ago,
Moore says, and while he was stand-
ing In the back door sunning himself,
he was startled by a weird medley of
j sounds. H.v listening closely he could
bear the words,
j "Come on to breakfast!"
There was no one In sight. And then
lie realized why the man had not heard
him.
The voice, bis own voice, had frozen
to a post and was thawing out—Mos-
tnn Transcript.
+ + +
Washington.
If
SS THOUSANDS 2W
UPON THOUSANDS OF
HEALTHY BOYS & GIRLS EAT
Grape-Nuts
AND CREAM EVERY
MORNING BECAUSE
WISE MOTHERS KNOW
"There's a Reason"
The American capital extended a
simple but heartfelt welcome to the
British minister for foreign affairs,
Arthur J. Ilalfour, and the other mem
bers of the British commission, which
has come to Washington to hold a
war conference with I'nited States
officials.
+ + +
A nation-wide advertising campaign
of extraordinary proportions has been !
decided upon by Secretary McAdoo as j
the most effective means of disposing j
quickly of the Jf,.000,000,000 bond is-
sue soon to be offered to the public.
+ + +
President Wilson and his Cabinet I
1 have taken up the question of regu- j
! lating food exports to the Northern
European neutrals and thus prevent
; food reaching Germany from the
I'nited States.
+ + +
The door of the Senate naval affairs
committee in ttu> Capitol Building w as
"Jimmied" the other night and was
found standing open. Police believe
the job was the work of spies seeking
information of naval plans
+ + +
The government's program for food
control during the war has been put
before Congress by Secretary Hous-
ton in a communication to the Senate
asking power for the department of
agriculture to take direct supervision
of food production and distribution in
the United States and requesting a
115,000,000 appropriation for putting
the plan into operation
■4* -4* +
Establishment of fourteen citizen
training camps where reserv > officers
ami applicants for aommislon. in the
new war army will receive intensive
military Instruction nave been au
I thorlzed by Secretary Haker. The
I oampa will be opened May 1 and the
j courses of Instruction under officers
and non-commissioned officers, of tli"
regulars will begin May s.
+ + I-
Domestic.
Sarah Bernhardt, after rallying from j
the effects of the operation she under-
went in New York recently, apparent-
ly has suffered a relapse and is again
In a critical condition, according to a
somewhat cryptic bulletin issued by
her physicians.
-I- + ♦
Final determination of the govern-
ment's attitude on the production of
intoxicating liquors during the war
will await the relurn to the United
I States of Herbert C Hoover, now in
Europe, who will head the food board
named by the Council of National De-
fense
+ + *
Secession from Utah and Colorado
I for the formation of a new state is to
be attempted by the Tich country ly-
ing between the Continental Divide of
the Rocky Mountains and the W«-
saich Hange.
+ + +
Southwest.
The use of any or all of forty-seven
planing and sawmills, represented by
industries centering around Kansas
City, has been tendered the govern-
ment and the Council of National De-
fense.
4- + +
A Villa colnmn under personal com-
mand of Villa and Jose Ynez Sala/.ar
was defeated at Ilahicora Ranch, Chi-
huahua. by General Murguia's Carran-
zista forces, according to a message
just received from Murgula.
+ -t i
Prudencio Miranda, who. at one
time was alleged to have been the
leader of the Mexicans who raided the
Corner Ranch near Hachita, N M.,
and captured three Mormon cowboys
and later killed them, has beeu ar-
rested in El Paso.
*t* -f- -p
Snipers who fired at an American
sentry stationed at the viaduct in toe
suburbs of El I'aso were fired upon in
return by a squad of I niled States
soldiers One Mexican was seen to fall
after a volley had been fired across
the border.
•fr + +
One person was killed, another was
probably fatally injured and four
others seriously injured by a tornado
near Panhandle City, thirty-six miles
nartheast of Amarillo, Texas.
* + +
At least ten persons were Injured,
some of them ; robably fatally, and
many houses and other buildings were
blown away by a violent windstorm
that stri^k Snyder. Ok , recently It
was the third time in fifteen years
that Snyder had been visited by
j storms resembling tornadoes.
+ + +
Foreign.
According to a Hanover newspaper
received here, rolonel General Baron
Von Falkenhausen has been appointed
governor general of Relgiuui to suc-
ceed General Von Bissing,
$oe Many
Operations
The Right Medicine in Many Cases
Does Better than the Surgeons
Knife. Tribute to Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound.
Doctor Said Operation or Death—But Medicine Cured.
I Des Moines, Iowa.—uMv husband says I would
have been in my grave today had it not been lor
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I suf-
fered from a serious female trouble and the doctors
said I could not live one year without an operation.
My husband objected to the operation and had me
try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. 1
soon commenced to get better and am now well
and able to do my own housework I can recom-
i mend Lydia E. Pmkham s \ egetable Compound to
1 any woman as a wonderful health restorer. Mrs.
1 Blanche Jefferson,703 Lyon St., Des Moines,Iowa.
Another Operation Avoided.
M O. Johnston, lloute D, Box 190, Richmond, Ind.
Of course there are many serious cases that only a
surgical operation will relieve. We freely acknowledge
this but the above letters, and many others like them
amply prove that many operations are recommended when
medicine in many cases is all that is needed.
If you want gjgjf £a£
read and 'ana we re d by a woman and held in strict confidence.
She Had 'Em.
Student—What are your terms for
students?
Landlady—Deadbeats and bums.
The British hospital ships Donegal
and Lanfranc, with many wounded
aboard, have been torpedoed without
warning Of those on the Donegal
twenty-nine wounded men and twelve
of the crew are missing. The Lan-
franc carried German wounded as well
as British Of those aboard nineteen
British and fifteen Germans are be-
lieved to have perished. .
-V- + -1-
The British war cabinet has de-
cided that even physician' and sur-
geon and even man with medical
training of militarj age must be call-
ed up for service immediately.
+ +' +
i Ten thousand strikers, mostly mu-
nition workers, tried to burn the town
ball at Magdeburg, Germany, recently,
according to a dispatch to the Kx-
change Telegraph Company from Old-
enzaal, Holland *
+ + +
I Brazil's great German population in
at least three states has revolted. Dis-
patches from Montevideo (Uraguay)
asserted the Teutons were well armed
- even with some artillery—and plen-
tifully supplied. Brazil's censorship
was down tight on any details.
■«■ + +
i A German raider has been sighted
off Montevideo, according to reports
In maritime circles The commander of
a steamer which has reached Buenos
Aires declares ho sighted a suspicious
looking craft during the voyage frotn
Hio Janeiro to Montevideo.
Dr. B. F. Jackson, Celebrated Physician,
banded down to posterity his famous
prescription for female troubles. Now
sold under the name of "Femenlna."
1'rtce OOc and $1.00.—Adv.
Its Sort.
"Harry is very anient In his profes-
sions of devotion, but I am afraid to
trust a lover's devotion."
"That's right. Most of it is only lip
service."
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen-
eral Tonic because it contains the well
known tonic properties ot QUININE and
IRON. It acts on the I.iver, Drives out
Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Build#
up the Whole System. 50 cents.
Figurative.
Kldd—I have just purchased abso-
.utely the last word in automobiles.
Kidder—That so'; What are some
)f its specifications?
Kiild—Twelve cylinder motor; sev-
en-passenger accommodation, and one-
man top. ^
Do You Neglect
Your Machinery?
The machinery of the body needs to
be well oiled, kept In good condition
just as the automobile, steam engine or
bicycle. Why should the human neglect
his own machinery more than that of
his horse or his engine? Yet most peo-
ple do neglect themselves. To clean
the system at least once a week is to
practice preventive measures. You will
escape many Ills and clear up the coat-
ed tongue, the snllow complexion, the
dull headache, the lazy liver, if you will
take a pleasant laxative made np of
the May-apple, juice of the leaves of
aloes, root of jalap, and called Pleasant
Pellets. You can obtain at almost any
drug store In this country these vege-
table pellets In vials for 25c—simply
ask for I)r. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets.
There can be no counterfeit If they
have the Dr. Pierce stamp. Proven
good by 50 years' use.
Snake Problem.
This is not new but it's worth re-
peating. A man iu Zion City, 111., sent
it to The News:
Two Zion «'itjr snakes, of whicn
there are abundance on the lake front
property, had a tight. One was a gar-
ter snake and the other a bullhead.
Each was three feet long and in their
ferocity they seized each other by the
tall and proceeded to swallow each
other whole. Tliey both started at the
same time and at the same rate of
speed.
Now the question is. which of thestfi
two snakes survived. ..r rather which
one was on the outside by the time the
Other was swallowed, the garter snake
or the bullhead?
It took five minutes for the two
snakes to swallow each other and they
both swallow^ each other right to
the :ip of the fangs. Which one was
on the outside when they were finished
ur were they both inside?—Indianap-
olis News.
Weak, Fainty Heart, and Mysteries
can be rectified by taking "Kenovme a
heart and nerve tonic. Price 50c and $ 1 tflt.
Tlie man who trusts in the Lord
never has occasion to cancel bis mem-
bership in a "Don't Worry club."
OKLAHOMA WOMEN
Oklahoma City, Okla.—"I am happy
to stute that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi-
cal Discovery cured my mother of in-
testinal trouble after the doctors had
given her up, and 1 also recommend
the 'Favorite Prescription' for young
girls as i gave It to my daughter and
found It just us recommended."—Mrs.
Ollle Wright, 420 W. Pine.
Oklahoma City, Okla.—"I can highly
recommend Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre-
scription. Am proud to say it has
been lots of help to me In my girlhood
and also In the rearing of my family.
I can recommend It to young wives In
case of uny womanly trouble. It has
always been my favorite tonic."—Mrs.
E. F. Cox, 411 W. Pine.
If not obtainable at your favorite
drug store, send $1.00 to Dr. Pierce,
Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and he
will send a large package of tablets or
send 50 cents for smaller package.
Canada's Liberal Offer of
Wheat Land to Settlers
is open to you—to every farmer or farmer's son
who is anxious to establish for
himself a happy home and
prosperity. Canada's hearty
invitation tnis year is more attractive
than ever. Wheat is much higher but
her fertile farm land just as cheap, and
in the provinces of Manitoba, Saskat-
chewan and Alberta
160 Acre Homwtwds Art Actually Frwto Settler*
and Other Land Sold at from $15 to $20 per Acre
The Rreat dcmonil for Canadian Wheat will
keep up the price. Where a farmer can get
near for wheat and raise 20 to 45 bushels to
the acre he U bound to make money - that's
what you t an expect in Western Canada. Won*
derful yields also of Oat«. Rarley and Fla*.
Mixed Farming in Western Canada is fully as
profitable an industry as grain raising.
Th«* excellent grnnnes, foil of notiitlon. are the only
food r«qniri'd either for bet-f ur dairy purposes
Ooc.d sfhools.ehnrchea, markets convenient, climate
cit'ellent. There Is an unusual d«>mund for farm
labor ui reumce th< many younu men who have
volunteered for the war \N rite for literature and
rurtlcnlan n« to reduced railway r*t«s tu bupt. of
muiltfraUoh, Ottawa. Can , or to
c. A. COOK
2012 Main SI., Kacsas City, Mo.
Canadian Government Agent
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Norman, Floyd. The State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1917, newspaper, April 27, 1917; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc161383/m1/2/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Advertising%22: accessed June 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.