Claremore Progress. And Rogers County Democrat (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 14, 1916 Page: 2 of 8
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THE CLAREMORE PROGRESS
Qreaf) Tic^ion Becomes
Great lac^
TAKES THE PUCE OF
DANGEROUS CALOMEL
New Discovery! Dodson's Liver Tone Acts Like Calomel But Doesn't Gripe,
Salivate or Make You Sick—Don't Lose a Day's Work—Harmless Liver
Medicine for Men, Women, Children—Read Guarantee!
a
77&D£ir&CKtJW2>'J CRSJT*
I
CAPTAJZf PAUL KO&P&- -
«>,0 00
Did you ever read 7 wen-. c&wurr
ty Thousand Leagues
Under t/ie Sea, the story
about a submarine, which
Jules I'erne wrote forty
odd years ago? The ves-
sel he described, "Nau-
tilus"is almost a counter-
part of the German
merchant submarine,
"Deutschland " winch
came to this country sev-
eral weeks ago • * *
<>It «eeks the German undrrm
boat Deutsclilaiid occupied tli-
first page of every newspaper
In the land, to the exclusion of
the Mexican problem and a
considerable port of the Euro-
pean Wur news. Her Journey
across the oceau from Breiucu.
her avoidance of the English and French war
vessels and her theatrical disclosure of her
Identity at Cape Charles constituted Ilia sen-
sation of a century.
Mr. Charles P. Tower of the New York
Tribune has written an article comparing the
Oeutschlnml with the Nautilus, the submarine
boat of Imagination which Jules Verne, the
great French novelist, described in "Twenty
Thousand Leagues Under the S a," published
"bout 4.r> years ago. No doubt many of you
have read the story. It is a great boy's book, like
"Tom Sawyer" or Fenlmore Cooper's "leather
Stocking Tales."
Mr. Tower assumes that the Nautilus was never
destroyed, and that the Deutschland is U - old
boat of fiction rebuilt. He says:
"Hut the sensation will be the greater when It
becomes generally known that the boat is not of
Certnan design or build; that she is really the
originnl submarine bout Nautilus, designed by
that wonderfully skillful naval architect, engineer
and scientist a (large. Jules Verne, built and navi-
gated over and under many seas by Captain
Nemo, nnd for many years supposed to have
been engulfed In the whirlpool between the
islands of Faroe and Lofoten, off the coast of
-Norway in June. ls iS; the same vessel, rebuilt
in some degree and refitted in a German ship
yard, hut the Nautilus, as truly as she was the
Nautilus when she was launched. In 1S6S or 18 *S.
"It lias been only a supposition that the boat
was lost In the whirlpool, bnsed on the fact that
no survivors of her crew, excepting Mr. Aronnax,
who wrote the log on lioanl the vessel on her
sensational and somewhat erratic voyage of
'Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,' and
his two personal associates, ('onsetI and Ned
I .and, never appeared In public or ever told any-
thing to the contrary, But it will be remembered
that Mr. Aronnax declared in his editlou of the
log. w hich was published in IST.'i. that he did not
positively know whether the boat was lost or
not. 'What has become of the Nautilus?* he asks.
•Hid it resist the pressure of the maelstrom?
I>oes Captain Nemo still live?
"Don't believe It? Why, It Is so thoroughly
true as to he axiomatic, liend such a description
of the boat that arrived at Baltimore on a Sunday
evening: then read Mr. Aronnax's logl.ook;
make careful eompurison of the description of the
Nautilus which is contained therein with that of
the so-called Deutschland—and dare to say that
they are not one nod the same vessel. The power
plant is new In part, arid in part renewed. Mr.
Verne designed the Nautilus to he driven by
electric (lower generated by primary batteries,
something that would be out of the question to-
day. but possible In the case of the Nautilus, be-
cause her owner was a man of enormous wealth
and became he had discovered an Inexhaustible
source of supply of the materials required to
renew his batteries.
"The primary battery was the only available
means of providing power for underwater pro-
pulsion, as the Diesel motor, now In use on n||
submarine vessels as a jiower plant for use on
the surface and for generating electricity for
power to be used under water, had not been de-
veloped. In fact, neither the Germans nor any-
one else made any considerable use of the Diesel
principle of motor construction until the Diesel
patents had expired. Besides, Mr Verne had no
dynamos with which to translate the imwer pro-
duced by motors Into electricity, although he had
the essential principle In the electric motors with
which he turned his propeller.
"And the vessel Is now fitted with periscopes.
T'pli! Calomel makes you sick. It's horrible!
Take a dose of the dangerous drug tonight and
tomorrow you may lose a day's work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes
necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when it comes in-
to contact with sour bile crashes into it, breaking
it up. I his is when you feel that awful nausea
and cramping. If you are sluggish and "all
knocked out." if your liver is torpid and bowels
constipated, or you have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour, just try a
spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone tonight.
Here's my guarantee—Go to any drug store
and get a 50 cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone,
lake a spoonful and if it doesn't straighten you
right up and make you feel fine and vigorous t
want you to go back to the store and get your
money. Dodson's Liver Tone is destroying the
sale of calomel because it is real liver medicine ;
entirely vegetable, therefore it can not snlivate 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 constipated
waste which is clogging your system and making
you feel miserable. 1 guarantee that a bottle of
Dodson's Liver Tone will keep your entire family
feeling fine for months. Give it to your children.
It is harmless; doesn't gripe and they like its pleas-
ant taste.—Adv.
Name of Spirit.
Tress Agent- I've got a dandy lutme [
for tlie chorus beauties of this piece. I
Manager—What Is It?
I'ress Agent 1 call 'em our Brundy
IVaches."
ROLE WOS FORCED ON DADDY HERMIT'S FARE COSTS LITTLE
Really Had No Desire to Act as Fa- j Reputed "Holy Man" of Japan Bub-
ther to the Girl, But He Had
Been Forestalled.
that you le'®. a* toule ^Mississippi | "'",r *,Tpri*f """
Diarrhoea tDrdial in your medicine I so ,ir* " Klrl should
The dowagers and
hnperons wliis-
young snd
have devoted
sists on Laurel Leaves and a Few
Raw Potatoes Daily.
A hcrtult who bus set up his private
shrine by the wayside calls himself
the incarnation of Fudosamu. the god
of the Nautilus was 'J i feet. That of the Deutsch-
land is "guesse<l" ut something less than .'10 feel.
The Nautilus was cylindrical in shape; the ves-
sel that has created the sensation duriug past
weeks is not quite cylindrical. In that her top-
sides are carried up for a space neurly vertical.
chest. In constant use for fifty years. I "'e whole evening to a man so | of tire. This mysterious inun makes
Prloe 25c and 50c.—Adv. *" *"
Appropriate Returns.
"Did they realize anything from the
Ice carnival?**
"Certainly ; plenty of cold cash."
Hippr is the home where Red Cross
Rail Blue is used. Sure to pli
grecers. Adv.
All
An honest man has no business in !
jail.
which the Nautilus in her early days did not
have. If she had been equlp|>ed with periscopes
In 1*06 and 1Mt7, It Is probable that she would
not have been In collision with the Columbus, the
Shannon, the Helvetia and other ocean steam-
ships during those years, much to the annoyance
Of their owners and the mystification of the
public. Also, the Nautilus in her reincarnation
has wireless telegraph equipment, something
which she did not in her early days, because
M.ireoni had not then been born. For the rest of
It. the Nautilus Is the VnOtDu* still.
"A very full d.-scrlptlon of the Nautilus is con-
tained in the log as written up by Mr. Aronuux
from ihe dictation of Captain Nenm. lie men-
tions that the captain showed him the plans,
sections and elevation of the vessel: doubtless
the original drawings made by Mr. Verne, or
perhaps tracings of the originals. If thev had
been blue prints. Mr. Aronnax would doubtless
have s|tokcn of them as stii-h : hut. of coarse,
the.v were not. as blue prints were not in use In
those days. The captain went on:
"'Here. M. Aronnax. are the several dimen-
sions of the boat. It is an elongated cylinder
wllh conical ends. It is very in
Shape, a shape already adopted in I.omlon in sev-
eral constructions of the same sort. The length
of this cylinder, from stem to stern, is exactlv
232 feet and Its maximum breadth Is feet It
is not built quite like your long voyage steamers,
but Its lines are sufficiently long and its curves
prolonged enough to allow the water t.. slide off
easily and oppose no obstacle to its passage.
" 'When the Nautilus is alloat one-tenth Is ..ut
of the water. Now, If I have made reservoirs of
a size equal to tlds tenth, and If I till the!,, with
water, the bout, weighing then 1..1U7 tons. «,i| t„.
completely ifum<*rse<l. res
the lower part of the Nautilus. I turn
nod they fill, and the vessel sinks.
" Also, when 1 have a mind to visit the depth*
of the ocean. I make use of slower hut not less
infallible means. To steer this boat, following a
horizontal plan. I use an ordinary rudder Uxed
on the back of the stern post, and with one wheel
.and some tackle to steer by. f.i.t I c„„ also make
the Nautilus rise and sink, nnd sink and rise, by
c vertical movement by means of two inclined
planes fastened to Its sides, oppose r„„t(.r
or flotation, plane* tlmt move ! y powerful levers
from the interior.. If the planes are kept parallel
with boat It mows horizontally. If slanted, the
-Nautilus, according to this Inclination and under
the innuet.ee of the screw, either sinks diagonally
or rises diagonally as It suits me.
"Set aside the obvious errors in the log or In
the translation, and the description of the Nau-
tilus might aH readily puss for that of the so-
called Deutschland as any that have been printed
1-K.k it over In detail The Nautilus was 232
'~H long; the jength of the undersea boat at
w-as "guessed'' at anything from 200
•t to 300 feet. Of course, as
She has been rebuilt, th, boat may have been
lengthens), to ault modern IiIchk.
"But the Nautilus had a conning tower. In
place of the present superstructure. The beam
-Take LUNG-VITA for-
h"itaking I.nnc-Tita fnraboet
and it baa c* rtalo)y h- t --i ma"
a*y«. Mias Jj-'pbla ito6H.iatU. rn Arm .
Memphis. Teno "| h*T* taken most all
kimlh of tafldiHii#. bat none of It teeuied to
h* p ■• am i I taking y«.ur Lung-
V it*. 1 firmly beli«re that Long - Vit* afcl
CONSUMPTION
c..«.plrt lr wore mr to hoaith an4 bran-
lli* reenamend it u. a t %nfT«r ag with I una
trouble " If Luna Vlis «l 11 d.. tlll for Mlaa
"•« It not N.o." for
J U> iihmi mu «,<l uu u,
<"|"' wl|fi a b..ui« or If be bun i
I' order direct Fifteen-dar treatment t! U0.
Th rty amr treatment I :< anklet
r^qa^st NAtfHVIM.N MBMv.INr
J>ept a .Naafavi e. Teno.
BRONCHIAL ASTHMA
are in
on taps
Adruco Fly-Bane for Flies,
Warbles. Mosquitoes, Gnata, Lie*,
Ticks and Vermin on Stock of all
and ti tumble home with an easy curve; or. at kinds. Increase the Milk—try It. Adv.
least. It Is so Indicated by such photographs as
have come to light. The change was undoubtedly Electric locomotives gradually are
made In the rebuilding, In order to Increase the replacing steam on the stnte railways
currying capacity; for It Is to he remembered of Italy.
that the Nautilus was not built to carry cargo, .
and had 110 great excess of buoyancy. The motive
power of the Nautilus was electricity. That of
the vessel from Germany Is electricity when
submerged, while for use above water the Diesel
engines -ipply the power. That Is of no Ini-
portunce as hearing on the Identity of the vessel.
It is u common thing In rebuilding a ship to
make some changes in the propelling mechanism.
"There is still more to cunie. Both boats—or,
rather, the same boat In the two periods of her
career—v\erj—was—Is—fitted tip In some degree
of luxury. I.isten to what Mr. Aronnax says
I'bout a room Into which Captain Nemo con-
ducted him:
" It was a library. High pieces of furniture
supported upon their wide shelves a great number
of hooks. The electric light flooded everything.
It was shed from four uii|silished globes, half
sunk in the ceiling.' And again. In speaking of
the saloon, filled with treasures of art beyond
price, Mr. Aronnax mentions the organ, of which
he says later in the chronicle: 'At that moment
1 heard the ilistnni strains of the organ, a snd
harmony to an Indefinable chant, the wall of a
soul longing to break these earthly bonds."
The Organ on the Nautilus.
"One may not approve of < 'uptaln Nemo's taste
In music; some of us may prefer the 'run of mill'
music whith one may have with n phonograph
and a selection of records made haphazard; but
lie was musical, at nil events, and had provided
himself with means with uhich to gratify his
taste. But the organ has given way to a phono-
graph. with which the iri'W of the boat enter-
tained themselves on the riy across <>r under the
Atlantic And when they vwre full up' on music
there was the library, with fewer books than that
of old. but ith Shakespeare as a foundation of
literary satisfaction.
"Still skeptical? How the food of the crew
of the Nautilus cooked? 1*.\ electricity. Says Mr.
Aronnax Then n door o|m n.-d Into a kit. hen nine
feet long, situated between the large storerooms.
There electricity, better than gas Its, if, ,||,| „n
the cooking. The streams under the furnaces
gave out to the sponge, „f plntlnu a heat which
was regularly kept up and distributed. They
also heated a distilling apparatus, which by evap-
oration furnished cxcellcr lilnkalde water.' How
WMM the 'grab* of the crew of the so-called . . _
Deutschland cooked? By electridtj Captali DlfOCtOW
K- n g althot gh he d I ot give a Oesirtptloa of
the cooking apparain* n, anything Ilk.- as full a
detail as docs Mi Aronnax of Ihnt of the Nau-
tilus. The boat that i . i iin Kotrtiig cinmamled
was furnished with all the comforts of home, ac-
cording to the one man who was aboard of her
much her senior. True, he danced
well enough and was known as a man
of umny millions. Still they had never
thought Meta mercenary.
Half way through the evening the
couple disappeared onto a balcony. The
girl sat down and the man stood gaz-
ing down at her. Without the slight-
est warning he asked her to be his
wife. He was a widower, as she knew.
"I wanted to please you," she said,
"but I did not expect this."
"It Is the unexpected that happens,"
he said with a smile.
"I'm sorry." she said, "and I'm glad
at the same time. I have been trying
to make you like me."
"Why?"
"I like you so much, as a father—"
"Thanks," he Interrupted; "I'm not
decrepit yet."
"Of course not. But I came here
his abode In a little coop near the
botanical gardens, paying a monthly
rental of $2.25. On the pluster Just
below the puper window is written:
"The worshiping place of the wood-
eutlug hermit."
Day and night one cun see the flare
of fire on the paper window aud a low
voice ran be heard, says the Kast and
West News. Every passer feels a
queer sensation as he goes by. Th*
visitor knocked at the dlsuiul-looklng
entrance. The one who came to an-
swer was the mysterious man. He
looked to be about fifty-five and in his
brawny nnd reflective features he
showed a magnetic smile.
It seems he began his pious life by
scorching his body Willi a lighted
candle to save the life of his sick
child. He fusted 21 days and prac-
ticed water meditation. The child re-
solely to meet and he Introduced to | covered. His faith grew stronger. Por
you. Why? Because lust night I 30 years past he has touched no rice
married your son."
ECZEMA
Honrs tare i« guaranteed
• up and permanently ear* ti
Urrtbla ltablng It It
pi>anded for that purpona an
r« ur money w i be promptly
refpnded without qoaatlon
If Hunt 1 Care fa • v
Jt —
Hunt
cb.BeM ...
r an? otbar akin diaaaaa
a.Tetter King Worm
Itcb.OeaM
or an? otb
it9 boa
For gala by all dm* atorag
K. B. Richards Medicine Ci., Sheraan, Tti.
v (pllTonic
Sold lor 47 years. For Malaria. Chilli
• ad Fever. Also a Fine General
Streorflhealal Toole. .
Expensive.
"You've got a fine collection of
paintings here," remarked the visitor
to a niun who had advertently made
a !ot of money on war brides. "They
must have cost you lots of dough."
"They aure did," udmitted the con-
nolscur. "Why, some of thetn pitch-
ers cost more than the frames that's
around them."
Cautious.
"I've discovered a system by which
my employer could get all the work
in his office done with half the force
he employs now."
"Why don't yon tell him about It
and earn his undying gratitude?"
"I don't dare to. lie might decide
that I am one of tile men he could
do without."
The Sort.
"Mrs. Gaddy does talk a great deal,
but she's as deep as a well."
"I hope she Is like one of tile wells
which sometimes dry up."
or other cereal. Before the visitor be
chewed some laurel leaves. Fifty of
these, five ruw potatoes, a little salt
and water, were his daily fare. He Is
said to effect miraculous cures.
Hopeless.
| "That man we were Just talking
to soems to be perfectly normal," re-
marked the visitor who was bring
shown over the insane asylum.
"And yet he's one of the very worst
cases we have," replied the attendant.
"That niun thinks he coo get as many
miles out of a gallon of gasoline as
the agent who sold him his cur salil he
could."
Calling for Reform.
Frances—You say you are going to
mnrry a man to reform him. That la
line. May I ask who he Is?
Flora—It's young Bond.
Frances—Why, I didn't know he hud
any bad habits.
Flora—Well, his friends are saying
that he has become quite miserly.—•
Buck.
One Exception.
"Like produces like."
"Oh, I don't know. l'«e
cash produce some hot times.'
Its Usual Course.
"What's this scandalous story all
about, anyhow?"
"I think It'a all about town."
h/irKM-
A toilet preparation of merit
IValpo to eradicate dandraC.
i For K 00 ti beg Color mmd
MJ taOray or Faded Hair.
•Or. and ti — at iT^c'at
Film* Developed ^,'1'::
does 110
"It's
[■r than 1
nslder hi 1
iear ensi
" official and who
Klim pieki an; iIm. itr tTo'« up t.«nnd 'n. lnOlni
.v •> « ** aad tc; ^
k'slalu! Vifau*aa«*i
wb«*re. prepaid. H*>n<l
In
eld |
ptlng as any
excepting
Baltimore
and some odd
■very essential the
In size and form,
he fluidified in proc-
• rhaullng und refuting. In power plant.
■ngines take the place
of electric motors r.,r .„rf«ce propulsion, for
economy's sake; in the Intricate electrical equip-
ment for lighting, cooking and In the control and
movement of all parts of the ship; In the means
provided for going below the surface of the
water at will, and in returning to the surface at
pleasure; even in the provision for the comfort
and of the crew, the Deutschland
and the Nautilus are one and the same Only
lu the use made of the craft is there a difference.
I lie Nautilus wax Imllt and operated to satisfy
the whim—let's call It a whim and forget the
tragedy of It ull— f a man wealthy enough to
ufford It : while a* to tin Deutschland «he crossed
the ocean to bring a few (Hiunda of dyestuffs of
which we are in need. It is the case of a thor-
oughbred harnessed to an express wagon In his
old age."
til Kodak Btipplfa a«-nt any
a% jt.nr nest r«.i 1 and let as
rodomg better kodak luiabing
Head for catalog.
Wostfall Drug Co., Kodak Dept.
206 W Main taitnan *«•«!• Oklthoma City
Lee-Huckins4—
i
OKLAHOMA CITY
FIREPROOF
450 Rooms 300 Baths
Ratos: SI and upwards
Storage Batteries
Mate to order for an j make of raa. If your old
battery im Inoperative, prepay It to ua and wo
« III give you a price on putting It In flrat-«*laao
roiMlltiuci. or allow you It to m ti
A million other women have found
the same solution these six have
Almost every woman at some time has had a coffee prob-
lem. Over a million American women have settled tneire
the same way ! Read what these six say—
bua a uew one
frmaty Ca., 427 W. Mak. OUaJtama Cdj. Okla.
PRIVATE WARS WERE
Any Pretext Would Serve to Start a
Long and Bloody Conflict in
Feudal Times.
"Of the many privileges conferred
or. the nobles of Europe by the feudal
system, none was more jealously
guarded or mure frequently exercised
than the right of wuglug private war."
Or. MucMillan writes In the Scottish
Itrview. "This lawless custom was
the en use of untold misery, barbarity.
MANY I n,ln ""d destitution. I'pon the slight-
est pretext—often Indeed with no ex-
cuse at all—the feudal baron would
sally forth from his stronghold In or-
der to carry Are und sword Into the
territories of some neighboring chief.
" This abuse,' snys Cox In his 'liis-
tory of the House of Austria,' 'was
carried to so great a a extent that not
only sovereigns and states eugugetf in
hostilities from Interest or revenge,
but the leaser barons, and even asso-'
rtations of tradesmen and domestics,
sent defiances to each other on the
most ridiculous pretenses and In a
nnnner scarcely credible at the pres-
ent day.
"'We find a declaration of war
frcm a private individual. Ucnry
Moyenberg, against the emperor; an-
other from the Lord i'Hiuensteln
against Frankfort, because a young
lady of the city refused to dance with
Ids uncle; another In 14.10 from the
baker and domestics of the margrnve
of Baden against Ksllngen, Iteutlin
gen, and other Imperial cltlea; another
In 1402 from the baker of the Count
t'alatlne l.nuln against the cities of
Ausburg. L'lm and KottwcU ■ „„„
U7I from the shoeblacks of the
veralty of Leipzig aguin«t Uic pro-
vost and some other men,t,v-, ,1Ijd
m 1477 from cook In fcpp^tHn
with his scullions, dalrymulds nnd dish
washers against Otho. count of Holm, •
"ISut tills lawlessness and mischie-
vous spirit did not expire with the abo-
lltion of the right of private war."
The public library of Cincinnati
makes and lends lantern alldea.
Every Woman Wnnti
"I recommend ArbuckW Coffee
to s y friend*. I buy it all the time
becauae it ia better coffee "-Mim
BmU. Hirtr. Ky.
"I use Arbuckles' because it ia
atmnger then JKe mffw and A r
burklea' packages are full 16 oz."
-Ifra. V'onerkin, ColdwaUr, A'ait.
"t have been ualng Arburklea* for
yea re. and have alwaya found it the
beat I ever uaed."-Afra. Juhnathan
Btfrigg, Coshocton, Ohio.
"I have used Arboeklea' for years
and think there la no coffee to equal
It" —/,. Walper, Shtphrrdt-
"I have beea ualng Arburklea' Cof.
fee for years. I thick It la the ,.nly
ANTISEPTIC POWDER
pelvic catarrk, ulceration and hrflaii
nation. RaeoaaamM by Lyrfia E.
Pinkhan Mad. Ce. for tea years.
A healing woaader for aaaal catarrh,
sore throel ajad aoee eyea. Economical.
"iteeBSlC
W. N U , Oklahoma City, No. 37-191I
Hinjr Arliui
J think It t
".ffee nt todrink."-Mr*. A. G. Waili.
han. Lay, Colorado.
"We have uaed Arboeklea' Coffee
for ten yeara and have not yet found
ita superior or equal."- Virgil Hada-
way, Br—rmtr, Ala.
Ar buck lea' is the bigjyest selling, most popular coffee
In the United States. Have you tasted it ? Get it at
your grocer s--either bean or already ground—and servo
it in your home. Know why a million other women say
that Arbuckles' is the finest coffee they ever tasted!
Make your coffee earn lovely gifts. Save the signature
on every Arbuckle wrapper. Arbuckles' premiums are
as famous aa Arbuck es'Coffee. Write for special pre-
mium catalog. Arbuckle Bros., 71-Ok Water St., New York.
ARBUCKLES' COFFEE
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Kates, W. C. Claremore Progress. And Rogers County Democrat (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 14, 1916, newspaper, September 14, 1916; Claremore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc181620/m1/2/: accessed June 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.