The Plaindealer (McAlester, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 29, 1913 Page: 4 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 16 x 11 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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News Notes
the Mcalester
A BILIOUS Llftii
For sick headache, bad breath,
Sour Stomach and
constipation.
11 I
Epitome of the Most
Important Happening!
at Home and Abroad
Get a 10-cent box now.
No odds bow bad your liver, atomach
or bowela; bow much your bead
acbea, bow mlaerable and uncomfort-
able you are from conatipatton, Indiges-
tion, klilousneta and sluggish Lowela
—you alwaya get the dealred reaulta
with Caacareta.
Don't let your atomach, liver and
bowela you mlaerable. Take
Caacareta to-night; put an end to the
headache, biliousness, dizxftiess, nerv-
ousness, alck, aour, gsssy atomach,
backache and all other dlatreaa;
cleanae your Inalde organs of all the
bile, gaaea and constipated matter
which la producing the mlaery.
A 10-cent box means health, happl-
neaa and a clear head for montha.
No more daya of gloom and dlatreaa
If you will take a Caacaret now and
then All atorea aell Caacareta. Don't
forget the children—their little In-
■Idea need a cleanalng, too. Adr.
Eat the Egg 8hells.
A tea spoonful of chloride of calcium,
three Mines a day, dlaaolved In water,
la healthful and nourishing, according
to the Oerman professors, Emerlch and
I*ow. Lime, If taken in alight qu&ntl-
tlea aa food, they contend. Is a proven
tlve and a cure of many physical lNa
which now afflict humanity, Increaalng
the vitality of the organlam, protecting
It from harmful microbes and curing
Inflammatory affections.
Instead of throwing away the shells
when one eata eggs, It would be bet
ter to eat the shells and diacard the
yolk and white, according to a pep
aonal view of theae profeaaora.
FIVE CHILDREN
TO WORK FOR
Q«ite an Undertaking For a Lady,
but Mrs. Wright Docn't
Mind Now.
Aahevllle, N. C—Mrs. Minnie
Wright, of R. F. D. No. 1, this city,
aaya: "1 don't think there la any
medicine made that would have done
me the good Cardui, the woman'a ton-
ic, did. 1 have five children to work
for, and I praia* Cardui for giving we
the good health to do It
I waa In a delicate condition, on ao-
ccunt of a relapse of meaales which
left me In a bad ahape, and I also had
aevere headaches and backache. Waa
In too bad a fix for anyone to live, It
teemed to me.
' 1 waa told that ay only chance waa
an operation, but I decided to try Car
dui inatead. I only took two bottles,
and now I am well and atrong again.
I don't believe there Is any medicine
on earth that will help Buffering wom-
en as Cardui will. I have already
gotten several ladies to try it, and I
am going to continue to recommend
your medicine."
Tor more than BO years, Cardui haa
been successfully uaed In the treat-
ment of womanly Ilia. It haa been
found to relieve women's pains, and
strengthen women's weakneaa.
If you are a woman, and suffer from
any oh the ailmenta peculiar to your
•ex. we urge you to give Cardui a trial.
It haa helped more than a million
women In the past half century, and
will do the aame for you If given a fair
trial.
Your druggist aells Cardui. |
FOREIGN.
A Russian expedition under Comm.
Wlilitsky reporti: the discovery of a
continent as large as Greenland, 600
miles north of Siberia.
The will of J. Plerpont Morgan was
probated In London. The estate In
(he llritlsh Isles amaunted to J5.K99.-
166. The government will receive
about $960,000
Prince Arthur of Connaught, son of
the Duke of Connaught, governor gen-
eral of Canada, was married in London
to Princess Alexandria Victoria,
Duchess of Fife.
The marriage of Miss Nancy Irish-
man, daughter of the former American
ambassador at Berlin, to the Duke of
Croy Is to tako place October 28, says
a dispatch from Geneva. Switzerland.
The campaign in the general elec-
tions, which will be held In Italy Oc-
tober 26, Is waxing warmer and In
seme cases political activity Las taken
the form of violence.
D. B. Hanna of Toronto, vice-presi-
dent of the Canadian Northern rail-
way, owners of the Volturno, said that
the hull of the vessel was valued at
1400,000, and that she was insured for
$300,000.
A new steamship company has been
oiK&nlzcd at Stockholm and will place
two passenger steamers of 18,000 tons
on the Sweden-United States route in
1914. Two steamers will be added to
this service In 1916.
Representations have been made by
the American embassy to the Mexi-
can foreign office that It has come to
the knowledge of the embassy that an
American, C. Equsettl, has heen ar-
rested and forced to enter tho army
now on the way to Quintans Roo.
The diplomatic representatives of
Great Britain, France, Spain, Cuba,
Gautemala and Norway at a confer
ence, decided to recommend that
their respective governments send
warships to Mexico for the purpose
of affording legation guards, should
conditions so require.
Reports received from the center of
the recent seismic disturbance in Pan-
ama, indicate that startling changes
are taking place In the bed of the
ocean off the coast of Los Santos prov-
ince near the town of Tonsl. About
fifteen miles from the mainland a
cable repair ship found that a depth
of 1,000 feet on the chart of the United
Statea war department published In
1904 now shows a depth of 6,000 feet.
Twenty Catholic nuns, members of
the Sisterhood of the Incarnate Word,
are among the refugeea now en route
from Tamplco, Mexico, to Galveston
on the oil tank steamer Hainault and
the steamer Waneta. They fled from
their Institution at Monterey. The
tanker also has as passengers six-
teen British subjects, ten Mexicans
and one American.
Ladles' Adrtoonr Mpt . Chattanooga. T«mti . (of
The giddy old world laughs openly
at a man and wife who are In love
with each other- but secretly It ea
vies them.
DOMESTIC.
The will of the late B. Altman. mul-
timillionaire bachelor merchant, filed
for probate at New York leaves Ihs
magnificent $6,000,000 art collection to
the public.
Ad Wolgast of Cadillac, Mich., de-
feated Battling Nelson of Hegewisch'.
HI., In a ten-round, no-declslon boxing
contest at Milwsukee.
A masked bandit robbed the mail
car of an express train of the South-
ern Pacific railroad near Burlingame,
Calif. Inspectors said the loss was
not great
plaindealer
A course In playwriting has been
added to the curriculum of Columbia
university.
San Francisco's dislike for pennies
is responsible for an excess of 61 cents
In the sub-treasury.
Tim Woodruff, Progressive leader
of New York and former lleut gover-
nor, Is dead after a stroke of paraly-
sis.
Gov. Sulzer was convicted on three
of the eight counts In the Impeach-
ment proceedings and removed from
office.
Mrs. Jennie May Eaton Is on trial
at Plymouth, Mass., for the murder of
her husband, Rear Admiral Joseph
Giles Eaton.
Julian Hawthorne, author and
fraud-promoter, has been released
after serving six months in the fed-
eral prison at Atlanta.
A sweeping denunciation of the
present system of divorce reached the
house of deputies of the Protestant
Episcopal church at New York.
On and after November 4 no mint
Juleps, no cocktails, not even whiskey
straight, sour wine or beer will be
served on railroad dining cars in Ohio.
Secretary of State Bryan, In an ad-
dress at Dubuque, Iowa, predicted that
much legislation would be enacted
when congress convened In regular
session.
The arrest of three glrla and eight
boys, ranging In ages from 14 to 18
years, revealed a remarkable gang of
youthful thieves operating in 8outh
Bend, lnd.
The influx of cattle Into the United
Stater, from Canada under the new
tariff law continuea and large ship-
ments from western Canada are re-
ported daily.
Ralph Rose, world's champion shot
putter. Is fighting for life in a hos-
pital at San Francisco against typhoid
fever, with which he was stricken
some daya ago.
Commander Charles A. Brand, U. S.
N.. retired, cr imltted suicide at Col-
chester, Conn., by shooting himself In
the woods near his home. The cause
is believed to be ill heal h.
W llllam C. Ellis, a Cincinnati leath-
er merchant who was found wounded
In a hotel room at Chicago, near the
body of his wife, confessed to a cor-
oner's Jury that he had killed the
woman. He was held to the grand
Jury, charged with murder.
The charters of no St. Louis cor-
porations were suspended by the Mis-
souri secretary of state for failure to
comply with the law requiring all cor-
porations m the state to flle with
the secretary of state a statement of
business done In the last fiscal year
and to pay an annual corporation tax
or ten dollars.
After an Investigation of the kill-
In* of Henry Farr and the Injuring of
Alfred C. Hoglund and Thomas D.
8immons at 8eattle by an automobile
driven by Laurence Duke, eon of Bro-
die Duke, the tobacco manufacturer
Prosecuting Attorney Murphy an-
nounced that Duke would be tried on
a charge of manslaughter.
Deatha In Chicago from automob'le
accidents incressed 665 per cent from
1907 to 1912, sccordlng to statistics
supplied to the Chicago safety commit
alon which waa organlied recently to
combat such accidents. In 1 07 there
were fifteen deaths from motor car
accidents. Isst year there were ninety-
two, the Increase being the largest in
the country.
WASHINGTON.
The United States government In-
formed Provisional President Huerta
that It looked with abhorrence and
amaxement upon hla assumption of
both executive and leglslstlve powers
In Mexico and that la view of his
course c6uld not regsrd aa constitu-
tional the elections planned for Oc-
tober It
Foley Kidney Pills Relieve
promptly the suffering due to weM, m.
active kidneys and painful bladder action
They offer a powerful help to nature
in building up the true excreting kid-
ney tissue, in restoring normal action
and in regulating bladder irregularities
Try them.
CURRENCY NO ONE DESIRES
Two-Dollar Bill More of a Nuisance
Than Its Value Can Be Made
to Justify.
Ccuntless persons who have some
time or other accepted change for one
dollar Tor a two-dollar bill will be In-
terested in the story of "Ole Prince"
Robinson, the colored barber In the
house barbershop at Washington.
When the sergeant-at-arms offered him
tlve )2 bills the other day as part of
his pay, Robinson waved them wildly
away, declaring that every $2 bill car-
ried with it the "Egyptian curse," that
he would rather break a looking-glass,
walk under a ladder or turn back with-
out making a cross-mark than take
a $2 bill because It was a sure sign
of 111 luck.
Whether there is an "Egyptian
curse" on the $2 not or not, there has
certainly been many an American
curse put on it. It is the easiest thing
in the world, victims will tell you, to
pass out a two for a one and not dis-
cover the loss until you begin search,
for that other dollar you had, bui
haven't any more. A currency reform
that would eliminate the $2 bill and
the hoodoo at the same time would
be a reform that would save money
for generations to come.
Not to Frighten the Patient.
Dentist's Wife—Why do you open
the door of the waiting room when I
sing?
Dentist—I want to show them that
the noise does not proceed from the
patients In the chair.—Pele Mele.
If it is the right kind of a home a
boy will never run away from It.
Santo Domingo ha<s adopted the me-
tric system.
The successful man never tells yon
what he Is going to do next.
Breakfast
Sunshine
Post
Toasties
end Cream
There's a delicious smack
in these crisp, appetizing bits
of toasted corn that brings
brightness and good cheer to
many and many a breakfast
table.
Toasties are untouched by
hand in making; and come in
tightly sealed packages—clean
and sweet—ready to eat with
cream and sugar.
Wholesome
Nourishing
Easy to Serve
Sold by grocers everywhere,
i
I
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The Plaindealer (McAlester, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 32, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 29, 1913, newspaper, October 29, 1913; McAlester, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc275189/m1/4/?q=%22Business%2C%20Economics%20and%20Finance%20-%20Journalism%22: accessed May 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.