Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 10, 1917 Page: 2 of 4
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THE COYLE CLIPPER
KISH SHERIFFS OF THE
SOUTHJjOW CONVINCED
Sheriff Mangum of Atlanta, Ga., 'Sheriff Anderson of
Houston, Tex., Sheriff Lewis of Marion,- Ark. and
Sheriff Kelley of Odessa,Tex., Come Out With Strong
Statements and Tell What Tanlac i las Done for Them.
pOUk leading SlierilTs of the South in widely separated states have
recently given their unqualified indorsement* to Tanlac. Tiu word
of men whose records for hotiesty and iinrighlncss has won and held for
them the highest county office in the gift ot the people of their own eom-
inunities, cannot he doubled, for if there is any oUiee that demands a
man of unimpeachable integrity, it is the office of Sheriff.
GERMANS MOVING
PETR03RAD
“Tanlac has certainly helped me and
I recommend It for the good It has
done In my case," said Hon. C. \V.
Mangum, ex-sheriff of Fulton County,
Georgia, who resides in Atlanta and
who has been one of the most popular
officials in the state, having served
three terms as sherifT. *‘I am seventy
years old,” he continued, "and have
most always been a pretty healthy
man until here lately. I have been In
a nervous wornout, rundown condition.
Most always after eating I would have
a full uncomfortable feeling which
would last several hours.
"After taking the second bottle of
Tanlac the fullness and all the dis-
agreeable symptoms disappeared and
my condition Is now that of u well
man Tanlac seemed to la* just what
I needed to put tuy system in shape
ami it has toned me right up. Natural-
ly I would recommend it to my friends
and I know of lifteen or twenty fam-
ilies that are taking it now on my
auy-so."
Arkansas Official Testifies.
Hon. Chas. I. Lewis, ex-sheriff of,
Crittenden ('ounty, a merchant and
large plantation owner of Marion, Ar-
kansas, said: "I am convinced from
the benefits that my wife and myself
and many of our friends have received
from Tanlac, that it Is without an
equal. Mrs. Lewis suffered for ten
years. She couldn’t digest anything
and gas forming in her stomach caused
severe pains and shortness of breath.
We both started taking Tanlac at the
same time and have had the most grati-
fying results. Mrs. Lewis can now eat
and enjoy her food for the first time
In many a day. She Is not nervous
and her sleep is sound and refresh-
ing and she Is like a different woman.
"I suffered with biliousness and
malaria and the two bottles of Tanlac
have fixed me up In fine shape."
Ex-Sheriff Anderson's Statement.
"Money couldn’t buy the good Tnn-
has done me and I gladly recoin- town.—Adv.
mend It to others for what It has done
in my case,” said Hon. Archie It. An-
derson, ex-sheriff of Harris County,
Texas, who was re-elected to this high
ofhee seven tinier and served the peo-
ple of his country for fifteen years us
sheriff. Mr. Anderson was chief of
police of the city of Houston, where
he resides, for several years, and there
is not a better known man In Harris
County.
"I was continually belching up un-
digested food," he continued, "and I
would bloat and swell up like I was
poisoned and suffered from neuralgic
pains of the worst sort and nothing re-
lieved me. 1 began to feel better after
tvklng the first bottle of Tanlac and
have Just started on my third and feel
like a different in.** already. I sleep
like a log now and can eat any and
everything I want without the slight-
est discomfort afterwards."
Texas Sheriff's Indorsement.
"1 needed a general all around build-
ing up for the last seven months and
Tanlac has done that very thing for
me," said Hon. S. A. Kelley, sheriff of
Fetor County, Texas, who resides at
Odessa, Texas, and who is one of the
most popular officials in that section of
the state. ‘Tin mighty glad now that
I took Tanlac, for I had been in a bad-
ly rundown condition for several
months. I had no appetite and didn’t
enjoy what I did eat and at times I
suffered terribly with rheumatic pains.
My hack ached all the time and rny
liver was so sluggish and out of shape
that 1 had a dull headache continually.
"I have taken only two bottles, but
l feel like a different man already.
My appetite is fine and what I eat
gives me nourishment and strength.
The rheumatism is much better and
my liver is in good condition. I am
relieved of the headaches and feel more
active and energetic than I have In
months."
There Is a Tanlac deuler In
German warships and transports loaded with troops are reported to he
on their way to the Gulf of Finland and it Is expected they will attempt to
land big forces at either Keval or I'ernau with the Intention of cutting off IV
trograd from the Russian army whose right wing Is tit Riga.
FIB WAR ARMY
10 HAVE 547,197
DETAILS WORKED OUT TO
BE PUT INTO EFFECT
AT ONCE.
EIGHTEEN NEW DIVISIONS
Oklahoma Included With Texas for
Mobilization In Fifteenth—Extra
Divisions of Cav-
alry.
Washington.—T*e full strength of
the war army organized under the se-
lective army bill will he 18,538 <rttl
j eers and 528,659 enlisted men, a total
i of 547,197, making up eighteen war
strength divisions complete in every
linn and supplemented by sixteen regi
j jnents of heavy field artillery equipped j
j with large caliber howitzers,
i Virtually every detail of plans, for
raising, maintaining, equipping and or-
ganizing this force has been carefully
your
Changed.
"Crimson Gulch doesn't seem like
the same town since it went dry.”
“That’s right," replied Rroncho Rob.
"It has changed both in Joy and grief.
The hoys don’t have neither so many
frolics nor so many funerals.”
No Sunday in Her Week.
Little Helen is an ardent supporter
<>f Sunflny school. She wouldn’t miss
going under any circumstances. A few
Sundays ago, however, she was ill and
the family council decided it would he
best not to let her know when Sun-
day came. This plan was followed,
but tin* next day the secret leaked out
ami she exclaimed :
“Oh, mamma; you didn’t put a Sun-
day in my week!"—Indianapolis News.
BOSCHEE’S GEei.ll
smiHium unnni
mtmmam--
Government Issues
Warning
Against Fly Poisons
• Following in an extract from “The
1 Transmission of Disease by Flies,”
- Supplement No. 29 to the Public
j Health Reports, April, 1916.
"Of other fly poisons mentioned,
i mention should l>c made, merely for
a pm pose of condemnation, of those
\ composed of arsenic Fatal cases of
polsoi lag of children through t lie
\ use of such compounds are far too
frequent, ami owing to the resem-
3 blauce of arsenical poisoning to
j summer diarrhea and cholera in-
fantum, it is believed that the cases
rejiorted do not. by any means, cotu-
j prise the total. Arsenical fly-de-
stroying devices must l*.* rated as
extremely dangerous, and should
’ never be used, even if other meas-
ures are not at hand.”
] 106 fly poisoning cases have lx»en re-
1 ported by the press within the last
2 three years. As Minted above this num-
: her is but a f> action of the real number.
; Protect your children b usingtbesafe,
” efficient, noil poisouous fly catcher
Panacea of the Home the World
Over.
Why will you ullow a cold to ad-
vance In your system and thus encour-
age more serious maladies, such as
pneumonia or lung trouble, when by
the timely use of a few doses of
Boschee’s German Syrup you can get
relief. This medicine has stood the
test of fifty years. It Induces a good
night’s sleep with easy expectoration
In the morning. For sale by druggists
in ail parts of the civilized world iu
25 and 75 cent bottles.—Adv.
A Wearisome Lecturer.
“Bl ggins is always lecturing on j^n-
t riotism."
"Yes. Sometimes I think he is an
alien enemy and is trying to make
patriotism unpopular."
worked out by the war department and
the selection of the men will begin in
u week or two.
Divisions Announced.
A revised list of officers’ training
eftmp districts, issued by the depart-
ment, indicates that the divisions of
the first half million new fighting men
| will be formed as follows:
First Division—Troops from all New
England states.
Second -New York congressional
districts l to 26 (including Long Is
land, New York City and a strip north
of the city.)
Third- Remainder of New York
state and Pennsylvania congressional
districts 10, 11. 14. 15, 16. 1. 25 and 28.
Fourth—Remainder of Pennsylvania
state including Philadelphia and Pitts
burgh.
Fifth New Jersey. Delaware, Mary-
land, Vlrglff a and I )i drict of < !olum
b a
Sixth North and South
and Tennessee.
Seventh Georgia, Alabama and
Florida.
Eighth—Ohio and West Virginia.
Ninth Indiana and Kentucky.
Tenth—Illinois.
Eleventh Michigan and Wisconsin.
The proportion of coast artillery
troops to be provided out of the first
.>o0,()0o will be 666 officers and 20,000
men, with requisite medical troops.
Supplementing these factional units
will be the sixteen regiments of heavy
field artillery, strength 768 officers and
21,104 men; eight aero squadrons or
one new squadron to each two new in-
fantry divisions; eight balloon com-
panies, ten field hospitals, ten ambu-
lance companies, twenty-two field bak-
eries, six telephone battalions, sixteen
pack companies, six ammunition trains
and six supply trains.
In preparation for th* enormous task
of training this great army the exist- I
ing regular establishment and the na* !
tional guard is being brought to full j
war strength. The regulars, when all !
five additional increments provided for I
in the national defense acj. have been
added, will total 11,233 officers and
293,000 men of all arms. Since April 1
nearly 50,000 recruits have been ob-
tained. bringing the army up to nearly
180,000.
Already orders summoning officers
of the regular service for examination
for advance in grade have been pre-
pared. Fifteen lieutenant colonels of
cavalry wil become colonels; twenty-
seven cavalry majors will become lieu-
tenant colonels; sixty three captains
will become majors and all lieutenants
will become captains.
Nineteen General Officers.
To provide general officers to com- j
mand the eighteen divisional training
camps, that number of army colonels '
may be examined. As there exists ak j
ready one vacancy in the grade of brig-
adier general, nineteen now general of-
fleers must be appointed in the neat
future and the army bill provides that |
the president may sort.these men from >
any source. A uniform grade of major
generals, senior and junior rank, also |
has been proposed, doing away with I
the grade of brigadier general. In any !
event the present general officers of |
wide experience probably will be se-
lected so far as possible to command *
the divisional camps.
The full strength of the national
guard units now existing will be 9,847
"...... r ' 9 954 men, giving a total
regular and national guard force to j
be whipped info shape before the new
Carolina r:i,|pd “f 21'080 °m<‘prs ani1 ;
I ''-‘•■U S men. New units must
’Em-> Pkiuir
Tails aStory'
[ .
-" •|sp ^
Is Your Back Stiff,
Lame and Achy?
Do Weak Kidneys Keep You Sick,
Tired and All Worn Out?
IF* YOU have a constant, dull ache, or sharp pains whenever
^ you bend or twist your back, and the kidney secretions seem
disordered, too, don t waste time plastering or rubbing the bad
back. It s likely that the cause is kidney weakness, and delay
in treating the kidneys may invite uric acid poisoning, gravel,
dropsy or fatal Bright’s disease.
Get Doan 3 Kidney Pills, a special remedy for weak kidneys,
used around the world and publicly recommended by 50,000
people in the U. S. A.
Personal Reports of Real Cases
GIVES DOAN’S THE CREDIT.
Mrs. G. A. King, 617 Texas St., El
Paso, Texas, says: “The pain in
my bax’k was so bad that I couldn't
get much rest. It was impossible
for me to straighten and I had to
use u cane. My ankles swelled
frightfully, making It hard for me
to walk. I was subject to head-
aches. especially in the morning,
and chills would come over me. t
feared paralysis. On a friend's ad-
vice, I used Doan’s Kidney Pills
and they restored me to good
health. I have had little kidney
trouble since and I give Doan's
Kidney Pills the credit for saving
my life.”
GOT QUICK RELIEF.
F. Doorley, 121 E. Broadway,
Kingfisher, Okla., says: "Kidney
complaint caused me no end of suf-
fering. The passag«-s of the kidney
secretions were Intensely painful
and it was evident that I had in-
animation of the bladder. There
ging across the small of
my back all the time and I
couldn’t
Ion
was a stinj
bai
descrlb
through. One day a friend suggest
ed my trying Doan’s Kidney Pills
and I did. I hadn't used them long
before the backache was gone Tin*
kidney secretions were regulat'd
and my kidneys were fixed up in
■)od Bhape. When I have used
an’s since, I
good results.”
Root
Doa
uive always had
DOAN’S
50c a Box at All Stores.
KIDNEY
PILLS
Foster-Milbum Co., Buffalo, N. Y., Mfg. Chemists
Practical Peace Plans.
"Aren’t you for peace?” asked Mr.
Rafferty.
"I am,” replied Mr. Dolan. "That’s
why I want to get In us soon ns pos-
sible and finish up the fighting."
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 of QUININE and
IKON. It acts on the I.iver, Drives out
Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds
up the Whole System. 50 cents.
A man who is blind to his own inter-
est finds many persons who are anx-
ious to lend him in the other direction.
Limit to Space.
this first force will exceed 700,000
| tivo troops backed by about 250.000
J more in the regimental recruit battal
ions.
200,000 More Officers.
From this force will be found eigh
teen divisions corresponding to the
organization of the first new army.
From it, also, early in September, will
be drawn some 200,000 officers and
noncommissioned officers who will
constitute the framework on which
the now army will be shaped. They
| will bo with the 10,000 officers to be
: selected from the training camps, the
j instructors of the first army and on
their efficiency rests the whole mill-
, , ,, two 8PP-' tary fabric that is to be built
ftrate cavalry divisions, which prob
UIIll8 must nei “Move up in front there, please,"
(r* a 1 10"('er. to till out tactical j shouted the conductor of one of the!
oraniations, and probably the total of
Twelfth Arkansas, Mississippi and
Louisiana.
Thirteenth—Minnesota, Iowa, North
and South Dakota and Nebraska.
Fourteenth Missouri, Kansas and
Colorado
Oklahoma in Fifteenth.
Fifteenth- Oklahoma and Texas
Sixteenth—Montana, Idaho, Wash
ington, Oregon, California, Nevada,
rtah, Wyoming. Arizona and New
Mexico.
in addition there will be
5-to-6 a. m. Illinois street cars.
“Can’t do it; door’s shut," answered
a stentorian voice in that direction.—
Indianapolis News.
ANY CORN LIFTS OUT,
DOESN'T HURT A BIT!
No foolishness! Lift your corns
and calluses off with fingers—
It’s like magic!
up.
Suspicious.
1’oet—The editor 1ms taken six of
my poems. That guy must bo nutty
enough to write poetry himself.
ubly will be situated in the southwest,
near t he Mexican border. Officers for
the cavalry divisions will be trained I
at all the sixteen officers training
camps, which will open within a few I
days with 40,000 prospective officers I
under training.
Each Infantry division will consist of according to a Central News dispatch
! nn f.i 1 I enfritMAm t f.. ...... . t i -
CHILI BREAKS WITH KAISER
One More Nation Added To List of the
Allies.
Ixmdon—The Chilean minister to
Germany has demanded his passports,
DON’T GAMBLE
your heart’s all right,
m., •
pine full regiments of infantry three j from Amsterdam
regiments of field artillery -—* —- ■■
that your heart's all right. Make
sure. Take "Henovlne"—a heart and
nerve tonic. Price 50c and $1.00,—Adv.
Cameo Cutting.
Cameo cutting one of the most an-
tique Ilf o. el t h r> ■ , ■ n 11 > III ell
Introduced Into the United States.
j The 0. & W. Thum Company
CjKAND RAPIDS MICHIGAN
Men and Wercien
"I
lots
Not the Right Kind
have mi option on *01110 town
Women as well as men are niude nilser-
Kilmer’s .Swamp-Root, the mvat kidney
medicine. 1* highly rc« omin- i.'led by thou-
”1 hope* it Isn’t local option.’*
Importantto Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASToRIA, that famous ohl remedy
for iufuuts and children, und see that if
funds
4
r. h t
proved t.» be Ju 1 i • remedy needed ir.
u
cases
At druggiets in 50c and $1.00 sizes* You
g
Swamp Rout !■• I q !’■>-„ *,p,. ,i pam-
y»’i Hi *ut n * dm.’*-, i t
o . Binghamton, N V . and '
enclose ten cent
Hears the
iUgnatur* of
In Cse for Over 30'Years,
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
one regi
ment of cavalry, one regiment of en-
gineers, one division hospital and four
camp infirmaries. The total strength
of the sixteen will be, 15,022 officers
and 439,792 men.
The two cavalry divisions combined
will have 1,214% officers and ,2 062
tii Ming in• • :i inAluding mm ■ • , ,
gineers and horse artillery units, ami
each will have also its divisional hos
pl'al c.n 1 camp fnlirmari' s.
Rllil-
jurv
noli,
<’ol.
i fix-
The dispatch says:
"A message received from Berlin
says the Chilean minister to Germany
has demanded his passports and an-
nounced a rupture of relations be-
tween Chile and Germany. The news
caused the greatest annoyance in po
littcal circles, where efforts were be-
ing made to avoid a break with both
Chile and Argentina, in order to pro
serve some friendships in South
America.
>hlct
telling you i
v I finer Ak ‘.'o . niii^uniuiuii, ,■>. $ , noa 1 t
h, also mention this paper, j Jlir "liter.
I’ussy willow buds soon expand it
brought into the house und put in u
Spanell Gets Five Years.
\
! tv of murder was returned by t!
I in the case of Harry J. S|
charged with the killing of Lieu
M C Sutler, and punishment \\
I ed five years. Spanell was indicted
at Alpine, Texas, for the killing or his
j wife and l.ieutetfant Colonel Butler
on the light of July 20 1916 The
charge of killing his wife. Mrs. Crystal
Holland Spanell, was tried* at San
Angelo ami he# was acquitted. The
lust triaj la. ted two weeks
U S. Flaq W th Mexicai*
Brownsville. Texas. What is eon I
sidored as a ftfrthor*lndicatlon oi itie j
revived friendship for the rnited
States was seen at the “Clnco d • '
Mavo” banquet when American ffags
were used profusedly in the decora '
tion of the banquet room. In one end i
of the room a large American and an 1
equally large Mexican flag were dis- J
played on the wall Beneath the flays j
appeared the.words In Spanish, ' l'nit
ed in Friendship A number of Ameri
ans attended.
Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or
any kind of a corn, can harmlessly be |
lifted right out with the fingers if you
apply upon the corn a few drops of
freezone, says a Cincinnati authority. ;
For little cost one can get a small
bottle of freezone at any drug store,
which will positively rid one’s feet of
every corn or callus without pain.
This simple drug dries the moment
It is applied and does not even irrl- i
tate the surrounding skin while up-
plying It or afterwards.
This announcement will interest
many of our readers. If your druggist
hasn’t any freezone tell him to surely 1
get a small bottle for you from his
wholesale drug h6use.—adv.
It is surprising how Ignorant girls
can be ut times. They should all know
what a kiss means, hut they often In-
i slst on having it repented.
THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH.
You will look ten years younger if you
f • by
r
A lemon will yield almost twice as
COCKROACHES
are easily killed by using
Stearns’Electric Paste
Full direction! in 15 languages
Sold everywhere —25c and $1.00
U.S. Government Buys It
Oklahoma Directory
WHOLESALE HAY,
SEEDS and GRAIN
hR™ Rn larif*
lYjP a9i2nm ”f ALFALFA. Write,
Li p wire or phune uh
f)L, CHEROKEE GRAIN CO
J 6G8 Cr«i* Eick»n*e, OLULona. City
N. S. SHERMAN MACHINE
ANI) IRON WORKS
Engineers, Founders and Machinists
Grate Bars and Smokestacks
18 <0 36 Emi M.in Street Ok laboma Citv. Okie.
Kodak Filins Developed Free!
Prints 3 Cents Each — Any Size
W rite for circular and Ham pies.
Oklahoma film flaiablog C«.. Oklahoma City, Ohio.
MILLIONS IN OIL
Do you want to know aomething of Ok-
lahoma's wonderful oil fields, and the
mllliona quickly msdeln oil InvratmentB?
Write for booklet—it’s fret Whit* Rock Oil
Co..Suita 4012-3 Henkowitx Bldg. .Okla.Lily.Okla.
SUFFERERS !!
i specialist advises this J*
liaii. —. ■■ ■■ — -
SIOMACH
A stomuch i
It h ii liar Imii,
Aqua I*ura -q
Tablespoonful uftcr meals 0 It mskea a
whole pint; Druggists prepare It —Try IU
It should be prepared for fl 00.
Are You Gelling Yours?
$12 MONTHLY PI NSIONS NOW ALI OWED
vod :>0 days defending whit,
le Indians in campaigns bet
Any man who mt
tiers against hostile Indians in campaigns between
1 nI ’ »nd IhvI , • Rg.-d rt'J ..r over, (or I is unmarried
widow) unless n o w drawing a pen-i n should
promptly seen re free particulars and blank forms
for application, (live ftill name, iig.-, u.it >: muster-
mu.li juice if slightly warmed before f PUBLIC INQUIRY BUREAU. Riggs Bldi rON.DC.
Kim -e
granulated Eyelids,
OJ H jQf Kye« inflamed by expo-
lure m Sun, Dml and Wind
a'-', — . tuickly relieved by Murine
B ar I * ^ lyrKrmedy. No Smarting,
just Eye Comfort. At
Druggist! or bv mail 50c per Bottle. Murine
fye Selve in Tubes 25c. For Booh ol (he tye
flit uk Marin# [yc Remedy (#., Chicot!
. .'I'r'fttu.n. UtT»! full nnuii' >: Mills.,t-
■
INQUIRY BUREAU, Rijgs Bids .WASHINGTON, D.C.
-■"ill POTATO PLANTS tte dt-llT-
t*' 'anci Ha 1’orto HH na
* t
1 uoo.
for f
for |
paid 40c per 100.r D
r II H&, Mia-g
r 11.60; 6.1K1G up
_____ ...000
Tomato nlat
id Pepper plants. 600 f 1
»at II 3# per l.oot'. f .» b n
d up at WUI per
6UU lor 7;.<\ 1,000
fl UU; 1.0UI
hero. Post-
rvllle, S. 0.
I UMBER y^wir*1' ,?»'bt»ndsoid if
JL -----------
W. N. U.. Oklahoma City, No. 19-1917.
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Wandell, Clarence F. Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 10, 1917, newspaper, May 10, 1917; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc910773/m1/2/: accessed May 31, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.