Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1924 Page: 2 of 8
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CIMARRON VALLEY CLIPPER
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
M
indigestion/,
' wcwaJ'
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
ELL-ANS
254 AND 75<t PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
ECZEMA
After Others Fail
PETERSON’S OINTMENT
Big Box 35 Cents
The mighty healing power of Peter-
son's Ointment when eczema or terrible
itching of skin and sculp tortures you
Is known to tens of thousands of peo-
ple the country over.'
For pimples, acne, rough and red
skin, ulcers, old sores, piles and all
blemishes and eruptions It Is supreme-
ly efficient, as any broad-minded drug-
gist will tell you.
No Account
Generally
Airs. I’. 1>. Nelson of Lake diaries,
La., writes, “It was a long lime be-
fore we found out what was the mat-
ter. I wanted to sleep all the time,
suffered with my eyes, backache and
headache. Had no energy and was
no account generally.
"Doctor examined me and said I had
Rright’s Disease, but could do me no
good. 1 took Iloho Kidney and Blad-
der Remedy and was healed.”
The IIoho Medicine Company, P.onn-
mont, Texas, guarantees a treatment
of six bottles to give entire satisfac-
tion or they will refund the $(1.00.
Price $1.20 per bottle or six bottles
for $0.00.
For sale by all druggists.
Shorter Hours for Women
The old saying that “man works
from sun to sun, but a woman’s work
Is never done" ts belled h.v the figures
of the national bureafa of economic re
search, which shows that the hired girl
on the farm*workingJ)y the week puts
In from one to five hours less per week
than does the hired man working by
the month. Also the female employed
by the day works about one sixth less
time than the male day worker
Lift Off-No Pain!
Doesn’t hurt one bit ! Drop a little
“Freezone” on an aching corn, instant-
ly that corn stops hurting, then short-
ly you lift it right off with lingers.
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
■Freezone” for a few cents, sutlieient to
remove every hard corn, soft corn, or
corn between ttie toes, and the foot
calluses, without soreness or Irritation.
TONIGHT
Tomorrow Alright
m ■ - - - -fr, --I-I
KEEPING WELL-An tfl Tablet
(a vegetablo aperient) taken at
eight will tielp keep you well, by
toning and strengthening your di-
gestiuu and elimination. m
Usedfor ovtrr
io
OVears
Oet I
25*B0X
Chips off 4!ie Old Block
N? juNions-utti# Nt»
On.-third th« regular dose. Made
of the Sam. ingr.dl.nt*, then candy
coetecl. For children end odulte.
M(OLD DV YOUR DRUGGIST*
OUR COMIC SECTION
0
Off the Concrete
CAfJT YOU UNDERSTAND
tf i dacr doujn thebe i'lu
STICK- IN ^ (W0RsE
Than deTcRE. - can/t you
wimp nUr-Q * h i CATCH YA
Copyright, W. N. U ,
.DEAR,
^ riOUU UlILL UKER.
get out of ■This
V"
This Strip Is All Business
PRETTY
SHADY
He: I’d let
you know I cart
trace my family
tree back a good
many centuries.
She: Is it a
shade tree?
VERY
MUSICAL
Mrs. Mouse:
It certainly does
Improve one’s
musical taste to
live In a ukulele.
Engineer a Good Risk
In spite of the ri9ks Incident to
their occupation, life Insurance statis-
tics show that locomotive engineers
live Just ns long as the average man.
The death rate from accident lias de-
creased very greatly In recent years,
nnd (lie engineers have nlso shared In
the general reduction In the death
rates from Infectious diseases. Be-
tween the ages thirty-one and fifty
five there has been a decline In the
engineers’ death rate of from 32 to 4-1
per cent. Fatal accidents In 1H22
were at the rate of 107 per 100,000, ns
against 318 per 100,000 In 1012. So the
expectation of life of a locomotive en
glneer at the age of twenty-eight Is
calculated as forty-one years. Aside
from chances of accident, ’running a
locomotive seems to he a healthful oc-
cupation.
Camels Trace Parentage
Camels enjoy the distinction ,,f |ie_
Ing the only‘domestic animals that
cannot trace their parentage to uny
■pedes existing In a wild stale.
Women ttrst appeared on the stage
In the latter part of the Seventeenth
century.
GREAT EX-
PECTATIONS.
Great thing!
are expected
from him
So?
Y'ea Any
number of men
expect that
some day he
will pay back
the money he
has borrowed.
TOOK HIM UP.
Man of Busi-
ness — I can
spare you l\\e
minutes, but you
know, my time
Is money. •
Gentleman of
Leisure—I shall
be happy to
take It In that
form, sir.
WR1GLEYS
After Every Meal *
It’s the longest-lasting
confection you can buy
—and It's a help to di-
gestion and a cleanser
for the mouth
and teeth.
Wrigley’s means
benefit as well aa
pleasure.
KEEP YOUR SCALP
Clean and Healthy
WITH CUTICURA
fiend
amlm
ost .
u rod W
Booklet FIUCU. Patent Lawyer.
PATENTS S-S
drawing for ex-
eat references
ta. Promptness as-
Vat hum F. Colenma
644 6 8t , Washington, D. 0
Green’s August Flower
The remedy with a record of fifty-seven
years of surpassing excellence. All who
suffer with nervous dyspepsia, sour stom-
ach. constipation, indigestion, torpid liver,
dizziness, headsches, ccming-up of food,
wind on stomach, palpitation and other
indications of digestive disorder, will find
Green's August Flower an effective
and efficient remedy.For fifty-sevenyears
this medicine has been successfully used
in millions of households ail overthe civil-
ized world. Because of its merit and pop-
ularity Green's August Flower can be
found today wherever medicines are sold.
30 and 90 cent bottles.
Enmities start from carelessness In
“not speaking," but there Is no sense
In such a start.
MOTHER!
Clean Child’s Bowels with
• “California Fig Syrup"
Flurry Mother! Even constipated
bilious, feverish, or sick, colic Dablel
and Children love to take genuine “Cul
Ifornin Fig Syrup."* No other inxatlvt
regulates the tender little bowels sc
nicely. It sweetens the stomach and
sturts the liver and bowels without
griping. Contains no narcotics or sooth
ing drugs. Say “California” to youi
druggist and avoid counterfeits. Insist
upon genuine “California Fig Syrup'
which contains directions.
Heredity
“Why do you do so much darning
daughter?"
“Runs In the family."
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 15-1924
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Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1924, newspaper, April 10, 1924; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc911853/m1/2/: accessed May 31, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.