The County Democrat. (Tecumseh, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, March 21, 1919 Page: 2 of 8
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THE COUNTY DEMOCRAT, TBCUMSEH. OKLA.
AFTER INFLUENZA-
WINTER COLDS—
BAD BLOOD
You are pale, thin, weak—w;th Httta
vitality. Your liver is slugr:.u and the
bad blood cause* your stomach muscle*
to lose their elasticity and become flab-
by and weak—then indigestion.
Doctor Pierce’* Golden Medical Di*-
eovery, made from wild root* and bark*,
and free from alcohol or narcotic*, is
the great and powerful blood purifier of
to-day. Ingredients printed oo wrapper.
Thi* tonic, in liquid or tablet form, ia
just what you need to give you vim,
vigor and vitality.
Take it as directed and it will search
out impure and poisonous matter
throughout the system and eliminate it
through the natural channel*.
You can procure a trial package by
tending 10 cents to Dr. Pierce’* Invalid**
Hotel. Buffalo, N. Y.
> gtn^iisAcr, OkU.—" 1 have often thought
of sending my statement in regard to tha
•Golden Medical Discovery.’ About nine
ysars ago I had a very bad caae of pneu-
monia; it left me weak and with a hacking
cough Nothing the phyaiciana gave me
seemed to relieve it in the leaat. Finally,
my son came home one day with a bottle
erf Dr Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery.
I commenced taking it and before the
first bottle was used I was to much better;
my cough .was gone and my strength
greatly renewed, and since that time a
bottle of it ia always on our medicine
shelf Sank J. Dunn. R. 2, Box 20.
7th
Oklahoma
Legislature
Rebellion against the admtnlatra- |
j lion broke out In the house of rep-
| resentatlves and at the end of two j
boura of mutiny of administration j
leaders. Interspersed with acrlraonl- I
I ous debate, the bill backed by Cover- J
j nor Robertson, which would have
| given him powc- of designating some j McIntosh,
bank aa the fiscal agency for the state.
| was defeated on final rill call, by a
, vote of 40 to 41.
The bill was defeated In the face
it repeated pleadings by a few ad-
1 ministration supporter* that Governor
i Robertson wanted the bill passed aa
j a companion to the $50,000,000 road
bond proposal and that Its defeat
would be a slap In the face of the
chief executive.
After the result of the roll call had
beeu announced Representative Har-
j per. of LeFlore county, temporary
| speaker of the house, moved that the
house reconsider the vote by which
[the bill was killed and that the mo-
tion lie on the table. This was done.
By tills parlimentary n.aneuver the
house clinched its action and it Is be-
lieved silenced fiscal agency legisla-
tion at this session.
A Mtti* Salary urno.
Tfi* senate voted, 20 to 17, to In-
crease the pay of members to $« a
day up to March 18 by placing an In-
I terpret at Ion upon the constitution to
I the effect that the 60-day limitation
! for a session applies only to days
1 when the legislature was actually in
! session. As a result members of the
I bouse and senate will draw pay for
nine days at 16 a day when they other-
wise would only have received <2
a day.
The Increase will coat the state $5,-
S2S If all of the members accept the
Increase although many senator*, led
by Luther Harrison and J. Elmer
Thomas, announced yesterday that
j they would not accept pay at the new
1 standard
The roll call on the resolution:
Ays*.
Democrats: Board. Cordell, David-
son. Hill, Hogg. Johnson. Knie, Knight,
Rider. Simpson, Smith,
RECORD OF OKLAHOMA TROOPS IN FRANCE
Vaugham, Wallace. Wilson,
Ingraham.
Calf
Enemies
WHITE SCOURS
BLACKLEG
Your Veterinarian can stamp
them out with Cutter’s Anti-Calf
Scour Serum and Cutter’s Germ
Free Blackleg Filtrate and Aggressin,
i, or Cutter’s Blackleg Pills.
Ask Kim about them. If he
hasn't our literature, write to u* for
information on these products.
■ A
The Cutter Laboratory
Berkeley, Cal., or Chicago, III.
**7*« Laboratory That Know, How '*
•w-
SOLDIERS and
TEACHERS
can enter into business without any capi-
tal and can assure themselves a perma-
nent annual income by giving all or part
of their time selling
LIFE INSURANCE
Only men or women of known integrity are
wanted. I have a splendid proposition now
open in your town, and if you want fur-
ther details, write, giving your references
CHAS. W. GUNTER, Stale Agent
Peas Mutual Life lntoraoca Compasy
Colcord Building Oklahoma City, Ohio.
Snyder,
1«.
Republicans: Goloble.
Snerman, Watrous, 4.
Nays.
Democrats: Carpenter, Coyne,
Dearmon, Draughon, Fleming, Hall,
Harrlaon, Kerr, Leach. Pugh, Spur-
lock, Thomas. Tucker, 13.
Republicans; Brown, Clark, Lynch,
Wood*, 4.
Absent.
Democrats: Cartwright. Hensley,
Mayfield, McAlister. Morton, 5.
Republicans: Briggs, Testerman, 2.
Governor Robertson In a message
to the legislature requested the pas
sage of an appropriation of $125,000
for the purchase of 40 acres Just south
of the state house This land is need-
ed. Governor Robertson said, for the
The following record and Insignja
taken from the "8tar» and Stripes."
Thirty-Sixth Division
National Guard of Texas and Okla-
homa. Divisional headquarters ar-
rived In France July St.
1918. Activities: Blanc
Mont sectoai north of
Somme-Py. Oct 6-2* < French
Champagne offensives.
Prisoners captured: 18
officers. 5S1 enlisted men
Guns captured: 9 pieces of
artillery, 204 machine guns. Total
advance on front line, 21 kilometer*.
Insignia: Cobalt blue arrowhead
with a khaki “I" superimposed upon
a khaki diac. The arrowhead repre-
sents Oklahoma and the "T” Texas.
The Thlrthy-ilxth division has been
designated to embark for home In
April. The Ninetieth will probably be
held alx months longer
r
__ carrying out of the original plans for
Representatlve 'paul Nesbitt, chair | ^>ing out and beautifying the capltol
man of the house roa.ls committee. ,
which is piloting the $50,000,000 bond
iiiiimiiiiuiiiBiliBBhiinnimnimiiiiiiwBiiu iuwj
State
News
Notes
Bbiituiiinitinnii iiiimimmniiiiiHHiii! iiiiiimiiimuimn
Roll of Honor
Albert Explains.
“Albert Pennyroyal Jones, tell me this
minute where you are going,” demand-
ed the head of the house.
“Why—er—my dear." explained Al-
bert meekly. “I wt s—or—going to
lodge—”
“A likely story. Indeed. You were go-
ing to do nothing of the kind.”
“Yes, I was about to say that I was
going to lodge—er—a complaint with
your.dressmaker that she was making
your clothes too cheap looking.”
bill, the one big pet administration
measure, and recognized as one of
the towering administration support-
era In the house, opened the attack
j upon the bill He characterized It as
the “most dangerous piece of legis-
lation" that had been offered In the
house and that Its passage would
mean defeat of the road bonds when
they go before the people.
It has been rumored in legislative
circles for several days that If the
fiscal agency bill became a law the
State National Bank in Oklahoma
City would be designated as the
agency and would reap huge sums in
fees in the handling of the proposed
$50,000,000 road bond and that the
supporters of the agency bill were the
chief agitators for the bond Issue.
The house also voted overwhelm-
ingly against reconsideration of the
Pryor bill, said to be in administra-
tion measure, which, if passed, would
| empower the governor to appoint
1 more than 1,000 county officers in OU-
j lahoma In January. 1921.
How a bill, apparently framed In
the interests of the banks of Oklaho-
ma City, can he introduced In the
I house of representatives, referred to
committee, considered and reported
o.:t favorably without the representa-
j tlve, whose name appears as the au-
thor, being consulted and without the
representative even knowing such a
hill had been Introduced Is a legis-
lative puzzle that confronted the
house.
House bill No. 529. appeared on the
calendar as having been Introduced
by Representative Asa E. Walden of
The bill appropriating $91,000 to
complete Improvements around the
capltol and on the grounds was passed
by the house. This, with the funds
already appropriated, will be sufficient
to complete all contemplated Improve-
ments on the building and grounds.
The Craver bill prohibiting trans-
portation of nitroglycerine, dynamite,
and other high explosives on any pub-
lic thoroughfare within a quarter of
a mile of any city was passed by the
house. This bill Is a sequel to the
recent explosion of nitroglycerine at
Blgheart in Osage county, which re-
sulted In the loss of several lives. The
bill Is primarily intended to govern
the transportation of explosives In the
oil fields.
The oil interests of the state won
their first big fight in the legis-
lature w-hen the house by a vote of
52 to 39, exempted gross oil produc-
tion from the proposed constitutional
amendment levying a six to eight mill
tax on all property in the state for
the aid of common schools. This ac-
tion prejudiced many of the friends
of the measure against it, and a short
time later it was defeated on final
roll call, receiving 47 io 38 against.
In the house 5(i votes are necessary
for final passage.
A bill providing increases in salar-
ies for state officials and employes
was advanced to engrossment and
third reading by the senate after neat-
ly three hours of discussion. The
bill has passed the house. Before
dvanclng the bill the senate struct
out all reference to positions in the
corporation commission on motion of
Senator S. L. Johnson. Senator John-
son asked that a special committee
Love county, and proposed certain \ be appointed to draw n special bill on
Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local application* as they cannot reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There la
only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafneaa,
and that Is by a constitutional remedy.
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE act*
through the Blood on the Mucous Surface*
of the System. Catarrhal Deafness Is
caused by sn Inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube.
When this tube Is Inflamed you have a
rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and
when It Is entirely closed, Deafness Is the
result. Unless the Inflammat on can be re-
duced and this tube restored to Its nor-
mal condition, hearing may be destroyed
forever. Many cases of Deafness are
caused by Catarrh, which Is an Inflamed
condition of the Mucous Surfaces.
one HUNDRED DOLLARS for any
ease of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot
be cured by HALL'S CATARRH
MEDICINE.
All Druggists 75c. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio.
Quite So.
Throe little girls were discussing
the clubs their fathers belong to. "My
father belongs to the Mooses,” suld
Mary.
“My dad belongs to the Elks,” said
Luclle.
“My papn must belong to the ele-
phants. He's so fat and big,” re-
marked Lenore.
And mother, who was listening, hud
to leave the room to laugh.
amendments to the law creating the
state official depository. The essence
of the amendments according to in-
terpretations of A. N. Leeeraft, state
treasurer, was to pave the way for
clearing banks In Oklahoma City to
pay only 2 per cent on deposits of
state money, while banks in other
parts of the state would be required
to pay 3 per cent.
The bill was introduced (luring
Walden’s absence from the house
the corporation commission, following
! an investigation. The committee on
fees end salaries was Instructed to do
| this work.
I Eyes of new-born babes must he
protected by a treatment of nitrate
! of silver solution by a bill which
! passed the senate. This is the law
now In several states and Is said to
j have resulted in a great decrease In
I cases of blindness at birth.
I The senate passed finally the house
about a week or ten days ago. Where 1 resolution providing tha* oil com-
1s came from, who wrote it or had it Paries In paying gross production tax
introduced was not disclosed when ; on oil shall figure the tax on the has-
Walden disclaimed any connection.
The bill was promptly killed.
The senate passed Senate bill No.
43 by Hill of McAlester. as amended
i by the house, one of the strongest of
' the so-called venereal disease bills
| submitted to the legislature. The
measure has been passed by the
j house and now Is ready for t»he gov-
I ernor'8 signature.
| The bill makes venereal diseases
reportable and makes it mandatory
is of the posted price and the prem-
ium they receive.
! STATEH9USE BREVITIES^]
C. L. Edmonson, former senator,
has resigned from the board of agri-
culture to become superintendent of
livestock for the board.
Congressman W. W. Hatsings, in
company with a number of other
under penalty of law. for a person | members of congress has sailed on
having a venereal disease to place ,he s s "Leviathan” for a tour of
himself under the care of a physician. Europe. Congressman Jim McClintic
It is made a crime for any person so , ]lag definitely decided to make a trip
to Europe in the near future.
RECIFE FOR GRAY HAIR.
To half p'nt of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum,
s small box of Harbo Compound, and %
oz. of glycerine. Any druggist can put this
up or you can mix it at home at very lit-
tle cost. Full directions for making and
use come in each box of Barbo Compound.
It will gradually darken streaked, faded
gray hair, and make it soft and glossy. It
will not color the scalp, is not sticky or
greasy, and does not rub off.—Adv.
Nothing worries n chronic kicker
like the refusal of things to go wrong.
m/ A Wholes#**, Cleansing,
|Jr fOl S E 3* Refreshing and Heatlsg
® (.•(iso—Murine for Red-
ness, Soreness, Granula
. tion,Itchineand Burning
of the Eyes or Eyelids;
“7 Drops” After the Mo-.ies. Motoring o- Golt
will win your confidence. Ask Hoar Druzmat
tot Murine when your Eye* Need Care. M J
Matins Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
Eyes:
afflicted to co-habit with another un-
1 til given a permit to oo so by his
physician.
All patent medicines for the treat-
! ment of venereal diseases are placed
umfer ban by the bill, since only phy
I siclans may prescribe treatment.
I This feature will cost thousands of
! dollars to druggists, it is said.
The board of health is given power
I for administration of the law.
The session will probably last til!
; the end of March.
The Hodges bill, amending the
nine-hour labor law for women so a*
j to apply to towns and cities of a pop-
ulation of 2.000 or more was passed
J finally by the house. At present the
law Is applicable only to women er.-
I gaged In certain lines of work in
‘ cilies having a population of 5.000 or
| more as shown by the last federal
; census. Another amendment makes
Former S. A. T. C. mess halls have
been moved from the university of
Oklahoma campus to the Arbuckle
mountains near ltayborn switch, and
are being converted into a permanent
camp for geology students who visit
the mountains twice each year. The
camp will be completed before the
spring trip of the geologists, sched-
uled for the first week in May, accord
ing to W. T. Lee, professor of geol-
ogy.
The disbursement of $1,276,675 fof
March payment to the Osage Indians
was started at the Osage agency at
Pawhuska last week, the amount bo
Ing $572.50 to each man, woman and
child on the tribat rolls. This is thu
first of the regular quarterly pay-
ments made every year and is made
up of oil and gas royalties and inter
est on Osage funds in the national
i the law applicable to women employ- i treasury. Another payment, known
ed in places immediately adjacent to | as the honus payment, is expected
• rho corporate limits of a city, even 1 later In this month or early in April,
though not actually within the city j the bonns money is acquired bv the
limit*. ^sale of leases on trlbsl lands
Died of Disease.
Pergt. Glen R. Martin. Sayre.
! Tot pi. Jas. C. Langford. Muldrow.
Wagoner Frank P Wind, Hydro.
! flare \V. Biggs. ChlokaRha.
Grear C. Delk, Stigler.
lohnnie Cubit. Harris.
Died From Wounds.
Bergt. Alvin Ross Kltchell. Ada.
Died of Accident.
Sergt. Albert W. Ingram. Oklahoma City.
Wounded In Action.
Lieut. Vernon W. Akins. Lamont.
Corpt. Geo Washington t.ee. Wilson.
Corpl. Laev V. Cook. Oklahoma City.
Corpl. Charles Smith. Wagoner.
Corpl. OUT Cain. Kremlin.
Thomas B. Baker. Hobart.
Raymond L, Carter. Spern.
Jess Morris. Cement.
Edward K. Wilson. Fort Towson.
Luther Lyles, Fox.
Wm. A. Moore. Altus.
Ira M. Sharne. Stroud
Arthur W. Babcock. Collinsville.
Alfred T. Corley. Hominy.
Awarded Distinguished Service Cross.
Alfred G. Bailey, Hulbert.
Nearly 5.000,000 cigars were manu-
factured in Oklahoma during 1918.
Durant will build a new high
school building costing $120,000 dol-
lars this spring.
The Pawhuska school board will
ask the voters this spring to author-
ize a bond issue of $115,000 for the
erection of a new high school.
Rev. G. J. Rousseau, an army chap-
ling now in France, has been called
as pastor of the First Baptist church
at Norman and will take charge of
the work May 1.
Petitions asking for the recall of
Mayor R. L. Carroll, of Miami, which
were filed recently with J. M. Buckley,
acting commissioner of finance and
accounts, have been denied.
Ardmore is in the midst of a hydro-
phobia scare. A horse and a mule,
each valued at $250 have died from
rabies due to dog bites. Another
mule is suffering from hydrophobia.
A development wave has begun to
spread over the Miami mining field
and it is believed that In a few weeks
the district will be practically as live-
ly as ever. The price of lead has
reached *63 giving great hopes that
jack may follow.
A bill authorizing the contest and
cancellation of homestead entries
formerly within the Kiowa. Comanche
and Apache Indian reservations in
Oklahoma, was passed congress. The
land, which aggregates 500,000 aere3.
wasopened to sale in 1906, but the
first settlers abandoned their tracts
because of drouth ten years ago, and
since then others have moved on the
property and improved it. The bill
permits these occupants to institute
a contest proceeding against the
abandoned entry, secure its cancella-
tion and buy the land from the gov-
ernment.
John E. Spangler, former cashier of
a Bartlesville national bank, was sen-
tenced to five years In prison in fed-
eral court at Muskogee. He had plead-
ed guilty of embezzling funds of the
bank. Spangler was arrested in New
York and brought back to Oklahoma.
Rebate in the sum of $14,339.25 is
due the citizens of Lawton from the
Comanche Light and Power Company,
according to the state corporation com-
mission. The rebate covers over-
charges from September, 1916, to
April, 1918.
Rev. T. M. Hartman, former pastor
of the Presbyterian church at Tahle-
quah and more recently connected
with the northeastern state normal as
a professor in the department of Eng-
lish, has removed to Pauls Valley,
where he will again take up pastoral
duties.
C. A. Hill, 50 years old. farmer liv-
ing east of Checotah. was almost cut
to pieces last week following a quar-
rel with Dave Leader, his son-ln-law.
Hill’s jugular vein was severed He
was slashed about the neck and breast
and both legs were cut to the bone.
The cutting was done with a pocket
knife. Lender was arrested by Dep-
uty Sheriff Noble and placed In the
county jail at Eufaula. Leader would
make no statement other than Hill
would not re him go to the Hill home
to se4 his wire. Leader went to Hill’s
place and the cutting followed.
of Oklahoma divisions in the wsr sr*
soldier paper, published In Parts:
Ninetieth Division.
National Army of Texas aud Okla-
homa. Divisional headquarters sr-
hmhm n France
June 22. 1918
Activities: Ssier
ajn-Haye Puvenelle
sector Aug
V PI B 10. St Mthlel oper
^atlon, September,
1915; demonstra-
tion at beginning of Argonne-Meusa
offensive, Sept. 28; Argonne-Meuee
offensive, Oct. 19 Nov. 11
Prisoners captured: *2 officers,
1,844 enlisted men. Guns captured:
42 pieces of artillery, 220 machine
guns. Total advance on front line:
28V4 kilometers.
Insignia: Red monogram “TO”
standing for Texss-Oklahom*.
Fir* destroyed an entire block 'ol
buildings In the center of Avant.
Elementary flying will be taught at
the new Oklahoma Military Institute
at Claremore.
The Kiowa county commissioners
have recently let contracts for new
bridges aggregating $48,000.
The postal esnsus Just completed of
Tulsa city and county gives the popu-
lation of Tulsa city 67,728 and Tulsa
county 95.366.
Plans and specifications for the pav-
ing of approximately forty blocks of
city streets have been approved by
the Miami city commission.
Ray Humphries of Tonkawa, who
has been interned at Constantinople,
Turkey, for nineteen months, as a
member of the crew of the U. 8. 8.
Scorpion, has arrived home after be-
ing released by the Turks.
Falling in an attempt to stop his
three children as they were running to
notify neighbors that their mother had
been killed, Tom Perry, a farmer liv-
ing five miles northwest of Jennings,
placed the muzzle of his shotgun
against his chin and pulled the trig-
ger.
William Toothaker, Osage county
ranchman who was charged with the
murder of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bald-
win, tenants on one of his farms, with
whose daughter he is involved in a
Mann Act case, was found guilty of
manslaughter in the district court at
Pawhuska. The jury fixed his penalty
at thirty years in the state peniten-
tiary.
The Ninetieth division, composed ol
Oklahoma and Texas drafted troops,
and the Thirty-sixth division, com
posed of national guardsmen from the
two states, will parade In Oklahoma
City previous to their demobilization
and enroute to their demobilization
camp, as soon as they are returned
from overseas if the city and army
can make arrangements for the
pageant.
J GIRLS! LOTS OF
BEAUTIFUL HAIR
A small bottle of MDanderine”
makes hair thick, glossy
and wavy.
Removes all dandruff, stops itch,
ing scalp and falling
hair.
STATEHOUSE BREVITIES
Ed Billings, sentenced to ten years
Imprisonment from Creek county for
highway robbery, was paroled by Gov-
ernor Robertson. Billings is only
nineteen years old. He ^ias served
two years of his term.
Governor Robertson appointed Jesse
Barber of Muskogee chairman of the
state election board succeeding Erett
Dunlap of Ardmore who resigned sev-
eral days ago. Barber has been en-
gaged in the oil business at Muskogee.
Jim Wilkins, a negro sentenced to
life imprisonment in the penitentiary
on a charge of murder after he had
refused to accept a five-year sentence
I on a plea of guilty, was pardoned by
j Governor Robertson. Wilkins was ac-
cused of murder in Comanche county
in 1906. The county attorney and
judge offered him a five-year sentence
to enter a plea of guilty. He refused
and when tried in the territorial dis-
trict court was sentenced to death.
Governor Haskell comuted the sen
tence to life imprisonment and now
Robertson has freed him.
C. B. Shaffer, wealthy oii operatoi
and capitalist of Chicago, lost his
long and spectacular light in the
courts to prevent payment of the
state Income tax on the fortune yield
ed by his property In Oklahoma when
the ^supreme court of the United
States at Washington, dismissed Shaf-
fer's appeal from the decision of the
three United States district judges
which upheld the right of the state to
tax incomes on property within the
state which is owned by non-residents.
The amount involved in the Shaffer
case is but $76,000, being the state in-
come tax for one year on $4,000,000
which Shaffer obtained from his oil
properties in Oklahoma. Its impor-
tance lies in the precedent it estab-
lishes by paving the way tor the col-
lection of not less than $2,000,000 due
tha state on the vast incomes on
property in Oklahoma which is owned
by residents of other states, accord-
ing to the attorney general.
Gas rates will not be raised in Okla-
homa City on account of the connec-
tion with the Cement field, Art L.
Walker, corporation commissioner, an-
nounced following the close of a hear-
ing on the capacity of the Cement
field. The hearing involving the clos-
ing of the only producing gas well in
the Cement field, which according to
testimony of experts of the commis-
sion and the Oklahoma Natural Gas
company now has a capacity of only
3.000.000 cubic feet a day. Tne com-
mission finished taking testimony
and took the case under advisement
To be possessed of a head of Heavy,
beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, fluffy,
wavy and free from dandruff is merely
! a matter of using o little Dunderine.
1 It is easy and inexpensive to have-
nice, soft hair and lots of it. Just get a
small bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine
now—it costs but a few cents—all drug
stores recommend it—apply a little as
directed and within ten minutes there
will be an appearance of abundance,
freshness, flufflness and an Incompara-
ble gloss and lustre, and try ns you
will you cannot find a trace of dandruff
or falling hair; but your real surprise
will be after about two weeks’ use,
when you will see new hair—fine and
| downy at first—yes—but really new
hair—sprouting out nil over your scalp
! —Danderine is, we believe, the only
sure hair grower, destroyer of dan-
druff and cure for Itchy scalp, and it
never falls to stop falling hair at once.
If you want to prove how pretty and
■oft your hair really is, moisten a cloth
with a little Dunderine and carefully
draw It through your hair—taking one
smull strand at a time. Your hair will
be soft, glossy and beautiful In just
■ few moments—a delightful surprise
awaits everyone who tries this. Adv.
The Wise Chief.
Reporter—“What started the blaze,
chief?” Fire Chief (in a whisper)—
I “Spontaneous Insurance.”
UPSET STOMACH
PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN AT ONCE END*
SOURNESS, GASES, ACIDITY,
INDIGESTION.
Undigested food I Lumps of pain ;
belching gas, acids and sourness. When
your stomach Is all upset, here Is In-
stunt relief—No waiting!
The moment you eat a tablet of
Pape’s Dlapepsln all the indigestion
pain, dyspepsia misery, the sourness,
gases and stomach acidity ends.
Pape’s Dlapepsln tablets cost little
at any drug store hut there Is no surer
or quicker stomach relief known. Adv,
Natural Procedure.
“What do you think of that new
gas scheme?" “Oh, everybody Is mak-
ing light of It.”
The Cuticura Toilet Trio
Having cleared your skin keep it clear
by making Cuticura your every-day
toilet preparations. The soap to cleanse
and purify, the Ointment to soothe and
heal, the Talcum to powder and per-
fume. No toilet table Is complete
without them. 20c everywhere.—Adv,
Yes, Itnfuln, it Is far easier to let
hair grow long than it is to write
poetry.
WH»n R*»F*v U Tpfthlne
GSOm BABY BOW HI; MHHICIN* Will OOlTMl
th*» Stomach and Bowel troubles. Perfectly barm*
lees. See directions on tbe bottle.
A man carries domestic economy to
extremes when lie stops the clock at
night to save time.
Keep your liver «etlve, your bowels ele«n by
takluc Dr. P>ere*’*s Pleasant Pellets and you’ll
keep ueallby, wealthy aud wise. Adv.
Many a mnn works overtime trying
tr> convince himself that he is honest.
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Henderson, L. P. The County Democrat. (Tecumseh, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, March 21, 1919, newspaper, March 21, 1919; Tecumseh, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1075837/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.