Okeene Democrat (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1918 Page: 4 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE OKEENE DEMOCRAT
ALMOST BUND
FROM DIZZINESS
This Virginia Lady Tells of Con-
stant Suffering From Dreadful
Backaches, Permanently
Believed by Cardui.
1 Norton, Vn.—Mrs. E. S. Clouse, of
■ds place, writes: “In about 1901 I
seemed to get In bad health, I had been
■Barried about a year ... I called In
JDr.-, of-, who treated me . . .
fend gave me medicine, which didn’t
do me any good. I suffered agony
•or about 4 months and felt 1 must
lave some relief, for I was so bad
off that I wus really unable to be up
put of bed during all that time.
f*I could hardly walk, every step was
gainful and a drag. I would be al-
most blind from dizziness. I’d have
dreadful backaches that never censed,
•nd severe pains ... I read of Cardui
In the Birthday Almanac and friends
wrged me to take it... I used one bot-
tle with such beneficial results that I
gained hope of recovery. After the
«se of 2 or 3 bottles, I felt so much
letter that I was able to get up and
go about my work. My Improvement
was steady and after about the 3rd
or 4th bottle, I was entirely cured
and the cure has been permanent . . .
For the past seven years I have had
perfect health and my work has been
a pleasure.”
Try Cardui, the woman’s tonic, for
your troubles. It is safe reliable and
ef proven merit. All druggists.—Adv,
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
SWSdOl
Lesson
(By E. O. SELLERS. Acting Director of
the Sunday School Course of the Moody
Bible Institute, Chicago.)
(Copyright, 1618, Western Newspaper Union. >
LESSON FOR APRIL 7.
i;
Naturally.
“Can you tell me on what line*
•ruins of thought run?”
“Certainly; on head lines."
THE COMPLEXION
ANY WOMAN CAN MAKE UP THIS
CREAMY BEAUTY LOTION
FOR A FEW CENTS.
The Juice of two fresh lemons strain-
ad into a bottle containing three ounces
•f orchard white makes a whole quar-
ter pint of the most remarkable lemon
•kin beautifier at about the cost one
must pay for a small jar of the ordl- 1
■ury cold creams. Care should be tak- 1
«n to strain the lemon juice through a
fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, I
then this lotion will keep fresh for '
months. Every woman knows that
lemon juice Is used to bleach a dark-
ened skin and remove such blemishes
as freckles, sallowuess and tan and Is
the Ideal skin softener, whltener and
Reautifler.
Just try it I Get three ounces of
•rchard white at any drug store and
♦wo lemons from the grocer and make
wp a quarter pint of tills sweetly fra-
grant lemon lotion and massage It dally
Into the face, neck, arms and hands.—
Adv. --
Proverbial Wisdom.
"Who breaks, pays."
“That shows you don’t know any-
thing about being broke.”
80SCHEE’S GERMAN SYRUP
Why use ordinary cough remedies,
when Roschee’s German Syrup 1ms
teen used so successfully for fifty-one
years in all parts of the United
States for coughs, bronchitis, colds
settled in the throat, especially lung
troubles. It gives the patient a good
eight’s rest, free from coughing, with
easy expectoration In the morning,
gives nature a chance to soothe the
fciflamed parts, throw off the disease,
helping the patient to regain his
ioulth. Made in America and sold for
more than half a century.—Adv.
The Brute.
She—“What would you do if you
were In my shoes?" He—“Get a pair
about four sizes larger."
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOltlA, that famous old remedy
tor infants and children, und see that it
Bears the
Aignature oft
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Crv for Fletcher’s Castoria
Too often miss the best fishing when
you move from one stream to another.
Bon't be a mover.
WOMAN'S CROWNING GLORY
R her hair. If yours is streaked with
■glj. grizzly, gray hairs, use “La Cre-
•Je" Hair Dressing and change It In
fie natural way. Price f 1.00.—Adv.
Women who laugh all the time in
Rubiic nag all the time at home.
JESUS SETS MEN FREE.
LESSON TEXT-Mark 7:1-37.
GOLDEN TEXT—If the son therefore
•hall make you free, ye shall be free In-
deed.—John 8:36.
DEVOTIONAL READING-Psa. 72:1-17.
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL . FOR
TEACHERS-Matt. 15:1-31; II Cor. 3:17, 18;
Gal. 6:1-26.
PRIMARY AND JUNIOR TOPIC-Je-
gus and the deaf man.
MEMORY VERSE-He hath done all
things well, he maketh even the deaf tc
hear and the dumb to speak.—Mark 7:37.
SENIOR AND ADULT TOPIC-Chris-
tlan liberty.
This lesson deals with the last of
those four events which mark the
crisis In the life of our Lord at Caper-
naum. It occurred Just before the third
period of his Galielean ministry and
the time of Ills final departure for Jeru-
salem. We have seen what the atti-
tude of Jesus was toward the law of
his nation. In this lesson we see his
attitude toward the rabbinical tradi-
tions of the people which were the
opinions of men and not the law of
God. Just so many today look upon
the forms and ceremonies of the
church as being verily the law of God.
Moreover, these traditions were made
a pretext whereby men evaded the
law. So today we find men very relig-
ious aud punctilious In their churchly
duties, who fall miserably In their ap-
plication of the moral code to conduct.
The analysis falls Into four general
divisions: One, the accusation, (vv.
1-5.; two, the answer, (vv. 6-13); three,
the application, (vv. 14-23)., and four,
the Illustration, (vv. 24-37).
I. The Accusation, (vv. 1-5). The
growing hatred of the Pharisees, led
them to make long journeys from Jeru-
salem that they might spy on Jesus
and find a pretext for accusation.
While they were studying him, they re-
vealed their Ideas of the kingdom ol
God. They took special notice that
the disciples of Jesus ate without
washing their hands. We must not un-
derstand this to mean so much the re-
moval of defilement, as the neglect of
a ceremonial observance over which
the Pharisees were pquctillous, (vv. 3,
4). Verses three and four Illuminate
certain traditions to which the Jews
adhered tenaciously. Thus exempli-
fied we can see that their Ideas of
man's relation to God were largely a
matter of external ceremony. Purity
to them was an outward matter largely
governed by the traditions of men, (v.
4).
II. The Answer (v. 6-13). The an-
swer of Jesus reveals the very oppo-
site Ideal. He begins by calling the
Pharisees hypocrites. A hypocrite Is a |
play actor—one who hides behind a
mask. Applying the prophecy of j
Isaiah, Jesus plainly tells the Pharisees i
that they are hiding their true charac-
ter behind the mask of ceremonial
cleansing. Such play acting Is but a
poor Imitation of the real heart con-
dition demanded of God, (Psa. 51:10).
Their hearts were far from God, even
though with their lips they professed
to serve him. The love we express to
God consists not In ritualistic worship,
but In doing his will from the heart. |
III. The Application, (v. 14-23).1
Jesus takes advantage of this discus-!
slon, and, turning to the multitude, up-'
on whom the Pharisees would bind a
grievous burden of ceremonialism and
falsehood (Matt. 23:4), warns them
that it is not so much that which en- 1
ters into a man that defiles him, as
that which issues from him (v. 15). It
seems quite natural that in their per- ,
plexlty the disciples should ask Jesus
what he meant by that. In his reply
(vv. 1S-23), Jesus shows very clearly 1
that “the Issues of life” (Prov. 4:23),
reveal the corruption which is within, i
(See Matt. 12:34, 35; Gen. 6:5; James
8:10-12). If the heart be not cleansed,
what will it avail if we wash the
hands? What then is the application
for this present day? Clearly we are
taught the danger of Up service with-
out a change of heart. Substituting
good for the best is sin. Forms and
ceremonies are good and have their
place; they are significant for they are
Important teaching factors; but they
must not he substituted for a pure
heart. We must beware lest we hide
behind such a mask.
There is here also plain teaching as
to Jesus’ estimate of the Pentateuch
and lnferentlally of the prophecy of
Isaiah. He specifically calls it “the
Word of God." Surely we can accept I
his estimate as contrasted with the !
tradition of the elders or the “con-
sensus of modern thoughL”
Less talk and more walk,
l^ess wish in* and more doing.
Less preaching and more practicing.
Less organization and more of the spirit.
DANGEROUS CALOMEL
IS SELDOM SOLD NOW
Calomel Salivates! It Makes You Sick and You Lose a Day's Work—Dodson’s
Liver Tone Acts Better Than Calomel and Is Harmless for -
Men, Women, Children—Read Guarantee!
Every druggist here, yes! your druggist and
everybody’s druggist has noticed a great falling-
off in the sale of calomel. They all give the
same reason. Dodson’s Liver Tone is taking its
place.
“Calomel is dangerous and people know it, while
Dodson’s Liver Tone is safe and gives better re-
sults,” said a prominent local druggist. Dodson’s
Liver Tone is personally guaranteed by every
druggist. A large family-sized bottle costs but a
few cents and if you find it doesn’t take the place
of dangerous, salivating calomel you have only to
ask for your money back.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is a pleasant-tasting, pure-
ly vegetable remedy, harmless to both children
and adults. Take a spoonful at night and wake up
feeling fine, no sick headache, biliousness, ague,
sour stomach or clogged bowels. Dodson’s Liver
Tone doesn’t gripe or cause inconvenience all next
day like calomel.
Take a dose of calomel tonight and tomorrow
you will feel sick, weak and nauseated. Don’t
lose a day’s work!
Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver medicine.
You’ll know it next morning because you will
wake up with your head clear, your liver active,
bowels clean, breath sweet and stomach regulated.
You will feel cheerful and full of vigor and ready
for a hard day’s work.
You can eat anything afterwards without risk
of salivating yourself or your children.
Get a bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone and try it
on my guarantee. You’ll never again put a dose of
nasty, dangerous calomel into your stomach.—Adv.
A man boasts of his bad habits only
when they are the best he has.
DEATH LURK8 IN A WEAK HEART,
bo on first symptoms use “Renovine”
and be cured. Delay and pay the awful
penalty. “Renovine” Is the heart’s
remedy. Price $1.00 and 50c.—Adv.
Too many men pray for the things
they are too lazy to work for.
To keep clean and healthy take Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They regu-
late liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv.
To the traveler the best guide Is a
checkbook.
Keep Yourself Fit
You can’t afford to be laid up with
ling kidn
ces. Son
ney troubles; almost any work
up w
sore, aching kidneys in these days of
Some occupations bring
Iped
high prices,
kidney troi
makes weak kidneys worse. If you feel
tired all the time, and suffer with lame
back, sharp pains, dizzy spells, head-
aches and disordered kidney action, use
Doan’s Kidney Pills. It may save an
attack of rheumatism, dropsy, or
Bright’s disease. Doan’s have hel
thousands back to health.
An Oklahoma Case
Otto Besse, city fire-
man, 306 N. Third St., t
McAlester, Okla., says: i
“I have used Doan's <
Kidney Pills off and on
for years and they have
always corrected any
attack of kidney disor-
der I have had, and
have put my kidneys In
good shape. At one time
I had a dull heavy pain
and soreness In my back
that wore me out. My
kidneys acted too freely,!
especially at n i g h t i?
Doan's Kidney Pllls^
have proved so good for this trouble
that I always recommend them to
anyone bothered that way."
Get Dota’i at Any Store, 60c a Box
DOAN’S "JfAV
FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y.
TOOK LAURELS AS SPRINTER
According to His Own Account, This
Man’s Record Makes All Runners
Take Back Seat.
Speaking at a dinner, Senator
Thomas J. Walsh of Montana re-
marked that bravery Is often more
beautiful in theory than practice, and
told the following story as an illustra-
tion:
One evening a party named Smith
rushed Into a cigar store in his home
town, and, In response to a question
as to what made him look so wild-eyed
and excited, he said he had been held
up by footpads.
“I was coming through that deep,
dark woods down by Johnson’s farm,”
he continued, “when I saw the dusky
forms of two men stealthily crawling
through the underbrush toward me.
One of them had a pistol in his hand
and the other—”
“Gee whiz, man!” Interrupted one
of the cigar-store crowd. “What did
you do?”
"What did I do?” responded Smith
with some emphasis. “Why, I did
three miles In just about four min-
utes.” — Philadelphia Evening Tele-
graph.
The Brawls' Criticism.
Mrs. Brawl—Oh, you—worm!
Mr. Brawl—Oh, you early bird I—
London Answers.
How’s This ?
We offer $100.00 for any case of catarrh
that cannot be cured by HALL’S
CATARRH MEDICINE.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is tak.
en Internally and acts through the Blood
on the Mucous Surfaces of the System.
Sold by druggists for over forty years.
Price 75c. Testimonials free.
F. J. Cheney & Co, Toledo, Ohio.
All the Amount.
“Well, Hardupp, did you raise any.
thing on your promise to pay?”
“Sure; I raised a smile.”
Adruco Barbed Wire
Liniment
heals without
a scar.—Adv.
He who goes in for taking things
easy will be most sure to come out
getting It pretty hard.
%ITCH!
Hunt’s Salve, formerly called
Hunt's Cure Is especially com-
pounded for tbe treatment of
Itch, Eczema, Ring worm, and
Tetter, and Is sold by the drug-
gist on the strict guarantee that
the purchase price, 75c, will be
promptly refunded to any dissat-
isfied customer. Try Hunt'sSalvfl
at our risk. Your local druggist,
or direct by mail from
A. B. Richards Medicine Co., Sherman, Ta
Cuticura Soap
Is Ideal
For the Hands
“You May Have Seen This.”
The woman was so elderly the pas-
sengers concluded the child she carried
must be her grandchild. Anyhow, she
was elderly enough that without her
burden, she should have been entitled
to a seat In the car. But the seats
were already taken, mostly by women.
It happened that the strap the old
woman elected to cling to hung di-
rectly over the head of a young man in
olive drab, busily engaged in conversa-
tion with a young woman. Block after
block the car ambled on. and from time
to time the old woman shifted the child
to the other arm and clung to the
strap with the other hand. Block after
block, and still the soldier sat “At
this point,” says our gentlemanly in- ,
formant, “we arrived at my corner,
and then the old lady got a seat.”—
Kansas City Stur.
PREVENT ABORTION IN COWS!
If any of your cows, heifers or tbs
herd sire hE-e an unnatural dis-
charge wash them ont with
Dr. David Roberts' Antisepto
•nd Flushing Outfit, Mss $1 Back
Thousands or dollars and many
calves can he saved by this simple
preventive.
Read the Practical Homs Vstateirits
Bred for hw ktrtM aa Akortiaa la Cows
_ If no dealer In yonr town, write
tr. DarM Rakarts' VsL Co* 100 Brood Aissus, Waukesha. Wit.
W. N. U, Oklahoma City, No. 14--1918.
Oklahoma Directory
Clean Your Clothes
to look like new at largest place in
city. Wrap in paper, send Parcel-
post; we do the rest promptly.
420 NORTH
BROADWAY
OKLAHOMA
CITY
post; we ao me rest proi
Surely Must.
“He signs himself E. Nebuchadnez-
zar Wombat. Wonder what the ‘E.’
stands for?”
“Dunno. But if he prefers to use
the name Nebuchadnezzar, the *E.’ !
must stand for something terrible."—
Louisville Courier-Journal.
TRY
Shipping
Your
CREAM
To BEATRICE CREAMERY CO.
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Better All.
June—So that is his better half?
Jane—Yes, and 40 per cent of the
rest.
FILMS DEVELOPED
IBe F«r Id, Asy Size. Rk packs. Azy Sits, 15c.
Prints »tx45d or smaller, 4c. S^xSX and np to
4x5, 5c. Post cards 6c each. Remittance must ac-
company order, or we will ship C. O. D. We do not
sacrifice quality for speed. Let our film experts
give yon better results.
▲ fni. use of Kodak supplies in stock.
Westfall Drug Cot, Oklahoma City
Eastman Kodak Agents, 204-206 W. Maun Sb
STORAGE BATTERIES
A>ass/M a—^-_______«
slop to an Distemper
CURES THE SICK
And prevents others having the disease no matter how
exposed. 60 eesta sad SI a kettle, AS asd $10 ■ Inn
Mettle*. Ail good druggists and turf goods houses.
Spofo Medical Co., Manufacturer!, Goabea, InA.U.S.A.
SOLD FOR 50 YEARS.
For MALARIA, CHIUS and FEVER.
ALSO A MNE GENERAL STRENGTHEN-
ING TONIC. MI by All Dreg St
ftmbulil, ____ ..
Batteries in stock for any make of car.
on AUT0NMILB er MAN
Liainwa PLANTS INSTALLER sad REPAIRER
____Pr«Rty Storage Battery Ce.
427 W. Mela St. Oklahoma City. Okla.
N. S. SHERMAN MACHINE
AND IRON WORKS
Engineers, Founders and Machinists
Grate Bars and Smokestacks
18 to 34 East M tit Street OkkWia Cky. Okk.
SCHOOL mm4 CHURCH
f ami tare, Opera Chairs
Send for catalog sad pries*
JASFER sires CR.. RALAIRRA CUT
Ik M, Sstrttb
—....... Repairing leaky,
'masked np and frozen radia-
tors Ws do not piss tot**,
hot w» replace old tones wttk
44^ MS W» 04C04H If
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Okeene Democrat (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1918, newspaper, April 5, 1918; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1076358/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.