The Ripley Bulletin (Ripley, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 20, 1915 Page: 3 of 4
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•INTERVIEW’ WITH THI HERO
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EVERY CITIZEN A BOOSTER
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soon* I »l*b you rould »i»y longer
l‘*« !*♦•« «> go im«rti*M in teeming your
ndieniure* ('all again aoon, uon‘i
you? Good-by"
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Psychology of Peddles.
The question of abort .versus long
periods of |>ractii'« in training the hu
man muscles for any psrtirulur kind
of work is obviously one having far
reaching ap|ilicalion Home Interest
Ing experiments on this subject havt
been carried out by Ur. K. 8. laishley
of Johns Hopkins university. At qulsl-
tlon of skill In archery was selected
ss the subject of observation. Twenty
untrained persons were divided into
three groups. One group shot five
arrows with the English longbow per
day; another, twenty shots per day;
and the third, forty shots. The re-
sults showed conclusively that the
gaoup shooting only five times a day
Improved in accuracy with less ex-
penditure of time In practice than was
required by either of the other groups
for the same amount of improvement.
A report on the experiments says:
“The relatively greater efficiency of
short periods of practice continuing
for many days is in accordance with
the results of the study of animals
and of speech habits In man, and in-
dicates that in training to muscular
feats, in both animals and men, the
length of practice periods required is
usually too great for maximum ef-
ficiency.”—Scientific American.
I I tew MMSlte SUt |r»* M
Ito mU. '#*4 touted
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u (j,e_ \\ 41, e— ie— Irt—ff Mbl
*t»ul tela k»MS> lu* X —*
M vary uusHiPtotstf**
and assstedf alaa said NWwtkisg
a lung 1 tea same tin*. and ttean I sy*tw4
Up about t lav aland Wt||, t ga«a
thaw the Isxl I had with toe, I laid
a hr ft, «a tiuud in uron and Hal, and
In clothing. and alarirtrily. and teard- i
ware, and printing, and Hvte pride.
1 told ‘am about our parka and boule-
vards, and our Wsrmwvills farm and
our tbrrocent fare. | talked fast *0
aa to get It all In, and I tried nut to
tolsa n point. Well, tteey aat there
watching i»a nod not saying n word,
but when I stopped for want of breath
n fine, portly man pulled n notebook
out Of his pocket.
"Td Ilka your name and address,’
tea said. •
“Then he put out bis band.
M ‘Glad to know you,’ be told mg'
Tin president of the chamber of com-
merce of —,* and he named a lead-
ing city of the Bouth. ‘And what I
want to say Is that If we had a half ,
dozen boosters Ilka you our town *
would bo a blamed sight bigger and
more useful. Hold on.* be added,
| ‘you're not a special, official booster,
are you?’
“ ‘No.’ I told him, Tm Just one of the
700,000.* “—Cleveland Plain Dealer
(to,
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a ipsafsl of bs>«
Tom
>y guaraateo—’do to
1 r dealer sad g*t a to
>• l4v«r Ten#. l*ui a j g>-p* a
of that sow# Inis ao
sente etetete Is rlugg
sad tosktng you fed n
also that a bottle of
one will beep your os
ag 8m for font tea t
1 tdfvs It Is tearmieev
id they Ilka Its plvasi
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Cm IWi m toste. IOs a baa
DOAN'S •VRRV
CO.WfPMAft|.
W»« Cowsss Tt
Dr John Nurfb 01
working oa tteo tteao
I us is may tee due to
la the system, a* tee
iNnslafii
7 wledo. O. la
ry that tuherru'
a Urk bf Uni*
says that while
tuherrular germs are everywhere, tteey
only thrive in ripe soil and just what
is larking in persons subject to tuber-
cular trouble gives fuod for thought.
He say* that there is less tuber-
culosis among people living In nrld re-
gion* and plants in such places bave
more lime in their composition than
those growing in humid regions.
WOOL GROWING IN
FOR SUBURBAN HOME
This By-Product of the Farm Will
Make Many Western Canada
Farmers Rich.
His Own Windows.
A woman had been arrested for
throwing stones through the windows
of a building on Pacific avenue and
her lawyer, “Indignation” Jones, had
applied to Judge Goggin for a writ of
habeas corpus.
After the facts had been recited
w-ithout comment, Judge Goggin ex-
claimed:
"Hold on there. What number did
you say that was?”
"Number 16.”
“That’s my property. I’ll pay the
fine myself, but don't break the win-
dows again.”
But Not One of Them,
‘‘Does he belong to the moneyed
class?”
“Heart and soul. There’s nothing he
wouldn’t do for them.”
A girl always tells a young man she
can cook—and she always tells other
girls that she can’t.
Here is a porch with inviting seats
and opportunity for climbing things
but without gracefulness or attempt a
beauty of line.
TREES FOR HOME GROUNDS
The salaries of college teachers with
rank of professor range in this coun-
try from $450 to $7,500 a year.
Leads to
INSOMNIA
Madness, if Not
Remedied.
“Experiments satisfied me, some 5
years ago,” writes a Topeka woman,
“that coffee was the direct cause of the
insomnia from which I suffered ter-
ribly, as well as extreme nervousness
and acute dyspepsia.
“I had been a coffee drinker since
childhood, and did not like to think
Small Varieties Add Greatly to the
Appearance of the House, and
» Also to Its Value.
In planting ornamental trees about
the home, we naturally consider their
utility in providing shade. There are,
however, a number of beautiful trees,
small In size, that occupy an interme-
diate place between shrubs and shade
trees. Their beauty gives them a
place of honor, but they should not be
placed where their growth will inter-
fere with other plants as they grow
larger.
The white fringe, or fringe tree, Cbi
onanthus Virglnica, is a native of the
United States, forming a large shrub,
rather than a small tree, as it is round-
ed and bushy. It has large glossy
leaves three to five inches long, dark
that the beverage was doing me all
this harm. But it was, and the time green, that are handsome through the
came when Ithad to face the fact, and season. In May or June it bears an
protect myself. I therefore gave up
coffee abruptly and absolutely, and
adopted Postum for my hot drink at
meals.
“I began to note improvement in
my condition very soon after I took
on Postum. The change proceeded
gradually, but surely, and it was a
matter of only a few weeks before I
found myself entirely relieved—the
nervousness passed away, my diges-
tive apparatus was restored to normal
efficiency, and I began to sleep rest-
full y and peacefully.
“These happy conditions have con-
tinued during all of the & years, and I
am safe in saying that I owe them
entirely to Postum. for when 1 began
to drink M I ceased to nee medicines '
Name gives by Postum Ce.. Battle
Creek Mkk Read “The Rond to
WaBviDs." In pkgs
Pnatawi Csml-tk* ortgtael tons j
■mat tee modi Wted. Ik
abundance of white flowers, in droop
lng racemes. The blossoms have nar-
row, fringe-like petals, and are very
graceful, olie specimen under obser-
vation, now about eighteen years
planted, is probably twelve feet high, !
a symmetrical vase shape; It flowers
abundantly. A young specimen, suit-
able for planting, costs about seventy- j
five cents.—Rural New Yorker.
Alberta wool grower! are looking for
25 cent wool this year. That Is the
assertion made by a prominent sheep-
man of the Grassy Lake district “It
is quite within the pale of possibility
that we will receive that figure from
our wool this summer,” said he, "and
I would not be surprised to see some
get more than that.
“The war has caused a great demand
to be made on the woolen mills, and
they have got to have thfe raw mate-
rial.”
The present season has been most
propitious for the growing of wool, and
the growers expect to reap a big har-
vest of a splendid quality. The winter
has been very even, and the sheep are
doing well on the ranges.
No special breed of sheep is kept
on Western Canada farms, and all
seem to do well. The advice of those
Interested in the welfare of the farm-
ers of Western Canada, advise all
who can at all do so to enter upon the
raising of sheep. They have proved
most profitable to those who go into
that industry on a scale commensu-
rate with their means, and their farm
area.
The climate is perfectly adapted to
the raising of sheep, they are easily
kept, and as pointed out, there is good
mone^ to be made out of them.—Ad-
vertisement.
Their First Breakfast
"-zm,
“This is how I like it”
You can have your husband say this
not only at your first breakfast^ to-
gether, but morning after morning.
If you should discover that every woman in your town used
the same coffee you would never rest until you had tried it.
A great many more women than live in your town are using
Arbuckles’ Coffee. In millions of homes throughout the country,
Arbuckles’ is considered necessary to make breakfast complete.
So rapidly has its sale increased, so popular has it become, that
today more of it is sold than any other packaged coffee. Arbuckles'
is pure coffee,—contains no chicory.
Couldn’t Tell.
“Why did you help the defendant
In the fight, if that's the case?” asked
the examining counsel.
Mr. Cassidy looked at the lawyer
•with contempt, and answered in a tone
of blighting scorn: “For the ra'son
that at that toime Oi had no means of
knowing which o’ thim would be the
defendant.”
Get a package from your grocer today
Notice the smiles of satisfaction at the
breakfast table. Try it. Give your fam-
ily the enjoyment of drinking the most
popular coffee in America.
■ either the whole bean or the ground.
Make your coffee earn lovely gifts for you
Save the tlffnetures on every Arbuckle wreppet.
Get beautiful, useful gifts—articles you have etwees warned
Arbuckles' premiums ave elmost es famous es Arbuckles
Coffee, la one year we gave sway over a million of #***
Send for our big Pi
>opular premiums. Write
Arbuckle Brothers. TlZ 4 Water St.. XI. If
premium alone I Send for-our big Premium Catalog thowiag
150 of our most popular premiums. Write to day to
This is ths signature you save.
REAL SKIN COMFORT
Fellows Use of Cuticura Soap and
Ointment. Trial Free.
By bathing and anointing these fra-
grant supercreamy emollients impart
to tender, sensitive or irritated, Itch-
ing skins a feeling of intense skin
comfort difficult for one to realize who
has never used them for like purposes.
Cultivate an acquaintance with them.
Sample each free by mail with Book.
Address postcard. Cuticura, Dept. XY,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
He Should Worry.
“How do you account for Nero fid-
dling during the burning of Rome?”
asked the professor.
“I suppose he had the place heavily
insured,” suggested the senior who
was specializing in finance.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSANI
a toilet preparation or merit.
Help, to era fit-are dandruff.
For Reatorm* Color and
[Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair.
ton. at d 91.00at Itrurrtata.
Comparisons.
“My income." said the boastful the-
atrical stax. "is much larger than that
of the president of the United States.’’
“Yes." replied the conservative per-
son. “But you can’t judge by incomes
Jack Johnson s income used to tee
Washington's Advantage.
Observing that civic art Is founded
on common sense, utility and commer- than yours "
dal considerations, Arnold W. Bran-__
ner. an architect who baa been work- Important to
lng for the development at civic Examine *arefully every bottle
beauty to New York, recently made • CA8TOR1A. a safe sad acre remedy for
statement which teas a bearing upon Infanta and cteildrva. and tee that It
Washington. He pleaded tor more
artistic cities oa the ground that the
lives of mea and womea are tafleeaced
teg their Mrrmswdiugs rw.1ie« Os* foe FWWi Paetoria
A quiet.
DOTT VISIT Tnt CALIFORNIA KX
POSITIONS Without ■ suppiy oI AI ten s F a-
E»to. ths an'iseptie powder to he shste-i t-to the
pShoes. or Assolvel to the foot-hsth. The Standard
Remedy for the feet for 25 years ft pres In Mart
re *f to tired scfc-r* feet end erere-ts toroLen
hot feet One tedy writes **? omr-yed every rr —ut*
A my stay at ths Esposlttoes. t-.anks to A »n’t
Fact-Esse In my shoes. Ce I TODAY Adv
His Mistake.
j “Jones Is a self made man ”
**I know. He surely made a
of take in not consulting an expert.*
Is facts and child re a. and see that It
la Use For Over SO Years.
la the words of the Mrtra
Mike “The B V. D’s will p
O K"
A «
Oklahoma Directory
OKLAHOMA TYPEWRITER SALES C0-. INC.
(The New Company.) 201 208 State Nat'l Bank
Bidg. Higheat grades, factory rebuilds, all makes,
office appliances, supplies, etc. Mechanical de-
partment complete. Address Field Department.
ADRUCO *tr
CRE8YLENE COMP.
LIVE STOCK otsP^r^uT
threshwgmbiiieTijpplies
Boiler' Tubes. Grate Bars.
pASEVITCH FOR
19514 W. MAIN OKLAHOMA CITT
rb« tlnmt p,.- L-»rds In tbs slat* SI.OO n dassa.
Films Developed
10« 1 Rail
Aar SI**
Film pack*, any .lie, lie; Prints op to and toeisding
tyil’t. Sc. and 'c-i.’c *e IkOk lr LA
our nisi eiprru ales fos OHM results. "nitrin
Kirtsks. Film, and all KodsSs Soppilrs teat any-
where. prepaid. Send u» yosr seat roll aad let as
convince you we are gt. ng belter g -*-- SuMklnp
Send for gatatog.
Westfall Drug Co.. Kodak Dept.
20* dr. Mala Eastman Amenta OktoSoma C%
F00S RELIABLE ENCINES
If yen realise tbs wisdom and aaeasmy
of letting (M> me Is year wars, tos one
ripen restorers Se«ra set She rtfll
oqnlpmesi far joe. F«. ewgf aao one S*o
K«T engines bolts—nn Meal wiow and
.1, ,e fore eery psrpa
of iksft-z. beitiss
p-p "#■ see., to eywtp i
water nil,
S'
• «W Sd
we-
lls
netful room, tee
• mam to de Ms
“Osr streets ten vs ths
11 held that mtet. dw-
r atrww's tense a |ef
«• the pe-M** Rente
md to Fwto Pestle sued
cStSse Prred
CbeM Bed Bton AB
If Osner Khayyam were n»ve today ..........
be d tee rue*lug a telg team cafe wwte Tteo mi wttte •
ptaMty ef bigteflto eaten rot * gv*« a wufue ravage
el mi
>• always g g
ss to L
Cite, toe M-tgto
Death Lurks In A Weak Heart
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Roff, Charles H. The Ripley Bulletin (Ripley, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 20, 1915, newspaper, May 20, 1915; Ripley, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1076376/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.