Cleveland County Enterprise. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1915 Page: 3 of 8
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THE NORMAN ENTERPRISE
■
f
[
A Big Influence
It is surprising the won*
derlui influence good
digestion has on your
general health. It not
only promotes strength,
but also keeps the liver
active and bowels open.
Therefore, watch the
digestion and as soon
as any weakness is
manifested resort to
HOSTETTER'S
Stomach Bitters
111111DI I I
Return of Walnut.
The wood of our fathers, the good
old "black walnut" that was reckoned
the supreme cabinet material of 60
years ago, has come back. True, they
call it "American walnut" now, and
give it a shiny finish and try to hide
the deep, purplish brown which is the
true glorr of the stufT; Dut it is the
same old mood in spite of all. May it
soon get back its ancient name and
more than Its ancient popularity.
OKLAHOMA NEWS NOTES
Jan. 28—Farmers' Union stai® meeting.
Ada.
Feb. 2-#— L.nj?an County Poultry Asso-
ciation, Guthrie.
Feb. 11-14, Y. M. C. A. state conven-
tion. Tulsa.
Feb. 19-20, Central Oklahoma Educa-
tional Association. Oklahoma City.
Feb. 22-24, Breeders' Show, Oklahoma
City.
Feb. 22 26, Oklahoma Breeders' Sale,
Oklahoma City.
March 15—Railway rate caaes, Okla-
homa City.
Apr. 19-21 state trap shoot. McAlester
April 26-30, Southern commercial Con-
gress, Muskogee.
„ May 21-24—State Firemen'® meeting,
Sapulpa.
CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK, UGH!
IT'S MERCURY AND SALIVATES
Straighten Up! Don't Lose a Day's Work! Clean Your Sluggish
Liver and Bowels With "Dodson's Liver Tone."
WANTED TO CONTINUE GAME
OLD SOLDIER WISHES TO
HELP SUFFERERS FROM KID-
NEY, LIVER AND BLADDER
TROUBLES.
I am frequently troubled with kidney
and bladder trouble, especially in the
Spring and Fall. Being an old Veteran
of the Civil War, a little exposure or
cold settles on my kidneys, and then
I am laid up with kidney or bladder
trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root was
recommended to me a number of years
ago, and I took a number of bottles of it
and was more than pleased with the re-
sults. 1 consider Swamp-Root the great-
est and best kidney medicine on the
market and it never fails to give quick
results in kidney trouble, bladder trouble
and lame back.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root has done me
bo much good that I feel if any words of
mine will be the means of relieving any
poor sufferers, that you are at liberty to
use this ktter as you see fit.
Yours very truly,
GEORGE W. ATCHLEY,
1786 Walker St. Des Moines, Iowa.
State of Iowa )
Poke County J88,
A. R. Ilansen, a retail druggist of this
city, being first duly sworn deposes and
says, that he is well acquainted with
George W. Atchley, who gave the above
testimonial; that said Atchley made and
signed said testimonial in my presence
and that I have sold said Atchley a part
of the Swamp-Root referred to in above
testimonial. Affiant further saya that
George W. Atchley is a well known citi-
zen of this city and an honorable man,
and that it was Mr. Atchley's desire to
give said testimonial.
A. R. HANSEN.
Subscribed to in my presence, and
sworn to before me, this 23rd of March,
1909.
E. J. FRISK, Notary Public.
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer fy Co.
Bintfhamton, N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will DoEorYou
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size
bottle. It will convince anyone. You
will also receive a booklet of valuable in-
formation, telling about the kidneys and
bladder. When writing, be sure and men-
tion this paper. Regular fifty-cent and
one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug
stores. Adv.
The masculine idea of an intellec-
tual woman is one who is built like a
hairpin and wears spectacles.
Wash day is smile day if you use Xed
Cross Ball Blue, American made, therefore
the best made. Adv.
The more a man gets the more he
wants—unless a police judge is dealing
it out.
A man looks cheap when his wife
calls him "dear" in public.
To Cool a Burn
and Take
the Fire Out
A Household Remedy
HANFORD'8
Balsam of_Myrrh
For CKtW'Surm,
Bruu e%-
Strrtin*, !
Chilblains, Lame Back,
Old Sore*, Open Wound*,1
.rid aU External Iryurid
Made Since 1846.
Price 25c, 50c and $1.00
. , OR WRITE
All Dealers
u, Lame Back,
s, Open Wounds,
External Injuries. ^
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet preparation of merit.
Helps to eradicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
A revival meeting Is being con-
ducted in a pool hall at Tonkawa.
Sapulpa's Dew $40,000 sewer Is com-
pleted aod will be put in operation
at ones.
Mrs. Charles Perry died at El Reno
as the result of a coughing spell. A
blood vessel was ruptured during the
coughing.
"Buck" Stigler, member of one of
the best known Choctaw Indian fam-
ilies on the eastern side of the state,
Is now the Ringling railroad station
agent at Lone Grove.
E. C. McMillion and C. W. Daley of
McAlester announced they would go
to Belgium to get colonists to occupy
5,000 acres of Pittsburg county land.
They expect to get as many as thirty
families.
The annual re-union of the Scottish
Rite Masons closed at Guthrie with a
banquet. More than 1,000 people at-
tended the convocation. Members of
the class of 112 finished the thirty-
second degree.
The Oklahoma State Dental Society
has reserved quarters at Oklahoma
City for the annual convention to be
held there March 15-19. Dr. J. M.
Temples of Tulsa is president and Dr.
C. R. Lawrence of Enid is secretary
of the society.
Charles McClain of Purcell, who had
been appointed license and record
clerk in the state game and fish war-
den's office, died at his home in Pur-
cell last week. Mr. McClain was more
than 70 years old. He was a member
of the constitutional convention and
McClain county was named for him.
There will be no further trouble,
I probably, over the office of district
I court clerk, and the office of county
court clerk reporter of Kiowa county.
The two offices have been merged in-
| to one family by the marriage of
Daniel Diehl, district clerk, to Miss
Vera Bailey, county court reporter.
SherifT Biffie of Jefferson county
and Frank Driskill, undersheriff, were
wounded at Ringling during a battle
with shotguns and rifles between the
officers and Charles Evans, an escaped
convict from the state penitentiary,
Evans was under eighteen years sen-
tence for the murder of Frank Gibson
near Asphaltum six years ago.
Twenty-five striking boilermakers
who began a march through the city
I streets at Drumright were arrested by
| the city's police, placed in jail and
I later heavily fined. There was no dis-
order in Drumright and the police de-
clared they expected none. Tank
workers all over the Tulsa field are
on strike, demanding more money and
union recognition.
A campaign to interest more farmers
of Jefferson county In growing peanuts
has been launched as the result of a
visit to the county by V. H. Schoffel-
mayer of Chicago, editor of the South-
! west Trail. He believes peanuts to
be one of the most profitable crops
for this section, and he announces
that the Rock Island Railroad will find
a good market for them.
The corporation commission has al-
lowed the Skiatook Telephone Com-
| pany to increase its phone rates, but
1 not exactly what the company asked
for. A rate of $1 for residence
phones and $2 for business phones a
month had been charged by the com-
pany. On this rate a showing was
made that the Income of the company
for the past year was $1,218.10, walle
the expenses were $1,346.19. Tin
company wanted to charge $1.50 for
I residence and $2.50 for business
phones. The commission allowed a
I rate of $1.25 a month for residence
j and $2.50 for business phones.
Acting under the direction of Presi-
dent Frank Gault, the state board of
agriculture abolished eight positions
in that department, including the six
deputy livestock inspector berths. At
the same time the board accepted the
resignation of Secretary Ben Hennes-
sey, President Gault announcing that
the department will be operated tem-
porarily without a secretary. The fol-
lowing were the employees ordered
dropped from the department pay roll
the action to become effective Janu-
ary 20. John Hendley, Pryor; A. E.
Romberg, Shawnee; M. F. Ikard,
Washington county; J. L Briscoe,
Marlow; T. J. Ball, Catoosa, and E.
Wyatt, Comanche, all deputy livestock
inspectors; J. E. Graham, Pryor, and
Terral McCIendon, Oklahoma City, de-
partment clerks.
The corporation commission has
cited the Santa Fe railroad In con-
tempt for failure to report an acci-
dent which occurred in Blackwell on
January 9. According to a Tonkawa
paper, a party of Tonkawa and Black-
well young folk miraculously escaped
death when a switch engine and
train of cars crushed the automobile,
in which they were riding, to kindling
wood. No report of the accident was
made to the commission by the rail-
way company; hence the citation.
Neglect to report such cases Is pun
ishable by a fine of not more than
$500.
Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. Take
• dose of the vile, dangerous drug to-
night and tomorrow you may lose a
day's work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when it comes Into contact
with sour bile crashes into It, break-
ing it up. This Is when you feel that
awful nausea and cramping. If you
feel sluggish and "all knocked out," if
your liver is torpid and bowels consti-
pated or you have headache, dlzzlnesB,
coated tongue, if breath Is bad or
stomach sour, just try a spoonful of
harmless Dodson's Liver Tone.
Here's my guarantee—Go to any
drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. Take
a spoonful tonight and If it doesn't
Btraighten you right up and make yoa
feel fine and vigorous by morning 1
want you to go back to the store and
get your money. Dodson's Liver Tone
is destroying the sale of calomel be-
cause It 1b real liver medicine; entire-
ly vegetable, therefore It cannot sali-
vate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to work and clean your
bowels of that sour bile and consti-
pated waste which Is clogging your
system and making you feel miserable.
1 guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's
l.lver Tone will keep your entire fam-
ily feeling fine for months. Give it to
your children. It is harmless; doesn't
gripe and they like its pleasant taste.
His Choice.
Just after the fall of Bloemfontein
soldiers were called for, owing to the
scarcity of civilians, to work the rail-
way. The weary "Tommies" were
lying in a camp one night after a hard
day'B work, when a sergeant called
out:
"Any .of you men want to put your
names down as railway porters, driv-
ers, stokers, half-boiled clerks, or for
any other appointments connected
with the railway?"
Silence, broken only by snores.
Then one "Tommy" slowly raised his
head and drowsily muttered:
"Put me down as a sleeper, ser-
geant."—London Tit-Bits.
FALLING HAIR MEANS
DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE
Save Your Hair! Get a 25 Cent Bottle
of Danderlne Right Now—Alto
Stops itching Scalp.
Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy
hair is mute evidence of a neglected
scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf.
There is nothing so destructive to
the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair
of its luster, Its strength and its very
life; eventually producing a feverish-
ness and Itching of the scalp, which
If not remedied causes the hair roots
to shrink, loosen and die—then the
hair falls out fast. A little Danderlne
tonight—now—any time—will eurely
save your hair.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's
Danderlne from any store, and after
the first application your hair will
take on that life, luster and luxuriance
which Is so beautiful. It will become
wavy and fluffy and have the appear-
ance of abundance; an Incomparable
gloss and softness, but what will
please you most will be after Just a
few weeks' use, when you will actual-
ly see a lot of fine, downy hair—new
hair—growing all over the scalp. Adv.
Solace.
"Ah," he murmured, "If there were
only something in this mundane world
that would solace all these vague
yearnings, satisfy one's wildest long-
ings, and fill the aching void within!'
"Well, what's the matter with pie?"
OR SICK STOMACH
Time it! Pape's Diapepsin ends
all Stomach misery in five
minutes.
Do some foods you eat hit back—
taste good, but work badly; ferment
into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,
sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or
Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's
Diapepsin digests everything, leaving
nothing to sour and upset you. There
never was anything so safely quick, so
certainly effective. No difference how
badly your stomach is disordered you
will get happy relief in five minutes,
but what pleases you most is that it
strengthens and regulates your stom-
ach so you can eat your favorite foods
without fear.
You feel different as soon as "Pape's
Diapepsin" comes In contact with the
stomach—distress just vanishes—your
stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch-
ing, no eructations of undigested food.
Go now, make the best investment
you ever made by getting a large fifty-
cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any
store. You realize in five minutes how
needless it is to suffer from indiges-
tion, dyspepsia or bad stomach. Adv.
WRONG VIEWS OF MARRIAGE
Brooklyn Lawyer Tells of Some Popu-
lar Impressions That Are Entire-
ly Erroneous.
Some persons believe, says Mr.
Hugo Hirsh of the Brooklyn bar, In
Case and Comment, that marriage
can be entered into by any man or
woman, regardless of age, race, re-
lationship, or condition. But in this
they are mistaken, for every state has
its own peculiar laws regarding, limit-
ing, and circumscribing entrance into
this relationship as the same may be
affected by those provisions.
Some persons believe that fraud,
force, duress, coercion, used for the
purpose of bringing about marriage
between man and woman, do not af-
fect the legality of the relationship,
but in this they are mistaken, because
every state and territory has a law
providing for the annulment of mar-
riages caused by fraud, force, etc.
Some men believe that wives are
chatties and may be beaten into sub-
mission. This is grave error, for In
many of the states such conduct Is
cause for an absolute divorce, and in
nearly all of the states it is cause for
a legal separation.
Secretary Lane Couldn't Understand
Defeat in Golf While He Had
Clubs to Play.
Josephus Daniels, secretary of the
navy, was invited the other day to
go out and play golf.
"I can't play it," said Daniels; "I
made up my mind some time ago not
to go in for golf until they change
the rules."
"How do you mean?"
"Well, until they change the rules
and make It as good a game as
shinny."
That recalls the tale they tell about
the time Franklin K. Lane, now sec-
retary of the Interior, first undertook
the mastery of golf.
Two enthusiasts over the game lent
a large set of clubs to Lane and they
played a round. When they had
reached the last hole Lane walked
over to the nearest teeing place and
began attempts to drive off with each
club in his sack, one after another.
"The game's all over," they ex-
plained, gently.
"Well," asked Lane, picking up an-
other kind of club, "can't I play my
hand out?"—New York Sun.
TALK OK WESTERN
Facts Don't Lie—Western Can-
ada Is Full of Facts—Here
Are Three of Them.
1. C. T. Moore, Underhill, Man.
Came from Bruce County, Ontario,
1882, with a capital of $2.00. Home-
steads# quarter section. Now owns
2,800 acres for which he paid average
of $20.00—worth today $40.00 per acre.
2. James Steel, Battleford, Sas-
katchewan. Came from Perthshire,
Scotland, 1904. His fare advanced to
bring himself and family to Canada.
Took up homestead, which he sold
later $25.00 per acre, buying 1,000
acres at $15.00 per acre. Has been
very successful In mixed farming.
Values land now at $40.00 per acre,
and Is worth $60.00. "If I had re-
mained in the Old Country my gray
hairs would have been a passport to
the poor house," he says.
3. H. J. Smith, Clover Bar, Alberta.
Came from North Michigan, 1893,
without capital. Now farming 800
acres, valued at $200 per acre. Pur-
chased originally at $16.00 per acre.
Engaged In mixed farming. Cows
average him $150.00 a year.
All this talk about the exploitation
of labor by capital, class distinction,
living wage, high coBt of living, and
so forth, doesn't hold the slightest
Interest for the Canadian farmer.
Why? Because he has proved that
you can't begin too poor to become
rich in Canada; that free homesteads
preclude the possibility of being
robbed of freedom and independence;
that the high cost of living can't hurt
the njan who grows most of his own
necessities; that his labor brings re-
ward In exact and just proportion to
time and intelligence Invested.
If those who whine at urban condi-
tions would give a little time to in-
vestigating those suburban, they
would likely spy a clear way out of
their difficulties. For the first step,
drop a card to any Canadian Govern-
ment Agent.—Advertisement.
Admiration.
"What do you think of my latest
series of observations?" asked one sci-
entist.
"Wonderfully Interesting," replied
the other. "If you had not been a
scientist you would have made a great
press agent."
Matchless Conceit.
Stranger—Have you a match, sir?
Vain In dividual—No, I don't think
bo.—Boston Evening Transcript.
It sometimes happens that a ma"n
who fails at everything else marries
quite well.
All things come to the man who
waits—if he waits on himself while
waiting.
For Five Years
I was
Troubled
with a
Chronic
Disease.
Peruna
Cured me
Sound
and Well.
tyrs. Maggie Durbin, 209 Victory
St., Little Hock, Ark., writes: "I waa
troubled for five years with a chronic
disease. I tried everything 1 heard
of. but nothing did me any good.
Some doctors said my trouble wa
catarrh of the bowels, and Some said '
consumption of the bowels. One
doctor said he could cure me; I took
his medicine two months, but It did
me no good. A friend of mine ad-
vised me to try Peruna and I did s©.
After 1 had taken two bottles 1 found
it was helping me. so I continued its
use. and it has cured me sound and
well. 1 can recommend Peruna to
any one, ar\d if any one wants to
know what Peruna did for me If they
will write to me 1 will answer
oromptly."
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 5--1915.
(L'fiAiumucj)
ALC0H0L-3 PER CENT
AVege table Preparation for As -
simila I ing the Food and Regula
ling the Stomachs and liowls of
Promotes Digestion,Chccrful-
nessanH Rest Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narc otic
/tyw of oij drsam/urm/rm
S:J •
MxS—na * \
ffahtUt SaUj «. I
I
Jfi Cttri** a U 9 t
Worm s,.d . i
ClorSltd «fn qnr 1
rfinkyrrtn Fftrvo* '
A perfect Remedy forConslipa
lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish-
ness and Loss OF SLEEP
facsimile Signature of
Tke Centaur Company.
NEW YORK.
GASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
Bears tho
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
I
Exact Copy of Wrapper
' DISTEMPER
Pink Eye, Epizootic
Shipping Fever
£* Catarrhal Fever
re and positive preventive, no matter how home* at any ape are lnf«<U d
r "expoMxl." Lluulri. given <>n tlie tongue; acts on tlie Blood and • * laridn; eipelH tha
nolnonoun gerniR from the body, ("tire* 1 MMemper In Doge and Hlieep and Cholera Id
I'oultry. Largestselling II vestock remedy, ('urea la (trlppe among human
and In a line Kidney remedy. 6oc ami 11 a hotth-; 15 aud HO a dozen. < ut this out,
Keep It. Show to your druggist, who will get It foryou. j. re4) Booklet. I Mm temper*
Cauees and Cures.'' 8pedal Agent* wanted.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO • I Bacteriologists GOSHEN, IND„ U. S. A.
Solved.
"Professor Grouch has at last solved
the problem of abolishing distress lu
the world."
"What's his scheme?"
"To starve the poor off the face ot
the earth."
Getting On,
"Has that novel you are reading aay
atmosphere?"
"I should say so! A tire explodes
In the first chapter and that's how the
hero meets the heroine."
The Opportunist.
He—I love the true, the good, the
beautiful, the—
She—Oh, George, this Is so sudden!
There may be people who are smart-
er than you are, but you never meet
them.
You never miss the water until iha
courts get hold of the stock and
squeeze it out.
Some men who boast that they pay
as they go never manage to get very
far.
Every time you wrong a neighbor
you harm yourself.
But one doesn't need to be a botan-
ist In order to recognize a blooming
idiot.
Roofings,
A. real guarantee on roofing!
A useless risk is to buy roofing
' not guaranteed by a responsible'
concern. When you buy our roofing
^ you get the written guarantee
6i the world's largest ... .
manufacturers of roof-llRC TTlOSt p€Opi€9
prove their worth
i!®St]| by the test of time
Buy materials that last
Certain-teed
Ask your denier for prod-
ucts mnde by us—they bear
our name.
Asphalt Roofing*
( All uruiltt. am I
Slate Surfaced Shtnglea
Aaphalt Felt*
Deadening Felts
Tarred Felta
Building Papers
Roofing
1-ply guaranteed 5 years
2-ply guaranteed 10 year*
3-ply guaranteed 15 years
Insulating Papers
Wall Boards
Plastic Roofing Cement
Aiphalt Cement
Roof Coating
Metal Paints
Out-door Paints
Shingle Stains
Refined Coal Tar
Tar Coating—Pitch
General Roofing Manufacturing Company
B'orWs laryeit marmfact urtrt of Itooflnj and BuiUtinu Paper b
N«w York City Boston Chicago Pittsburgh Philadelphia Atlanta Cleveland Detroit
St. Lonis Cincinnati Kansas City Minneapolis San Francisco Seattle London Hamburg Sydney
If Yours Is fluttering or weak, use RENOVINE." Made by Van Vleet-Mansfleld Drug Co., Memphis, Tenn. Pries Si.OO
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Cleveland County Enterprise. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1915, newspaper, January 28, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc108487/m1/3/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.