The Greenfield Hustler (Greenfield, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1917 Page: 4 of 10
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As the Lily Grows
GAS, INDIGESTION
“Pape’s Diapepsin” fixes sick,
sour, gassy stomachs in
five minutes.
Time It! In five minutes all stomach
distress will go. No Indigestion, heart-
burn, sourness or belching of gas, acid,
or eructations of undigested food, no
dizziness, bloating, or foul breath.
Pape’s Diapepsin Is noted for Its
speed In regulating upset stomachs.
It is the surest, quickest and most cer-
tain Indigestion remedy In the whole
world, and besides It Is harmless.
Please for your sake, get a large
flfty-cent case *>f Pape’s Diapepsin
from any store and put your stomach
right. Don’t keep on being miserable
—life is too short—you are not here
long, so make your stay agreeable.
Eat what you like and digest it; en-
joy it, without dread of rebellion in
the stomach.
Pape’s Diapepsin belongs In your
home anyway. Should one of the fam-
ily eat something which doesn’t agree
with them, or in case of an attack of
indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis or
stomach'’derangement at daytime or
during the night, it is handy to gl\e
the quickest relief known. Adv.
The Principles of Big Business.
First Surgeon—Do you think $1,000
Is too much to charge for taking out
Bulger’s appendix?
Second Surgeon—No. But why
don’t you wait? He’s making money
so fast that you can get $5,000 out of
him In six months.—Life.
Spartan Women Suffered Untold Tortures
but who wants to be a Spartan? Take
“Femenlna” for all female disorders.
Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
Diplomacy.
Mrs. Green—Your cook told mine
that your husband Is getting a very
small salary.
Mrs. Wyse—We just tell her that to
keep her from demanding a large one.
BOSCHEE’S GERMAN SYRUP
Why take ordinary cough remedies
when Boschee's German Syrup has
been used for fifty-one years in all
towns in the United States, Canada,
Australia, and other countries, for
coughs, bronchitis, colds settled in the
throat, especially lung trouble. It
gives the patient a good night’s rest,
free from coughing, with easy expec-
toration in the morning, giving nature
a chance to soothe the inflamed parts,
throw off the disease, helping the pa-
tient to regain his health, assisted by
pure air and sunshine when possible,
Trial size 25c, and 75c family size.
Sold in all towns in the United States,
Canada, Australia, and other coun-
tries.—Adv.
Explained.
“My daughter, don’t use powder on
your face so much. It is so loud.
“But, pa, this Is noiseless powder.”
The scent of the I.Hies 1* bound
sind hulden,
Its Ineense rises in bordered
aisles;
There’* the promise of spring in
the sunlight nolden.
There’* the Joy of spring in the
ehlldren’* smiles!
And ye*terday’* toll add hurried
eliunor.
The elty’s throng uud the elty’*
strife,
It* cluttered scene nnd Its fevered
glamour
That make u* the struggle we
dare call Life.
•
We leave It all at some fair, dim
portal,
(The Lilies gleam In the bor-
dered aisles!)
And oh, the message and gift
Immortal!
(“There’s the joy of spring In
the children’s smiles!)
And we hear of that far-off Syrian
garden.
Where Mary’s Master stilled
her fear,
And the angel’s words of hope
and pardon:
“For He Is risen: He Is not
here.”
Hlsen! Sweet Christ of the dis-
tant ages!
Like Mary, we listen and know
the voice;
And more than the story of hal-
lowed pages
The touch of His love and life
rejoice.
For in any saducss of some to-
morrow.
If we hear His answer we lose
all care,
\nd above forgotten tears and
sorrow-—
The scent of the Lilies shall
linger there!
Easter in
Other Lands
To keep clean and healthy take Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They regulate
liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv.
The Reason of It.
“So he’s an author. What a poor
carriage he has!”
“No wonder. He’s a hack writer.”
Important to Mother*
Examine carefully every bottle ol
CASTOR I A, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that It
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Year*.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
A Growl.
“Are your married daughter and her
husband living with you?”
“No; they’re living on me,”
/^VF ALL annual festivals among
I 1 Christian nations, Easter seems
to have made the most serious
Impression, and the customs connected
with its first celebrations to have lin-
gered the longest. Europe, with its
many nations, and. therefore, many
peoples, has ever been the scene, of
various ceremonies distinctly belonging
to the separate countries, with the
Latin church always in the lead in the
matter of picturesque symbols and pro
cessions.
Strange customs, sometimes com-
bined with elaborate ceremonies, are
found ofteut-st in the rural districts,
where the people have not free access
to the towns, and simplicity of living
does not question the di[Terence be-
tween truth and tradition.
In. Brittany many interesting cus-
toms are observed. It is a laud of
legends. The very people, quaintly
dressed as they were a thousand years
ago, suggest legends and traditions.
When the faith of the Nazarene was
first preuched to their ancestors they
held the mammoth stones which
abound in the fields and countryside in
deep veneration.
The church united stories of won-
derful stones with the word of Christ,
so that its teaching might sooner de-
velop converts. Fete days were held
in high esteem, and many queer beliefs
and associations became entangled with
the festivals.
On Easter morning at the Church of
St. Cronley, in the village of Finistere,
Brittany, every man, woman and child
of the vicinity is in attendance. The
women and children are in their best
frocks and snowiest caps, and the men
are leading the cattle to the door of
this church, which would do credit to
a city of size.
There the priest receives the men
and animals, and while the women clus-
ter around, gravely listening, the cattle
are blessed and the care of St. Cronley
invoked in their behalf. This saint is
a great favorite all over Brlttanj , and,
like so many traditions of the Bretons,
his story is connected with the giant
stones. It appears that he was a bish-
op of Rome come up to the province
to convert the heathen.
He was hunted by wild men until
deatli seemed near, when suddenly ev-
ery pursuer was turned into a stone,
and so they stand today, one group
forming a regular border along the
road from Carnac to Kerlescant.
Mounting many of these stones are
crucifixes and on Easter morning the
little processions passing through the
fields and along the road to the near-
est church stop and rest a few mo-
ments and offer up an Easter prajer.
In scattered communities, where there
are few towns, an Easter service is
often held in the fields, and a sermon
preached from a wayside shrine, set in
one of the historical stones.
CLING TO ANCIENT CUSTOMS
In Rural England Forms of Easter
Celebration Indulged in for Cen-
turies Are Still Kept Up.
The mention of hot cross buns im-
mediately suggests England, where
they are used more universally than
perhaps any other country. And while
Eugland is not a Catholic country,
so-called, rural customs of all kinds,
religious and otherwise, have an un-
usually firm hold. One of the veiy
strangest Easter-day customs Is called
the harepie festival, enacted In Leices-
tershire, at the village of Hallaton.
Every Easter morning a brass band
heads a procession which takes in most
everybody in the town.
They parade through the streets and
after a short service at the Episcopal
church the rector, aided by two or
three officials of the village, cuts up a
large rabbit pie, which has been baked
for the occasion. These pieces of pie
are fought for by boys and young men.
down a hillside called Hare Bank, and
it is considered something to be proud
of to deserve the largest cut of the
pastry.
This is followed by a feast in the
principal tavern or church, and ale in
abundance is consumed, an affair
which precedes a football match fa-
mous over the whole of the county,
and looked forward to by thousands
of spectators every year.
SLUGGISH BOILS
No sick headache, sour stomach,
biliousness or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10-cent box now.
Turn the rascals out—the headache,
biliousness, indigestion, the sick, sour
stomach and foul gases—turn them
out to-night and keep them out with
Cascarets.
Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
know the misery caused by a lazy
liver, clogged bowels or an upset stom-
ach.
Don’t put In another day of distress.
Let Cascarets cleanse your stomach;
remove the sour fermenting food;
take the excess bile from your liver
and carry out all the constipated
waste matter and poison in the
bowels. Then you will feel great.
A Cascaret to-night straightens you
out by morning. They work while
you sleep. A 10-cent box from
any drug store means a clear head,
sweet stomach and clean, healthy liver
and bowel action for months. Chil-
dren love Cascarets because they
never gripe or sicken. Adv.
To Presumptive.
He—Does your mother object to
kissing?
She—Now, just because I allow you
to kiss me, you needn’t think you can
kiss the whole family.
DON’T GAMBLE
that your heart’s all right. Make
sure. Take ‘‘Renovine”—a heart and
nerve tonic. Price 50c and $1.00. Adv.
Full of Faith.
Mrs. Barton—Have you any faith
in life insurance?
Mrs. Grill—Yes, indeed; I’ve real-
ized $10,000 from two husbands, and
they weren’t good ones, either.
Druggist Advises Use of
Kidney Medicine
I am satisfied after selling Dr. Kilmer «
Swamp-Root for six years that it is a very
fine preparation and I believe it will do
all and more than is claimed for it. Judg-
ing from experience I would advise its usa
in any ailment of -the kidney, liver and
bladder and believe it would do all that
was expected.
Very truly yours,
GUY’S PHARMACY,
D. G. Guy, Prop.,
609 South Akard Street,
Oct. 28, 1916. Dallas, Tex.
Prove Whit Swimp-Root Will Do For You
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bot-
tle. It will convince anyone. You
also receive a booklet of valuable infor-
mation, telling about the kidneys and blad-
der. When writing, be sure and mention
this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one-
doilar size bottles for sale at all drug
stores.—Adv.
She's Right, at That.
“She’s so old-fashioned In her
Ideas.”
“Yes; she believes that as a punish-
ment for children spanking takes the
palm.”
Easter Cleaning in Rome.
In Rome and other large Italian
cities there is a great house-cleaning
at Easter, and hawkers appear in the
streets selling long-handled, roughly-
made brooms from which to brush
spiders’ webs from lofty ceiling cor-
ners. This Easter cleaning is a sur-
vival of the purification, part of the
Jewish Passover.
CUTICURA HEALS ECZEMA
And Rashes That Itch and Burn—Trial
Free to Anyone Anywhere.
Three Privileges.
Study, work arid pray—three privi-
| leges that belong to every young
Christian.
In the treatment of skin and scalp
troubles bathe freely with Cuticuru
Soap and hot water, dry and apply
Cuticura Ointment. If there is a nat-
ural tendency to rashes, pimples, etc.,
prevent their recurrence by making
Cuticura your daily toilet preparation.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Only a woman can see the point of
a pointless joke.
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The Greenfield Hustler (Greenfield, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1917, newspaper, April 5, 1917; Greenfield, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1172139/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.