The Kiowa County News. (Lone Wolf, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1919 Page: 3 of 8
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THE KIOWA COUNTY NEWS*
Calomel Today! Sick Tomorrow!
I Guarantee Dodson's Liver Tone
Don’t take nasty, dangerous calomel when bilious,
constipated, headachy. Listen to me I
Calomel makes you sick; you lose a
day's work. Calomel Is quicksilver
and It sullvates; calomel Injures your
Uver.
If you are bilious, feel lazy, slug-
gish and all knocked out, if your bow-
els are constipated and your head
aches or stomach Is sour, Just tuke a
spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver
Tone Instead of using sickening, suit-
voting cnlomel. Dodson's Liver Tone
Is real Uver medicine. You'll know It
next morning because you will wake
up feeling flne, your liver will be work-
ing, your heudache and dizziness gone,
your stomach will be sweet and bow-
els regular. You will feel like work-
ing. You'll be cheerful; full of vigor
and ambition.
Your druggist or denier sells you a
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone for a
Defective Goods.
Mother was attracted by the yells of
her youngest offspring. For some
•trange reason she suspected thnt her
non William had something to do with
the vocal commotion. With father's
S’undny-go-to-ineetln’ razor strop In
bund she hurried to the nursery.
Willie met her with a disappointed
look on his face.
“Say, mn," he began, disgustedly,
“Mrs. Brown was all wrong. It won't
do it at all.'*
“Won't do what” demanded ma.
“Bounce," said Willie. “She said
the hahy was u bouncing boy, but he
ain't."
few cents under my personal guaran-
tee that It will cleuu your sluggish
liver better thun nusty calomel; It
won't muke you sick und you cun eat
anything you wunt without belug sail-
vuted. Your druggist guarantees thut
each spoonful will start your liver,
clean your bowels and strulghten you
up by morning or you get your money
back. Children gladly take Dodson's
Liver Tone because It Is pleusant tast-
ing and doesn't gripe or cramp or
make them sick.
I nm selling mMtlons of bottles of
Dodson's Liver Tone to people who
have found thnt this plensnnt, vege-
table liver medicine takes the place of
dangerous calomel. Buy one bottle on
my sound, reliable guarantee. Ask
your druggist about me.—Adv.
Brain Work.
“Adam gave a name to each of the
animals.”
“Yes," commented the lesson-weary
small boy. "Maybe having to study
nil that zoology was one reason why
he wasn't happy and contented in the
garden."
Out of Father's Hands.
"I’d like to get that soli of mine to
spade up the yard.”
"Well, why don’t you direct him to
do it?"
"I don’t know If I have a right to
without consulting his scout commis-
sioner."—St. Louis Globe-Deinocrut.
Money’s Devious Ways.
Mrs. Wayup—Where did Mrs. de
Style get her new lint?
Mrs. Blast'—Thnt’s a problem. She
bought It with the money which her
husband borrowed from her uncle,
who bad won It In a poker game from
her brother, to whom she Imd loaned
it shortly after her mother bail taken
It from her father’s pockets and given
It to her for a birthday present.—New
York Globe.
The light of happiness is often shut
nut by the shadow of suspicion.
Don’t wait until your
cold develops Spanish
Influenza or pneumonia.
RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR.
To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay
Rum, a smull box of Barbo Compound,
and *4 oz. of glycerine. Any druggist can
put this up or you can mix it at home at
very little cost. Full directions for mak-
ing and use come in each box of Barbo
Compound. It will gradually darken
rtrenked, 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.
In Shadeland.
Galileo was reading the Evening
Star when Shakespeare happened
along. “Well, what’s the world doing
now, old top?" usked the Immortal
one."
“Ask me something easier, Bill," re-
plied Galileo. "I once got Into serious
trouble for volunteering thnt very In-
formation.”—Buffalo Express.
Kill it quick.
Standard cold remedy for 20 years—In tablet
form—safe, sure, no opiate.—breaks up a cold
tn 24 hour.—relieve, grip in 3 day*. Money
back if it fail*. The genuine box haa a Red top
with Mr. HUl'a picture. At AU Drug Stores.
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 3-1919.
Where He Stood.
A kiss stolen under the mistletoe
had started It, and now he was uwuit-
Ing her reply.
"Wilfred," she snld, softly, "before I
give you my answer you must tell me
something. Do you drink anything?"
At her first words his handsome
face had darkened and grown gloomy;
hut nt the finish of her remarks all his
despondency lied. Was that all she
wanted to know?
Eagerly he clasped her In his arms
und whispered in her rosy ear: “Any-
thing!” he snld, fervently.
WEAK KIDNEYS MEAN
A WEAK BODY
When you’re fifty, your body begins to
creak a little at the hinges. Motion is
more slow and deliberate. "Not so young
gs I used to be" is a frequent and unwel-
come thought. Certain bodily functions
upon which good health and good spirits
so much depend, are impaired. The weak
j spot is generally the bladder. Unpleasant
B symptoms show themselves. Painful and-
annoying complications in other organs
arise. This is particularly true with el-
derly people. If you only know how, this
trouble can be obviated.
For over 200 years GOLD MEDAL
Haarlem Oil hns been relieving the in-
convenience and pa;n due to advancing
years. It is a standard, old-time home
remedy, and needs no introduction. It is
now put up in odorless, tasteless capsules.
These are easier and more pleasant to take
than the oil in bottles.
Each capsule contains about one dose of
five drops. Take them just like you would
any pill, with a small swallow of waten
They soak into the system and throw off
the poisons which are making you old be-
fore your time. They will quickly relieve
those stiffened joints, that backache, rheu-
matism, lumbago, sciatica, gall stones,
gravel, “brick aust,” etc. They are an
effective remedy for all diseases of the
bladder, kidney, liver, stomach and allied
organs.
GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules
cleanse the kidneys and purify the blood.
They frequently ward on attacks of the
dangerous and fatal diseases of the kid-
neys. They have a beneficial effect, and
often completely cure the diseases of the
bodily organs, allied with the bladder and
kidneys.
If you are troubled with soreness across
the loins or with “simple’’ aches and pains
in the back take warning, it may be the
preliminary’ indications of some dreadful
malady which can be warded off or cured
if taken in time.
Go‘to your druggist today and get a box
of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules.
Money refunded if thev do not help you.
Three sizes. GOLD MEDAL are the pure,
original imported Haarlem Oil Capsules.
Accept No Substitutes.—Adv.
SOLO FOR 60 YEARS
For MALARIA,
CHILLS and
FEVER
Also a Fin* General
Strengthening Tonic.
SOLD BY ALL DRIlfl STORES-
Clear Your Skin
Save Your Heir
With Culicura
Soap. Olnt., Talcum
25c. each. Sample
each of “Outleiib,
Dapt. B, So*ton."
r'ROST PROOF
Cabbage Plants
Bttrly Jersey and Charleston Wakefield, Suc-
cession and Flat Dutch. By express, 800, *1.25;
1,000, *2.00 ; 6,000 at *1.75; 10,000 and up atll.60,
V. O. B. here. By Parcel Post, prepaid, 100, 85c;
600, $1 JO; 1,000. *2.50. Wholesale and retail.
D. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S. C.
Unconscious Advertising.
Modest Young Lieutenant (reporting
to C. O. after a thrilling raid Into No
Man’s Lund)—Captain, I wish to re-
port Private Ilick's conduct In the
highest terms of praise. He Is the
bravest man in the world. He fol
lowed me every place I went.—Ontario
Post.
The man who falls In business, but
continues to live In luxury, Is a thief
—Spectator.
Gnbriel will piny the last trump In
the game of life.
Children’s Coughs
may be checked and more eerioue condition*
of the throat will be often avoided by
promptly giving the child • dose of safe
Your
Eyes!
A Wholesome, Cleansing,
Refreshing and Heallaf
Lotion—Murine for Red
ness, Soreness, Granula
, tion, Itching and Burning
_ of the Eyes or Eyelids
"2 Drop*" After the Movie*. Motoring or Gol
will win your confidence. Aak Your Druggiv
for Murine when your Eye# Need Care. m-ii
Maria* By* Remedy Co., Chicago
Important Commercial Centers
Destroyed Beyond Repair.
PEOPLE ARE LEFT HOMELESS
Country Should Be Forced to Pay for
fUithteea Destruction as Far a*
Within th* Power of Its
People.
By WRIGHT A. PATTERSON.
In August, 1914, the city of Lena In
northern France was a prosperous
community of close to f»0,000 people. It
was known as the Pittsburgh of
France, and Its coul fields were the
one great source of supply of fuel for
the nutlon. Its steel and Iron mills
supplied much of the material for
French railroad*, shipbuilding and
other Industries. Its people were In-
dustrious und thrifty, living In com-
fortable homes, surrounded by the
modest luxuries of an Industrial com-
munity.
All thnt Is left of Lens today Is a
crumbling pile of debris. No single
wnll of fhe city Is still standing, und
hardly n plocq, of a wall as much ms
ten feet square can he seen amid the
terrible ruins. Both the buildings
and the machinery of Its factories are
gone completely. Its coal mines are
flooded und the machinery with which
they were operated hns been destroyed.
And all this because Germany start-
ed n wur for the purpose of conquest;
a war In which no principle other than
thnt of selfishness was Involved. To-
day Germany Is a crushed nation. Her
plans for world domination miscarried,
her armies have been defented, but
before these things happened the city
of Lens had been destroyed.
I stood amid the ruins of whnt had
once been the attractive and prosper-
ous industrial community of Lens and
watched hundreds of her people who
had returned after the Germans had
been driven back, ns they senrehed for
the spots on which their homes had
once stood, as they dug Into the debris
they can he ntnde to pny for them an
far us dollars can pay.
And with the passing of this city
there passed nwuy many thousand
lives of British soldiers who today lie
hurled around the place they so hrnvp-
ly defended. One possibly better re-
alizes here the terrors of this war than
at any other one spot. Here the Ger-
mans held the hills to the east of the
city, and the British defenders occu-
pied the low-lying fields between the i
hills and the city. For them dugouts
or deep trenches were out of tin* ques- j
tlon ns the lutul Is hut little ubovc
sea level. And here, iq what Is almost
a marsh, the British Tommies lay
month ufter month, through winter and
summer, u fair target for the Boche
guns on the nearby hills.
When I was In Ypres late In Octo-
ber, many of the people to whom It |
had been home, were there digging
hopelessly In the rubbish In a vain ef-
fort to find some small thing that could
he usHoiiutcd with the homes thut the
Germans hud destroyed In their effort
to secure world domination by a wur
of conquest.
City of Walla Only.
The city of Menln In Belgium, wit*
not shelled by either urtny, anil yet it
Is u city that Germany should puy for. |
The wulls of Menln ure standing, but
It is a city of wulls only. The lloors,
the roofs, the Joists, the doors and win-
dows and the door and window cuslngs
are gone, all torn out by the Invading
Boche, with the result that the people
of Menln ure as homeless as the peo-
ple of Lens and Ypres and hundreds of
other cities und towns In the invaded
countries.
1 rode through devastated Armen-
tleres, Bullleul, La Bftssee, Doual.
Cambria, Boise), I’eronne, Albert, Ar-
ras, St. Quentin, Gulseard, Noymi,
Chauny, Thlaucourt, Vlgueulles and
hundreds of smaller towns, und the
story of devastation was always the
same, with hut little variation, devas-
tation caused by the Boche, and for
which the Boche should pay, and for
which the price assessed will never he
high enough.
In many ways the hellishness of the
Boche has been demonstrated. The
city of Arras has not suffered such
complete destruction as hns fallen
upon many other cities. Here the Ger-
muu gunners centered their fire upon
A* the City of Menln Looks Today.
In an effort to rescue from It some one
thing, some memento of that home they
bad loved as much, or even more than
we Americans love our homes. I saw
the tears on the cheeks of many as
they tolled. I sow an old woman car-
rying away, as the only thing she
could find, a piece of a broken chair,
and I thought, who shall pay for this
devastation, this misery?
There la But One Anewer.
Are the broken, homeless people of
Lens to pay? Are the people of France
to pay? Are the people of England or
America or Belgium to pay? Or are
the Germans to pay?
To be sure, the city of Lens was de-
stroyed by shells fired largely from
British guns. But they were fired Into
the city because the Invading Ger-
mans In the city must be driven
out that not only France, hut the
world, might be freed of the menace
of German domination; and the debris
thnt once was Lens stands today ns
n striking monument to German greed
and to the accuracy and efficiency of
British artillery.
Could the people of America have
seen the people searching those ruins
ns I saw them; could they have seen
the tears as I saw them they would
have said, ns I said, Germany musl
pay, and she must continue to pay
until this fair city and many, many
others like it, have been restored;
until these people and their descend-
ants are again the happy, prosperous,
contented people they were before the
hell of German wnntonness and selfish-
ness was let loose In 1914.
What happened In Lens has hap-
pened In many other cities and towns
In France, In Belgium, In Italy, in
Serbia, In Roumanla, In Poland, and
for all of them Germany and her al-
lies should pay, and pay, and pay.
Cruel Fate of Ypres.
Another example of the hellishness
of this German war of conquest is seen
in what was once the beautiful and
historic city of Ypres, in Belgium.
This town is today but one mass of
ruins. Its wonderful Cloth Hall and
St. Martin’s church, both considered
among the marvels of Europe and both
dating back to the thirteenth century,
are gone, never to be restored. There
Is no way by which the Germans can
give back to the world these beauti-
ful monuments of past centuries* but
the cathedral, and day after day, week
after week and month after month
they continued to pour a rain of metal
upon this beautiful old church until
today It is nothing but a mass of pow-
dered stoue. Germany cannot give
back that cathedral of Arras, but she
can pny and should pay for the need-
less, senseless destruction.
And the fair cities and towns that
have been so ruthlessly destroyed are
but Incidents lu the devastation caused
by this war, and for all of which Ger-
many and her allies, and they alone,
are responsible, and for all of which
they should pay.
DO YOU YAWN AT CONCERTS?
If So, There Is a Reason, Which Is
Thus Explained by Modern
8ong Writer.
If a person yawns during a sym-
phony concert and twists his program
instead of being absorbed in classical
music It may not be his fault. It may
be due to an undeveloped pituitary
body, which Is located in the brain,
back of the temples.
This Is according to Cyril Scott, the
song writer, in his "The Philosophy
of Modernism In Connection With
Music.” Mr. Scott says that this pitu-
itary body Is highly susceptible to mu-
sical vibrations, If normally developed.
In other words, It is the seat of the
emotions. He goes further and adds
that It Is the seat of the astral or sub-
llmal self. This Is In keeping with
the theory of the ancients that this
gland Is the seat of the soul.
In commenting on Mr. Scott’s state-
ment, Medicine and Surgery Magazine
says:
“At a time like this when the pitu-
itary body Is the paramount topic of
conversation in medical circles on ac-
count of Its influence on our under-
weight or overweight, Cyril Scott’s
message In regard to Its attitude to-
ward music should give us pause. The
faulty pituitary body can be corrected,
no doubt, by treatment; made super-
sensitive and vibrant; thus a person
Indifferent to music may become highly
appreciative to It.”
Young pea pods are largely eaten In
Europe and are described aa tender,
succulent and wholesome.
::::::::::
for the
sealed package. hot
have ao eye out
also lor the name
W RIG LEYS
That name Is your pro-
tection against Inferior
Imitations* lust as the
sealed package Is pro-
tection against Impurity.
Her Line of Waste.
Mrs. Bonlmm -Talk Is cheap.
Itcnham—If It wasn't you’d he the
Must extravagant woman In the world.
BOSCHEE’S SYRUP
Why use ordinary cough remedies
when Boschee’s Syrup has been 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 night's rest,
free from coughing, with easy expec-
toration In the morning, gives nature
a chance to soothe the inflamed parts,
throw off the disease, helping the pa-
tient to regain his health. Made In
Amcrjca and sold for more than half
a century.—Adv.
Do not rest your arms on the table.
8tack all your weapons In a corner be-
fore dinner.
Elderly Eggs.
Customer—You label those eggs.
"Fresh from the country." Are th<iy
the same ns I got here yesterday?
Grocer—Yes, sir.
Customer—Whut country do you
mean, China?
Beef Fat Substitutes.
Norway lias discovered that beef
suet Is not absolutely necessary to the
manufacture of margarine. Cod liver
oil, herring oil and other fish oils ara
said to be excellent substitutes.
Well Trained.
"Does Bessie muke George a good
wife?"
“No, but she has made hliu un aw-
fully good husband."
Fuult finding, like charity, often be-
gins at home.
Scorn oometh close upon servility.
Grow Wheat in Western Canada
One Crop Often Pays for the Land
JS®»
-v.
Western Canada offers the greatest advantages to home seekers.
Large profits are assured. You can buy on caay payment terms*
I Fertile Land at $15 to $30 per Acre—
■ land similar to that which through many years has averaged from 20 to 4S
I bushels of wheat to the acre. Hundreds of cases are on record where in Western
I Canada a single crop has paid the cost of land and production. The Govern-
Iments of the Dominion and Provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta want
I the farmer to prosper, and extend every possible encouragement and help to
Grain Growing and Stock Raising.;
] ThoughWestem Canada offers land atsuch low figures, the high
I prices of grain, cattle, sheep and hogs will remain.
Loans for the purchase of stock may be had at low interest;
I there are good shipping facilities; best of markets; free schools;
churches; splendid climate; low taxation (none on improvements).
particular* a* to location of land, for Kale, mar*. illoatrated literature,
ed railway rates, etc., apply to Supt. of Immigration. Ottawa, Cau.. or
F. H. HEWITT, 2012 Main Stmt, KANSAS CITY, MO.
, For
raduo
Canadian Government Agent
Let our suggestion influence
you just once to try—then
you will be our friend and customer, for
HELIOTROPE
The Always
Reliable99
FLOUR
is the most likable product of
golden wheat—a milling par
excellent for all flour uses.
Ask Your Grocer—
Oklahoma City Mill & Elevator Co, Oklahoma City
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Hornbeck, W. W. The Kiowa County News. (Lone Wolf, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 5, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1919, newspaper, January 16, 1919; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1173505/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.