Pauls Valley Democrat (Pauls Valley, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 12, 1914 Page: 3 of 8
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The Authority of Law In
Our Prescription Dept.
When your doctor writes your prescription, he is
authorized by law, by training and by experience to
diagnose your case and prescribe for you. When you
bring your prescription to us you get the advantages
of all the authority that the law has invested in us.
Registered graduate pharmacists fill our prescriptions
and every attention and detail is attended to, thereby
assuring you of proper and correct results. You get
this careful service without extra cost.
L"wmMJ
tauiiGUtff! IT SICKENS 1
ACTS ON LIVER LIKE DYNAMITE
Hi OTIC K OF SHERIFF'S SALE.
In the District Court for Garvin
County, State of Oklahoma.
Frod, S. Gum and Lester It. Gum
>artners doing business under the firm
name of Gum Brothers, Plaintiffs..
Vs. Mo. 1507.
I>auta Overton Love. Mittle Love, his
wife. W. M. Freeman and C. I . Mo
Olueky, trustee, and the National Re-
serve Itank of Kansas City, Missouri, a
•Corporation, Defendants.
Notice it) hereby give that under and
by virtue of an order of sale issued t<
me out of th«* District Court - f Garvin
County, Oklahoma. 1 will on Tuea-jp.y,
he 1 fit It, day of December, 1914, at two
■'clock p. ni. of .said day. at the front
door of the Court House in Pauls Val-
ley, Oklahoma, offer at Sheriff's sale,
to the hiKht-st and best bidder for ca h
in hand, without appraisement, tin
last half of the Southeast quarter « f
Section 24. in Township ,'i North of
itangs 2 West of the Indian Meridian,
thc'Wcst 16.02 acr<-s of lot :{ in Section
19 and the West lti.02 acres of lot 1
m Section 19. both in Township 2 North
of Itangf l West of the Indian Merid-
ian, Garvin County, Oklahoma, suhj.v-t
«> a prior mortgage of $1500.00 to th<-
Aetna iJfe Insurance Company.
The above described property in sold
as the property ..f d l.-nlants ah . <
named and is direct*4 by said ord- r of
.sale to be sold as upon execution witn-
vut appraisement, according to law. to
satisfy a judgment in favor *>f th •
• >iaintiffs, Fred S. Gum and Lester 1 .
Gum, partners, doing business un ier
the name of Gum Brothers for $23 4.79
v/lth interest from May Blh, 1914. at
10 per cent per annum, together with
$50.00 attorney's fees and costs. |
A MISTAKEN IDEA
There arc some people who still resort
to drugged pills or alcoholic syrups to
overcome colds, nervousness or general
debility, and who know that the pure,
unadulterated nourishment in Scott's
Kmulsion is eminently belter, but refrain
from taking it because they fear it may
lead to excessive fat or obesity.
This isa mistaken idea, because Scott's
Kmulsion first strengthens tlie bo<ly before
makingflesb. Its blood-forming proper-
ties aid nature to throw off sickness by
buildinghealth from its very source,and
flesh is formed only by its continued use.
Avoid alcoholic substitutes for SCOTT'S.
Relieves Rheumatism
Everybody who is afficted with rheu
COWS FRESHEN IN THE FALL
1 Milk Flow Kept Up for Longer Period
and Produced During the Season
of High Prlcee.
j (By W. KRHEUOKF, Wisconsin.)
| For cow* to freshen twice a year
1 really sounds like nature faking, but
: that la just what happens to cows that
| freshen in the fall.
| Good feeding and careful attention
j keep up a large flow of milk all win-
[ ter: then In the spring when the green
: herbage comes the rule, again the man
| (factum of milk receives a fresh stlm
■ UlUB.
I Thus by fall freshening the milk
flow is not only kept up for a longer
period of time than would otherwise
be the case, but the most ndlk Is pro-
duced during the season of highest J
prices. In this lies the chief superi
orlty of winter over summer dairying
t'ows that freshen in the sprfrig dry
up quickly ill the fall when the grass
Is no longer present; few farmers take
good care of a dry cow during the
winter so that the next year the ani-
mal will be still less useful. Such de-
terioration in a cow is often greater
than the entire value of her tnilk
! products.
j Then again, the cows need most
: protection during the summer months
1 when labor may he u«ed to better ad
HEREFORD BREED OF CATTLE
Represents Type Suitable for Largest
Production of Beef—Has No Su-
perior on Range.
Tbe Hereford derives its name from 1
Its native district In England. The
most popular color and markings are
dark claret or cherry, r-hlte face,
throat, chest, legs, belly and small
stripe of white on neck and before
the shoulders. The honis are me-
"Mson's Liier Tone" Starts Your Liver
Btlier Than Calomel and Doesn't
Saiivats or Make You Sick.
ie! '1 :tke nn mom sick-
i . ilotuel when bilious or
lion': lose a day's work I
nvivun or quicksilver
mvrosis of the bones,
it cornea into contact
crashes into it, breaking
Hereford Bull.
to
cmnjj, -MIIK;
' i-,
which can-, m
Calomel, when
with sour bile
it up. Tliis \h when you fool that awful
naunea and crumping. If you are nlug-
•jjish and ''ull knocked out,'* if your
liver is torpid and l*m 1h coiiHtiputcd
or you have headache, dizrincM, coated
tongue, if hroatn in had or ntonmch ssour
just' take a spoonful of hurmlcH* l)od-
bon's Liver on my guarantee.
Here's my guarantee—On tn nm •Irog
at«m 9u<} gi-t a 50 cent battle •>! h vi-
• n's Mvf r Tom*. 'lake a s^ooifu) t"~
ni|fht and 't it doeHti't Ktruii^hieu vn.i
r-^ht up nd make you feel fine ami
viv-oun by morning I want you to •
!>h«'Iv to . «• store and get, your ronnoy.
!)-<! oil's Liver Tone is d« -Jro it>g ihi
nal«' of calomel lx cauM{ it. is r..*I i'u.-t
medicine; entirely vegetable, ;i.er >5v.re it
can not aalivate or tnak - v<- - ;• -Ic.
1 guarant<v that one npoouful of DoJ
Ron'rt Liver Tone will put your drUg-.-i i-
liver to work and clean y ur bonvwU of
that «our bile and coiiat-ipat >1 w.i.ste
whfeb it clogging your hj'kumji and mak
ing you feel miMuahle. 1 purantH that,
a battle of TVod«on'a Liver i'ore will
keep your entire family feeling fine for
months. Give it to your cbihlre u It h
harmlew, doesu't gripe and they like iia
ptaia&nt tabic.
\OTICK OF SHI IMI I S MALE.
The Pauls
Corporation.
Vh.
No
I diuia to long, white and generally
turning outward.
This breed represents the type that
i8 suitable for the largest production
of beef as it. is low set and broad,
heavy in Lorequarter* full, deep
chest, level wide hack, wide thick
loin (and quarters. The form repre-
sents that which is associated with a
strong constitution, vigor and pre-
potency and one of the ptrong points
of the. breed is its gra/.ivjr attributes.
The Hereford probably has no super-
ior on the range. The eows of this
nougli to raise
i of in may n* necaiiary to satisfy said
.i mln nu nt. intorest. co.slsi and ro.-is of
' wale r:n«l all th" i i«ht, tit 1 •• int re.*t an«J
equity of redemption of said dci'« ndantn
i in and t< said property or any parv
i thereof as in c«s.- of salcy .f
; rotate on exe«'iition, without "iprain"
i ment subject to confirmation by si Ui
f Throe H„ ,- I
Witness my hand this the llth, day
. , . breed give ouly mill
III vantage in the fields, while during the H V(>J.N ,|lr|ffv 0.l)f
winter months no labnr can find em I
matism in any form should by
mens keep a bottle of Sloans linimsnt j ployment. Summer dairying has ab
on hand Tne roimue you (eel oain or i HoluUjl.v nothing to command It.
soreness in a joint or in>:sele, bathe it
DON'T KEEP TOO MANY HOGS
Feed ia about the same jirlee In the i
. . summer as in the winter, uhllfe wlntei I ©veratocked Farm la Unprofitable One
with S.oan s Linim- it Do r.ot tub ltr, labor is cheaper: this, with the in I qjvc gvery p,y or other Ani-
Sloans D-*ne:rates arnost immediatefv | creased price for winter products ■ nlJ| a Fair Chance.
, . j iiiakes winter dairying by far the mors
right to the -ea of pjtn. relieving the j j,ro;Ual)le 1
Sheriff ,,f oirvin rourtn?jR0kKi,om„.: hot teuder, swollen f-elinu and mak—
A e", Chamber*. I/JW* & Itieliards.m. ;n„ r,,r> ... i.nmfnH3Sle G
H(tom« .va it>r i taiiKi
ing the part easv apt! comlortable Gt t CJ_£AfjL|fJFSS
a bottle of Sloans Liniment for 25c oi | —
IS ESSENTIAL
Whenever Vou Need a ueneral Ionic isny druKRist and h? e it in the house
Take Grove's **
Tlic Old Standard Grove's Tasteless i ~"8 >nst colds, sore and swollen
chill Tonic is c<]ually valuable as a joints, rheumatism neuralgia, sciatica,
General Tonic because it contains the . , , « .
well known tonic properties of QUININE an ailmer.ts Your rnoriey bacK
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives j if not satisfied, but it always gives in
out Malaria, Knricbes the Ulood and ' ...
Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents slant rtiiei *(iv
J. O. A lis tot t, Sanitary Slaughterer,
Wholesale Butcher Hide and
Livestock Dealer.
Having tamed (he retitil meat market over to
J C Thompson, I now have time to jrive better
attention to the line of business I follow.
J. O. ALLSTOTT
Too (Vuch Car® Cannot Pe Exflrcited
in Handling Milk, a« it Oetnon-
•tratrd by London Ca«e.
In the nrilInk of inil>. both foi
home ooiibumptlou on tht* farm and
I alao for shipment to the various mar
j kets, U)o much eare cannot be taken
in keeping 11 absolutely fre« from eon
; tact with anything in which there is a
I poHhtbility of being germs of disease
The fojlovrfft?: paragraph amply illus
\ trates the deadly resuUs of careleeis
nesi, and Nhouid be a warning lo a!l
I who have to do with the handling at
i milk:
"A milkman near London pricked
'! his linger with a thorn. It festered
j but he refused to Rive up lii« work
until he was obliged to go Into.a hos
pital. At the same time an epidemic
of diphtheria broko out in the neigh
, borhood. an epidemic which eventually
j caused 117 deaths. The doctors were
i at first at a loss to trace the cause
but presently they found that, the
: germs came from milk supplied from
i the farm where the man with the
i pricked finger worked. Then they ex
I amined the uian nnd found that his
' poisoned hand r**k«d with germs at
this deadly disease."
I It Is a mistake to overstock your
; place witli pigs or my other atutnals.
; Too many farmers in attempting lo
I make money by increasing the num-
I her of animalB do so at tin; expeiu'?
J of quality. An ov ratocl.ed farm is
; not a profitable one. A form that is j
I oven-tocLi-d is ohn that has more j
I snfnnils oj any char;M*tc r than can I • j
•' piopc/ly cared for m k< j/t in koc;J, i
| thrifty, growing condition. Wherevei
' the numbers Interfere with the growth !
i or with the attention that should he
, given them it is overstocked. If the i
j pastures are too small for them oi •
i too short, necessitating the purchase
i of feed, the profits are cut. with a two- >
j edged sword, first because of purclms ,
; ing feed, second because of injury to i
the thrift and growth of the animal
i More money can be made with hall' the
animate properly ted and cared loi
! and kept in a thrifty, growing condl
, tion. Every pig or other animal
should have a chance, ami if thoy ar«
crowded it. is impossible to give them
a good show. Numbers sometime*
are the sole cause of losses instead of
profits.
T s. Stevonson. AHjp Stevenson. TI..
Monarch Loan Company, .i Corporation!
A. I. (tuff, It. 1^. Frennan and L 1 .
Davis, Di'liMulantH.
Whorena it appears from an order of
Sal«- issued out of the District Court
of the County of Garvin ami State of
Oklahoma liourlnu date of the 10th, dnv
J oCr N\ vember, 1914 to ine directed and
j now In my hand*, that on the 23rd,
day of February 1914 in on action tlu-n
i p« riding in said Court, wherein The
1'euls V'alley National flank, a Corpora-
, t it mi w ii m plaintiff and 'i'. .s fltev.-nson,
Alice Stevenson, The Monnr<ti Loan
• Company, u Corporation, A. J. c.ofl. H.
I.. Fr«-innn and J* D. Davis were th-
defendants, a personal judgment w>i >
. rendered In said Court in said action
• In fa\ .i of the plaintiff and agaliist
said defendants T. y. Htovenson. AJiee
Stevenson for th«
jdred Sixty Nine and 05|100 ($369.05) i ^
j debt and damages bearing1 interest at! November, l.ni
the rate of ten per cent per annum
from the (lit.- thereof and costs . f huit
taxed ni Nineteen anil no|100 ($l9.<ui) I
aiitl which sums were declared and ;i i-
iudged by tut id Court t<i In- ?i vuj.i
«•« .,,! Hen on the real estate therein,
and hereinafter described.
And whereas, it further appears that
it wuh further ordered by said Court
in said netI6)i tliat an order «if nale
issuo out of said Court directed to th •
Sheriff of said County of Garvin com-
manding him to advertise and sell said
real «;itot'. without appraisement. < r
.SO miii'h tiler* of as may be nec« HMj,ry
to satisfy said Judgment, inter -at, eostn
and i'o.st;i of sale, and all the ri^ht,
titb . intereKt and e«iuity of redemp- !
tlcn of wild defendants in and to *aid i
property * r any part thereof as In en*-
ef sales <,f real estate on execution
without .'ipprrismt nt subject toconiii -j
mat ion by the Court, and mibjeet to
first mortgan > II.mi of the Monarch j
Loan Company, for tlio principal «um oft
9300.00.
And whereas, I am commanded in J
said order of sale now in my hands to
nrtvortlHe and sell Ma id premises pur
suant to the order and judgment of
said i'ourt, as aforesaid.
Now. Therefore public notice ts here-
by given, that on the ls.th, flay of De-
cember 1914 at the hour of 2 o clock in
the p. m. of the Muid day. at th- main
entrance of the Court House, in sarrt
County of Garvin. I .shall offer for sate
and s-ii <" the highest and best bid
tier, for cash, the real estate in« ntion **
in sakl order of Sate, nnu described a.*
follows to-wit:
The west half of the east hall r
the northeast quarter of S« etion tS^
Towushlp 1 North, llan^'c 1 West. i
said C« unty of Garvin or ho mu<h there
Sheriff
CM AS F W'ORI. Y
itit >. OU) thon
$100 Reward, SlOft
Tim readers of tiiis pap«v n'ilL (,«>
pleased t*> learn that there i : tnt m i-
dreadsd disease that sclei. . • - tner.
able to cure in all its staK*-s, one that is.
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure the eily
positive cure now known to ti > medical
fraternity. Catarrh being u eeustitution.il
olseuHO, requires a constitutional treat
ment. fialTs Catarrh Cur. I - t ilteti ii
tcrnally, ucting dire« tly upon the Moort
and mut ous surfuees of the nys-em, there-
by destroying the foundatioti of the dis
case, and giving the pa.iem or iiRth hy
building up tho constitution ami assisting
nature In doing its work. Tie pripriotoi«
have jio much faith In its • jrative pow-
ers that jtlioy offer One Hundred Dollars
for any cane that it falls to cure. Send
for Hit of testimonial*.
Addi-rr: J\ .1. CHKNKT A- CO 7oJ«4o. ().
Bohl t v all liriiLgitftn. ?&c.
Tkkt Hall's Faintly Ptlla fdr cor.ttipaOurv
GREEDY HOGS ARE DESIRABLE
Oregon Station Find* by Actual Feed
ing Tetti That Heaviest Eater Is
Most Profitable.
Horse Shoeing
A SPECIALTY
The feet of every horse brought to us
is thoroughly examined before shoeing
and special care is taken that the horse
is shod according to individual need
and we warrant the work.
I have secured the services of Jno
Phenton, the noted horse-shoer,
to do this work.
"COAL!
Carbonite
McAlester
and
Cheaper Grades.
Lump,
Lump,
Our prices are right-
Terms—Cash on Delivery.
PHONE 193
PauisValley Ice&Fuel Co.
DEVICE FOR LEADING A BULL
M*tal Tub* Provided With Handle si
One Knd and Hixak on Cither
Will Prove Efficient.
t The body of this "leati" ie r metal j
1 ttrbjB. ftiur fe«i In lwi<lU, proTide^
with a handle on oue eu<i mtd a hoik
od the utile;'. Inai'lA I tin tube In a
rod, which Is presxe>l ajealnst tho lo
Tbe Oregon agricultural station has ;
found out by actual feeding teals that |
I be hog which eats most greedily is
the most profitable. Thirty pigs were |
divided into three lots, the heaviest
eaters lu one lot. and others graded 1
according to their capacity for coil- |
turning feed.
A hundred hogs like the heaviest (
: eaters at the rate of gain made and
• present prices, would make a profit
of |2B'('.t>3, or almost, exactly $:; a
j head. A hundred like the poorest j
feeders would have made a profit of 1
j $115,611, or only a Utile more than a
: dollar a head. They were eienly
j graded ss lo sine and fcex. If there
j is this greal difference between the j
; heavy-eating hogs and the light eat-
era—then ruofl lion growers will agree !
| 1 a at the breeders might well devote
themnelves to breeding appetite in
hogs, insleiid of color or fancy points.
: If the appetite makes the profits,
i breed appetite.
A general line of Blacksmith ing dona
and all work guaranteed to be satis -
factory. Nothing to small for our
bestsorvicft nor too large for us to
handle.
Jim S. Walker
Shop Opposite Valley Wagon Yard
Lead for Dangtraua Bull.
uer side of the hook by a spring, but
Is cosily released by a pull ou the
riujf at the opposite end of the rod.
Th« ueer aimply stands at a safe dls
tfcj+ce and ctarep* the device /over the
fa«usltlve central wall of the iull's
. nose. ]p case <jf necessity It caji he
used effectively as a club.
Cewa Get Hemeeiok.
<"o«s are nervous, tlmlil and ser.sl
live and (hey suffer wltl) homesick-
ness. The newly purchased cow la
apt to fall off in her milk flow for a
time until she aeta used to new tur
ronndliigs.
Ice Cream Ooublee Profits.
Mauy dairymen, a ho reside adjacent
tc cities, find that they can 4ouble
their . profit* hy making ice cream.
This ludustry has b en gr«atly aided
by tbe pure food la* requiring a high
made article of lee cream.
LivtSroq
UNotes i:
Never let. tbe colt uut ae If I he mare |
la heated.
Karly and thorough training, makes
gentle, safe ana tractable boraes.
. . .
Keep vou ok stock growing and it i
will be earning Kometkiuc every <i y. '
« s .
No profitable animals should be I
kept a moment longer than necessity i
requires.
... j
The profitable •1111 Hon breeds of j
sheep are those of early maturity,
rapid growth and necessarily chort-
lived.
• • •
It takes longer and costg more lo
make up a pound of loss Ihun it does
lo udd five pounds of gain under fa-
vurable conditions.
• ♦"* — I
1 YOU PAY the "FIDDLER"
So why not get good groceries of stan-
dard brands that are wholesome and
dependable.
Then too our service is worth mentioning- we treat you
ritfht., gjve you prompt and courteous treatment Try us.
Phone 23-SPARKS GROCERY
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Mitchell, J. D. Pauls Valley Democrat (Pauls Valley, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 12, 1914, newspaper, November 12, 1914; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc118534/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.