Pauls Valley Democrat (Pauls Valley, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 30, 1915 Page: 2 of 8
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what catarrh is STUDENTS EARN M
■ :J f> *rv third
It has been a d that every third
p, t0fl has catarrh in fr'rm-
Scieote has *hown that nasal tatar
^ .n indicates a general weakne
of he body; and l'" il treatment*
ti t form of snuffs and vapors do lit'
if any %fsd.
rrh ron ho"jl'l trr*'.
Jobs at New Haven Net Scholars
S37.146.
To corn
er by «nrichin_ .
« <ood in Scott * Kma
n.. «1 food nd «
f a^coW.or-nyterm
feat' *
or
nc.fr-
T-yit.
Let Nrtu-e Hi/i l« « /
no
tb'
V 4 If
asd th
i1 l-a
r u
V/orV for 2,007 Obtains by Bureau of
Appointment*, Aec«rding to Re-
pot—Some Make %y00
a Year.
• « w Haven —Yal* student* who
worked •: Ir y through coll'-** lant
4 A a total of ;7.H6>si >n
• i r-l for th«rn by the Lu
r . j of *pi*/linm«-nU of Y l - univer-
•line to the fir«t report of
«ahC t
On, man worked for U e Wtorh-.tf
Repea mc Anna wmpuf, 4o:o* •
twelve-hour ablfl aix m«hU a week,
and be completed a regular year of
law iKbool work. Otban care Dl'.fh'
of hand performance*. played tn or-
thewtras. served a* inspector* for the
anttfly campaipi, acted a* doorkee^
er at wedding etc. One sa-.h-red
newspaper clipping* at 50 cent* a
clipping of the r cord of every cot
P^lltive event between Yale and Har-
vard to settle an argument between
a Yale graduate and a Harvard grad
uate. One cleaned tombstone a
GRAVEYARD IS FOR SALE
Milton Burying Ground, Oldest in St.
Loui*. to Be Sold for "a
Song"
JUST HOW TO CURE A COLD
All Depend*, Sema f hjr*ici*n* Da
ciare, on Haw the Patient Ac-
Quired the Connp'aint.
The proper treatment of a cold
ordtng to manv physicians, <li>
wMch serve as warehouses and the'
floating elevator* which furnish tlx '
bu*:n->a8 to Antwerp's 300 grain i
ho*j«H. These elevators, with e gh1 |
new voted last year, are twelvt
in number and are owned by the mu-
nic;pal:tr. They are pneumatic-,
ith a lsft of 100 feet, and one cares
I" ♦
pecds in some degree upon the way ^ a cargo of 5,000 tons in about
the i>erson ha# taken the cold. It u
n<-—arv to go bac-k to the beginning
Liberty News
Mi "■ "H * N<ai5("> Kay
too i> and Haiti" ftawyei -tent
Sunriiy at M Luther H rnil-
i<llh
Mr aii'i Mr® Bhvik 1<Jk uud
daughter* np-nt Sunday ; ftfr-
iioon at Mr M <:i*.
Hji.^4 Vugi>- Foster and
Nan'-y liavl "!•' winners
iii 'he frui'. canning club at
Paula Valley la-<i Weduehday.
Mi>> fc'ciHter iec *ived litst prize,
it li-'ing a free trip to the i<tale
fair, MtHa Rapburn «etK a fre
trip to attend a Klwrt court#; at
Hti 11 water iu January. V\ e all
wa it to con^iaiulate the Rirlb
on their ni';e work and hope
they will be as luck again.
Misb Lillie My era i-p ut Suti
day afternoon at the home of
Arthur Hamiltoim.
Clyde Cartel Bptnt Satuiday
night with Kohert Myern
Correnpondent.
Si Tioui*.—Anybody wish to buy *
remetery for *lxt"'-eight cents" Olb
i* to be. sold at public auction for
taie* and co*ta to cov. r the amount-
It is the old Milton burying gr'J ind,
With *11 area of three tenth* of an
acre, a quarter of a mile north of
East Alton, the oldest grave in hich
is that of John Milton, s/bo died In
1812.
An assessment of two dollars *as
levied against the graveyard for the
Bast Alton drainage and leve dis-
trict It waif to be paid In annual in-
stallments of twenty-three cents
i The trustees of the cemetery have
had little money for its upkeep arid
for the past year or so J. W < 're-
former treasurer of the drainage
board, has paid the twenty-three
cent* out of hi* own pocket.
Iiiir n* he year the bureau a r.i«t
„ | ,, . i . ii-ntu who applied lor wor*
In tl." rase* of three-fourths of the
, ng the bureau provided for
*urt > <1 vholar*hip aid *u(Bcient to
.e the assets for the year equal tc (
the total necessary espense*.
Tyvew'/ttf'jg and stenographic work
fura^e'l the most profitable meat:*
of -mployrnent and the newspaper bu-
rna . brought good results. Owing to
til- discussion that arose concern-
ing tutoring this mean* was not
p . ihed vigorously Next year, ac-
trdiM< i" arrarigements matJ'i by tbi*
faculty, there will be a regular tutor-
ing school attached to the university.
The record kept of the amounts
earned by students shows that a total
of 2 fW7 Jobs were given out during the
hine month* of the university year.
■ from which the men reported total ATniir onicnWftU^
larnlngi of $.>.61111. a"d 175 posl- QUARRY STONE POISON
! furni tii :d for students for |
the summer, from which the estl- Men and Harui Made Sick by Flyinj
mated total income is $17,500. Particle* When Lime*tone
This, of course, does not include the I* Blasted.
large amount of income of men from j
work which they have continued on Auburn—A peculiar form of blood
work wrtun m*y na>w tuiiwiiuv. w.. A'iDurn—^ p *^uii « "
Jobs obtained through the bureau In polfIon|nR among employees ia a Ume-
previous year*, or the earninga from , Kton„ quarry was reported by Dr.
the large amount of work which men , John H vVbitbeck. health officer of
have found for themselves about the rayu(?a Fifty men have been strick-
Ity. On the basis of this computa- |
tion It is estl mated about seven bun- j
tjroil students In the university sup-
port themselves and earn approximate
|y |300 a year each at Yale.
They engaged In all kinds of work.
VARICOCELE
CURED IN 5 DAYS —
-,t,ti.*i iMti.
'"in * ouuf. : M ;.iT". I.-'
1 ■ '
„. . „l, f.lloto I" In.l-.—I' .
1 rI mill o'lii'T *wnpt"tii Uiil'*'
1 A, «, M*r. Writ# f-ir iHu-trnU-a
'wraSSSi
Pay when CURED
There w< rs ilS ushers, 98 did clerical
work 7u were walters, and Included
in other rlasses of work are canvass
lug, caring for furnaces, gardening,
collecting, clerical work in dining
halls, musir and clerking in stores.
Twenty-tlvn men canvassed for
names for a woman's suffrage petition
presented to the Connecticut legisla
ture live acted as models for artlBts,
for claitH.M in anatomy and for an un-
derwear manufacturing company; flf-
teen acted as pallbearers, fifty <*«
"supers" in theatrical entertainments,
flv« were professional partners ai
Cayuga . ---, —
en. Six are in a hospital and one
will probably flie
According to Doctor V\ httbeck, t.ie
malady Is caused by the blasted stone.
Horses cut by particles also were in-
fected.
of the illn -?s—to begin where the
cold began.
For instance, if one eatehefc cold
bv getting the feet cold, -ay by going
out with thin shoes, and getting wef
and chilled, it is not the cold but thf
long chilling that does t'ne harm.
The be st measure ia to taKe a hot
font bath. The cold got in through
the feet, so it should be driven out
through the feet.
If one get- cold by expo-ing thf
bark of the neck to a draft, resulting
in a lame l>a> k. sorene--, cold and
itiffnei- in the neck, then hot appli-
cation- -vnild be made to the beck of
the neck. ,. ,
If the cold is the result of general 'or "im-
exposure and a lowering of the gen-
eral bodily tcin| frature then a gen-
' eral hot "oath i* eood. This should
Ije taken at night Drink a couplt
of glav--s of hot water, get into the
hot bath and stay there about half
an hour.
Have the bath hot enough to set
up perspiration. It may be as hot as
one likes in 'lie beginning, but when
perspiration begins, lower the tem-
perature to about 100 degrees, and
keep it there for about half an houi
more. Then lower it to about 95 de-
OTees arid stav in the bath anothei
hour. One may safely remain in
! the bath two hours if suffering witl
a realiv bad cold.
Drink some more water at the
close of the bath and go to bed. It
is well to drink just as mrnh water
as on £ i aa.
thr^e da-s, which formerly detained j
i t--.--«*1 there for fourteen days when
hand labor was employed. While I
hostilities may perhaps set the work
back another decade, hope may bt
ieriveij hv Antwerp and other strick-
*n citie* bv remembering how calam-
ity often has a most stimulating ef
feet u;v«n industry—a- in such cases
« San Francisco. Baltimore, etc.—
Scientist American.
Good-Night Corns,
fiori-Bsy "fists-W
Srw-TlMmCmimAj ThatHtrw
yBii« The Smp le, Conunoa
Sense Way.
srnmM
ySar corn*. You can l;1 art •
IMPROVEMENT.
"That wan doesn't tell the truth j
naif the time."
'•Well." replied Senator Sorghum: j
'he mtfst be reforming. A fifty pel j
-ent veracity average is pretty high ;
THE NATURAL INFERENCE.
"Gets-It' Ends Corn l' ln - H* 8ar
And too.
riS nf corns the ea«>* way, quick.
Kimple, sure, new
mon sense. > can't
^L.fbned corn EJosenS and come.
^^Qet^ir^lrSoW at all drupgl.t^
25c *. bottle, or .sent direct by K.
Luwreiico de Cu ChlflWO.
Sold in Pauls Valley and recom-
mended as the world's best corn
'•It-is said that a great many illicit
distilleries have been found in lius-
sia since the sale of vodka was pro-
hibited."
'•What do you infer from that?" Drug Store.
hven an imperial ukase cannot
uike the i^dge off a national thirst.- "^™I7d Mrs. J. R- Hanison
its name. ]Vho are at Gatesville, Texas,
a>e receiving congratulations
"This collection of ^dippings is a ^ ^ anival Thursday of a
Urtory Of prize fights , daughter who
know ; that ,s why it ts a scrap ^ ^ Adelaide.
jook.
ITS EXTENT.
"Do voll like the marble bust sent
,oii among your other ornaments.-
"Oh, it's head and slioukkrs over
he rest of them."
Workmen Find Coffin.
Ladoga, Ind—The remains of a cof-
fin containing some fragments or hu-
man bonea were uneartln.-d here by
workmen excavating tor a cellar in
New Koss. The grave was not near
a cemetery. About fifty years ago a
man named NoUsinger disappeared
mysteriously from New Ross and wai
not seen nor heard from after >jr«.
Residents of New Ross b. iieve a
with fmil play and waa hurie'
woods, which then covered '• '
where the grave was fouriri
GRAIN DOCKS AT ANTWERF
Plan Contemplate* Concentration of
Ail City'* Business of That Par-
ticular Description.
The "dock of the concentration'
i at Antwerp was, by the action of the
i i ity authorities just prior to the j
declaration of war, to have been a
reality in U'lti. The plan, conceived
ten years ago, is to concentrate at
one great dock all the prain hiuw
USELESS TROUBLE.
"l>on't dignify that accusation
jt itli a reply."
"1 dare say a reply in this case
couldn't answer."
itaxia."'
ITS SORT.
Jiggs has locomotor
one of the newest
\ Wonderful Antiseptic
Germs and infection aggravate ail-
ments and retard healing Stop that in
(ectioo at once Kill the germs and
get rid of the poisons. For this pur-
pose a single application of oloan s
Lin;;nent not only kills the pain but
destroys the germs. This neutralizes
infection and gives nature assistance
overcoming congestion and gives a
"Chance for the free and normal flow of
the blood. Sloans Liniment is an emer-
gency doctor and should be kept con-
1 s'.antly on hond. 25c. 50c The Sl.oo
I sizecontains six times as much as tne
125c. Adv-
m
And it is to your advantage to trade with us. For our large stock and low prices
appeal to you. Our reasons why we sell for less is because we buy cr
Cash and sell for Cash, and that's your biggest advantage.
MAKE NO MISTAKE—COME TO THE RIGHT PLACE
Apron Gingham, per yd
Cotton Cheeks, per yd
10c Dress gingham, per yd
:!t) inch Percale, per yd
Outings and flannelettes, per yd
House canvass, per yd..
•) 4 Unreached sheeting, per yd.
Silk poplins, in all colors.
5c
4c
74c
8/iC
5c and 8'ic
3ic
39c
50c bed sheets,
8 ox Duck, per yd
Pillow Slips, each
Good childrens dresses, in all sizes, 2- c i <Jt c
Cotton bats, each - ®c
A good toweling, per yd
Boys knee pants, a good line to pick from,' 0c
Boys Suits, a big stock to pick from H-J
A good line of boys hats
A pood line of Mens pants •
Mens ribbed underwear - -
Mens ribbed union suits - - c
Mens blue work shirts..... - - - c
.i $1 bo
Mens work shoes
Ladies shoes gl 35
Boysshoes - '
Be sure and see our line of ladies cloaks,
a nice line to pick from. The most up-to-date
line of ladies skirts f2*25
Our line of comforts and blankets will sur
prise you when you see them, at these pi ices.
Be sure and see our ladies and Mens and
also childrens Rain coats and rubbers, in fact
anything for the wet weather.
' t„ref prices carefully and compare them with any
1f vou admit we sell foe less
Pauls Valley, Oklahoma.
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Mitchell, J. D. Pauls Valley Democrat (Pauls Valley, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 30, 1915, newspaper, September 30, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc118580/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.