The Talihina Tribune (Talihina, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1916 Page: 2 of 8
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THE TALIHINA TRIBUNE
Not a Bite of.
Breakfast Until
You Drink Water
Says ■ glass of hot water and
phosphate prevents lllnesa
and keepa us fit.
HAPPIEST MOMENT OF DONOVAN'S LIFE
Just as coal, when It burns, leaves
behind a certain amount of Incom-
bustible material In the form of ashes,
•o the food and drink taken day after
4ay leaves In the alimentary canal a
certain amount of Indigestible mate-
rial, which If not completely eliminat-
ed from the aystem'each day, becomes
food for the millions of bacteria which
Infest the bowels. From this mass of
left-over waste, toxins and ptomaine-
like poisons are formed and sucked
Into the blood.
Men and women who can't get feel-
ing right must begin to tako Inside
batbe. Before eating breakfast each
morning drink a glass of real hot wa-
ter with a teaspoonful of limestone
phosphate In it to wash out of the
thirty feet of bowels the previous day's
accumulation of poisons and toxins
and to keep the entire alimentary
canal clean, pure and fresh.
Those who are subject to sick head-
ache, colds, biliousness, constipation,
others who wake up with bad taste,
foul breath, backache, rheumatic stiff-
Bess, or have a sour, gassy stomach
after meals, are urged to get a quarter
pound of limestone phosphate from
any druggist or storekeeper, 'and be-
gin practicing Internal sanitation.
This will cost very little, but Is suffi-
cient to make anyone an enthusiast
en the subject.
Remember inside bathing Is more
Important than outside bathing, be-
cause the skin pores do not absorb
impurities Into the blood, causing poor
health, while the bowel pores do.
Just as soap and hot water cleanses,
sweetens and freshens the skin, so
hot water and limestone phosphate
act on the stomach, liver kidneys and
bowels.—Adr.
Inspection Lamps for Shells.
A British electrical manufacturer
jas designed an electric lamp for fa-
cilitating the inspection of the lnte-
^ (rlor walls of shells In munition works.
' The equipment may be described as a
tubular lamp protected by a wire
guard, a long metal rod, a wooden
handle In which is a pushbutton
■witch, and connecting cord and
plug. The equipment Is held by the
handle while the lamp, supported on
the long brass tube, Is lowered Into
the shell to be Inspected.
i.
ted
W/dDi/r VV
Donovan
Clyde fli/an
0
Four Prominent Figurea In American League.
No sick headache, sour stomach,
biliousness or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10-cent box now.
Turn the rascals out—the kcadache,
biliousness, Indigestion, the sick, sour
•tomach and foul gases—turn them
•ut to-night and keep them out with
Cascarets. <•
Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
hnow 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;
lemove 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 yon
•ut by morning. They work while
jou sleep. A 10-cent box from
any drug store means a clear bead,
■weet stomach and clean, healthy liver
and bowel action for months. Chil-
dren love Cascarets because they
•ever gripe or sicken. Adv.
A large- portion of what the world
calls good luck Is composed of ninety-
nine parts of ambition and one part of
talent.
Yes, Yes.
"I'd go through Are and water for
you."
"And bow about firewater?"
Weak, Falnty Heart, and Hysterics
can be rectified by taking "Renovins" a
heart and aerve tonic. Price 50c and fi. Ml.
The dancing master is always tak-
ing steps to raise money.
For calks use Hanford's Balsam.
Adv.
One should learn to talk well—also
when It is well not to talk.
Budyard Kipling is fifty years old.
(By FRANK a. MENKE.I
"The happiest moment of my life"
"Wild Bill" Donovan, who is serving
time as manager of the Yankees,
paused, looked off into space for a
moment or so, and then bis face
beamed.
"Why, I lived that last summer in
Detroit, when I accomplished what
some folks claimed was the impossi-
ble—the striking out of Ty Cobb, with
the bases full," answered "Wild Bill."
"Cy Pteh started the game and was
knocked out of the box. I didn't have
any other pitchers to shove In, so I
went in myself, I passed the first bat-
ter. The next one went out on a fly.
80 did the third. I hit the fourth bat-
ter In the ribs with a roundhouse
curve, and filled the bases by walking
the next Detroit batter.
"Then came Ty Cobb. He was grin-
ning and the crowd was kidding me In
a good natured way. I shot up one to
Ty and it was wide. The next one
was wide. Ty kidded me by asking
why didn't I put 'em over. The crowd
was giving me the merry ha-ha and
telling me that 'you used to be a
pitcher. Bill, but that was forty years
ago.'
"Well, then I hitched up my trous-
ers and tightened my belt. I shot the
next ball over for a called strike. I
put the next one In the groove and
Ty didn't make a swing at it. It waB
strike two. Ty fouled off the next
two.
"With the count two-two Ty proba-
bly figured that I'd waste a ball In an
effort to get him to swing at It. But
I fooled him. I threw a roundhouse
curve—and right into the groove. Ty
made a vicious swing at It—and
missed.
'J had struck out Ty Cobb with
the bases full, and the ovation that 1
got that Sunday following that little
trick, was the greatest that ever was
given to me during all my baseball
career.
"And, let me tell you this little Bill
was sort of proud about that little
stunt
"Did Ty have any comment to make
afterwards?"
"Not to me, but I hear that he said
to one of his teammates that the rea-
son he fanned was because Cy Pleh
had such a crazy delivery that It
threw him off his stride and he wasn't
back In It until after he facod me that
first time.
"The second happiest period was In
Washington last summer," he added.
"Carroll Brown worked for us and
was knocked out of the box along
about the fifth inning. The game
seemed hopelessly lost for us and so
1 signaled that I was going in to
pitch.
"When I walked Into the box Old
Clark Griffith began to give me the
ha-ha and the razzle-dazzle. lie yelled
something about the 'Old Men's Home'
at me and told his boys that 'Here's
where we make a million runs.'
"Well, now, you know I'm not the
pitcher I used to be. The old whip
ban stiffened up a bit through added
years and lack of steady work. But
FAVORS GOLF PASTIME
Noted Twirler Says Game Is
Good for Baseball Players.
Helps One to Gain Absolute Control
sf Himself, One of Greatest As-
sets In Game.—Also Assists
Batting Materially.
"1 cannot agree with these men
who say golf is bad for a ball player,"
says Jack Coombs of the Brooklyn
Dodgers. "It helps him more than an
ordinary man realizes. One of the
greatest assets of the game is abso-
lute control of oneself. In which
confidence plays an Important part
Thus, the mind being under contro1,
one thinks not of the importance
resting upon him. There only Is one
thought—succeed.
"It Is true the swing in goK is far
different from that used in baseball.
There are few ball players, however,
who do not bring that stroke of tbelr
profession Into golf. If you will look
back to the games I pitched for the
Athletics on Mondays, you 'vlll no-
tice from the box scores that my bat-
ting was far superior to that on other
days. I played golf every Sunday,
rain or shine, and as I often said to
the boys: 'That ball looked as big as
a pumpkin.' Whether golf playing the
day before had anything to do with
it or not I dare not say. Being a
bug on golf, my own opinion Is formed.
"Associations on the golf links are
far different from those formed In
other walks of life.
"During the world's series of 1910
Mr. Plank, Ed's father, came from
Gettysburg to see the games. He
lived with us during his visit. The
afternoon before the first game
against the Cubs Bender, Ed and I
played golf. We came home, went to
bed early, and did not wake up until
I haven't forgotten how to throw
twisters, nor have I forgotten Bome
of the weaknesses of some of the
clubbers.
"And so I worked on the weaknesses
of those Washington hitters, with
Griff taunting me and with the crowd
yelling something about 'has-been' at
me. I worked four full Innings and
struck out seven of those Washington
clubbers. When I began moving down
the boys Griff's yells became fainter
and fainter and when I'd annexed six
scalps Griff had become almost tongue
tied.
"In the last Inning Clyde Milan, the
slugger of the Senators, came up,
Griff found his vocal apparatus again
and began yelling:
" 'This old guy hasn't got a thing,
Clyde; not a thing. Knock the ball
out of the lot."
"Those other boys had orders to
strike out bo as to make you feel good,
you old has-been, but here's this boy
Milan who hasn't got any Buch or-
ders. He's going to show you Just
what we all could do if we wanted
to.
"Milan is one of those boys who
makes a pitcher work. He must have
the ball over the plate. He's got al-
most unerring Judgment nn to the
good ones and the bad ones. I know
I was up against a tough bird, but I
was willing to risk putting my arm on
the blink for all time in an effort to
fan him, and get the last laugh on
Griff.
"I shot the first one over In the
groove—and Milan swung and missed.
He fouled the second and then Just as
he was figuring that I'd waste one
I shot It up to him on a dead line. It
caught him almost unawares. He
swung—but too late and Milan was
out on strikes.
'That was a happy day for Old
1(111."
Big Pirate-Cardinal Trade.
Ever since Fred Clarke and Miller
Huggins put through the big trade at
the close of the 1913 season, which
involved eight players, there has been
much speculation as to which side
got the best of the dicker. It may be
even Stephen at the beginning of
next seaBon, for from present Indica-
tions only two players who figured In
the deal will remain with the Pirate*
and Cardinals—one on each side.
Konetchy and Mowrey have departed
from the Buccaneer fold, leaving only
Harmon remaining, and as St. Louis
plans to dispose of Dolan, Butler, Wil-
son and RobinBon during the winter
only Miller will be left in the Cardinal
ranks when spring arrives.
Captain White a Giant.
Harold M. White, the new captain
of the Syracuse university football
team, is some giant. He weighs In at
273 and is six feet Blx Inches tall. He
is by long odda the biggest man in the
college game. He plays at guard and
tackle and Is lively on his pins.
6 CHILD CROSS,
FEVERISH, SICK
Look, Motherl If tongue ia
coated, give "California
SyrupofFigs."
Children love this "fruit laxative,"
and nothing else cleanses the tender
stomach, liver and bowels so nicely.
A child simply will not stop playing
to empty the bowels, and the result Is
they become tightly clogged with
waBte, liver gets sluggish, Btomach
sours, then your little one becomes
crou, half-sick, feverish, don't eat,
sleep or act naturally, breath is bad,
system full of cold, has sore throat,
stomach-ache or diarrhoea. IJsten,
Mother! See if tongue Is coated, then
give a teaspoonful of "California
Syrup of Figs," and In a few hours all
the constipated waste, sour bile and
undigested food passes out of the sys-
tem. and you have a well child again.
Millions of mothers give "California
8yrup of Figs" because it Is perfectly
harmless; children love It, and it nev-
er falls to act on the stomach, liver
and bowels. *
Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottla
of "California Syrup of Figs," which
has full directions for babies, children
of all ages and for grown-ups plainly
printed on the bottle. Adv.
Punished. ti
"What Is that horrible looking effigy
they've got stuck up in the middle of
the public Bquare?" asked the city
man of the landlord of the Punkville
arms.
"That sir," replied the landlord, "is
the Btatue of 8ilas W. Punk, the man
who founded Punkville."
"Founded Punkville, eh? Well, if
that'B the case he richly deserved
what the artist did to him."
A GRATEFUL OLD LADY.
Jack Coombs.
Mrs. A. G. Clemens, West Alexan-
der, Pa., writes: I have used Dodd's
Kidney Pills, also Diamond Dinner
Pills. Before using them I had suf-
fered for a number of
years with backache,
also tender spots on
spine, and had at
times black floating
specks before my
eyes. I also had lum-
bago and heart trou-
ble. Since using this
medicine I have been
Mn.A.G.Genens reiieved of my suf-
fering. It is agreeable to me for
you to publish this letter. I am glad
to have an opportunity to say to all
who are suffering as I have done that
I obtained relief by using Dodd's Kld-
i ney Pills and Diamond Dinner Pills.
Dodd's Kidney Pills 60c per box at
your dealer or Dodd's Medicine Co.,
Buffalo, N. T. Dodd's Dyspepsia Tab-
lets for Indigestion have been proved.
60c per box.—Adv.
Pittsburgh and Maine are the latest
universities to take up hockey.
8:30 the next morning, ripon arising,
I asked Mr. Plank bow he had enjoyed
his rest. >
" 'Never slept a wink,' he replied.
'Been up since 4:30 o'clock. Walked
all over Fairmont park. Was too
nervouB to sleep. How could you and
Ed snore so when the series begins j
today ?'
I had not given the Importance of
the baseball game a thought. I was
thinking, when I went to sleep, how
easily Ed and I could have beaten
Bender at golf fc-vd we played with s
little more confidence."
Obliging to All.
"Is Miss Triller an obliging singer?"
"Oh, yes; half the time she refuses
to sing."
INTERESTING
• SPORT •
PARAGRAPHS
Germany Schaefer Is not the fun
niest man in baBeball. Clark Griffith
says Washington will win the pennant.
• • •
An unusual number of horses will
be trained in the South for this sea-
son's racing.
• • •
There are eight pacers with rec-
ords under two minutes, six of them
being free legged.
• • •
Many figure that in Murphy's hands
Peter Stevens will Join the list of two-
minute pacers.
• • •
There is a report to the effect that
Lexington has decided in favor of
the pari mutuel machines.
• • •
W. E. D. Stokes figures that de-
scendants of Peter the Great won 31
raceB and earned $70,450 In 1915.
• • •
When the war Is over we ran fall
back for excitement on the perennial
billiard championship.
• • •
Coach Charles E. Courtney expects
to be In shape to again take charge
or the coaching of the Cornell oars-
men this spring.
IMMEDIATE ATTENTION
should be given to sprains, swellings,
bruises, rheumatism and neuralgia.
Keep Mansfield's Magic Arnica Lini-
ment handy on tbe shelf. Three slzss
—26c, 60c and f 1.00.—Adr.
His Prescription.
"Doctor, I have a frightful cold in
my head. What shall I take for It?"
"A handkerchief, madam."
Ask your dealer for the free book-
let, "Useful Hints for Horse Owners,"
Issued by G. C. Hanford Mfg. Co., Syra-
cuse, N. Y., manufacturers of Han-
ford's Balsam of Myrrh. Adv.
The grave Is a narrow escape from
life.
Improve
Your
Health
To promote and maintain
your general health, pay strict
attention to your diet and see
that the liver and bowels are
regularly active. If assis-
tance is needed, Just Try
OSTETTER'S
Stomach Bitters
H
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Springer, M. E. The Talihina Tribune (Talihina, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, March 3, 1916, newspaper, March 3, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc132638/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 21, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.