The Talihina Tribune (Talihina, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, January 12, 1917 Page: 3 of 4
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THE TALIHINA TRIBUNE
MAKING RESOLUTIONS
AND SO FORTH
With Humble
Instruments
By REV. HOWARD W. POPE
Moody Bible Institute.
Chicago
'4;
A little editorial
about joys and .
rows, failures
achievements of the old
year, and hopes and
promises for the new : :
Suggestions for a New
Year's Eve party:: Also
a few words by a doctor
about " swearing off "
TANDING, as we are, upon the
threshold of another year, many of
us will. In fancy, go back over the
twelve months that have passed
and smile when we recall the "New
Year resolutions" we made a year
ago. uT
"Yes," a woman will say, 1
made good resolutions lost New Yeur'n-my In-
tentions were of the very best, but I did
not have the will power to live up to them.
Pray, what Is the sense of making new ones?
Well, forget last year's good resolutions and
forget the past year entirely. Turn with hope
and confidence to the great new year about to
dawn, and—yes, make new good resolutions, as
many of them as your brain can conjure up. Per-
haps you did fall to keep the good Intentions
that made yon so happy when you thought them
out. but remember you are very human. Indeed,
tf we all vere not so very human there would he
absolutely no need of our ever making any kind
of good resolutions.
Many of us will see the old year go with tew
regrets. It brought us, perhaps, an extra share
•of cares and disappointments, but are we not all
the better and stronger for them, and will not
the lessons they taught us stand us In good stead
■during the coming days? Dear friend, let me as-
sure you that the difficulties and discouragements
you surmounted during this still present year will
without question make you a better and braver
woman.
Welcome the now year; and by all means make
new good resolutions. Every one of us needs to
make them, because as I have said, we are all
inan or woman.
In the hearts of most of us Is a wonder, a curl-
oglty, an to what the coming year may bring to
us, whether good fortune or bad. sorrow or Joy.
How many of us realise that the shaping of our
fortunes during the year to come Is In our hands?
We do not need to depend oil some Imnirlnnry
fate to deal us out good luck or bad. as she will.
If we have the earnestness and the desire to suc-
ceed.
All Desire Happiness.
But, after all, we want something more out of
I he year to come than Just materiul success, wel-
come though that may he. Success is not always
attended by happiness, and what we all desire
In realitv In 1917 is happiness, no matter what Its
source. To be contented and happy, thnt Is the
most we can wish for anyone. Including ourselves.
We can find true happiness by making and keep-
ing the proper kind of New Year's resolutions.
The annual period for taking stock of our
mental, spiritual and material resources And*
most of ns about where we were a year ago. We
nre living nbout the same. We are thinking about
the sume thoughts.
We are animated by about the same expecta-
tions. When we are depressed It Is because of
the same old fears.
gome have learned something In the dying
year. Some have not. Some hope to learn durltig
the coming year.
Most of us spend the main portions of our lives
In disappointment over the failure of that which
we hoped might come to pass, balancing that with
our washed-out pleasure that the worst of the
things we feared did not happen. Some of ns
lack grip upon ourselves.
This annual stock-taking of our mentality
should light the future of the coming year with
the experience of the year lust passed. If It
doesn't do that we are not doing the Job right.
The extent to which we have learned our les-
sons hi the old yenr will he the measure In which
we may gauge our expectations for the new year.
Turning the New Leaf.
From time Immemorial It has been the custom
of the forehanded good old-fashioned neighbor to
square up his accounts, muke new resolves, start
cutting off certain bad habits, and "turn over a
new leaf."
This is perfectly reasonable and natural. As tin'
Calendar marks a new cycle of time, so we In-
stinctively pause and mftce ready for a fair new
start In life, even though we know that neither
life nor time has any pause In its onward sweep.
It is probable that there are many more New
Year's resolutions broken than are kept strictly
through the year. Even so, there Is good value In
the making of them, In spite of what somebody
has said about the downward road being paved
with good Intentions.
In od new resolves nre good for us any time,
and a backward glance will not hinder our for-
ward march. We cannot make too many efforts
to prune off bad habits and such other dead wood
as we find In our lives each year. All who have uo
faults, please stand!
However, It may be that the best New Year's
resolve we can make this first holiday of 1917 will
be to start the good habit of beginning new every
■jwnlng.
After ail the mistakes and disappointments and
business battles that leave us tired and sour and
sick, ihere come, a new day, so that we can begin
over' again and do better. If we start such a plan,
the coming year and those following It will be
happier new years.
New Year's Entertaining.
New Year's eve Is an occasion of big celebia-
tlon all over the country, every man and woman
having a desire to speed the old year and wel-
come the new with some form of festivity. In
the cities the hotels and restaurants make a big
feature of this holiday, and each and every one
advertises a special supper, with dancing, etc.
Tills Is all very well for those who do not have
to count the pennies when seeking pleasure, for
entertainment on New Yenr's eve cornea high.
Everyone wants to be amused, to greet the Incom-
ing twelve months with Jollity and song,
and the consequence Is that the restaurants de-
mand and get high prices for entertainment on
that occasion.
There are no end of enjoyable ways of enter-
tnlnlng in one's own home on New Year's
eve, and the woman who wishes to give pleasure
lo the family and friends on this occasion enn
do w. at very little expense. All she needs Is to
usk n Jolly crowj), to think out a clever scheme
of tubM decoration, to arrange some forms of
amuseW-it and nil will be well.
The woman who has fairly large rooms In her
house will do well to select dancing ns the chief
fotrr of entertainment for the evening. Dancing
has lost none of Its fascination for the majority
of folks, and If It Is made the big feature of the
party It Is safe to say that most of the guests
will be well pleased. A small dance need not be
an expensive affair. If you have a phonograph
all Is well; If not surely you have some friend
from whom you can borrow nn Instrument for
the evening. Dancing to a phonograph Is Just as
good fun ns dancing to an orchestra, provided
one's partner Is skillful at treading the "light
fantastic."
When giving a New Year's eve party where
dancing is to be the chief attraction of the eve-
ning It Is a good Idea to ask one's guests to come
lo the affair masked. This will lend mystery nnd
excitement to the party and there will be great
fun when the guests unmask as the hour strikes
twelve nnd the new year Is ushered In to the
nine of many hnppy voices wishing each other
"Happy New Year."
After the usual felicitations are over, supper
should he served. Tills may be simple or elab-
orate, Just ns the hostess desires.
As for table decorations, a pretty centerpiece
|i> to have a star made from a brilliant red poln-
settln. In the middle of the star place a tall
candlestick with a long white candle for the new
yenr. Knelt point of the star should he marked
by a low candlestick holding a shorter white
candle. At the left of each plnle have a spray of
tmlnnettla. A pretty way to serve Ice cream on
this occnslon would be to hnve It molded In the
fi rin of n candle nnd candlestick, the candle lo
be the vnntlln cream and the candlestick to be
of | i.stnchlo green. A tiny wax taper may be In-
serted at the top of each "candle" and lighted
Just ns all ure brought In.
A simple supper menu for New Year's eve
might consist of hot bouillon (n thin soup) served
in cups so tlint It Is easy to hand around, chicken
snlud, snndwiohos. lee cream, cake and coffee.
TI I- supper should be of the buffet order, the
men guests helping the girls to the food they re-
quire. On this way the need of extra help Is
dispensed with nml no additional expense Is In-
curred on this score.
M HiBte
CALOMEL MAKES YOU SIGK, UGH!
ITS MERCURY AND SALIVATES
Straighten Up! Don't Lose a Day's Work! Clean Your Sluggish
Liver and Bowels With "Dodson's Liver Tone."
Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. Take straighten you right up and make you
a dose of the vile, dangerous drug to feel fine and vigorous by morning I
For those who do not care for dancing, cards,
either bridge, "rum," Tantau or some other popu-
lar game, will do to pass the hours before twelve.
Doctor Smith Talks.
Drinks, smokes and candy are not the only
things to swear off on New Year's day. There
are plenty of others, and for most of us the others
are much more Important, as fortunately the
readers of this department are not victims of
rum and tobacco.
New Year resolutions, however, should not con-
sist entirely of "swear offs." Too many "don ts
are not advisable. "Do" is much better than
"don't." Positive resolves are better than nega-
tive ones. If you "swear on" enough good habits
it will not be necessary to "swear off" any bad
ones. In other words, positive or constructive
policies are better than negative or destructive
ones. This applies to health Just as much as to
anything else In life. So, don't think you can "get
by" simply by swearing off on one or two of your
pet vices. Not at all. Your New Year resolu-
tions, to be of any real value, must he construc-
tive. You must decide not only to quit some
things, but to begin some things, also.
Good resolves and swiMir offs may be grouped
In pairs, and to udvantage, It seems to me. Let's
try it that way for a change.
I will take good care of my body.
I will not abuse It.
Hold Up Your Right Hand.
This first pair of resolves looks pretty simple,
but If you think a minute you will see that It In-
cludes a multitude of things. It actually Is the
whole thing In a nutshell. If you swear this par-
ticular pair of swears, and keep your onth. you
will have health and happiness all the year, and
your bill at the doctor's and the drug store will
be so small that you can have an extra new dress
Instead. Let's see what It does Include.
I will have "house cleaning" In the house I
live In.
I will not procrastinate In Instituting prepar-
edness against disease.
This means thnt you will have the dentist go
over your teeth with absolute regularity once or
twice a year, but It also means that you hnve
sense enough to know that the rest of your body
Is at least as Important as your teeth and that
you will have your doctor examine yon from head
to foot nnd fix up anything that needs it before
any symptoms nppenr. which would simply mean
that the process had gone on so far that correc-
tion would be murh more difficult If not impns
slble. This would Include an examination of the
urine and the blood pressure, both of which
should be Investigated once every year In the
case of every person over forty years of age.
I will keep clean Inside and out.
I will avoid dirt.
This means not only the dally bath, but It
means the flushing of the Inside of the body so as
to keep the sewers working. It inenns the drink-
ing of about a gallon of fluid per day. It also
means keeping the teeth scrupulously neat,
cleansing them morning, noon nnd night, so that
they will not Infect every single mouthful of food
you swallow. What Is the use of pure-food laws
if you save a choice selection of germs between
votir t« eth so as to spread them on the food which
Uncle Sam certifies is "pure."
It rlso means sufficient exercise to maintain
bodily activity, so that circulation will keep thing*
elf nn inside nnd prevent stagnation. It also means
plenty of fresh air. so thnt the oxygen will oxi-
date, or bum up. nil the debris and Uie poisons
nnd the toxins which are being formed In every
body all the time ns the result of eating nnd of
living.
Keep Smiling.
I will cultivate good cheer,
l will nvold unger, hate and moroseness.
It doesn't hurt to sinlle. Remember that. It
Isn't hard work. It doesn't cost anything. It
Isn't simply for others that sue should smile It
helps one's self evfo more than others. Slug!
Whistle! Laugh! These things do not cost any-
thing. either, and they help a great deal. We
doctors know that If we can get a patient to
laugh and sing It Is pretty sure that he Is on the
mend and on It good and strong. We also Itnow
that anger, hnte. sulks, pessimism and all such
horrid things nre actually destructive. This Is
not Christian Science or any other sectarianism,
but Just plain common spnse backed up by the
latest laboratory experiments. All these mental
conditions cause the formation of actually polsoq-
our chemicals in the body an<l at the same time
hl.ider the activities of normal health processes.
The Old Year.
By HELEN AGNES HOLTON.
Silently the shades of evening,
(lather round this quiet spot.
And I watch the waning twilight.
In a reverie of thought.
Thinking of the year that's ]
Of its hours dark and bright.
Wondering what record it carrlsn,
In Its wluged rapid flight! i
Will it tell a pleasing story,
Of earth's wayward children here?
Of good work done, and happy workers.
Busy all the livelong year?
Or will It tell of sadness.
Of virtues not yet won?
Of hoursvspent In Idleness,
And of good deeds left undone?
Methlnks I hear the echo
Reverbrate through the air.
Old Year goes laden with memories.
And burdens heavy to bear.
And borne on the ebbing tide.
Of death's cold mystic river,
Into that shadowy land.
Rids us farewell forever.
And now we hall the glad New Yenr.
And future Joys await to be unfurled.
Another page in Time's great book be-
gun.
Another page of grace for all the
World.
Then ns we wend oar checkered way,
Mid summer's bloom and winter's
chill.
Let us reap earth's choicest blessings.
For there's more of good than ill.
Upon this pure and spotless page.
May kindliness be traced,
Then when we bid this year ndleu,
Naught would we see erased.
Condensed Plots.
"Why are you so fond of moving pic
tores?''
"My parents wouldn't let roe res<
novels In my youth. I'm making uj
for lost time." f v
TEXT—And ofter him wu 8humK r
which nlew nix hundred Philistine! with
an ox goad.—Judges 3:31.
When the chosen people entered the
promised land. God left certain nations
of the Cannanltes
in the Innd In or-
der to prove Is-
rael by thein, to
nee whether she
would be faithful
to Jehovah or not.
These nations
were assigned to
different tribes < f
Israel, and GchI
promised that he
would drive them
out on certain
conditions.
These condi-
tions were that
Israel wns not to
associate with
them, nor bow down to their gods, nor
even mention the name of their gods.
But Israel did not obey, nnd the
steps of their downfall are recorded
In this chapter; they did not drive out
their euemies, they took their daugh-
ters to be their wives, they dwelt
among the Canaanites, they served
their gods, they forgot the Lord their
God, and he sold thetu Into the hund
of the enemy.
The book of Judges Is a sad, sad
story of disloyalty, defeat and bond-
age, brightened now and then by a
description of some noble man or
woman whom God raised up to defend
his honor, nnd to deliver Israel from
her sad condition.
Among the heroes whom God used
for this purpose no name shines out
more signally than that of Shatngar,
of whom it is said that he slew six
hundred men single-handed with an
ox goad. And thai Is all thnt we know
about hlin. To my mind this Is a strik-
ing proof of the Inspiration of the
Scriptures. If the Rlble had been
made by man, he would surely have
devoted a whole chapter to such a re-
markable achievement, but the Holy
Spirit for reasons best known to him-
self gives only 20 words to it. The In-
spiration of the Scriptures Is proved
as conclusively by their silence as by
what they say.
Shamgar Is a good type of the per-
sonal worker. We need many like him
today. We have men enough to coin
plain and criticize, but not enough
of those who are willing to grapple
with the problems of life, und attempt
to solve them. If he had been like
some men he would have called a con
veutlon to discuss the state of religion
in Israel, passed resolutions, appointed
a committee to report and returned
home. Shamgar was not that kind
of a man. He believed in personal
work, and so he took hold of the mat-
ter himself, and lo, the whole prob
lem was solved.
Furthermore, he was not a trained
worker. In these days we have schools
to Instruct workers in the best meth-
ods, but Shatngar had received n<
training at all. He knew nothing about
war, and he had no wenpons except
an ox goad. It Is not likely that he
killed those Philistines Just as sclen
tltlcally as some might huve done It
but he did It Just as effectually for he
left them dead.
There is a lurge place for untrained
workers iu our day. There Is always
something thnt anyone can do, who
really wishes to help, and in the doing
of it he gets a certain training.
Where did Mr. Moody get his train
lng? Or Uncle John Vassar, Mel Trot
ter or a host of others who have been
signally successful In winning souls to
Christ?
Shamgar had faith In God. He waa
familiar with his Rlble, nnd he remem-
bered that God had promised Moses
and Joshuu that one should chase
1,000, aud two put 10,000 to flight.
Here were only GOO Philistines, and if
God's promises were reliable, that was
an easy Job.
I suppose It came about in this way:
The Philistines had raided the country
so often that the people were Intimidat-
ed. We rend In Judges 5:0 that the
highwnys were unoccupied nnd the peo-
ple truveled in the byways. In the
spring of the year the frightened Is-
raelites crept out Into their fields and
sowed them. During th? summer their
enemies left them unmolested, but
when the crops begun to ripen, they
raided them coustuntly and carried off
the harvest.
One day n band of Philistines came
down upon Shatngur's field. Some men
would have run uwuy, but not so
Shamgar. He said: "Tills thing has
gone tar enough. It Is n disgrace to
| our nution and to Jehovah as well.
If no one else will resist then). 1 must,
und I may us well begin now as ever.*
Accordingly he attacked the (loo men
with nothing but an ox goad. God hou
ored his fnlth nnd gave him tin- \i<
tor.v. This put fresh couruge into taint
ing hearts. When they saw what Go«i
nnd one brave man could do. they ral-
lied us n nation and soon threw oft
the yoke of the enemy.
Observe, too. that Shamgar was Jeal-
ous for God's honor. It was not the
loss of his own crop or even his neigh
bors' crops which led him to enter
such nn unequal contest. He felt that
God's honor wns at stake, and he could
not bear to have the Philistines despise
Jehovnh or his people. And so he wtv*
willing to run some risk, if Indeed
there was any risk, in trusting God's
promises.
Jonathan did the same thing, ns we
read In 1 Sam. 14:6. and Nehemlah
also, anil God honored their faith In a
similar way. God needs more Sham-
gars In our day—men who are willing
to work for him in a small way, and
work alone, and work with what they
huve. Will you be one?
night and tomorrow you may lose a
day's work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones
Calomel, when it comes into contact
with sour bile crashes Into it. break
lng it up This is when you feel that
awful nausea and cramping. If you
feel sluggish and "all knocked out," if
your liver is torpid and bowels consti-
pated or you have headache, dizziness,
coated tongue, If breath is bad or
stomach sour. Just try a spoonful of
harmless Dodson's Liver Tone
Here's my guarantee—Go to any
drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. Take
a spoonful tonight and if it doesn't
MOSES, NOT DAVID. WROTE IT
Newspaper Critic Hints Chauncey De-
pew's Knowledge of Bible is
Limited.
PINK EYE
want you to go back to the store and
get your money. Dodson's Liver Tone
is destroying the sale of calomel be-
cause it is real liver medicine; entire-
ly vegetable, therefore it cannot sali-
vate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Tone will put your slug-
gish liver to work and clean your bow-
els of that sour bile and constipated
waste which is clogging your system
and making you feel miserable. 1 guar-
antee that a bottle of Dodson's Liver
Tone will keep your entire family feel-
ing fine for months. Give it to your
children. It Is harmless: doesn't gripe
and they like Its pleasant taste.—Adv.
DISTFHPIR
CATARRHAL rCVCR
AND ALL NOSF
AND TttROAI DISEASES
liquid given on the t..ngue.
fe for brood mares and
■PWWIW I r.O cents a bottle, SB a
doien. Sold by all drugglata and turf ffooda houaea. or Bent,
express paid, by the manufacture™ Booklet, "Distem-
per. Cause and Cure.'' free.
Sl'OIIN' MEDICAL CO., Chemlata, Gonhea, lad., V. S. A.
CANADA AGAIN
A PRIZE WINNER
Chauncey Depew probably expected
a controversy when he recently de-
nounced the Psalmist for limiting
man's years on earth to seventy, but j HlQnBSt Premiums AW3rdGu 3l
he couldn't have anticipated the form
It has taken. The following Is one of
severnl letters addressed to the editor
of the New York Tribune which Mr.
Depew's statement has called forth:
"Mr. Depew, according to your re
port of his Interesting address on not
growing old, took exception to the fa j
miliar observation In the ninetieth j
Psalm that the days of our years are
threescore and ten. He assumed that j
David wrote that Psalm and argued . ,
since David's life w„s ko Irregular, i
strenuous and violent, that he may
Many Exhibitions.
The Pall fair season Is past and •
retrospect of them shows that Western
Canada Is stronger than ever iu the
matter of exhibits, and has taken more
than her usual share of the prize
money. From Western Canada to
Texas Is a long look, from Alberta,
Saskatchewan and Manitoba to the
southwestern corner of Texus is «ev-
have been, or, at any rate, have felt,
prematurely old.
However that may have been, the
fact Is that the ninetieth Psalm was
farmers from this new country to the
northwest were wide awake to the
possibilities that waited them at the
International Dry Farming Congress
held at El Paso, Texas, a few weeks
uu'1 IT v. 7,1," r>|1 ' ago. to bring to the uttentlon of those
ever .ttrlbuted to David. If Mr. De- ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
Western Canada could do In the pro-
pew had looked at the heading of the
Psalm as given In our Bibles he would
have noticed that It is entitled 'A Pray-
er of Moses, the Man of God.' Such Is
the Jewish tradition. Even If David
shorteneil his years by Ids manner of
life he did not, at any rate, declure
that seventy Is the limit nnd that a
possible few years more or less are
tabor and sorrow. It may not be Moses
that wrote the Psalm, but tradition
has It so.
"It Is said that Moses lived to be
one hundred and twenty years old and
that his eye was not dim nor his nat-
ural force abated. It Is also observed
In the narrtive that when he led his
ductlon of grains and roots from Its
soil. And what did these farmers doT
The first thing was to carry off the
first prise and sweepstakes for wheat.
That was a foregone conclusion, for It
has now become an established fact that
nowhere elee In the world Is there
grown wheat of tfce high character and
market value of Western Canadian
wheat. The same may be said of oats,
of barley and of rye. But when It came
to notice that Western Cannda took
first prize for alfalfa, It was then that
more special attention was given to
the products from Western Canada. It
showed that In that country there lies
people out of Egpt he was fourscore opportunity for supplementing the
years old and did good service for forty I W(,nl)(,rf(11 nBtlvi.
grasses, so full of nu-
years more. This should be eneourag- trlt|on t)m, t[u. tamed varieties,
lng to Mr. Depew, the octogenarian. amnng theM1 nlfalf„ enttle
whose eye Is not dim, nor his spontane- , w|,h m) „tU(,r foo(] W(.r>, Ml
ous humor abated."
Weak, Fsinty Hesrt, and Hysterics
can be rectified by taking "Renovine" a
heart and nerve tonic. Price 50c and 11 Ml
Good Advice.
A minister was questioning his Sun-
day school concerning the story of Eu-
tychus, the young inan who, listening
to the preaching of the Apostle Paul,
fell asleep and, fulling out of a win-
dow, was taken up dead.
"What," he asked, "do we learn from
this solemn event?"
The reply from a little girl came:
"Please, sir, ministers should learn
not to preach too long sermons."—Tlt-
Blts.
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen-
eral Tonic because it contains the well
known tonic properties of QUININE and
IRON. It acta on the I.iver, Drives out
Malaria Enriches the Blood and Builds
up the Whole System. SO cents.
Moral Sickness.
"Here's a pathetic letter from a 'shut-
In.' "
"Ah! One of those unfortunates
doomed to spend a lifetime In bed or J
fitted for the shambles. Western Can-
ada's worth was proved as probably
the greatest mixed farming portion of
the continent When the steers from
the Western Canndlan prairies reach
the Chicago stockynrds they bring
the top price and outweigh those from
other places where grass fattening Is
the process. But It wns not only In
grains that Western Cannda carried
oft the highest honors at the Kl Paso
exhibition. Potatoes, parsnips, beets,
carrots and rutabagas also took the
highest honors. In root production
this country is becoming favorably
known.
The question often arises as to mar-
kets. There Is always the highest
price awaiting the producer, and as
soon ns the Hudson Bay Railway, now
about completed, reaches tin- liny,
there will be an additional « utlet for
the produet of the farm. The Pacific
const route, via the Panama canal, will
give another outlet of which full ad-
vantage may betnken. With virgin Innd
selling at from $15 to $'J0 per aere. and
Improved fnrms at reasonable prices
and on easy terms, there is no better
opportunity for the man with limited
means nnd a desire to secure a home
at the least cost In a country where
can soon become wealthy, ns thou-
rthers have done, than In
an Invalid chair?"
"Cm. I-et me rend further.
he's shut in for ten yen
off for good behnvlor."
Age-Herald.
.vltb time !
-lllruilnghun
1 Western Cnnndn. To the man with less
•ems | ,IH.,ins „n(j who Is prepared to accept
Never do today what you can pnt oft
till tomorrow. Delay may give clearer
light as to what Is beet to be done. -
>nron Bur?
it farm of UK) acres free, the Domin-
ion Government olTers him hl« choice
in districts thnt have land of the high-
est type, but at present being from ten
to twenty miles fron a railway.
The Pence Itiver Country, now being
opened for settlement and reached by
railway affords excellent opportunity
to the homesteader. To seeure Infor-
mation as to Western Canadian lands
write the Canadian Government agent,
whose name nppears elsewhere In this
paper.—Advertisement.
Getting Their Dues.
The latest story of the "Bang went
saxpence" series: There were two
Hielan'meu an' they were at the front.
An' yln o' them witch a bin an' the
Ither yln was Jist golu to thraw Its
neck.
"No* flie imo." says the first yln;
•'let her be till the mornln'. She mlclit
lay nn egg."—London Tlt-Blts.
Dr. B. F. Jackson,Celebrated Physician,
handed down to posterity his famous
prescription lor fwmale troubles. Now
sold under the name of "Femenina."
Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
Inconvenient.
"After all, it's no crime to be poor.'*
Sold for 47 years. For Malaria,Chills I Maybe not,, but no poor man can
and Fever. Also a Fine General nfiord to hire a lawyer to prove that
Strengthening Tonic* ^ isn't "
APPENDICITIS An accident policy doean t help a
I yo"n* "mn out whe" "e ,0Ve"
elde wrttr for TelusbWi Booh of Information .
New faaland has seres o(
There are fi.OTri radio stations in the
nited States.
BEWARE OF
sudden colds.
Take —
CASCARAJ^USNiNE
The old family remedy-in tablet
form-safe, sure, easy to take. No
opiate®—no unpltusunt after effects.
Cures colds in 24 hours- " ~ "*
Money beck if il
uine bo* with R<
U s, picture on i
Al Any Drug Stora
ipLLTTONIC
ff.f. Ill a oi hBom BT..UUCAS0 I
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 52-191®. j wheat
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Springer, M. E. The Talihina Tribune (Talihina, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, January 12, 1917, newspaper, January 12, 1917; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc132725/m1/3/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.