The Talihina Tribune (Talihina, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, September 28, 1917 Page: 3 of 4
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THE TALIHINA TRIBUNE
A New and Better
Standard of
Baking Powder
Purify
KAZAN
1 and 5
Ask Your
Grooot
Pound
By
Jamas
Oliver
Durwood
Copyright by the Bobbs-Merrill Company.
University of Notre Dame
NOTRK DAME, INDIANA
Offers Complete Course In Agriculture
Fall courses also la Letters, Journallim,
Library Science, Chemistry, Pharmacy, Medi-
cine, Architecture, Commerce and Law.
It amounts to the same thing wheth-
er we eat In the kitchen or cook in
the dining room.
A new invention for automobiles Is
a combination of ordinary spring and
shock absorber.
THI8 18 THE AGE OF YOUTH.
You will look ten years yonoger If yoc
darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs bj
suing "La Creole" Hair Dressing—Ad?.
Her Secret Discovered.
He—"Your soldier friend been in
any engagement?" She—"How did
you guess?"—Judge.
The Situation.
"How are you making out with your
chicken farming?"
"I find It hard scratching."
Spartan Womsn Suffered Untold Torturss
but who wants to be a Spartan? Take
"Fementna" for all female disorders.
Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
• Vision.
"Can your wife see two sides of a
question?" "Yes; her own and her
mother's."—Life.
A Screen Scream.
"Isn't she a movlng-plcture star?"
"More of a planet. She shines by
reflected light."—Life.
Of Course.
"I expect to die In harness."
"Then I take it you have a stable po-
sition."
These Girls.
"I wonder who Is ringing the door-
bell. Is It some chump who merely
wants to hang around the parlor, or Is
It a nice chappie who wants to take me
for a ride In his automobile?"
"Take a sniff at the keyhole, girlie,
and see If you can smell gasoline."
No Vacation Trips In Germany.
The Prussian ministry of communl
rations Issued an urgent appeal to the
public not to travel. The people are
begged not to leave their homes unless
for the most compelling reasous of
health or recuperation. There will
be neither holiday trains nor excur-
sion rates this summer, though ex
tra trains will now and then be run
In case of special emergency. The
public Is reminded that, while food In
the country Is plentiful here and there,
the only "certain" way of getting any-
thing to eat Is to stay at home.
FOR THE FIRST TIME IN
HIS LIFE KAZAN KNOWS
THE JOY OF PERFECT
FREEDOM — HOW HE
MEETS THE CHALLENGE
OF A HUGE GRAY WOLF.
Kazan Is a vicious Alaskan
sledge dog, one-quarter gray
wolf. He saves his master's life
and Is taken along when the mas-
ter goes to civilization to meet
his bride and return with her to
the frozen country. Even the
master Is afraid to touch the
dog, but Isobel, Kazan's new
mistress, wins his devotion In-
stantly. On the way northward
McCready, a dog-team driver,
Joins the party. Inflamed by
drink on the following night,
McCready beats the master In-
sensible and attacks the bride.
Kazan flies at the assailant's
throat and kills him. Fearful of
punishment, the dog takes to
the woods and Urlld life.
CHAPTER IV.—Continued.
What's the Answer?
A short time ago Prof. II. B. Gough,
head of the public-speaking depart-
ment at DePauw university, delivered
a talk In a small town In Lawrence
county, near Bedford, says the Indian-
apolis News. He was being congratu-
lated ou the talk when one farmer In
the audience edged his way to the
speaker and asked whether he was in
a hnrry. Professor Gough, who had
to make a certain train, said no, other
than he wished to get home at a cer-
fSln time. The farmer, Instead of In-
viting him to n fine fried chicken din-
ner, said: "Say, my boy and me heard
your talk and we wanted to know
whether It was a sermon or an ad-
dress." Professor Gough made his
train and reached home without par-
taking of any fried Chicken.
It Never
Disappoints
To insure clothes of snowy
whiteness on washday just
use
Red + Cross
Ball Blue
Take no imitation, but insist
on the genuine Red Cross.
All good Grocers sell it.
Large Package S cents.
MITHS
Soldfor47 yenn. For Malurln,Chills
ord I'over. Also n Fine General
Streniillieiilnti Tonic.
After that cry Kazan snt for a long
time on his haunches, sniffing the new
freedom of the air, and watching the
deep black pits in the forest about him.
ns they faded away before dawn. Now
and then, since the day the traders bad
first bought him and put him into
sledge-traces away over on the Macken-
zie, he had often thought of his free-
dom longingly, the wolf blood In him
urging him to take it. But he had
never quite dared. It thrilled him now.
There were no clubs here, no whips,
none of the man-beasts whom he hnd
first learned to distrust, and then to
hate. It was his misfortune—that
quarter-strain of wolf; and the clubs,
instead of subduing him, hnd added to
the savagery that was born In him.
Men had been his worst enemies. They
had beaten him time and again until he
was almost dead. They called him
"bad," and stepped wide of him, and
never missed the chance to snnp a
whip over his back. Ills body was cov-
ered with scars they had given him.
ne had never felt kindness, or love,
until the first night the woman hnd put
her warm little hand on his head, and
tiad snuggled her fuce close down to
his, while Thorpe—her husband—had
cried out in horror. He had almost
buried his fangs In her white flesh, but
In an Instant her gentle touch, and her
sweet voice, had sent through him that
wonderful thrill that was his first
knowledge of love. And now it was a
niun who was driving him from her,
away from the hand that had never
held a club or a whip, and he growled
as he trotted deeper Into the forest.
He came to the edge of a swamp as
day broke. For a time he bad been
filled with a strange uneasiness, and
light did not quite dispel it. At last
he was free of men. He could detect
nothing that reminded him of their
hated presence In the air. But neither
could he smell the presence of other
dora. of the sledsre. the fire, of compan-
ionship/tnd food, and so far back as he
could remember they had always been
a part of his life. -
Here It was very quiet. The swamp
lay In a hollow between two ridge
mountains, and the spruce and cedar
grew low and thick—so thick that
there was almost no snow under them,
and the day was like twilight. Two
things he began to miss more than all
others—food and company. Both the
wolf and the dog that was In him de-
manded the first, and that part of him
that was dog longed for the latter. To
both desires the wolf blood that was
strong In him rose responsively. It told
him that somewhere In this silent
world between the two ridges there
was companionship, and that all he
had to do to find it was to sit back on
his haunches, and cry out his loneli-
ness. More than once something trem-
bled In his deep chest, rose In his
throat, and ended there In u whine. It
was the wolf howl, not yet quite born.
Food came more easily than voice.
Toward midday he cornered a big
white rabbit under a log, and killed It.
The warm flesh and blood wus better
than frozen flsh, or tallow and bran,
nud the feast he hag gave him confi-
dence. Thnt afternoon he chased many
rabbits, aud killed two more. Until
now, he had never known the delight of
pursuing and killing at will, even
though he did not eat all he killed.
But there was ns light In the rab-
bits. They died too easily. They were
very sweet and tender to eat, when he
was, hungry, but the first thrill of kill-
ing them pussed away after a time. He
wanted something bigger. He no long-
er slunk along as if he were afraid, or
as If he wanted to remain hidden. He
held his head up. Ills back bristled
His tall swung free and bushy, like a
wolf's. Every hair in his body qulv>
ered with the electric energy of llfo
and action. He traveled north and
west. It was the call of early days-
the days away up on the Mackenzie.
The Mackenzie was a thousand miles
away.
He came upon many trails In the
snow that day, and sniffed the scents
left by the hoofs of moose nnd caribou,
and the fur-padded feet of a lynx. He
followed a fox, and the trail led him to
a place shut In by tall spruce, where
the snow was beaten down and red-
dened with blood. There was an owl's
head, feathers, wings and entrails lying
here, and he knew that there were
I other hunters nbrond besides himself.
' Toward evening he came upon trncka
In the snow that were very much lik«*
I his own. They were quite fresh, and
I there was a wann scent about them
thnt made him whine, and filled him
again with thnt desire te fall back up-
on his haunches and send forth the
wolf-cry. This desire grew ntronger
In hltn us the shadows of, night deep-
i rned In the forest. He had traveled
all day, but he was not tired. There
I was something about night, now thnt
j there were no men near, that exhllarat-
' ed him strangely. The wolf blood In
j him ran swifter and swifter. Tonight
J It was clear. The sky was filled with
stars. The moon rose. Ami at last
he settled back In the snow ami turned
his head straight up to the spruce tops,
and the wolf cume out of him In a long
mournful cry which quivered through
the still night for miles.
For a long tune he sat and listened
after that howl. He had found voice—
a voice with a strange new note in It,
nnd It gave him still greater confidence.
He had expected an answer, but none
came. He had traveled In the face of
the wind, and as he howled, a bull
moose crashed through the scrub tim-
ber ahead of him. his horns rattling
against the trees like the tattoo of a
clear birch club as he put distance be-
tween himself aud that cry.
Twice Kazan howled before he went
on. and he found Joy In the practice of
that new note. He came then to the
foot of a rough ridge, and turned up
out 6t the swnmp to the top of It. The
stnrs and the moon were nearer to him
there, nnd on the other side of the
ridge he looked down upon a great
sweeping plain, with a frozen lake glis-
tening In the moonlight, and n white
river leading from It off Into timber
that was neither so thick nor so black
as that In the swamp.
And then every muscle In his body
grew tense, and his blood leaped. From
far off In the plain there came a cry.
It was his cry—the wolf-cry. His Jaws
snapped. His white fangs gleamed,
and he growled deep In his throat. He
wanted to reply, but some strange In-
stinct urged him not 11). That Instinct
of the wild was already becoming mas-
ter of him. In the air, In the whisper-
ing of the spruce tops, In the moon nnd
the stars themselves, there breathed
a spirit which told him that what he
had heard was the wolf-cry, but that It
as not the wolf call.
The other, came an hour later, clear
and distinct, that snine wailing howl at
the beginning—but ending In a staccato
of quick sharp yelps that stirred his
blood at once Into a flery excitement
that It had never known before. The
same Instinct told him that this
the call—the hunt-cry. It urged him to
come quickly. A few moments later It
came aguln, nnd tills time there was a
reply from close down along the foot
of the ridge, and another from so far
away that Kazan could scarcely hear
if. The hunt-pack was gathering for
the night chase; but Kazan sat quiet
and trembling.
He was not afraid, but he was not
ready to go. The ridge seemed to split
the world for him. Down there It was
new. and strange, and without men.
From the other side something seemed
pulling him back, and suddenly he
turned his head and gnzed bnck
through the moonlit space behind him,
and whined. It was the dog-whine now.
The womsn was back there. He could
hear her voice. He could feel the
touch of her soft hand. He could see
the laughter in her face and eyes, the
laughter that had made hlra warm and
happy. She was calling to him through
the forests, and he was torn between
desire to answer that call, and desire
to go down Into the plain. For he
could also see many men waiting for
him with clubs, and he could hear the
cracking of whips, and feel the sting of
their lashes.
For a long time he remained on the
top of the ridge that divided his world.
And then, at hist, he turned and went
down Into the plain.
body, his fangs sunk deep in her Jugu- j
inr. She lay heavily on him. but he did
not lose his hold. It was his first big ;
kill. His blood ran like fire. He :
snarled between his clamped te«Hh.
Not until the last quiver hnd left |
the body over him did he pull himself |
out from under her chest "and forelegs. J
He had killed a rubbit that day and
was not hungry. So he sat back In the 1
and waited, while the ravenous | (By ,
. . . , , , \n „ lit Teacher of English Bible In the Moody
pack lore at the dead doe. After a lit- , BJb,e inatitnte of Chlca*o.
tie he came nearer, nosed In between (Copyright. 1917. w?st rn N.wtpapor Union.)
two of them, and was nipped for his In- 1
LESSON FOR SEPTEMBER 30
ItmioNAL calomel makes you sick, ugh!
SlUWSOlOOL its mercury hnd salivates
Lesson
Straighten Upl Don't Lose a Day's Work! Clean Your Sluggish
Liver and Bowels With "Dodson's Liver Tone."
As Kazan drew bnck, still hesitating
to mix with his wild brothers, a big TH£ G00DNESS AND SEVERITY
OF GOD.
Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. Take
a dose of the vile, dangerous drug to-
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
Ing it up. This ii when you feel that
awful nausea and cramping. If you
grny form leaped out of the pack and
drove strulght for his throat. He had
just time to throw his shoulder to the j (Review.)
attack, and for a moment the two '
rolled over and over in the snow. They - — B
were up before the excitement of sud- n<l gracious, slow to anger, and plan- (eel Biugg|Bh and "all knocked out, if
)little hnd drawn the pack from | :,ou ln -P tm« . your lirer la torpid and bowel, constl-
A profitable way to upend the hour pated or you have headache, dltzlncai.
would be to make h study of Daniel s coated tongue, If breath la bad or
prayer a« recorded In the lesson as- atomach aour. Ju,t try a apoonful of
ilened for our reading today, and have harmleta Dodaon', Liver Tone
the lessons of'the quarter as lllustra- Here'a my guarantee—Oo to any
Hons of the goodness and severity of dni« itore or dealer and get a aOcent
Clod. Announcement of the plan may bottle of Dodaon a Liver Tone Take
made the Sunday before, and the a apoonful tonight and If It doean't
den battle had drawn the pack
the feast. Slowly they circled about
each other, their white fangs bare,
their yellowish backs bristling like
brushes. The fatal rlug of wolves
drew about the fighters.
It was not new to Kazan. A dozen
times he had sat In rings like this,
waiting for the Anal moment. More
than once he had fought for his life
within the circle. It was the sledge-
dog way of fighting. Unless man inter-
rupted with a club or a whip it always
ended in death. Only one fighter could
come out alive. Sometimes both died.
And there was no man here—only that
fatal cordon of waiting whlte-fanged
demons, ready to leap upon and tear
to pieces the first of the fighters who
was thrown upon his side or back. Ka-
stralghten you right up and make yotf
feel tine and vigorous by morning 1
want you to go back to the store ind
get your money. Dodson's Liver Tona
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 pit your sluf>
glsh 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. I 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 fast®—Adv.
different lessons of the quarter as-
signed to different members of the
rlass to tell how they bear upon the
topic of the lesson for this week. A |
broad analysis of Daniel's prayer is as
follows:
I. Confession of the Nation's Sins
(vv. 3:15). The circumstances of this
prayer were extraordinary. The crisis
was so serious that Daniel sought after
prayer to the Lord with fasting, sack-
zan was a stranger, but he did not fear i cloth and ashes. In his confession the
those that hemmed him In. The one people's sins are placed In contrast
great law of the pack would compel with God's righteousness. He acknowl-
them to be fair. edges that their sorrows and sufferings
He kept his eyes only on the big gray Justly belong to them. Daniel, the
leader who had challenged him. Shoul- ; holy man against whom there Is no
der to shoulder they continued to ; record of wrongdoing, Includes himself
circle. Where a few moments before srlth his people.
there hnd been the snapping of Jawn II. Supplication for Mercy and For-
and the rending of flesh there was now glvenosa (vv. 10-10). He pleads for
silence. Soft-footed and soft-throated , God's anger and fury to turn away, and
mongrel dogs from the south would his remembrance of the Holy City and
have snarled and growled, but Kazan his chosen people. The Lord s honor
and the wolf were still, their ears laid was at stake. He confesses that Israel
forward instead of back, their tails had no merit, were utterly destitute of
free and bushy. rlghteouness, and pleads consideration
Suddenly the wolf struck ln with the on the ground of covenant relationship,
swiftness of lightning, and his Jaws j Another way to conduct the review
came together with the sharpness of would be to ask different members of
steel striking steel. They missed by the class to report on the different les-
nn Inch. In that same instant Kazan Rons by giving the vital nnd central
darted In to the side, nnd like knives teaching of each. The following are
his teeth gashed the wolf's flank. suggested ns vltnl teachings of the
They circled again, their eyes grow- several lessons:
Ing redder, their lips drawn back until Lesson 1. God Is absolutely holy,
they seemed to have disappeared. And therefore those who have been sanctl-
then Kazan leaped for that death-grip fled by fire from the heavenly altar are
at the throat—and missed. It was qualified for his service.
only by an Inch again, and the wolf Lesson 2. He who turns away from
came back, as he had done, and laid the Lord shall be judged by the Lord,
open Kazan's flank so that the blood I Lesson 8. In Hezeklah's reformatory
Canada's Liberal Offer of
Wheat Land to Settlers
is open to you—to every farmer or fanner's son
who is anxious to establish for
himself a happy home and
prosperity. Canada's hearty
invitation this year is more attractive
than ever. Wheat is much higher but
her fertile farm land just as cheap, and
in the provinces oi Manitoba, Saskat-
chewan and Alberta
180 Am Isasstssfc Ait Actsslly Frss ts Settltn
■Dd Other Uii S«14 st frs* 115 ts |20 ptr Am
Th great demand for Canadian Wheat will
keep up the price. Where a fanner can get
nesr 92 for wheat and raise 20 to 45 bushels to
the acre he U bound to maka mon*7 — that's
whst you can expect in Western Canada. Won-
derful yielda also of Qata. Barley and Flax.
Mixed Farming in Weitern Canada is fully as
profitable an industry as grain raising.
Th* excellent graaaea. fall of nutrition. ar« the only
food required eltb«r for or dairy purpo*.-,
(iood n-houla. I'hurchea. market* convenient, eli niste
ricellenl. Th^re I* an nnntnal demand fur farm
labor u> replace the many rouna men who Bare
Tolnntaarad for the war Write for ittoniti.re and
particular* aa to reduced railway rates to Hupl. of
Immigration, Ottawa. Can or to
G. A. COOK
2012 Main SI., Kanias City, Mo.
Canadian Government Aaent
HER WORK NOT APPRECIATED
Cook Thought Efforts Wasted Because
Master Was Not Laid Up Peri-
odically From Overeating.
CHAPTER V.
Leader of the Pack.
All that nlghy Kazan kept close to
the hunt-pack, but never quite ap-
proached It. This was fortunate for
him. He still bore the scent of traces,
and of man. The pack would have torn
him to pieces. The first Instinct of the
wild Is that of self-preservation. It
may have been this, a whisper back
through the years of savage forebears,
that made Kazan roll In the snow now
and then where the feet of the pack
had trod the thickest.
That night the pack killed a cnrlbou
l the edge of the lake, nnd fensted
until nearly dawn. Kazan hung In the
face of the wind. The smell of blood
and of warm flesh tickled his nostrils,
and his sharp ears could catch the
cracking of bones. Hut the Instinct
was stronger than the temptation-.
Not until broad day, when the pack
had scattered far and wide over the
plain, did he go boldly to the scene of
the kill. He found nothing but nn area
of blood-reddened snow! covered with
bones, entrails and torn bits of tough
hide. Hut It wus enough, aud he rolled
ln It, and burled his nose In what was
left, and remained all that tlay close to
It, saturating himself with the scent
of It.
That night, when the moon and the
stars came out aguln, he sat back with
fear and hesitation no longer in him,
aud announced himself to his new com-
rades of the great plain.
The pack hunted again that night, or
else it was a new pack that started
miles to the south, and came up with a
doe caribou to the big frozen lake. The
night was almost ns clear as day, and
from the edge of the forest Kazan first
saw the caribou run out on the lake a
third of a mile away. The pack was
nbotit a dozen strong, nud bad already
split Into the fntal horseshoe forma-
tion, the two loaders running almost
abreast of the kill, und slowly closing
ln.
With a sharp yelp Kazan darted out
Into the moonlight. He was directly In
the path of the fleeing doe, nnd bore
down upon her with lightning speed.
Two hundred yards away the doe saw
him, and swerved to the right, und the
leader on that side met her with open
Jaws. Kazan was ln with the second
lender, and leaped at the doe's soft
throat. In a snarling mass the pack
closed In from behind, nnd the doe
went down, with Knzan half under her
A lady hnd a cook who gave her ev-
ery satisfaction, nnd she wns under the
— .— Impression thnt the cook VM equally
ran down his leg and reddened the work the Passover Feast was restored. sfttj8ge(j wjtj, jler piaCe. But one mom-
snow. The burn of thnt flank-wound showing thnt the only way to get peo- ^ ]ndy'g intense surprise, the
told Knzan that his enemy was old ln pie to return to God Is to gather them cooj£ ^er sjle wng g,^ng away,
the game of fighting. He crouched around the Cross of Christ the Atone- "Whatever do you want-to leave for,
low, his head straight out, and hli ment by Blood. Jane?" asked her mistress. "I am very
throat close to the snow. It was a Lesson 4. Though onr unfaithfulness plea8e(j wm, you, and I thought you
trick Kazan had learned In puppyhodQ nnd cowardice have shamefully humlll- were quite comfortable here."
—to shield his throat, nnd wait. nted us, we should turn to Ood In "Yes, mum, I'm comfortuble enough
Twice the wolf circled nbout him, prayer. in a way, but—"
and Knznn pivoted slowly, his eyes hall Lesson 5. God's gracious Invitation The cook he8ltateti an(j fidgeted
closed. A second time the wolf leaped extended to all without money an about,
and Kazan threw up his terrible Jaws, without price. " "But what?" queried her mistress,
sure of thnt fatal grip Just In front of I<esson 6. No matter how wicked one "Well, mum," she blurted out, "the
the forelegs. Ills teeth snapped on mRy have been In his anpstasy from fac( ^ master doesn't seem to appre-
empty air. With the nlmbleness of a God. " he sincerely repents, Got w elate my cookery, and I can't stop ln a
cat the wolf had gone completely over be found of hlra. place where my efforts to please are
his back. j Lesson 7. Regardless of one's age wagte(j; BO j-j rather go, mum."
The trick had failed, and with a and experience, Ood can use him In ..fiut ^hnt ,nukes you think that
rumble of the dog-snarl In his throat.' rto,nR mighty work If he will but open your ma8ter doesn't appreclnte your
Kazan reached the wolf ln a single , h'8 un*° . , cookery? Has he ever complained to
bound. They met brenst to breast Lesson 8. The Word of God found you?„ asked thl. in<iy.
Their fangs clnshed and with the whole and rend w,n mightily convict of sin, ,.N() mum. ,,ut my ,agt n,nster wns
weight of his body, Kazan flung him- and transform ones life and environ- alwayg beln. ialtj up through overeat-
self against the wolf's shoulders, m*nt- ^ „ Jt _t .( „ . ..a Ing—he said he couldn't help doing so,
clenred his Jnws, and struck ngaln for Lesson 9. God ai predictions as to th becauge my cookery was so delicious ;
the throat hold. It was another miss— captivity of Israel were fulfilled to tlK master here hasn't been laid up
by a hair's breadth—nnd before he _^ot.h,n* |8.h"11 J1. ® once all the three months I've been
could recover, the wolfs teeth were w^ch Oo(lnhfl? "a,(1 £*,7!* Ah«nhoril wlth you' 0,1(1 thut s Ju8t what bother8
i ii. .. . . Lesson 10. Jehovah Is the shephern mum 1"
ln ,he bnck of 1,19 neck- „f captive I-rnet. and wlil surely (father I me 80' mUm 1
them out from their wanderings and
save them.
Lesson 11. One should be unflinch-
ingly loyal to God under all circum-
stances.
Lessons 12 and 13. God Is able to de-
liver those who trust hlra, from fire
and from wild beasts.
I If a cat has nine lives a fiddle should
I have #JOre strings.
The first lesson In charity Is to give
away what you don't want.
Almost Correct.
Charles was nn only child nnd nl-
ays associating with his very learn-
ed parents he sometimes tnlked like a
book.
"My fnther Is n sociologist," he told
Petey, who lived In nn nlley and had
met plenty of sociologists but hud
never lenrned to clnsslfy them.
"A what?" asked Petey.
"A sociologist, and he Is very much
Interested In studying the conditions
of the mentally deficient."
I'etey considered for a moment
nnd then nsked: "Is he In n bug-
house?"
How Kazan chooses a mate
and learns the joys of bossing
a wolf pack is described vividly
in the next installment.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
WHEN ONE'S LIFE IS SHAPCD
YES! MAGICALLY!
CORNS LIFT OUT
WITH FINGERS
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 acts on the Liver. Drives out
Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builda
up the Whole System. 60 cents.
Not a Poet.
"Excuse me I Do I see the manag-
ing editor, Mr. Quill?" asked u brawny-
looking female of the proprietor of the
Jabrllle luminary.
"We don't wish any poetry, thank
you."
"I don't—"
"Yes, yes; I know. I can't stop to
| hear It Just now."
■ "But I tell you I don't—"
"Well, It don't make any difference;
I I have a bnrrel full of gushing efTu-
| slons on unrequited love in the cellar
already."
"You ralsunder—"
j "Look, here, madam. How'd you get
In here? I've got a man outside that
I pay six pence n head to throw love
When God Probes,
God loves us too much to let what You ssy to the drug store man,
Not in the Cradle, But From 12 to 18 hurt us stay with us. So, be- 'Give me a small bottle of freezone.' ,,
Years of A0e, Prof. Earl cause of this love, he himself Is will- This will cost very little but will poets do^A tlie^stairs,
Barnes Declares. jnff hurt us in order to save us from positively remove every hard or soft
the greater hurt. Probing Is done ln
"•The hand thnt rocks the cradle order to get rid of something that
rules the world?' Nonsense; It only Would Injure. And so, as Prebendary
handles the material. The time of the Webster has said: "Do not be afraid
shaping of life is from twelve to eight- 0f God's probing. He never wounds
een yeurs old; thut Is the formative except to heal. He never humbles ex-
perlod. All great educators know cept to exalt. Do let God deal with
that," Earl Barnes snld In his lecture you; do not be afraid of his probing."
on Jenn Chrlstophe at Pittsburgh. It Most of us have been afraid of It; we
You Idiot I I'm no poetry fiend. I
corn or callus from one's feet. Ju t tH"k >"ur mfn and '",ft
A few drops of this new ether com- bend down In an ash barrel,
pound applied directly upon a tender,
aching corn relieves the soreness in-
stantly, and soon the entire corn or
callus, root and all, dries up and can
be lifted off with the fingers.
This new way to rid one's feet of
you say anything more to
wedge you ln alongside of him. I'm a
nurse, I am. The doctor told me t
run down here nnd tell you, If you aro
Mr. Quill, that the baby Is a boy, that
he weighs nine pounds and your wife
ou to come right home nnd
was the last of six studies In genius
given by Mr. Barnes before the Uni-
versity Extension society.
"Nothing Is more tragic than the re-
lation of genius to professional life,"
said Mr. Barnes. "Genius is solitary
and Individual, can never be fulfilled
until It goes out from the routine nnd
stays out. If genius were respectable,
like you or me, he would be mediocre
like you or me."
New York City as a State.
Col. J. B. Bellinger wants the city
of New York elevated Into a new state.
To that end he would have unnexed to
It adjacent slices of Connecticut nnd
New Jersey. In his opinion erection
of the city Into a stnte would bring
power to solve complicated problems,
such as transportation and food dis-
tribution. Should his Iden be adopted
the new stnte would possess the unique
distinction of being the only stnte ln
the Union without nn ngrlcultural urea
or farming population.
may be dreading It Just now. We shall
not fear If we remember what kind of
love Is bnck of It: thnt all-sacrlfldng
love that died for us on the cross. So
we enn safely, gladly let ourselves go
utterly Into his hands nud nsk those
nall-plerced hands to do with us what
they will. Then he can begin to show
us his love ns we may never yet have
known the meaning of love.—Sunday
School Times.
corn9 wns Introduced by a Cincinnati wants yo
^^^^see It*
"Great Caesar! Why didn't you any
so nt first? Where's my hnt!"—Lon-
man, who says that freezone dries ln
a moment, and simply shrivels up th
corn or callus without Irritating the
surrounding skin.
If your druggist hasn't any freezone
tell hlra to order a small bottle from
his wholesale drug house for you.—adv.
don Tlt-Blts.
Good Memory for Dates.
"Do you know what duy this Is?" ^uhoamnyqn
sked Mrs. Ocev Wattles, sweetly. °L
aguaranteed remedy for
HAY fEVER-ASTHA
Yoor aoaiT will IIS k«rr*D«n b* yonr drngflW
. .!„■ ifthli remHlT «>Ol
Need to Catch Vision of God.
When we are content to live on the
lower levels of life It Is because we
haven't caught the vision of God.—L.
K. Smith.
Martyrdom Sublime.
Christianity hus made martyrdom
sublime and sorrow triumphant.—B. H.
Capln.
The Mother's Influence
There never yet was n mother who
taught her child to be an InHdel.—Hen-
ry W. Shaw.
mMUH .. - -'iiM'dy nnl
naked Mrs. Occy Wattles, sweetly. cSSpanMn^iu"^?. *nS
"Uh-huh," replied Mr. Wattles. 2SSKVIioCStta.attaisof3iU
"Sure. Ifs—ah—"
"We were married just four years
ugo this morning," Mrs. Wutles went
on.
"Yes, sir. I remember just ns though
It was yesterday. And—er—It's next
week our lease on the tint expires,
Isn't it?"—Kansas City Star.
<)|p Judtf" M to wh«Mbc
drngglat will vtve 7<>u
by keeping Mississippi Diarrhea Cor-
8AVE A DOCTOR'S BILL
M OE.UW.UI. cm.
n DR.R.SCHIFFMMN'S g)
Asthmadok
AND ABTHMADOR CIGARETTES
DO.ltlT.lT «l" INSTANT R*LI £ In worr ou.
S ,.^>| PI<7 "I"" tht>a..nd.wta> bu bM«
"'nAlderUl lm ar*bl«. afu r ba*ln« tried #T«rr other
meant <«f relief In rain. AMhniutira h..uld avail
themielTea of tb! /iiamnte* offer through their own
drufgl.t- Bar ^ceiit ««?<> •'V>1«
r—mnr drr. 't."M Vou will be tb«
you am benefitted and tha
ai'h roar money If yc.n are
of any fairer proyoalti.
(61
Gold in History.
Gold was known from the earliest
historic times, and is mentioned In the
eleventh verse of the second chapter
of Genesis. At tlrst It was chiefly used
for ornaments. The trude of the gold-
smith Is mentioned ln the fourth verse
of the seventeenth chapter of Judges,
In connection with the overlaying of
Idols with gold leaf.
The Lady Spoke Last.
A five-year-old girl and a three-year-
old girl were talking. "I'm older thnn
you," snld the hoy, elated over tho
fact. Said the girl, "Well, I'm newer
than you!"
A Predicament
A man took his children to a county
fair. As they moved about the grounds,
the father felt his fifth born tugging at
his coattalls. He turned, and the young-
ster begged him to buy some candy.
"Buy It yourself," said the father.
uWhere's the dime I gave you a little
while ago?"
"It's down my neck."
"Well, shake It out 1**
"But, dad, I can't It was in my
mouth when It went down."
dial handy for all stomach complaints. R schiffmann Co., Proprietors, St. Paul, Nina.
Price 25c and 50c.—Adv.
Some writers get n dollar n word
nnd some wrongdoers get more than
thnt wheu they talk saucily to tho
Judge.
Most men have ability; too ninny
of us, however, are too tired or too
lasy to demonstrate It.
7(JHI lit. Granulated Eyelids,
> Sore Eyes, Eyes Inflamed by
' Every Woman Wants ]
ANTISEPTIC POWDER
-c, -...oreEye*, ty.-- IP
*X3 5«rr>. Duit a id Wind quickly
relieveJ by Murine. Try It in
r" c your Eyes and in Baby' Eyes.
)UR tYtj No Scurf inj:, Jost FveComfert
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE
Dissolved in water for douches stops
pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam-
mation. Recommended by Lydia E.
Pinkham Med. Co, for ten years.
A healing wonder for nasal catarrh,
sore throat and sore eyes. EconomicaL
Hat estrievdinary draining and germicidal
Sample Frte. 50c. all dmuMb, ct port raid or
LrmJ Thrl'.-ti.T, Inil^Cmi.a.w.rW.n.Kw ^
Marine Eye Rewdy
<V« Salvo, n IVltttS t ■ '• P
tsklJUu-iiasE/c lUac„if Co,
x r oottK Murln*
>/! •« K «- fro*.
Clitcaao j
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 35--1917.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Springer, M. E. The Talihina Tribune (Talihina, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, September 28, 1917, newspaper, September 28, 1917; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc132777/m1/3/: accessed May 20, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.