The Dover News (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 4, 1914 Page: 3 of 4
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THE NEWS. DOVER OKLAHOMA.
fpmTB
MRS. LYON'S
ACHES AND PAINS
Have All Gone Since Taking
Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound.
Terre Hill, Pa.—"Kindly permit me
to give you my testimonial in favor of
Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Com-
^ pound. When I first
\?Ji. began taking it 1
* — S J was suiTi'rinK from
female troubles for
some time and had
almost til kinds of
aches—pains in low-
er part of back and
in sides, and press-
ing down pains. I
could not sleep and
had no appetite. Since I have taken
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound the aches and pains are all gone
and I feel like a new woman. I cannot
praise your medicine too highly.''—Mrs.
Augustus Lyon, Terre Hill, Pa.
It is true that nature and a woman's
■worn, nas produced the grandest remedy
for woman's ills that the world has
ever known. From the roots and
herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham,
forty years ago, gave to womankind
a remedy for their peculiar ills which
has proved more efficacious than any
other combination of drugs ever com-
pounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound is recognized
from coast to coast as the standard
remedy for woman's ills.
In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,
Mass., are files containing hundreds of
thousands of letters from women seek-
ing health —many of them openly state
over their own signatures that they have
regained their health by taking Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound;
and in some cases that it has saved them
from surgical operations.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
1 toilet pr 'parntion of merit.
IIi-lpa t<. eradicate dandruff,
j For Restoring Color and
'Beauty toGray or Faded Hair,
60c. and jfl.iw at Druggists.
98 RAILROADS
FACE WALKOUT
THEIR PLEAS FOR MORE PAY
SPURNED, 55,000 TRAINMEN
WILL VOTE ON STRIKE.
ALL WESTERN ROADS AFFECTEO
Total Number of Miles of Roads to
Be Affected About 140,000—
Means Fifty Per Cent Higher
Pay Roles for Roads.
Chicago, June 2.—Negotiations for
Increased wages were suspended today
; between the firemen and engineers
and the general manager's committee
> of ninety-eight railroads west of Chi-
cago.
The final refusal of the railroads to
! grant their demands will he submitted
to the men and a referendum on the
question of a strike will he taken, ac-
cording to Warren S. ritone, grand
| ci ief engineer of the Brotherhood of
I Locomotive Engineers, and W. S. Car-
i ter. president of the Brotherhood of
I Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen,
who have headed a comittee of em-
ployes in the negotiations.
Mr. Stone said it probably would re-
quire about thirty days to complete
the vote and in the meantime no fur-
S ther proposals would he submitted.
The negotiations have been going on
here for nearly three months. The
railroads involved include practically
all the roads in the United States
j west of Chicago, including the Illinois
| Central and all lines in Canada west
of Port Williams, except the Grand
Trunk-Pacific.
The total mileage of the railroads
is about 140,000 miles and more than
i;r,,giiu engineers and firemen who now
receive about $07,750,000 annually are
involved.
According to a statement is*urd by
the general manager's committee, the
request of the men would increase tho
Bog Mothers Kittens.
"Mike." a rat terrier owned by Wil-
liam Halley of Georgetown, was dis-
covered yesterday mothering a pair of
kittens he had stolen from the home I
of a neighbor. "Mike" had gone to j
the house, picked the kittens up by |
the neck, and carried them to his own
home, where he was discovered play-
ing with them and making them com-
fortable in every way. When the two
kittens were returned to their mother
"Mike" was Inconsolable, and has
since refused to out.—Georgetown
(Del.) Dispatch to the Philadelphia
Inquirer.
SCALP ITCHED AND BURNED
833 South Scioto St., Circleville,
Ohio.—"My little girl's trouble llrst
started on her head in a bunch of lit-
tle pimples full of yellow-looking mat-
ter and they would spread in large
places. In a short time they would
open. Her scalp was awfully red and
inflamed and the burning and itching
were so intense that she would scratch
Imd rub till it would leave ugly sores.
The sores also appeared on her body,
and her clothing irritated them so
that 1 had to put real soft cloth next
to her body. She would lie awake ot
nights and was very worrisome. At
times she was tortured with itching
and burning.
"I tried different remedies with no
benefit for months. I had given up all
hope of her ever getting rid of it, then
1 concluded to try Cuticura Soap and
Ointment. The second application
gave relief. In a short time, she was
entirely cured." (Signed) Mrs. Alice
Kirlln, Nov. 4, 1012.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Hook Address post-
card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.
Glad to See Them Go?
Patience—I see a lx>ndon railroad
station has been equipped with pen
ny-in-the-slot tnaolunes for the sale of
tickets to persons who wish to ac-
company friends to the train plat-
forms.
Patrice—That's too cheap. I know
I'd give more than a penny to see
some of my friends leave the town.
AVOID SPREADING OF DISEASE
Precautions That Should Be Observed
by Those Afflicted With
Tuberculosis.
All persons who are intimately as-
sociated with cases of active pulmo- I
nary tuberculosis cannot be too cau-
tious about the proper disposition of |
tuberculosis sputum. Such sputum I
should always be received in cups
containing a live per cent solution of
lysol or carbolic acid, or in the ab-
sence of these, milk of lime. Paper
cups, made especially for this purpose,
may be used and subsequently burned,
soiled handkerchiefs and cloths
should be immersed for one hour in
lysol or carbolic acid (five per cent)
and then boiled before they are han-
dled. The patient should be provided
with a set of dishes for his exclusive
use, and these should be kept by
themselves and boiled thoroughly aft-
er each meal. Remember that tuber-
culosis is a preventable disease, but
that its control can be accomplished
only by the strictess observance of
sanitary precautions.
Wheel Talk.
Wayside Walter and Tired Tommie
met for the first time in several
months.
"Been across the country," Wayside
Walter explained.
"Traveling incog?" asked Tommie.
"Nope," replied Walter, "in the
able."—Youngstown Telegram.
HER MOTHER-IN-LAW
Proved a Wise, Good Friend.
A young woman out in la. found a
■wise, good friend in her mother-in-law,
Jokes notwithstanding. She writes:
"I was greatly troubled with my
stomach, complexion was blotchy and
yellow. After meals I often suffered
sharp pains and would have to lie
down. My mother often told me it
was the coffee I drank at meals. But
when I'd quit coffee I'd have a severe
headache.
"While visiting my mother-in-law I
remarked that she always made such
good coffee, and asked her to tell me
how. She laughed and told nie it was
easy to make good 'coffee' when you
use Postum.
"I began to use Postum as soon as I
got home and now we have the same
good 'coffee' (Postum) every day, and
I have no more trouble. Indigestion
is a thing of the past, and my com-
plexion has cleared up beautifully.
"My grandmother suffered a great
deal with her stomach. Her doctor
told her to leave off coffee. She then
took tea but that was just as bad.
"She finally was induced to try Post-
um which she has used for over a
year. She traveled during the winter
over the greater part of Iowa, visiting,
something she had not been able to
do for years. She says she owes her
present good health to Postum."
Name given by Postum Co , Battle
Creel:, Mich. Read "The Road to Well-
ville," in pkgs.
Postum now comes in two forms:
Regular Postum—must be well
boiled. 15c and 25c packages.
Instant Postum—is a soluble pow-
der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly
In a cup of hot water and, with cream
and sugar, makes a delicious beverage
Instantly. 30c and 50c tins.
The cost per cup of both kinds is
about the same.
"There's a Reason" for Postum.
—sold by Grocer*.
payrolls of the department approxi-
mately 50 per cent.
GIVE EAR TO REBELS.
Even Huerta Envoys Favor Giving
Carranza Faction a Hearing.
Washington. June 2—American dele-
gates to the Mexican mediation confer-
ence at Niagara Falls were in fre-
quent communication today with the
Washington government. It was de-
clared in official circles that the
burden of the communication related
to the hitch in the progress of negotia-
tions which hag arisen since the note
was sent last week to the South
American mediators, outlining the po-
sition of the Mexican constitutional-
ists. It further was reported that the
matter of recognizing or rejecting rep-
resentatives of the constitutionalists
now was squarely up to the mediators
themselves.
What will be the outcome of the
deliberations over the new element
injected into the proceedings was not
predicted by officitls of the govern-
ment here, hut messages were receiv-
ed from observers at Niagara Falls
that the Huerta delegates had not
looked with disfavor upon the emis-
sary from Carranza bearing the mes-
sage outlining his position. It was
stated, in fact, that General Huerta's
representatives had regarded the de-
velopment with a degree of favor, as
indicating hope for future peace in
Mexico, and that they had determin-
ed to leave the matter of receiving
constitutionalists into the conference
entirely to the South American en-
voys.
That Justice Lamar and Mr. Leh-
mann, representing the United States,
have been urging recognition of Car-
ranza, seemed more apparent than
ever in Washington tonight.
The president would not discuss for
publication today any phase of the
Mexican problem. Although he re-
newed audiences with the newspaper
correspondents, the president let it be
known that he could not talk about
Mexico, in view of the mediation ne-
gotiations.
Judges to Pry Into Big Wreck.
Montreal, June 2.—Loss of nearly a
thousand lives in the sinking of the
Canadian Pacific liner Empress of Ire-
land. will be investigated by a royal
commission of three appointed today.
The hearings to determine responsi-
bility for the ramming and sinking In
the St. Lawrence river Friday morning
of the Empress of Ireland by the Nor-
wegian collier Storstad, will begin on
June 9. The three men who will
comprise the investigating tribunal are
Sir Adolpli Routhier, judge of the
court of admiralty of Quebec; Hon.
Ezekiel McLeod, chief justice and
judge of the admiralty court of New
Brunswick, appointed by the Canad-
ian government and George L. Yaux,
of the legal staff of the British board
of trade.
SUCCEEDS IN CANADA
An interesting and successful Ameri-
can farmer. Lew Palmer, of Staveley,
Alta., passed through the city today.
Mr. Palmer came from Duluth, Minn-
just ten years ago, and brought with
him four cows and three horses and
that was his all. He homesteaded in
the Staveley district, and today has
430 acres of land. $:i,000 worth of im-
plements, 31 Percheron horses, made
$1,000 out of hogs last year, raised
7,000 bushels of wheat, 0,000 busheis
of oats, 12 acres of potatoes, and IS
tons of onions. His farm and stock is
worth $30,000, and he made it all in
ten years.—Exchange.—Advertisement.
Trade Secret.
"Where do you get the plot for your
stories?"
"I have never had but one plot," de -
clared the popular author, "and I
swiped that from 'Romeo and Juliet.'
All you have to do is to change the
scenery and the dialect."
LADIES CAN WEAR SHOES
One sue smaller after using Allen's Font-Base, tho
Antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes. It
makes tight or new shoes f« el easy. Just the thing
for dancing, liefunt tub-tiruCs. For FUKU trial
p&okuKt'i address Allen S.Olmsted, I.elloy. N. V. Adv.
Of Course.
She—Why does a hen cackle when
she lays an egg?
He—Because the egg can't, I guess.
Have a Porch
EVERY
PACKAGE
TIGHTLY
SEALED!
Remember—the new seal is air-
tight and dust-proof! It's the
best gum in the best package.
Be SURE it's WRIGLEY'S.
Look for the spear.
KEEP "IN FORM"
WRIGLEYSk.
SPEARMINT
It's the ideal offering to
guests or family, especially
after dinner.
It's the hos-
pitality gum —
so perfectly
packed that it
stays perfectly
fresh and clean.
It costs al-
most noth-
ng but people
like it better
than much
more cost"
ly things.
It relieves ail "over-
eaten" feelings —re-
freshes the mouth-
cleanses the teeth
beautifully.
Chew it after
every meal.
This really means keep-
ing the digestion good,
the liver active and the
bowels free from con-
stipation. You are then
ready to "play the
game" to win. For any
disturbance in the di-
gestive functions
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS
has been proven very
helpful. You should try
it, but insist on getting
HOSTETTER'S
Oldest Welshman.
The oldest Welshman in the world
is Mr. Thomas Morris, who lives at j
Westernville, Neb. Although he is ,
now an American citizen, he was born
a subject of George 111, at the little
village of lierriew, Montgomeryshire, ,
on January 15, 1794. lie is therefore i
one hundred and twenty years old.
His father was an agricultural la
borer and died when the boy was
three years old. Morris was appren-
ticed to a cobbler and followed his
trade in this country until 1871, when,
at the age of seventy-Beven, he emi-
grated to America.
The old man is very proud of the
fact that he has lived in three cen-
turies. He remembers the union of
Great Britain and Ireland, the assassi-
nation of President Lincoln and the
laying of the first Atlantic cable.
Morris can still walk with the aid
of a stick and see with the aid of
spectacles, which he first purchased
after passing his hundredth birthday.
His hearing is good, and he enjoys a
cup of tea or coffee with each meal.—
Daily Express.
Benefit of the Best Light.
We should be as generous with
man as we are with a picture, which
we always give the benefit of the best
possible light —Ralph W. Emerson.
Mysteries of Complexion.
"She has a fine complexion."
"And she gives every man who i
kisses her a little of It as a souvenir " i
"how
Have Sold Last Note of Orient.
Kansas City, June 2.—All the money
necessary to refinance the Kansas
<'ity, Mexico and Orient railway, has
been obtained and the road will be
out of its receivership and on its
own feet again within the next 30
days. W. T. Kemper, who aided in
the refinancing, received a letter from
the Orient financiers in New York
saying the last- of the notes had been
sold and all arrangements made to
start at once on the process of re-
habilitation.
For Real Speeding.
"Pop," said Inquisitive Ignatz
fast can a horse go?"
"Well, replied fathpr, "a mile in
two minutes and four seconds is con-
sidered good speed. Why do you ask?'
"Oh, I was just thinking," replied
Ignatz, "what a shame it was that
Paul Revere, Tam O Shanter, and John
Gilpin didn't have motorcycles."
Natural Consequence.
"The wind is rising."
"That's because it is from
East."
Literary Talk.
"Mv dear, there's the candlestick
on top of the clock. Don't you think
that sort of thing is Really a little
too previous?"
"What on earth do you mean, Wil-
liam Henry?"
"1 mean it's ahead of time."
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle ol
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Ysars.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
Practical Ones.
"What are the best fruits of ro-
mance?"
"Wedding dates and bridal pairs."
Good Cause for Alarm
Deaths from kidney diseases have In-
creased Ti% In twenty years. People over-
do nowadays in so many ways that the con-
stant tllteiing of poisoned blood weakens
tho kidneys.
Beware of fatal Brlght's disease. When
imckacho or urinary ills suggest weak
kidneys, use Doan's Kidney Pills, drink
water freely and reduce the diot. Avoid
colTVe, tea and liquor.
Doau's Klduey Pills command confi-
dence, for no other remedy is so widely
Ubed or so generally successful.
A h ii ii mvs Case
"Expofu:
hnrdships
pht
ubU-
fvrry Pktnrf
I db a Story
• kid
awful
f 3^3
R First St., Mc-
I'herson, Kan.
"Three doctors
treat I'd me. but I
Btiadily got w.jr«o
until I was helpless.
I wis laid up for
eleven we
time and
■ *• d Doan's Kidney
Pills and they made
a complete and permanent euro."
Get Doan's at Any Store, 50c a Bo*
DOAN'S "p'IWV
FOSTER.MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
135 BUStlELS PERACRE)
jm the yield of WHEAT
on many farms in
Western Canada in
1913, some yields
being reported as
high ms 50 bushels
per acre. As high
aa 100 bushels were
recorded in some
districts for oats.
50 bushels for barley and
from 10 to 20 bus. for (las.
J. Keys arrived in the
country 5 years ago from
Denmark v/ith very little
means. He homesteaded,
worked hard, is now the
owner of 320 acres of land,
in 1913 had a crop of 200 I
acres, which will realize hiin
about $4,000. His wheat
weivhed 68 lbs. to the bushel .
and averaged over 35 bushels |
to the acre.
Thousands of similar in- .
stances might be related of the \
homesteaders in Manitoba, Sas-
katchewan and Alberta.
The crop of 1913 was an abun- .
dint one everywhere in Western
Canada.
I Ask for descriptive literature and
' reduced railway rates. Apply to
Superintendent of Immigration, l\
Ottawa, Canada, or \Vu
O.A.COOK. \}\
125 W. 9th STREET. KANSAS CITY, MO.
Canadian Government Agent
DAISY FLY KILLER
metal, can't spill or tip
over; will not soil or
Injure anything.
Guaranteed effective.
All dealers rflsnnl
ex preen paid for II.00.
HAROLD 80MER8, 160 DeK&lb A*s , Brooklyn, h T.
W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 23-1914.
COLT DISTEMPER
Can be handled rerr easily. The sick are enred. and all oth«n la
sauissUble.no matter h<; w "exposed." kept froin!having the die-
,«a « l.r usinir KHOHNU LIQUID DISTEMPKK CUKK. Give <>a
'the Voiuraa.or In feed. Acta on the blood and expels genus of
all forms or distemper. Beet remedy ever known for martin In foaL
One bottle uriiarant^ed to cure one canw. Wc and ti a bottle; 16 ana
•10dosen of .lnnnr «tsan<1 harm** dealers, or sent express paid by
manufacturers. Cut shows how lo poultice throat*. Our free
Booklet (fives everything. I«o«ial airente wauled. Laryeel solllutf
_ . horse reined/in exuten-jo—twelve years.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO. rte«i* 8sadBsetsrtoietisu, Goshen* lnd«« U. 8. A*
Death Lurks In A Weak Heart
It Yours Is fluttering or weak, use RENOVINE." Made by Van Vleet-Manafleld Drug Co., Memphis, Tenn. Price SI.OO
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Martin, J. S. The Dover News (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 4, 1914, newspaper, June 4, 1914; Dover, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc136351/m1/3/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.