The Dover News (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1916 Page: 2 of 6
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THE NEWS. DOVER. OKLAHOMA.
GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT,
BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR
Make it Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxur* '
iant and Remove Dandruff—Real
Surprise for You.
T
Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf-
fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus-
trous and beautiful as a young girl's
after a Danderine hair cleanse." Just
try this—moisten a cloth with a little
Danderine and carefully draw It
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
and in just a few moments you have
doubled the beauty of your hair.
Resides beautifying the hair at once,
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dandruff: cleanses, purifies and invig-
orates the scalp, forever stopping itch-
ing and falling hair.
But what will please you most will
be after a few weeks' use when you
will actually see now hair—fine and
downy at first—yes—but really new
hair—growing all over the scalp. If
you care for pretty, soft nair and lots
of It, surely get a 25 cent bottle of
Knowlton s Danderine from any store
and Just try It. Adv.
Precocious.
"What would your mother say if sh"
saw you doing that, little hoy?"
"How's any man going to tell in ad
vance what a woman's going to say?'
Decidedly Encouraging From Ev-
ery Standpoint.
STOP EATING MEAT IF
KIDNEYS OR BACK HURT
Take a Glass of Salts to Clean Kid-
neys If Bladder Bothers Vou—
Meat Forms Uric Acid.
Eating meat regularly eventually
produces kidney trouble in some form
or other, savs a well known authority,
because the uric acid in meat excites
the kidneys, they become overworked;
get sluggish; clog up and cause all
sorts of distress, particularly backache
and misery in the kidney region; rheu-
matic twinges, severe headaches, acid
stomach, constipation, torpid liver,
sleeplessness, bladder and unlnary ir-
ritation.
The moment your hack hurts or kid-
neys aren't acting right, or If bladder
bothers you, get about four ounces of
Jad Salts from any good pharmacy;
take a tahlespoonful In a glass of
water before breakfast for a few daya
and your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts is made from fhe
acid of grapes and lemon Juice, com-
bined with lithia, and has been used
for generations to flu^h clogged kid-
neys and stimulate them to normal
activity; also to neutralise the acids In
the urine so it no longer irritates, thus
ending bladder disorders.
Jad Salts cannot Injure anyone;
makes a delightful effervescent llthta-
water drink which millions of men and
women take now and then to keep the
kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus
avoiding serious kidney dlseaso.—Ad*.
A love match generally lasts about
as long as a fellow can hold it without
burning his fingers.
SOAP IS STRONGLY ALKALINE
and constant use will burn out the j
scalp. Cleanse the scalp by shampoo- I
ing with "La Creole" Hair Dressing, !
and darken, in the natura! way, those |
ugly, grizzly hairs Price. $1.00.—Adv, !
file regular army in Hawaii is to be
Increased from jt.UOO to L'L'.OOH in the (
next two years
The Quinine That I>ocs Not Affect Head
tuT'IV.fvoOi'TNINK ,Uno.'dfu.?, I
«iuui.ue can be taken by anyone. 25c. '
One woman can be very fond of an-
other if they are a hundred miles
apart.
.ttli dav ik smile dav if you uie Fled
( nm Hail Blue. American made, therefor*
the best made. Adv.
A man never knows what a woman
thinks of him—nor does she.
Speaking of conditions generally in
Canada, the most encouraging feature
of the year, front a trade and financial
standpoint, lias been the bountiful
harvest of the Northwest, where a
greatly Increased area under cultiva
"oil has given the highest average
yield in the history of the country, if
is estimated that the grain crop of
Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta
has a market value to the producers of
approximately four hundred million
dollars, iu (he use of which we may
anticipate not only the liquidation of
much indebtedness, but the stimula
tlon of current trade.
The annual reports of tlie various
hanks throughout Canada are now lie
ing published. They savor of opti
mism all the way through and, ion
trary tc what might he generally ex-
pected I11 war times, business is good
everywhere.
The General Manager of the liank of
Montreal at the recent annual meet
ing said: "The position of Canada is
a highly favored one, with an assured
future of growth, development ami
general prosperity."
In the same report It is said that the
Canadian West "lias recovered to a
marked extent from the economic (lis
location of a year ago."
'I lie season's wheat and other cereal
crops have exceeded all previous rec
ords in quantity and quality, and. dc
spite the enormous yield, prices have
been uncommonly well maintained.
It would be difficult to exaggerate
the importance of these results to the
Prairie Provinces and the Dominion
at large.
The prosperity of those engaged in
mixed farming and ranching is most
encouraging.
The Hour mills in Manitoba, Sas
katchewan and Alberta are busy ami
are doing well. Their combined daily
capacity is about 27,000 barrels
The large advances of the Dominion
Government to farmers in certain dis-
trict a, principally in the form of seed
were made very opportunely and have
been amply Justified by the very large
crop yield In those districts
Business In many Important lines is
good and should continue to Improve
as returns from grain yet to he mar
keted are received.
The general business outlook has
been transformed by the large crop
'1 lie returns of the gross earnings of
Canadian railroads for November show
those of the Canadian Pacific ill
creased $1,796,000 or 78 per cent for
the last nine days of the month. Com
pared with same month year ago, in
crease no less than $5,291,000 or ti7.fi
per cent agaitiBt a 45 per cent gain in
October, and a decrease of 4V4 per
cent In September.
H. V Meredith, of the llank of Mont
real, in a recent address delivered at
Montreal, declared that the most en
couraging feature from a trade and
finance standpoint had been the boun
tiful harvest of the Northwest, where
the greatly increased area under culti
vat Ion had given the highest average
in history of the country. He esti
mated the grain crop of the three
provinces at a value of over $400,000,-
000. and said that such remarkable re-
sults would have the effect if attract-
ing the tide of immigration to our
shores, when the world is again at
peace. The restoration of a favorable
balance in our foreign trade is a fac
tor of supreme importance at the pres-
ent time.
It is the general opinion in the Bast
that the 1915 grain crop in the Prai
rie Provinces not only put the whole
Dominion in a sounder trade and finan 1
cial standing, but that it will also re
suit In a big increase in immigration
to the West of agricultural settlers
who will include capitalized fanners 1
from Kurope and the I'nited Stales as
well as homesteaders. Advertisement
Farmers' Educational
and Co-Operative
Union of America
Matters %< Eipltial Moment to
the Progressive Agriculturist
A rralty fellow never has any peace
Necessity is a powerful weapon —
Seneca.
I'ast men and fast rivers are often
shallow
I'raise is honest—sometimes; Hat
tery never is.
A diplomat never kicks at the cut
that harks at his heels.
Idlers spend I heir lime going no
where and coining hack
Doubt is an expert at weaving
barbed-wire obstructions.
1 here is more hot air used by poll
tlcians than by aeronauts.
Feeling sorry for a friend in hard
luck is the average man's limit
Uve stock of choice breeding is now
a formidable rival of King Cotton
Philosophy will even help some men
to endure the trials of matrimony
No boy who is given a share in his
product ever voluntarily left the
farm
More wives would respect their bus
hands if they were not so well ac
(juainted.
Success is not measured by the
style displayed by a man's wife and
daughters.
No home is complete without
(lower and vegetable garden, no mat
ter how small.
A man is always dead sure he is
right whenever the decision affects his
own pocket book
Alter a man has passed the critica
siage of his illness he begins to worry
about his doctor's bill
W hen a boastful marksman misses
the center, see him solemnly examine
the sights on the gun.
A woman never gets over feeling re
sentful toward the man she would
have married had he only asked her.
Farming is as difficult to learn prop-
erly as a trade However, it can be
made more alluring. That depends
altogether upon the teacher.
Give a hoy a pig to take care of. a
dozen hens and a plot of ground, and
if he is worth shucks he will have the
time ol his life and gain in health
and strength.
FAIR PROFIT FOR PRODUCER
No Easy Task to Successfully Organize
• nd Manage Selling Associa
tions Among Farmers.
a
99
HEALTH
THE WATCHWORD
This Really Means,
PERFECT DIGESTION AND
ASSIMILATION OE EOOD
LIVER ACTIVITY
BOWEL REGULARITY
RICH. RED BLOOD
TRY
HOSTETTER'S
Stomach Bitters
when weakness is manifested in !
the Stomach, Liver or Bowels.
Jv H. TURNER
WHOLESALE DEALER IN ' •
ALFALFA AND PRAIRIE
HAY, BALE TILS
541 MA DOUGLAS WICHITA
The success of u nurse (jirl depends
on her attention to little things.
TRY THIS EASY WAY
TO CLEAR YOUR SKIN
WITH RESIN0L SOAP
Bathe your face for several minutes
with Hesinol Soap and warm water,
working the creamy lather into the
skill gently with the finger-tips. Then
wash ofT with more Hesinol Soap and
warm water, finishing with a dash ot
clear cold water to close the pores.
Do this once or twice a day, and you
will be astonished how quickly the
healing, antiseptic Resinoi medication
soothes and cleanses the pores, re-
moves pimples and blackheads, anil
leaves the complexion clear, fresh
and velvety. In severe cases a little
Resinoi Ointment should also he
used. Hesinol Soap is sold by all
druggists.— Adv.
If love were contagious girls would
work overtime to catch it.
Imporinnt to Mothers
„ Examine carefully every bottle oi
^ASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy foi
Infants and children, and see that li
Hears the
signature
I In Use For Over 3C Years?
j Children Cry for Fletcher'i Castori*
hvery time some p*.nple bury the
hatchet they dig up a hamuier.
Organized marketing must take the
place « unwise and suicidal competi-
tive individual selling on congested
local markets before we can reason
ablv hope to obtain a fair share of the
wealth Which we are creating on our
farms It is folly to contend that co-
operative marketing is Impracticable
in the face of the many living exam
pies in localities where marketing as-
sociations are doubling the profits of
co-operative members It Is true that
It is no easy task to successfully or
I Runize and manage a selling associa
j lion hut the very fact that It requires
patient and persistent effort makes it
I all the more profitable for those who
j stay by it during the formative and
| experimental period of its existence.
In this connection, let us again
j sound warning against big schemes
of co operation in which it is proposed
to Include every farmer in the whole
neighborhood or county. Successful co
operation never begins that way.
Building tlie co-operative structure on
the presumption or theory that 500
farmers, even 100 farmers, are surely I
- going to fall right In line as loyal co- I
operators is like counting chickens'
before Ihev are batched It Is this
unwise presumption that dooms many
co-operative ventures io disappoint-
ment and failure.
The best co-operative ..inrketing as
socj.it ions ha vi started v/ith sma'l
groups of men Mid h;,ve gradually en-
larged the tleli. of operation us the
men in charge acquired experience and
became worth/of confidence In view
of this condit.on why lose time dream
ing .if some nig co-oi era live scheme?
If yon cant cooperate first with a
small group of farmers in your own
neighborhood with whom you are per
sonallv acquainted, how can vou ex
pect to co-op .-ate In a big scheme,
with farmers that vou do not know?—
The Progress v. Farmer
FARMER'S INCOME FOR WORK
Question as to V'hether Advantages
of Tenancy and Ownership ( an Be
Combined Is Discussed.
Moat people In thia country believw
that the tenant Is a menace and that
the owner Is more desirable because
he maintains soil fertility by li vu
atock farming and other good systems
and manifests more public spirit
Others believe that with a a.V8tem of
long leases. such a8 prevail in ECng
land, the tenant would be able to con-
duct Ilia operations with a much
smaller investment, and without many
of the objectionable features of ten
ancy a8 it now exists in thia country
We will have to readjust our ideas
somewhat radically to reach the pres-
ent Knglish condition, but many of
the advantages of ownership and ten
ancy can perhaps be combined with
out any revolution in our preaent
ideas, according to O K. Johnson of
the rariu management department of
the University of Miasouri
In a survey of the western part of
Johnson county the department found
that the size of a farm business has a
close relation to the income which
the former receives for his « ork and
that small owners may often enlarge
their operations by renting additional
land. Thi8 part owner stands with
the owner in the social matters, both
from the standpoint of the individual
nd that of the community which he
is helping to improve. In fact, in the
region surveyed, lie spent even more
for his family living than the man who
was renting no land This includes
what he grew on the farm and he was
much more nearly self sustaining be
cause he produced a greater portion
of his living on the farm and bought
less of it at stores. The interest
chargeable on his total investment
was loss than two-thirds a3 great as
in the case of the owner, for the total
investment., were $7,633 and $12,555
respectively. It must be remembered
that even after renting some land
from others, these part owners had
only about seven and one-half acres
more land apiece than the owners, and
ten acres more than the tenants with
whom they are compared The actual
figures were 14;J.6, 136 and 133.5 acres
respectively.
To a considerable extent the matter
may be summed up by saying that the
owner made a labor income of $;;i4 a j
year on 136 acres, the part owner $4."i6
on 143.6 acres, and the tenant $531 on
133.5, but many people would be will
ing to pay the additional $45 a year
for the advantage of knowing that it
would not be necessary to move in a
year or two, make new friends and
establish a system on a new farm The
difference between labor income the
part owners have and tenants have is
more than counterbalanced by the
higher standard of living of the part
owner who spent $(J4 a year more on
family living. The average owner in
that region probably does not realize
that his labor income is as far below
that of the tenant or part owner as
Mr Johnson s figures show. He does
not realize that so great a portion of
what he regards as income is not in
come from his labor, but from the
money investment which his land rep
reaenta.
Mow to avoid
Operations
These Three Women Tell How They
Escaped the Dreadful Ordeal of
Surgical Operations.
Hospitals are great and necessary institutions, but they
should be the last resort for women who suffer with ills
peculiar to their sex. Many letters on file in the Pinkham
Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., prove that a great number of
women after they have been recommended to submit to an
operation have been made well by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound. Here are three such letters.* All
sick women should read them.
Marinette, Wis.—"I went to the doctor and
he told me I mut<t have an operation for a female
trouble, and I hated to have it done as I had beea
married only a short time. I would have terrible
pains and my hands and feet were cold all tha
time. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound and was cured, and I feel better in every
way. I give you permission to publish my name
because I am so thankful that I feel well again."
—Mrs. Fred Beiinke, Marinette, Wis.
Detroit, Mich.—" When I first took Lydia E.
' Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I was so run down
with female troubles that I could not do anything, and our doctor
said I would have to undergo an operation. I could hardly walk
without help so when I read about the Vegetable Compound and what
it had done for others I thought I would try it. 1 got a bottle of
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and a package of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Sanative Wash and used them according to directions.
They helped me and today I am able to do till my work and I am welL"
—Mrs. Tuos. Dwyeh, 989 Milwaukee Ave., East, Detroit, Mich.
Bellevue, Pa.—" I suffered more than tongue can tell with terrible
bearing down pains and inflammation. I tried several doctors and
they all told me the same story, that I never could get well without
an operation and I just dreaded the thought of that. I also tried a
good many other medicines that were recommended to me and none
of them helped me until a friend advised me to give Lvdia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound a trial. The first bottle helped, I kept
taking it and now I don't know what it is to be sick any more and I
am picking up in weight. I am 20 years old and weigh 145 pounds.
It will be the greatest pleasure to me if I can have the oppor-
tunity to recommend it to any other suffering woman."—Miss Irene
Froklicher, 1923 Manhattan St., North Side, Bellevue, Pa.
If yon would like special advice write to I.ydi.i E. Pinkham
Med. Co. (confidential),Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened
read nd answered by a woman and held in strict confidence!
HONESTY IS A BUSINESS ASSET
m
TROWER, CHASE & McCOUN LIVF. STOCK
live stock exchange, kansas city, mo.
J' |K.ruI Of France (lin ing the Mrs. } We all admlr^ a n,an who
crease of lit I nOimmio' ' ' ■ « "e- . «hlnBS to himself, until we wan, to
ciease of $lfe I,>,00,000 front a year ago. borrow something
SEES FIFTEEN-CENT COTTON
Columbus Peacher Predicts Better
Times for Southern Farmers—
Outlook Is Cheering.
"The sharp decline in the cotton
market this week is only temporary
We will see lG cent cotton by March
1," said Columbus I'eaeher to a Bir
mlngham Age-Herald representative
the other day.
"The unusually high price of seed,
to say nothing of the good prices be-
ing paid for the staple, has caused a
groat rush to the gin
"The farmers are fast getting out
of debt. Friends of mine who had
given notes for large amounts in pur-
chasing fertilizer and other commodi-
ties have taken up their paper in full
at maturity.
"The situation in the cotton belt is
for the mos\ part cheering. With crop
diversification continued next year, I
Alabama should be in tine shape when !
the 19lti cotton crop is ready for mar-
ket."
FARMER SHOULD KEEP BOOKS
Few of Them Know Whether They Are
Producing Milk or Fruit or Vege
tables at a Loss or at a Profit.
nd children, and ice that 1
r r li ti A* v
Business men of today keep very
close tabs on the various costs en
terlng imo the production and market
ing of their products. When it :s
found that the costs exceed the com
IMPOSING ON COUNTRY YOUTH ! pensatlon received, the manufacturer
turns his attention to some other form
of production.
Why should not the farmer do like
wise? Why produce milk or fruit or
vegetables at a loss? Few farmers
would think of such a thing. Yet.
they are doing it every day. They
don't know that they are doing it.
They have no means of knowing
What few records they may keep are
entirely Inadequate.
Old-Fashioned, One-Teach School
With Studies Not Adapted to
Rural Life. Is Fraud
TCASCAREIS" ACT
OH LIVER BOWELS
No sick headache, biliousness,
bad taste or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
| and stomach clean, pure and fresh
, with Cascarets, or merely forcing a
I passageway every few days with
Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or
Purgative Waters?
| Stop having a bowel wash-dav. Let
| Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg
, tilate the stomach, remove the sour
j and fermenting food and foul gases,
take the excess bile from the liver
and carry out of the system ail the
constipated waste matter and poisons
in the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will make vou
feel great by morning. They work I
while you sleep—never gripe, sicken '
or cause any inconvenience, and cost
only io cents a box from your store.
Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
have Headache, Biliousness, Coated
Tongue, Indigestion, .Sour Stomach or
Constipation. Adv
Indulgent mothers are those who
permit their children to annoy others.
THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH.
\ou w'" look ten years younger if you
darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs by
using ",.a Creole1' Hair Dressing.—Adv
W lien a man Is In his cups he should
beware of family jars.
j Rp(l ( ios Ball lllu#*. nmde in Aruer.i'i,
therefore (lie best, delight* the houaewui.
All ifood grocer*. Adv.
Over 83,000 Australians have been
trained for active service since the
war began.
For Thrush
and Foot
Diseases
k Antiseptic,
Cieanii.ig
Henling
Save Your Stock
HAN FORD S
Balsam of Myrrh
L alinim8 nt'?
For Gaits, Wire
Cuts, Ijuneneea,
Strains, Bunches,
Thniih, Old Sorea,
Nail Wounds, Foot Rot,
Fistula, Bleeding, Etc., Etc.
Made Since 1846. **![ A"*1**
Auout It
Price 26c, E2c and $2.00
All Dealers "fiSS*
eX&KfcR'S
hair balsam
I t-iU-t preparation of merit.
Hf'p* eradicate dandruff.
For Rcalorics Color and
Beauty toGrny ov Faded Hair
PATENTS
arson F.< ol«'innn, W.\«r
Witpnn j>.. huolC'frt*. Htifh
referenda. Heat <wuita.
w. N. U.. WICHITA, NO. 3.-1918.
A little, ill-equipped one-teacher
country si hool in much better thnn no I
school at all; hut it remains today in i
many a rural community w here it has I
no more business than an oxcart !
would have as a pleasure vehicle '
A string of little, old-fashioned one
teacher counlry schools with a course
of studies not st all related to coun
try life, in a rural district where many
farmers own automobiles is a scan-
dalous fraud on country youth
The consolidated country school
graded. r.ell-housed. well equipped'
with adequately paid teachers and a
course of study knit up with country
life, is the farmer's best asset —Sat
urdav Evening i'ost.
Co-Operation Is Necessary.
Community co-operation is neees
sary to build up the community Pri-
vate co-operation in that community
must co-operate with the communitj-
This is fundamental.
Building Locations.
Buildings should be located on the
side of the farm nearest the school,
church and town
" O-ISIO.
Most Eminent Medical Authorities Endorse It
4 /Vew Remedy for Kidney, Bladder and a„ Uric Acid Troublet
Well as Dr. Staon^al^'disUng'illHh" ! has'd^ov^ed08" °' expprlmftntation
Authors—agree that whatever n v I i 8Coveied a new remedy which
slMgsslllHliMI
caused rheumatUm ? n ? ®7,pll?n ,or "eok "omen and Dr.
or you suspect kidney' or bUdder — ° Mcdical D,BCOVe^
trouble Just write Dr. Pierce at the
Surgical Institute, Buffalo. N Y send
a samp^ °, urine and describe symp
toms. Vou will receive free medical
advice after I)r Pierce's chemist baa
fun?'!! ,h® u'lne—this will be core-
hilly^done without chavge, and vou
J1 09 ucder no oblicatlon. Dr. Plerc*
for the Mood have been favorably
known for the past forty years and
more. They are standard remedies
to-day as well as Doctor Pierce's
Pleasant ^ Pellets for the liver and
bowels, ^ou can have a sample of any
one of these remedies by writing Dr
Pierce and sending 10c for trial pack-
age.
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Hofer, H. C. The Dover News (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 13, 1916, newspaper, January 13, 1916; Dover, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc136450/m1/2/?q=communication+theory: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.