The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 27, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 25, 1917 Page: 8 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE NORMAN TRANSCRIPT
E
)
"Pape's Diapepsin" cures sick,
sour stomachs in five minutes
—Time K!
"Really docs" put bad stomachs In
order—"really does" overcome Indiges-
tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and
sourness In five minutes—that—Just
that—makes Pape's Diapepsin the lar-
gest selling stomach regulator In the
world. If what you eat ferments Into
stubborn lumps, you belch gas and
eructate sour, undigested food and
acid; head Is dizzy and aches; breath
foul; tongue coated; your Insldes filled
with bile and Indigestible waste, re-
member the moment "Pape'n Diapep-
sin" comes In contact with the stomach
all such distress vanishes. It's truly
astonishing—almost marvelous, and
the joy Is Its harmlessness.
A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dla-
poppln will give you a hundred dollars'
worth of satisfaction.
It's worth Its weight In gold to men
end women who can't get their stom-
achs regulated. It belongs In your
home—should always be kept handy
In case of sick, sour, upset stomach
during the day or at night. It's the
qulckpst, surest and most harmless
Stomach doctor In the world.—Adv.
British women are taking up the cul-
ture of herbs.
DEATH LURKS IN A WEAK HEART,
so on first symptoms use "Ronovlne"
and be cured. Delay and pay the awful
penalty. "Renovlne" is the heart s
remedy. Price $1.00 and 50o.—Adv.
A man domiciled In a village board-
ing house hus no use for the locul
newspaper.
WOMAN'S CROWNING GLORY
Is her balr. If yours Is Btreaked with
ugly, grizzly, gray hairs, use "La Cre-
ole" Hair Dressing and change It In
the natural way. Price $1.00.—Ady.
A building trades council Ims been
organized at Clarksburg, W. V'a.
GAVE HIS CANE AWAY!
Mr. S. P. Benton, Kerrvllle, Texas,
writes: "For several years prior to
1000 I suffered from kidney and rheu-
matic troubles. Was bent over and
forced to use a
cane. For these
disorders I am
glad to say I used
Dodd'« Kidney
Pills, which proved
to be the proper
remedy. I am 64
years old, feel
One and once
— again stand as
straight as an arrow. Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills deserve great credit." Be
sure and get "DODD'S," the name
with the three D's for diseased, disor-
dered, deranged kidneys; just as Mr.
Benton did. No similarly named article
will do.—Adv.
[""STAfEHOUSE BREVITIES J
Earning of School Land Apportioned.
A sum of $223,027.73 Is available
from the earnings of the school laad
of the state for the support of state
Institutions for this year.
The money will be distributed
among state schools as follows;
University, $88,394.90.
University Preparatory, $56,1
Agricultural and Mechanical col-
lege, $115,747.20.
Negro Agricultural and Normal uni-
versity, $22,801.93.
Normal schools, $127,645.91. This
divided among the six state normal
schools will give each of them $21,'
242.48.
These are the figures from which
the boards controlling the different
educational institutions of the state
calculate the amount of appropriation
needed from direct tax to support the
schools. All boards and heads of in-
stitutions are preparing these requests
now.
The secretary of the school land de-
partment estimates that the earnings
will be the same for the next two
years.
It ought to be consoling to the widow
to know that history often repeats
lself.
WHAT IS
LAX-FOS
LAX-FOS is an improved Cascara
(a tonic-laxative) Pleasant to tahe
la LAX-FOS the Cascara is improved by
the addition of certain harmless chem-
icals which increase the efficiency of the
Cascara, making it better than ordinary
Cascara. LAX-FOS is pleasant to take
and does not gripe nor disturb stomach.
Adapted to children as well as adults.
Just try one bottle for constipation. 50c.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver Is
light the stomach and bowels are right
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gently but firmly com;
pel a lazy liver to
do its duty.
Cures Con-
stipation, In-
digestion.
Sick
Hcndmche,
and Distress After Eating.
SMAJL PII-L, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
ECZEMP
•'Hunt's Cure" iMmnintflod to
•top and iHtrmaneutijr euro that
ternbln itching. It It coin-
Carter's
TTLE
PILLS
Government Hat To Sue Its Ward.
Minnie A. Pease, woman of the
Osage Indian tribe, believes in letting
the tribal council have the last say on
the question of her allotment near
Turley, Okla. Thus the federal gov-
ernment Is placed in the singular posi-
tion of having to enjoin Its ward.
Application to Judge John H. Cot-
teral, of the United States district
court, for a writ to enjoin Minnie from
interfering with the operations of the
Winona Oil Company has been filed,
W. Booth Merrill, assistant district
attorney, said yesterday. The United
States government Is made complain-
ant for the writ.
Minnie, it la said, has guarded her
front gate for the past month to keep
workmen employed by the oil com-
pany from operating the two oil and
three gas wells already on the allot-
ment, or from drilling any new wells.
She claims that only the Osage tribal
chiefs have the right to determine
where the new drilling shall be done.
Government officials have been unabla
to change her opinion.
Rate Case Has Coat $150,000.
A balance of $88,755.02 remained
unexpended at the end of the last
fiscal year from the appropriation of
$100,000 made by the extra session of
the legislature a year ago for the
conduct of the 2-cent rate cases in
federal court, according to figures
given in a report compiled by Attor-
ney General S. P. Freeling for submis-
sion to the legislature.
The report covers expenditures
from the fund up to the end of the last
six months, or for the first six months
of the life of the appropriation. Since
then approximately $10,000 has been
spent. It is estimated by General
Freeling that approximately $70,000
of the appropriation of $100,000 will
be turned back to the state treasury.
During the six years of passenger
rate litigation, it is estimated by At-
torney General Freeling that the state
has spent $150,000 in its efforts to sus-
tain the constitutional 2 cents-a-mlle
refunded without question
if liunt'8 Cure falls to cure
IUb, leiwi.Tetter. Blag Worm
For sale by all draff stores
or by mall from the
A. B.Richards Medicine Co.,
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet preparation of merit.
H*jps to eradicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair.
ftOr. and >1.00 at I ruw>.'iwt«.
pensions:,sk
w H
service and their wi/Iows also hTu with SfilB
their widows and children under 16 Inquire or
Nathan Blckford, 848 La Av«' , Washington. I). C.
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 4—1917.
Laws to Stop Fire Loss.
In his annual report State Fire
Marshal Hammonds suggests the
enactment of seven laws that he says
will tend to lessen fire insurance
rates and aid in protection of life and
property.
He suggests uniform fire escape
law; uniform inspection law ; law giv-
ing chiefs of fire departments police
power to enforce orders; law requir-
ing motion picture shows and places
of public gathering to have sufficient
exit and aisle space; and for licens-
ing of motion picture operators; state
building code; law governing hand
'ing of volatile oil, gasoline and other
explosives; law compelling inspection
by insurance agents of property in
sured by them.
"Cruel Economy."
Governor Williams' "cruel economy''
policy was carried out to the limit in
his own department since the last ses-
sion of the legislature, acording to a
eport made by him to the senate. Al- !
:ogethir he saved $6,295.
There are no deficiencies in any j
branch of the executive department. |
Figures, covering financial'operation
of the governor's office for the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1916, extracted
from the governor's report in a mes-
sage to the senate follows;
Expended.
Salary or governor
Salary of private secretary ....
Salary of chief clerk
Salary of stenographer
Salary pardon and paro'e officer
Contingent fund
For special services
For special Investigation loans.
For care of Incorrigible girls..
Unexpended.
Stenographic fund
Contingent fund
Checking system
Investigating s< 1 ool lands
For expert assistants for board
of equalisation l.SfiO.tl
Care of wayward girls 40s.40
Total 16 295.40
More Insurance Companies Withdraw.
Two more insurance companies—
the Southwest and the Southern Sure-
ty companies have cancelled all poli-
cies In Oklahoma, acording to in-
formation reecived by C. K. Boat 1-
man, secretary of the State Rankers'
association. The companies will dis-
continue entirely writing that class
of insurance, even at an advance in
rates. The^e are two of several com-
panies which have cancelled their
insurance in Oklahoma, following the
large number of bank robberies tint
have occurred.
>4,500.00
. 2,000.00
. 1,200.00
. 1,200.00
1.800.00
. 6,000.00
.12,000.00
. 2,500.00
. 4,400.00
16.1!
. 2,032.44
841.(4
. 1,146.37
"CASGAREIS" ACT
ON LIVER; BOWELS
No sick headache, biliousness,
bad taste or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10 cent box.
Are you keeping your burets, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and fresh
with Cascarets, or merely forcing a
passageway every few days with
Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or
Purgative Waters?
Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let
Casrareis thoroughly cleanse and reg-
ulate the stomach, remove the sour
and fermontlng food and foul gases,
take the excess bile from the liver
and carry out of the system all the
constipated waste matter and poisons
In the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will make ycu
feci great by morning. They work
while you sleep—never gripe, sicken
or cause any Inconvenience, and cost
only 10 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.
No Place to Stay.
"You know the old saying thut truth
Is found at the bottom of a well."
"Yes," replied the cynic, "and X also
know that wells are going out of fash-
Ion nowadays."
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the orig-
inal little liver pills put up 40 years ago.
They regulate liver and bowels.—Adv.
Making Lessons Mean Something.
Agriculture and domestic science In
the schools will mean most to boys
and girls when the lessons taught are
used In the work on the farm and
home.
What the Doctor Knows
KIDNEYS MUST BB RIGHT TO
INSURE HEALTH.
Few people realize to what extent their
health depends upon the condition of the
kidneys.
The physician in nearly all cases of
serious illness, makes a chcmical analy-
sis of the patient's urine. He knows that
unless the kidneys are doing their work
properly, the other organs cannot readily
be Drought back to health and strength.
When the kidneys are neglected or
abused in any way, serious results are
sure to follow. According to health sta-
tistics. Bright's Disease, which is really
an advanced form of kidney trouble,
caused nearly ten thousand deaths in one
year, in the State of New York alone.
Therefore, it is particularly necessary to
pay more attention to the health of the*#
important organs.
An ideal herbal compound that has had
remarkable success as a kidney remedy
is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great
kidney, liver and bladder remedy.
The mild and healing influence of this
preparation, in most cases, is soon real-
ized, according to sworn statements and
verified testimony, of those who have used
the remedy.
When your kidneys reauire attention,
get Swamp-Root at once from any phar-
macy. It is sold by every druggist in
bottles of two sizes—50c and $1.00.
However, if you wish first to test this
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper. Adv.
All Rich.
"I understand Mr. (ianerby has a
gr« at many wealthy patients."
"Yes, Indeed. Why he thinks noth-
ing of ordering ten or fifteen to Palin
Beach lu the course of a single day."
A NEGLECTED COLD
1b often followed by pneumonia. Bo-
fore It is too late take Laxative Quini-
dlne Tablets. Gives prompt relief \n
cases of Coughs, Colds, La Grippe and
Headache. Price 25c.—Adv.
Authors and the Like.
"I suppose the time Is coming when
men will fly to and from their work
In airplanes."
"Perhaps so," said the timorous per-
son, "but if I live to see that day I'll
envy the man who works at home.**
FOR PIMPLY FACES
Cutleura Is Best—Samples Free by
Mail to Anyone Anywhere.
An easy, speedy way to remove pim-
ples and blackheads. Smear the affect-
ed surfaces with Cutleura Ointment.
Wash off in five minutes with Cutleura
Soap and hot water, bathing some min-
utes. Repeat night and morning. No
better toilet preparation!1 exist.
Free sample each by mall with Book.
Address postcard, Cutleura, Dept. L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Queer Preference.
"It Is very odd that baldheaded
men always want to sit in the front
at the theater."
"Yes, one would think they'd want
to get further away from the flies."
Alwayn proud to show white clothe*.
Red Cross Ball Blue does make them
white. All grocers. Adv.
Idle Curiosity.
"A hotel lobby may be half full of
millionaires and no one gives them a
second look."
"That's true. This Is n prosperous
CJuntry."
"But let a man enter with a queer
piece of baggage In his hands and hun-
dreds of necks ure stretched to the
Umlt."
GETS RUDE SHOCK
DEMOCRATIC ADMINISTRATION
IS ENLIGHTENED A BIT.
British Concern Offers Lower Bids on
Navy Shells Than Americans and
Our Trade After the War
Seems Menaced.
When the uavy department opened
bids for 10 and 14-inch shells for
American meii-o'war, the Democratic
administration got a rude shock to Its
tariff views, says the Washington
Herald. It found that of live compet-
ing firms, an English concern, Had-
llelds, Ltd., had underbid Its four
American competitors by a margin of
$213 under the lowest.
The Washington Steel and Ordnance
company proposed to furnish the
shells for $750 ench, the lowest Ameri-
can bidder. The Hadtields' bid was
$5)3.
Immediately the explanation was
vouchsafed that the probable reason
was that the British North Sea fleet
and the Channel fleet were so Inac-
tive that their stocks of big shells
were overflowing and the English firm
was thus enabled to bid in the Ameri-
can market.
Sounds good.
Most Democratic argument for a
low tariff does sound good before
analysis. Of course, the party of
Jackson and Jefferson has abandoned
the free trade Idea now, but the old
theory Is maintained in a "local" way.
as the unfortunate Hancock once de-
scribed the tariff issue.
But the fact remains that In this
terrible time of distress In Great Brit-
ain, with most of its able-bodied young
men from the industrial classes at
the front or employed In war pursuits;
with women working In the munitions
factories, England is able to compete
in American markets with such a tre-
mendous margin of difference in sale
price that there can be no question of
the necessity of protection against
products of such cheaper labor.
Gun shells nre not usually consid-
ered In tariff discussions, but gun
shells are made of steel mostly. If
Great Britain at this time—the time
when her very national existence Is
at stake—can use America as a dump-
ing ground to the disadvantage of
American Industry, what will It be
able to do when the wnr ends with all
Its great forces of labor back at work
and working as never before?
Most everyone agrees that the Unit-
ed States must take some steps to pre-
pare Itself for the Titanic struggle
with Europe for business when the
war ends.
Can we do so without a tariff suf-
ficiently high to protect the American
manufacturer, the American working-
man and the American people gener-
ally?
If the gun shell experience of the
Democratic administration Is a cri-
terion we cannot.
THE BASIS OF
Taft on War Prosperity,
Mr. Taft reminds the country In his
common-sense way that this war pros-
perity of ours is a menace. He does not
say it is an evil per se; the essence
of his warning is against the reckless
and foolish use mnde of our run of
national luck. He points out that the
present private and public extrava-
gance In another year must form
habits that will cause real suffering
among wage-earners and embitter the
controversies sure to arise when wage
reductions become necessary.
The ex-presldent might have added
with equal consideration for the facts
that our prosperity Is a menace not
because It Is due to the war, but be-
cause the American people lack the
self-control necessary to pass through
a period of good times without losing
their heads. The cause of the pros-
perity has nothing to do with shaping
the denouement; the use made of It
lias everything. If we come to eco-
nomic grief after the war It will not
he, ns some moralists will say, be-
cause we have enjoyed Ill-gotten
gains, but because we have squan-
dered them and acquired expensive
tastes we will no longer be able to sat-
isfy. It will be because we have de-
clined to lenrn the lesson of prepared-
ness.—Detroit Free Press.
Quite the Fashion.
Secretary Baker says that the de-
ficit In the war department Is only
$25,000,000. That's nothing. Deficits
are the fashion at Washington under
Democratic extravagance.
Ah, There, Democrats.
One of our highbrow lecturers points
out that the world nttalned Its great-
est height of happiness In the thir-
teenth century. That was before the
Democratic party was born.
Some Sick Already.
There may not eventually be as
much comfort as usual, this time, In
(he knowledge that there won't be
another presidential election for four
years.
Halt the Pork Grabbers.
The only right menns of checking
the wicked extravagance of the pork
barrel is to keep the situation before
the public and force congress to be
honest. In this year of dwindling
funds and mounting taxes, the waste
of government money Is nothing short
of crime. Advertise the crime; show
It up; watch every congressman. If
the graft Incident to sectional repre-
sensatlon cannot he routed by that
means, then the present form of rep-
resentative government Is nt fault and
•mist be charged.
A Theme Discussed by the Wall
Street Journal.
In speaking of Canada a short time
ago the Wall Street Journal made tire
statement thut "The basis of Canada's
riches is the fertility of the soli, and
no freak of warfare cun Injure thut
while her grain will increase In de-
mand as the population of the world
grows. As an Investment field Canadu
Is worthy of consideration." These
words are well worthy of atteutlou, es-
pecially coming from such a source as
this eminent Unanclnl journal. With
a land area exceeding that of the
United States and with tillable ureas
coming under cultivation, the wealth
of Canada's future can scarcely be esti-
mated, while the wealth today Is such
as to bring her most prominently be-
fore the world.
During the past year thousands of
farmers In Western Canada sold their
crops for more than the total cost of
their land. Lands at from $15 to $30
an acre produced crops worth $40 to
$75 an acre. Stock raising and dairy-
ing were equally profitable.
The year 1915 saw most wonderful
crops and magnificent yields over the
entire country, and many farmers
wiped out indebtedness that hud
hung over them long before they came
to the country, and the year 1916 put
them In a condition of absolute inde-
pendence. A report to hand verified
by a high official might seem marvel-
ous, were the particulars not well
known, and where are not other cases
that would seem almost as phenom-
enal. This Is a southern Alberta story :
A farmer wished to rent an adjoining
farm on which a loan company held a
mortgage. The applicant said he want-
ed the first ten bushels of wheat, after
which he would divide, giving the loan
company one-third. After threshing
he paid Into the bank at Calgary $10
per acre for every acre cultivated, to
the credit of the loun company, as
their share or their third of the crop.
Sixteen dollars per acre rent. His
two-thirds was $32 and in addition the
first ten bushels of wheat. Land on
this same security can be purchased
for from $16 to $30 per acre. Won-
derful yields are reported from all
pnrts of this district. Recently 4,040
acres of a ranch were sold to an Illi-
nois farmer; 300 acres of wheat In
1918 produced a yield thut averaged
42% bushels of wheat per acre. George
lUchard, formerly of Providence, II. I.,
on a southern Alberta farm got 2,052
bushels of wheat from a 50-acre field,
or over 40 bushels per acre, and from
a 50-acre field of oats got a return of
76 bushels per acre and still had some
sheaves left over for feeding.
A report just Issued by the Alberta
government gives the yield of wheat In
the showing of 1916 ns 28 bushels per
acre; 45 bushels of oats and 30 bushels
of barley.
Travelers through Alberta's wheat
belt have had revealed to them scenes
of agricultural productiveness unap-
proached In any other part of the
world.
Alberta farms, selected with even
moderate discretion, have raised men
to Independence and aflluence with rec-
ords of wonderful development unsur-
passed nmongst the phenomenal indus-
trial success of which Cunada well may
boast.
Many ulmost Incredible yields have
been reported by reliable authorities,
wheat exceeding 70 bushels per acre
and oats 145 bushels.
Numerous records show that the cost
of farms has been more than repaid by
this year's crop. In one Instance, land
purchased for $3,200 produced wheat
which was sold for a little over $10,OIK).
During the year 1917 there will be
an immense amount of labor required
to take care of the crop In Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and Alberta.
One of the problems which Western
Canada hus to face every year is the
securing of an adequate supply of
labor to handle the harvesting and
threshing of its big crops. This prob-
lem, indeed, is always present in auy
country that has a big agricultural pro-
duction ; in the ease of Western Can-
ada it is enhanced by the comparative
sparslty of population and the long dis-
tance from industrial districts, which
can be expected to offer a surplus of
labor.
In Western Canada the present diffi-
culties are Increased by the war. A very
large number of Western Canada's
small population have enlisted for serv-
ice with the Canadian forces In Europe,
and at the present time there Is gen-
erally speaking no surplus of labor for
the ordinary channels of Industry, to
say nothing of the abnormal demands
of harvest time. The situation, how-
ever, tins to some extent been met by
the action of the Canadian mllltiu de-
partment, who have released all such
men who are still In training In the
western military camps and who desire
to engage In harvest work for a period
of generally one month.
The actual number of men engaged
in 1910 In harvest work was between
forty and fifty thousand. Wages were
higher than usual, running from $2.50
to $4.00 a day with board, and from
$35 to $00 a month.—Advertisement.
Sonne"5
THE HIGHEST QUALITY
SPAGHETTI
36 P gt Rrdpt Book frrc
SKIKNER MFG. C0~ OMAHA. USA
IAIUST MACARONI FACTORY IN AMERICA
COTTON
f We handle cotton on consignment only I
ami have the ti nest concrete warehouses
with almost unlimited capacity, where
your cotton will be absolutely free from
aH weather damage. Highest cIa^ilIl-
eal ions and lowest interest rates on
money advanced. Write us for full
particulars.
GOHLMAN, LESTER & CO.
The oldest and largest exclusive
cotton factor! In Texas.
HOUSTON. TEXAS
An Unsettled Question.
Little Lemuel—Say, paw, does "Hon."
in front of a man's nnme mean that
he Is honest?
Paw—Sometimes It does, sop. and
then again sometimes it fiowja't.
Second Choice.
"I'm writing a story for one of the
I leading magazines," remarked Scrlb-
I son, with a lofty air.
"Indeed," replied his caustic friend.
"And which one of tile Inferior maga-
zines do you think w'U publish it?''
ALL RUN DOWN
AND NERVOUS
Says This Lady Who Had to Sup-
port Family of Four. Read
Below Her Statement
About Cardui.
Tallapoosa, Ga.—Mrs. Sallle Eldson,
of this place, writes: "I was In very
poor health, all run-down, nervous,
had fainting spells, dizziness and heart
fluttering. I had these symptoms us-
ually at my . . . times. I had a
very hard time, working for seven
years In a hotel after my father died.
I had to support our family of four. I
read the Birthday Almanac and
thought I would begin taking Cardui.
I received good benefit from It. I am
sure It will do all that It claims to do.
I took three or four bottles before It
began to show effects. After that I
Improved rapidly and gained In health
and strength. I took nine bottles In
all. This Is the only time I have
taken It. I was down to 108 pounds
and I gained to 122. I felt like a new
woman. I couldn't sleep before and
had to be rubbed, I would get so nerv-
ous and numb. And all this wa*
stopped by Cardui."
The true value of a medicine can be
determined only by the results ob-
tained from Its actual use. The thou-
sands of letters we have received
every year for many years from
grateful users of Cardui, are powerful
tributes to its worth and effectiveness.
If you suffer from womanly aliments,
try Cardui, the woman's tonic.—Adv.
A bad boy seldom Inherits his bad-
ness from his father. The old man us-
ually hangs on to all he has.
FRUIT ME
FOR SICK CHILD
"California Syrup of Figs" can't
harm tender stomach,
liver and bowels.
Every mother realizes, after gtvlng
her children "California Syrup oti
Figs" that this Is their Ideal laxative,
because they love Its pleasant taste
and It thoroughly cleanses the tendel|
little stomach, liver and bowels witba
out griping.
When cross, Irritable, feverish, or
breath Is bad, stomach sour, look at
the tongue, mother! If coated, give a
teaspoonful of this harmless "fruit
laxative," and in a few hours all the
foul, constipated waste, sour bile and
undigested food passes out of the bow-
els, and you have a well, playful child
again. When Its little system Is full
of cold, throat sore, has stomach-ache,
diarrhoea, Indigestion, colic—remem-
ber, a good "Inside cleaning" should
always be the first treatment given.
Millions of mothers keep "California
Syrup of Figs" handy; they know a
teaspoonful today saves a sick child
tomorrow. Ask at the store for a B0-
cent bottle of "California Syrup of
Figs," which has dlioctlons for babies,
children of all ages and grown-upi
printed on the bottle. Adv.
Arduous Work.
The heart soqb becomes tired of
much gayety. I'leasure-seeklng Is a
very laborious occupation.
Cure that cold
—Do it today.
CASCARA ©QUININE
The old family remedy-In tablet
form—safe, sure, easy to take. No
opiates—no unpleasant after effects.
Cures colds In 24 hours-Grip in 3
days Money back if it fails. Get
the genuine box with Red Top
and Mr. Hill's picture on It—25 ceuta.
At Kay L>ru« Stof
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Burke, J. J. The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 27, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 25, 1917, newspaper, January 25, 1917; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc139367/m1/8/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.