The Davis News (Davis, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 14, 1908 Page: 7 of 8
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A TUB TEST
By FOREST BLAKE
(Copyright, IDC'S, by Dally Story Pub. Co.)
I don't believe a girl ever done such
a thing before.
ft wasn't a bit like novels—though
I never had much of a chance to read
them, for I've had to work out ever
since I was 15. But in novels, you
know, the girl is always beautiful, and
always dressed in shimmering satin
and lace; and the man generally
meets her behind a bank of palms at
a ball, and they wind the thing up in
a garden of roses just as the sun goes
down. And, as he clasps her slender,
drooping form in his arms, and she
lays her golden head on his manly
bosom, I always wonder how much
of that clasping business there'll be
when he sees her with her golden
hair done up in curl papers and a last
week's calico dress on?
And, you know, that makes lots of
difference. Now, I'm not a bit pretty,
but when I'm dressed up you'd be sur-
prised. My hair's dark, and it's na-
turally straight and oily and wants to
lay right flat to my head. But when
I've washed it good and curled it just
the least bit and snarled it into a pom-
padour back and front there's not one
person in a dozen but would say the
whole thing is nature. Then my com-
plexion is kind of dark, but I've found
out how to use Princess cream and
rice powder so it won't show. And I
know just what kind of styles and col-
ors to wear. So, when I'm dressed up
in my brown, tight-fitting, tailor suit,
with furs and hat all to match—the
whole thing simple and elegant and
not a bit like a hired girl—and I'm
with a crowd of girls and we meet a
man—well, ho never looks at the
others.
But, when I get home and change
my tailored broadcloth for an old blue
calico with a patch on the front, when
the powder wears off and my hair be-
gins to wilt and get stringy, then I
guess a man wouldn't turn his head—
unless It was to keep from looking at
me.
Then why don't I just keep fixed up
all the time? Because I don't have
time. When a girl gets up at four,
gets breakfast, milks five cows, puts
out a big washing, gets dinner, churns,
does the ironing, gets supper and then
mows the yard while she's resting,
there's not much time for poinping
your hair. And when I saw 1 couldn't
work and keep pretty, both, I chose
to work. And I never worried anything
about it—not till I met Isaac.
He's a school teacher, and an awful
fine scholar, too. He graduated from
common branches, and he's spent two
whole terms in the county normal.
He's been teaching district school for
seven years now—every year in a dif-
ferent place.
He talks a whole lot about his "pro-
fession."' and about "the child." and
the "child's mental growth," and "in-
tellectual processes," and a lot of other
things I can't understand. He's told
me, too,, that it takes a great deal of
courage for a man to recognize his af-
finity—whatever that means—among
the lower classes, when his calling in
life is to be a brain worker and a great
leader among men.
And, besides being a school teacher,
he's the most finicky fellow I ever
went with. They say it takes him fif-
teen minutes to comb his hair, and he
can't put on his hat without a looking-
glass. When I get into a big stew of
work 1 forget all about how I look,
but Isaac never gets so deep in as
that. Last summer, when help was so
scarce here ia the country, and the
men jus: working their heads ofT to
get harvesting done, and Isaac was
sitting around at home studying intel-
lectual processes, John Winters here,
that's the woman's man I work for.
he asked Isaac to help him. And
Isaac helped one forenoon. And they
said he wore gloves all the time and
when he come into the field he was
carrying an umbrella over him.
I went with him all the next winter,
and by spring he was coming here
twice a week regular. I used to spend
nearly two hours beforeb'ind getting
ready for him, and he would just take
spells over my—my—looks; but all
the time I felt kind of uneasy.
At last one night when he was try-
ing to make me promise him, sure, I
just up and says:
"Isaac," says I, "you don't know me.
You think I'm pretty, and I'm not."
"Why aren't you pretty, Matilda?"
says he. (He always says "aren't"
and "isn't.") "Haven't you the most
beautiful hair that was ever
woman's head? Isn't your skin tike
the petals of a lily? Aren't your teeth
like pearls?"
"No, sir," says I, "they ain't! It
takes me half an hour to do up
hair so it looks like it's naturally fluf-
fy. These pearls you're talking about
most of 'em cost three dollars apiece,
and my lily skin comes out of a cold
cream jar and a powder box. My eyes
is the real thing, but if there was any
way of changing 'em I'd be a doing
It."
He seemed sort of dazed for a min-
ute, but at last he says:
"Well, Matilda, even if your bodily
charms are not all—er—real, those, of
your character are. And love, Matil-
da, is not dependent on the physical.
Love is a spiritual thing. It is a com-
munion of souls."
That all sounded nice, but still I
didn't feel just right about it. But I
told him I'd give him an answer the
next afternoon when he was In come
and take me out buggy-riding.
1 didn't sleep much that night. It
seemed to me I had come to the place
where the path divided, and I couldn't
tell which way I was going to travel.
At last I made up my mind what I was
going to do to decide the matter. It
was pretty tough on me, but I felt It
was my duty.
The next day I went to work clean-
ing house. After I had cleaned and
scrubbed two rooms the forenoon was
about gone, and I saw the floors
wouldn't be dry enough for the carpets
before night, so I put on t*Jo boiler
and went to washing. Isaac was to be
there at Uiree. By half-past two 1 be-
gun to get panicky. Then, for the
first time that day, 1 took time to go
and look in the glass.
I was a sight. My hair wasn't like
the heroine's in a story. You know,
when their hair gets damp it always
curls up into little, clinging tendrils.
Well, mine don't. And, wh^n I paw
myself standing there in my .vretched
old wrapper, with my stringy bu. . and
face covered with what Isaac calls
presperation, 1 felt like fleeing as a
bird to the mountain. But I didn't. 1
just went back to my washing.
Prompt at three o'clock Isaac drove
up to the fence. I could see him from
the window, with his gloves on and
gold-rimmed glasses, and collar stand-
ing way up around his ears. When
the children came a-racing through
the house to tell me he had come I
just said, calmly, "Bring him out
here."
Pretty soon in came Isaac. I couldn't
see him very plain for a minute
through the steam, and for a minute
he didn't speak. At last he says, in
the funniest voice:
"What does this mean?"
"ft just means I'm kind of busy this
afternoon," says I, as I picked up a
pile of dirty clothes off of a chair and
offered him a seat. ''How do you like
my lily complexion to-day, Isaac?"
"I'm sure—I don't understand," he
says. "I feel kind of stunned."
"You'd better feel stunned before
you're married than afterwards," says
I. "I don't think any man ought to
marry a girl till he's seen her in her
everyday clothes. And so I want you
to understand that this is the way I
look about half of the time. If I was
to take you I'm afraid that, judging
from your present prospects, I wouldn't
NEW ARRIVALS IN CANADA
NEARLY 300,000 IN 1907.
ABOUT SIXTY THOUSAND FROM
THE UNITED STATES.
Now that it is known that in the
year just closed nearly sixty thou-
sand from the United States declared
their intention of making their hone3
in Canada, it might not be out of
place to search for some reasons that
would bring this about. These people
are but following the example of the
fifty-five or sixty thousand who did
the same thing the year previous, and
an almost equal number who the year
before that but followed the example
of the thousands of the year preced-
ing. An excellent climate, certain and
positive crops of grain of all kinds,
good markets for their produce, land
—and good land, too— at low prices,
MACHINE-GROUND FAINT.
Occasionally one hears the "haiid-
mixed" paint of the painter slightingly
spoken of as "unscientific" and "not
thoroughly mixed." The facts are all
on the side of the painter and his hand-
prepared paint.
It is the most "scientific" paint there
is. because it is made on the spot to
suit the particular purpose for which
It is to be used. It is as scientific as
a good doctor's prescription. If the
painter did not mix it thus it would
be as unscientific as a patent medi-
cine. Moreover, the paint which a
good painter turns out is made of
genuine white lead and pure linseed
oil. If he does not mix it himself he
is not sure what is in it, and conse-
quently his client cannot be sure.
As for not being thoroughly mixed
by machinery, that is simply a mis-
statement. White Lead as made by
National Lead Company is thorough-
SPRING KIDNEY TROUBLE.
easy terms of payment, (not forget- : 8 Cent
* ... . , , . f of pure Linseed oil in the factory, mak-
ing a paste. This paste need only be
THIRSTY THOMPKINS!
ft
"Thompkins must drink a te
lot."
"What makes you think so?"
"Why, every time he swallows
of food you hear a splash!"
Shew Model Rural Schoolhouse.
Under the supervision of Mis
Martha Van Rensselaer, who is i.
charge of the reading course for farm-
ers' wives of the State Agricultural
college. Cornell university has erected
on its campus a model rural school
house. The essential feature of this
schoolhouse is a workroom which oc
cupies one-third of the floor space. The
purpose in building this schoolhouse
is to show that such buildings may be
made artistically attractive, homelike
sanitary, comfortable and durable foi
the same amount of money and laboi
as the unattractive and unsatisfactory
buildings to which so many rural dis-
tricts have been accustomed. The
Cornell model is designed for 25 pu
pils in the main room, and the folding
doors and wiudows in the partition en
able one teacher to manage both
rooms.
ting the 160 acres of land given free
by the Government, particulars of
which the Canadian Government Agent
whose name appears elsewhere will
tell you about) and then the splendid
social conditions. The situation is
pretty well sized up by a writer in one
of the magazines. Quoting from this
article, we find this: "Those of us
who made good in the States," inter-
jected another settler as if to con-
tinue the story of his neighbor, "hare
had it easy from the start; a little
money is a mighty good thing on com-
ing into a new country. But those
who make an entry, or even buy lands
at low rates, are able to square things
In two or three seasons' crops. There
are hardships in building shanties,
and then with increasing prosperity
getting things into shape for better
homes. But affairs go much as in the
States. We have the largest liberty in
the world; there is more home rule in
the Provinces than in the several
states of the Republic. Taxes are
light and with only a few million peo-
ple west of Winnipeg we don't get in
each other's way. One's friends over
the line probably thought we would not
live through the winter; and while it
is cold, real cold, it is free from the
moisture experienced in the east.
Schools are good as encouraged by
the Government; the enterprising
American promoter and Yankee drum-
mer see to it that we take notice of
the latest improvements and best agri-
cultural machinery. Altogether we are
as near to affairs as we would be on
our own farms in the States. Winni-
peg bears the same relation to us as
Chicago did at home; and Edmonton
with the surrounding region advances
as Omaha did in the days when wo
thinned with additional linseed oil to
make it ready for (he brush.
i The thorough incorporation of pig-
ment and oil has already been accom-
plished before the painter gets it.
To know how to tell pure white lead
is a great advantage to both painter
and house-owner. National Lead Com-
: pany will send a tester free to anyone
interested. Address the company at
Woodbridge Building, New York, N. Y.
MADE HIS MEANING CLEAR.
Vividly Described by Or.e Who Has
Suffered from It.
Mrs. H. Mutzabaugh, of Duncannon,
Pa.,says: "I was sick and miserable all
last Spring and as I
did not know what
was the matter I
kept going down
and down until I
was a physical wreck.
I had smothering
spells, flashes of
heat over the kid-
neys and pain in pass-
ing the kidney secre-
tions. which contained sediment. My
husband urged me to try Doan's Kid-
ney Pills, and at last I did so. They
did me much good, and I used in all
eight boxes which restored me to per-
fect health."
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
ONE LESSON WHOLLY WASTED.
Sheer white goods, in fact, any fine
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beau-
ty. Home laundering would be equal-
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
An Undesirable Article.
When Mr. B. went to call upon some
friends the other afternoon, he was on
his way out of town and so had his
traveling bag with him. This he
placed in a corner, and when he rose
to leave he overlooked it. His hostess
happened to notice it before he had
Typical Farm Scenc, Showing Stock Raiting in
WESTERN CANADA
Some of the choicent lands for grain growing,
stock raiting and mixed farming in the new dis-
trict* of Saskatchewan and Alberta have re-
cently been Opened for Settlement under the
Revised Homestead Regulations
Entry may now be made by proxy (on certain
conditionn). by the father, mother. won, daugh-
ter, brother or simcr of an intending hoi
Professor's Son Translated Father's
Speech Into the Vernacular.
A college professor, In company
with his son, was enjoying a walk in
the country, when he met an old
farmer. It had been a very wet sea-
Bon, and the professor, thinking to
start the conversation in a way that
would prove interesting to the farmer,
remarked:
"There has been a rather abnormal
precipitation of late."
The farmer seemed somewhat em-
barrassed, and the professor's son,
who used a different vernacular,
though he was a student in the college
to which his father was attached, at-
tempted to straighten out the matter.
Drawing the farmer to one side, he
said in a superior way:
"The governor means that we've
been having a devil of a lot of rain."
—Harper's Weekly.
'"Nails."
"Nails are a mighty good thing—
particularly finger nails—but I don't
believe they were intended solely for
Little Surprise Planned by Billiger
McSwat Not a Success.
"Lobelia," asked Mr. McSwat, who i
was rummaging in one of the closets,
"have you done anything with that
old coat of mine that used to hang on !
the last hook in here?"
"Yes," answered Mrs. McSwat. "I
gave it to the Volunteers."
"You did, did you?" Well, you'll
be sorry to learn, perhaps, that there
was a five-dollar bill in it which I
was going to give you if I found that
coat undisturbed at the beginning of
March."
"O, I think not, Billiger. I searched
it thoroughly before I gave it away."
"You're a pretty smart weman,
Lobelia, but it didn't occur to you to
look inside the lining."
"O, yes. it did, and I found the five-
dollar bill. I spent it for the rubber
plant in the front parlor that you have
admired so much and wondered how
I managed to buy out of my allowance.
You're a pretty smart man, Billiger.
but there are times when you don't
look the part."
There being no further business be-
fore the house, Mr. McSwat adjourned
without form.
Bteader. Thousands of homentcads of 160 acres
, m „ , . | each are thua now caHily available in these
reached the door, and called to her j Rreiit grain-growing-, Btock-raisiug and mixed
little daughter: farming Bectlona.
There you will find healthful climate, good
neighbors, churches for family worship, schools
for your children, good laws, splendid crops,
and railroads convenient to market.
Entry fee In each ease is 110.00. For pamph-
let, "Last Best West," particulars as to rates,
best time to go and where to locate,
"Marie, run after Mr. B. and tell
him he has left his grip here!"
The little one gave her mother one
swift glance of surprise, but flew duti-
fully to obey orders.
"Oh, Mr. B„" they heard her say,
"mother says you have forgotten to
take your grip with you." Then she
added, quickly, in a tone of polite
apology: "You see, most all of us
have had it this winter, and we'd
rather not have any more!"
apply t
J. S. CRAWFORD,
No. 125 W. Ninth Street, Kansas City, Missouri.
Truth and
Quality
THE QUARREL.
were as young as the boys yonder. scratching—though I used mine large-
We get together much as they did in ^ ^or P,irPose for several years,
the granges over the border; the gov- I 1 was sorely affected and had it to do.
ernment has established experimental
schools of agriculture, and progress in
every line is stimulated. This is a
great region for grazing," we hear the
Calgary citizen continuing, "and then
with building elevators of wheat at
one dollar a bushel, many of us find
One application of Hunt's Cure, how-
ever, relieved my itch and less than a
box cured me entirely."
J. M. WARD, Index, Texas.
%
appeal to the Well-informed in every
walk of life and are essential to permanent
success and creditable standing. Accor- j
ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of I
known value, but one of many reasons
why it is the best of personal and family
laxatives is the fact that it cleanses,
sweetens and relieves the internal organs
cn which it acts without any debilitating
after effects and without having to increase
the quantity from time to time.
It acts pleasantly and naturally and
truly as a laxative, and its component
parts are known to and approved by
physicians, as it is free from all objection-
r.ble substances. To get its beneficial
effects always purchase the genuine—
I manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
i Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug-
! gists.
CARTERS
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dl
treusfrom Dyspepsia, Xa
digestion aud Too ft!sartp
Eating. A perfect rsa*
edy for Diialness, Nat >
sea, Drowsiness, Bad
Tafifte la the Mouth, Coat-
ed Tongns, Pain in the
Side, TORPID LIVER.
TTiey regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable
SHALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
BILLIARD TABLES
POOL TABLES
LOWEST PRICES. EASY PAYMENTS.
You cannot afford to experiment with
untried goods sold by commission
agents. Catalogues free.
The Brunswick - Balke - Collender Company
537-539 Delaware St.,Dtp.B.KANSAS CITY, MO.
DR. A. D. YOUNG
NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASES. (
OKLAHOMA CITY. t : OKLAHOMA.
Long Distance Phone, P. B. X. C8.
and Whiskey Tlnhltc
He—Farewell!
thou jade!!!
Farewell,
Too Free Speech.
The allegations made during a trial
time to go over to the live stock ex- «for "blasphemy" raises the whole ques-
hibition in Chicago or visit old friends tion of courtesy and kindliness in pub-
during the course of the winter. Ilc discussion. Ridicule and sarcasm
Every man is taken for what he is are permissible, and effective weapons
"How Do You Like My Lily Complex-
ion To-Day, Isaac?"
have much time to stand before the
glass, neither. And I'm afraid, too,"
says I, kind of cautious, "I'm afraid
you'd have to find me in the kitchen
over a wash-tub more than once a
week."
Then he got mad. "Even if you
should have to work at manual labor,"
says he, "you can maintain your per-
sonal appearance," says he.
"Oh, well," says I, as I started a
sheet through the wringer, "what's the
difference? Love does not depend on
the physical. Love's a splirtual thing,
Isaac. It's a communion of souls."
Well, sir, he just give me one long,
shuddering look, then he lit out of
that kitchen and out to his buggy and
went away. That was three weeks ago,
and 1 ain't seen him since.
If ever a man comes along that'll
teil me, over a wash-tub, that he loves
me, I'll know lie's got the real goods—
and I'm ready for him.
worth or for what he can raise
in this good air and on this fertile soil
we intend to show our old friends
that we are made of the right stuff—
that we are chips of the old block
who built up the American West."
Putting It Concretely.
Although Mr. Lawton was wont to
Indulge in a sort of language which
left his hearers in some doubt as to
his exact meaning, yet when he was
"put to it" he never failed to make
himself understood.
"No, I shouldn't want to live in a
house like Philander's," he announced
to Mrs. Lawton on the evening of his
return from a Visit to a nephew. "His
cellar, now—it's most desperately
overflowed whenever the weather is
anyways damp."
"Just what do you mean by des-
perately overflowed?" asked Mrs. Law-
ton.
"I mean." said her husband, mildly,
"that all they had to do was to open
the door that led from the kitchen
down cellar, and the apples come
floating right in on to the kitchen
floor. Is that plain to ye?"—Youth's
Companion.
in debate, but mere vulgarity and
abuse or irreverence in ,de_aling with
subjects that are sacred to others, are
not to be confounded with free speech
and cannot be tolerated.—Lloyd's
(Eng.) News.
Prompt Payment.
A village doctor, whose most
troublesome patient was an elderly
woman practically on the free list, re-
ceived a sound rating from her one
day for not coming when summoned
the night before.
"You can go to see your other pa-
tients at night," she said, "why can't
you come when I send for you? Ain't
my money as good as other people's?"
"1 don't know, madam." was the re-
ply. "I never saw any of it."
PATENTS;
Edgur M. Kitcbin, Our
vithout charge hour
for my free T><K,kUa.
tullilmc, UitblEgton. I). C.
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 16, 19
Valla t
PACKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
:id bcaatlflef tbe lialr.
. lnxuriAiit jrrowth.
— B« toro Or«7
w ... Youthful Color.
Ip dlie« c« it Iif.ir Ulliufc
—'tl.00.-K PniKi- ^
lief. 1H A
at Jrugfiat* or by mail,
nplo FllEK. Address,
ANAKE8I6"
buue Bid*.. Nkw York.
IRRIGATED LANDS
In a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE.
A powder. It cures painful, smart-
ing, nervous feet and ingrowing nails.
It's the greatest comfort discovery of
the age. Makes new shoes easy. A
certain cure for sweating feet. Sold
by all Druggists, 25c. Accept no sub-
stitute. Trial package. FREE. Ad-
dress A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy. N. Y.
Those Peekaboos.
She—Women's clothes are a mys-
tery to men, aren't they?
He—Oh, I don't know. I can often
see through them.—Cornell Widow.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of(
In Use For Over ,'JO Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
WHITE US FOR BOOKLET CONCERNING
IRRIGATED LANDS IN TUE OREAT TWIN
FALLS AND JEROME COUNTRY, IDAHO,
bove the sea level. Inexhaustible water supplv, taken from
th largest river in America. No ulkaii. no cyclones.
Altitude only 3700 feet
the great Snake River, these?
420,000 acres of the finest fruit and agricultural land in the W
Theinanwho wantsa home where everything grows that makes farming profitable—
* * ' " i, as we quote
H. A. STROUD & COMPANY.
Twin Falls, Idaho
Pettit's Eye Salve for 25c
relieves tired, overworked eyes, stops eye
lichen, congested, inflamed or tore eyes. All
druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y.
The Trouble.
A man may be religious without be-
longing to a church, but the trouble io
that he generally isn't.
Kill the Flies Now
before they multiply. A DAISY FLY
K1LLKR kills thousands. Lasts the sea-
son. Ask your dealer, or send 20c' to II.
•Somers, 149 De Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Cause of Mutton's Woolly Taste.
The woolly taste in mutton Is said
to be due to slow dressing the car-
cass
The woman who marries for money
usually gets what she went after, but
it's different with a man.
GIRL WAS DELIRIOUS
With Fearful Eczema—Pain, Heat,
and Tingling Were Excruciating—
Cuticura Acted Like Magic.
"An eruption broke out on my
daughter's chest. I took her to a
doctor, and he pronounced It to be
eczema of a very bad form. He treated
her, but the disease spread to her back,
and then the whole of her head was
affected, and all her hair had to be cut
off. The pain she suffered was excru-
ciating, and with that and the heat
and tingling her life was almost un-
bearable. Occasionally she was deliri-
ous and she did not have a properhour's
sleep for many nights. The second
doctor we tried afforded her just as
little relief as the first. Then I pur-
chased Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and
Pills, and before the Ointment was
three-quarters finished every trace of
the disease was gone. 'It really seemed
like magic. Mrs. T. W. Hyde, Brent-
wood, Essex, England. Mar. 8, 1907."
A Gentle Request.
"Charley, dear," suid young Mrs.
Torkins, "I wish you wouldn't pay so
much attention to the personal popu-
larity of horses this year."
"What do you mean?"
"You have a dreadful habit of pick-
ing out animals who are favorites be-
fore the race and absolutely friend-
less after."
j Garfield Tea cannot hut commend itself
| to those desiring a laxative at once sini-
j pie, pure, mild, potent and health-giving.
It is made of HerbH. All drug stores.
Suit the action to the word and the
word to the action.—Shakespeare.
RED CROSS BALL BLUE
Should be in every home. Ask your grocer
for it. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents.
Perish discretion whenever it inter-
feres with duty.—More.
Smokers appreciate the quality value of
Lewis' Single Binder cigar. * Your dealer
or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111.
No honestly exerted force can be
utterly lost.—Fronde.
Snowdrift
HoglessJLard
FOR ALL COOKING PURPOSES
Nature-grown In the fields of the Sunny South ; obviously purer and
healthier than the fat of the hog.
More economical than hog lard ; goes farther, much farther, every time.
As good as butter for cake and bread making and for all kinds of cooking
where butter or other cooking fat is needed, and much cheaper, it costs
less in the first place and less of it has to be used.
ti1'.3 fo?1? a?-d guaranteed; every pound made under strict
Lnited States Government inspection.
THE SOUTHERN COTTON OIL CO., New York, New Orleans, Savannah, Chicago
W.L.DOVGLAS,
than amy othmr manufaoturIn tho
world, jNeam* thay hold thmir
•hatto* fm hotter, mw longor, and
£• o/flr«Jfep valuo than any other
ahooa hi tho world to-day.
W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price
y*- **■ Donglaa name and price la stamped on bottom. 1
gwleU
I
Arr/uivcfo
Tnkf IV© Hnhatltut*.
wind colic. 25c a bottle.
The more a man doesn't know the
less he doubts.
"tss.':;:;TK«inp ii'>Ejtw«nr IPILESi8ASSSY
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more poodi brichter and faster colon than any other dye. One 10c packaoe colore all libera. The* d*e in rnirf u/ ft« .„. i— v«. a—
am garment without rippins apart Write (or (roe booklel-lU to D,e. Bleach and Mix cilirL M O KRO If D R U O C O. T QuhiZy, intoo£
Never Fails.
"There Is one remedy, and only one
I*have ever found, to cure without fail
such troubles In my family as eczema,
ringworm and all others of an Itching
character. That remedy is Hunt's
Cure. We always use it and it never
falls." W. M. CHRISTIAN,
Rutherford, Tenn.
60c per box.
Too Polite to Interrupt.
Police Justice—You saw that cock-
fight? Why didn't you stop It and ar-
rest the men?
Police Officer—I did, Y'r Anner—
afther th' fight was over.--Chicago
Tribune.
The discriminating
SLOAN'S
farmer keeps a supply of
LINIMENT
For spavin, curb, splinh sweeny, capped hock, founder^ strained
tendons, wind puffs and all lameness in horses •,
For thrush, foot rot and qarqet on cattle and sheep -
For hog distemper, hoq cholera* thumps and scours in hoas-
For diarrhoea,canker and roup in poultry-/
AT ALL DEALERS - — - PRICE a5*.50* & * I.OO
Send for free booh on Horaes.CoHle. Hogs ond Poultry Address Dr.Eorl S.Sloan, Boetan. Mai
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The Davis News (Davis, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 14, 1908, newspaper, May 14, 1908; Davis, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc140593/m1/7/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.