The State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1915 Page: 3 of 4
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"
THE MULHALL STATE JOURNAL
SUFFERED AWFULLY
NOW QUITE WELL
A Lady's Suffering Was So Intense,
That At Times, She Was Unable
To Straighten Her Body.
A Splendid Chance.
"Turkey raising is an arduous busi-
ness," said a wholesale poultry dealer
of Baltimore. "Day and night you
must look after your birds the same
as you look after horses.
"California turkeys are very fine.
They are very well taken care of. It
is no snap to work on a California
turkey farm, I tell you.
"I was visiting a California turkey
farm last month when a boy applied
for a Job.
"'Your references are good. I'll try
you,' said the farmer.
'"Will I have a chance to rise, sir?'
the boy asked.
" 'Yes, said the farmer, 'a grand
chance. I'll want you to have the feed
mixed by four o'clock every morn-
ing.' "—Washington Star.
QUIT MEAT IF KIDNEYS
BOTHER AND USE SALTS
Take a Glaae of Salts Before Break-
fast If Your Back-Is Hurting or
Bladder Is Irritated.
If you must have your meat every
day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with
salts occasionally, says a noted author-
ity who tells us that meat forms urio
acid which almost paralyzes tire kid;
neys in their efforts to expel it from
the blood. They become sluggish and
weaken, then you suffer with a dull
misery in the kidney region, sharp
pains in the back or sick headache,
dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue
is coated and when the weather is bad
you have rheumatic twinges. The
urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the
channels often get sore and irritated,
obliging you to seek relief two or
three times during the night.
To neutralize these irritating acids,
to cleanse the kidneys and flush off
the body's urinous waste get four
ounces of Jad Salts from any phar-
macy here; take a tablespoonful in a
glass of water before breakfast for a
few days and your kidneys will then
act fine. This famous salts is made
from the acids of grapes and lemon
juice, combined with lithia, and has
been used for generations to flush and
stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to
neutralize the acids in urine, so it no
longer irritates, thus ending bladder
weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in-
jure, and makes a delightful efferves-
lent lithia-water drink.—Adv.
Justice discards party, friendship,
and kindred, and is therefore repre-
sented as blind.—Addison.
The silos are being built under-
ground extensively through the west-
ern part of the United States.
HAIR OR NO HAIR?
It Is Certainly Up to You and Cutl-
. cura. Trial Free.
Hot shampoos with Cuticura Soap,
followed by light dressings of Cuti-
cura Ointment rubbed into the scalp
skin tend to clear the scalp of dan-
druff, soothe itching and irritation and
promote healthy hair-growing condi-
tions. Nothing better, cleaner, purer.
Sample each free by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XY,
Boiton. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
More than 333,000 Jews are in Eu-
ropean armies, it is said.
A really skillful woman can laugh at
Ti pointless joke just as easy.
When Your Eyes Need Care
Cae Murine Eye Medicine. No Smarting—Feel#
Fine—Aets Oulckl.v. Try it for Red, Weak.
Bore Eyes and Granulated Eyelids, Murine In
compounded by our Oculists— not a "Patent
Medicine"—but nied In nucceHnful Physicians'
Practice for many years. Now dedicated to
the Public and Hold by DnigtflHtH nt 60c per
Bottle. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes.
|5c and 60c. Write for Book of the Ey Free
Murine Eye Remedy Company, Chicago. Adv
WTalnut, N. C.—"About 12 years
•go," says Mrs. S. W. McClure, of
Walnut, "I began to fail in health, get-
ting worse all the time. I wasn't able
to do my work, suffering awfully at
times with pains in sides, especially
the right side, and none of the time
was I well.
Sometimes I could not straighten
up my body for the Intense suffering.
I suffered more or less all the time,
end was irregular.
As Cardui had helped others, I
started trying it. I bought six bot
ties, and after using two or three bot-
tles, I commenced improving, getting
better all the time, until I was entirely
well.
I became strong and healthy, gained
flesh, weighing 120, being just a
shadow when I commenced taking
Cardui. Sly work is a pleasure, and I
feel like doing my work since, for the
cure was permanent, and I have been
well and strong ever since.
Cardui is a fine medicine for suffer-
ing women, and I recommend it to all
iny friends who have womanly
trouble."
Thousands of women have written
to tell of the help Cardui has been to
them. Cardui is a mild female tonic,
acting especially on the womanly or-
gans. It has shown itself of great
value to sick, weak women. It is
surely worth a trial.
Begin taking Cardui today.—Adv.
STILL GROWING
j TOTAL FOR STATE NOW REACHES
OVER MILLION AND A
QUARTER BALES.
JACKSON COUNTY STILL LEADS
With 49,200 Bales to Compare With
9,811 At the Same Date Last
Year—Complete List of Gin-
nlngs In All Counties.
Oklahoma City.—Oklahoma's cotton
| crop for 1914 is still increasing its
| margin over any previous year and
the ginnings to date have amounted
| to 1,147,675 bales, according to the
latest report of the federal depart-
j ment of agriculture. Jackson main
tains Its lead among the counties With
49,290 bales as compared with 9,811
bales the previous year.
The report by counties follows:
—Crop—
County— 1914 19)3
Adair 1,340 822
Atoka 10,459 10,161
Beckham 29,681 12,044
Bryan 22,377
Caddo 30,806
Canadian 1,437
Carter
Cherokee
Choctaw
Cleveland
Coal
Comanche 24,160 14,584
CALOMEL WHEN BILIOUS? HO! SLOP!
(CIS LIE CM1TE ON LIVER
I Guarantee "Dodsons' Liver Tone" Will Give You the Best Liver
and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Had—Doesn't Make You Sick!
37,7*6
22,276
1,375
23,126 20,951
7,090 5,396
20.165
12.097
6,873
19.241
Cotton 22,2ft 2
Creek
Custer
Oarvln ...
Crady ...,
Greer ....
Harmon ..
Haskell ..
Hughes ..
Jackson ..
Jefferson .
Johnston
Kingfisher
Kiowa
Latimer ..
1/eFlore ..
Lincoln ...
Logan ....
Love
McClain ..
McCurtain
McIntosh .
Marshall ..
M ayes
Murray ..
Muskogee
Okfuskee .
Oklahoma .
Okmulgee
Osage
Pawnee ..
Payne
Pittsburg .
Pontotoc ..
24,543
2.S52
37.S02
22,340
35,025
10,624
18,802
1,623
27,423
1434
11,616
\607
Stop using calomel! It makes you
sick. Don't lose a day's work. If yoii
feel lazy, sluggish, bilious or consti-
pated. listen to me!
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones
Calomel, when it comes into contact
with sour bile crashes into it, breaking
it up. This is when you feel that aw-
ful nausea and cramping. If you feel
"all knocked out," if your liver Is tor-
pid and bowels constipated or you
have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue, if breath is bad or stomach
sour just try a spoonful of harmless
Dodson's Liver Tone.
Here's my guarantee—Go to any
drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. Take a
Hard Work.
A. J Drexel, who is a volunteer in
the automobile service of the HritiBh
army, wrote in a recent letter to Phil-
adelphia:
"As Kitchener said, or didn't say, to
Cobb, otir trenches stretch like a gray
snake from Switzerland to the sea.
And what hard work our young sol-
diers have, let me tell you, digging
these trenches!
"I saw a young soldier in a half-
finished trench lay down his shovel
the other day and light his pipe.
'"Here, what did you lay down that
shovel for?' the sergeant asked.
" 'To cool it, sir,' said the young sol-
dier."
Sequoyah
Stephens
Tillman
Tulsa
Wagoner
Washita
All other
Total
16,522
14,970
32,116
9,811
28,331
13,720
ID,663
22,475
42,609
2,477
17,102
1,802
2,132
23,281
21,933
43,681
33,849
19,024
14,106
18,828
14.219
19,281
12.3S6
11,046
12,090
82,964
21,641
15,428
15,515
4,296
2,249
9,621
8,098
30,776
24,713
30,409
23,313
15,237
10,244
12,037
8,905
4,682
3.277
7,576
5,379
15,010
13,209
23,620
24.735
24,474
23,960
41,169
20,404
5,581
6,183
23,756
19,043
26,926
26,066
30,703
21,343
36,375
15,607
8,220
5,624
14,776
13,075
29,212
16.S13
9,464
5,078
A POTATO KING
"If I were a fanner boy, or a boy with-
out capital, find wanted nn early compe-
tency. I'd start right out growing rota-
toes,' paid Iienrv Schroeiler, the Potato
king of ihe Red River Valley, whose story
in the John A. Salzer Seed Co.'s Catalogue
reads stranger than a romance. ,
spoonful and if it deesn't straighten
you right up and make you feel One
and vigorous I want you to go back to
the store and get your money. Dod-
son's Liver Tone is destroying the
sale of calomel because It is real liver
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore
it cannot salivate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to work and clean your
bowels of that sour bile and consti-
pated waste which is clogging your
system and making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone will keep your entire fam-
ily frellng fine for months. Give it to
your children. It is harmless; doesn't
gripe and they like its pleasant taste.
INDIAN HAD SENSE OF HUMOR
At Least Enough to Get Off Good
Joke on the Cross-Examin-
Ing Lawyer.
Prom Fenimore Cooper and other
authorities we have gained the im-
pression that the Indian is a stolid,
severe Individual, with no sense of
the white man's humor, but one red
brother showed himself quite a civ-
ilized joker the other day In the Unit-
ed States court at St. Paul. He was
a wilness in a hotly contested case,
and a lawyer was after him In the
most approved style to cast discredit
on his testimony. After apparently
frightening the Indian with the awful
consequences which would follow the
: Ightest deviation from the truth, the
lawyer solemnly said:
"Now. sir, I want you to tell me the
exact truth, without any shutting or
evasion. I want you to look me square
in the eye and tell me how you get
your living?"
The Indian looked straight at the
lawyer and, with that grave air fa-
miliar to all acquainted with the red
man, simply said: "Eat."
The courtroom roared and the law-
yer let the witness go.
St. Genevieve.
St. Genevieve, the patron saint of
Paris, was consecratod at the age of
seven to the service of religion by St.
Germanus, bishop of Auxerre, who
chanced to pass through the village of
Nanterre, where she lived, about four
miles from Paris. She acquired *
great leputatlon for sanctity. Tlrs
church of St Genevieve, completed in
1764, was named In her honor. Dur-
ing the revolutionary period It was
withdrawn from the service of relig-
ion and called the Pantheon, but was
afterward restored In name and to
ecclesiastical uses.
His Mistake.
"John," she said to her husband,
who was grumbling over Ills breakfast,
"your love has grown cold."
"No, it hasn't," he snapped; "but my
breakfast has."
"That's just It! If your love hadn't
grown cold you wouldn't have noticed
that your breakfast had."-—Stray Sto-
rljs.
Some Hint.
"Hello, Rlank! Where are you go-
ing in such a hurry?"
"To the post office to put up a kick
about the wretched delivery service."
"Whnt's the trouble?"
"Why, that check you promised to
send me ten days ago hasn't reached
me yet."
WHY CRIP IS DANGEROUS.
yiT
It requires a good tonic laxatlvt tc
keep the body of the patient as strong
as possible to counteract the effect of
the poisons created by the grip bacil-
lus. An expectorant tonic with some
laxative qualities !s the safest rem-
edy. Such is Peruna.
Mrs. Gentry Gates, 8219 First Ave.,
East Lake, Ala., writes: "I had a
bad case of grip. 1 tried Peruna and
It cured me. 1 can safely say It la a
fine medicine.**
Mr. George E. Law, 13*4 N. Frank-
lin St., Brazil, Ind., writes: "I am
satisfied that Peruna Is a wonderful
remedy for grip, and I do most heart-
ily endorse and recommend It."
BLACK
LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED
by Cutter's Blackls* Pills. Ixm-
VVrlto for IxHikl'-i and testimonial*.
H F* V m 10 dose pkpo. Blackleg Pills 11.00
SO doio Pkos. Blackleg Pills 4 00
Tro any Injertor, but Cutter's
The superiority of Cutter iinxluctn In tlu« to over 13
yearn of specialising In vncelnes and serums only.
Insist on Cutter's. If unol>Ulnat>le. order direct.
Tho Cutter Laboratory. Borkelav. Cal.. or Chleajo. Ilk
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 6-1915.
...1,147,675 825,069 j
BRITISH SHIPPING IS DESTROYED
Tokomaru and Icaria Sunk in English
Channel by Germans
London. The toll taken by tfie Ger-
man submarine U-21 in its raid in the
Irish sea in the vicinity of Liverpool
still stands at three ships—the steam-
ers Ben Cruaehen, Linda Blanche and
the Kilcoan, the latter a small vessel.
The crew of the Kilcoan was landed on
the Isle of Man by a coastwise steam-
er. In addition a German submarine
also has torpedoed two British steam-
ers in the English channel near Harve
—the Tokomaru and the Icaria.
The Irish sea raider easily made her
escape and shtpping Interests, confi-
dent that she has returned to her base,
ordered a resumption of normal traf-
fic.
This submarine is the same vessel
which last September torpedoed in the
North Sea the British cruiser Path-
finder with a loss of 24 lives and later
destroyed two British steamers off
Harve. She found numerous vessels
In the waters to which she has con-
fined her activities. In addition to
these vessels she is known to have at
tempted to sink at least five other
steamers which were chased by her
These include the steamer Graphic
with 100 passengers and a crew of
forty, and the smaller boats Atreus,
Ava, Kathleen and Endymion. All of
these vessels escaped in zigzag flight
The Graphic's captain had his pas^
sengers don life belts and sent all tha
members of the crew to the stokehole
so that the steamer could keep up a
full head of steam In flight. The cap-
tain also took the precaution to warn
by wireless vessels from coming Into
the zone of the submarine's activity.
The Allan line steamer Scandina-
vian from St. John, N. P., January 22.
for Liverpool with 500 passengers on
board, learned of the raid of the U-21
and put into Queenstown. After re-
maining in Queenstown for a short
time the steamer proceeded for Liver-
pool.
TORNADO VISITS THE SOUTHWEST
Parts of Oklahoma, Texas and Arkan-
sas In Path of Windstorm
Price Schrooder's Famous Ohio, bushel,
$1.75; ten bushels, $15.00.
For 10c In Postage
We gladly mail our Catalog
and sample package of Ten Fa-
mous Farm Seeds, including
Speltz, "The Cereal Wonder;"
Rejuvenated White Bonanza
Oats, "The Prize Winner;" Bil-
lion Dollar Grass; Teosinte,
the Silo Filler, Alfalfa, etc.,
etc.
Or Send 12c
And we will mail you our
big Catalog and six generous
packages of Early Cabbage,
Carrot, Cucumber, Lettuce,
Radish. Onion—furnishing lots
and lots of juicy delicious
Vegetables during the early
Spring and Summer.
Or send to John A. Salzer
Seed Co., Box 720, I.ti
Crosse, Wis., twenty cents
snd receive both al ove collec-
tions and their big catalog.
It Isn't Being Done Now.
"Jone is so very romantic. She says
she's going right down on her knees
to beg her father to let her inarry
Bobby."
"What's she waiting for?"
"For the styles to change."
Fill IMIIE
The Mercy-Seat.
Thou must not look so much at the
evil that Is nigh, but rather at that
which stands ready to pity and help—
and which hath pitied and helped thy
distressed soul, and will pity and help
It again. Why Is there a mercy-seat,
but for the sinner to look toward in
time of need? Be patient till the
Lord's tender mercy and love visit
thee again; and then, look up to him
against this and such like snares,
which would come between thee and
the appearance of the Lord's love;
that thou mayest feel more of his abid-
lngs with thee, and of the sweet ef-
fects thereof. For these things are not
to destroy thee, but to teach thee wis-
dom; which the Lord is able, through
many exercises and sore trials, to be-
stow upon thee; that thy heart may be
rid of all that burdeneth, and filled
with all It rightly desires after, in the
proper season and goodness of the
Lord; to whose wise ordering and ten-
der mercy I commit thee.—Isaac Pen-
lngton.
How It Came.
"How did you get your musical tem-
perament?"
"I was born in A flat."—Princeton
Tiger.
A man never wants a thing after he
get It half as bad as he thought he did
while chasing it.
Nearly 6,000,000 females are work
Ing for wages In England
Dallas.—The eastern portion of Tex-
as and parts oC Arkansas and Oklaho-
ma felt the effects of a sever wind-
storm, which at Tyler, Texas, and Gar-
land City, Ark., assumed the nature of
a tornado. Falling temperatures also
were noted. No serious delay to traf-
fic or communication lines was report-
ed. No deaths have been reported at
any point
"California Syrup of Figs" can't
harm tender stomach,
liver and bowels.
Every mother realizes, after giving
her children "California Syrup of
Figs" that this is their ideal laxative,
because they love (ts pleasant taste
and it thoroughly cleanses the tender
little stomach, liver and bowels with-
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 pf Figs" handy; they know a I
teaspoonful today saves a sick child
tomorrow. Ask at the store for a 60-
cent bottle of "California Syrup of
Figs," which has directions for babies,
children of all ages and grown-ups
printed on the bottle. Adv.
NO BAKING POWDER MORE
WHOLESOME THAN ALUM
POWDERS.
Washington, D. C.—Alum baking
powders are no more harmful to a per-
son than any other baking powders.
Such is the conclusion of the ref-
eree board of consulting scientific ex-
perts of the department of agriculture
as the result of experiments to deter-
mine the influence of aluminum com-
pounds on the nutrition and health of
man The report gives the results of
three sets of extensive experiments on
human subjects conducted independ-
ently by members of the board and
waE id response to questions put to it
by the department of agriculture, The
board's report was unanimous and was
signed by Ira Remsen, president of
Johns Hopkins university, Chairman:
Russell H. Crittendon, professor of
physiological chemlBtry in Yale uni-
versity and director of the Sheffield
Scientific school: John H Long, pro-
fessor of chemistry in Northwestern
university; Alonzo E. Taylor, profes-
sor 01 physiological chemistry in the
University of Pennsylvania, and Theo-
bala Smith, professor of comparative
pathology In Harvard.
Reliable evidence is abundant that women
are constantly being restored to hen 1th by
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
The many testimonial letters tnat we are continually pub-
lishing in the newspapers—hundredsof them—are all genu-
ine, true and unsolicited expressions of heartfelt gratitude
for the freedom from suffering that has come to these
women solely through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Money could not buy nor any kind of influence obtain
such recommendations; you may depend upon it that any
testimonial we publish is honest and true—if you have any
doubt of this write to the women whose true names and
addresses are always given, and learn for yourself.
Read this one from Mrs. Waters:
Camden, N.J.—" 1 was sick for two years with nervous spells, and
my kidneys were affected. I had a doctor all the timo and used a
galvanic battery, but nothing did me any good. I was not able to go
to bed, but spent my time on a couch or in a sleeping-chair, and soon
became almost a skeleton. Finally my doctor went away for his
health, and my husband heard of Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and got me some. In two months I got relief and now I
am like a new woman and am at my usual weight. I recommend
your medicine to every one and so docs my husband."—Mrs. Tn.na
Waters, D30 Mechanic Street, Camden, N.J.
From Hanover, Penn.
Hanover, Pa.—"I was a very weak woman and suffered from
bearing down pains and backache. I had been married over four
years and had no children. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
proved an excellent remedy for it made me a well woman. After
taking a few bottles my pains disappeared, and we now have one of
the finest boy babies you ever saw."—Mrs. C. A. Kiokkodk, R FD.
No. 5, Hanover, Pa.
Now answer this question if you can. Why should a
•woman continue to suffer without first giving Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial ? You know that
it has saved many others—why should it fail in your case?
The' German textile industries em-
ploy more women than men.
Wounds cleansed by Hanford's Bal-
sam. Adv.
The Japan Women's college at To- Maori women, formerly cannibals,
kyo has over 1,200 students. now vote in New Zealand.
"■ TT'/UIUII ,1 (iniiirilt.1
docs justice to herself if she does not t ry this fa-
mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it
has restored somnny suffering women to health.
•Write to LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO.
™ ^ (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice.
Your letter will he opened, read and answered
by a woman and held iu strict coiilideiico.
Ho Had Some.
Mollie—Is her hair all her own?
Chollie—No; I've got a lock of it in
my watch she gave me."
Very Much So.
"My fate hangs on a hair."
"Then you have but a bald pros«
pect."
Yes, waiting for every farmer or farmer's
son — any industrious American who is
anxious to establish for himself a happy
home and prosperity. Canada's hearty in-
vitation this year is more attractive than
ever. Wheat is higher but her farm land
just as cheap and in the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta
160 Acre Homesteads are Actually Free to Settlers and
Other Land at From $15 to $20 per Acre
The people of European countries as well as the American continent
must be fed—thus an even greater demand for Canadian Wheat will keep
up the price. Any farmer who can buy land at $15.00 to $30.00 per acre
—get a dollar for wheat and raise 20 to 45 bushels to the acre is bound to
make money—that's what you can expect in Western Canada. Wonder-
ful yields also of Oats, Barley and Flax. Mixed Farming is fully as prof-
itable an industry as grain raising. The excellent grasses, full of nutrition,
are the only foo^ required either for beef or dairy purposes. Good schools,
markets convenient, climate excellent.
Military service is not compulsory in Canada but there is an unusual demand for farm
labor to replace the many youn.; men who have volunteered for service in the war.
Write for literature arrd particulars u to reduced railway rates to Superintendent
Immigration, Ottawa, Canada; or to
C. A. COOK
123 W. 91 h St„ Kansas Cify, Ma.
CanadiaivGoverment Agent.
a mj iti; * .<■. >«.
Becuuuo of tnoue ugly, grizzly, gray hair*. U«t« "LA CREOLE" HAIR DRESSING. PRICE, SI.OO, retail.
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Norman, Floyd. The State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, February 5, 1915, newspaper, February 5, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc141377/m1/3/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.