Carney Enterprise (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, September 13, 1918 Page: 2 of 4
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THE CARNEY ENTERPRISE
Keep Yourself Fit
You can't afford to be laid up with
■ore, aching kidneys in these Java of
high price*. Some occupations bring
kidney troubles; almost any work
makes weak kidneys worse. If you feel
tired all the time, and suffer with lame
back, sharp pains, dizzy spells, head-
aches and disordered kidney action, use
~ " ey Pills. It may save an
rheumatism, dropsy, or
'"C*
Doan's Kidney Pills. It may save an
attack of rheumatism, dropsy, or
Dright's disease. Doan's have helped
thousands back to health.
An Oklahoma Case
Otto Besse, city fire-
man, 306 N. Third St.,
McAlester, Okla., say!>:
"I have used Doan's
Kidney Pills oft and on
for years and they have
always corrected any
attack of kidney disor-
der I have had, and
have put my kidneys in
food shape. At one time
had a dull heavy pain
and soreness In mv back
that wore me out. My
kidneys acted too freely,
especially at night
Doan's Kidney Pills'1
have
that
anyone bothered that way,
Get Doan's ti Any Store, 60c a Bos
DOAN'S
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
ave proved so good for this trouble
I always recommend them to
EAGLE SERUM
"Tk« only SERUM made in Oklahoma"
will protect your hogs
Write for our FREE BOOKLET
TIE EAGLE SERUM CO.. OKLAHOMA CITY. OKUL
SHE GOT WHAT SHE WANTED
Young Irish Girl Resourceful When
Unaccustomed Word Had Tempo-
rarily Slipped Her Memory.
In Ills amusing book, "Old Irish
Life," Mr. L. M. Call well tells a story
of a young peasant woman—Sally
Sweeny—who used to walk Into Gal-
way twice a week to do shopping for
his family.
She could neither read nor write, yet
she never made a mistake with any of
the messages that were intrusted to
her.
Once, however, her memory did fall
her. One of the Indies of the family
had commissioned her to bring back u
yard of satin, and the unaccustomed
word had slipped out of Sally's recol-
lection.
She did not allow herself to be beat-
en, however, and made an effort to re-
call the word; so she went Into the
principal shop In Galwuy still thinking
hard.
"What ls't that ye call the divll?" she
asked, "whin It's not divll that ye sa^
to him?"
"Is It Satan you would be mean-
ing?" asked the astonished draper.
"The very wan," said Sally, delight-
edly; "an' ye'll give me a yard."
Assurance.
Sirs. Newlywed—Oh, I'm sure that
Rill's perfectly straight; he admits
everything that I charge him with.
Some men are locked up for safe
breaking and some for safe keeping.
Post
Toasties
— Everything a
corn food ought
" to be —
And saves
the wheat
(doSS^L
HOLD ALL WISDOM IN KORAN
Arabs of the Desert Place Implicit
Faith In the Teachings of Their
Prophet Mahomet.
An Arab of the desert, one of the Be
dawi. What are these Arabs of the
desert? Today they look across the
sands upon their droves of sheep and
oainels and peaceful are their nights.
But In the olden days, the days of
which they dream and chant their
songs as they lie before their tents at
ulghtfall, they were not men of pas-
toral tasks, but they looked upon their
lances brilliant In the sunlight, horses
charging Into battle, men with keen
dark faces filled with lust for blood
and booty. They hear their women
close behind them, women like these
sitting now beside nie, shrieking blame
or telling them tliut death upon the
battlefield was only opening wide for
them the gates of paradise. They bore
their flag around the eastern world,
their flag that Is founded on a book.
The men of other nations have many
books, but the Beduln of the desert,
the follower of the prophet, has but
one, eternal, uncreated, written In the
language they will hear In paradise,
Within their book, the Kornu, Is th«
wisdom of the ages, and no one can
add to it nor make Its teachings lest
divine. It came from Allah's lips
straight to the great Mohammed, and
holds for all true followers the sum
and substance of God's laws to men.
That book has conquered half the
world, and the Bedawl believe that the
time Is coming when the men of Islam
shall possess the earth as their In-
heritance from God on high. It is writ-
ten on their foreheads. These Arabs
of the desert, these keen-eyed men sit-
ting so quietly In the white moonlight,
are proud with a pride we do not un-
derstand. They are proud of their
lineage, of the purity of their blood, of
their unbroken traditions. They are
the real adventurers of the world, and
their nervous, high-strung, daring
characteristics have become the per-
manent marks of their race. One
finds them ready to do and dare every-
thing that appeals to their Imagina-
tion. A cause must appeal to their
emotions—must appeal to the heart,
Dot the head—those same riotous emo-
tions which never produce, but al-
ways ruin.—From Asia Magazine.
Yank Surprises French Men.
Lieut. J. Wray Chase of Eugene,
Ore., Is probably regarded as a cow-
boy proficient In throwing the lariat,
In the opinion of one French officer.
Lieutenant Chase, In a letter to his
wife, tells of an Incident In connection
with the moving of a gun.
"Yesterday we were taking a gun
through a bad place," he writes.
"There was about twenty feet of wa-
ter, and after the gun was across I
still had the brake rope on my side,
so I gnve It a swing and hung It nicely
over the gun out of the water and
mud.
"A French captain stood there and
said : That's pretty good.'
" 'Oh, I am from the West, you
know,' I replied, Just as If I had In-
tended to throw the rope that way.
He said he knew that place and that
It was a fine place. I never let on
that I couldn't do the same thing
again, and not one asked me to try,
so everything went along without ar-
gument or explanation."
Famous Geysers.
The most famous geysers In the
world are those of Iceland, which
number over a hundred, the principal
one having an opening of 70 feet In di-
ameter and discharging n column of
water to a height of 200 feet. There
*re also wonderful geysers In the Yel-
lowstone park region of the United
States, and some In New Zealand. Gey-
sers are hot springs of volcanic or-
igination and action, and are remark-
able for the fact that they throw out
great streams of boiling water and
steam, Instead of lava, as In the ease
of a volcano.
Trust Me! Try Dodson's Liver Tone!
Calomel Harms Liver and Bowels
Read my guarantee! Liven your liver and bowels
and get straightened up without taking sicken-
ing calomel. Don't lose a day's work!
There's no reason why a person
should take sickening, salivating calo-
mel when a few cents buys a large
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone—a per-
fect substitute for calomel.
It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid
which will start your liver just as
surely as calomel, but it doesn't make
you sick and can not salivate.
Children and grown folks can take
Dodson's Liver Tone, because it is
perfectly harmless.
Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is
mercury and attacks your bones. Take
a dose of nasty calomel today and you
will feel weak, sick and nauseated to-
morrow. Don't lose a day's work.
Take a spoonful of Dodson's Liver
Tone instead and you will wake up
feeling great. No more biliousness,
constipation, sluggishness, headache,
coated tongue or sour stomach. Your
druggist says if you don't find Dod-
son's Liver Tone acts better than hor-
rible calomel your money is waiting
for you.—Adv.
The Strong Withstand the
Heat of Summer Better
Than the Weak
Old people who are feeble and younger people
who are weak, will be strengthened and enabled to
go through the depressing heat of Summer by taking
Ci rove's
Tasteless chill Tonic
It purifies and enriches the blood and makes
you Strong. You can soon feel its Strengthening,
Invigorating Effect.
GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC is an ex-
ceptionally good general strengthening tonic for pale,
sickly children, for delicate Mothers, for Old Folks or
any one of the family who has poor blood. It is
pleasant to take. Price 60c.
Perfectly Harmless. Contains no
Nux-Vomioa or other Poisonous Drugs•
jW Grove's chill Tonic Tablets
You can now get Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic in Tablet
torm as well as in Syrup, the kind you have always bought. The
1 ablets are intended for those who prefer to swallow a tablet
rather than a syrup, and as a convenience for those who travel
The tablets are called "GROVE'S chill TONIC TABLETS" and
contain exactly the same medicinal properties and produce ex-
actly the same results as Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic which is
put up in bottles. The price of either is 60c.
Where in Western Canada you can buy at from
$15 to $30 per acre good farm land that will raise
20 to 45 bushels to the acre ot $2 wheat — its
easy to figure the profits. Many Western Canadian
fanners (scores of them from the U. S.) have paid for their land from a
single crop. Such an opportunity for 100% profit on labor and investment
is worth investigation.
Canada extends to you a hearty invitation to settle on her
Free Homesteed Lends of 160 Acres Each
or secure some of the low priced lands in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or
Alberta. Think what yon can make with wheat at $2 a bushel and land so
easy to get Wonderful yields also of Oats, Barley and
Flax. Mixed farming and cattle raising.
The climate is healthful and agreeable; railway fa-
cilities excellent; good schools and churches convenient
Write for literature and particulars as to reduced railway
rates to Supt Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to
G. A. COOK
2012 Main St., Kansaa City, Mo.
Canadian Government Agent
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Mason, George D. Carney Enterprise (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, September 13, 1918, newspaper, September 13, 1918; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc143242/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.