Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1917 Page: 2 of 8
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THE SENTINEL. GARBER. OKLAHOMA
WOMAN COULD
HARDLY STAND
Restored to He-aJth by Lydia
Em Pinkkajn's Vegetable
Compound.
Galicia
1
Una's
Fortune
0
Ffcltaa, N. T. — 'Tfcj wTJ rrrr.tE
par rjoi ibtir rrsx.*y fyr •.Ttazzs-z.t and
re-fare nti
wi>*c to
prtr.t< that Lju
E. Frskbaas Vege-
tal.* Cccpo.td
w. *- ■* ties
wel;? Fcr crrer a
vear I nfferwj fo
j Jrjc ferM.e ru -
en I cmjiJ taniy
^ etacd and "ti
J afra.:: to go or tha
i tr*e'. ilow Doc-
I ton mjJ
of*-rmtjon
i E. Pinkhars'i
V(|('r • Coapocai his prwed it
•Cberir* I aa now perfect? w*J
%jui *So fcsy kiod of won. Mra.
Ji'Bis PheJ's. care oi h. a. E*ier,
E.F.D. No. 5, FflMoa. N. Y.
vr« wiris rrery raa *r r.'tn
fpaei fecA> troobfaa, nerrcosoeaa,
<.<r ti* Uaea eoold a« tae let-
ten wT.tieo by wos&en made well by Ly-
ti E. Pinkhaai'i Vegetable Oaapoaod.
If yen bare bad aynsptonu aad *> not
the cause. write to tba
T
ime
Da GEORGE ELMER COBB
vsiK«d quite res oily, tor Una wes .n
! his m.ai
I -Did yoa call me. sir?" be iDqa;rarf- >
f i "I did. If you are Ur. Annsuons- I
S ~Tb:l is EC) Luiue."
J v i - - "" - jounc mj". my ti
I lu.-- Ml me aboot. then." qsarered tte i
I <> L.LT. "Toa're in with the pij
| prjod wt on the hill, bat J-ioa HP ,
1 yoa are a real gentleman and 1 km>«
I I • ail tn:«T you. I haven't much to «to
I *.th fdflt generally. but 1 like your j
| f wm yon do something for met-'
I i -Willingly, if it is in my power." av
t A.-.. :r--t-i w.th rn:
j -j-. ojj man banded a folded docu-
-If«
IS re.
JCW 'rtofjof xr THL PLOW
were ae«« «
wooid h<e!p me, tot Ly isa .
Bi
Lydia E- Pintr-ac. Meorine Co. Lynn,
Kua., for beJpfui advice given fr s.
The oar of llu*<ta la a timber o rr-
chant.
RE the war geography and
itics combined to make Gaii-
a province apart from it*
leighbors. On the south the
Carpathians cat off easy access from
Hciigary; on the north the Koatian
frontier *as much more than a con-
ventional line.
Gal:<ia was part of the old kingdom
of l'< land, but in the eaxiern part of
the province its population, mainly
Buthecian. was openly antagonistic to
the Poles—as the stormy debates in
the a <^mbly at Ivmberg ind the stu-
dents' roms In the university of the
same city often proved. Even In re-
ligious matters there was no union,
and the provincial capital boasted
three rival archbishops as well as
*en!ed the real wealth of the family,
made themselves snug in the rest of
the room. The floor was trodden
earth, and sanitation was as the
snakes of Ireland. The extraordinary
thing to an Englishman was that this
Insufferable atmosphere produced
beautiful children, healthy women and
sturdy men. I have seen children come
• 'U? of a hovel whose gni -*ful carriag"
might be the envy of a woman of fash-
ion. and whose faces were those of
angels.
Typhus Is Their Scourge.
According to our notions, they should
all die of consumption: but typhus
born In dirt and nouriibed on under
feeding, is the real scourge of the coun
try. When a case breaks out, the
With the Fingers!
Says Corns Lift Out ;
Without Any Pain;
Bore corns, hard corns, soft corns or
any kind of a corn can shortly be
lifted right out with the fingers If you
will apply on the corn a few drop* of
flUHiiii says a Cincinnati authority.
At little cost one can get a small bot-
ti« of freezone at any drug store, which
wllJ positively rid one's feet of every
corn or callus without pain or sore-
nem or the danger of Infection.
This new drug is an ether compound,
and dries the moment It Is applied and
doea not Inflame or even irritate the
■orrounding skin. Jn«t think! You
can lift off your corns and calluses
now without a bit of pain or soreness.
If your druggist hasn't freewme he can
easily get a sm:ni liottle for you from
his wholesale drug house.—adv.
high dignitary of orthodox Jewry. The family of the victim go to the churc:
Jews, indeed, were everywhere, as pet- and the whole village comes to pra>
ty traders, usurers, bankers, and year .rith them for the patient's recovery :
by year they were becoming more and and typhus bein£ one of the most in-
more the economic masters of the fectious diseases known, it most be ?
country, writes A- Wyatt Tllby in the very mild. Innocuous type that doe*
London Graphic. The country was not produce an epidemic when these
poor, but it was made to be wealthy, are the only means taken to cure It.
The soil Is good, there Is excellent j I suspect that much of the heavy
arable and pasture, there are valuable : mortality among the troops fighting in
mines in the mountains, and, above Galicla has been due to this cause,
all, there are vast oil fields. It was There have been hints in the Austrian,
the oil which attracted the only Eng- and more particularly the Hungarian
lishmen or American? who ever went ptpera, of terrible outbreaks all along
to Galicia. But there was a heavy -his front The doctors can do little
Willing to Oblige.
John's father kept a candy store. I
and the little fellow often carried
candy to school to divide with the
other children. One morning the
teacher noticed a strong smell of p*'i>-
permlnt and began to Investigate in
order to stop eating during school
hour*. Unable to detect the culprit,
aho bent over small John and whis-
pered :
"John, have you any candy?"
"No, ma'am," he replied.
"Have any of the other boys any?"
"No, ma'am."
As she turned away he touched her
hand and said. "I will bring you some
at noon."—Indies' Home Journal.
The Servant Question.
Ashley entered the employment
agency office hurriedly, barely paus-
ing to wipe the perspiration from his
brow.
"Have you a cook who will go to the
country?" lie questioned anxiously.
The manager turned and opened a
door leading Into the adjoining room,
and called out:
"Is there anybody here who would
like to spend a day la the country?"—
Harper's Magazine.
annual drain of emigration, and It
used to be said In jest that there would
soon be more (Jailclans In Chicago and
Winnipeg than in Galicia.
But two years of war hit Galicia
hard, and the second year harder than
the first. Leinberg. which has changed
hands twice, has indeed escaped dam-
age, and Przemysl—a miserable, sec-
ond-rate town, in spite of its strategic
importance—suffered little during the
prolonged siege. Cracow, too, far away
to the west, where the great monu-
ments of old Polish history combine to
form one of the most Interesting, if
under military conditions: only winter
can lessen the scourge—by killing off
the victims. But in spring the whole
thing will break out again.
Meantime the condition of Galicia
must be miserable indeed. The heavi-
est fighting on the eastern front has
been there; the terrific battles of
Halicz have almost rivaled Verdun. It
i is known that the Germans have car-
ried off much of the stock to replenish
! their own larders. Nearly all the able-
; bodied men of the country have been
i called up for military service over two
years. Agriculture has been practical-
luitiiti
iXWJRO , GAUC1A.
Tin
Ctate!
first glass factory In the Colled
uas built In 17<W.
Motor-driven windlass** have been
design* I for raising eircus-tent pole*.
(r
Foods Are
Increasing
In Price
But you can still buy
GrapeNuts
at the same price.
This staple cereal in
its air-tight, wax-pro-
tected package will
keep indefinitely, yet
is ready to eat at a
moment's notice.
Crape-Nuti is full of
compact nourishment
with a delightful
wheat and barley
flavor.
The Most Economical of
Prepared Cereals
the least visited, of European cities,
was threatened for some months, hut
has so far only heard the echo of tlie
guns. It Is the villages and smaller
towns that have suffered.
Its Village! Not Beautiful.
Now, n Galician village is not, as a
rule, a beautiful object. No artists
visit the country to paint Its cottages;
no authors waste superlatives on its
rustic charm. Indeed, the only thing
superlative about It is Its mud, which
Is as much a specialized product as a
London fog. In the winter, when the
snow Is hard, one may, if sufficiently
foolish and Inexperienced, walk down
the street without leggings reaching to
ly ruined; communication between
east and west is cut off by the line of
the opposing armies, which lies* flat
across the province from Yolhynla to
.the Carpathians; and very many of
the villages have been destroyed, as in
other parts of Poland. Whatever the
political fate of Galicia afte- the war,
the conqueror will have to rebuild its
industrial life from the foundation.
Ancient Lead Diggings.
Several Indian lead diggings and evi-
dence of smelting furnaces used by In-
dians many years ago have been found
by Charles E. Brown and Albert O.
Barton of Madison while studying thu
the knee and still emerge recognizably j Indian remains In Grant county, ac-
human; In high summer the mud cording to a
changes its form but not Its evil na- latest number of the quart
ture, by turning Into dust. But for the 1 tin of the Wisconsin Archaeological
rest'of the year It Is Just mud. Even ..oclety.
th women wear Wellingtons, and tuck | Although many evidences of Indian
oice was p.ei
respectful. Una Waiters looked up
in surprise. Then her face flushed and
a manifest em harassment was visible
in her pretty, innocent its*.
"I thank y- n. but—y'-s. if you
please." she sai i and wondered at her ,
own temerity.
Una was carrying two baskets and
one was unusually heavy. It was COT- j
ered with a wresting, newspaper fold-
ed neatly. Mr. Dtle Armstrong would
have probably wondered if he bad
guessed what it hid. He v ondered
at Its weight as be r*-'ieved her of the .
basket. Lina was able to carry the
basket on her other arm very com-
fortably.
"I think I know who yon are." spoke
her escort. "I have heard MNs Barton
speak of you."
"Yes. Nellie is my cousin." replied
Lina. "We don't see much of one an-
other. though. She Is away a good
deal and—"
Lina paused there and with tact Mr.
Armstrong changed the subject. He
understood without an explanation.
Miss Nellie Barton was the daughter
of a family of wealth. The Walters
folk were not blessed with social ad-
vantages. He chatted about the birds,
the flowers, the lake, the woods and
Lina was relieved and interested. Then
where the road turned and In sight
of a rude old hut. she put out her
hand timidly.
"I can take the basket now. if you
please." she said gratefully and the
young tnan scanned the depths of her
eyes with a realization that they were
true, tender eyes, the glowing glimpse
■ of which he did not soon forget.
He lifted his hat and strolled slow-
ly back the way he had come, reluct-
antly, too, for the lovely girl
seemed a natural part of the sweet.
; fresh vernal frame about them. He
was a broker from the city, a close
; friend of Ned Barton, brother of Nel-
lie, and he had been a guest at the
Barton palatial home for a week. Pur- i
posely invited or not. Miss Barton had
get her snares to capture him. as was
her rule with marriageable young men
of social prestige and money. Arm-
strong admired her. for she was regal-
ly beautiful, but he was conscious of
her wiles. There had been a surfeit
of her apparent wiles, and the contrast
between the proud beauty and the lit-
tle wild wood flower he had just left
was intense and soul-stirring.
"I say, Armstrong, flirting?" hailed |
a free and easy voice and Ned Bar- j
ton came into view, his fishing rod
across his shoulder. "Wasn't that Linu i
Walters?"
"Your cousin, she said." replied
! Armstrong. "Tell me about ber. I ni j
! Interested."
"Then don't let Nellie know it!" ad-
vised Iiaphazard Ned. "Truth Is, Nel-
, He cuts her. You see. the Walters 1
people are the poor branch of the fam-
ily and Nellie rather keeps the relsi-
1 tionship in obscurity. Not but what
Lina is a genuine trump. She's the
1 hrusest little scout I ever knew. Works
for her folks day and night and is
! happy and smiling over it. Poor Lina .
for she's every inch a lady. Carry-
ing something to Cncle Peter, I war-
rant"
"And who is Cncle Peter?" inquired
Armstrong.
"Oh, a sort of an outcast, a hermit
■ now. Poor, old, crossgrained. He once
! could have bought up the whole town,
but he got speculation in his blood
and it led him to ruin. Pity you didn't
have him for a client in those old gol-
den days of Ids. to steer him up against
real securities that paid real dividends.
One day there was an explosion thai
startled the town. His last fUJlar had
taken wings in the wake of a fading
gold mining scheme that swallowed up
something like five millions. Then he
shut himself up in that wretched old
shuck down the road anil lives to him-
self."
"And Lina that Is, Miss Walters?'
the crowd '
rouzti thi< k a
And L.na ber
he explained, "and 1
I don't leave much
hack, bot with the
II for a few hundr-i
or Lina. the ooly one
ho has stock to mc
] thin."
Jf appeared Arm-
si n.ng was about to leave. And Ann
-trwic had -the pleasure of escorting
her b.«De. After that he met her sev-
eral times. Armstrong extended his
vacation. eaHi Jay more and more at-
tracted by the sweet girl who was be-
g. naing to love him.
Ok day Cncle Peter died. It was
after the funeral that Armstrong met
Lina ad told her of the wt,i. She
Ms as grateful for the small bequest
as though her uncle had left a palace.
"Dear old uncle!" she murmured, the
tears ia her eyes. "I am glad I was
a comfort to him.
And then, as they strolled through
the woods. Armstrong felt that he
could no looger restrain his love. Sim-
ply, earnestly he asked her to become
his wife.
"We will look over this legacy of
yours." suggested Armstrong us they
neared the old hut.
An expression of commiseration
fame over his face as they entered
the cheerless, sparsely-furnished rnaia
room. It changed to wondering amaze-
ment as they penetrated to a smail
one adjoining.
For one whole end of it was papered
\ with a queer covering, the stocks Ln-
ile Peter bad bought years a gone, rep-
resenting his lost fortune. At the®
WHAT IS
LAX-FOS
lax fos is an Improved cascara
A Digestive Laxative
cathartic a*3 liver tonic
Fos is not a vrcret or Pafot MeJi-
c.se b-J! ti composed of tha following o^J-
f&s&iooed roots and herbs:
CASCARA BARK
BLUE FLAG ROOT
RHUBARB ROOT
BLACK ROOT
MAY APPLE ROOT
SENNA LEAVES
AND PEPSIN
fa L i-Fos tne Cashu is improved br
vne addmoo of these d gettve ingredient*
I. afcu-g it better than ordinary Cascaia,
aod thus the ^on b'.oatioo acts not oQiy as •
innis axatrre <tod cailurtic but 2>so
as a digesirve aod liver tc*rc. Syrup laxa-
tives are weak, bet Lax-Fos coxnwoes
streogth with palatable, aromatic tasie and
does aot gr:pe or disturb the stomach. Cns
bottle will provr L*x-Fos is invaluable for
onst:pat on. Indigestion cr Torpid L.*er
o*-"-- Co-.
Was Papered With
ering.
a Queer Cov«
Armstrong stared <'ttri<Ktsly. Sudden-
ly he ran hi.s hund across a dozen or ,
more greea and brown certificates.
"Keystone Consolidated!" he ex-
claimed, "why. y« ur uncle could never
have known."
"Known what.?* interrogated Lina
vaguely.
"That they have become one of the
most seasoned investments oo the mar-
ket. Two huiulxvd shares* four hun-
dred, two thousand. Preferred. Why.
Linn, you are ub actual heiress. \ ery
icarefuily we ruust soak them off that
wall, for they rvpreseut t^anething like
j one hundred thousand dollars market
value.**
And so, at the end of the strni^fct
| road so patiently traversed by gentle,
self-sacrificing Lina. there was fortune
au4 happiness supreme.
AT k JAPANESE FESTIVAL
As Tourist Describes It, It Is More
Like a Country Fair Than a Reli-
gious Rite.
The Skye Terrier.
The two Britii.il > iil'>rs lm<J ^tired
ticket.. f<ir tUe *bow atxl were stal-
ing at the Kkje terrier which had o
mill h hair tlrat It locked more like a
woolen rue tlwn a *Tiog.
"\VUi'*li etid w 'is' 'ead. Bill?" asked
one.
-BJowed If 1 know." was tb reply.
•But 'ere. Ill "tick a plD iu itn, and
you look which end bark*. '
SUP OF FIGS FIR
A GUILD'S
It is cruel to force nauseating,
' harsh physic into a
sick child.
Look back at your childhood day*.
Remember the 'dose ' mother insisted
on—castor oil, calomel, cathartics.
How you hated them, how you fought
against taking them.
With our children it different.
Mothers who cling to the old form of
physic simply don t realize what they
do. The children'9 revolt is well-found-
ed. Their tender little "lnsldes" ar
injured by them.
If your child s stomach, liver and
bowels need cleansing, give only deli-
cious California Syrup of Figs." It
action is positive, but gentle Millions
of mothers keep this harmless "fTOlt
laxative" handy; they know children
love to take it; that it never fails to
clean the liver and bowels and sweet-
en the stomach, and that a teaspoonful
given today saves a sick child tomor-
row.
Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottl*
of "California Syrup of Figs," which
has full directions for babies, children
of all ages and for grown ups plainly
on each bottle. Adv.
The tfcfference.
"DarlInt." Mtyi the fond wife, *1
ill Willi last ntitht that you pin me a
diamond necklace."
"Tou did';"
T—, and I woke up laughing Ilk* *
child."
••Huh. if F1 ti eaniPd that I gave yoa
a diamond nci Itn-v. I'd have wakened
the whole neighborhood with my
groans.''—Judge.
tbHr skirts Ir at the top.
Nor I* a fJalldan Interior much more
attractive. The house, which I* built
of ilay. 1* necessarily fashioned to re-
sist the cold, for the winds from the
north blow straight down on the prov-
ince. Even If the wiedow Is made to
open. It Is not opened from October to
May. I remember entering one such
cottage on so Kanter Sunday morning
notne years ago. The whole winter's
accumulation of stale, exhausted air
was Insupportable «fter the fresh
spring breeze out *** doors. A sick
! child
I lien with Its
Interrogated Armstrong.
"Oh, I supi>ose she has pitied his
loneliness. 1 hear he is growing fruil
and weak. The Walters people haven't
,n article published in tha I much to spare, but 'whut they have
er of the quarterly bulle- Una is probably sharing with himlve
met her lugging a haaket of coal down '
there several times. Fancy Nellie do- ;
lug that for him I"
All of which made a due impression
on Dal
hearted, true-soul
a new urrlvnl at the Barton place that
afternoon—a girl chum of Nellie and
her brother. Nellie proceeded to play
this young gentleman against Arm-
strong to urge up his jealousy and at-
; tentlon. Armstrong saw through the
: flimsy scheme and wtis. In fact, glad to
be relieved from so much of the cotu-
vlllage sites, cemeteries and planting
grounds have probably been destroyed,
the authors of the article were able to
find about 1"> village and camp sites,
and ten mound groups In I'lattevllle,
Harrison. Potosl and Paris townships
and In the vicinity of C'assvllle.
Some of the old Indlnn lead mines
were found within the city limits of
I'lattevllle. They consist of burrows
dug In the base of n hill near the , .....
water's edge. An Indian smelting fur- l*ny 'he sha ow c cm|U> ^
nace was discovered gome time ago In i "e 'tel>'
I'lattevllle township at a place known
«1I In the lar„'e family bed; a | at Tufa Falls. It consists of a hopper- , — „h„i„ „r
chicken, l.-„ed at me I shaped hole, lined with stone grates added to the clrcumsmntl.l, chaln_of
I went out to lkegamishrlne, a very
famous place, where the festival is at- |
tended by thousands. Inside the tenj-
ple different families hail set up their :
little shrines and the people sat
a rott tul aud peeled apples ami
crunched them or smoked and gos-
siped, while others beat on the ti.sh-
mouth woollen gongs and contacted
the ceremonies. Coppers rained Into
the bis bins In front of the iilols and
hundreds of candle prayers wavered ;
and flickered in the mass movement j
of religious riot. When the candle j
was two-thirds burned It gave way to
Armstrong, for he was a' tiig-1 another, for wax is valuable and can !
1 fellow. There was resold, and half a prayer must not
occupy the place that might be gt\en j
to a whole one.
Some people were evidently in a i
prayerful mood, hut squawkers and [
rubber apples on real branches will
typify the shrine to me. That and
the delicious peanut candy I bought,
and which left me with no desire for
qunll on toast when I returned.—T he
Christian Herald.
COVETED BY ALL
but possessed by few—a beautiful
head of hair. If yours Is streaked with
gray, or is harsh and stiff, you can re-
store it to Its former beauty and lus-
ter by using "La Creole" Hair Dress-
ing. Price S1.U0.—Adv.
The Limit.
"She loved him long."
"That's the way with women. They
never love us when we are short."
Grippy weather
this. Better get a
box of—
lookout for Lina, but he
did not meet her for .several day*. Be-
fore he did. there was another link
suspiciously from the other end of the
colored quilt; an inqulnltlve pig pro-
truded It* snout from beneath the bed.
The whole family «i«-pt In that bed at
night, except the husband, who occu-
pied the warm corner by the stove a*
of right; and the animal*, who repre-
upon which the lead ore was heaped
and covered with burning wood. The
melted lead dropped Into the hopper.
Puzzling.
Why i It women eager to go aho^
ping are unwilling to go markeUng?
Incidents appertaining to his formal
acquaintanceship with Lina. He was
passing the old hut one afternoon when
there came a feeble hall. Armstrong
made out a flgure seated In an arm-
thalr Just within the doorway. He
kjitw It must be Code Peter and ad-
Peculiarity of Peanut Growth.
It has been noticed thut the common
peanut grows In a peculiar wny that is
distinctly original. The little plant
send* up its shoots, with the fruit on
the end of a somewhat stiff stalk, and
then before It ripens the stem bends
over and carefully pushes the fruit uu
dergrouod.
CASCARAtfgUININE
The old family remedy-In tablet
form-sale, sure, eesy to take. No
opiates-co unpleasant after effect*.
Cures colds in 24 hours—Grip In 3
days. Money back if It tails. Get
the genuine boa with Red Top and
Mr. Hill's picture on It-25 cent*
At Am? Slort
GOLD
7% preferred participating stock In
Gold Dredging Company. Bank
references. If you will investi-
gate you will buy.
For particulars address
H. W.NclNTIRE
Lot Angeles, Gal.
mepyvA W*UonlC,('ol m «,Wufc-
Dl I pM I X inglon.DC Hooka fr*« HUfc-
In I Kale I W rtfirticu. b«l rasalta.
"RIINcs RATS"Sr.n.^Mr^£
GALLSTONE
W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 11-1917.
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Peters, Kay. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 29, 1917, newspaper, March 29, 1917; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc144960/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.