Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 143, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 18, 1915 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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PAGE SIX
SAPULPA HERALD, THURSOAY. FEBRUARY 18 1915.
Spring-
time
is a hard time to find
good things for the
table. If you will call
us we can help you as
we have everything on
markets.
v i
Beat Meats
Our own biff refrigerating
plant enables us to handle
meats in the most sanitary
manner
KING'S
Kash Koncern
PHONE 281
No Sausage Tastes
Like Ours
SKIN TROUBLES AND DIET
,_____,
REMOVAL I
I
The Hancock Clean-
ing works is now
located at 15 E.
Hobson. Send us
your cleaning,
pressing, remodel-
ing and tailoring.
Dermatologists Have Made Dlecovery,
and Give Valuable Advice to
the Afflicted.
There la reaeon to believe that there
la a cloee connection between many
forms of skin trouble and the diet
One significant thing ia the singular
stubbornness of many akin disorders
and their myseerloua tendency to recur
even when the physician continues the
form of treatment that at first seemed
to act as a care. Among these rebel
lions skin troubles are acne, eczema,
psoriasis and urticaria Ail four dl»
eases are likely to respond to treat-
ment at first, but too often they return
obstinately, as a stream of water re-
turns when It baa been swept back by
a broom.
That common characteristic has set
the physicians searching for acme
common underlying cause. As a re
suit of their investigations it Is gen-
erally believed that there is a direct
relation between the metabolism—that
Is to say, the chemical changes by
which food is transformed Into body
tissue—and the condition of the skin.
Hut although we accept it as a fact
that many kinda of akin trouble are
dependent on the diet, it la atlll nec
essary to experiment with each case
until we have found the particular diet
that Is best for It. After that has been
accomplished there is constant need
for the patient to exerelae all the self-
control be possesses, for these obstl
nate akin disorder* cannot be cured In
a few days or even a few weeks.
A regulated diet does not mean tlm
ply going without this or adding that
article of food. One leading dermatol-
ogist has defined It as "such a regula-
tion of the quantity and quality of food
and drink, Its mode of preparation,
and the time and method of its con-
sumption ss shall conduce to the res-
toration and maintenance of the health
of the body, Including the akin." The
patient, therefore, muat co-operate
faithfully with his physician or the
Cttre will fall—Youth s Companion.
I
Thi* week anc
Bargains may
Sapulpa stores.
every
be bought
week
Let us show you Henry Bowch Wall
Paper, Sample Hooks Paper at 2e
up We also hang paper and paint
Drop me a postal. All work guar
anteed.
H. H. WARD
IOC East Bryan Are.
MUCH IN THE APPEARANCE
I PHONE 968 I
I_____I
ROOFING
Ull.HPHT A FOSTER
Coupled With a Cheery Manner It Will
Greatly Help a Person on Hi*
Life'* Journey.
The matter of neatness of appear-
ance of tbelr stall is being Liken up
by employers very widely. One great
railroad has a "bureaif of neatr-ear/
through which all new conductors,
ticket sellers and other employees are
supplied with u little circular upon
the Importance of a neat appearance
A foreign ambassador, who ha*
served at several large capitals of
the world, told lately of an emissary
who hud returned to him from a mis-
sion and announced failure. "Were
[ you, may I ask, wearing that waist
coat?” with thumb Jerked In the dl-
| rectlon of the crumpled garment 'i
was.” "Then," said Iris chief, ”1 do not
marvel at your lack of success.”
Next to a cheery manner, a neat ap-
pearance Is any man's best capital
I The two together create an atmow
phere In which "luck" likes to linger
Success will not come to meet you
half way unless ; +\e- ; Inviting and
agreeable—Christian Herald.
Settlement
Notice
Having been appointed
administrator of the es-
tate of the late P. J.
Zachritz, I wish to
secure as early a set-
tlement as possible.
Suits will be brought
on all accounts not
settled before
March 2, 1915.
H, M. WATCHORN
Administrator
! IF YOU HAVE LOVED BEFORE
Be Sure Your Wife-to-Be Knows All
About It. for That Is the Na-
ture of Woman.
• _____
Some men teem to have the idea
that to tell a girl their old love af-
fairs is to make her jealous or un
easy henceforth.
This is quite a mistake, for if she
is that sort of girl she Is not worth
troubling about, and it's better to find
out in time, ss s marriage where com-
plete confidence does not reign on
both sides Is not likely to be a happy
one.
However, speaking generally, no
■enslble girl really fancies she is the
first and only love, for where is the
man. or the girl, for the matter of
that, who has never nad the shadow
of a passing tlrtatlon before the pres-
ent "adored one” appeared on the
scene? And, after all, it does not mat-
ter very much how many old love
affairs a man has bad. provided they
are dead and gone, and he can truly
impreas upon hit reigning sovereign
that she Is the best and truest and
the last A great many girls like to
feel that they are the chosen recipi-
ents of such confidences, and the mere
fact of being able to chat easily
about old flames will prove that no
sad remembrance Is attached
Even if you did happen to have a
serious attachment. It Is all the more
necessary to be absolutely straightfor-
ward about it.
Your fiancee will appreciate your
nonesty. and can feel that at all events
there are no unpleasant discoveries
to be made later on. for when confi-
dences come too late then real mis-
chief is done, and It takes a noble-
minded woman to forgive and forget
—Philadelphia Evening Ledger.
POSTERITY’S DEBT TO TINKER
I
Work
mm4 Ntpairiai
AM work iu
Hired
Falinnl** Famished
Ami i 10-389
Sopolpo
Sapulpa Ice Co.
ICE
Also Wood
and Coal
Deliveries to any part of
the city
We si Hobson
PHONE 121
AUTO STOLEN
See Geo. A. Smith,
the Insurance man
and have have him
injure your Auto
againet loss by FI RE
THEFT and other
hazards. Low rates in
Reliable Companies
PfIONK 213 and
he will do the rest
A Good Idea.
A certain mill owner was gettlni
very exasperated with his men ovet
the condition of the cloth which they
produced. Out of about every ten
lengths sent through to the warehouse
five or six of them had holes In. In
the hope of stopping this the pro
prletor informed the men that for all
the holes they made he would stop a
shilling In their wages. The next
week a length came in with two hole*
In It close together. The proprietor,
therefore, sent for the man who bad
done it and said:
"Now. Jones. 1 told yon that for
every hole that you made In the cloth
you would be fined one shilling, and
here Is a piece with two holes In."
Jones picked np the cloth and looked
at It, then suddenly tore the two holes
Into one.
“That saves a shilling, then,” he
said.
I
FOLLOW THE CROWO
MOST PEOPLE
EAT
AT THE
Cozv Lunch
•
—The answer is the best
service and the biggest
meal in the city for
25c
- Get the habit, if we can
not please you we don’t
want your money.
I
Itinerant Mender Furniahed Theme for
One of Wagner's Greatest
Compositions.
A tinker has established himself op-
posite our house and stunned my ears |
all day long with his Incessant ham- j
mering. In my disgust at never being j
able to find a detached house protect- |
ed from every kind of noise, I was on |
the point of deciding to give up com
posing altogether until the time when
this indispensable condition should be
fulfilled.
But It was precisely my rage over
the tinker that, In a moment of agi-
tation, gave me the theme for Sieg-
fried's furious outburst against the
bungling Mime. I played over the
childishly quarrelsome Bolter theme
In G minor to my sister, furiously
singing the words at the same time,
which made us all laugh so much that
( decided to make one more efTort.
This resulted in my writing down a
good part of the first scene by the
time Liszt arrived. October 12 (1856).
—Richard Wagner, In his Autobiogra-
phy.
I
I
Automobile
Service for Shopping and
Calls $1.00 per hour.
Phone 1020
A Hlitoric Weapon.
Mona, which henceforth is en-
shrined in British hearts, has long
been a household word for Scotsmen.
I Every boy Insists on an excursion to j
Edinburgh castle to see Mons Meg
For Meg was made In Flanders, and
did much havoc at the siege of Scot-
tish castles as well as in wars of ad-
venture Into England. Partly of wood
xnd partly of iron, the great gun was
put together late in the fifteenth cen-
tury. Cromwell captured it and listed
| it as "the great Iron murderer, Meg.”
While firing a salute for the duke of
York, in 1682 Meg burst A century’
later It was banished from Edinburgh
to the Tower of London as a useless
gun: but Sir Walter Scott saw ro-
mance and patriotism In Mons Meg,
ind persuaded the war office to send It
Back to the castle.—London Chronicle.
Sawdust as a Dressing.
Dr. Charles W. Cathcart urges In
the British Medical Journal the use
of plnewood sawdust as a dressing
for wounds. It must be obtained from
absorbent wood, sifted through a No.
8 sieve, and then through a No. 40
sieve to remove the dust. It must be
sewn up In sterilised gauze bags, loose-
ly filled, and these are placed upon
the wound They absorb the dis-
charges, deodorize the secretions and
.set to a slight extent as antiseptics.
Emptied ths House.
"There we were, a big audience In |
the house and the back of the stage .
on fire," said the vasdevllle manager.
"Mercy! What did you do?” asked
Slithers.
"Why," said the manager, “I went I
out before the curtain and announced
that as an extra Harrison Von Boob
had volunteered to tell the audience j
the story of how he eot from San Mo- |
rltx to tendon after flie war broke out. |
and In Just three mtnntes there wasn't |
a aoul left In the house!"—Judge.
For Automobile Tires
Union Hardware
Glut of Peach Stones.
A pile of 500 tons of peach stones
has accumulated at the entrance to a
great canning' factory In California,
where It has been the custom In other
years to crack the pips, ship the ker-
nels to Oermany for the manufacture
nt prussic acid, and other chemtcals,
and sell the shells for fuel. The Ger-
man demand has {alien o* this year.
Office
Rooms
C'EVKRAL FIRST-
*** Class single or con-
necting front rooms, all
light and airy, especially
adapted for office use
owing to their location
Dewey near Park. opp.
Court House. Phone 787
CHARLTON HOTEL
Sira. I ann y (iarSiiar. Prop.
Way ot the Modern Debtor.
Dodson and his friend Jones stood
tonverslng on the corner. Dodson
looked up. clutched nls companion by
the arm, and whispered: 'Hurry
Jim!” Around the corner they went
and made off up the street. Then
Jones called Dodson to account. ''Cred-
itors of mine,” answered Dodson "It
isn't like you to dodge creditors." said
Jones Are you up against It?” "Well,"
was the reply, "1 have enough in my
pocket tc pay him, and tf he caught
me 1 might do It. Now let's go and
4pend some of this money, so 1 can
give him an honest excuse if we should
happen to see him again.”
ROOMS — Single r House*
krvpinff, hot and cold water.
K«*> «ud electricity, beat ol to-
cation*, Dewey near 1‘ark. Tele*
l»b>mc 7S7. Charlton Hotel.
Memory.
To be convinced precisely of tue
fidelity and certainty of the memory,
we must bear in mind that the image
—idea or notion are equally good
names for image—is an unmistaken
and exact representation of the orlg
Inal impression. Unless there is this
assurance—and the slightest defect ol
the muscles, eyes, skin, ears and othei
senses precludes and interferes with
all possibility of accuracy—memory
plays us a continual series of Hal
loween tricks and April Fool jokes —
Dr. Leonard Keene Hirshberg.
Two Jobs Lost.
"There goes a man I might bav»
married," said Gertie.
"He? Why he married his stenog
rapher!" said Mabel
"I know it." replied Gertie. "I ap
piled for the same job Just ten min
utes after she was hired "
like
Couldn’t Expect Him To.
Lady—I'm afraid you don't
work, my good man.
Tramp—How kin I. mum? Work's
wot killed my pore- wife
Bring Your
Printing'
TO THE
Herald
Office
The Best Work at
the Best and Most
Largly Equipped
Printing Plant in
Eastern Oklahoma
nothing too big
NOTHING TOO SMALL
Quick Service and Good Work
We Aim to Please
Your Pleasure Is Our Pleasure
We Want to Show You what
Good Work Is
So Bring Your Next Job Here
Phones: 185-265
^ rl>
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Todd, O. S. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 143, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 18, 1915, newspaper, February 18, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1519070/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.