The Daily Ardmoreite. (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 106, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 8, 1916 Page: 3 of 8
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Ardmore Tuesday February
SAGETEA TURNS
GRAY HAIR DARK
It's Grandmother's Recipe to
Bring Back Color and
Lustre to Hair.
That beautiful even shade of dark
glossy hair can only be bad by brew-
ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sul-
phur. Your hair Is your charm. It
makes or mars the face. When it
fades turns gray streaked and looks
dry wispy and scraggy just an appli-
cation or two of Sage and Sulphur
enhances Its appearance a hundred-
fold. Don't bother to prepare the tonic;
you can get from any drug store a
50-cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and
Sulphur Compound" ready to use.
This can always be depended upon to
bring back the natural color thick-
ness and lustre of your hair and re-
move dandruff stop scalp itching and
falling hair.
Everybody uses "Wyeth's" Sage
and Sulphur because it darkens so
naturally and evenly that nobody can
tell it has been applied. You simply
dampen a sponge or soft brush with
it and draw this through the hair
taking one small strand at a time;
by morning the gray hair has disap-
peared and after another application
it becomes beautifully dark and ap-
pears glossy lustrous and abundant.
Constipation
When costive or troubled with con-
stipation take Chamberlain's Tablets.
The-.- are easy to take and most airree-
able in effect. Obtainable everywhere.
OKLAHOMA NEW
MEXICO & PACIFIC
RAILWAY COMPANY
TIME TABLE No. 6
In Effect 12:01 a. m. October 6 1915.
Supersedes Time Table No. 6
of September 6 1914
Westbound T. T. No. 6 Eastbound
No. 3 No. 1 Effective 12:01 No. 2 No.
Passenger Wednesday Passenger
Dally October 6th Dally
1915.
P.M. A.M. STATIONS A M. P.M.
Lv. Lv. Ar. Ar.
3:00 7:00
2.0
3 05 7:04 West Ardmore 10:25 6:44
7.
3 J0M7:25 Lone Orove 10:05 6:20
9.7
4:05 7:55
Wilson
9:35M5:50
10.01
33
4:45 8:35 Rlngling 8:55 5:15
P.M. A.M. STATIONS A.M. P.M.
Ar. Ar. Lv. Lv.
W. J. STONEBURNER
Gtm. Superintendent
Kansas milling C9
WCHITA KAKISA
AT YOUR GROCER'S
PLRCELL WHOLESALE GROCERY
Distributors
J. W. Agec
The Cash
GROCER
Phone No. 167
Your Patronage
Appreciated
HIM .UVFTyni? 11
tramp
111
8 1916.
FOURTH ANNUAL AUTOMOBILE
SHOW IN KANSAS CITY MO.
Kansas City. Mo. l-Yb. 7. Motor
oars 4'iip of them angregatina; ap-
proximately three niillion dollars in
value were in place today in the
J. I. Case buildins for the opening of
the tenth annual automohile show of
Kansas City which will continue until
Saturday night.
The show this year surpasses all
previous efforts according to K. E.
Peake secretary of the Motor Car
Dealers' association of Kansas City.
Ninety-six motor car exhibitors and
fifty-six accessory exhibitors showed
the latest models and fashions today
on 140n0ii square feet of floor space.
Because of the great number of
cars it was impossible to show the
exhibits in Convention hall as here-
tofore so the directors chose the
Case building. Kach of the four floors
of the building lias been decorated
niasnilieenl ly. The first floor w as
transformed into an artist's concep-
tion of a lesson in preparedness
red white and blue bunting. Amer-
ican flags and pictures of President
Wilson were used in abundance. The
next floor is modeled after the gar-
d"ns of Monte Carlo. On the third
floor visitors found themselves in a
scene repres'MitiiiK Ihe Casino de
Vichy and on the fourth lloor a typi-
cal Japanese garden formed the back-
ground for the many models of motor
cars. It is estimated that $:!0flilO was
spent for I lie (h coral ions.
Chassis runabouts louring cars
landaulets. rounes. and limousine.-!.
all the latest accessories and eery-j
thing interesting to the motor carj
public were displayed today.
SOUTHERN CANNING CLUB
GiRLS SWELL FARM P"OFIlS
.iitiihern farm gills are setting a
re.-oMl which their northern si--' r.-
may find difficult to equal. In the fif-
teen southern states nearly iiO.OOO
girls are now enrolled in girls' can-
ning clubs which are organized as a
part of Ihe agricultural extension
work of the department of agricul-
ture. The purpose is to encourage
girls to grow tomatoes and other
vegetables in tenth-acre ganlens and
to can their products for home use
HAIR COMING OUT?
Dandruff causes a feverish irritation
of the scalp the hair roots shrink
loosen and then the hair comes out
fast. To stop falling hair at once and
rid the scalp of every particle of dan-
druff get a 25c bottle of Danderine
at any drug store pour a little in your
hand and rub it into the scalp. After
a few applications the hair stops com-
ing out and you can't find any dan-
druff. ft CHILD HATES OIL
CALOMEL PILLS FOR
Lie AND BOWELS
Give "California Syrup of Figs" f
cross sick feverish
constipated.
Look back at your childhood days.
Remember the "dose" mother insisted
on castor oil calomel cathartics.
How you hated them how you fought
against taking them.
With our children it's different.
Mothers who cling to the old form
i of physic simply don't realize what
they do. The children's revolt is
well-founded. Their tender little
"insides" are Injured by them.
If vour child's stomach liver and
bowels need cleansing give only deli
cious "California Syrup of Figs." It?
action is positive but gentle. Mill-
ions of mothers keep this harmless
"fruit laxative" handy; they know
children love to take It; that It never
falls to clean the liver and bowels
and sweeten the stomach and that a
teaspoonful given today saves a sick
child tomorrow.
Ask your druggist for a 50-cent
bottle of "California Syrup of Figs"
which has full directions for babies
children of all ages and for grown-
ups plainly on each bottle. Beware
of counterfeits sold here. See that
it is made by "California Fig Syrup
Company." Refuse any other kind
with contempt.
DON'T FREEZE
WHEN YOU CAN BUY
COTTON AT 8 CENTS
Clean :: Batted
Ready for Quilts
NOW PUT UP IN NICE
PACKAGE 3 LBS. UP.
ARDMORE OIL & MLG.
CO.
THE DAILY
or sale. The clubs are under the
siipenisiou of nearly V woman
agents who represent the department
of agriculture and the extension de-
partments of the state colleges.
It is found from the reports of
the woman agents that during the
first year or menmer.-riTp caring for
one crop preferably tomatoes even
a very ambitious girl has all the work
she can do. In the second and later
years however girls are encouraged
to raise two or three different kinds
of vegetables in their plots and to ex-
tend their canning operations to other
products of the farm. Thus surplus
fruits and vegetables are not only
kept from going to waste but are
made a source or profit.
Complete figures of profits are not
yet compiled. The last available com-
pilation shows that 7.7M canning club
girls put up l91Snl cans jars and
oilier containers of fruits and vege-
tables which were worth conserva-
tively $2S4SSO. of which nearly Ji'on-
oO'i wits profit.
Has Used Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy for 20 Years.
"Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has
been used in my household for the
past twenty years. I began giving It
to my children when they were small.
As a quick relief for croup whooping
cough and ordinary colds it has no
ennal. IVing free from opium and
other harmful drues I never felt
afraid to give it to the children. I
have recommended it to a large num-
ber of friends and neighbors who have
used it and speak highly of i'." writes
Mrs. Mary Minke. Shortsv i!le X. V.
Obtainable everyw here.
LETTER LIST
List of Unclaimed Letters at Ardmore
Postoffice January 31.
Ladies
r.'alies Relic
Heranihatii Mrs. Mary
Pi ley Kmma
Brown Miss Frances
Brown Miss Mayme
Burton Mrs. Cr. W.
Cleveland Sophia
Ilebeck Mrs. Frances
Forsher Miss Maud
Freexe Mrs. Kliza
Cardncr Mrs. Lena
Gregory Mrs. Mary
Luster 'Mrs. Hell
Lins Mrs.
Nicholson Mrs. F. K.
Pennington Mrs. ilattie
Shavers Mrs. Chas.
Sinallwood. Ktter
Smith Kster
Smith Mrs. Minnie
Sullivan Mrs. Maftie
Taylor Mrs. Viola
Williams Miss Laura
Gentlemen
Batty Geo.
liearman S. W.
Bowie W. H.
Powles C. A.
Bridges Albert
Burch J. T.
Burton. A. C.
Burch J. E.
Champion R. R.
Clark Andrew
Croider Mr.
Crawford. A. T.
Green J. W.
Hinshaw Prof. E. B.
Howard Will
James I II
Jenkins G. W.
King. J. IC 2
Mcintosh. A. L..
Mitchell Rallie
Milton Harry W.
Moore. T. C.
Petty G. R.
Pickens. Horres
Reed. .1. L.
Rollins. T. R.
Sbeid. M. V.
Shipman F.dd
Smith Robert F.
Stie Ave
Thompson i?. T.
Whitaker Sam
Winset Lewis
Williams John
Young Dock
PROGRESS IN BUILDING
ALASKAN RAILWAY
"When I came out last fall from
Fairbanks" said Thomas R. Jtiggs
Jr. a member of the Alaskan engin-
eering commission. Jr. Washington
the other day "my feet rested on
$150000 worth of gold bricks not
fake ones the real thing."
Mr. Riggs came the greater part of
the w-ay by stage. But even now in
the dead of winter the government's
railway builders are making the dirt
rock ice and snow fly in Alaska at
such a pace that soon this gold will
reach the coast by rail. Rail connec-
tion tapping the famous Matanushka
coal fields probably will be opened up
next summer. The through line from
Seward the southernmost port on the
Alaskan gulf to Fairbanks in the
heart of Alaska probably will be com
pleted within four years.
This task of "opening up Alaska"
is tuin to that of "opening up the
west" which has been so vigorously
undertaken by President Wilson and
Secretary of the Interior Franklin K
Lane. The railroad is the wedg' by
which Alaska will be opened to uV
ARDMOREITE
velopment. It is likely in the end to
become but one of a network of rail-
roads. Alaska is not nearly as frigid a
proposition as most peopre think. The
new railroad will not take you "the
farthest north by rail." In Alaska
now running from Nome to Shelton
there is a little narrow-gunge line
which penetrates a good deal further
north thna Fairbanks; and from Fair-
banks another narrow-guago line goes
46 mines north into the Chatanika
mining district. The old Russian
line from I'etrograd to Archangel runs
further north than the Nome-Shelton
line and the new Russian road from
Petrocrad to F.katorina heats the Am-
ericas farthest - north by rail still
more
The Alaskan railroad will open up
the Nenana coal fields to consump-
tion in Fairbanks. The entire vicin-
ity of this chief mining city of central
Alaska is now practically denuded of
wood Cut wood for fuel use is cheap-
er in the larger cities of the Vnited
States than in Fairbanks. They are
paying from ten to fifteen dollars a
cord for wood in Fairbanks this win-
ter. When the railroad Is opened
coal can be delivered at Fairbanks
from t!u' Nenana fields at a ton.
For luel. a ton of coal equals two
con!- of w ooil.
TV:- i" i- more catarrh in t'ds sec
tiiui .if t.:e country than all other dis-
eases put together and for years it
Wil- -appo.-ed to lie incurable. Doctors
presc-;b-d local remedies and by
cou-i.int'v f.ii'.ing to cure wHh loci!
treat. -n. pronounced it incurable.
Cat i.-r.i iJ a local disease creatly in-
t'liu lie .1 lv constitutional conditions
ami therefore requires coti-titutioral
trea'n.eti'. Hail s Catarrh Cure man
ufactured by I-. .1. I 1 1 e n e y v v o. i o-
ledo. Ohio is a i-onsriintional remedy
is taken mtern.rlly ahd acts through
the lil.it. tl on the mucous surfaces of
the .-v-teiii.. One hundred dollars re-
ward is offered for any case that
Hall's Catarrh Cure fails to cure.
Send for circulars and testimonials.
F. .1. CHKXKV & Co . Toledo Ohio.
Sold bv druggists 7.c.
Hill's Family Pills for constipation.
Dispensation of Providence.
C. R. Sanders a negro cotton picker
who lives near the little town of Em-
pirn Ga.. woke up at midnight with
i yo-'J to find that his warm bed was;
31'cupied by a large fat 'possum.
3eorge was badly scared not knowing
U first that it wasn't a rattlesnake or
v w illowampus. When he got a match
ind lighted the kerosene lamp he be-
iield Urer' 'Possum curled up in hi3
blanket. "I reckon de Lord has sent
'ou an' here you' so gwlne ter stay''
fie remarked as he seized Mr. 'Possum
jy the tail. Next day George ami his
'anilly had a feast of baked 'possum.
Man-Power.
There is a distinct difference be-
tween power and endurance. The av-
erage woman seems to have quite as-
much endurance ns the average man:
but in actual physical power she is
entirely outclassed. In a series of
experiments to determine this point
it was found that the average energy
a man can develop is one-fifth horse-
power that of a woman only half as
much. The machine for making the
tests is a bicycle mounted on a fixed
frame and geared to a brake wheel.
The person under test works the ped-
als and the point at which the frictioa
of the brake causes the machine tt
atop indicates the horse-power he baa
reached.
Meaning of the Crescent.
The Turkish crescent although now
regarded as essentially Mohammedan
in significance was it uppears of
Christian origin. A crescent moon
was the emblem of the Byzantine em-
pire and of the Eastern church. The
Turks adoptetl it as n badge of tri-
umph after the capture of Constan-
tinople in 14.7!. With reference to
the crescent tho story of the origin
of the c rescent-shaped Vienna roll is
worth recalling. It arose in th six-
teenth century when the Turks were
besieging Vienna. Failing to carry it
by assault they began to mine tho
walls. At that period the city's bake-
houses were in the walls under the
fortifications and when the mines
were almost through the sound of the
work was heard in the underground
bakehouses and an alarm was given.
To celebrate this event the bakers of
Vienna adopted the Turkish emblem
as the form In which to mold and
bane their bread.
TREX! IF RHEUMATIC
OR CONSTIPATED
Twenty-Five Cents Worth is Plenty:
Try it. Take Harmless Soothing
Trex For Just a Few Days.
Then no more intense rheumatic
pains; good - bye chronic miserable
constipation; no more sore aching
honk TmT U wonderful. Acts right
toff. Trex induces natural drainage of
the entire system: promptly opens
your clogged up liver and bowels
cleans the stomach of fermenting gas-
sy foods and waste; eliminates irri-
tating rheumatic poisons; relieves fe-
verishness headaches dizziness and
bilious misery. Don't stay "knocked
out" any longer. Get this quick relief
today. l'rc at F. J. Ramsey or direct
from It. H. Denton & Co. (Not lac).
J Ueardstown Illinois.
:: r: 3 a
st a
:: RAL ESTATE TRAN3FERS St
St Furnished by SS
SS Clii.'kasaw Title Company SS
SS .bonded Abstractors-. SS
tt a
a a a- a :: a a a a a a a a s a tt
William K. Carney to Jennie Be-
atrice Carney. Warranty Deed. Part
section L'S :.:.'!e. anil "ti !!sKe.
.1. E. Hamilton and wife Millie L..
to W. II. P.-ater Harold Wallace S.
A. Applo ami Wirt Franklin Warranty
Heed. Prater one fourth interest
Harold Wallace one-fourth Intel rat
Apple one-eighth interest and Frank-
lin one-eighth interest in lot3 1 and
J section t .Js.Tw.
L. C. IlivicK and wife Mae. to It.
B. . Myers II. G. Rowley and C. O.
Doss Warranty I ced. Part secfl.m
It! :!w.
W. D. Fra:.ter guardian of Ella
Jones a minor: to J. S. Mullen. Guard-
ian's Deed. I ndivided one fourth in
terest in and to part section It! and
:'I :'s:!w.
B. II. Met Tendon and w ife. Susie
to labia .1 Btii ficls. Warm nly Deed.
Lots : and I in block :' in Goodell
add. Hon :-:.. V vr"son.
Food That Ooesn't Show Oirt.
One day i visited a delicatessen'
shop to ask tn owner to cover th-)
food. His repi was "I can't keep
all my food in .. glass case.'' A survey
of the .store si owed me that he had
a glass ase in: which he had carefully
placed all of his canned goods while
on the top of tho case then was a
display of salads and cooked meat:!
I asked him why ho didn't reverse
tho situation ami lie said ' I hadn't
thought of it." Probably he hadn't
but to my mind came this thought:
Canned goods would have to he dusted
every morning but mayonnaise ami
potato salad and lemon pies do not
have to be- dusted. Housewives'
League Maga.me.
TRY IT! SUBSTITUTE
FOR NASI CALOMEL
Starts Your Liver Without Making
You Sick and Can not
Salivate.
Every druggist In town your drug-
gist and everybody's druggist has not-
ticed a great falling-off lti the sale of
calomol. Tliey all give the same rea-
son. Dodson's Liver Tone Is taking its
place.
"CalomiJ is dangorous and people
know It while Dodson's LIvor Tcno is
perfectly bafe and givoa better re-
sults" si'.id a prominent local druggist.
Dodson's Liver Tone Is personally
guarantied by every druggist who
soils It. A large bottle costs 50- cents
and If it fails to givo oay roilef In
every case of liver sluggishness and
constipation you havo only to- sk for
your money back.
Do'lson's Liver Tone is a pleasant-
tasting puroly vegetable remedy
hnrmtuss to both children auJ: adults.
Take a spoonful at night aivl wako up
feeling line; no biliousness sick head-
ache acid stomach or constipated
bowels. It doesn't gripe or cause In-
convenience all the next day like
violent calomel. Take a dose- of calo-
mel today and tomorrow you will feel
weak sick and nau.sea.ted. Don't lose
a day's work! Take Dodson's Liver
Tone instead and feel fine full of vlg-
give to children; they like IL
or and ambition.
aau'-aaaaaaarsaaa a
a a
ARDMOREITE tt
St SUBSCRIBERS tt
It
St If at any time you fail to tt
tt receive your paper by C: 30 p. St
a m. on week-days or by 8:00 a. tt
tt m. on Sundays and will phone tS
tt No. 5 I will send you a paper tt
tt by special delivery boy lranis- tt
tt diately upon receipt of your tt
tt call. tt
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tl died If call is not received on tt
tt or before time stipulated. tt
tt R- T. MEEKER tt
tt Circulation Mgr. tt
tt
tttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt
BEST OF LEATHER
and
WORKMANSHIP
On Every Job of
Shoe Repairing
Cross Electric Shoe Shop
Phone 125 J 8 N. Wash.
WE CALL FOR ANO DELIVER
PAGE THREE
Mil
KEEP FEET DRY
Tells Rheumatism Sufferers to
Take Salts and Get Rid
of Uric Acid.
Rheumatism is 30 respecter of age.
sex color or ranU If not the mosf.
dangerous of human afflictions it Is
one of the most painful. Those sub-
ject to rheumatism should eat less
meat dress ns warmly ns possible
a i on! any undue exposure and aobve
all drink lots of purr- water.
Rheumatism is caused by uric acid
which is generated in the bowels and
adsorbed into the blood. It is the
function of the kidneys to filter this
acid from the bloo.l and cast it out
in the urine; the pores of Ihe skin are
also a means of freeing the blood of
this impurity. In n.tmp and chilly
cold weather the skin pores are closed
thus forcing the kidneys to do double
work they become weak and sluggish
and fail to eliminate this uric acid
which keeps accumulating and circu-
laiing through the system eventually
settling in the joints and muscles
causing stiffness soreness ami pain
called rheumatism.
Ar the first twlnire of rheumatism
get from any phainincy nliout four
ounces of Jail Salts; put a tablespoon-
fill in a glass of water and drink be-
fore breakfast each morning for a
week. TIi is is said to eliminate urie
acid by stimulating the kidneys to
normal action thus ridding the blood
of these impurities.
Jad Salts is inexpensive harmless
and is made from ihe acid of grapes
and lemon juice combined with llthia
and is used with excellent results by
thousands of folks who are subject to
rheumatism. Here you have a pl".s-
ant effervescent lithia-water drlr.ic
which overcomes uric acid nn.I is
beneficial to your kidneys as well.
A ae.ild. burn or severe rut heals
stuulv If neirlected. The family that
keeps a bottle of MALLARD'S SNOW
LINIMENT on hand Is always pre-
pared for such accidents. Price 1:5c
50c and $1.00 per bottle. Sold by
Bomar Drug Co.
FREE
TRAVEL
INFORMATION
We have for the convenience-of
prospective travelers a well
equipped information bureau. If
you have a half-formed notion of
making a winter trip t
Tlaas
Florida
California
or to some of the oig eastern
cities and want to know what It
will cost drop a postal card to
the undersigned. We will be glad
to tell you all about train ear-
vice co it of railroad and sleep-
ing car tickets and so forth. We
will also send you without
charge. Illustrated descriptive lit-
eratur.t. A BrLTON
?aesenger Traffic Maaaser
9avtt Louie
FRAIEY BROS.
PLANING MILL
Manufacturers of
Windows Doors Frames
and all kinds of Interior Finish
A Specialty on
Window and Door Screens
TELEPHONE 324
402 North Caddo Street
Tired!
Ar yoa tirJ? ra iommt
Is Trylhill T ? Not
il la net Uainaaa. Ton ar ilL Tear
Tta ! loaia. Yoar 8oaah.
fcidaar aaJ Llvar mmmd atirriatf aa.
Noihiag will do Ihia b.ttar loaa
Electric
Bitters
50c. and S1.09 AH Dru4t
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Easley, John F. The Daily Ardmoreite. (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 106, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 8, 1916, newspaper, February 8, 1916; Ardmore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc154446/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.