Daily Ardmoreite (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 5, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 15, 1918 Page: 2 of 6
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o
I
- MB BTaTaTaV
AMERICA JS MOTHER
JF GREAT INVENTIONS
50ME OF THINGS THE KAI
SER AND GERMAN CEOPLE
ARE UP AGAINUT.
. In his articles in the Wall Street
ournal on "Captains of Industry"
'. C. Forbes takes up the inven-
ivc genius of America to conihat
lie (ierinan claim that (icrnmnx
(! the world in the field of in en-
ions. He sax tli.U America can-
hot only niatcli Ucrniain s recoru
Km show live xx onderftil inventions
or everv one liennanv can hoasi.
nehlcnt.'illy he .-hows that a nre.it
nany of the inventors here con-
rary to general belief were aide
. o make fortunes out of their dis-
coveries or evolutions. Jn other
.vords t lies had fonie rotnniercial
ensc in spite of their inventive gen-
us.
Here are some of the American
leviecs: Fleet ric 1 tlit in talking
riachitus storage batteries nioviioj:
lictures. poiirc.l cement house-
rollev car stock ticker ivpcxvritcr.
i .1 ......
mmeoyrapn. ilnpicx irict;i apn;. .
ueless appartus anbiiiarinc tori-Joes.
All ol the treat airricul-
;urai implement list from Whit-
icx's cotton jmii ili i ii to tractor-
(Juki's lhre-hlnt; machines di-c
.low- etc.
I lien the pel lection of the tele-
ihoiie and it- pioper uiiliiie-. lor-e
a ;th his telegraph. W riht hrnt li--r-
xvilh airetaft. I'nltuii s i 1 1 1
-tf-ainbuai. and modi rn navie- di-
ed descendant- of l-.iieson's iil.ni-
tor ami the -ulnnai nu- il-eii. .in
American laiil the lirst ocean ca- ;
;.le. American- perfecte d the rail- j
i.oad with its yreat locomotives!
P.ullnian ears and air brakes as1
Ixvcll as signals- and automatic carl
couplers. Moreover the method of
constant telegraphic cotnintiuica-i
ion with moving trains.
;: France invented the automobile I
Iind Henry Ford made it j.o.-.siu.o
for i-vcrxbo.lv to oxxn one so that j
America dominates this field lor.
Ii he world and supplies it xxitli low
priced car-. Then the cash register.
adding machines dictagraph the
I sewing machine slioe maeiiincix
modern buildings pctlectctl printing'
processes cantilever iniugcs n.u-t
Ccvized steel and so on until you1
i . i i -.. i
come to army woik tuc niacinm-
kiiin the revolver ami the repealing'
rifle all American creations. :
Ol course thi- is not the entire
list by any means lor we make the
best machinery in I be world for all
purposes and the bc-l machine
tools but the list is long enough .to
create a pleasant feeling all through
one's anatomv and to inspire a con
fidence in what our fellow Ameri-
cans will be certain to do in the xxay
ol new weapons and other xxar es-
sentials provided they are called
for.
.Perhaps there have been few in-
ventions of great importance m the
last eighteen months (and there
. may have been but tor war reason.-
. not given to the public) but greater
than genius has been the woiideriul
executive ability displaxcd in the
transport of huge armies acro-.s the
llautic. with all their impediments
Mid the xx underfill coiisli ucl ion of
railroads pier- harbor facilities etc.
Although it may be egotism wc
American have no reason to be
jshamed of ourselves in ibis war
hue on the contrary we can ju.-t-
lv
le i ry pr
And as the
uch-afis io
md.
proud
Nation xx b
i xei man I .in . J.m-
:". ;:ml the I'nr.-uit of Happiness
..e cheerfully xxillingly unselfishlx
. :u! p.'iiriotically lend our dollars
io our l ;o eniuieiii on its Liberty
Vonds for the -pleading of this gos-
pel of true democracy to the nations
.-.lid peoples of the earth.
MISSISSIPPI RIVER
"OPENING" CELEBRATED
Xew ( i leans ( let.
I.- reb graiu-
ot congratulation on
Ihe revival ol
river traflic belixeei
and St. I.oui-. sent
i New Orleans
by 1 'ri-idcut
ti son and ."secretary
ot I oinnieive
Kedfield were lead
vesterdav attend'
at a ltinrbeo'i late
i'd by prominent
business nun
the nxv boat.
and held just before
Nokoinis and two
bares started
up -treani xxun
tons of freight. The Nokonn
barges arrived here Wednesday
a cargo from St. I.oui-.
and
XX itll
HUN PAPER DEMANDS !
KAISER QUIT THRONE
Zprich. Switzerland. Oct. 13. !
(Sunday; In an txtraordinarilx
outspoken article the I'ranki-che
Tagespost. the Nuremberg socialist
organ flatly demands the abdica-:
tion of the (ierinan emperor. It lc- i
Clares that the responsibility for the
present situation rests on him and ;
savs that as the military system is i
!ab'out to collapse lie must be the ;
'.last of the military monarchs.
Lax-Fos With Pepsin.
A liauid digestive laxative pleas
ant to take. Just try one 50c bottle
for indigestion or constipation. jov !
' made and recommended hy tlie
f manufacturers of Grove's Tasteless
'chill Tonic adv.
a FINS ASK GERMANS
TO QUIT COUNTRY
C Stockholm Oct. 13 (Sunday)
aThe Finnish government has asked
f.ermany to wtihdraw her troops
irom Finland. The request was re-
cently delivered to General von dcr
Goltz the German high command-
er on Finnish territory.
THEY DESERTED THE HUNS
II. ip is ilio fiisi if r i - lii'iinun.s eomiiiK nut of ii cellar (in the YVntein front
whi le thev liuil l.iil.l.Ti n eseiipc from tile Herman yoke. They xvaiteil in lililintf
mull the ainviil ..I' the Itrllisli ami Ihen Kave themselves llt.
lirilish OITIi'lal riintoi;i aph. H I I'nderxvi.nil &. I'liilei vvooJ
THE BRITISH FRONT
Reciprocal News Service
Relayed by Kansas City Office
(Hy Ceovge T. live.)
American 1'ress H eadtpiarters
r.ritish Front. Oct. 8. We set out
early this morning to .see the start
of the battle which in its spread-
ing vastness promises to be of almost
decisive importance. P.cforc dawn
we motored through frosty mists
toward the lines held bv Ameri-
!cans fiiditintr with llritish. Wc had
an idea of the objectives of the
l'.rtish division which are 'being at-i
tained long before schedule time and j
ithat the American-' part would be i
; to advance some 4.01 III yards and take!
! the villages of P.rancourt and Pre-
1 inont which they did before noon.
In fact the speed of the advance
I was such that a certain ridge be-
yond I'.eanrevoir recoininended to
t us a- the best high ground to watch
j the Yank and Tommies fighting
together was out of the zone of
I battle a little more than two hours
after the attack. At live o'clock xve
had to press ou beyond. The first !
we knew that the battle was going j
well xxas when a llritish intelligence
otlicer reported that an airplane had I
dropped a uies-ago reading "F.ne-
my routed." That's all. This was j
-non corrohorated as xve sped on.
by the sight of llrili-h heavy gun-
being pulled forward by tractor engine-.
Such big artillery would not
be dragged forward if the attack
had not succeeded in driving the
( iermans backward.
The night which had been thickly
black and had given the Third Ar-
my its desired color for a storming
of dense iic-i- of machine gnus on
the gla-sy -lopes jn-t south of Catll-
I rai changed in a -tarry dawn. 'Ihen
we bad a .old dining rain with two1
rainbows in ibe night sky which!
we interpreted as ;i good omen.
'I Ii ri nigh village only recently re-'
covered from the enemy dilapidate
ed hulks of villages uc passed Kois-j
el. and were soon in count ry that
the t.ennnns have held since lvl-l.
I .v erv w here their signs hung to
xx reekage of buildings and trunks of
trees and ex cry where x e saw heaps
of their w ar m i! erial.
Road Workers Busy
I hat winch struck its most nn
iiiiprcs-ively was the vast milliner
of road workers of the British al-nio-t
elhow to elbow along ihe xxay
working tiv.-iishlv to keep the roai
in repair for the heavy columns
. I
i
tran-ports. .-bell boh
x ere ipiickiy idled
(Ileal mines that I
s iii the road
and levelled.
Iermans had
pl.m'e.l
.sonic ca
ration i
detours
lleccssil.iii d
si's f.liii.g up
f Ii inpoi .11 y
. 1 1 d g 1 1 1 g 1 11
r the prepa-
senn'-cireular
great cavities.
around Hi
Tin
iinmeu - e amount of 1 1 at fie Coin - I
ing and going xxa- regulated won-
derfully well and we only had a half!
minute'.- delay when a heavy truck
skidded aero- -the road xxith its!
rear wheel.- in a ditch. Two oilier
pres-ively was tip.
had the toad clear
unbroken t ran -port
ammunition food s
vast number1
n the almost !
line carrying1
nal wire and '
all sorts of battle equipment to
tlie
fighters were a great manv British
Kid Cross ambulance
i - -. .s
liurrving to I
&
IIH. Ul tU I L V 1 I I l -Mill MdlMMI. I
Awav on the hoi to our left I
was a steady line of smoke which 1
xve decided to be a resumption of i
barrage bv the Third Am y prob.
ablv for a further attack. Ahead audi'
'
to the right of us were less thick i
clouds of smoke indicating that the
Fourth Army artiUcrv under its
different plan of action had finished
nost G js wor-K -c c0j als0 se
i;ritisi observation balloons all
along tiie front. Squadrons of Brit
ish airplanes in formations of threes
fours and fives. which we had been
watching as thev buzzed over
us
for two hours now flew at right
angles to our course in other words
up and down the front. From low
heights and at great altitudes around
them appeared little black dots thai
merely changed into shrapnel puffs.
We saw a great many dead
horses quite a fexv of them along
the road. There were a number of
Tommies engaged in burying them.
Before xx e realized it xve xvere far
foi w ai d.
Although we had passed British
- -i
uu-ries ui various cabbies and had
them firing we concluded
line was still distant be-
ui-e there was absolutely no re
taliation by the enemy. We were
not to hear or see the explosion of
a single ( ierinan shell. 1 11" ever
climbing to what seemed the high-
est ground ahead of the sausage bal-
loons xve noticed that the shell holes
we walked around were fresh
enough to have been made a fexv
hours before. We also noticed the
embroidery-like designs made in the
soft earth by bullets of the enemy
machine guns which had evidently
trained in a barrage on this hill
then some fresh blood and scissored
bits of bloody khaki evidence of
fust aid followed by dressings dur-
ing the morning.
Advanced Dressing Stations
Close at hand xve came to the
j most advanced dressing station
j where British. American and (ier-
I man wounded xvere being brought
in by stretcher bearers and ambu-
j lances. The station was in an open
I field but the Royal Engineers had
leardy cut a roadway up to the op-
already cut a roadway up to the op-
ling of the stretchers. 'I he doctors
in charge wire American officers
but their orderlies anil the ambu-
lance staff were all English. The
doctor in command apologized for
not shaking hands as his were cov
ered wuli hlood. Many ol the I oni-
tiiics who had helped to dress or
carry wounded Yanks had blood on
their uniforms. Carolina boy very
slight of build was the only one
crying with pain lie had a body
wound which no dope could relieve.
As soon as he had been examined
the British sergeant in'' charged of
the loading of the ambulances
! looked gravely at his tag and or-
j dered him lifted gently into the first
ambulance to leave. As the stretch-
I er w as lifted the boy screamed. The
j big Tommy leaned oxer him and
j stroked the Yank's face. "There
'steady little boy." he kept repeat-
i ing. "Steady steady." The Yank be-
j came miiet. Another Yank who said
he was from the stockyards at Mem-
phis told of three (iermans xxith a
! machine gun who hail kept him on
Ill's stomach for quite a time. When
j lie worked around them they sud-
! denly held up their hands and cried
"Kamerad." "But 1 didn't come all
i the way over here for nothing
stranger" said the Tennessecan in
reply pushing out his lips oddly a
if about to spit. Both his arms and
lone of his shoulders were heavily
'bandaged but he didn't seem to
i .. i
realize it. :
"Better jump in here lad and get
a seat" said the Tommy who was
loading the char-a-hanc with walk-
ing wounded "or these boche will
squeeze you out."
Soon the chara-banc with its mot-
i ley collection of Yanks. Tommies
' and (iermans. all some?vhat slupor-
I ous with drugs and injections moved
down the road.
A Tommy who insisted he wanted
fresh air and preferred to walk to-
xxard the casualty clearing station
probably several miles in the rear
said that his wound as well as most
of the others were cases caused
by shraptu-l. In fact we had heard
OH SIOCHIIS 111.11 UIOC WU..S
nor a single uaxonei cas-- ami xriv
r i. : "... At .
1 1 v i in iir Kii" wuunus. . iiist
. . .... .
Lf - h.. llirt Trmmr tr.11 1 II rill in frl V
i i e
ot the WUC Urre: c m :inl
avn - the onrush of the whippet
!aV. 'hroBh hc nfan!rf 'th.thte
-?''sh cavalry movmg into the hat-
c 'V quaoron oru.aui
.1. - .i i. - i i -ii
l " usan"V'. K .
Glad To Be Prisoners
Finally we got back to the Yank
"poxv" cage or prisoner of war cage
which had begun to iill up 1200 hav-
ing been counted at noon with
batches .f others streaming in from
the hill paths. Here we found the
editor of a Chattanooga paper in
charge as lieutenant of intelligence.
The questioning of prisoners was
done by a New York lieutenant who
had been an Associated Press editor
and his staff. The prisoners knew
nothing of the kaiser's general or-
der on peace nor of the peace over-
tures. They stood in lines with
their coins papers and keepsakes on
the ground in front of them. I no-
DAILY ARDMOREITR
ticed many had colored comic post-
cards of President W'il-on and Lloyd
tieore. A great many also had black
rosaries among their little piles of
thinkets. All seemed overjoyed to
have been captured and shouted
greeting to friends as they xvere led
into the cage. Prisoners who had
escaped by crawling through the
(ierinan lines during the attack had
tales to tell of mined roads and the
lack of (Ierinan defenses in the hack
area and the information corrobor-
ated what (ierman prisoners had
been gracious enough to confess.
The escaped men in their torn
clothes and scratched bare legs sat
down to an emergency banquet con-
tributed by Tommies and Yanks
from their rations.
WAR SUMMARY
(By The Associated Pres)
Gersman forces have abandoned
Laon and the whole St. (iohuiu re-
gion. The French after re-occupying
Laon have pressed on until
their line now runs from the Oise
river above La Fere to the eastern
end of the Chemin des Dames.
When the Ccrmaiis began to fall
back out of the bag into which (hey
were being caught by the rapid ad-
vance of the .allies on each side they
went with such speed that the
change in the battle line in that sec-
tion of the front during a fexv hours
was astonishing. . Not until the
French reached the Laon-La Fere
railroad did they encounter any real
resistance.
Italian troops participated in the
advance and now are engaged oil
the hills north of the Ailelte river.
At this particplar point the ('icrnian
lilies haxe been pressed back or have
been withdrawn so tlml a sharp
angle has been created.
With the exception of the area
north of Douai there appears to
have been a .slowing down of the
allied advance during the past couple
of days. At no point have the Brit-
ish and Americans swept ahead as
they did on Thursday and Friday of
last week.
At Brunhilde Line.
This may indicate that the Ger-
mans have reached what is known
as the H unding or Brunhilde line.
This position which is much less
formidable so far as known than the
Hiiidenbiirg system still is strong
enough to restrict pursuit by the
allies and perhaps hold for some
time.
The llunding line runs from Ant-
werp to Ghent and thence to Tour-
nai Conde Valenciennes Colesmes
Guise Bethel Youzieres Dun sur
rtleuse and then down the Tiase of
the St. Mihiel salient to the Moselle
where it joins the old front run
ning through Lorraine and thcYos-
ires to the Swiss frontier.
French and British forces have
virtually reached this line east of
Cambrai and St. Quentin. British
units are reported ai Solesnies while
the French further south are with-
in four miles of Guise.
On the Champagne front General
Berlhelot is less than five miles from
Bethel while further east General
Gouratid has taken Youzieres. but
has not penetrated much north of
that place. Americans fighting in
the Argonne region are through the
Krimhilde line but their progress
there is very slow.
Retreat and Escape Disaster.
Study of the tactics followed by
the (iermans during the past week
show they are following the meth-
ods of retreat used in the Marne
and Somme salients in July and
August. They hold their flanks fairly
secure and have withdrawn their
center. They have thus apparently
escaped disaster around Laon where
military experts said the Germans
had delayed their "retirement too
long for their own safety.
In the region of Douai British
troops are fighting their way for-
ward against desperate resistance
and in spite of numerous water-
ways which serve to hold up their
advance.
Douai is virtually reached while
to the north the line i.- sagging off
sharply to the east. Should Douai
fall tlie British will he able to ad-
vance on Valenciennes.
The Ooise river has been crossed by
the French to the northeast of La
Fere at Origny and they have ad-
vanced close to the .river to the
north.
GEN. ROY HOFFMAN
BACK FROM FRANCE
Arrived Yesterday in New York
Message Says.
Oklahoma City Oct. 14. Briga-
dier General Roy Hoffman arrived
in New York yesterday from France
and proceeded immediately to Wash
ington according to word received
at his home here yesterday.
The message stated that General
Hoffman hopes to be able to spend
a few days at home before going to
a new assignment.
After commanding the Ninety-
third Provisional division for sev-
eral months General Hoffman was
transferred to the First division
commanded by Major General Rob-
ert L. Bullard who was appointed
commanding general of the Second
American field army Saturday.
Following the capture of Can-
ligny Lu liullard's troops. General
Hoffman went to a Paris hospital
and was kept from the front for
many weeks by a series of surgical
operations.
Liberty Bond or Liberty Bound
which will you have it.
NOTICE.
If you want your clothes cleaned
clean or dyed fast colors ring Lon-
don the steam cleaner and dyer.
West Main trect. Phone 301. 14-2
1 NEW OFFICIAL OF
i AMERICAN TREASURY
1 fur -
. s. A
' VC
tins?. .
Allifl't ltiithhnne
.-iieei'i-.l.s (Iseai1 T.
Ciii.-hy win. Is now represent oik the
treasury il.'i.ariMient in Trance ill'.
Italhhi.ne is a vv.-l hninvn laxxycr uT New
Y..rli an. I fur the pasl .-ndit moiitlis has
iisfiiciiileil him --11 in a volume r ciipae-
ity xxith Ihe iretisin-y ilepai lineiit. his
wink iImiIiiik parlieiilai'Iy Willi Ihe tonus
which the American vi.vi rniin iit has
made to the entente allies.
ROOSEVELT GIVES
HIS VIEWS ON
TRIMMING BOCHE
ALSO WANTS TURKEY
CHASED OUT OF EUROPE
FOR ALL TIME.
Oyster Bay. X. Y. Oct. 14.
Colonel Theodore Roosevelt speak-
ing at a Liberty Loan meeting here
declared that peace proposals should
be discussed only with our allies."
As for a league of nations the
colonel added. "1 should regard a
proposal to include Germany
Austria and Turkey in it as oil a
level with the proposition to stop
burglary and murder in Xew York
by inviting all the burglars and gun-
men to join the police force."
Peace terms the colonel said
fchould include economic barriers
agaiusl Germany so that she can-
not flood our markets xxith her
home made products.
Clear Hun Out of Poland.
"In the next place." he said. "We
should secure complete justice for
till our allies. We ought not to be
content merely with autonomy for
the subject races of Austria and
Turkey. The C-'zecho-Slovaks should
be given complete independence
and so should the Poles without
any taint of German overlordship.
'"The Italians of Austria should
be joined to Italy and the Rumanians
of Hungary to Rumaiia. The Jugo-
slav common wealth should be
created. The Turks should be
driven from Europe and the
Armenians and Syrians given their
independence and all the Greeks
guaranteed their rights.
"France should receive back
Alsace and Lorraine Belgium
should be restored and amply in-
demnified and probably Luxemburg
included within her limits.
Keep German Provinces.
"Russia shot. Id be freed from the
German stranglehold. Ukrainia
Lithuania the Baltic provinces and
Finland should be absolutely cleared
of German influence both military
and economic. England and Japan
should keep Ihe provinces they have
conquered. North Schles wig should
be given back to the Danes. In
other words wc should fight this
war through to a finish. We should
put an absolute end to the threat
of German world domination and
instead of merely talking about fu-
ture justice wc should bring justice
now to all the nations oppressed by
Germany and her allies."
During the meeting Colonel
Roosevelt was told of the German
government's acceptance of Presi-
dent Wilson's terms.
"What I said in my address covers
this development" was his only com-
ment. Meant "Two Down" Of Course.
Boston Transcript: An English
newspaper man reporting that fa-
mous baseball game before royalty
wrote that in the sixth inning the
score against the army was "two-
love." Bonds Win Battles. Buy Mor
Bonds.
r
When Itching Stops
There is one safe dependable treatment
that relieves itching torture and skin in
tation almost instantly and that cleanses
and soothes the skin.
Ask any druggist for a 35c or $1 bottle
cemo and apply it as directed. Soon
'.ou will find that irritations pimples
llzckheads eczema blotches ringworm
md similar skin troubles will disappear.
A little zemo the penetrating satisfy-
"ng liquid is all that is needed lor it
Danishes most skin eruptions and makes
Ue skin soft smooth and healthy.
Ibe & W. Kow Co. Cleveland. O.
& H ' i i' "'i
mm Mm
BATTLE FOB BREAD
IS WAR IN RUSSIA
MOST TERRIBLE FAMINE IN
MODERN HISTORY IS
STALKING OVER LAND. I
Stockholm Friday Oct. 11.
By the Associated Press) Hunger
is hastening tlie downfall of the
bolshevik regiment Russia far more
than the feeble and disorganized
efforts of the opposing political
parties. The political strike in tlie
isolated soviet republic is now be-
coming a pitched battle for bread
in which all political theories and
theorists are lost and Moscow and
Pctrograd are regarded as monsters
trying to steal the meagre food
supply of the rural districts.
On the eve of its first anniversary
the bolshevik dictator ship of the
proletariat faces the most terrible
famine in modern history and the
final test has come of the ability ot
soviet arms to maintain what
Nikolai Leiiine the bolshevik
premier calls "organized hunger".
American Tells of Woe.
An American who just arrived j
from Russia and who for three
months was engaged in an effort to
provide bread for workmen in the
industrial centers of soviet Russia
told the correspondent today of a
widespread military organization ol
the peasants against soviet annuity.
I which is noii-pntical and based
'purely on self-preservation In
i three districts of the Vyatka gov-
j eminent alone the peasants have
organized and armed 15.1'iitH men.
chiefly returned soldiers to resist
I soviet attempts to take their grain.
Ihe peasants pay tne sonnets .nm
rubles each monthly.
Similar conditions exist in all the
grain producing governments
nominally under soviet authority.
The soviet grain crusaders were
able to obtain limited quantities of
rye this year which was harvested
before the peasants had perfected
their organization of returned sol-
diers but the loss ot this rye forced
the peasants to action.
Peasants Guard Grain
lu many places the wheat and
oats crops are in the hands of
tlie peasant organizations which arc
guarding them against the bolshevik.
Where the districts are not well
organizhd the farmers are putting
the grain only as they can sell it.
and xxill burn it or let it rot in the
fields rather than risk its confisca-
tion by armed bands of bolsheviki.
The food crusaders sent from
Moscow and Petrograd meet with
such resistance' that many who
escape death join the anti-bolshevik
forces and assist in tighten-
ing the noose of starvation about
the two soviet strongholds which
are undergoing a hunger siege far
more death dealing than the
spasmodic revolutionary outbreaks
directed against tlietn by the social j
revolutionists and the social demo-j
crals. 1
OSTEND HARBOR IS
BLOCKED BY HUNS
London Oct. 14. It is under-
stood that the (iermans no longer
nro .ittrinntintr to use the Flanders
coast for operations by sea of any
description. I hey nave stripped
their .bases there of all vessels and
h.-iv "left viitmtllv no seanlanes. The
mouth of the hannor at Ostend has!
heeil ijiockcu o me i.iim.ii.- .!
there is little doubt that similar steps
will be taken at Xecbrugqe.
PIMPLY? WELL PONT BEl
People Notice It Drive Them "Iff
with Dr. Edwards'
Olive Tablets
A pimply face will not embarrass you
much longer if you get a package of Dr.
Edwards' Olive Tablets. The skin should
begin to clear after you have taken ths
tablets a tew nignis.
Cleanse the bloodt he bowels and the 1 1 ver
WlLJl liUWO.". - v.s sj s-
cessful substitute f orcalomel; there's never
any SICKness or pain micr vaixnit; mem.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do that
which calomel does and just as effectively
but their action is gentle and safe instead
of severe and irritating.
M nno arhn takpQ fllivp Tahlpts IS
ever 'cursed with "a dark brown taste"
a bad breath a duu listless - no gooa
tornid liver bad
juviiiift. 1 -
disposition or pimply face.
- n. I - - T1 1. 1 A ......
lit. cawarai unrc ibuicis m-
8 purely vegetable compound mixed
tmth .live oil: voa will know their:
by their olive color.
Dr. tawaras 6pent years among pn
.sn nffttz-trvH arith fivr tmA howr'
.jciiis si.... . s .
complaints and Olive Tablets are tht
immensely ettecave result.
Take one or two nightly for a week
3ee how much better you feel and look
10c and '5c per box. All dn""---.
! WILSON IS GATHERING
INFORMATION OF WAR.
! Xew York. K't. R --President
Wilson Saturday inspected the work
conducted by the enniinis-iou of i"-
utiirv which under the direction ol
Col. F. M. House the pre-idcut''
close friend and adviser is gather-
ing information for the use of th-'
American government at the peac;
conference to follow the defeat ol
the central powers. With Mrs.
Wilson and Colonel House the
president spent half an hour at the
headquarters of the National Geo-
graphic Society where the informa-
tion is being assembled.
Dollars and Fighting Men.
Bonds Buy Bayonets.
GIRLS' PAINS
AND WEAKNESS
Yield to Lydia E. Pinkham'
Vegetable Compound.
Thousands of Girls Benefited
St. Louid Mo. "When I was only
fifteen years old mother had to put inn
lu uitu rvrij iiiv......
fortwoUBysoecausa
1 suffered Buch pain.
1 also suffered from
u weakness mid
mother took nie to
a doctor but he did
nothelpme. Finally
mother made me
take Lydiu K. 1'ink-
hani's Vegetable
Compound and it
has made me strops
and healthy. So
when mother or I
hear nny women complaining we tell
them about Lydia E. Fink hum's Vege-
table Compound and what it did for
me"Mrs. John Frame 1121 N. 18th
St. St Louis Mo.
Girls who suiter as Mrs. Frame did
should not hesitate to give this famous
root and herb remedy Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound a trial os
the evidence that is constantly being
published proves beyond question that
this grand old remedy has relieved more
suffering among women than any other
medicine. "
For confidential advice write Lydia E.
Tinkham Medicine Co. Lynn Mass.
The result of their forty years experi-
ence is at your service.
I.MI'KKIAL CAKE
No. 11 N. Washington St.
New ami I'p to Paro Chinese and
American Dishes.
CI.KAV ;)( SKKVIf'I?
Ol'KN DAY AM) NIGHT
I'hone Ci7 Tables for I. allies
Months for I'rivato Tarties.
SAM). fi RAVEL. RTOXE
Wholesale. lietail.
KOCK CRDFK SAND AXU
URAVKL tO.
James Barron. Manager.
Telephone 3i9.
"We favor City Inspection
welKhts and measurea."
ot
If You Enjoy
HOME
COOKING
Visit
Paul's Cafe
1 15WestMainSt.
Have the old reliable
UNCLE TOM
Shoe Repairer do your
work.
RAINES SADDLERY
COMPANY
210 West Main Phone 193
We Call For and Deliver
Free.
ami0 -S
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I.
ci
ti
m
F
cc
to
be
pi
mi
of
Oi
tro
the
ioi
1
: ally
Ais
ties
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tint
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Spaulding, H. G. Daily Ardmoreite (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 5, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 15, 1918, newspaper, October 15, 1918; Ardmore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc156588/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.