The Mustang Enterprise (Mustang, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, April 7, 1911 Page: 2 of 6
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Mustang Enterprise $3.50 RECIPE CURES
g - WEAK KIDNEYS, FREE:
J. M. DAILY, Publisher.
Entered al the Postoffice at Mustang,
Oklahoma, as second-class mall mattor
STATE HAPPENINGS
As a result of Injuries that he SUSU-
Uln. .1 while driving last summer, Viv-
ian Wiley, who lived near I'arrow,
died at his home, at the M« °] "• ;
Wiley had been paraly/ad am-1 the u0"
eldent.
Initial steps toward the organization
jj a militia company in Guymon havt
been taken. Those In charge ot the
Movement state that a sufficient num-
ber ui young men and boy* are Inter-
C«tad In the organisation to insure its
iucct'Mi.
RELIEVES URINARY AND KIDNEY
TROUBLES, BACKACHE, STRAIN-
ING, SWELLING, ETC.
To Get
Its Beneficial Effect"
Always Buy the Oenuino
WHY GOVERNOR VETOED
MUSKOGEE FAIR BILL in WOMAN'S
Stops Pain
In the Bladder, Kidney*
and Back.
Wouldn't It ho nice within a week or °
to begin to say Ibye forever to the
learning, dribbling, straining, <>r too fre-
quent pusi age of urine; the forehead and
tin- bnck-of-the-head aches; the stitches
ami p.'ilnn in the back; the xrowlnif mus-
cle weakncss; spots beforo the eyes; yel-
low sliin; sluggish bowls, swollen eye-
lids or ankles; 1-k cramps, unnatural
short breath, sleeplessness and the de-
ep.
cy?
I have a recipe for these troubles that
you can depend on, and If you want to
make a QUICK IlKCOVKUV. you out-lit
to write and get a copy of It. Many a
doctor would charge you 33...0 Just for
wilting this prescription, hut I have It
nnd will be glad to s.-nd It to you entire.
Just drop mo a line like thin:
Robinson, K ~'t Luck Building.
Detroit. Mich., and 1 will send 11 by re-
turn mall In a plain eliv. lop. As you will
ten when you get It. tide recipe contains
At McAlester Deputy Sheriff w • oniy harmless rcmed.. •>. but It haa
Md'clly and Hock Island Special Ag- g| , , . .,.|,... . ,„| ,,;,|n cnqu-rliig power
«nts John iiurnet and !■:. M. Hounsu- ^ u wm <4U|ckly show Its pow.r once you
manulbciurctl hyilie
Ernest House, national superintend-
ent of the Nation.il Bible Study Couise,
has announced that Enid will be west-
am headquarters for the movement.
House lias moved to Knld and will edit
the National Issue, official paper of ilia
organization.
Sheriff W. J.
ly
Sold bv till loadincj
Drwjqists
One Size Only# SO1! d Boiflo
2>^"Lame
ille captured live negroes and about j ,,
$300 worth of meal, said to have In ■ n u
Itolen. The negroes were put In jail o<
with the exception of John V I'ierco, 1 fcl
i veterinary surgeon, who gave bond.
Chi f of 1 ollce Mitchell ot tli.'.hrle,
was notified P..ur da> by Hn-tiff Hoyt
f Pailie eotinly tliut unknown parlies
robbed the postolliee al Cushing Wed-
nesday night of *1.0«0 m 'ash and
■tamps A. II. Holland, editor of tho
Cushing Independent, is postmaster.
Governor Cruce named the following
lo compose the state board ot optome-
try, created by the recent legislature:
Drs. 14. K I'avis, Oklahoma City; H. II. j
Wilson, Shawnee, and W. II. Hale, of
Weatherford. The two members men-
tioned lirst are oecullsts and the latter
an optician.
Mrs. T. A. l.edbetter, mother ol
fudge Led better, died at Ardmore
after an illness of several weeks At
ber bedside were her husband and all
her children, except one daughter, w in.
is in Kngland. The funeral was held
Thursday afternoon. Mrs. I.cdbettot
was (17 years old and was well known
In Oklahoma City, where she often vis
Ited her son.
BO I think
Ih' without d. lay.
laid better see what
I will Bend you a
j It and cure your-
The tour Howard l>oy^ and R. P.
Graham, cnptureii near Sentinel last
week, were given a preliminary beat-
ing at Cordell before Judge Coker and
their cases continued. Graham plead
ad guilty to stealing liorscs nnd resist
Ing ntllcers, and was positively Identi-
fied by the cashier and his wife as
being one of the men who held litem
up and robbed the bank of t raw lord,
Oklahoma.
Saving Trouble.
The husband of a fashionable worn
an, whose gowns ate at onco tho ad
nitration and despair of her feminine
acquaintances, was discussing the
cost of living with a friend at the
Union League the other night.
"ily the way," ventured tho friend,
«_er don't you have a good deal of
trouble keeping your wife dressed In
the height of stylo?"
Tho woman's husband smiled and
then shook ills head emphatically
"Oh, no," he said, "nothing to speak
of Nothing -nothing to the trouble j
I'd have if I didn't."
Moissant's Comparison.
I "The late John It Moissant was a
' genial as well as a skillful airman,
; said a Chicago editor.
"1 remember well a visit ho once
1 made me. with drawings of an aero-
! plane of Ills own Invention under his [
I arm I Joked him a little about the
machine—It certainly had a heavy,
;n kwai'd look Hut he said with a
laugh:
"Oh, don't Judge even an aeroplane
j by Its outside. What If the man w ho
! discovered the oyster hadn't stopped
to pry open the shell.' "
With his veto of the Muskogee state i "Second. I am opposed tothe ' sta*
fair bill Governor Cruce advanced tho lishment, at present, ot anmoie st
, . , institutions. 1 he number «"
argument that the state sl.ou d not i ^ dlstrU)Uted a8 tbey are, are a pot-
undertake to manage a fair. In dib i|lye mena,.B t0 good government. 'I ho
approving the bill Governor Cruce also ou]y thjng tliat now stands between '.he
stated that he was opposed to the es demands of these institutions and th«
tabllshment of any more state insti treasury of the state is tho governor.
tutions. " l'he number we have now, i Establish a few more and the governor
distributed as they are, are a positive will be powerless to stay the h " .ga
mena. e to wood government," he says. hand, for measures will easily be pass
In commenting upon tlie state fair j over his veto. It is time to loo a ■-
proposition as made in the Muskogee j situation soberly and sensibly, in
lair bill the governor made the follow no few men Indeed who can shake
Ing statement themselves loose from the lettering
I have disapproved Ibis bill, first, hand ot local Influences and interests,
bee .use 1 do not think this stale should and It is rare indeed that a legislator
undertake to manage a lair Person- .an be found w ho will \ote against an
ally I am opposed to Hie government appropriation for 1111 institution in h:
undertaking to do a thing that an indl district, no matter how useless or ex-
vicinal or corporation can do as well, travagant it may be. Hut the injutj
Kaiis are largely private enterprises and wrong to Oklahoma does not stop
and as such should be managed apart] with the matter of appropriations.
from the government. 1 understand J Practically all legislation is a ♦11* .
that no appropriation is asked at this and the man with a meritorious bill in ! "trying period
but several sections of the bill j the interests of the people is frequently ri,storatioa t„ health na :
Leg
Well"
Made Safe by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
tnrougi -from nervousness
1.id other annoying
symptoms, and I
can truly say that
I.yJia E. l'inkham 3
Vegetable Com-
pound has proved
worth mountains or
gnlil to me, as it
Ire tornl my health
Jand strength. I
never forget to tell
my friends what
Lydia E. Pinkham'3
Vegetable Compou^haBdon^^or^me
rawiBmu w nuans so much
can leave no doubt that it is the inten compelled to make terms with appro- J0'me that for the saite of oth^-suaer-
tlon of the promoters of the proposi- priation advocates before he can pass jn(r women 1 am willing to ma V)1JF
don to ask future legislatures to give useful measures. Muskogee lias a
financial aid, and when the time comes splendid lair, financed and managed by
the state can ill afford to withhold a able and capable citizens of that city.
helping hand. It is proposed to make | want to see this fair grow into much
this a state fair, give to it all the cred larger importance, and 1 am sure 'hat
It and prestige the name implies, and it will; but I do not believe this state,
when launched upon this plan, the j under present conditions, should go In-
time.
you" may publish
CnAS. Barclay,
"I wish to
say that I
have used
Sloan's Lini-
ment on a
lame leg that
has given me much trouble for six
months. It was so bad that I
couldn't walk sometimes for a
week. I tried doctors' medicine
and had a rubber bandage for my
leg, and bought everything that I
heard of, but they all did me no
good, until at last I was persuaded
to try Sloan's Liniment. The first
application Helped it, and in two
weeks my leg was wel! '—A. L.
Hunter, of Hunter, Ala.
Good for Athletes.
Mr. K. Oilman, instructor of
athletics, 417 Warren St., Rox.
bury, Mass., says:—"I have used
state cannot afford to see it fail. 1 to this business."
ODD FELLOWS TO CONSOLIDATE |
East and West Side Lodges to be Con-
solidated.
An event of great importance in the
fraternal world is the proposed con-
solidation of the Odd Fellows Grand
Lodges and Grand Encampments and
Itebekah Assemblies of Oklahoma and
Indian Territory, which is scheduled
Col. Sidney Suggs, of Ardmore, good
roads booster and prospective state
highway commissioner, Is trying to
work up a unique scheme for roprc
aentalion for Oklahoma at the good
roads convention to be held al llirm-
Inghani, Ala., on May 21-2ti. Ills Idea
Is to have one automobile nnd ut least
one good roads booster Ironi each of
the seventy seven counties of Oklaho-
ma make the trip overland to Birming-
ham for that convention, and he i
quite confident of success
K. C. Bowers, formerly a clerk In tho
Guthrie postofllce, has been trans-
ferred to Oklahoma City, and It is
probable that others of the Guthrie
postofllce force will he sent here.
Transferring of Guthrie poHtollice help
to Oklahoma City will prove quite an
advantage Tho Guthrie clerks are
acquainted with many of iho clerks
In the departments 1 r si lie, whu h will
aid the Cl;h honri Cil * po.->i nia-i. r ti.a
teria!l> in the lundliic -f itu.il for
state ollicials and their empioyi
Tuberculosis In Japan.
Japan is not lagging behind In tho
fight against tuberculosis. The Japan
Health association lias over 200,000
local members and carries on a cam-
paign of leclurei In U10 cities and
towns of the country. Tuberculosis is
Increasing in Japan, due chiefly. Prof.
S Kltasalo of Tokyo says, to the
rapid development of tho factory sys .
ten of industry, the Introduction of
modern methods and manners of civil-
ization and Iho Increa ing acutenes
of the struggle for existence
Sheer white goods, In fact, nny fine
wash goods when new, uwo much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done In a
manner to enhance their tcxlllo beau-
ty. Home laundering would be equal
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, tho first essential
being good Starch, which lias sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
with great success in cases o£ ex-
treme fatigue after physical exer-
tion, when an ordinary rub-down
would not make any impression."
Sloan's Liniment
h is no equal as a
remedy lor Rheu-
matism, Neural-
gia or any pain or
stiffness in the
muscles or joints.
Prices. 25c. ,50o. & ® 1.00
Sloan's book on
tinr<4««. rut tit*. nl"'f|
nml p . ultr y •« *
free. AtltiroM
Dr. Earl S. Sloan,
Boston, Mass., U. S- A.
ITinMPV T" a deceptive ,11
IYIL/rN i-* 1 thousands liavo 1
trouble
s
IN THE LITERARY WORLD
News of the Late Books and Their
Authors
j The versatility of the very popular
j novelists, C. N. and A. M. Williamson,
I was never better shown than by their
I latest book, "The Golden Silence ".
Here they have woven an entirely
, k i new and entirely original plot, one full |
to occur during the week . beginning , ^ both ,m account and
Mnmhiv \i)ril 10th. ut OKlunoniu * • .
All other fraternal, professional and its own. The scene of the story .s
religious bodies, except the Odd Fel- laid in North Africa, the land of the
lows have already amalgamated. golden silence. 'I he natural descrlp-
Judge J. B. A. Robertson, of Chand t ive imagery painting for which the
ler, i'ast Grand Master and present. popular couple are justly famous is
Grand Representative to tho Sover- .,uowe(j full sweep here where the air
elgn Grand Lodge, will have charge ,g ever ia(]en with romance and deli-
and carry into effect tho agreement ^ perfume, but in addition to the
of consolidation at the coming meet- atmosphere the story con-
1Ilg George A. liens,,aw, ^"a very subslantl.l phu a hunt
Corporation Commissioner. ia 'he . . a Vu antl-
Grand Master of the Indian Territory for a lost sister on the part of abeautl
Jurisdiction, while J. L- Robertson, of ful dancer to whose charm tho heio
Newkirk, is Grand Master of the Ok- succumbs when also on his way to
: lahoma organization. There are 18,000 | Africa to visit an old friend. It
wouldn't bo a Williamson story if it
didn't have a happy ending for every-
body, but there is doubt of the term-
ination of the adventures up to the
very last page. "The Golden Silence"
ia published by Doubleday, i'age & <'o..
w ho are the regular American publish-
ers of the Williamsons.
Ing women
trouble public so
this letter."—Mr;
ll.F.D., Granitcville, \ t.
Xo other medicine for woman's 1'ls
has received such wide-spread and un-
qualified endorsement. No other med-
icine we know of lias such a record
of cures as lias Lydia i.. 1 inkliam a
Vegetable Compound.
For more than 30 years it has been
curing woman's ills such as inflamma-
tion ulceration, fibroid tumors, irreg-
ularities, periodic pains and nervous
prostration, and it is unequalled for
carrying women safely through tha
period of change of life.
'Mrs. Pinkharn, at T.ynn, Mass.,
invites all sick women to write
her for advice. Her udvico is tree,
axul always helpful.
PA'S ANSWER.
I
His Interest.
"You are going to interest yourself
In this reform enterprise "
"Certainly," replied Senator Sor
ghutu.
"But 1 thought it was unfavorable
to your friends "
"it is. Anil I'm p«'ltiK to interest
myself In it far enou^i to let me
oftVr suggestions that will render it
linpractit 1."
to men r < i
... . \1 Mil \ .
\m> in ti i) > i' nu
tilt* Ol 1 I >i l L ' 1 1
'IHMC.
nl.iin * nrlliU'il "ii T«*ry
HI In a tunic
II"' in.il. rls
i.K up tin* m sirni by .U
cold
"I-
dim
11
SI
a bU
v.
U.al l>.<
< mm
v. hen
to w i'
your
she
A Sign.
wlfe still
Gentle Hint.
after silencel 1 11 soon have to
n on n trip to bore wells
tlnrtlyi Well. I'm sure that Is
mprovenieut over boring people.
im \ i i I \ s I oi i r i v - r
The new state medical hoard, ap-
pointed by Governor Criie. . is as To!
lows Regulars Drs l\ H. File, Mus
kogee John W lluke, Guthrie. Leroy
Long, McAlester, and I'hlllip F. Her
rod. of Alva. Kcclesiasties Hrs-. M-
Cray, Mountain View, and K. Saw-
yer, of Hokchltto. Homeopaths l>rs
W. L Honnell, Chickasha, and C F.
Btlllwell. of l'iedmont. Osteopaths—
J. A. I'ricof Oklahoma City. Alter-
nate— Dr. H. J Shackelford, of Ard-
more.
•The first application for exemption
fnim the Jim Crow law. under tho
legislature, was made to the corpora-
tion cotnmh ion by the Wichita Falls
Northwestern, a new line now build-
ing through Western Oklahoma. The
law authorizes the commission to ex-
empt from the provisions of the law
depots in towns wl\ert> there are no
negroes. The railroad asks tho exemp-
tion for the stations of Humphreys,
Moravia, Cart> r and Carpenter, all lo-
cated lu a country where there art- no
negroes. The exemption. If granted,
will relieve them of Ihe necessity i'f
building its depots so as to provide
for a Jim Crow apartment.
Final settli it al has been made with
the state in the first Inheritance ta*
case arising in I'ittsbutc county. The
estate w'as that ot Kdward Jatnea
Fannin, a prominent citizen of McAl-
ester, which was valued at JUti.OO#.
The tax, however, was only a* . C0mmcrcl,i
tho estate was all left to the widow (U. a(ta)1.l. li<)rd
•nd two children und the per centuge
useised therefor was very smalt. It
■was in connection with this case that
the attorney general ruled Hint an In-
surance policy payablo to the widow
was not to be counted lu figuring tho
IfthtrUanc* tax
and
I f you
d results you
cm no mistake by uslntr l'r. Kll-
tr.cr's Swamp-Fttiot, th * it-at l l:i '• r'i:r}"
civ. At driiKKists in Hfty ■ «vr i dol-
lar si s Sample bofllt* h} m.rl fr \
also pamphlet telllnir you how i - And uut
if you ha ire kidney ti
A.ldrpsd, l>r. Kilmer A Co., lJinghamton, N Y.
s Fine postcsrdscdcc
v >,.ii 1 only 2o stamp nd i-eo I ■■■ ■
j vo x llnoit <i« Ul Knil oHH.tl ari,-l
DEFIANCE STARCH
I'oim U, HUB
piukati*
SUPMIOR QUALITY.
ri A T E I! T ^
PATcNTo
rlUKeruld« t.... "«' K, lil *<«>ii, >'•
ri WMtMl I IB0I
, Il,|t,l • t ,tf tl.M 1 .1- «I '
i«... HurliiiKton. N• i
Gdd Fellows on the Oklahoma side
and 16,000 on the Indian Territory
bide, making a total of 43.000 when
united; besides this lliere will be
. more than 20,000 Rebekahs. It is
expected that from 8,000 to 10,000 Odd
Fellows and Rebekahs will attend the
meeting at Oklahoma City which will
last the greater part of a week.
CARNIVAL AT OKLAHOMA CITY
Big Celebration Will be Held at Capital
in April
Oklahoma City is making extensive i
preparations to celebrate the Huu of
■8tf" with the greatest event ever held
lu the southwest. The celebration will
be held en the 21st and ~nd of April,
and will be a close duplication of iho
New Orleans Mardi Gras. Two days
of merry making and revelry are
planned. Excursion rates on all rail
roads will he in effect and thousands ,
of people from all over the state are ex- j
V There will be three greal pageants
and a brilliant mask and costume ball
as the main features of the event, and
society leaders from all over the state
have signified their Intention of at-
tending Ihe hitter event in costume.
Mrs Honnelv Reid, of Oklahoma < Ity.
has charge of the ball and the corona-
tion ceremonies which immediately
preceded.
! College students, uniformed lodges,
automobiles, city and state ollicials
nnd thousands of merrymakers In mask
and . OBtume will lake part in the pag-
eants which are now being planned.
Florida Pope Sumerwell, tlie author
of that amusing little book. Four in
Family, holds that one does not really
know the fun of being a child unless
one is brought up on a farm. She
was—a large slock farm In Texas. To
any young persons objecting to the
tedium of school hours, she commends
a lield of waving grain. In that land,
and even when pursued by a small dar-
key. you can so double and turn on the
enemy that you are pretty sure of
safety unless prudence makes you
heed the instruction hurled from the
lips of your pursuer.
"You Miss Foddie, you better come
right home, kase your maw is geln'
to plum blister your hide offen you if
you don't."
At nine she went to school in Austin,
riding her own pony, with tier next
older brother behind. It humiliated
greatly, and she would always
him
slow down so that he could jump off
and stroll up for all the world like one
who had walked all the way.
FF.ATHER BEOS !
The Mok< ■ I uriittur®
The thousands who are interested
in tho achievements and difficulties of
those interesting gentlemen. Messrs
l'olash and Perlmutter, Ladies Cloaks
and Suits, by Mr. Montague Glass, will
t« be glad to know that Doubleday, I'age
Anew center of lltet at y .utivit. ^ (1)i )|avo published in book form
developing at C.unston Hall, a tainous (.()11(M tlon Qf these Illimitable
old Virginia manor h°u«e, which itand* I Btorle . a tecond volumt will appenr
e of the Potomac, live miles g()Iuowhat later. These stories have
(Illusion Hall , without uuestion the most sue
"What is an indeterminate sentence
pa?"
' Matrimony, my son."
IS EPILEPSY CONQUERED7
New York Physicians Have Many
Cures to Their Credit.
New York, April 4.—Advices from
every direction fully confirm previous
reports that the remarkable treatment
for epilepsy being administered by tha
consulting physicians of the Dr. Water-
man Institute is achieving wonderful
results. Old and stubborn casos have
been greatly benefited and many pa-
tients claim to have been entirely
cured.
Persons suffering from epilepsy
shoti! I write at once to Dr. Waterman
Institute, 122 East 25th st, Branch 03,
New York, for a supply of the remedy,
which Ls being distributed gratuitously.
Chicken, All Right.
A Camden lawyer walked Into a re?
| taurant the other day, prepared to
order himself a chicken dinner.
The waitress approached hliu.
looked at her and said.
"How's chicken?"
"I'm all right,'' she answered, cheer-
ily "how's yourself?"
Ho
treating you
Gave mo lee pudding for
ionally of oftener r iple h ad
to believe they admire him
u reality they are only trying
t him.
Ceii.i ation cauiic. and .eriou.lv- fl
vntc- m 1 \ ii'-< . It i- thei.iukihly . i
le |ii- picn-e'a l'elh'ti. Tiny nugsr coated
tumulc.
11 hdn always appeared to me that
good manners are almost as valuable
ial as In diploma
tic affairs.—hord Cromer.
111:11 run** iiai.i. ru'b
should he III even home. A«li veiir uiooer
fur it. l-arge 2 ot. psekags only 3 cent.
Oklahoma Directory
Oklahoma City
Lee lluckins Hotel
European Rates fi.oo per day.
Popular price Cafe in connection.
KERFOOT-MILLti? & CO.
i |ncorpor ied >
Manufacturer* of
broncho brand
OVERALLS m WORK CLCTHIHG
\Vholes.ile l>ry Gocxls
oklahoma city oklahoma
S«nd u* your mall uraer*.
For Best Results Use
on the shor
below Mount Vernon. C.unston ,uul been without question
u in., nronerty of i'aul Hester, whose ] ceBgtu| mnmwlne fiction that has ap-
new play, "The Bill Toppers," a dram peared in years. '1 heir popularity
atiwtion 'of Andre Castaigne's novel , steadily Increases.
of the same name, is soon to be pro-
■ented in h ni'.on by v.arie Tempest. Poet,c Apprentice
„ at (lunston Hall also that a grocer's apprentice admctid
Vauahan Keater, the brother of the poetry hns summoned his employer,
pl'iv wiiuhl, wrote The Prodigal Judue,! a rich merchant of Ouailsa. Setvia,
tt "noM-rju'i.t published by the Hobbs lor unlawful dismissal. I lie mercnant
Merrill Company, l'he prodigal Judge (.xpjn|ne(j timt his customer
elured to be Paul Wllstaeh. i '
. the third member el the <0111
It was at the lodge of the
r^-nte that Mr. Wllstaeh
ls di
makei
I lou no.
Uunston
wrote his l.ife of Richard Manslhl
mid it was here also that
dramatic version
roved such au Impressive addition n>
repertoire of the regular theatre
e Prodigal Judge, and The
-rs ri
cause the boy answered all questions
In rhyme and detained people while lit
d meter and verse. Moreover, he
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CAHTOK1A, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
Bears the
Signature of (
In T'se For Over .'«) Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Severe Critic.
Alice I like Tom (rumen , ly anrt
j he's very much the pentleman; but
he does like to talk about him elf!
Grace Yes, d ar. your knight hath
11 tho. sand IV I'uck.
"The heart is a small thing, but de-
ulreth great mailers; It ls not sulll-
cient for a kite's dinner. *et tho world
U uot sufficient for It. Hugo.
he wrote the
ot Thais, which has
TI
epn
only
pr
the
Thais.
T_|PI ■■■■
son s a< tivilles on that old plant.mon
which, by the way. is well within th
mile circuit which congress
Vernon by
ten
has
fix
greeted his employer with a new coup
let every day. The court found th"
merchant Justified and advised the ap
prentice to me a 1 his way - llelgtade
cor. Pall Mall Gazette.
Strange
Mr. Mart y new, ta little ere ;lyi —
This soup, Agness, doesn't seem to
taste much like turtle Mrs. Mairy-
i ,1. I t see why. J"hn, 1 let the
it le until
el!.
They
mi mm «■
Are the Best
That Grow
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM
barteldes seed co.
Oklahoma Seed Houta, Oklahomi Clt
Just drawn about Mt. Veraon Dy pro ( ^ jw(m
erection of any lun.tl Wt(,( W;IS „, arly hot enough to
Puck.
bibttlng the
of the
It's no use a church advertising tha 1
nilile when It Is dodging Its biila
nitutions within that dlatane
' tom* of Oeorfe v. aahlngton.
I A description of a wedding explains
I that the bride was charmingly ihoui .
becomingly dressed.' It reminds us
I of the reporter's note. ' Ihe patient Is
I much bet', r. though Dr. Drown Is still
in attendance.
scald Ihe poor little thing.
Untenable Ground
"By the way. why do you permit
your children to believe In furies'
:1 can't tell them there are 110 faries,
and then expect them to believe in
microbes.' Washington llorald.
c irficl 1 Tea purifies ihe 1! od. et
eaten rheumatism, gout ami other uisi ■
c,<. to sleep without supper, but rise
without debt.—Talmud
Up-Set
Sick Feeling
that follows takinc a dose of castoi
oil, salts or calomel, U about the
worst you can endure—Uch l
cives one the creeps. You don 1
have to have it—CASCARET^.
move the bowels—tone up th«
liver—without tlicse bad feeling*
Try them.
CASC.MtKTU 11* S V,* t*r • '•
• irfttmcnt. tl .liuMt.oi Ivjjrul n
la iht oilW. UIUT" * "• BKwUk
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Daily, J. M. The Mustang Enterprise (Mustang, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, April 7, 1911, newspaper, April 7, 1911; Mustang, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc157351/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.