The Gate Valley Star (Gate, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 15, 1919 Page: 4 of 8
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THE VALLEY STAR, GATE, OKLAHOMA
ITS NO SECRET
where she got
her color.
Many wo.
men, perh&pi
your neigh-
bor, will tell
you that ah*
got her woa«
derful oolor,
her vivociom
spirits, her
strength and
health by
taking a
41 temper*
an re" tonic,
known aa I)r.
Pierce's Fav-
orite Pres-
cription.
Probably no man In Amcrica was ever
Iwtter qualified to succeanfully treat the
disease* peculiar to women than Ds.
Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y. The cases that
oomo to him run into many thousands,
giving him an experience that rarely
comes to any one man. Dr. Pierce found
that in nearly every case there were
eertain vegetable growths which rarely
(ailed to give prompt relief in those
feminine disorders from which so many
women suffer. lie combined these roots
and herbs into a temperance tncdicinq
that he called Dr. Pierce's Favorite Presr
cription. Thin medicine is sold in both
liquid and tablet form by druggists every-
where. A weakly, sickly, backachy, head-
achy, nervous, despondent woman, with
regular or irregular pains—with feminine
disorders that come in youth or middle
age—is pretty sure to find in Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription the exact remedy
that her condition calls for.
Auto Safer Than "Hoss."
The Industrial accident board of the
■tat© of Massachusetts discloses the
remnrkahle fact that fatalities from
motor vehicles Inst year were less
than those for which horse-drawn ve-
hicles were responsible. This Is un-
usually interesting, because automo-
biles and trucks are 60 per cent
greater In number than horses. Forty-
three fatal accidents nre reported by
the board. Twenty-three were caused
by horse-driven vehicles.
WAS IN MISERY
Mrs. Jobes Was in Serious
Condition From Dropsy.
Doan's Made Her Well.
"I don't think many have gone
through such nil wry an I, ' nays Mm. C.
Jol>es, 131) Federal fct., Huiiington. N. J.
"That awful pain in tny hack felt a*
though hit tipine were crushed. Mv
head acheu and 1 had reeling and fall
ing sensations when ev-
erything would turn
black. Though the kid-
ney secretions passed ten
or fifteen times in an
hour, only a few drops
eaine at a time and they
felt like boiling water.
1 noon found 1 had drop
sv. I bloated all over.
My face was so swollen
1 could liardlv see out of
ankles and feet felt as
MRS. JOBES
My
though they would burst if I put any
ing
left
my eyes.
" igh . , .
weight on them. My night clothes l>e
came wringing wet with sweat and I
would get chilly anil shake all over.
Doan's Kidncu Pills soon had me feel
ing like a different woman My kid
neya were regulated and all the swell
went away. The aches and nains
me and after I had finished my
eighth box of Doan's, I was as well as
ever. My kidnevs have never bothered
tne since Doan's Kidney Pills cured
me."
Subscribed and sworn to before
me,
J. LEEDOM SMITH.
Notary Public.
Get Data11 at Any Siora, 60c • Box
DOAN'S k,',dl"t
FOSTER M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
wnpaia so Young
' ^ Rub Dandruff and
_ Itching with
WCuticura Ointment
Shampoo With Caticara Soap
- — * - «* '
In the Garden.
"What's the matter with Snap-
dragon ?"
"Sho has Just cnlled Johnny-Jump
Up to go over to the Clinging Vine
corner and get Sweet Wllllaiu nway
from the Wallflowers."
Catarrh Cannot He Cured
tr local, aitmcatjons. the?
cannot reach the aval of the disease.
Catarrh la a local disease. greatly Inltu-
by constitutional conditions. HALl/S
CATAHKII MKD1CINK will cure catarrh.
It la taken internally ami acta through
the ltlood on the Mucoua Surfaces of the
System HALL'S CATAKIttl MKU1C1NK
Is composed of aome of the best tonics
known, combined with aome of the beat
blood purifiers. The jperfect combination
ef th* In at edlents In ti ALL'S OATARRH
BKDIt'lSK la what produces auch eon-
•erful results In catarrhal conditions.
Druggists 75c. Testimonials free
F. J Cheney A Co., Props., Toledo, Q.
Hla Ambition.
"Is your son ambitious?"
. "Wry. He wants some day to pitch
a no lilt, no-run game."
When Your Eyes Need Car«
Try Murine Eve Remedy
■o SmaiVM — Jtut *7* Comfort. Wcetya
lunula of mall. Writ# for Free
1 IIS USUI
TERMS OF PEACE
GIVEN GERMANY
ARMY AND NAVY REDUCED,
DAMAGES TO BE PAID,
COLONIES FORFEITED
TRIAL OF EX-KAISER PLANNED
Huna Declare They Will AgTce—May
Refuse to Pay Punitive Damages
But Make no Further Threats; Lose
Rhine, and Yield part of Prussia
Paris.—The treaty of peace between
the twenty-seven allied and associated
powers on the one hand and (lermany
on the other, has been submitted to
the Gorman plenipotentiaries at Ver-
sailles.
It is the longest treaty ever drawn.
It totals about 80,000 words divided
into fifteen main sections and repre-
sents the combined product of over a
thousand experts working continually
through a series of commissions for
the three and a half months since Jan-
uary 18, the treaty printed in parallel
pages of English and French which
are recognized as having equal valid-
ity. It does not deal with questions
affecting Austria, Bulgaria and Tur-
key except in so far as binding Ger-
many to accept any agreement reach-
ed with those former allies.
League in First Section
"Following the preamble and depo-
sition of powers comes the convenant
of the league of nations as the first
section of the treaty. The frontiers
of Germany in Europe as defined in
the second section; European political
classes given in the third; European
political classes in the fourth. Next
are the military, naval and air terms
as the fifth section, followed by a sec-
tion on prisoners of war and military
graves, and a seventh on responsibil-
ities. Reparations, financial terms
and economic terms are covered in
sections eight to ten. Then comes
the aeronautic section, ports, water-
ways and railways section, the labor
covenant, the section on guarantees
and the final clauses.
"Germany by the terms of the
treaty restores Alsace-Lorraine to
France, accepts the internationaliza-
tion of the Saar Basin temporarily and
of Danzig permanently, agrees to ter-
ritorial changes towards Belgium and
Denmark and in East Frussia, cedes
most of Upper Silesia to Poland, and
renounces all territorial and political
rights outside Europe, as to her own
or her allies' territoies and especially
to Morocco, Egypt, Siam, Liberia and
Shantung. She also recognizes the
total independence of German Austria,
Czecho-Slovakia and Poland.
Army Only 100,000
Her army is reduced to a hundred
thousand men including officers: con-
scription within her territories is abol-
ished; all forts fifty kilometers east of
the Rhine razed; and all importation,
exportation and nearly all production
of war material stopped. Allied oc-
cupation of parts of Germany will con-
tinue till reparation is made but will
be reduced at the end of each of three
five year periods if Germany is ful-
filling her obligations. Any violation
by Germany of the conditions as to
the zone 50 kilometers east of the
Rhine will be regarded as an act of
wnr.
Only Six Warship*
The German navy is reduced to six
battleships, six light cruisers and
twelve torpedo boats without sub-
marines, nnd a personnel of not over
15,000. All other vessels must be sur-
rendered or destroyed. Germany is
forbidden to build forts controlling
the Raltic, must demolish Helgoland,
open the Kiel canal to all nations,
and surrender her 14 submarine
cables. She may have no military or
naval air forces except one hundred
unarmed seaplanes until October first
to detect mines and may manufacture
aviation material for six months.
Germany accepts full responsibil-
ity for all damages caused to allied
and associated governments and na-
tionals, agrees specifically to reim-
burse all civilian damages beginning
with an initial payment of 20,000,000,-
000 marks, subsequent payments to
be secured by bonds to be issued at
the discretion of the reparations com-
mission. Germany is to pay shipping
damage on a ton-for-ton basis by ces-
sion of a large part of her merchant-
coasting and river fleets and by new
construction; and to devote her eco-
nomic resources to the rebuilding of
the devastated regions.
She agrees to return to the nine-
teen-fourteen most favored nation
tariffs, with discrimination of sort; to
allow allied and associated nationals
freedom of transit through her terri-
tories and to accept highly detailed
provisions as to pre-war debts, unfair
competition, internationaligation of
roads and rivers, and ether economic
and financial clauses. She also
agrees to the trial of the ex-kaiser by
an international high court for a
supreme offense against international
morality, and of other nationals for
violation of the laws and customs of
war. Holland to be asked to extra-
| diate the former emperor and Ger-
many being responsible for delivering
the latter.
Not Member of League
The league of nations is accepted by
the allied and associate powers as
operative and by Germany in prin-
ciple but without membership. Simi-
larly an international labor body is
brought into being with a permanent
office and an annual convention. A
great number of international bodies
of different kinds and for different
purposes are creatcd, some under the
league of nations some to exccute the
peace treaty, among the former is the
commission to govern the Saar Basin
till a plebiscite is held fifteen years
hence; the high commissioner of Dan-
zig, which is created into a free city
under the league, and various commis-
sions for plebiscites in Malmody,
Schleswig and East Prussia, among
those to carry out the peace treaty,
are the reparation, military, naval,
I air, financial and economic commis-
I sions, the international high court and
military tribunals to fix responsibil-
I ities and a series of bodies for the
control of international rivers.
"Certain problems are left for solu-
tion between the allies and associated
powers, notably details of the disposi-
tion of the German fleet and cables,
the former German colonies and the
values paid In reparation. Certain
other problems such as the laws of the
air and the opium, arms and liquor
traffic are either agreed to in detail
or set for early international action.
The preamble for the treaty, estab-
lishing a basis for negotiations, is as
follows:
"Preamble. The preamble names
as parties of the one part of the Unit-
ed states, the British Emprie. France,
Italy and Japan, described as the five
allied and associated powers, and Bel-
gium, Bolivia, Brazil, Cuba, China,
Ecuador, Greece. Guatemala, Haiti.
The Hedjaz, Honduras, Liberia, Nica-
raugua, Panama. Peru, Poland, Port-
ugal, Rumania, Serbia, Siam, Czecho-
slovakia and Uruguay, who with the
five above are described as the allied
and associated powers and on the
other part, Germany.
"It states that: Bearing In mind
that on the request of the then im-
perial German government an armis-
tice was granted on November
eleventh, nineteen eighteen by the five
allied and associated powers in order
that a treaty of peace might be con-
cluded with her, and whereas the allied
and associated powers being equally
desirious that the war in which they
were successfully involved directly or
indirectly and which originated in the
declaration of war by Austria-Hun-
gary on July twenty-eighth, nineteen
fourteen against Serbin, the declara-
ed states, the British Empire, France,
tion of war by Germany against Rus-
sia on Aug. 1, nineteen fourteen, and
against France on August third, nine-
teen fourteen, and in the invasion of
Belgium, should be replaced by a firm,
just and a durable peace, the pleni-
potentiaries, (having communicated
their full powers found in good and
due form have agreed as follows):
Terminates War.
"From the coming into force of the
present treaty the state of war will
terminate. From the moment and
subject to the provisions of this treaty
official relations with Germany, and
with each of the German states will be
resumed by the allied and associated
powers.
Afghan Music.
The Afghnns have a penchant for
musical Instruments, and the wealthier
classes import some costly makes,
though occasionally their manner of
using them is somewhat startling. An
Afghan noblemnu sent for a grand pl«
ano, and had nil the lower part cut off,
ns he found It most convenient to piny
it squnttlng on the floor.
Honey In Africa.
Quantities of honey are found in the
African forests by the natives in hol-
low trees. The honey Is generally
at the summit of the tree, and the men
knock down the tree and smoke the
bees out of their lodging with burning
grass. The honey Is then quickly col-
lected aud taken to camp.
Playing Safe.
Billy wrote a letter to Santa Clnus
and when he finished he asked his fa-
ther for a check. "Cause," said tho
little fellow In way of explanation. "ot
course Santa Clnus has to pay his heat-
ers or maybe the'd go off und strike
on Christmas eve."
The first secretary of the navy was
Benjamin Htoddert of Maryland, np
pointed In 1708, at the time of Adams'
administration ; he also served through
the adtuluistratlou of Jefferson.
PERUNA
and MANALIN Cured Me
Mrs. E. M. Harris, R. R.
No. 3, Ashland, Wis., sends
a message of cheer to the
pick:
"After following your advice
and using l'eruna and Manalln, I
nni rured of eatarrk of the none,
throat and stomach, from which
I hud Buffered for never*! year*.
When I commenced taking I'e-
runa I could not make my bed
without stopping to reat. Now I
Catarrh of the
Nose, Throat
and Stomach.
do all my work and am In rood
health. I recommend this valu-
able remedy to all Buffering from
any disease of the stomach."
Peruna la Sold Everywher
Liquid or Tablet Form
WATCH YOUR COLTS
For CuukIis, Colila and Distemper, end at the first symptoms of ny
•iirh ailment, glre small du«ea of that wuuilcrlul remedy, now
uiual u e<l In existence,
JilMHIVS I1IKTENFRR COMPOUND
Safe fur all ages—Colts, Marett In foal, Stallions and all othera. Ad
excellent prerentlTe a* well aa cure. Consumers may order direct from
tbe manufacturer, CO cent* and 91-16 • bottle, $5.50 and $11.00 ■
dozeu, delivered.
5l'OII.\ MKUICAL. COMPANY, Goehea, lad., V. S. A.
OTTO WEISS POULTRY FEEDS
Balanced Rations lor Chicks ami lit ns
Saves the Little Ones and Makes Hens Lay
- TI. Otto Weiss Milling Company, Wichita, Kansas a —=—:=
Push and Go.
"Here, boy," said the wealthy mo-
torist, "I wunt some petrol, and get a
move on. You will never pet any-
where in the world unless you have
pusli. Push Is essential. When I was
young I pushed, and that is whut got
me where I am."
"Well, guvnor," said the boy, "I
reckon you'll have to push again,
'cause we ain't got a drop of petrol In
the plnee."—Boston Transcript.
It's the early picnicker that'catches
the pneumonia.
A man's cup of Joy resembles an
after-dinner coffee cup, but bis cup of
sorrow holds several gallons.
ALLEN'S FOOT«= EASE DOES IT.
When your shoes pinch or your corns and
bunions ache get Allen's Foot = Ea#e, the
antiseptic powder to be shaken Into shoes
and sprinkled In the foot-bath. It will
take the sting out of corns and bunions
and give Instant relief to Tired. Aching,
Swollen, Tender feet. Sold everywhere.
Don't accept an]/ substitute.—-Adv.
Her Humble Admission.
Voice Over the Phone—"Hullo 1 Is
that you, darling?" Darling—"Yes.
Who Is that speaking?"—London Mall.
Indigestion, Gas
and Bloat From
Acid-Sfomach
An ac'd-stoinach cannot digest food
properly. Instead, the food sours and
ferments and, passing Into the intes-
tines, becomes a breeding place for
countless millions of deadly germs—
toxic poisons they are called. These
poisons are absorbed Into the system
and cause untold misery. So, you see,
it is just acid-stomach, nothing else—
that makes so many people weak, list-
less and unfit; saps their strength and
energy; robs them of their vigor and
dtallty. Biliousness, bad liver, n<*rv-
ousness, blinding, splitting headaches,
rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica—these
nnd many other still more serious ail-
ments often are traced to the com-
mon source—an acid-stomach.
Take EATONIO and get rid quickly
of the pains of Indigestion, heartburn,
that horrible, lumpy, Moated feeling
after eating; disgusting, belching,
food-repeating; sour, gassy stomach.
These stomach miseries are caused by
what doctors call "Hyperacidity." It's
Just ACID-STOMACH. And In ad-
dition to tlie palm* and miseries It
causes, ACID-STOMACH Is the start-
er of a long train of ailments that
uost people never dreamed are In
any way connected with the stomach.
Pleasant tasting EATONIO TAB-
LETS that you eat like a bit of candy,
quickly put an end to your stomach
troubles. They act as an absorbent—
literally wipe up the excess hurtful
add and make the stomach pure,
sweet and strong. Help digestion se
that you get all the power and energy
from your food. You cannot be well
without It I
If you are one of those who have
"tried everything" but In spite of it
still suffer all kinds of ncld-atomach
miseries—if you lack physical and
mental strength nnd vigor—begin at
once to take EATONIO. Get back
your physical and mental punch and
enjoy the good things of life.. Like
thousands of others you will say you
never dreamed that such amazingly
quick relief nnd such a remarkable
Improvement in your general health
was possible.
Your druggist has EATONIC. We
authorize him to guarantee it to give
you instant relief or refund yout
money. Get a big box of EATONIO
today, It costs but little and the re
suits are wonderful!
( FOR YOUR ACID STOMACfiH v
rtockccaismq n\
Vestem Canada
isasporofUableasGrainGrownq
maker. Raising Cattle, |
where ron
c. J® !®&turnC,?n"d* Grain Growing is a profit maker. Rai
tan? -at $15 to #30 Per Acre
-Good erasing Land at Mueh Less.
for the purchase of stock or other farming requirements can be had at low int.rffi
and sui
improvements), good markets and shipping 7l
schools, churches, splendid climate and sure crops.
r. H. HEWITT, 2012 Hila Stmt, KANSAS CITY, HO.
1'unndlan government Agent
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Stevens, Arthur J. The Gate Valley Star (Gate, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 15, 1919, newspaper, May 15, 1919; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc165201/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.