The Calumet Chieftain (Calumet, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 30, 1919 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
SI
tc
m
w
m
a
THE C
Vs'OBIH OF
MIDDLE SHE
Need Help to Pass the Crisis Safe-
ly—Proof that Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Cornpouad
Caa be Relied Upon.
SEVEN BAYS
OF NEV/S
THE WORLD OVER
Urbatia, 111.—' "During; Change of Life,
In addition to ita annoying symptoms, I
had an attack of
grippe which lasted
I all winter and left
| me in a weakened
condition. I felt at
times that I would
never be well again.
1 read of Lydia E.
>Pinkham'9 Vege-
table Compound
, and what it did for
women passing
through the Change
of Life, so I told my
doctor I would try
it. I soon began to
gain in strength
and the annoying
symptoms dis-
appeared and your Vegetable Compound
lias made me a well, strong woman so
I do all my own housework. I cannot
^recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound too highly to women
passing through the Change of Life."
—Mrs.Frank Henson, 131(513. Orchade
St., Urbana, 111.
Women who suffer from nervousness,
"heat flashes," backache, headaches
and "the blues" should try this famous
root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pink*
ham'a Vegetable Compound.
finds Ring in Chicken's Stomach.
.T. W. Jones, prominent business man
<*' Huntington, \V. Yii.. is today again
wearing on Ids linger a big ring with
an amethyst setting from wldch he lm<l
been mysteriously separated for sev-
erul weeks. 11«• lost the ring in his
chicken yard, lie now knows, for in cut-
ting open one of the chickens while
preparing It for the taijle the ring was
found hi its stomach.
BOSCHEE'S SYRUP
Why use ordinary cough remedies
when Boschee's Syrup has been used
so successfully for fifty-one years in
ail parts of the United States for
coughs, bronchitis, colds settled in the
tUroat, especially lung troubles? It
gives the patient a good night's rest,
free from coughing, with easy expec-
torntlon in the morning, gives nature
n chance to soothe the Inllmaed parts,
throw olf the disease, helping the pa-
tient to regain his health. Made in
America and sold for more than half
n century.—Adv.
It often costs a lot to keep virtue
In repair, but the self-starter of vice
Is always in working order.
Rppp clonn inside ns well ns on tilde ?>y taking
a gentle lnxntivo nt leant once a week, such as
Doctor Pierce's Pleaaant Pellets. Adv.
A little disappointment now and
then is a wholesome tonic.
Confined to Her Bed
Days at a Time
But Dean's Brought a Quick
and Lasting Cure.
Mrs. Ilerrmnn Riisehke, 177 Fourth
St.. Lontj Island City, N. Y., says:
"The paias in my back were almost
unbearable. 1 always felt tired ami
listless and found it almost impossible
to attend to my housework. Gradually
the pains increased -day by day my sul-
i'erina became worse. Of-
ten flashes of liyiit and
black (specks would ap-
pear before my eyes and
dizzy spells would come
over me. My hands and
feet were swollen and iny
head pained me so at
times I thought it would
split. My Kidneys an-
noyed me, too. I be-
came despondent. Some-
times 1 would have to take to my bed
for three or four days at a time. I
had the good fortune to hear of
poan's Kidney Pills, so I be^an us-
ing them and was soon back in per-
fect health again. My cure has stood
the test of time, so I am only too glad
to recommend Doan's to other kidney
sufferers."
Mrs. Ruschke Rave the above state-
ment in April, 1910, and on April 4,
1917, she added: "I gladly repeat all
I have said about IJoan's Kidncil
Pills, for they have cured me of kid-
ney complaint."
Gel Dmu'i at Any Store, 00c > Bot
DOAN'S
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
Mrs. RuschW
Use Cuiicura Soap
To Clear Your Skin
All druggists: Soap 2f>. Ointment 2f> A 50. Talcum 26.
Sample eaoh free of "Cntlcnra, D«pft. E, Boston "
Baby Colds
require treatment with a remedy that con-
tains no opiates. Piso's is mild but effec-
tive; pleasant to take. Ask your druggist tor
PESO'S
War News.
Arrangements are In progress, ac-
cording to reports at Cobleaz, by
which the American army of occupa-
tion eventually will bo taken homo
by way of the Khine to Rotterdam or
some German port fcr embarkation.
The plans for troop transportation on
the Khine call for a large number of
barges and also for the use of all
available river steagiers.
An official dispatch from Belgrade
to the Serbian press bureau at Wash-
ington said popular feeling against the
Italian army grows every hour in the
Serb, Croat and Slovene regions oc-
j cupied by the Italian forces, and that
i open clashes occur dally.
+ + +
The proceedings of the first peace
| conference session were confined to
1 the election of Georges Clemenceau,
I the French premier, as permanent
j chairman of the conference, an ad-
dress of welcome by the president of
j the French republic, Raymond Poin-
I care, and speeches by President Wil-
son, Premier Lloyd George and Baron
Sonnino.
+ + +
All arrangements have been made
for President Wilson's visits to the
American battle fields and to some of
the- devastated regions of Northern
France, but the time has -not been
fixed. The visits will depend wholly
on the procedure of the peace confer-
ence and the turn of affairs in the
meetings.
t t +
It is the conviction of Marshal
Focli that the Rhine must be made
the barrier between Germany and
France. He expressed this clearly
when ho received American newspa-
per correspondents at Treves. The
marshal was there in connection with
tlio meeting concerning the extension
of the armistice.
♦ + +
Unity of command on the Siberian
front has been arranged, and the
French general, Jules Janin, who has
been commander of the Czecho-Slovak
army, will have supreme direction of
the Allied forces in Russia.
•1 -J- +
Occupation of Montenegro by Ser-
bian troops has resulted In a revolt
by the Montenegrins, according to an
official statement issued at the Mon-
tenegrin legation. Insurgents num-
bering about twenty thousand have
succeeded in occupying several towns
from which the Serbian forces were
driven.
+ + +
Besides Premier Clemenceau as pre-
siding officer at the peace conference,
provision has been made for several
vice-presidents, who doubtless will fn-
cludo an American, sitting alongside
of M. Clemenceau at the head of the
conference table and occasionally al-
ternating with him in presiding over
the deliberations of the congress.
+ + *
Washington.
Prohibition has become a part of
the basic law of the United States.
Ratifications of federal amendment by
thirty-six, states makes that measure
the Eighteenth Amendment to the fed-
eral constitution. All except a half
dozen of the forty-eight states are ex-
pected to adopt the amendment in the
next few w eeks.
4, 4.
Demobilization of combat units in
the United States had been ordered
General March, chief of staff, told the
House military committee recently.
Tliis means, he added, that every unit
of the army in the United States with
the exception of two regular regiments
held for police duty at each camp has
been ordered demobilized.
+ i +
A tour of the country in a "prison
special" is being organized by the Na-
tional Woman's party to carry to the
people the story of the administra-
tion's refusal to act on the federal
amendment, according to Miss Alice
Paul, chairman of the organization.
Thirty in every'*'thousand soldiers
in the United States died from in-
fluenza and pneumonia during the li-
month period ending December 27,
1918, according to a report of the di-
vision of sanitation of the surgeon
general's oitice.
4- *1. 4*
Ten major generals, thirteen brig-
adier generals and one colonel have
been selected by General Pershing for
distinguished service medals for their
work in connection with the creation
of the American army in France and
Its successful assault on the German
liues.
+ + +
Domestic.
Sixteen persons were reported In-
jured, three seriously, whes a San
Francisco street car escaped from con-
trol on a steep hill, coasted two blocks,
jumped the track on a curve and ran
into a residence.
| J. Willard Robinson, formerly a
I stenographer in the office of Jere-
iniah A. O'Leary, is accused of carry-
i ing messages between O'Leary and
German agents in Holland in 1917, in
an indictment for treason returned in
j New York by the federal grand Jury.
+ ♦ +
Passage of the proposed 20 per cent
war tax on theater tickets would
throw out of employment between
10,000 and 15,000 persons engaged in
theatrical and allied industries, ac-
cording to a statement issued by the
United Theater Managers of America.
•fr <• 4*
Four steamships, their decks crowd-
ed with American fighting men, hun-
dreds of whom gazed upon the home
shores from cots and convalescent
chairs, passed the Statue of Liberty
recently amid a din from fyarbor craft,
bringing home 4,992 heroes.
+ + +
Three navy airmen were killed near
Pensacola, Fla., when a seaplane fell
into Pensacola Bay. They were Er
sign A. D. Honeywell of Geneva, N.
Y., John Wigmore of Los Angeles
Cal., and James J. Cray of Pittsburgh,
Pa.
•fr 41
A movement to save from outlawry
the manufacture and consumption of
beer and light wines, of small alco-
holic content, notwithstanding the
ratification of the federal prohibition
constitutional amendment, has- been
inaugurated by the New York Feder
ation of Labor.
4* 4* 4*
A general, strike of organized labor
designed to paralyze every industry in
the country, beginning the 4tli of next
July, was decided upon by the Na-
tional Labor Congress as a means of
obtaining a new trial for Thomas J.
Mooney and Warren Billings.
+ 4* 4-
An investigation of charges made
by Gov. Henry Alien of Kansas re-
garding conditions under which the
35th Division fought in the Battle of
Argonne Forest is asked in a resolu-
tion introduced in the House by Rep-
resentative Campbell of Kansas.
4" 4- -b
Southwest.
The prohibiton resolution has been
passed finally in the lower house of
the Texas legislature. Senator Dean,
who is engineering the senate prohibi-
tion resolution, announces that the
senate will wait and take up the
house resolution.
+ 4" 4*
A negro bandit who held up and
robbed passengers on the Chicago,
Great Western train between Leaven-
worth and Kansas City, is believed to
be in hiding in Leavenworth. Rail-
road detectives have been working
with the local police in an effort to
run the robber down
4> 4- 4.
Lius Cedella, one of the most im-
portant Mexican rebel leaders in the
Tampico oil region, has surrendered
with three hundred followers to fed-
eral troops under command of Gen.
Cesar Lopez de Lara, according to a j
telegram from Monterey given out at
Brownsville, Tex., by the Mexican
consulate.
4. 4. 4.
Guadalupe, opposite Fabian, Texas,
was captured and held over night by
a band of armed and mounted Mexi-
cans, reported to be a part of General
Felipe Angeles' command in the north.
Guadalupe is thirty miles southeast
of Juarez.
4, 4. 4.
Foreign.
Rioting occurred In Berlin during
the night after the Spartacans had
attempted to destroy the ballot boxes
used in the recent election, according
to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch
from Copenhagen. The Spartacans
were repulsed everywhere.
4. 4. 4,
A soft blue-white diamond, weigh-
ing 388 Vi carats, has been found at
the Jagersfonteen Mine, Orange River
Colony. This promises to become one
of the diamond field's "historic
Sem."
4. 4. 4.
The course of the elections through-
out the "German state" says a Ger
man government wireless dispatch,
received in London, has clearly proved
that the development of a republican
form of government interests the
whole German nation.
4. 4. 4.
Grave election riots are taking place
in Germany, where the people ara
voting to choose members of the na-
tional assembly. A general strike lias
been djilared at Leipsic, which is
without gas and water, according to
Copenhagen advices to the Exchange
Telegraph Company.
4. 4. 4.
The French steamer Chaproi has
struck a floating mine in the Straitj
of Messina, sinking in a few minutes
Five hundred passengers, mostly
Greeks, Serbians and Russians, liava
been drowned. Another steamer saved
one hundred and fifty of those on
board.
4- 4* 4*
Dr. Karl Liebknecht has been shot
and killed while trying to escape as
he was being taken to prison, accord-
ing to the Frankfort Gazette.
Be Sure to Get
HE wax-wrapped
sealed paefcass
with WPAGLEV'S
upon it is a guar-
antee of quality.
K
The largest chewing-
gum factories in the
world —the Sarsesf
selling gum tn the
world: that is what
WRIGLEY'S means.
$
06
SEALED TiGHT
KEPT RIGHT
The Rauor Lasts!
How to Do It.
"We have been married ten years
without 1111 argument."
"That's right. Let her have her
own way. Don't argue."—Boston
Transcript.
INDIGESTION, GAS,
UPSET STOMACH
HURRY! JUST EAT ONE TABLET
OF PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN FOR
INSTANT RELIEF.
No waiting! When meals don't fit
and you belch gas, acids and undigest-
ed food. When you feel indigestion
pain, lumps of distress in stomach,
heartburn or headache. Here is instant
relief.
Just as soon as you eat a tablet of
Pape's Diapepsln all the dyspepsia, in-
digestion and stomach distress ends.
These pleasant, harmless tablets of
Pape's Diapepsin always make sick, up-
set stomachs feel fine at once and they
cost so little at drug stores.—Adv.
A Time Saver.
Mistress—I want a maid who will
be faithful and not a time-waster. Car
you promise that?
Bridget—Indeed'n I can. I'm thai
scrup-lous, ma'am, about wastin' tim<
that I make one job of prayin' and
scrubbin'.—Life.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle 0!
CASTORIA, that famous old remedj
for infants and children, and see that il
Bears the
Signature of(
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castorig
liiU Clii Mil vli, uULi dvt> 111 it L II
Song Trenches.
"She is having her voice trained."
"I suppose that is to enable her to go
over the top notes."
Red Cross Ball Blue is the finest
product of its kind in the world. Ev-
ery woman who has used it knows
this statement to be true.
Any man who feeds upon his own
greatness Is not apt to be bothered
with the gout.
Easily Accomplished.
Rich Bachelor—"My only ambition
la to die poor." Married Friend—"And
have you picked out the girl yet?"
Groves Tasteless chill Tonic
restores vitality and energy by purify! m: and en-
riching the blood. Yon can noon foel tb Strength-
ening, Invigorating ttifect. Price Wc.
It's what a woman doesn't know
about a man that causes her to have a
good opinion of him.
It isn't an idle claim;
It's an accepted fact
That the now-famous
HELIOTROPE
FLOUR
The Always
Reliable''
Is on a level with the
present demand for the best
—Ask Your Grocer
Oklahoma City Mill & Elevator Co., Oklahoma City
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Penn, S. A. The Calumet Chieftain (Calumet, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 30, 1919, newspaper, January 30, 1919; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc168194/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.