The Herald-Sentinel. (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 3, 1918 Page: 2 of 8
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THE CORDELL H E R A L D - S E N T I N B L
Kill That
Cold and
Save Health
CASCARAK QUININE
The old family remedy—In tablet
form—nft, (lire, easy to take. No
opiate*—no unpleasant after effect*.
Cures colds In 14 hours- Grip in S
days. Money backifitfails. Get the
genuine box with
Red Top and Mr.
Hill'a picture on it
M Tablet a (or llo.
At Any Drug Star*
WIIIH's Ming Cotton Seed
Urg.st expert scientific shippers-home and
jetMler"'hlgb g™d"PlANTINt
OCT WI (.LET'S COTTON CATALOG
[oat outiearly short staples,early lung staples,
Wrly wilt resistant typo*. Stnte types and
amounts wanted, and we will price.
WILLET SEED COMPANY. Auiusta, CaoriU
~ — Washington'! pppulatlon Is boosted
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 1-1918. 40,000 by war.
RELIABLE PRESCRIPTION
FOR THE KIDNEYS
For many yean druggists have watched
with much interest the remarkable record
maintained by t)r. Kilmer's .Swamp-Root,
the great kidney, liver and bladder medi-
cine.
It is a physician's prescription.
Swamp-Root is a strengthening medi-
cine. It helps the kidneys, liver and blad-
der do the work nature intended they
should do.
Swamp-Root has stood the test of years.
It is sold by all druggists on its merit and
it should help you. No other kidney medi-
cine has so many friends.
Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start
treatment at once.
However, if you wish first to test this
great preparation Bend ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—Adv.
The flrst and worst t>f all frauds
Is to cbout one's self. All sin is easy
after that.—P. J. Bailey.
CZAR'S AUTOMOBILE OPERATED OVER SNOW
Net Contents 15Fluid I
. ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT.
J AVe$elabtefrepafatiMfrAj-
I simulating theFood bjr Regular
I tlntftheStooactoandBwiwa
i Thereby Promoiing Dltfeslion
| Cheerfulness andRestCootam
neither Optam,Morphine n*
| Mineral, not Wahootm
j^jouk'sAMwanx
\
3 resulting therefrori-inln"1'^
ftcSlmfle Silnrtarsrf
BMCawtAonGoiVfl®
r YORft
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
GASTHIA
For Infanta and Ohflflwin.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
Bears the
SignatureJ
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Yeers
CASTORIA
Mexico Is buying American soap.
No Need.
Lady—Do you think It Is fair to take
his enndy? I it lg not the sjgn of an expert to
Little Boy—I don't have to be fair— snort every time you swing the ax.
I kin lick him,—Life.
LAXATfv It BHOVK? the cause,
2ig«ta™ii,o,X'xflra£.oyulnlne''' ■•w.owvil
AVOID A DOCTOR'S BILL
on the flrst of the month by taking
now a bottle of Mansfield Cough Bal-
sam for that hacking, hollow cough.
Price 25c and 50c.—Adv.'
Poverty may sidetrack a man, but
It never blows him up.
Philadelphia municipal court heard
83,004 cases In last fiscal year.
colic in horses
demands PROMPT attention. Keep
one or twu bottles of
Dr. David Roberta'
Colic Drench *&%•
In jour medicine chest all the time.
It relieves In the shortest possible
time. Head the Practical Home
■ e^gf'
<r<rtrfr£r tr'Wr t> ☆•iWKrtrft'tKr trCr-tiirtrtiirirti
TAX COLLEGE ATHLETICS
College athletics and big
league baseball will have to con-
tribute their share to the Ameri-
can war chest under the new
• ; revenue act. Commissioner of
Internal Revenue Daniel C. Rop-
fc er ruled that athletic contests
come under the classification of
$ "amusements" nnd persons buy-
£ *5 tickets thereto will be re-
r quired to pay a tax of 5 cents
£ on a half-dollar or 10 cents on a
£ dollar.
The Eternal Feminine.
St. Peter—Right this way, ladles, to
'get your halos.
Shade of Mrs. DeStyle—Now, Mr.
Peter, before I take one I would like
to know If you allow the privilege of
exchanging It If I find when I get home
that It doesn't fit?
High Honor for Roush.
Eddie Roush Is one of the youngest
players who ever led the National
league In batting. He Is twenty-four
years old.
Baseball Boom at Panama.
Baseball Is booming again this win-
ter In the Panama Canal Zone. The
league consists of teu clubs.
A Religious Combination.
Recently a parcel was received In
the Toledo post office xvhlch for some
reason had to be opened. It was ad-
dressed to "Any Soldier In France Who
Does Not Receive Another Present."
It contained a Bible aud a set of box-
ing gloves.
EXCELLENT TWO-YEAR-OLDS
Exceptionally Good Performances
Marked Wlndup of Racing Sea-
son at Belmont Park.
A couple of exceptionally good per-
formances by two-year-olds marked
the wlndup of the harness racing sea-
son nt Belmont park, Philadelphia.
The Divorcee, a sister to this season's
great three-year-old, Bertha Dillon,
2:03>4, by Dillon Axworthy, 2:10^4,
out of Miss Bertha C„ 2:10%, by Bar-
onmore, 2::14tt. took a record of
2:14, and The Cossack, by Dillon Ax-
worthy, out of Czarevna (3), 2:07V4,
by Peter the Great, 2:07%, took one of
2:13. It Is doubtful If any other two-
year-olds ever trotted to as fast rec-
ords as far north as Philadelphia In
the month of November.
Athletics for Students.
Coach Chester L. Brewer of the
Michigan Agricultural college Is work-
ing on a plan which will require all
the students to take part In some sort
of athletics In order that the students
may be physically fit.
Kansas Germ Free Fluid Vaccine
with a proven record on over half a million calves, has by actual test made
good everywhere and has stood the tent of time. It is safe to use at anytime.
Cannot give the disease to calves or spread disease in pastures. It is easy
to administer. Leading cattlemen are using it exclusively—ask any of them.
Write us for names and free book on blackleg.
THE KANSAS BLACKLEG SERUM CO.
101 Stockyards Exchange Wichita, Kant.
MACHINE MAKE8 HIGH 8PEED- OVER FROZEN SURFACE.
The former czar's automobile, now used by Russian officers on missions
In and around Petrograd, Is shown In accompanying photograph.
It Is operated over the snow by means of leather belts with rubber
facings, the front wheels being mounted on runners. The machine Is capable
of making 100 miles an hour over a frozen surface.
ERRORS Or OWNERS
Fall to Oil Parts That Are in
Out-of-Way Places.
SMALL NUTS NOT TIGHTENED
Trouble With Average Motorist la
That He Fails to Realize That
Automobile Is Very Delicate
Piece of Mechanism.
There are motorcar owners who
sometimes wonder why their cars do
not last as long or give as much satis-
faction as an automobile of the same
make owned by a friend or an ac-
quaintance. The trouble with the av-
erage motorcar owner Is that he falls
to realize that the automobile is a
piece of very fine machinery and that
It will render service In proportion to
the attention it receives. It is not
human and will not cry out when
abused.
C. A. Englebeck, a well-known dis-
tributor, has been through the auto-
mobile business from racing, service,
selling, superintending and managing
standpoints.
Englebeck Talks.
"The car owner should remember
that washing the body does not cletn
the motor; that tightening the nuts
and bolts easily reached does not make
those under the c<y any tighter; that
oil placed in the motor does not mean
that one can neglect the clutch, trans-
mission or rear axle," talked Engle-
beck at a recent club meeting.
"We recommend certain things
which every factory endorses because
we have found from experience that
they will bring the best results. Do
not make changes or Improvements'
without flrst consulting the dealer
from whom you have bought the car,
for there may be strong objections to
these changes of "which you are not
aware.
Factory Know* Best
"Remember that the standard fac-
tory maintains engineering and ex-
perimental departments and is in a
better position to know what is proper
to use or not to use in connection with
its cars than Is the average mechanic,
who Is apt to try to Induce an owner
to change some part of the design
or Install some new device.
"When , it becomes necessary,
through accident, neglect, abuse or
other cause to make a change, one
should seek the advice and services
of the dealer from whom he has
bought the oar. This dealer has the
Interest of the car at heart more than
any other person in the trade. But,
if distance makes the dealer unavail-
able, It Is cheaper in the end to em-
ploy the best mechanic in the vicinity.
"If the motorcar owner will relig-
iously observe these rules and give his
automobile conscientious care, it will
be easy for him to get long and sat-
isfactory service."
AUT0IST WASTES MUCH FOOD
LOCATE TROUBLE IN MOTORS
Pounding May Be Caused by Imper-
fect Electrical Connections or
From Lost Motion.
If the pounding Is regular and con-
tinuous, it Is likely to be from lost
motion in bearings. If Irregular and
occasional, It Is more likely to be due
to pre-lgnitlon from Incandescent
carbon, or from imperfect electrical
connections.
If it is accompanied with an occa-
sional miss, especially if the missing is
more frequent when the car Is run-
ning than when the engine is runnning
Idle, It is more apt to be imperfect
elecitlcal connections.
If One-Third of Cars of United 8tate
Will Kill Chickens a Year, Loss
la $400,000.
(By C. 8. ANDERSON, Colorado Agricul-
tural College, Fort Collin*, Colo.)
Here Is a hint to the motorist who
wants to help in our national cam-
paign for food conservation. Have
you ever stopped to count up the num-
ber of chickens that you run over la
a season?
Statistical reports show that there
are 3,000,000 motor cars in dally use
In the United States, and most of
these cars cover some country roads
every day. A vast number of these
cars are opernted by careful drivers
and will not kill one chicken in a year
while other cars may kill several in
one day.
To be very conservative, let .us es-
timate that one-third of these cars
wtll kill one chicken per year. This
means a sacrifice of 1,000,000 chick-
ens. These chickens will vary as to
size, age and value, but with pres-
ent prices, an average of 40 cents each
a very conservative estimate.
Based on these figures, the value of
this annual destruction Is $400,000.
While it Is impossible to know the
actual loss, it is very likely that two
or three times the above figure would
be more nearly correct.
Just Once! Try Dodson's Liver Tone!
Take No Calomel! Listen To Me!
If bilious, constipated, headachy or sick, I guarantee
relief without taking dangerous calomel
which sickens and salivates.
Stop using calomel! It makes you
sick. Don't lose a day's work. If you
feel Inzy, sluggish, bilious or consti-
pated, listen to me!
Calomel Is mercury or quicksilver,
which catfees necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when It comes into contact
with sour bile, crashes into it, break-
ing it up. This Is when you feel that
awful nausea and cramping. If you
are "all knocked out," if your liver Is
torpid and bowels constipated or you
have headache, dizziness, coated ton-
gue, If breath is bad or stomach sour,
Just try a spoonful of harmless Dod-
son's Liver Tone.
Here's my guarantee—Go to any
drug store and get a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone for a few cents. Take a
spoonful tonight, and If it doesn't
straighten you right up and make you
feel fine and vigorous by morning. I
want you to go back to the store tad
get your money. Dodson's Liver Tone
is destroying the sale of calomel be-
cause it is real liver medicine; entirely
vegetable, therefore It can not salivate
or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to work and clean your
bowels of that sour bile and consti-
pated waste which Is clogging your
system and making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone will keep the entire family
feeling fine for monthg. Give It to
your children. It Is harmless; doesn't
gripe and they like Its pleasant taste.
—Adv.
Man, being "made in the image of
the master," makes u shining mark
to shoot at.
BRAKES THAT DRAG ARE BAD
That They Are Being Made Laas Ef.
flciant for Future Use la Objec-
tionable Reault
Almost as bad as brakes which slip
are brakes which drag all the time.
The mere loss of power and pickup
this occasions is not the most serious
effect. The fact that as long as the
brakes are dragging they are being
made less efficient for the future is
the most objectionable result. The
dragging wears the friction surfaces
so that It is Impossible to adjust them
properly after a time.
ALARM BELL ON SPARE TIRE
Wrong Combination of Buttons
Sounda Alarm—Steel Box Con-
tains Peculiar Mechaniam.
A lock for the spare automobile
tire Invented by Theodore P. Laskar,
7716 St. Clair avenue, Detroit, rings
an alarm bell when tampered with.
The lock fits on the tire receptacle
Adruco Barbed Wire
Liniment
heals without
a scar.—Adv.
A Harah Cynicism.
"Marriage is a lottery," said the phil-
osopher.
"In that case," commented the poor
misanthrope, "the anti-gambling laws
are not enforced as they ought to be."
Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications as they cannot reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There la
only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafnesa,
and that Is by a constitutional remedy.
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acta
through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces
of the System. Catarrhal Deafness la
caused by an Inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube,
when this tube Is Inflamed you have a
rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and
when it Is entirely closed, Deafness is the
result. Unless the Inflammation can be re-
duced and this tube restored to Its nor-
mal condition, hearing may be destroyed
forever. Many cases of Deafness are
caused by Catarrh, which Is an Inflamed
condition of the Mucous Surfaces.
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any
case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot
be cured by HALL'S CATARRH
MEDICINE.
All Druggists 75c. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney ft Co., Toledo, Ohio.
A Big Darnirig Bill.
In 1901, when the French govern-
ment set out to have its state tapes-
tries mended, it was estimated that
the cost would be equivalent to $150,-
000. The tapestries in question num-
bered 90.
No Proofe.
"The sense of public honesty is grow-
ing every day."
"Can't notice that contributions to
the conscience fund are getting into
the million class."
A Tart Reply.
"I hope you never deceive your
wife," said the meddlesome man, with
a look of pious concern.
"I'd like to know what business It la
of yours to hope that I never deceive
my wife," snapped the Irascible citi-
zen. "Do you think I'm going to let her
find out how ornery 1 am, Just to
please you?"
Best Way.
"How objects do1 puss from eye to
eye."
"Yes; I suppose they do It on the
bridge of the nose."
Girls who are enrolled as second-
class yeomen In the United States navy
receive $85 per month salary.
Spartan Women Suffered Untold Torturea
but who wonts to be a Spartan? Take
"Femenina" for all female disorders.
Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
Nothing New.
"The papers say that women are
to be used as carriers for the malls."
"Well, why shouldn't they carry the
malls? Haven't they long been trans-
porting them?"
Her Face Beams
Alarm Bell Warna of Thievea.
In place of a lid and is held in place
by four bolts.
A round steel box in the center con-
tains the mechanism and has on Its
face eight buttons. When the right
combination of buttons has been
pressed the bolts can be slid back and
the tire removed. A wrong combina-
tion of buttons starts a bell Inside the
lock ringing.
SACKS FOR EMERGENCY USES
Assist in Getting Stalled Machinea Out
of Muflhoiea if Placed Under
Rear Wheela.
A lap robe, a gunny snck, or even
some old newspapers will frequently
be enough to get a car out of deep
sand or a mudhole If placed In front of
the rear wheels to provide traction.
A big armful of straw or hay, alpo,
will turn the trick. Anything, In fact,
that will keep the wheels from spin-
ning will suffice. Mnny motorists carry
a few old sacks for this purpose, and
they can testify to the fact that they
are worth many times their cost as
emergency equipment.
FOR FOLLOWING OTHER CARS
Get In Habit of Running Machine
Slightly Off Road to Prevent
Danger of Collision.
When following other cars on a
crowded country road watch out for
a sudden stop. Qet 1$ the habit of
running the car slightly off the road,
if there Is room, so that If the brakes
do not hold you will be in no danger
of hitting the car ahead.
GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER
Has been used for all aliments that
are caused by a disordered stomach
and inactive liver, such as sick head-
ache, constipation, sour stomach,
nervous indigestion, fermentation of
food, palpitation of the heart caused by
gases In the stomach. August Flower
Is a gentle laxative, regulates digestion
both in stomach and intestines, cleans
and sweetens the stomach and alimen-
tary canal, stimulates the liver to se-
crete the bile and Impurities from the
blood. Sold in all civilized countries.
B0 and 90 cent bottles.—Ad*.
Tommy Needed Them, Too.
The wounded Tommy writhed nnd
squirmed as the masseuse, with Iron
fingertips, massaged his Injured leg.
At last he burst out:
"'Arf a mo! What d'yer think yer
a-dolng of? Owl"
"It's all right!" said the masseuse.
"I'm kneading your muscles!"
The Tommy gently but firmly pulled
his leg away from the none too gentle
grasp of his tormentor, and breathed;
"So'm I!"
GOOD HOMEMADE TIRE PAINT
Mixture of Gasoline, C-35 Cement,
Soapatone and Whiting Will Be
Found Satisfactory.
A satisfactory tire paint for finish-
ing the inside of a tire after repair-
ing may be made by mixing thorough-
ly one gallon of gasoline, one-half pint
of C-35 cement, one and one-half
pounds of soapstone and one-half
pound of whiting.
THIS 18 THE AGE OF YOUTH.
You will look ten years younger if you
darken your ugly, grizzly, gray haira by
using "La Creole" Hair Dressing.—Adv.
Not Posalble.
"Tlje architect spoiled that new po-
lice court."
"Couldn't be spoiled. A police court
is, of necessity, a fine building."
All the Adverbs.
"Wife shopping early?"
"Early, late, often nnd enthusiasti-
cally."
m .!! Murln> Is tor Tired Eyes. 1
MOVKt Red Eyes-Son Eyes — s
" inulated ayellds. B*t —=
vrith the "Wash day tmile," instead of the
Wash Day Grouch, in aheer joy and da.
light at the dazzling, anowy white purity
of her white goods.
Red Crass Ball Blue
Will chase "wash-day-blues"—
Succeed where others fail, and
bring the smile of triumph to
eyery housewife who really cam
for pure, white, fresh clothes.
5 CENTS. AT AIL CR0CEBS.
Frost Proof Cabbage Plants
Early Jersey and Charleston Wakefield, Sue-
cession and Flat Dutch. By express, 800, |1.S5|
1,000,12.00 ; 6,000 at 11.75; 10,000 up at 1.50. F. O.
B. HERE. Delivered parcel post 100, 86o; 1,000.
13.50. Satisfaction guaranteed.
D. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S. C
Cuticura Heals
Skin Troubles
Soap 25c. Ointment 35 and 50c.
Oklahoma Directory
Films Developed
our dim experts glre youbetter results, aastmaa
Kodaks, Films, and all Kodak Supplies sent
where, prepaid. Send us your next roll am
convince you we are doing better Kodak fli
Send for cstsloc.
Westfall Drug Co., Kodak Dept.
200 W. Mala Eastman Agents Oklahoma City
TRY
Shipping
Your
TO BKATRICE CREAMERY CO.
Oklahoma City, Okla.
CREAM
STORAGE BATTERIES
Hwbullt, Rmpmh*4 mmd Re-ehmrfd
New Batteries In stock (or any make of car.
Anything electrical on AIITeNOBILe er rtIN
iieaiiNC pirns insulub as* iepiihi,
Pruaty Storage Battery Co.
427 W. Mala St. Oklaheaa City, Okla.
N. S. SHERMAN MACHINE
AND IRON WORKS
Engineers, Founders and Machinists
Grate Bars and Smokestacks
18 (0 3t Esst Mlia Street Oklshsas City. Okla.
It for Byes that (eel dry and imart. =
HUB your Byec as much of your loving care s
as your Teeth aid with the same regularity. r
CUE FW TKI TIN CUNT MIT KW m l ~
Sold st Drug and Optical Mores or by Ma:I.
1st Murlei Eje Rsms* Co, CMcscs. tm ftss Isok
laiiuiuuuiiiuiuiiuiaumiuiiiMiiiiuuiiiiuiiuuiiuuli
SCHOOL aad CHURCH
Furniture,Opere Chairs
Bend for catalog and prices.
JASKI SIPES CO. OKLAIOPM CITT
Tte Oehr Sudatty She* la OkbhMi Op
▲■to reader* fcodloo atrftlgfct-
eae4 eat a* (eel u aw.
Oklahoma AutoJUdteter
Feeder ft Lamp Repair Sbep
Owismuium: Repairing leaky,
smashed up and frosen radia-
tors. We do not ploy tubes,
but we replace old tuses with
new tubes. KM w. sacoiD tr
Fancy Cot Flowers and Plants
Floral Designs by mail at
express. Quick service.
FURROW & CO.
The Florists
129 V. Nsis St.. ekls. City, Okla
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Gunsenhouser, M. H. The Herald-Sentinel. (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 3, 1918, newspaper, January 3, 1918; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc169627/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.