Quinlan Mirror. (Quinlan, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1910 Page: 3 of 4
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natural i
DECIDES 10 GALL
SILHOUETTES OF
WESTERN CANADA
PREFERRED WALK
American Tourist Indignant at Seem-
ing Imputation That He Had
Feline Proclivities.
DECISION FOLLOWS MEETING
OF BANKERS.
"I don't like that Jones girl. She's
always running people down!"
"Goodness! I didn't know she had
an automobile!"
BOY TORTURED BY ECZEMA
"When my boy was six years old, he
suffered terribly with eczema. He
could neither sit still nor lie quietly in
bed, for the itching was dreadful. He
would irritate spots by scratching
with his nails and that only made
them worse. A doctor treated him
and we tried almost everything, but
the eczema seemed to spread. It
started in a small place on the lower
extremities and spread for two years
until It very nearly covered the back
part of his leg to the knee.
"Finally I got Cutlcura Soap, Cutl-
cura Ointment and Cuticura Pills and
gave them according to directions. I
used them In the morning and that
evening, before I put my boy to bed,
1 used them again and the improve-
ment even in those few hours was sur-
prising, the inflammation seemed to
be so much less. I used two boxes of
Cuticura Ointment, the same of the
Pills and the Soap and my boy was
cured. My son is now in his sev-
enteenth year and he has never had
a return of the eczema.
"I took care of a friend's child that
had eczema on its face and limbs and
I used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment.
They acted on the child just as they
did on my son and it has never re-
turned. I would recommend the Cuti-
cura Remedies to anyone. Mrs. A. J.
Cochran, 1823 Columbia Ave., Phila-
delphia, Pa., Oct. 20, 1909."
Temperamental Toilet Table.
A very aged Englishman many years
ago gave this advice to his daughter
in a letter as to what a lady's dressing
table should contain:
The best beautifler a young lady can
use is good humor. The best renavator
truth; the best rouge is modesty; the
best eyewater is the tears of sym-
pathy; the best gargle for the voice
is cheerfulness; the best wash for
smoothing wrinkles is contentment;
the best cure for deafness is atten-
tion; the best mirror is reflection, and
the whitest powder is innocence.
GOVERNOR DEN1ESTHEREP0RT
Would Amend Bank Guaranty Law
and Limit the Fees to Be
Retained by County
Officials.
Restrained by Politeness.
"Prisoner, have you any reasons to
present why the sentence of the court
should not be pronounced upon you?"
"No, your honor. I feel as if I
should like to say a few words about
the defense my lawyer put up for me,
but there are ladies present; you can
go ahead with the sentence, your
honor."
Just Turned About.
"With my husband," said the wife of
the busy man, "it is always a case of
talking shop."
"And with my wife," said the spouse
of the bargain hunter, "it is usually a
case of shopping talk."
There is no use going into a politi-
cal campaign with any reputation, be-
cause you won't have any when you
come out.
Constipation causes many serious diseases. It
Is thoroughly cured by Doctor Pierce's Pleasant
Pellets. One a —' *—*"
laxutive, three (or cathartic
apt
Following cheap advice is
prove expensive.
Guthrie, Okla.—Governor Haskell
has decided to call a special session I
of the legislature to meet January
18th to pass a bill limiting the amount j
of fees that clerks of the district
court, register of deeds and sheriffs
may retain; to amend the bank guar- |
auty law and to take up other matters.
This was the authoritative informa-
tion that developed here In connection
with the secretly called conference
of state bankers held with Governor
Haskell. The bankers were with the
governor several hours, recommend-
ing the amendments to the banking
law. Members of the administration
and a close friend or the governor de-
clare that he lias definitely decided
to convene the legislature in special
session, but are not willing to be
quoted as the governor still denies
to the press that he has decided on
a session. He admitted, however, that
the bankers came for the purpose of
suggesting amendments to be consid-
ered by the next legislature. They
were called at the Instance of the
governor.
About Middle of January.
A prominent administration man,
close to the governor, said: "The
governor tells me that he will call
the session for about the middle of
January. The only thing that has de-
terred him has been the howl over
'high taxes and the fear that if a ses-
sion was called the people would re-
gard It as adding to the burden of
taxation. The excuse has been dis-
covered. In most of the counties of
the state the sheriffs, register of
deeds and clerks of the district court
are receiving compensation in feeB
larger than the salary of the gover-
nor. In some counties they get from
two to four times as much. Unless
there is a special session the legisla-
ture will not meet until after the next
election and the constitution pro-
vides that the compensation of an
officer cannot be iccreased or dimin-
ished for the term to which he was
elected. There must be a special
session of the legislature or the peo-
ple must pay these exhorbitant sal-
aries for the next four years. The
cost of the special session will be
saved to the taxpayers several times
over In the passage of a fee limit
bill. Such a bill was permitted to
quietly die in the enabling rooms of
the first and second legislatures, but
In the special session the legislature
must go directly on record for or
against such a bill."
Plan Bank Amendment.
The secret conference between the
governor, members of the banking
board and thirty specially invited
state bankers lasted from two in the
afternoon until after dark. The most
important amendment agreed upon
was one to put the state itself in the
bank guaranty business. It is pro-
posed that when a bank fails, Instead
of sacrificing the assets in order to
pay the depositors at once coupons
bearing six per cent interest shall be
issued, with the state behind them.
It is expected that they would sell at
par. It is proposed to redeem them
from money,in the guaranty fund and
from the return from the liquidation
of the failed bank's assets. It was
recognized "that the certificate^ pro-
vided in the present law would not
bring par and for that reason are im-
practicable.
No Matter
what Liver or Bowel medicine you
are using, stop it now. Get a lOo
box—week's treatment — of CAS-
CARETS today from your druggist
and learn how easily, naturally and
delightfully your liver can be mado
to work, and your bowel* move every
day. There's new life in every box.
CASCARETS are nature's helper.
You will see the differenceI 6S3
CUT THIS OUT, mall It with your address to
Sterling Remedy Co., Chionffo, 111., and receive
a handsome souvenir Kola Bon Bon FRE&
ChiMresi like
M
The man from Iowa began to talk
land before the train was well out of
the C. N. R. depot in Winnipeg. The
talk began In rather wide circles. The
rush to the land, the bumper crop, the
system of summer fallowing pursued
in the semi-arid districts, were all
discussed, and then, with a sort of
apologetic smile, the Iowa man said:
"I'm a bit interested in this country
myself. Some of the men down home
got a few sections up here along this
line, and I'm going to have a look at
them. Never been up in Canada be-
fore"— (it Is curious how these mid-
western Americans pronounce the
name of the Dominion as if it was
"Can'dy")—"but if it looks good we
will be up to stay next fall."
"You see, It's like this," said the
man from Iowa—quite manifestly con-
tinuing an argument that had been go-
ing on in his mind for some time.
"Hack in our State land has become
dear. Anybody wanting to sell can
get $70 or $S0 an acre for it, and
every farm that's offered Is snapped
up. In Saskatchewan we have just as
good land that cost us $11 and $12, so
that a man can take up five or six
I times as much there as in Iowa on the
j same investment, of money.
"It isn't the money, though, that
brings most of us up from Iowa. I'm
I not sure that money would be enough,
j Tne 'invasion' is a family affair. We
have no chance of keeping our sons
I around us back home. They have
to leave the-farm and go into the big
cities of the neighboring States to get
work. To keep them on the farm and
in touch with ub, we come up here
and make little colonies with the chil-
dren around us, on homesteads or
bought land. This makes it easier for
the farmers back there in Iowa to get
land for, the stay-at-homes. The fam-
ilies that come to Canada are kept
together and the families that buy
the farms they leave are kept to-
gether, too. There won't be any slack-
ening of the rush, either, for they still
raise big families back in Iowa."
One could almost see the mental
process of this typical American farm-
er in defending a step that meant a
new flag, a new allegiance, a new
land, and new associates. To aban-
don Old Glory of the Declaration of
Independence for a good thing in
cheap land would hardly be playing
the game, but to go out Into Sas-
katchewan to "keep the family togeth-
er," was another and a quite higher
motive.
Why seek too closely to analyze the
reasons for the greatest land trek in
the history of America? It is enough
to know that the sons of the frontiers-
men of Iowa, and Kansas, and Minne-
sota—the best blood of the mid-west—
are pouring into the Canadian west in
an ever-increasing stream, and are
learning that "God Save the King" and
"My Country 'Tie of Thee," are sung
to the same tune.—Toronto (Ontario)
Globe.
UNPROFESSIONAL.
trjed remedy
STREET
gyoh s
Senator Depew was asked by a re-
porter as he was having his luggage
examined last month, if he had
brought auy stories back from Europe.
The senator laughed nud replied:
"Well, in the smoke-room of the ship
I heard an interesting thing about a
Montanan in Chester. Chester, you
know, is walled. Its wide walls, on
which you could drive a horse, are
famous. You can circle the town on
them.
"But the Montanan knew nothing
about Chester. He had only arrived
in Liverpool that afternoon. And as
soon as he finished his quaint dinner,
he said to the waiter in the quaint
Chester inn:
"What is the best way for me to
amuse myself here for an hour or two
before bedtime?'
" Well, sir,' said the waiter, 'it's a
fine evening, the moon is full, and I
think you'd find a stroll on the walls
most enjoyable."
"The Montanan, Ignorant of the pop-
ular promenade upon the wide walls
of Chester, thought he was being
guyed. He frowned at the waiter and
said bitterly:
" 'What do you take me for? A tom
cat?'"
A Pessimistic View.
Among the patients in a certain hos-
pital of Harrisburg there was recently
one disposed to take a dark view of
his chances for recovery.
"Cheer up, old man!" admonished
the youthful medico attached to the
ward wherein the patient lay. "Your
symptoms are identical with those of
my own case four years ago. I was
just as sick as you are. Look at nip
now!"
The patient ran his eyes over the
physician's stnlwart frame. "What
doctor did you have?" he finally asked,
feebly.—Illustrated Sunday Magazine.
Diner—Have you seen that a doctor
intends to inoculate himself with the
cholera virus bo that the he may have
the results of the experiment. Isn't
that fine?
Proprietor—No, perfectly mad, I
call it. Supposing I ate the same
meals as my cflentB. i
Tuberculosis Death Rates.
The death rate from tuberculosis
among men employed in occupation*
exposed to municipal and general or-
ganic or street dust is higher than
among other employed males, accord-
ing to a recent bulletin of the bureau
of labor of the department of com-
merce and labor. The percentage of
deaths from consumption among
males exposed to organic dust is 23,
while the percentage for all males
in the registration area Is 14.8. The
percentage of deaths from tuberculo-
sis among workers exposed to metal-
lic dust is very much higher.
Her Mistake.
A lady overtook a little girl of her
acquaintance on her way to school.
"Do you like decimals, my dear?" she
asked.
Now the little girl had not gone
very far In her arithmetic and she
was unfamiliar with the word deci-
I mala. She shrank from acknowledg-
ing her Ignorance, so, after a minute,
she stammered: "Yes'm, I like them
pretty well, but not as well as
peaches."
WESTERN CANADA
What 1.1. Kill, the Great Railroad Mas net a,
Saya About ita Whont-Produclnu Powers
*Tho are at pit now! of th!« country
fitting ot home* for IU
Maple •"'! protluolnB
nBMHMlMa. The
tlnys ot oar aiwrniartice
a* a wheat vxportlna
country are tor;*. 0«n.
n,In I* to bo tbo grout
wheat oountrjr.
His Little Mistake.
They stood beneath the stars, silent
as the heart-beats of the nighty look-
ing Into the diamond-studded shirt-
front of the sky.
"Is that Mars?" he whispered, as he
slipped his arm round her taper waist,
and gazed upon a glittering orb in the
distant blue.
"No, it isn't," she exclaimed, jerking
away; It's mine; and if you think
you are hugging mother, I cau tell
you that you are very much mis-
taken."
The matter was amicably adjusted
before anything serious resulted.—Ex-
change.
Charity by Proxy.
There is an Oregon statesman who
is very prudent with his money. He
rarely spends anything if he can get
some one else to do the spending for
him. One morning he was walking
down the street with a friend and
they met a beggar who had a tale of
woe that was amazing. The states-
man listened and asked some ques-
tions. Then he turned to his friend
and said: "John, this man's story
affects me greatly. Give him a quar-
ter."—Life. -
Coals of Fire.
One Christmas evening a Sunday
school pupil appeared at church, only
to be surrounded Immediately by a
number of deriding playmates.
"She's wearing her sister's coat!"
cried one.
"And she's got her brother's gloves
on!" cried another.
"Yes," was the retort that turned
the tide of ridicule, "and I came with
my mother's blessing."—Judge.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any
ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. cheney a co.. Toledo. o.
We, the ondersiRned. liavo known F. J. Cheney
for the last 15 year*, and believe him perfectly hon-
orable In all business transaction* anil financially
able to carry out any obligations made by his Arm.
WALDINQ. Kjnnan A MAKVW,
Wholesale Druggist*. Toledo. O.
Hall'iCatarrh Cure is tahen Internally, acting
dlrectlv upon the blood and mucous surfaces or the
system. Testimonials sent free. Price 76 centa per
Very Funny.
BorroughB—Mr. Merchant's out, you
say? Why, he had an appointment
with me here. That's very funny.
New Office Boy—Yes, sir; I guess
he thought it was, too. Any ways he
was laughin' when he, went out.—
Catholic Standard and Times.
m
This great tailtoad _
nuto U tolling a.lvantuk'O
of tho situation by u -
«t'iislve railway Imlld-
Upwards of 125 Million
Bushels of Wheat
upwards ot S3
homcstentia of IOO acre*,
nn<l adjoining i>ro-*mi>tloilB or
li.O lu rcsutt S3 per twl, amto
be had lu tlio choicest dlbt rlcU.
Kdioot* convenient, cllmato
excollont, soil tlio, very hra t.
rnllwuyn rIoiio at linnd, htiUd-
Inir lumber cheap, fuel oosy to
got and roitaonublo In price,
water easily procured: mixed
farming a sueeeaa. Writ
... —|Sn.
, r.i.ll
t''(«
Writs ,
l>««t rliii n for Mttlnmant, settlors
low railway rates, dew-rlptivo lilies,
tratod "Last H«atWo t'f (sent free
on applloat Ion i, and oi her Infurmiv
tlon, to Hup'i of ImmIgnition,
Ottawa, Can., or to the Oauwliaa
Government Agent.
j. 8. CRAWFORD
Is. IIS W. Ninth Stmt, Kustl CNj I
(Dss address nrarest you). tf>
DRUG STORE ACT.
Topeka, Kan.—Samuel A. Harrison,
of Kansas City, Mo., who owns a
drug store in Kansas City, Kan., ap-
plied for an injunction before Judge
Pollock in the federal court to pre
veht the enforcement of the anti-drug
store liquor law.
The drug Btore law prohibits th9
Fale of liquor for medicinal purposes
by druggists. It is claimed that the
law is contrary to the fourteen! h
amendment to the constitution of the
United States and in conflict with ths
constitution of the state of Kansas,
which provides that liquor may be
sold for medicinal, scientific and me-
chanical purposes.
CURE
m WSt tlMQtt
It is so pleasant to lake—stops ihe
cough so quickly. Absolutely safe
too and contains no opiates.
AD Dru.: gists, 25 coots.
Is Madriz Recognized?
Washington.—Much speculation was
current in official and diplomatic cir-
cles here concerning the probable ac-
tion of Central American republics In
the recognition of the Madriz govern-
ment at Managua. Tha state depart-
ment thus far has received no offi-
cial information of such' recognition
by any Latin-American county. It is
an open secret that the American
state department would be surpris 1
to learn that Mexico had recogn! 1
President Madriz without having pr<- -
lously consulted the United State*.
Provided for Newsboys.
Mrs. William Waldorf Astor provld
ed in her will that the newsboys of
New York should have a Thanksgiv-
ing dinner, as they have had at the
expense of the Astor family for half
a century. This year at least 2,000
newsboys were on hand, the afternoon
papers having suspended work, thus
giving the little fellows a holiday.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
One Idea of Economy.
"What do you mean when you tell
the people they ought to economize?"
"I mean," said Mr. Dustin Stax,
"that they ought to go slow in patron-
izing most business enterprises in or-
der that they may have more money
to spend with mine."—Washington
Star.
The Difference.
Wlfey—John, couldn't you let me
have a little money this morning?
Rattleigh's is advertising six puffs for
a dollar.
Hub—Great Scott! And we men can
get 60 delicious puffs for ten cents.
This Will Interest Mothers.
Mother tiray's Sweet Powders for Children,
cure Feverlshneas, Headache, Dad Stomach,
Teethiug Disorders, Regulate the Bowels and
Destroy Worms. Tliey break tip colds In 24
hours. Pleasant to take, and harmless as milk.
They never fall. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample
mailed FREE. Address, Allen 8. Olmeted,
Le lloy, K. T.
Doubtless.
The Homebody—What's the Indus-
try in New York, near as ye could
jedge, Agner?
The Traveled Man Steppin' lively,
I reckon—Puck.
Those who claim that a woman
isn't so apt to indulge in crooked
work as a man evidently never saw
a woman try to drive a nail.
HEAD. HACK AMI t,K«iS AC1IKT „
Ache nil over? Throat sore, with chills? That Is La
urlppc. IVrrr Davis' Painkiller will broak It titi If
taken promptly. All dealers. iV, 3f>c and 50c bottles.
During the first six months of his
married life a. man pities old bache*-
lors. After that he envies them.*
ON1.V ONE "BROMO QUININE."
That Is LAXATIVB BHOMO QU1MNIU, Look for
the signature of K. W. UKOVK. Used (ho World
over to Cure a Cold In One Day. 26c.
The people who have the greatest
opinions of themselves are frequently
the poorest Judges of human nature.
Smoker* also like Lewis' 8ingle Binde;
cigar for its purity. It is never doped,—
only tobacco in its natural state.
There's a difference between dignity
and pomposity, but some people don't
seem to be able to realize it.
AM- UP-TO-DATE HOUSEKEEPERS
Use Red Cross Ball Blue. It makes clothes
clean and sweet as when new. All grocers.
A man can't help feeling restleaB
when even his bills are unsettled.
Make the liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver is right
stomach and bowels are tight.
CARTERS LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gently but firmly com-
pel a lazy liver to
do its duty.
Cures Con*
Itipition,
Indiget'
tion,
Sick _ ,
Headache, and Distress alter Eatiag.
Small PiU. Small Doe*. Small Mm
GENUINE must bear signature:
Carters
HAIR BAL8AMR
Clesiurt and beautifies the h
Promote* a lossrtul (mtk.
Never Pails to Bestoro dray
. Hair to. ita Youthftil Ootor.
Cure. scalp dtwaM a hair Islllufr
JtV.and fl-OOat Dregfhts
RICE FARM E3S
J's W. UNDERWOOD, Prealdent
Hank of Commerce Stuttgart. Ark.
; Thompson's Eye Water
basis for clear Kansas farm. n« ll.nu^ba
Kltsgerald Jt Co., l*a't.Attys.,Box K Washington,D.C
I starches cluUiea ulceaa.
W. N. U.. WICHITA, NO. 2-1910.
It is so hard to separate some men
from their money that they seem to
be suffering from lockjaw of the
poeketbook.
Financial.
Stella—Isn't .Mabel going to marry
the duke?
Bella—No; he rejected the budget.
Quick as Wink.
Of a Later Date.
Bess—That's a quaint ring you are
wearing. It is an heirloom?
Tess—Well, it dates from the Con-
quest.
If your eyes ache with a smarting burn-
intf sensation u*e I'ETTIT'S EYE SALVE.
All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y.
Seneca: Vices are contagious and
there is no trusting the well and sick
together.
Welcome Words to Women
Women who suffer with disorders peculiar to their
sex should write to Dr. Pierce and reccive free the
advice oi a physician cf over 40 years' experience
—a skilled and successful specialist in the diseases
of women.. Every letter of this sort has the most
careful consideration and is regarded ca sacredly
confidential.- Many sensitively modest women write
fully to Dr. Pierce what they would shrink from
telling to their local physician. The local physician
is pretty sure to say that he cannot do anything
without "an examination." Dr. Pierce holds that
these distasteful examinations are generally need-
less, and that no woman, except in rare cases, should submit to them.
Dr. Pierce's treatment will cure you right in the privsay of
your own home, llis " Favorite Prescription" has cured
hundreds of thousands, some of them the worst of
pii.eh rrnwD in e to i* days.
PAZO OINTMENTIsiraoronteed to mre any case
• f Itching, Mind, Hlpi'dinjr or rmtmUuig Pile* in
tt to 14 days or inoney refunded. 60o.
The best of plans fall out, and the
best of friends get married.
BAKK1MS. HACKING. UASI'INti Opma
can he lirokvn up quickly by Alien's Lung Balsam. .
This old, reliable remedy tins been sola for uYer
40 years. Ask your druggist about it.
It Is the only medicine of its kind that it the product of a regularly graduated
physician. The only one good enough that its makers dare to print its every
ingredient on its outside wrapper. There's no secrecy. It will bear examina*
tion. No alcohol and no habit-forming drugs are found in it. Some unscrup-
ulous medicine dealers may offer'you a substitute. Don't take it. Don't trine
with your health. Write to World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R.
V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y.,—take the advice received and be well.
Remember that a sound argument
doesn't mean loud talk.
Wizard Oil
r.M .ii* j'rvjy J i?i * J T.VJ J I
GREAT
tor
pain
RED CROSS BALL BLUE!
Should be in every home. Ask your grocer
for it. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents.
A great deal Is heard of the art of
remembering, and but little of the
fine art of forgetting.
It's the judgment of many smokers that
Lewi*' Single Binder 5c cigar equals in
quality most 10c cigars .
A pessimist by any other name
would be a fault-finder Just the same
You
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and (aster colors thsn sa> other dta. 0a# 10c psckage colors all fibers. The* dys In cold water better than ny other thai You can dya
aw fBrmcnt without riwiagapsrL WrltoiorlreebeeUet—HeatoOf*, Bleach sad Mm Colors. MOMHOE DRUG OO , Qrtnoy, /#/*■ '
Don't be common. It's the uncom-
mon man who causeB the world to sit
up and take notice.
■jro .
*s, rodu es In-
- bottle.
Mrs. Window's Soothing
Mldrea teeth'
Sammsttlon, allays
For ehUdre* teething. softeas the guns,
~ i pain, cures wind sol [ti
BROWN'S
Bronchial Troches
Save tK« votes in all kinds of weather. Singers and
public speakers find them Invaluable (or clearing tha
i. There Is nothing so aftscthrc for Sore Throsl,
A Clean Face Will be a Habit
NO STROPPING NO HONING
Wine and women may be alike, In
some respects, but age Improves wine
1 and Coughs. Filty years' reputation.
Price. 25 cents, 60 cents and $1.00 R«r boa.
Samples mailed on request.
JOHN.^EjRQWfMc RON. Bo*.,,. Hat,.
WORLD OVER
HAIR M6TORER
LA CREOLE
Because of thM« ugly, arialy, gray hairs. Ua«
PRICE* tl.OO, retail.
U.' •
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Tipton, W. B. Quinlan Mirror. (Quinlan, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1910, newspaper, January 6, 1910; Quinlan, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc174442/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.