Canadian Valley Record (Canton, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 7, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
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THE CANTON RECORD, CANTON. OKLAHOMA
"DAN DERI NE"
Girls! Save Your Hair!
Make It Abundant I
NEWYORKRENTERS
ARE IN REBELLION
Thousands of Familes Unable
to Move Out of Their
Present Homes.
GALBRAITH HEADS THE LEGION
World War Veterans Elect Cincinnati
Man A# National Commander-
Keep Neutral In Politics.
Mftt Contents 15Pluid Drachn
WRITS OF EVICTION HELD DP
Immediately after a "Danderlne"
massage, your hair takes on new life,
lustre aud wondrous beauty, appear-
ing twice as heavy and plentiful be-
cause each hair seems to fluff and
thicken. Don't let your hair stay life-
less, colorless, plain or scraggly. You,
too, want lots of long, strong, beauti-
ful hair.
A 35-cent bottle of delightful
"Danderlne" freshens your scalp,
checks dandruff and falling hair. This
stimulating "beauty-tonic" gives to
Only 2,000 Vans Available to Trans-
port 75,000 Families — Officials
Find the Rates Prohibitive.
New York.—-Municipal officials are
making efforts to bring order out of
confusion which resulted from efforts
of thousands of families to retain
their homes against eviction orders—
or to find means of moving to new
luartersl
Hundreds of tendnts swarmed the
offices of the mayor's committee on
rent profiteering with appeals for aid
in retaining their homes or prevent-
ing rent increases. Arthur J. Hilly,
chairman of the committee, issued a
statement urging these tenants to co-
operato and consider the merits ef
their own cases, to prevent the New
York courts from becoming hopeless-
thin, dull, fading hair that youthful ly clogged with tenant-landlord cases.
brightness and abundant thickness-
All druggists!—Adv.
Under Surveillance.
Mrs. Llttleflat—Tilly, you've left my
lingerie scattered all around this room
and I'm expecting company any min-
ute.
Tilly the Maid—Tlint's nil right,
ma'am. I'll "keep my eye on 'em and
see they don't pinch nothin'.
If You Need a Medicine
You Should Have the Best
Have you ever stopped to reason why
it is tfcat so many products that are ex-
tensively advertised, all at once drop out
of sight and are soon forgotten? The
reason is plain—the article did not fulfill
the promises of the manufacturer. This
applies more particularly to a medicine.
a medicinal preparation that has real «■-« «*•<., « i..aU ....u u-
curative value almost sells itself, as like sand moving vans available. Many of
an endless chain system the remedy is f tho tenants planned to go to quarters
recommended by those who have been which 8cheduled to become vacant Oc
Can't Evict Tenants.
| Aaron J. Levy, chief justice of the
municipal court, announced telegrams
! had been sent to the chief clerks of
courts in the various districts direct-
ing that no warrants of eviction be is-
sued In any landlord and tenant pro-
ceedings commenced before Septem-
ber 28. This means, Justice Levy
said, that no tenants can be evicted
except those subject to eviction under
the new housing laws, passed at the
recent special session of the state
legislature.
Announcement also was made that
a mass meeting of citizen : will be
held in Carnegie hall to consider the
housing situation. Governor Smith
and United States Senator William M.
Caldev will speak.
Moving Rates Are Prohibitive.
It was estimated that seventy-five
thousand families would attempt to
move with hardly more than two thou
benefited, to those who are in need of it.
A prominent druggist says "Take for
example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a
preparation I have aold for many years
and never hesitate to recommend, for in
tober 1, were occupied by other fam
ilies unable to find new quarters.
Commissioner of Accounts Hirsch-
field, after an investigation of condi
almost every case it shows excellent re- tions, declared moving van rates are
1 •* ■*•*« "«" ■
sale," v J B | from moving.
According to sworn statements and I Justice Levy, in his statement, said
verified testimony of thousands who have ! that "thousands upon thousands of
used the preparation, the success of Dr. I tenants " wDuld have been subject to
ordering warrants held up resulted
from a conference of municipal court
justices. A meeting of the board o£
justices, he said, will be held October
5 to prepare rules for uniformly car-
rying out the new laws.
most every wish in overcoming kidney,
liver and bladder ailments; corrects uri-
nary troubles and neutralizes the uric
acid which causes rheumatism.
You may receive a sample bottle of
Swamp-Root by Parrels Post. Address
Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingliamton, N. Y.,
and enclose ten cents: also mention this
paper. Large and medium size bottles
for sale at all drug stores.—Adv.
The House Divided.
"There II surely be trouble after that
marriage."
"What makes you think so?"
"He's a Republican and she's a
Democrat."
Dont Forget Cuticura Talcum
When adding to your toilet requisites.
An exquisitely scented face, skin, baby
and dusting powder and perfume, ren-
dering other perfumes superfluous.
You may rely on it because one of the
Cuticura Trio (Soap, Ointment and
Talcum). 25c each everywhere.—Adv.
Appropriate Gait.
"He is riding to a fall."
"Who is?"
"That bus boy."
THREATEN A RESERVE BANK
Officials of Kansas City Federal Insti-
tution Receive Anonymous Warning
of Intended Bomb Explosion.
CASCARETS
"They Work while you Sleep"
Kansas City.—On an anonymous
"tip," admitted by officials of the Fed-
eral Reserve Bank to have been re-
ceived here, an extra force of police
and federal agents are guarding the
R. A. Long buildings. Tenth street and
Grand avenue, home of the Federal
Reserve Rank.
The "tip" Is said to have been that
an attempt would be mad : to blow
up tbe building at 3:30 o'clock in the
afternoon.
Officials of the Reserve Bank ad-
mitted Mayor Cowgill had received an
anonymous letter of warning, which
he sent to J. Z. Miller, governor of
the bank.
At the office of Fred Tate, in charge
of secret service investigation here, it
was said Mr. Tate was out of town.
An investigator in the office, however,
did not deny the report of a threat
was true.
Clevenland, O.—The American Le-
gion convention threw another plum
Ohio's way when it selected former
Col. Frederick W. Galbraith, Jr., of
Cincinnati as Its national commander
for the ensuing year.
Galbraith, the candidate of the "in-
ner circle" of the legion's works, won
out on tht second ballot after a tussle
with former Lieut.-Col. Hanford Mac-
Nider of Iowa, who was vociferously
backed by the "rarin' to go" elemaut
from the Western states.
The third candidate, John F. L. Her-
bert, hailed from Worcester, Mass;.
The vote on the final ballot showed
Galbraith, 686; MacNider, 275, and
Herbert, 145. MacNider . immediately
arose and moved to make Galbraitn's
election unanimous. The convention
concurred and then proved that it
hadn't used up all of its demonstration
ability on Tuesday by welcoming its
new commander with a volley of yells.
Galbraith commanded the 147th in-
fantry of the 37th or "Buckeye" divi-
sion overseas, serving in the Baccarat i
and Ypres-Lys sectors and later par-
ticipating in the big drives of St.
Mihiel and the Meuse-Argonne. He
was wounded in the latter engage-
ment, and wears the distinguished ser-
vice cross and the Croix de Guerre
with palm for heroism in the Argonne.
But although the western delegates
didn't put over their candidate, they
did put the convention on record as
favoring the Pacific slope's anti-Jap-
anese resolution, which denounced Nip-
ponese immigration as "a grave men-
ace to the people of the United
States," called for the cancellation of
the "gentlemen's agreement" between
this country and Japan, and for the
appointment of a committee of the le-
gion to go into the whole subject thor-
oughly and report to the next conven-
tion. The resolution was adopted
practically unanimously.
The convention did a thorough job
in voting down unanimously a resolu-
tion which provided that it might en-
gage in limited political activity, and
refusing to modify the nonpolitical
clause in its charter. This did not
come about, however, until after a
stiff fight waged by various state dele-
gations which wanted permission to
"go after" certain of their home poli-
ticians with the whole strength of le-
gion condemnation officially expressed.
\ ' ^lgohol-3 per cent:
If AVe^ablelYcparationforAs
' siinilatin^theFoodfiyR^tt^
[ 1in£ the Stomachs and Bowels o
.
#i
'in
;J CO"
IS!
I Thereby Promoting Di^cstfoii
J Cheerfulness and Rcsttotams
Ttd/xafi —
fumpkm
Senna -
Jbc/uUi Sattt
Ant's*
Warm W
C/arrfM Swrr
IfaUiyntnHMr
a AhelpfulRcmedyfor
' Constipation and Diarrhoea-
I and Feverishness and i
i Loss of Sleep
rcsiiltin^therefromMnMaflcy.
facsimile Si|natnreof
jftajgggf
THE CESTAUB G OMPAKC
NEWYORgt
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
Bears the
Signature
of
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
ROCKING CHAIR IS INDORSED i FIND ALTAR ROOM OF AZTECS
French Authorities Declare Great
American "Institution" to Be
Physiologically Correct.
SAVES LIVES OF CHILDREN
National Safety Council's Campaign in
Schools of the Country Brings
Good Results.
Milwaukee.—Greater safety of chil-
dren's lives throughout the nation re-
sultant from the national safety coun-
cil's campaign of instruction in pub-
lic and private schools of the country
after less than a half year's activities
was brought out in the report of C. W.
Price, general manager of the nation-
al safety council, read before the
ninth annual safety congress.
The school safety instruction was
formulated by I)r. E. George Payne,
principal of the Harris teachers' col-
lege of St. Louis, the report stated,
and added that twenty-nine cities and
towns have adopted his plan.
Milton C. Potter, superintendent of
schools of Milwaukee, said annual in-
tra-school accidents in Milwaukee,
prior to tbe war, had been reduced
40 per cent, but that during, and after
the war a reaction was felt which
swelled the number of mishaps ma-
terially.
Knock on wood! You're feeling
fine, eli? That's great! Keep the entire
family feeling that way always with
occasional Cascurets for the liver and
bowels. When bilious, constipated,
headachy, unstrung," or for a cold,
upset stomach, or bad breath, nothing
acts like C'nscnrets. No griping, no
inconvenience. 10. 25, 50 cents.—Adv.
There must be warmth in the ppnrkle
of a diamond. A glove is seldom wort)
on a Jeweled hand
MORE LUMBER PRICES CUT
Finish and Flooring Drop 2^ Per Cent
at Kansas Cltiy—Dimensions
Are Down, Too.
Kansas City.—Announcements were
made by all Kansas City lumber yards
of a reduction of prices approxi-
mating 10 to 20 per cent, according ( W1 lcvo_
to grade. This puts the local retail I lution against autocratic governments,
market in line with recent reductions organized labor in this country regards
in the wholesale market and marks the American government as being e&-
a decline of 20 to 40 per cent from
the peak prices last May.
The reduction is the fourth made
this year and local lumber dealers be-
BREAKS WITH THE RADICALS
American Federation of Labor Repudi-
ates Doctrines of the European
Groups in Printed Statement.
New York.—The American Federa-
tion of Labor has broken completely
with European radical labor groups in
a statement in the current issue of the
American Federationist, its official >r-
gan, according to the New York World.
The statement repudiates completely
the doctrines of the British Labor
party and the International Labor
party.
"The American Federation of Labor
is not a revolutionary body and has
never had any affiliation with any rev-
olutionary body which would require
it to give serious consideration to rev-
olutionary proposals of any kind," the
article said.
"While recognizing the need of revo-
Nobody who has studied the rocking
chair will be surprised to hear that
the French Academy of Science hns
declared it the most hygienic of all
seats instead of a mere American fad.
It is, as the academy says, physiologi-
cally correct. The trouble with it is
that it is not always psychologically
correct. Its baneful effects are not on
the rocker, but on the beholder. It is
an all-around joy only when it is not
rocked. New England ladies used to
test a new neighbor by getting her to
sit in a rocking chair. If she could re-
sist rocking she was of the elect. This
simple test of the nerves has made or
marred a great many newcomers' pop-
ularity.
The advantage of the rocking chair
is that it puts the body in perfect
balance. The skull Is kept in the prop-
er position. Rut oscillation does not
add to the benefit. It is good to find
an invention which has been maligned
because of misuse Indorsed by the
scientists. Let these gentlemen next
find something good to say about silk
hats.
Odd, Isn't It?
She—"I see bicycling is again on the
rise." He—"Yes, in spite of the fail-
ing off." .
Interesting Discovery in Pueblo Ruin
in New Mexico Has Recently
Been Made.
The most satisfactory event to mark
so far the work of the American Mu-
seum of Natural History In its exca-
vation of the Pueblo ruin at Azier, N.
M., is the recent discovery of what was
evidently the holiest shrine of this pre-
historic people, records Popular Me-
chanics Magazine. It takes the form
of a room, bare of furniture, but in
perfect condition. The walls are plas-
tered, and are painte(] in a glaring
white with dull red "borders and a
frieze of triangular designs. On the
ceiling beams are strange marks made
by rubbing the palm and fingers In
white paint, and then pressing thein
upon the wood. From these beams
hang several strands of beautifully
made rope, presumably for the support
of some sacred objects. On the ceil-
ing, too, is carved a serpent, two amf
one-half feet in length, and In desien
unlike anything known to the archeolo-
gists in charge.
Soft Is Right.
"Say, Mike, wanna make a soft half-
dollar?" "Betcha." "Melt It."—Amer-
ican Legion Weekly.
A woman may listen to her hus-
band's advice, but she does as she
pleases anyhow.
sentially democratic."
Appeal Again to League.
-- London.—The London Times says it
heve now that the bottom has been js informed that the Lithuanian gov-
reached and then, with an enormous j Prnment has made a fresh appeal to
demand for lumber expected for the League of Nations asking an im-
spring, building prices will be Inclined j mediate meeting of the council in or
to advance with the certainty of aider to consider the situation created
stiffening in wholesale prlce . | by the Polish Invasion ot Lithuania.
That Wholesome
lable Drink
Postum Cereal
gains new friends right alontf
because of its pleasing taste
healthfulness, and saving in cost
Postum Cereal is delicious when
properly made: boil fully fifteen
mmutes after boiling begins.
The more you boil Postum Cereal
the better it is.
'When ordering be sure
to get the original
Postum Cereal
A 50-cup package
usually sells for 25$
Made by
Postum Cereal Co.,Inc
Battle Creek,Mich.
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McDowell, C. S. Canadian Valley Record (Canton, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 7, 1920, newspaper, October 7, 1920; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc176342/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.