The Greenfield Hustler (Greenfield, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1913 Page: 2 of 14
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\
terrible agonies
worse misery
Advices Front Durant'* Neck Tell
®f Mr*. Bazemore's Trying
Ordeal, and Her Condi-
tion at Present
ilto^helD Th. ,d°?t0r'' but
■oiJi r P- The Iast one I went
sens®
mmm
'«l "o much better" my Work' « '
W rcYniTh~
today. -Begin taking Cardui
Your druggist sells It.
^ONWwoli^
sunning decides contest for
hand of beauty.
Father Chose Among Many Suitors for
His Daughter, but the Girl Her
—If Took Hand in Final
Selection.
M*4ic,n« Co.,
Unm Vr"',""" on yourcjif an^fiu' Tenn.. for
wr.°pr^rTr;"dvment f0r Wo^" 2b in plain
.rn up^";f.dKbb;;eier'" <•>«
How do you Bpell it*"
lea' I,!]," n° to worry 'bout dat;
,ult y°"rself. 1 aln- pubticlar. •'
iowa^T*, f"ot-eas«.
«B fi&ss
AddreM A"en * o X':r^^ym^vFR/^
Paradoxical.
",m '° *° frookedr
at.nce.* " """""ened circum-
The chap who in an e7^«Trt at mak
Ssrs;,-
S t£* ■—-
Banish
"Dull Care"
Most of your downhearted,
ness and -blue feeling" can
be traced to a lazy liver.
Biliousness is a sure de-
frayer of health and happi.
ness.
once upo° a (|me. a Sen.
sai tailor, who had a daughter as
„.l " the "un- A" the youths
<n the neighborhood were In love with
er beauty, and two of them went to
ner and asked for her hand. The girl.
fce a well-trained daughter, made
L^ifo answer, but called her father,
who listened to them and said:
t Is late; go home, and come again
tomorrow. I will tell you then which
a 0U 8llaI1 have my daughter."
At daybreak the next morning the
young men were at his door.
"Here We are'" th0y crled; "remem-
««, at you Pr°mised us yesterday."
Walt," said the tailor; "I must go
out and buy a piece of cloth; when I
return you will hear what I expect you
to do.
He soon returned, and calling his
8a,d t0 tIle young men:
1 h !y 1°°*' there are two of you and
ave but one daughter. I cannot give
ner to both of you and must refuse
one you 8ee th,8 pJece Qf cjQth?
will cut from It two pairs of breeches
exactly alike; each of you shall make
one of them, and the one that finishes
first shall be my son-in-law."
Each of the rivals took his task and
prepared to set to work under the
tailors eyes. The latter said to hie
daughter: "Here Is thread; you can
thread the needles for the workmen."
The girl obeyed; she took the spool
and sat down by the youths. But the
pretty witch was full of cunning; her
rather did not know which one she
loved, neither did the young men, but,
ror her part, she knew very well. The
tailor went out, the girl threaded the
needles, and her suitors set to work.
ut the °ne she loved she gave
short needlefuls, while she gave long
needlefuls to his rival. Both sewed
zealously; at eleven o'clock the work
was scarcely half done, but at three
in the afternoon the young man with
6 short needlefuls had finished his
task, while the other was far behind.
When the tailor returned the victor
carried In the finished breeches. His
rival was still sewing.
"My children," said the father. "I
aid not wish to show any partiality be-
tween you, for which reason I divided
1 the cloth Into two equal parts and
gave each a fair chance. Are you sat-
isfied ?"
"Perfectly," answered they. "We
understood your meaning and accept-
ed the trial; what is to be will be!"
But the tailor had reasoned to him-
self: "He who finishes his task first
will be the better workman, and con-
sequently the better fitted to support
his household." it did not occur to
h m that his daughter might outwit
1m by K!vin* the longer needlefuls to
the one she did not wish to win. Wom-
an s wit decided the contest, and the
girl chose her husband herself.—Alice
Bunner's "Twice-Toia Fairy Tales." In
Atlanta Journal.
Healthy Baby is
Precious^ Blessing
To Make It Healthy and
Reep it Healthy Use 4 Re-
liable Baby Laxative
enS Sfft °f the greatest Personal
v w«moat ,ntelligent attention
to diet, babies and children will be-
2ln0?t,Pated' End 11 18 a th«
wro!.i!P5 n and indigestion have
I Tfth m5nL a young ,,fe- To 8tart
Hf ? digestive apparatus Is to
■tart life without handicap
workfnl*ZZ <iannot a11 have Pe^ect
best o J® We mu8t do the next
^ and ac<Julre them, or train
don? healthy. This can be
ve?v h?*hil U8e °f a 'axative-tonic
very highly recommended by a areat
many mothers. The remedy is called
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and has
been on the market for two genera-
itTnv h Can bou*ht conveniently
;LaJy„drUVtore for flfty cents or
irLrtJ E ^°ttlG' and tho8e wh° are
toe Sona?°.°IVenCed °' ,tS m6rU" bu*
Its mildness makes it the ideal medl.
Icine for children, and it is also very
fi-Sf ,to th® ta8te- It Is sure in
Verv m?l« a"d , genuinely harmless,
very little of It is required and its
lL Vir n\ U8G id°es noi cause !t to 'ose
other rera"i« 6 C"8 W"h BO man>'
. WORMS.
to*Vn*i worm8 Nearly*!^ bad a^dl.tem >m' n Rtom*ch nd in-
I^ook bid "re bad n„Trh °°st urh
Spohn a Cure will remove the worm. « Physic em to death.
toneVmiin.il ,n* worm*, improve the
'nh vain M a — a _
f^NMED,CALCO..C^m,„, > c^„;Iod.u,A.
x
v Make the Horse Clad
ana Eager for Work
1 •apsamy
. PKICC ,
*7S9|
J toaaafrMi
I jy CaaW
I. little
—. H— ala
latmrtat
of i
wSg
a in c
Practical Maid.
Jh*70t course' I m much honored
by your proposal, but I must have a
few days to think it over.
ftnswer?Ve"' Whe" W"y ' come ,ot ^
"""day. there's the
wash ng. Tuesday I must putupcU an
somo and Wedne«day I must make
some jam. Come on Thursday.
Purely Accidental.
Had any accident on this road
« y ..aakPd the traveler.
Yep," replied the man who hangs
around the station. Throe trains
came in on time last week "
HOSTETTER'S
Stomach Bitters
will make the liver active,
I assist the digestion, help the
bowels to become regular
and make life a pleasure.
Get a bottle today.
■ ■ mi
ieSalve, SggftSl
Not Quite.
Is he what you might call a police
captain at large?"
Top*Ica. ^ ° °Ut °n ba"*"—Town
A Love Story.
*°'v ''onrl Berg,00. at a dinner In
"V H ' kod of 10,6 wltl> that
g y and sparkling philosophy which
has made him famous in Kurope
.nM *!6, lnJUlR 8Pn8P of Passion," he
I IttJTm U nt>t ,,ve ]on* There,«
a little fable above love which has a
deal of truth In it.
"Love, so the fable runs, bent over
« beautiful maiden, when Cynicism
sneerod and said: ^miasm
"'Oh, yes, her eyes are stars snd
hor mouth is a^roae. but twenty vrare 1
hence she Wlll%e fat and round-back ** £iTRK
" vr
will bf blind eh?'*
No.* Love answered, calmlv *i
■Imply shan't be there to see.'"
JTiou'iTm r'Z'L "TiTZZi
The Degrees.
Love opens one s heart."
•yes""' and marrlHge opens one's
Som«tlm s the early bird has a
long wait before bmakfast Is served
in the dining car.
SPUR FARM LANDS
Urmer U5aa,,y pays from
k J" " *** acre ,n commissions,
although he may not realize it. Spur Farm
wTfrom 7 g 80,(1 d'reCt bv the owners.
?niJ y°U gRt everV dol|ar of value.
W at oSr ,ra'^!? without irrigation.
able fo?.^!P end,dJgrazin* tracta «uit-
able for stock farms and small ranch tracts
^r-ct'°^° fifty: from $5 per acre up
l^H. R reliable production of these
lands, prices are lowest in West TexaT
Perfect title. Terms one-fifth down balance
any time.5' 6 years~Payable, however.
j Write for free Must toted booklet.
swtn<£™^ for s. M.
SWENSON & SON, Spur, Texas
———;
Oklahoma Directory
seeds
% -Saddles
are used by riders
who know. Write
for catalog.
James Ha we.
naaryetta Oklahoma
*
Dorothy Johnson.
in thl€h "iTL 8Ufh Improvement
.? «- hea,t5 of anyone. Syrup Pep-
sin Is a wonderful remedy and I shall
never be without it again." Thousands
«Tntlvrin ?lllWhn'8 Sy.rup PeP®ln con-
ber or th. ^„M°uge- tor erery
info™ ? family can use it from ln-
p/^n i° iage" The U8ers of Syrup
ttnf waVe Earned to avoid cathar-
othpr h raI wators- P'Hs and
remed«ea for they do but
temporary g°°d and are a shock to
any delicate system.
'' ®° "Praber of your family baa
5ke to ?2? epsln; =" would
llRe to make a personal trial of It be-
'i in- the r'«ul r of a
we" eSyrup Pepaln. Mr,. Johnson Sav. I Z1,J Jl?" samp,e bo"l<> will be
t
i
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The Greenfield Hustler (Greenfield, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 27, 1913, newspaper, March 27, 1913; Greenfield, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc177682/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.