The Inola News (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, May 13, 1921 Page: 3 of 4
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Why That Bad Back?
Ii backache keeping you miserable?
Ire you "all playea oat," without
trength or rigor for jrour work! Then
ind what is causing the trouble and
orrect it. Likely, it's your kidneys!
fou have probably ben working to*
isrd and neglecting rest snd exercise,
four kidneys have slowed up and poi-
oris have accumulated. That, then, is
he cause of the backache, headaches,
lizziness and bladder irregularities.
Jse Doan'i Kidney Pills Doan't
lave helped thnumiMia and should help
rou. Atk your neighbor!
An Oklahoma Case
Si'; 2^
Mrs. O W. Jackson.
E. Cherokee St..
Wtfwier, Okla., say«:
"I was run down and
felt weak and tired.
Often objects seemed
to swim before my
eyes. I was nervous
and discouraged and
had so much backache
I was miserable^ I
had taken Poan's
Kidney Fills but a
short time when I had
relief and soon I was
feeling well again."
Ce« Don's at Any Stove, 60c a Bo*
DOAN'9
"OSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. V.
Happenings
In Oklahoma
Jiu Effect.
"I like your Juxz orchestra."
"I hove no Jazz orcliestru," Mild the
oprletor of the beancry. .
"lluli?"
"But X guess we do have more rat-
ng of dishes than any joint Id
wn."—Louisville Courier-Journal.
HUGH
STRIKE
Cigarette
To In the
delicious Burley
tobaooo flavor.
It's Toasted
(5§)
[ILL RATS TODAY
STEARNS'
•ELECTRIC PA8TE
"killer' for Rate.Mice.C«cfcn>ech«a.
iu and Wat^rbnjf* - the greats**? kn«wn Q*XTt*M
divine Tbef «Mtroy both fi-d and pr pony
jams' metric Past* forres tbes* pctta to run
•in tbe building for wat#r and frrth air
LADY roll I NK HKTTKK THAN TRAPS
Directions 1b 1& lanirnacr* in every box.
• Slsee. S6c and 91 W. Mn. ugh u. Mill 60 u *00 rata
I). H. tiovornmont bays It.
SQUEEZED
ID DEATH
Vhen the body begins to stiffen
nd movement becomes painful it
I usually indication that the
idneys are out of order. Keep
tiese organs healthy by taking
COLD MEDAL
1m world'* standard remedy for kidney,
ver, bladder and uric add troubles,
'anions sine* 1696. Take regularly snd
eep in good health. In three bin, all
ragglsts. Ouaranteed aa represented,
aek he the mm Gold Medal en erery bee
and Bcc.pl ao irailatioa
Ladies Keep Your Skin
Clear, Sweet, Healthy
With Cuticura Soap
and Cuticura Talcum
[III All Flies!
^ DAISY ?LY KILLS* eltrart. end
b all fli«s N« t. eteaa. omamaetaT• V eM and
s. Lata i
_'«on Med* of metal,
'can't p !l ortipoffr:
will not soil or injure
Mr,.
I your dealer off
ISOLD S')kJr.KaItuT). I^i'lb .'bSu*Ir . N. T.
—EOnaKT"
HAIR BALSAM
awHlnnm >I<-I luirr«illas
a*HSSS Color and
laaty lo Crar aad Faded Hak
tur. H><1 II toll lTiicti.U
Watermelon Seed
Dili Watson, Kleckley Sweet, Hulbert
oney, 6.V pound, delivered. Nuncy
all sweet potato plants, 93 per 1,000.
'ash with order.) Pioneer Seed Store,
10 W. California, Oklahoma City.
"A CARPET OF GREEN"
Mdntaomsrr Count/ there Is a real
um Sea. Ill
Bids., Montgomery, Al*
«S\S2S!
Mb co . w.
ruumt iMWMW SHOOK
U. t'ANNINO BROOM COHN
OAKLAND, ILLINOIS.
Twenty.flvs applicants for teachers
certificates were before the county
board of examiners at Miami recent
ly.
In the movement to raise 11,500,-
000 for the Oklahoma City college,
Methodists of Kingfisher have obtain
ed Ml.775.
A large water softener and Ultra
Hon plant has been added to a hptel
at Pawhuska in addition (o a $G,000
laundry recently completed.
Sixty-six blocks of paving have been
completed at Atoka recently. Twenty
more blocks will be paved durinw the
summer, according to city officials.
A portion of the watershed ground
has been leased by the city of Atoka
to a Tulsa firm under contract to be-
gin mining of coal within sixty days.
A number of citizens have erected
a club house six miles from Holden-
ville, on Little river. A caretaker will
be placed in charge of the building
and grounds.
With plana under way for the erec-
tion of booths to be completed within
thirty days, it is assured that Itar-
(lesville will have a market place
where farmers can sell direct to the
consumer.
A aeries of basket picnics to be held
during late July and August is being
planned by the Ponca City Retailers'
association. All Ponca City people
will join with the farmer folk of a
community in the affair.
Martin Larran will begin the erec-
tion at once of a modern concrete
block building on Second avenue Just
oft .Main street in Purcell which will
be used to house the Purcell laundry.
The building will be rushed.
Organization of a class of ISO mem-
bers in the study of petr-'eum geol-
ogy has been effected in the Ardmore
high school. The text book to be
used is the I'nited States bureau of
mines report on the Hewitt field.
The Oakley-Askew aerial service,
which operate an aeiial transportation
line in Ardmore, has offered the use
of the airplane "Ardmore" to Sheriff
Buck Garrett to aid him in locating
stills and similar work in various
parts of the county.
The tract of ground northeast of Sa-
pulpa known as the Thompson forty
has been cleared by the park commis-
sion and will be equipped with bench-
es and pavilions. A large oven mafte
of stones has been built and gas piped
to It. The park is primarily for tour-
ist use, though It is open to any one.
McAlester'* souvenirs of a smalt
i hurricane which passed through here
1 are fourteen demolished barns and
| private garages, eight unroofed
houses, three unroofed business hous-
' es, five plate-glass windows blown !n,
and a number of uprutted trees, total-
ing in all close to $75,000 in damages,
i The Oklahoma Cotton association
state ofllre announce the nomination
of two directors from each of ten dis-
tricts over the state of which ten
nominees will be clected to serve as
the board of directors of the associa-
tion with another director appointed
by the secretary of the Board of Ag-
riculture.
j Dewar achoola in the industrial dis-
trict of Henryetta, will close May 20,
with twenty nine graduates from the
eighth grade and seventeen from the
Junior high. A. I. Moore formerly of
! the agricultural department of the
Henryetta schools will succeed H. Is.
Stites as superintendent. Professor
Stites going to I'avenport.
A new grandstand and a commodi-
ous pergola are improvements being
planned by the city park board for
I^egion park of El Reno during the
next few weeks. The grandstand will
be built on the ball diamond to be
used In connection with the baseball
league games, while the pergola will
be erected on the island in the lake.
May 2, 1921, marked the 118th anni-
versary of the signing of the treaty
'or the purchase of Ixtuislana terri-
tory from France for the sura of $ IS.-
OHO.OOO by ambassadors of the I'nited
States, according to Dean Roy Cat -
linger professor of history at the
I'niversity of Oklahoma, and author
of a textbook on the formation of this
state.
The fastest meet in the history of
Oklahoma interscholastic athletics-
such Is the record of the seventeenth
annual interscholastic. Although on-
ly one record was broken, a number
were crowded, and all of the events,
even those In the newly created class
C. were pushing the state interschol-
astic records. Forty-two events. In-
cluding many trial heats were run off
by the I'niversity of Oklahoma ath-
letic officials In four houra and fifteen
minutes without a single hitch through
out the entire meet.
Sentinel residents and farm people
of the vicinity will Join In a public
barbecue Thursday night. May 20, to
be given by the chamber of commerce,
assisted by the Farmers Co-OepratlYe
association. A program to continue
throughout the day Is being arranged.
Three hundred pupils from the
county schools will be ready to enter
the high schools of Osage couaty with
Ihe opening of the new school year
next fall, according lo the county su-
perintendent. This Is the largest
number ever graduated from county
grade schools thui far.
SUFFERING OF A
LIFETIME ENDED
"Words Can't Express Gratitude
I Feel Toward Tanlac,"
Says Mrs. Burrington.
"From childhood until I got Tanlac,
I suffered from Indigestion anil stom-
ach trouble," said Mrs. J. A. Burring-
ton, MO Stanford Ave., Ix s A lige lea.
REICHSTAG IS TO
A CAUCUS VOTE FINDS PAR-
TIES NOW READY TO
SIGN NOTE
SOCIALISTS FIRST FOR TERMS
The People Party Votes Not To Yield
69 to 5 In Poll Taken, First
Shots Fired on a Sentry
at Dusseldorf.
MRS. J. A. BURRINGTON
Los Angelet, Calif.
Col if., "and that's been n long time,
for I'm now In my sixty-eighth year.
"I remember when I was a chlhl I
was kept on a strict diet of lime
water mid uillk for weeks and I have
been In constant distress all these
years. I suffered terribly from bloat*
intf and hud to lie very careful of what
I nte. I became so weak and nervous
I could hardly go about my housework
and was In a miserable condition.
"About two years ago my husband
got such splendid results from Tanlac
he Insisted on my taking It and the
medicine wasn't hut a little while In
ridding nie of my troubles. It guve
me u splendid appetite, and I could
enjoy a good henrty meal, even things
I hadn't dare touch before, without
liny fear of It troubling me.
"Then 1 had the lnlluenzn and be-
came dreadfully sick and weak, but
toy stomach kept in good order and it
only took four bottles of Tanlac to
build me up again to where I'm now
feeling lietter than at any time 1 can
remember. 1 have gained eleven
pounds In weight, too. and words can't
express the gratitude I feel toward
Tanlac. I Keep Tanlac iu the house
ull the time now, for I know It Is a
medicine that ran lie depended upon."
Tanlac Is sold by leading drugglsta
everywhere.—Adv.
Berlin.—The party leaders admit-
ted that there was available in the
reichstag a safe majority in favor of
accepting the allied ultimatum with
regard to the reparations.
The majority socialists and clerl-
caU in party conference voted In fa-
vor of accepting the ultimatum of the
allies.
The German peoples' party by a
vote of 59 to 5, rejected the proposi-
tion.
As the independent socialists hare
already favored yielding to the allies.
It Is believed there will be a sufficient
majority in the relchstag for accept-
ance of the ultimatum.
Paul I.oebe, of the majority social-
ists and president of the relchstag
will be commissioned by President
Ebert with the task of forming a new
cabinet.
The first Incident between civil
and troops of the French arrty of oc-
cupation occurred when fast automo-
biles returning from Cologne with
several passengers who were in high
spirits, ran past the military outposts
of Imsseldorf. One of the occupants
of the machine fired three revolver
shots, one bullet severing the finger
of a Fiench sentry. The wounded
trooper telephoned the number of the
car ahead to the authorities at Dues-
seldorf.
On entering the city the automobile
was stopped and its occupants arrest-
ed. They will be court martlaled.
A Pure,Sure
Healthful
Bakmgf Powder
at an
Economy Price
•
Contains no Alum
Use it
-and Save !
^PRIC$ |
Phosphate
Baking
Powder
Write for NrrwDr Priqc Cook Book- Its free
Price Baking Po\yder Factory.
loo3 Independence Blvd. Chicago Il ,
lie who never fully never .succet'ds.
TEXAS OIL KING MURDERED
Warren Wagne la Shot Down On
Streeta of Ft. Worth; Enemy Held.
Her Aim Waa Good.
Cholly—"Blinkers' sweetheart I* a
brick." Percy—"I know It. I heard
that she threw herself at him."
ASPIRIN
Name "Bayer" on Genuine
Fort Worth, Texas.—Warren Wag-
ner. 45-years-old, wealthy oil operator
and oil supply inan died from gunshot
wounds. Fred J. Holmes, oil operat-
or. surrendered to Sheriff Smith im- i
mediately alter the shooting.
Following Wagner's death Holmes
was released on bond of $10,000
charged with murder. Business dis-
agreements are given aa the cause ol
the trouble.
Wagner was shot while he was
walking on a down town street. Four
shots were fired, three taking effect,
Wagner fell on his face, never seeing
' the man who had fired the shots.
Wagner was head of the Wagner
ftapply company, director of several
oil field banks and had been one of
the best known oil operators In the
Mid-Continent and North Texas fields.
He drilled the first big gusher in fhe |
Desdemona field, the well coming fn
for 10,000 barrels and making a for
tune for Wagner and his associates.
He also drilled several wells in the
Oklahoma fields and was well known
there as one of the most daring oper-
ators, a man "who never refused a
chance."
Important to Mother*
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOltIA, that famous old remedy
for Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
Indu«try does not liuve to muke
wishes.
Beware! Unless you see the name
"Buyer" on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre-
scribed by physicians for twenty-one
years and proved safe by millions.
Tuke Aspirin only as told In the Bayer
package for Colds. Headache. Neural-
gia. Itheumutism. Kurache, Toothache,
Lumbago, nnd for Pain. Handy tla
boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of As-
pirin cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger packnges. Aspirin Is the
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoacetlcacldester of Sallcyllcacld.
—Adv.
The culture of lea existed In China
In the Fourth century und In Japan In
the ninth century.
SWAMP-ROOT FOR ~
KIDNEY AILMENTS
There i« only one medicine that really
atAndi out pre-eminent aa a medicine for
curable ailmenta of the kidneya, liver and
bladder.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root sUnda the
highest for the reason that it has proven
to be juit the remedy needed in thousands
upon thousands of distressing eases.
Swamp Root mskea friends quickly be-
cause ita mild and immediate eflect is sooa
realized in most cases. II is a gentle,
healing vegetable compound.
Start treatment at once. Sold at all
drug stores in bottles of two aisas, medi-
um and large.
However, if you wish first to test this
mat preparation send ten eents to Dr.
Kilmer * Co, Ringhamton, N. Y, for a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—Adv.
A ninety mile walk on anowshoM
wes accomplished by a Canadian w >
man last winter.
Just say to your grocer Red Cross
Ball Blue when buying bluing. You
will be more than repaid by the re-
sults. Once tried always used. 5c.
Remarkable Discovery.
A remarkable discovery with regard
to the blood, says the Scientific Amer-
ican, tins Just been made by a phy-
sician in Lonflon. In making serums
the doctor got the needed plasma from
the blood of horses. After he had
drawn off the plasma, he Injected the
red corpuscles Into the horses again.
The result was that the horses Imme-
diately formed new blood fluid of nor-
mal composition. It will take some
time to determine the full possibili-
ties of so startling a discovery, but It
Is likely to have an Important bearing
on the practice as well as the theory
of medicine.
The emeruld Is the most precious of
gems.
FRECKLES
Now U lk« Tumm to G*« R* mi
~ u.If r
There's no longer the •ItghtMt need of
feeling uhimrd of* your fr^ckleo, as Uthlne
—doubl« strength—la guaiantecd to remove
the e homely apota.
Simply g t *n ounce of Othlno—doobla
itrength—from your ilrvgclet, and apply •
little of It night and mornlag an«l yon
should, eoon see that even the wo rat freckles
have b gnn to dlaappear, while the IVghtor
ones have vanished entlraly. It la oeldora
that mora than one ounce la needad to com-
pletely clear the akin and sola a beaut If
clear complexion.
Be sure to aak for the doable strength
Othtns. as thla la enid under guarantee of
money back If It (alls to remove f reck lea.
Live and Dead Lumber.
A report issued by the forest prod-
ucts laboratory states thut If sound
dead trees arc sawn into lumber anil
the weathered or charred outside cut
away, sui h lumber cannot be distin-
guished by any known test from that
rut from live trees. Most of the wood
In a live tree is actually dead, and
the specification for lumber should
then-fore lie framed to provide for a
maximum amount of decay or Insect
infestation, and the provision of a
clause specifying live timber is unneo
esjary.
TO REDUCEJTEEL WAGES
Twenty Percent Reduction la An-
nounced by Gary
New York.—Wage rates of day la-
borers at the manufacturing plants of
the United States steel corporation
will be cut about 20 percent may 16.
Elbert H. Gary, head of the corpora-
tion, announced.
Announcement of the cut was ac-
companied by the following statement
from Chairman Gary:
"After long and painstaking effort
we have not been *ble to find a prac-
ticable basis for the enflre abandon-
ment of the 12hour day or turn in
the Immediate future.
"However, we have eliminated the
12hour day in certain departments
and shall continue our efforts In this
direction with the hope and expecta-
tion of making the elimination of the
12 hour day complete during the next
year. We do not believe we can sat-
isfy our employes with any shorter
limit."
Other rates. Including salaries, will
be adjusted eijhltnbly, added Mr.
Gary's statement. Issued after a two-
days' conference here with executive
heads of various subsidiary compan-
ies.
Naming the Birds.
Orvllle Wright suld at a Dayton
bunquet:
"Flying becomes more popular
every day among our wealthy young
men. Certain newspaper humorists.
In fact, are trying to Invent a suitable
nauie for theTiew fad.
"I have seen It called 'flyphola
fever,' 'Intlewenxa.' and 'aeroslpelaa.'
but -my owu suggestion would be
•skyatlea.'"
What the BanA Meant to Marie.
In a New York"ousehold Is a maid,
newly arrived from Hungary, who has
tragic memories of the war. She Is the
sole survivor of her family. A few days
ago there was a neighborhood celebra-
tion near her new home, one of the
features being a small parade. When
the hand marthed past and struck up
o military air Marie sprung to the win-
dow. I.lke a fln«h she was back, ex-
claiming one of the very first English
words she knows:
"War! War!" t
The man who courts trouble Is soon
married.
In the fifteenth century the term
vaudeville was applied lo a certain
ol<l Normm folk song.
Two I. C. C. Heads Approved.
Washington—Nominations of E. J.
Lewis of Indianapolis 'and James D.
Campbell of Spokane. Washington, to
the Interstate commerce commission
were confirmed by the senate
Sehuyjer Confirmed for Envey.
Washington—The nomination ol
Montgomery Schuyler of New York,
to be minister to Salvador waa con
firmed la the senate.
New Yerk Bank Cuta Rata.
New York—The New York federal
reserve bank announced a reduction
In Its rediscount rate on commercial
paper from T lo 6^ percent. The rata
on government securities and hanki
era' accrptancea la unchanged at I
percent
sss
let the Children in,too!
It's no longer necessary to
' maintain a dividing line
at the breakfast table—tea •
or coffee for grown-ups —
no hot cup for the .youngsters
Serve
Instant
postum
to each member of the fam-
*'There's a Reason for Pbstom
Sold, by all grocers
Hade by ft>stum Cereal Company, foe.
Battle Creek, Michigan.
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The Inola News (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, May 13, 1921, newspaper, May 13, 1921; Inola, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc180877/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.