The Inola News (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, May 20, 1921 Page: 3 of 4
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itch Your Kidneys!
hat "bad back" ii probably do* to
ik kidney*. It ikon in a doll,
ibbing backacha or (harp twinges
m stooping. Yoo have headaches,
, di y spells, a tired, nervous feel-
and irregular kidney action. Don't
lect it—there i* danger of dropsy,
rel or Bright'a diaeaaet Uae Doan't
Inew Pillt. Thouaandi hart saved
in selves more aerioua ailment* by
timely uae of Doan't. Atk your
fhbort
An Oklahoma Cat*
Henry Claaaaen.
shoemaker, Fair-
view. Okla., says:
"Every time 1 over-
worked. my kidneys
were affected and I
had aharp palna In
my back over my
kldneya. At aurh
tlmea I wai handi-
capped at my work.
Doan's Kidney Pllla
were brought to my
attention and after
is them. I waa rid of the trouble,
iv put my kldneya In good condl-
Lm
CU< Oaaa'a a* Aar Jltn, #Oc a laa
OAN'S V.VA*
ICR-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO, N. Y.
Uaed to It.
e doesn't Be«-m to mind a thing
le say w hen he la addressing his
preparing to drive."
o. He's used to having sarcastic
rks flung at him."
hRt BO?"
en. He does the curving at dinner
at his house and lit* wife has
■ge family." •
HEN'S FOOT-EASE
And sprinkle In the Foo4-
Bath. n takaa the attng
out at Ooraa, Bunions,
Blisters and Callouses,
and give* teat and eom-
to hot, Ured, smart-
, swollen test
Mora than 1,800,000
pounds of Powder lor
lbs Feet ware need by
our Army and Navy
daring the war.
p_ Allen's Foot*
Ease, tho pow-
der lor the (ml
tee the friction from the shoe, fraab-
■ the feet and glvee new vigor.
Nothing relieves the pain of tight or
w shoes so quickly. Bold erery where.
0 Years Old
■Was Sick
wr Feels Youotf After
rakinrf Eatonlc for
Sour Stomach
had sour stomach ever since I had
irrlp and It bothered me badly
> taken Kntonlc only a week nnd
mi' ti better. Am 80 years old,"
Mrs. John Hill.
lontc quickly relieves sour stom-
Indlgcstlon, heartburn, bloating
distress after eating because It
1 up and carries out the excess
ty and gases which cause most
ich ailments. If you have "tried
thing" and still suffer, do not give
ipe. Eatonlc hag brought relief to
of thousands like you. A big box
but a trifle with your druggist's
in tee.
uticura Talcum
r frapMt *
[ways Healthful
I 2St. OUeaal S ead JSc, Tali ■ Sc.
SEVEN DAYS
OF NEWS
THE WORLD OVER
Shot Roach and Ant Powdir
ullt Roiohts ir4
Aatt Ij Contact
For aale by all
Qrocen and Druf-
gisttlnSSc. 50c and
11.00 anas,
r DaaJ Skat CWcal Ca.. OUaWa CU. Okk.
SLOW
DEATH
eg, pains, nervousness, diffi-
y in urinating, often mean
}us disorders. The world's
dard remedy for kidney, liver,
der and uric acid troubles—
GOLD MEDAL
I quick relief and often ward off
ly diseases. Known aa the national
dy of Holland for more than 200
k All druggists, in three sizes.
fee (he aeaaae Cold MxUI ea> eran b >
aed accept aae imitatioaa
OR WOMEN
ir «w half ,
JTTS UVuK POLS bevel
Id for the Liver.
■ad Iks feOewlag fraa a waaiaa
tarty-eight! "I hava mm* ML
JTTS FILLS lar Bowel regale-
years, laanwcah
they era also tke Beat
■later for etterretafd-
— rtteee. I hava laU
aavaf My frleiadg aa« aawaaae
mM ha wttfeeet tfcesk A tew
iyshatera,aarwfjraaaraaHricht.tt
Dr.T utt's
iver Pills
I. U.. Oklahoma City, No. >1~1tt1.
Peace Motes.
If the Germans carry out their re-
ported plans for a counter attack
again A the Polea, Upper Silesia will
be thrown Into a state of civil war
In which the allied forces here- will
be compelled by circumstances to re-
main neutral and let events, which
might disrupt the peace of Europe,
take their course.
+ ♦ ♦
Lloyd George's declaration to the
house of commons that "the Polish In-
vasion of Opper Silesia W a complete
defiance of the treaty of Versailles,"
marks the definite and open break be-
tween Great Britain and France re-
garding Middle European policies.
♦ + +
Germany's acceptance of the Allied
reparation demauda has promptly
stimulated Interest of American busi-
ness In German trade possibilities.
There has been a marked increase In
the number of Inquiries reaching the
state department concerning trade re-
strictions. . •
# ♦ ♦
The Harding administration wanta
It to be distinctly understood that the
resumption of American representa-
tion In allied councils Is not going to
Involve or entangle the United Statea
in affaira of purely European con-
cern.
♦ ♦ ♦
Satisfaction in French official and
political clrclqp over the acceptance
by Germany of the terms of the allied
ultimatum on reparations was much
qualified by the smallness of the ma-
jority in the reichstag In favor of such
acceptance and the feeling here that
the new German cabinet is most un-
stable.
* * *
Herr Von Mutius, conselor of the
German embassy. In the absence of
the armbassador, Dr.' Mayer, delivered
the German acceptance of the ultima-
tum to the foreign office at noon the
other day.
♦ ♦ +
While the United States is again
taking part in the deliberations of
allied statemen on post-war problems,
the participation of this country dis-
tinctly does not embrace the use of
American troops for any purposes
which are not discernible from Wash-
ington.
* ♦ *
Germany has accepted the allied ul-
timatum. The reichstag by a vote of
221 to 175 yielded to the final demands
of the allied powers, und in so doing
agreed to fulfill the terms of the
treaty of Versailles "to the capacity"
of the nation to do so.
+ + +
Washington.
Secretaiy Weeks has announced
the appointment of Gen. John J. Per-
shing as chief of staff of the army.
At the same time Weeks announced
that MaJ. Gen. James G. Harbord, at
present commanding the second divi-
sion. will bo Pershing's executive as-
sistant. a
* * *
"Dollar-a-year" men or other civil-
ian war participants, should not be re-
warded with medals designed for mili-
tary heroes. In the opinion of Secre-
tary Weeks. Announcement of
Weeks's policy In recdgnlilng war
service was made when he conferred
distinguished service medals on six
army officers.
♦ * ♦
Postal receipts, generally regarded
as a barometer of the country's finan-
cial and Industrial situation, Bhowed
a decrease in March and April, 1921,
compared to the corresponding
mouths of 1920. The receipts are for
the fifty largest postofflces, doing 54
per cent of the nation's business.
+ + +
The conference report on the
emergency Immigration restriction
bill has been adopted by the senate
ami house and the measure flow wlli
go to President Harding for hi* ap-
proval. The vote was 277 to 33.
♦ ♦ ♦
Something is radically wrong with
retail prices. Attorney General Paugii-
i ty said the other day, In comment-
ing on reports that representatives of
retailers wore to confer with various
agonclep of tjie government on the
price situation.
+ + +
Tho senate has pussed the emergen-
cy tariff and antidumping bill, retain-1
Ing all amendments recommended by
the finance committee, b- 4 rejecting
those individually proposed. The vote
was 63 to 28.
♦ * *
Domestic.
A wind and hail storm of unusual
severity swept over parts Of Georgia,
Alubama. Mississippi and Tennessee,
causing heavy damage to crops and
buildings. Hailstones one and one-
half Inches In diameter w«re picked
up after the storm hud passed.
+ + ♦
Four brothets. ranging In age from
12 to 21, were burned to death when
their homu waa partly destroyed by
fire at Cambridge. They were Ledger,
Earnest, Warren and Lester Treinb-
ley. They were trapped by the flamea
on the third floor. *
♦ ♦ ♦
Edwin 8. Graves, vice-president
of the International Upholsterers'
Union, and Roy Hull, business agent
tor the Chicago local, wore found
guilty of conspiracy to commit vio-
lence In the upholsterers' strike la
lilt by a Jury at Chicago.
Specific charges that thirteen men
have been killed In the air mall aar
▼lee because of what he termed "gross
mismanagement, Inefficiency and
criminal negligence by officials,"
were made by Lieut. C. C. Eversole
In testimony presented, through f fed*
eral committee which has been con-
ducting an Investigation of air mall
conditions.
♦ ♦ ♦
Several persons were Injured and
considerable property damage caused
by a tornado at Roseboro and Long
Branch , according to reports r- celve£
at Raleigh. N. C. Telephone lines are
down and detailed reports have not
been received.
♦ ♦ ♦
Fire at Youngstown, O., recently
caused a loss estimated at 1million
dollars. l"b, old Mahoning Valley
power house, a lumber yard, ten
houses and a garage were destroyed
and the plant of the Smith Brewery
Company damaged.
♦ ♦ ♦
Guerrilla warfare, with all odds ap-
parently favoring the forces opposing
the state. Is being waged In the grim
mountains of the strike-torn Mingo
County , coal field of West Virginia.
♦ ♦ ♦
The army appropriation bill car-
rying approximately 320 million dol-
lars and providing for an army of 150,-
000 enlisted men was passed late the
other day by the house and sent to the
senate. The vote was 243 to 23.
♦ + *
Southwest:
Six men were killed and seven In-
jured in the wreck of a Texas A Pa-
cific freight train at Eagle Flat aldlpg
between Van Horn and Sierra Blanca,
Hudspeth County, Tex., according to
a report received at the telegraph of-
fice of the railroad In Dallas.
♦ ♦ *
Four enlisted men of the 7th ord-
nance depot detachment at Fort 8111,
Ok., were killed recently when five
hundred pounds of black gun powder,
condemned and ordered destroyed,
prematurely exploded.
♦ ♦ * .
Judge John Devereux, aged and
well known jurist and formerly a
member of the Oklahoma supreme
court. Is dead at Tulsa from a mys-
teriously received wound on the head
and from an Illness that his physl
clans believe was Caused by a drug.
* ♦ ♦
Eagerness to enjoy the first swim
of the season with the coming of the
first warm spell cost the life of Le-
nora Johnson, 10 years old, daughter
of Capt. and Mrs. Johnson of Clayton,
N. M., who-are in McAlester, Ok„
visiting relatives.
. ♦ + +
Sergt. Algoli Bloomquist, 23 years
old, and C. E. McCullough, 45 years
old, a cotton broker of Oklahoma City,
were killed, and Sergt. E. Grogan. At-
lanta, Ga., 22 years old, was probably
fatally Injured In an airplane accident
near the military reservation at Fort
Sill, Ok., recently.
+ + +
With only a fair yield of wheat In
sight In Texas this spring, first har-
vesting of the grain is expected to get
under way about June 1 In the north-
ern section of the state, according to
reports received by the Texas Farm
Bureau Federation and the Texas In-
dustrial congress.
* + * •
Miss Catherine Newby, Indianapolis,
Ind., narrowly escaped death when
bhe was run over by the engine and
four coaches of a Santa Fe passenger
train on a trestle near the city limits
of Dallas, Tex. She was not severely
Injured.
♦ + ♦
Foreign.
Fifty persons were killed and a
score wounded recently In Morelia,
capital of tho state of Mlchoacan, says
reports to the Excelsior, City of Mex-
ico, when police, aided by unsolicited
help from radicals, charged a large
group of Catholics.
+ + +
Some two hundred destroyt-rs, twen-
ty five battle ships and fifty light crul- .
sers have disappeared from the Drib '
isli navy list In recent months. The
British admiralty has issued an ex-
planatory announcement saying the
vessels were all sold to British firms
for breaking up.
+ + +
Col. George Harvey, the new Amer-
ican ambassador, has been received
by King George at Bucklnham palace,
the ambassador presenting his cteden
tials to the king. a
♦ + ♦ '
Mrs Paul Vincent Southard, also
known as Mrs. Lydla Meyer, was held
by the police at Honolulu on orders
from Los Angeles In connection with
the deaths of four of l.er husbands, a
brother-in-law and a child of one of
the nwtn she married. . |
♦ ♦ ♦
A dlsptach to the London Times
from Helslngfors, Finland, says It has
been learned that another telegram
has been sent to Maxim Lltvinoff, the '
Russian soviet representative at Re-
val. by "Koaiistern," Inqfe-ing what
arms there were available for' Dublin. 1
+ + +
There has been on formal recogni-
tion of the soviet government of Rus-
sia by Groat Brltalu aud tho actuation
with reference to recognition has not j
changed since the conclusion of the j
preliminary Anglo Russian trading
agreement.
♦ ♦ ♦
German forces are masting near
Upper Silesia. A heavy concentration
Is reported near Kosel and Kreusbeig.
National feeling Is running high.
Armed clashes In which field artillery
la playing a Bart, are la progress
throughout the district.
Canfntt lBThnd
ALCOHOL-3 PBR OOtT.
Actable IVcpentairAi
s imitating the Food by
tinfithcStomftchsandB^riy
Children Cry For
Thereby Promoting DtgeiHc*
Cheerfulness and Be*Castt
ftciherOplam, Morphine twt
Mineral. yoTKAHcoTic|
s'Wf/lr UP™""**
A helpful Remedy
Constipation end Dun**1
and Feverishness en®
LOBS OF SLEEP—
fi^ttn<1hgrefrc«-t''«MC7
facsimile S«n
WEWYOHK
CAST0RIA
Special Care of Baby.
That Baby should have a bed of its own all are agreed. Tet it
is more reasonable for an infant to sleep with grown-ups than to mm
a man's medicine in an attempt to regulate the delicate organism of
that same infant. Either practice is to be shunned. Neither would
be tolerated by specialists in children's diseases.
Your Physician will tell you that Baby's medicine must be
prepared with even greater care than Baby's food.
A Baby's stomach when in good health is too often disarranged
by improper food. Could you for a moment, then, thlnfc- of giving
to your ailing child anything but a medicine especially prepared
for Infants and Children ? Don't be deceived.
Make a mental note of this:—It is important, Mothers, that
you should remember thrt to function well, the digestive organs of
your Baby must receive special care. Ho Baby fa so abnonpal that
the desired results may be had from the use of primarily
prepared for grown-upe.
■others should rub the soouct that ■ asouso msr some or arrcHtrt easrasa
OSNUINg CASTORIA always
Bean the Signature of
If you are strong, be gentle.
InportiBt to all Wonea
Readers o! this Paper
Thousands upon thousands of women
have kidney or bladder trouble and never
suspect it.
\\ omen's complaints often prove to be
nothing ela* but kidney trouble, or the
retult of kidney or bladder disease.
If the ladneys are not in a healthy con-
dition, they may cause the other orgaas
to become disessed.
Vou may suffer pain in the back, head-
ache and loss of ambition.
Poor health makes you nervous, irrita-
ble and may be despondent; it makes any
one so.
Hut hundreds of womeu claim that Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp Root, by restoring
heslth to the kidneys, proved to be just
the remedy needed to overcome such
conditions.
Many send for a sample bottle to see
what 'Swamp-Root, the great kidney,
liver and bladder medicine, will do for
them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer ft Co., Hinghsmfon, N. Y„ you ■
may receive sample size bottle by Parcel i
1 ost. You can purchase medium and
large size bottles at all drug stores.—Adv.
8penk with acts.
fenada Offers
I and Wealth I
industrious
t he;r
r. a. hewitt
2912 Kala St. Kamu Cfttj, No.
Not "Something for Nothing"
But Premiums for Your Tags
FOR MEN, WOMEN, BOYS AND GIRLS
Ask Your Dealer for These Brands — 5e« That Yoa Get year Tag* — Thty Arm Vahtablm
KENTUCKY COLONEL
PICTURES
Tsken from 10c bags of Kentucky
Colonel pipe tobacco are of equal
value with tags and may be as-
sorted ox. all one kind.
Automatic Lighter
and Pocket Lamp, fio Tar*
Twenty other special articles for
men
Aluminum Salt.
Pepper and Toothpick
Holder and Tray
26 Tags
Cameo Brooch, X Tags
Gold Filled
Dozers ot Pins Chains
and Buttons
American Cut Glaus
Cream Pltchtr and Sugar Bowl. 75 Tags
Spoon Tray or Jelly and Pickle
Dlan, So Tags
Premo Jr Kodak
Pictures JS.X3V ISO Tags
Many other amusements
French Harp, Old Standby, 25 Tags
Also Fiddles and Phonographs
Thirty Different pocket Knives
X-Ray Alarm Clack, 3)0 Tags
_ (Tells Time In Darkness)
Forty other Clocks aad Watches
Twenty Different Flashlights
ROGERS TRIPLE SILVER PLATE ROGERS NICKEL SILVER
( Teaspoons 75 Tag* 11 Teaepoona TO Tags
(Table Spoons 160 Tags S Table Spoone TO Tags
< Knives and ( Forks 150 Tags • Knives and I Forks at Tags
Eighty other articles for tabls and kltchsn
WRIT* TODAY FOR YOUR 1921 PREMIUM LIST
Tobeoeo Ssmglse by Mail 60c — Special Inducement to Uve Dealers
Addreaa: Smith A Scott Tobacco Co, Inc* Dept. A, Paducah, Ky.
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The Inola News (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, May 20, 1921, newspaper, May 20, 1921; Inola, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc180878/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.