The Fargo Republican (Fargo, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1916 Page: 2 of 2
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THE REPUBLICAN FARGO OKLAHOMA
BIUDUS HEMM
nni lift nnihrm
Gently cleanse your liver and
sluggish bowels while
you sleep
' Got 10-csat box
t 8tck hsadscha biliousness dtast-
mm coated tongue foul taste and (owl
knttkralvan trace them to torpid
liver delayed fermenting food la the
-towels tr so mi rgutf stomach
' Poisonous matter -clogged tilths to-
teat In ee lnatead of tying coat pot
of tho system la re-absorbed Into the
blood When thia poiabn roaches tbe
daltcatg brain ttissua It causes con-
geal loa and that dull throbbing gldk
enlng headache i ?- t 1 i-i -
Ca scare ta lpmfidliteiy cleanae tbe
attnadh rbpiethn’aour undlgeated
(bod aba foul gazes’ take the exceaa
bUe fi-om the liver and carry out all
the eonatlpated waste matter and
pofaona In the bowels
" A Ciacaret to-night will Barely
stralghtenyou out by morning They
work while you Bleep— a 10-cent bos
from your drugglat means your head
Ic-Year atomach aweet and your liver
add bowela regular for months ' Adv
Ita Advantage
‘ la there much In thia real (estate
business?” I v ' I
"Oh yea there are lota to sell"
lVFor calka uae Hanford's Balaam
M-
i - i
:A toper once said that life ’a sweets
hn more to drinks' than they did to
'eats
m
MEAT CLOGS KIDNEYS
THEN YOUR BACK HURTS
f
-Tpko a Olaaa of 8elta to Flush Kid-
i neya If Bladder Bothers You—
H v-t
prink Lota of Water s
' No man or woman who eata meat
regularly can make a mlatake by flush-
Ing tha kldneya occaalonally aaya a
well -knoWa’ authority Meat forma
uric acid which excitea the kidneya
they become overworked from i the
a train get alugglah and tall to filter
the waate and polaona from the blodd
then we : get alck Nearly all rheu-
matism headaches liver trouble ner-
vousness dizziness aleepleaaneaa and
urinary disorders come from alugglah
ftldneya
- The moment you feel a dull ache In
thp kidneya or your back hurta - or If
the urine la cloudy offensive full of
sediment' Irregular of passage Or' at-
tended by a aenaatlon of acaldlng atop
eating meat and get about four ouncea
of Jad Skits 'from any pharmacy take
ai tablespoonful la a glaas of water
before breakfast and In a few days
yohrtktdneya Will act fine Thia fa-
mous salts la made frpm the acid pt
grapes and lemon Juice combined
With llthla and has been' used for
generation! to flush and stimulate tha
kidneya also to neutralize the acids
In urine so it no longer causes irrita-
tion thus ending bladder weakness
Jad Salta la Inexpensive' and cantaot
Injuye 1 makes ‘ a delightful efferves-
cent llthla-water drink which everyone
arms waica everDna
should take now and then to keep the I
kidneys clean and active and the blood
pure thereby avoiding serious kidney
complications— Adv
I I 1
Said Eve unto Adam: “It gives me
a pain to sea you walking the floor
with a Ctfu”
"RECIPE FOR CRAY HAIR
To half pint ot water add 1 os Bey Bam a
email box of Barbo Compound and M oe of
glyoerise Apply to the hair twice a weak
ntil It becomes the desired abode Any drug-
flst eon pot thia up or job oan mix It at
oma at very little ooet It will gradually
darkee etreaked faded gray hair and re-
moves dandruff It is excellent for falling
hair and will make hareh hair soft and gloeey
It will not oolor the scalp la not sticky m
greasy end does not rub off— Adv
Variety Is the spice of life to tbe
bald man In tbfe front row '
SYRUP OF FIGS FOR
:A
It is cruel to force nauseating
harsh physic into a
sick child
p (i
Look back at your childhood days
ttefnember the "dose” mother insisted
pn— csstpr ' oil calomel cathartics
How you hated them how you fought
agatnBt taking them
With our i children It's different
Mothers who cling to the old form of
physic simply don't realize what they
da t The chUdren's revolt is well-founded
Their tender little "Insides' srei
Injured by them
If your child's stomach liver and
bowels need cleansing give only deli-
cious “California Syrup of Figs” Its
action is positive but gentle Millions
of mothers keep this harmless “fruit
laxative" handy they know children
love to take -it that it sever falls to
clean the Uver and bowels and sweet-
en the stomach end that a teaspoonful
given today saves a sick child tomor-
row 1 1 '
V Ask at the store for 60-cent bottle
ef "California 8yrup of Figs" which
has full directions for babies children
of all ages and for grown-ups plainly
on each bottle Adv
The true secret of feminine beauty
la to be born pretty
STATE HEWS K0TES)1
! SHADOWS OP COMING
'Mar t-lh— Livestock - show 'so
Oklahoma City
Mareh — Sixth district republican con-
vention El Keno
April — Third District republican con-
vention Durant i
Aug 1 — ftate Primary
opt ll-U— ntepneaa county fair
Hope 14-lS— Uraay noun tv fair
Sept l(-ae— Comaaohe eouaty fair
Sept IS-SS— Ottawa county fair
Sepr VI to - State Fair uuuon City
Nov 1— Election Day
- " — ' T"
Natural gas has been turned Into the
mains at McAlester
Pupils of tbe public school of Le-
high have' started a savings bapk
About fifty farmers around Bristow
ha ve expressed a-wllllngness to Join
In growing 600 'perea of watermelon!
during the coming season
Postal savings' deposits at the Okla-
homa City poatofflee In January 1916
reached a total of 92600 In excess ol
the figures for January J91P- -
Norman and Chlckasha citizens are
endeavoring to secure natural gas for
the two towns and have placed the
subject before their chambers of com-
merce - '
The county treasurer of Pottawat-
omie county has collected 339 00749
of the taxes due fpr the year 1916 Of
tbe amount collected 9793368S goes toi
tbe state
The smallpox quarantine baa been
lifted after there were about twenty-
five cases of smallpox In and around
'Apache Schools were closed on 'ac-
count of the presence of the malady
Forty-five thousand dollars will: be
spent' In improving the roads In Tusk-
ahoma township in Pushmataha coun-
ty the money to bo derived from !the
sale of bonds voted in tho township !
1 While using coal ell in kindling a
fire in the kitchen stove Mrs Carrie
Shaffer' aged 60 of Enld was burned
to death when the flames exploded the
can and threw the fiery fluid over her
Midland Valley railroad officials
have announced that between 9109000
and 9260000 will be spent in erecting
railroad shops at Muskogee replacing
buildings that burned about two week)
ago 1 1
At the last meeting of the Ponca City
fclty council bonds to the sum of 912000
were cancelled These bonds were not
due for pome tjrae but tbe council de-
cided to retire them and atop tbe In-
terest i - i
t
A mass meeting of Ponca City cltl-
sens adopted a resolution asking the
city commissioners to -submit to the
voters Aptll 4 a proposition to Issue
115000 In municipal : bonds the pro-
ceeds to be used in constructing a
municipal auditorium
i Citizens ef Perkins participated in a
big Wolf drive February 22 in ah ef-
fort to rid that part of Payne county ol
the animals Several hundred persons
participated in the drive In order to
mitigate danger no weapons were
carried by the hunters
E F Stanton fornlerly an ordained
minister of the gospel has filed aultj
at Hobart for divorce from his wife
Mrs E Z Stanton after a wedded life
1
of twenty-nine years Stanton In his
petition asserts that while he was busy
about his church work his wife would
belittle his efforts and on one occa
sion she asserted that the devil was
stilt in him
' - I -I !
Surveyors of tbe Texas Oklahoma
A Eastern railroad are surveying an
extension of the line from Broken Bow
to DeQueen Ark have crossed thei
Arkansas -Oklahoma line and expect to
complete their work within two weeks
Construction work has already 'com-
menced at Broken Bow and It Is under-
stood the road will be completed with-
in eighteen months
Fire which originated In the Bijou
picture theater at Otlton completely
destroyed the entire block the mone-
tary loss being estimated at 975000
Two major League teams will give
practice games to the University of
Oklahoma nine this spring The big
leaguers will be the Chicago 'White
Sox and tbe New York Giants One
of the most difficult schedules yet at
tempted by an Oklahoma term1 has
been arranged for tbe Sooners this
year The Chinese University team
from Honolulu will play two games at
Norman on their tour of America
County Treasurer R D 8tewart of
Guthrie reports that up to the present
time about 950001) more taxes has
been paid Into his office on 1915 taxes
than for the same time a year-ago
Corporations have paid about 9100000
and many smaller taxpayers are pay
lug both the first and last half at one
payment
The cotton gin at Roff belonging t
the Roff OH and Cotton Co was burn
ed The building and machinery
total loss Thirty bales of cotton wen
partially consumed The loss Is estl
mated at about 915000
" Cleaning Whits Lace
Delicate laces which have become
soiled may be cleaned beautifully bj
squeesing them through skim milk to
which a little bluing has beeu added
They come out of their bath looklny
like new and are just the right atilt
ness when stretched and dried or drte
and ironed between t cloths over
Turkish towel pad
Ail kiuus of feathered teas are In
favor there are even fans of blacl
velvet trimmed with ermine
Jump from Bed
i in Homing aqd
! ’ Drink Hot Water
Tells why everyone should drink
j hot water eaoh me ruing
before breakfast
Why la nan and woman half the
time feeling nervous despondent
worried some daya headachy doll sad
unstrung some daya really incapaci
tated by Illness
I i i
i
It we all would practice Inside-bathing
what a gratifying change would
take place lnatead pf thousands of
half-sick anaemic-looking souls with
pasty muddy complexions we should
see crowds of happy healthy rosy-
cheeked people everywhere The rea-
son la that tha human ayatom does not
(Id itself each day of all the waste
which It accumulates under our pres-
ent mode of living ’ For every ounce
of food and drink taken Into the sys-
tem nearly an ponce of waste material
must be carried out else It ferments
and forma ptomalne-liks poisons which
fire absorbed Into tho blood r'i
Just as necessary aa it la to clean
tha ashes from the furnace each day
before tbe fire will barn bright and
hot so we must each morning clear
the inside organa of tha previous day's
accumulator of Indigestible waste and
body toxins Men and women wheth-
er alck or well are advised to drink
each morning before breakfast a
glaas of real hot water with a tea-
spoonful of limestone phoaphate In
It aa a harmless meana of washing
out of the stomach- liver kidneys and
bowela tbe indigestible material
waate sour ble and toxins thus
cleansing sweetening and purifying
the entire alimentary canal before put-
ting more food Into the stomach
Millions of people who had their
torn at constipation 1 bilious attacks
add stomach nervous days and sleep-
less nlghta have become real cranks
about the morning inetde-bath A quar-
ter pound of limestone phosphate will
not cost much from your drugglat or
at the store but la sufficient to dem-
onatrate to anyone Its cleansing
sweetening and freshening effect upon
tbe system — Adv
According to French statistics only
one-fourth of the available accidents
are due to defects In aeroplanes
For hot grease burns apply Han
ford’s Balsam lightly until tbe fire Is
extracted AJt
If a woman-is homely she tries to
persuade herself that she has a classic
face ' ' '
Time itl Pape’s Diapepsin ends
all Stomach misery in five
' ! f minutes '
4
Do some foods you eat hit back-
taste good but work badly ferment
Into stubborn lumps and cause d sick
aour gassy stomach? Now Mr or
Mrs Dyspeptic Jot this down: Pape’s
Dia pepsin digests everything leaving
nothing to sour and npset you There
never was anything so safely quick so
certainly effective No difference how
baldly your stomach is disordered yon
will get happy relief in five minutes
but wbat pleases you moat is that It
sti-engthens and regulates your stom-
ach so you can eat your favorite foods
without fear
Tou feel different as soon ns "Pape's
DIapepsin" comes In contact with tho
stomach— distress Just vanishes— your
stomach gets sweet no gases no belch-
ing no eructations of undigested food
Go now make the best investment
you ever made by getting a large fifty-
cent case of Pape’s DIapepsin from any
store You realise In five minutes how
needless it is to suffer from indiges-
tion dyspepsia or bad stomach Adv
Nowadays we hear more about tbe
shiftless son-in-law than about the
prodigal son
SUFFERED FOR FOUR YEARS
Mr J M Sinclair of OUvehlll
Tenn writes: "I strained my back
which weakened my kidneys and
caused an awful had backache and
inflammation of
the bladder La-
ter I became so
much worse that
I consulted - a
doctor who aaid
that I had Dia
betes and that
my heart was af-
fected I suffer-
Mr J M Sinclair ed for four years
and was in a nervous state and very
much depressed The doctor's medi-
cine didn’t help me so I decided to
try Dodds Kidney Pills and I cannot
say enough to express my relief asd
thankfulness as they cured me Dia-
mond Dinner Pills eared me of Con-
stipation Dodds Kidney Pills 50o per box at
your ' dealer or Dodds Medicine Co
Buffalo N Y Dodd Dyspepsia Tab-
lets for Indigestion have boon proved
60c per box— Adv
A woman baa tbe same ambition to
get Into eoclety na a man has to keep
out of jalL
Conducted by tho 1 Notional - Wmua'l
Christian Temperance Union)
LIQUOR MEN AND LABOR
Before the convention of the Ameri-
can Federation of Labor there was a
demand by the liquor Internets or or
ganixatlons identified with them that
the American Federation of Labor
line up with the liquor men In their
fight against prohibition Mr Charles
Btalxle writing In tha Continent aaya
that tha atmosphere of tha convention
was so decidedly unfriendly to each
action that the liquor men "word
easily persuaded to drop the entlrq
question Throughout the convent
Uou" continues Mr Btesle “the liquor
men were strahgely quieL refraining
from taking anb pert in nny ef ihe
dlscusalons forj fear af nrouklng the
enmity of anybody whose dplniong
might be controverted
“Aj maos meaning fo the purpose of
discussing the mlatlod of labor to the
salodn waa helf on tnn first feundmjf
afternoon of thq convention and was
attended by about one thousand per
sons With the uae I of government
statistics and lotfc which -appealed to
tho workers facts Fare presented
whlck bettered down tfe arguments of
tho liquor men that tia abolition of
tho saloon would create n labor panto
The statement that the labor men
In England bad not only organised n
labor officials’ temperance fellowship
with which the best leadere were Iden-
tified but that bartenders brewery
workers and others In the liquor In-
dustry were not considered worth or-
ganising by tbe British Trades con-
gross had a marked effect on the au-
dience" ' I
WAY DOWN IN ARIZONA
A traveling salesman who goes into
every nook and corner of Arizona vla-
lting the W C T U booth at the Panama-Pacific
exposition naked what we
knew of the results of prohibition in
Arizona Mias Brown the director re-
peated aome of the statements which
had come to her from residents and
travelers not at all knowing hla atti-
tude In the matter Then he told her
that he had been in all parte of the
state having gone over the territory
for fourteen years He said: "You
cannot exaggerate changed conditions
In the mines the accidents have de-
creased 80 per cent the efficiency has
more than doubled and the physical
appearance of the communities has
greatly Improved The faces of men
look far fresher healthier and happi-
er Business has ' Improved greatly
Merchants and other business men
who formerly opposed prohibition on1
tho ground' of' Injury to business are
now its greatest boosters and would!
not allow n return to old condittons1
Prohibition has come 'to-stay In Ari-I
sons" The visitor admitted that he
had always been accustomed to take
his glass of beer and liked a glass of
wine with his meals but declared
there la not one argument for the con-
tinuance of the liquor traffic :
THETE8T
A Birmingham (England) employer
who Is a stanch teetotaler recently
advertised for a foreman for one oi
the departments of his works and a
large crowd of men called at the feel
tory When the employer saw then)
outside he said generally: "Well ws
might as well go and have a drink1
pointing to n tavern opposite He suit
ed the action to his words and led tb4
way acrosa the men following When
he reached the swing doors of the pah-
lie house he turned around and saw
one man loitering behind the others!
and called ont to him: - "Aren’t you
coming in?" “I’m a teetotaler
thanks" was the response "Walk
you’re the man for me" the employer
promptly rejoined and be there am
then engaged him while all the othen
were aent about their business
THERE'S A MORAL ( i
From the Sacramento Union comes
the following: A well-known resident
of Sacramento the other day met on
a train two men and their wives wh
had come from Kansas seeking farms
In California He asked them why
they lid not Investigate the country
around Sacramento as It offered many
opportunities for the home-seeker
They replied that they had r spent
three f smx in this city and had beefi
much impressed with wbat they sato
“But” said one of them "Sacramento
has entirely too many saloons for
ns srl the farmers’ roads are lined
with roadhouses so we decided to go
elsewhere to locate”
A GOOD TYPE
Rockford 111 is a prosperous com-
fortable interior American city A pari
of Its population Is of alien birth or pak
entage - Thus It represents the type qi
American life and very favorably the
American scheme a smell city with
high average of Intelligence — Chicago
Tribune -
And Rockford Is dry - '
PRODUCES CRIMINALS
Gentlemen your trade cannot be
treatod like any other buslnesa for It
is unlike any other The liquor traf-
fic tends to produce criminality In
the population at large and law-break
Ing among the saloonkeepers them
selves If the American people do not
control It with a firm hand It will
soon control them— Theodors Roose-
velt SAILING OVER BAR
”Many a young man has lost hla rul
der whlln tiring to nail over the her’
lira FORIUE
lam In tbe bands of the farmers end
the work of distribution through the
regular channels of trad has already
begun Millions of bushels of grain
in tie han))Ot I
naklt thaw-1 a are
ble health kt 1
tntp'circulaiei bSffeflttlng
tlie thousands Who are depebdeat in- yt
thfl I 01 Se hemic Industry of the “
UiB 1 province for their livelihood
"The mock prosperity that rested on
tho insecure foundation of Inflated real
(Contributed by W J White of the I estate valude has passed away and in
Deportment of tho Interior I its pine the corner stbne of the ioouo-
Ottawa Canada) I try's sound financial future to being -i
I strolled into a bank In one of the I huilL i 7 “ ' ’
cities of the west n short time ego and I - t"Thq trust and puirignge companies
tha bank manager sold '"after thei tho
war tha Canadians should be pro-1 wholesale merchants all tell the1 same
pored for a greet lnpux of pepple I story i today of marked Improvement
Tha crops that the western' Canodlen In their business The fermbreinnd
tormi have prod need In 1918 and the I others ari meeting their Just dues jUid
wealth that the farmers have had I paying off debts that In many cases
thrust upon them by the high price I hays been long overdue Cqllectlooo
of grain will make form loads' volu-1 Ore better today than' they have been
able and farming remunerative After I since the most prosperous ays of an r
the war Is over there Fill bp thou- history' and obligations are being met
sands go to Canada to engage jh sgrl-1 freely and promptly ‘:l
cu)tyr4 and many ottyer Industrie that I i‘‘Notr" -1 sold "why should' -they
will certainly prove profitable -'Condi-1 wait until the war Is overft V
tlons will be wonderfully godl The I And he agreed with' me— Advertise-
advertising that Canadahax bad dur-j meet-
ing the last year or two by its magnlfl-1 -
cent contribution of over 260000 men I When a leap-year girl attempts io
to fight for the Empire the wonderful I kiss a young man to bis crodtt e
sums It has given to the Red Cross I It said he never threatens to call
end Patriotic funds the excellent I help
showing It made in subscribing over!
"Then Take Advantage of
Opportunities In Canada"
double when only 50 millions of dollars
was asked as a war loan the brav
ery courage and hardihood of the sol
dlers who have fought the battles In Oreenheart wood from BrltiUh
Flanders it Is Just wonderful" GaUn u td to outiost iron or at £
my enthusiastic banker grew eloquent when U8ed under W8teri
One might have thought he was n sub-1 i t
sldlzed booster for Canada “But" he I
said "they won’t go until after the
war"
“Well now Mr why wait un-1 teU yonr is' Murine 'Eye BsaMdr oi
til after the war? ‘ If all you saj be Chicago —dely JNok onTrsuasaCW
true and you have said nothing yet mtB C8B afford to lt down K 4
of the wonderful bank clearings of for a Koldea opportunity to coi U
Canada today nothing of the fact that Blonf he doeant need lt 75
the Immense grain crop of Western
Canada thia year has given to every
man woman and child in that coun-
try over three hundred dollara per
heed why wait until after the war?
After the war under eucinwrtdinoni
as you have pictured (and which era
real) land values will go up( price!
will Increase ' Advantage should bo
taken of the low prices at which these
agricultural lands can be bad today)
They have not increased1 any1 as yeti
and excellent farm landstoan-be (is
close to railways In old settlement!
in excellent communities for from fli
teen to thirty dollars per acre Tbi
climate Is good and will heno bette I
after the war"
'What about conscription though I
“T
there now would they not haveti l
face It? Then too there is the repor
that there is a' heavy war tax oi
lands” i
I toss surprised to learn that' thesi
old yarns stories that I : thought hs
been exploded long age were still dc
Ing duty In many parts of the Unite)
States and that n gentleman' ef thi i
wide learning of my frlpnd was in-
clined to believe them
Conscription!” I said f'WIth Can
ada contributing 2500(10 menyoluntari -ly
enlisted why conscription? ' Then i
is no conscription -in- Canada ant
peither will there be It is not need -ed
' In any case no legislatldn couli i
be passed by the Dominion Parliamen
which would impose military servlcn
upon people who are' not citizens o!
Canada either by birth or naturaliza-
tion ' Settlers from the United State
could not become ‘naturalized British
subjects until they had Resided in
Canada continuously for three years
I quoted from official documents
"In the first few months of tbe wafr
I clearly stated that there-would no
be conscription Jn 'Canada I repeat
that statement today”
"And then as to taxes” T continued
quoting again from official nqthorltj
AU taxes levied by the Federal Gov-
ernment take the indirect ford of cm -toms
excise and Inland revenue di-
ttos lt is untrue that farmera art
paying direct 'war-tax levies and ' n
intending settjer need hesitate tp
come to Canada on this account
"Official denials should convince you
that all apprehensions whiqh ho i
been' making some would-be-settler i
from 1 thC United 1 States' heBltate t
make a change whjle the war lasts
are without foundation ‘ With ' thesp
misunderstandings cleared up the
present war conditions even becomp
an added Inducement to settlement In
any part of the provinces ol westerp
Canada inasmuch as war prices and
keen demands for all mariner of fanh
products -afford the farmer a special
opportunity to make money" I
I was glad of the chance' a rul
pleased to have him state that h
views had pltogcther changed
! 1 could have continued and (told hi
Of thq fortunes that had been made hi
the' season of 1915 odt of farming
wheat growing' -oat growing) barley
growing cattle raising dairying anjd
mixed farming ' I could have tod
him of an Ottawa (Canada) syndicate
that had a yield of 130 bushels hf
oats per acre from thetr farm at Walp-
wrlght and from (Oi acres of wheat
field they threshed over 60 bushels ppr
acral' Theta yields while phenomenal
were repeated In -jnonyi portions pf
western Canada' It wa interesting to
inform him that the average yield bf
spring wheat In Saskatchewan wia
2618 bushels per acre Manitoba 9S3
bushels in Alberta 3816 bushels
end over the three provinces there was
a total average of over 80 bushels per
acre ' ' ' "- " ' '
"Thv Immense crop Mat has Just
been harvested has put millions of dol-
take r
- rsguh is
PM Cray Boise tat Ttrsd Bysa
make ‘us look older than we ere Eat
your Erse younc end you will look you c
After the Movies Mur1neYourKyse IWt
To Drive Out Malaria
And Build Up Tbe Sj
UrtweTon to
I Quinine sod Itoain a Ftflee form Tbe
I Quinine drives out malaria tha Iron
j builds up the system
He is a wipe son whp knows that
he knows less thaA hie father '
4--- t-T I
If You Can’t Gat It In' Town
Borneo os -In almost i every toy® l
the United SU selto Hanford BaL
aaui' of Myrfh'i' If Ott cant IL
write Gj Q Hanford Mfgt QF Ptvot
Price 50c hhd 10(k AdV
r4 — -rr
Many a msept love at sight to due
- - T
to dlmaeM ofth llght- 17
i ll )-J Hr
POVETED BY ALL
but ' possessed by r few ‘ s' ibeantffhl
hand of hair If yours to stronked with
gray of to harsh and stiff you ton ra-
sters It to Its former beauty and lus-
ter by using "Lo Creole" Hair Dress-
ing Price f 100— Ady1 ? v - in
' k littW ntmsenie then end How nUy
stir vp sh ewful row w
ii S - rm
THE BLUE THAT TRUE J
Red Crie Ball Blue gives to olothee
n clear dazzling white tohlfier than
anew not a greenish yellow: tings like
cheap bottle blue Buy Red Cross Ball
Blue for next -washday) TOn Sarfcl be
happily surprised Large paqlragp at
your grocers 6 cents— Adv - ‘
L I - ) t II-T- i ) I i
Wireless Man In Demand 1
Radio1 dperatbra 'nf enlisting in
great numbers In thp ranks of the bel-
ligerent nations ot Europe' It' Is -to-ported
that- in the British -navy alone
more than 5250 radio opera tors have
enlisted Among" those serving On
warahlpa-one has earned the Victoria
crpas- one the croaa of the Legion ‘of
Honor and -four thb' dlsUngulahed-den-
duct medals j
-ill-
stine1
staff of interior decorators Is' at ’ '
your dispoSali-fo assist you with
your spring decorating
Thaw experts offer you dependable
free advice on how lo treat your walls
eothxt they will harmonize wit hand eat
off o advantage your floor covering
furniture draperies — ne ana
wearing zppnxeL
They alaewent to tslj you about ttw
handiome decorative wall and ceiling
border effect that can be obtained by
'the uae oi stencil ‘-the vary-lataat
j wrinkle to wall decoration
)
Stencils ordinarily coat from SO cents
t to S3Q0 each but if you will write for ' -tha
free "AlabaMine Packet" contain- 1
tog hnd colored proofs of U of the
very latest stencil effect we wiU tell
you how vote can have rour choice of
these and dUO others at practically no
CKS22iW?2Ei--r
'AU beta ins In I lb packagea In dry
"“dr ® "i in cold
watar is eold by paint hardware drag
ad ganeral stores averywhara
AlahMtlneCo
' I
0 ! I-)'': : '
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Tipton, W. B. The Fargo Republican (Fargo, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1916, newspaper, March 2, 1916; Fargo, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1839210/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.