The Geary Times (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 8, 1916 Page: 4 of 8
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THE GEARY TIMES
WESTERN CANADA
Accompanying Industries Also
Prove Highly Profitable.
The cheese tndastry throughout
urnicni Canada today Ii in i highly
flourish ice condition and U bound ta
t ««rjr abort tin* to berome much
more Important The ir bai created
• (rent demand for that article. and
H« um ikroafl bn ftwi it a lot of
•seful advertising. The article known
aa Canadian cheeee is now sought not
only br the soldier ta tbe trench**
but by the ordinary HrHUn consols er.
who. having BMd It. la quick to ap-
preciate tu Taluc Thi D'-ar.i that
after the war there arill be a demand
created for It that 'would bo* other-
wise hare been fp to the present
(b? war needs bare limited the local
aupply. but wtth the Increased effort
that ii now being put forth it U hdfced
(hat thia will be met. A* a matter of
course the prices are high. and the
fartr.fr* who contribute to the cheeaa
factories are making money.
The rheeae aeaaon la n jw fully open
and there la erery proapect of an ex
cellent year because the high prict
which obtained la at year will undoubt
adly be maintained tbia aeaaon. West-
ern Canada haa all the natural re-
sources for the making of cbeeae. the
reed and the cool night* two things
tasential. and In time It Is bound to
ecome one of the finest cbeeae cotu -
fries of the continent.
The lower foothills of Alberta, used
soly at the present time as ranges or
for no purpose, will tn time produce
rfceese la great quaatitles. and doubl
leas will soon equal the famous up-
lands of Denmark.
The cool nights mean the better
keeping of milk and cream and
(bane, and that Is a great thing for
the Industry. especially when com-
bined with possibilities of cattle feed
•acb as exist on the long alopes from
the Rockies eastward.
The bog market, which may be
classed as an adjunct of farming. !•
an exceedingly good one. and the low
east at which the feed can be pro-
lured coupled with the high prices
realized, make this industry very prof
Itable.
One of the first thoughts that occur
to the mind of the average prospective
settler is the likelihood of suitable
marketa. In this connection the fol-
lowing table will M Illuminating. It
la supplied by the P. Burns company,
packers and exporters, of Calgary, and
•hows the average monthly price paid
for hoga for the six years 1910 to lfis
Inclusive. When one considers the low
Initial cost of the land and the amall
overhead cost of maintenance and
feed, these prices challenge compart-
•on.
1910 1#11 1912 1913 1914 1915
that disrr «< s r mgnt She pitted
b-tc this was what Lent wanted.
"Htt.lo. I i." be aaid seating him
self near iSfcr tuba -flow y jo gett.n'
' along r
SHOWGD.P.VICTORTf
alakaii
Ian. ..
Feb. ..
March.
April .
May ..
lune. .
luly ..
Aug .
iept. .
Oct ..
7* * « T\ 14.71
*'4 14 8 «.9«
7\ * 84 74 7.10
74 84 74 8.06
74 9 84 7 8.21
7 84 ft 6.85 t.30
7"i 84 8 8 8.12
8 814 84 84 7.93
94 9 R\ 7*4 8.86
84 84 74 * 902
Nov 74 9 ftVfc 7 «4 8 36
Dec 7* 84 84 74 6 4 8.70 4
A farmer of Monarch. Alberta,
•laima the dlatlnctlon of being the first
In the province to sell a carload of
bogs at the high price of eleven cents
• pound, live weight. The sale was
Bade t short time ago at Calgary, and
at that time was a record, although
prices have since gone as high as
111.114 Per hundredweight. With
■uch prices available for hogs tha
farmer has a market for everything
his farm produces, as there Is prac-
tically no farm product which cannot
be converted Into good hog flesh. The
■ncertalnty of results which attends
grain fanning even under most favor
•ble conditions la removed when the
•ettler goes In for raising hoga, beef
and dairy product* With Western
Canada's cheap lands, fieavy crops, and
climate free from diseases of stock,
the stock farmer la aa sure of succesa
M anyone can be.—Advertisement.
Cauae of Slckneta.
Ha ron—I understand a lot of cigars
are exported from the Philippines to
ithla country every year.
Egbert That's none of my affair. I
should nay that It waa up to the board
of health.
To Drive Out Malaria
And Build Up The System
rake the Old Stftodaid GROVE'S
TASTELESS chill TONIC You know
what you are taking, aa the formula ia
printed on every labM, showing ll la
Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The
Ouioiae drivea out malaria, the lroo
builds up the system. jo cents.
A regular woman Is always glad
when her huaband has a holiday, ao
that he ran put In about eighteen
hours doing odd Jobs at home.
SAVE A DOCTOR'S BILL
by keeping Mississippi Diarrhoea Cor-
dial handy for all alomach complaints.
Price 2Gc and 60c.—Adv.
The National Guard of New York
has an armored train.
Chicago will this year open 43 new
playgrounds.
Portland. Ore., Is to have a new
tblpbulldlng plant
SYNOPSIS.
W>tu trc«*lUa* th* ele*n -rw*hlag op
HUJ Mary Alice Brcwr. . *. t up.
cc. by sosfce Ljt cht*v«iu buy*. wt , *t ;;
aaal ag into tb« «tr 9tm ta re^-taol
U* to her h me In Calvert tr~t
by Kraoria Wll!*«i Galahad kaighL
■* ta puaiaf-ed by her dmaaea father for
trr <r :r.« without the wtah money Xtrr
Altf ar.'! ri iwty from hotn#. takre a
'r-TVey rt* into the ntntry and sprds
Ute "MrM at the fanohoua* of «ur. Thom-
• It the morninc ah« me«-ta little Char-
lie Thomas, a <-rtpple. 8am takes Mary
Alice home and fir.da that be and Mr.
Brown are old acijua!ata c«-a Ham taJte<
and Mary A no* to bis t .me for a
visit while I>em Brown, the drunfcta fa-
ther. ta earring a workhooae aantenre.
CharUe U made a Oalahad knl.ht. Fran-
cis vlatta the farm and la saved from
drowning by Mary Alice.
6 One of the burdens of ax- ^
g trams poverty is that the poor \s.
K must live in surroundings which «
g drag body and soul to greater %
X misery. A parson of true re- #
& flnement can endure shabby
clothing, bsd food, bars neces- :V
p sitiea but crass ssaociations, %
& ugly snvlronment, brutality, g
^ these make a ^icadpisca of jg
K thorns.
CHAPTER V—Continued.
"Well. then, you'll be goln' to Rta-
rey'a once In a while, and I'll be there
every day, doln' up bnndles. I won-
der If you would come and see me Just
a minute, once In a while. You—you
—been awful nice to—to Charlie
Thomas. I never knew a boy Just like
you—the boys In our neighborhood are
nasty."
"Oh. Mary Alice," said Francis, feel-
ing the red creep into his face. He be-
came suddenly very awkward. He
lost all bis swagger, all bis compla-
cence. "Oh. Mary Alice," be said,
"yon quit! I never did snythln'. Don't
you go makln' fun of me now. If you
don't stop g lying me. I won't come to
see you st the store."
They had turned Into Mrs. Travers'
•Ids yard. Frauds Wlllett suddenly
remembered that he might be late to
supper. He dropped the wagon tongue
and dashed hurriedly out of the gate
and dlssppeared In the heavy shadows
cast by the street arcs. Mary Alice col-
lected her dollar and seventy-five cents
and started down Clipper Hill with
her empty, rattling wagon.
"Ood's goln' to make me well,"
Charlie Thomas had said. Suppoae—
no, It couldn't happen. Rut Charlie
was aure of it. It >tter be like Charlie
nnd believe that, somehow, the thing
that you wanted to happen must bap-
pen.
"I guesa." ahe thought. "Ood'a all
right when be—when he gets around to
you."
Mary Alice did not know that a
great many people who are always
making ezcuaea for Ood, always trying
to eiplaln away the apparvnt discrep-
ancies or contradictions In God'a pro-
cedure. would have been deeply
shocked to hear ber "guess that Ood
was all rigbt" and would, no more
than Mary Alice heraelf, bare realised
that ahe was perfectly reverent and
entirely prayerful.
Htacey'a paid Mary Alice four dol-
lars a week and set ber up in a sort of
lookout box back of the glove counter,
where ahe Inserted the purchases of cus-
tomers In envelopes and manipulated
one end of a pneumatic tube which
completed the analogy between her
perch and a small armed turret.
The glrl'a pay and Mrs. Brown's
earnlnga from her few laundry custom-
ers made the little family more com-
fortable than It had been for many
montha. Mam Thomas came to Shef-
field two or three times a week and
frequently went ont of his way to aee
Mrs. Brown and little I>lck. If thrifty,
Sam was no plutocrat, yet he hardly
ever called without bringing aorne
amall gift. Half a barrel of aaaorted
vegetablea, a little butter, some egga;
once Martha sent three pairs of knit-
ted mittens. Urge, medium and small.
"The Thoinaaea deserve luck. Mary
Alice," said Mra. Brown. "They're al-1
waya and forever thlnkln' up aomethln' i
to do for someone. I guess ma.vl>e the ,
reason we're so poor Is because we're
stilish Did yon bring home the «hln-'
bone?"
"M-hm. It cost ten cents a pound.
It used to be eight."
"I'll put It right on to stew. When ,
it's done you can take a bowl of It In |
to Mrs. Bloomer. She's kind of allln'."
Mary Alice had not told anybody '
about Francis Wlllett's doctor uncle, j
She dared not, for fear of disappoint-
ment. Francis said Uncle Billy .lack-
Bon waa away In Europe and wouldn't
be back until midwinter. He didn't
know whether hi* father had told Sam
Thomas about Doctor Jackson; he
rather thought not.
Francla developed an extraordinary
fancy for gloves. Mrs. Wlllett mar-
veled and Mr. Wlllett chuckled. He
had seen Mary Alice Brown. She waa
a nice little girl: she had saved hla
I boy'a life: be approved ef Francia'
| friendsbin for her and of the common
interest* that drew th. ru toge'tier He
wanted bis boy to be both democratic
:iud ' bivalrous. Francis was the apple
of hu eye.
John WlUett had k soft heart
wherever suffering was concerned. It
plesaed him to aee bis b-fy dlaplay
signs <>t a similar t-nderees- If the
Oalahad Knights was Francis' Idea.
John Wlllett's pocketbook waa an es-
sential of lta success: for the "litter-
chore" and incidental expenses gjore
than ate op the twenty-flve-<-ent fees.
Wlllett was delighted to help: for he
waa pretty well-to-do and prid^ him-
self that be had never been selfish with
his money, from the first day he bad
ever earned a dollar.
There was now but one cloud upon
the immediate horizon of the Brown
famliy. This cloud would grow bigger
for the rest of the three months of
Lem Brown's stay in the workhouse,
and then goodness knew what would
happen. Mrs. Brown and Mary Alice
contemplated the possibilities with
dread.
Men are not reformed In Jails. Lem
would emerge sober, but with the de-
termination to remedy that undeslred
condition at the first opportunity. He
would have no Job; even if be kept
sober for a while, he would be a bur-
den upon the family. That he should
keep away from drink more than a
very few days was inconceivable.
The two-room tenement in the house
off Calvert street was almost cozy
now. It was a home, clean and warm.
The Browns ate quite regularly; little
I>lck waa fat and rosy. Always there
was an atmosphere of good cheer and
comfort The thought gripped them;
What would Lem Brown do to It all?
Sam Thomas came •■ usual, and one
day ha broached the subject "I bate
to get personal, Lottie." ha said. "It
ain't any of my business, pVap*; but I
been wonderin' about Lem."
Mrs. Brown looked up at him. but
said nothing. There waa nothing to
•ay.
"Why don't you more away from
here, so he won't find you? This is a
pretty big town. You could go clear
'way over on the East side. Your rent
wouldn't be no higher."
"I know. I know," said Mra. Brown.
"But—but—I'm Lem Brown's wife!"
"Well, I'll be switched! Women's
the queerest of all human beln's," aaid
Sam. "Why—say. you don't for a min-
ute think there'* a chance of reformin'
Lem. do you? You've tried that long
enough, ain't you?"
"He's my husband." said Lottie,
hopelessly.
She went about her work absently,
squeezing the sudsy water from a «uc-
cesslon of white garments. Sam sat
-Hui-o, Lem.- ahe replied, and ke? Signs Prove Country Is Turning to
ber eyea oa her work.
"Ain't you giad to see oer
•"Of course. Have you had a hard
timer*
-Dretfui; somethin' awful. Work,
work. work, from is >ru:n' "til night,
and half-starved all the time. That
workhouse ia a torture hole, if there
ever was one."
He was working up a fine case of
aelf-plty. He had been very badly
treated. Mra Brown noticed that be
was clean, that bis hair waa trimmed
and he was not In the least thin, but,
on the contrary. i >ked very well fed.
"I s'poae I got to go look for a Job.'
Republicans.
decent Special Election in the Second
Congrcaaionat District of West Vir>
flnia la Only On« of Many
Significant Incidsnta.
Feel
Comforfabl
Afler Ealing
Or
Is Titers
NAUSEA
That waa an Interesting straw
which West Virginia tossed up Into
the political breeze when a vacancy
In the Second congressional district
was filled at the regular November
•lection, the Democratic candidate waa
chosen by a plurality of 1.350. At that
. ., . time the total Progressive vote was
said Lem. I got to have a little car Ul5. „ the Progressive, had all, - „ M
™ „ voted for the Republican candidate be BV All Mean*—TRY
Mr* Brown looked up. would have tfen elected by only 365 ' * I ill
"Do you mean that Lem?" she margiIL
asked. -I* yon reaHy want money fot Now the d/ttrict bag elected a Re-
car fare? How much do you want? pubUcan ^ aboul goo plur nty. Tbe
Where are you going to look for a RepljbHean margin Is much larger
HEARTBURN
INDIGESTION
DYSPEPSIA
jobr
than It would have been if all of tha
Tbe pale light of hope burned in her Progressive, who stuck to their own
eyea I ng y«rs of experience seemed organization two years ago had voted
to have taugfct h^- nothing. This thing ^ Republlf|ui Ucket a„ other
had happened, oh. so many timea be- eoodltiona had remained unchanged,
fore. Lem drew a very long, woe-be A, ^ totAj rote wu lmAlIer th&n it
. „. , Is in a general election, and as not
. * ?** Tj?. said "Ovar at every Progressiva voted the Repub-
,.°r: J ' * "can Ucket. It Is Quite evident that
^^ l5if|0. ^ i ?T C*r?° oUw edition, did not remain the
!*£*. to sport my ttey were ,n m4
wiL„ 7 ^ *° h T« "* «> Democratic losses and R
except when I-wben I bad one o' my pubUcan
slip-ups. But that ain't goln' to hap . ..
pen no more. I'm through. I'm a re- ' 1(lr|f ^ respect West Virginia la
formed man. AH I want It three dol- ^ " h" 'on« ^
lars to get me some overall, sn' a din i ^ h® c"rreBtv M ^
ner pail an' pay my fare to the dock. I"*'?™'* thrK°7hout he c°^
toward the Republican party and this
H
OSTETTER'S
Stomach Bitten
They're needln' men. nd I can gc , , lD,e "ePu° c n anu .
right on tonight." «pecial election In \*eat Virginia 1.
"Walt a minute." said t!« wife. She
Tn* Point of View.
They sat over their coBea at tha
fashionable table d'hote.
Her eyea having swept the root,
•he turned to blm. "Do you notic*
what beautiful handa the young wom-
an opposite haa?"
He confessed he did not
Presently pursuing her survey sh«
asked. "Do you observe the late' \
spirituality In the dark dreamy C f
of the young man with her?"
He confeased he did not
She was a brilliant authoreaa ht |
a penny-a-liner.—Judge.
went into the bedroom. Lent '. -okeO
after ber and treated himself ta •
wink.
Tbe door from tbe hall opened and a
the latest demonstration of the gen
eral drift of public sentiment
The Sugar Tariff.
"It matters not which party wlna
man stepped Into the Brown kitchen 'n the election next November, there
It was Sam Thomas. j wil1 have to be a revision of tbe tar-
"Hullo. Lem Brown." he said. |,ff- and along upward lines," declared
Iiem looked up. startled. When s Senator Robert F. Broussard of Loui-
' man has been in Jail, one can't tell at the Shoreham. "We may ex-
' what may happen. | Pect England to withdraw from our
I "You been away. I hear." said Sam market as a purchaser of sugar after
pointedly. "You're goln' away again. |the war. for she haa been encouraging
ain't you?" j the development of augar production
What me? Goln' away again? Oh, M * reault of the report of a com-
SOMETHING HAD
TO BE DONE
no. I was Just tellin' Lottie I—'
He stopped, for bis wife bad come
in. She held three one-dollar bills In
her hand, which ahe hastily thrust be-
hind ber, looking very guilty, as If
Sam Thomas had caught ber stealing
the money.
"Hullo, Lottie," .aid Sam. "I aee
Lem's back."
"Yea," said Mrs. Brown. "He's got
• Job—over at tbe docks. He's goln*
right over there now, sred't you Lem?"
"M-hm. I'm goln* right over there
this afternoon—after I get me soma
overalls and a dinner pall and—'
mission appointed some time ago.
England will undoubtedly become a
large producer of augar. British Gui-
ana is producing 2,500,000 tons of sugar
where a few years ago her produc-
tion was only 100,000 tons.
"Under the Brussels conference,
England Is not permitted to give sub-
sidies, but the position taken by the
English commlsalon la that the war
put an end to the agreement, lnaa-
much aa Germany waa a party to It
"For the present the duty of one
cent a hundred on sugar will be suf-
ficient, but we shall undoubtedly have
"And a half a dozen drlnka of to raise the duty later on to the old
whlaky," put In Sam Thomas coldly. rate, or even higher, for we ahall be-
"Oh. no, no, Sam. Certainly not" yond question have England aa a com-
protested Lem. "certainly not Never petltor in our market unless wedo."—
again for me. No. sir. I'm goln' to Washington Post
work. I got a good Job, stevedorln';
night work, you know, stowln' cargo
in—"
"You lie, Lem."
Unjust to Roosevelt
Ever since General Wood was
What's that?" Lem's artificial-look- I °f Wh°
Ing eyes stared with dull surprise at o 7 "w
| made chief of staff by Roosevelt etc.
! —Washington Correapondence of the
° ■ New York Evening Poet
Presfdent Roosevelt never had any-
«;,t tr*r •„£:
Sam.
"You He," persisted Sam
haven't got a Job; they ain't loadln' no
vessels over at the docks now; and
"So Long, Lottie. Com* on, Lam."
helplessly by. studying her hoe. He
could remember w-hen it bad been a
mighty pretty face, too—a good deal
like little Mary Alice's; only Mary
Alice wasn't so sparkling as her moth-
er had been. Not much sparkle left
now. poor thing!
"(ioldarn it!" said Sam, and aroae.
"I g"t to be goln'. Next time I come
In I'll bring you a couple of cabbages.
We got more'n we ueed."
He stumped off down the atalra. Mra.
Brown cried a little Into her wash-
tub.
On the day of his release Lem
Brown came home in mldafternoon.
As he turned Into the alley off Calvert
street, a man stepped out of the gro-
cery store on the opposite corner and
took up a post across tbe alley from
the Brown tenement, where he waited
ten or fifteen minutes.
"1 guesa It'a time enough now," the
man said to himself, and climbed*the
atalra.
Mrs. Brown was occupied with her
t uatomary business when Lem came
In. llo waa quite a different Lem
from the dominant brute she had aeen
they do.
"Aw, Sam." whined Lem. "So help
me, I—"
"Somebody's goln' to belp you, but
be ain't goln' to belp you to no
drinks."
"But Sam. I got to bare some over-
alls If I go to work—"
"You'll git overalla aU right all
Wood "over the heada of many who
outranked him In tbe army," and It
waa President Taft who, on July 16,
1910, appointed General Wood chief
of ataff of the army when he waa lta
ranking major general. It waa Preal-
dent McKlnley, and no one elaa, who
ever "Jumped" Leonard Wood over
"many who outranked him." Preal-
rlght. You'll git aomethln' else. too. I dent McKlnl«y durln« Wood's service
Come on. now. We'll be on our way." " *°T«ri,or of Cuba made
him a brigadier general, U. 8. A., on
February 3, 1#01. President Roose-
velt promoted General Wood to major
r way,
"What d' you mean. Sam?"
"I've got you a Job, Lem. A good
Job—a right swell Job. You'll like It , _ „ «
Lem. 'cause I know you love hard *enerml on Augu,t • 1903' but toT
^rlj >• considerable time he had been the aa-
"But Sam. I'm not very strong-I ' "l,or brigadier general Secretary of
been sick—" .|*ar Root said that the appointment
"You haven't been alck. and you'r. J" ™ ^ ^ " by 8?nlorUy-
a big. lazy, bog-fat liar, Lem Brows. I Thet brt^d,fr" " "®e
You give me another word of your mas would bear Mr' Root ont-
snd I'll hand you the grandest whalla* | _ _ —77~~T "
you ever had In your life." Ex-Prealdent Deserves Honor.
Sam shook a fist as big as a Ch!- W1,at R«P«b"can has set a better If
cago ham under tbe noae of the aston- *° good " ln the matter of
lahed and affrighted Lem. Then ba ^ °I thla year than
turned to the wife, who bad atood ex-PrMldent Taft. He hu effaced
mutely and uncomprehendlngly by. j hlmaelf entirely aa a political force
"Lottie, this big hulk of a huaband '!° 11{' * ^
of youra haa got to go <o work, and , * *"rth"ri ,or All he haa
I'm goln' to aee that he doea. I've been Mked "d now "k,n« a ^
For FsiEnf Hesltk of Toug Dsofk.
ter. Pat Fsitk ia Curdai tad
Glad Now They Did.
Georgetown, Fla.—"When I wu
about 16 years old," wrltM Mra. J. C.
Tucker, of thla place, "my mother had
me take Cardul... I... Buffered great
pain in atomach and hack... I and my
mother both knew I m-iat have aome-
thing for we knew 1 waa getting
ateadlly In worse health a.'1 tha time.
"Before taking tha Cardu'. wa had
Dr. ... Ha treated aa tor
about 6 montha. I didn't get any per-
manent relief, ao wa quit his medicine,
and I began taking CarduL I had got
thin, and my face waa thin with no
color, except that tt was dark,
daily dark clrcleo under the
Then I had begun to bloat, in
face and abdomen, the family feared t
waa taking dropsy. At tha appearanca
of these 'dropsy* symptoms was when
we felt we must have some change, so
we got the Cardul, and I began tak-
ing it
"After the uae of one bottle I felt
much improved, the bloating had all
disappeared, the pain, relieved... 1
got well and healthy a. could be,
weighed 146 pound.. Became a strong
well girl... Also it', tbe finest tonla
for young girla I know of."
Your druggist has Cardul for sale.
Try It It may be Just what you need,
▲dr.
Beauty Fills the Houae.
"I« she pretty V
"Pretty? Why, that girl it ao
pretty that plenty of fellows are glad
to call on her father and mother."—
Pittsburgh Post
Every woman thinks aha la a prima
donna when It com« to putting a
baby to aleep.
needln' belp on the place for a long
time. I^m won't make first class help,
but I ain't goln' to pay him much. If
he can't be handled, I'm goln' to have
him sent back to Jail; and this time
It'll be the penitentiary, for assaultin'
you and Mary Alice that night.
"And listen, Lottie. Msybe be don't
look It; but somehow I've got a sus-
picion that there may be the makln'a
of a man ln that mls-'able carcass yet
Anyhow, I'm goln' to undertake the
Job. So long. Lottie. See you next
week. Come on. Lem."
^iiiYrwifirnnnnftnrnnnnnfinnnnnnniMiwnnniiaiinjifwiRAiwj^i
Do you believe there la *
opposition to the national admlnla-
tration, which he conaldera a failure.
He la "pulling" for none of the aspir-
ants for the Chicago honor, aubmlt-
tlng no planka for the platform, but
aaaumlng that a good ticket will be
named on a platform of atralght Re-
publican principles.
▲ man who seeka to attr up discord
ln the Republican party la not a good
Republican.
Anti-Dumping Law No Good.
It may be taken for granted that
after the war tbe European natlona '
will .eli manufactured goods far be- !
enough Iron In Lem'a aoul, ^ ! ,ow co,t' no matter what sort of an
£ enough manhood buried away >-.
in him, te atlck at thia Job and
make good 1
<TO BK CONTINUED.)
That the human brain can wlthatand
the .train of peral.tent work better
than the muscle, of the body hu been
proved by recent experiment!.
anti dumping law the secretary of com-
merce may get on the book.. Hi. de-1
partment cannot devise an anti-dump. '
lng law. with the cumbersome ma-1
chlnery of Investigation and report, '
that cannot be Msily evaded. There I
is but one certain anti-dumping devlca |
and that It a genuine protective tariff
which will follow Republican succesa
tn November.
You need
never worry
about results in
baking if you use
KC
BAKING
POWDER
It has been a stand-
by for a quarter of
a century. Guaran-
teed under all
pure food laws.
252^^25*
1
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Seger, Neatha H. The Geary Times (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 8, 1916, newspaper, June 8, 1916; Geary, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc184108/m1/4/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.