The Geary Journal (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1914 Page: 2 of 10
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:viv
THE GEARY JOURNAL
gas, mm
'Tape's Diapepsin" settles sour,
gassy stomachs in five
minutes—Time It!
You don't want a slow remedy when
your etomach Is bad—or an uncertain
one—or a harmful one—your stomach
Is too valuable; you mustn't Injure it.
Pape's Diapepsin Is noted for Its
speed in giving relief; Its harmless-
ness: its certain unfailing action in
regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs.
Its millions of cures in indigestion,
dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach
trouble has made It famous the world
over.
Keep this perfect stomach doctor in
your home—keep It handy—get a large
fifty-cent case from any dealer and
then If anyone should eat something
which doesn't agree with them; if
what they eat lays like lead, ferments
and sours and forms gas; causes head-
ache, dizziness and nausea; eructa-
tions of acid and undigested food-
remember as soon as Pape's Diapepsin
comes in contact with the stomach all
■uch distress vanishes. Its prompt-
ness, certainty and ease in overcoming
the worst stomach disorders Is a reve-
lation to those who try it.—Adv.
Women in the World.
According to statistics married
DAIRY GAR ON
THE FRISCO
IJNES IN SOUTHWEST OLAHOMA
TO BE COVERED IN TWO
WEEKS' OUR.
MASONIC GRAND L0D6E MEETS
DEMONSTRATIONS BY AN EXPERT
Com Testing and Feeding Main Sub-
jects; Tour Starts at Thomas.
—Other News of the
State.
Hobart.—To encourage the dairy in-
dustry in western Oklahoma the Frisco
railroad is operating a dairy instruc-
tion car over its southwestern Okla-
homa lines starting February 10 and
continuing until February 23. Actual
demonstrations in cow testing and
properly balanced rations will be
given.
The car is In charge of A. J. Mc-
Dowell, dairy agent of the Frisco
lines, assisted by a number of expert
demonstrators. An entire day will
be spent at each of the cities included
on the schedule, which ia as follows:
Thomas, February 10; Custer City,
February 11; Cordell, February 12;
— Rocky, February 13; Mountain Park
school teachers do better work than February 16; Manitou, February 17;
those who are unmarried.
Savannah, Ga., has more women
motorcyclists than any other city of
her size in the United States.
MiBS Mary T. Wilson will probably
be appointed as head of the woman
prison board in Indiana.
Mrs. Susan Jones of Benson, N. C.,
has just celebrated her eighty-fifth
birthday by cutting a new set of
teeth.
Glasgow, Scotland, it to have female
police if the women's association there
can have their way about it.
Harriet Freebery, a woman lawyer,
has been engaged by J. S. Kinney, a
millionaire of Menominee, Mich., to
defended him in a $500,000 breach of
promise suit against him.
Mrs. Frederick W. Lehmann, wife of
the former solicitor general under
President Taft, Is the latest addition
to the "matron class" at Washington
university.
THICK, GLOSSY HUB
FREE FROM DANDRUFF
Girls! Beautify Your Hair! Make It
Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant—Try
the Moist Cloth.
Try as you will, after an application
of Danderine, you cannot find a single
trace of dandruff or falling hair and
your scalp will not Itch, but what will
please you most, will be after a few
weeks' use. when you see new hair,
fine and downy at first—yes—but real-
ly new hair—growing all over the
scalp.
A little Danderine Immediately dou-
bles the beauty of your hair. No differ-
ence how dull, faded, brittle and
scraggy, JuBt moisten a cloth with
Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. The effect is im-
mediate and amazing—your hair will
be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an
appearance of abundance; an incom-
parable luster, softness and luxuri-
ance. the beauty and shimmer of true
hair health.
3et a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's
Danderine from any store and prove
that your hair Is as pretty and soft
as any—that it has been neglected or
injured by careless treatment—that'*
all. Adv
Have to Stay In.
Yeast—This paper says that the Civ
ic federation in Boston would have
rug beating in the back yard stopped.
t'rimsonbeak—Too bad. Those Bos-
ton husbands won't be fble to "beat
it" over the back fence at night now.
Frederick. February 18; Snyder. Feb-
ruary 19; Eldorado, February 20; Al-
tus, February 21; Lawton, Febru-
ary 23.
In connection with the operation of
the car the industrial department of
the railroad has issued the following
statement:
Natural Condition* Good.
Natural conditions in this section
are excellent for dairying and the in-
dustry is growing very rapidly, but
the average dairy farmer is not get-
ting as good returns as he should,
largely by reason of three things:
First: He is not testing his cows
bo as to know just what each one is
producing, and as a result, he is keep-
ing many unprofitable cows. One-half
of his herd is eating up the profits
made by the other half and he won-
ders why he does not make money;
by proper testing and weeding out,
his profits can easily be made many
times larger.
Second: Many dairy farmers are
milking beef and scrub cows not
adapted to milk production, whose
milk yield is so slow that no money
can be made with them. There are
dairy bred cows in which the natural
tendency to give milk is so highly
developed that they will use all their
surplus feed in milk production. By
the use of such cows, loss can be, and
frequently is, turned into a handsome
profit.
No Profit From Milk.
Third: Many cows are also being
milked which have a good capacity
for milk production, but from which
no profit is realized, either because the
feed used is not adapted to milk pro-
duction. or not enough of it is fed to
produce a good flow of milk. With
out the raw material (feed) from
which milk is made, no cow can pro
duce algood yield
The purpose of this dairy instruc
tion car is to help the dairy farmers
overcome these three difficulties. A
very simple and easy way of testing
cows to know which will yield a profit
and which will not will be fully dem
strated so any farmer can easily put
it into practice on his farm.
The value of good blood and proper
' selection; the results obtained there-
by; a cheap, practical way of procur-
ing the good blood; practical and
simple methods of feeding so as to
get the most milk for the least cost
under the conditions which we have
this winter, will be plainly shown.
Dr. Chas. Reeder, Grand Master.
McAlester.—One thousand Masons
of Oklahoma were here this week for
the meeting of the Oklahoma grand
lodge. Dr. Chas. L. Reeder of Tulsa
is grand master.
ONE *TTEHMHT PLEADS 6UILTY
In the Case Growing Out of Death of
Insane Patient at Supply.
Enid—Sheriff B. F. Richards of
Woodward county has brought Horace
Roark to the local county jail for keep-
ing until February 20, when the dis-
trict court convenes in Woodward.
Roark is accused of causing the death
of Wade H. Badgett. an inmate of the
Supply hospital for the insane on Au-
gust 25, by beating him. The papers in
the sheriff's office here show that
Roark has entered a plea of guilty to
a charge of manslaughter in the sec-
ond degree and that the plea was ac-
cepted by the court on recommenda-
tion of the Woodward county attorney.
Sentence will probably be given in the
February term. Another prisoner, J.
M. Shelton. is accused of aiding in
Badgett's death and he Is being held
at Woodward. The charge grows out
of investigations by the board of trus-
tees and other state officials into the
death of an inmate of the asylum,
Frank S. Pomeroy, January 19.
Rock Island Boosting Melons.
E. R. Bennett, horticulturist for the
Rock Island Railway system, accom-
panied by Frank Cottrell, assistant,
is in the southern part of the state
conferring with farmers in the inter-
est of the coming watermelon crop.
The horticulturists are traveling in
a special car and make stops as fol-
lows :
Ninnekah. Monday; Rush Springs.
Tuesday; Marlow, Wednesday; Ryan,
Thursday; Terral. Friday; Alex, Sat-
urday; Verden, Monday.
Last season meion growers at a
number of stations consigned on the
same day large shipments of melons
to the same destination and as a re-
sult prices slumped to the loss of the
shippers. During the coming season
members of the organization will be
urged to scatter their shipments, in
order that no one market will become
glutted.
Through the co-operation of the
Rock Island railroad members of the
association will be kept in touch with
market quotations on melons.
IMET
IMVOWMR
The cook is happy, the
other members of the family
are happy—appetites sharpen, things
brighten up generally. And Calumet
Powder is responsible for it alL
For Calumet never fails. Its
wonderful leavening qualities insure
perfectly shortened, faultlessly raised
bakings.
Cannot be compared with
other baking powders, which promise
without performing.
Even a beginner in cooking
gets delightful results with this never-
failing Calumet Baking Powder. You*
grocer knows. Ask him.
RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS
Its Drawback.
Jinks—"You don't mean to say your
wife wants to sell that prize toy ter-
rier you bought for he'r?" Binks—"Yes,
she does." "Why, I thought that dog
was said to be the smallest dog In
the world!" "That's the trouble. It's
so small she keeps mistaking it for a
mouse!"
Important to mothers
Examine carefully every bottlo of
CASTORIA, a safe and aure remedy for
infants and children, and Nt that it
Bears the
Signature of,
In Use For Over SO Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Caston*
Out, Damned Spot!
He—Have you read Freckles?"
She (quickly)—Oh. no! That's my
vrjj —o. S. U. Sun Dial.
Or pierces P sa*n: Pellet* relate
tod invigorate stomach. and bowe£
Huttar -coated, tinjr granule* to u"
m candy. Adv.
Most of these mother-in-law jokes
are composed by men who never en
Joyed that blessing
Pride goeth before a fall, and tt
doesn't soften the bumps any at that
University Has Unique Collection.
Norman.—About 500 of the leading
daily newspapers of America, includ-
ing all those published In cities of
over 50.000 population as well as the
metropolis and capital of each state,
have been received by the School of
Journalism of the University of Okla-
homa for use in the courses in editor-
ial writing and comparative journal-
ism. All of the papers are of approx-
imately the same date. January 1,
1914. and were received directly from
the publishers.
PMIIIE OIL COMPANY MKT MY
Valuable Leases In
Cannot Escape
Creek County
Taxation.
"cmrets" for
a bilious liver
For sick headache, bad breath,
Sour Stomach and
constipation.
Get a 10-cent box now.
No odds how bad your liver, stomach
or bowels; how much your head
acheB. how miserable and uncomfort-
able you are from constipation, indiges-
tion, biliousness and sluggish bowels
—you always get the desired results
with Cascarets.
Don't let your stomach, liver and
bowels make you miserable. Take
Cascareta to-night; put an end to the
headache, biliousness, dizziness, nerv-
ousness, sick, sour, gassy stomach,
backache and all other distress;
cleanse your Inside organs of all the
bile, gases and constipated matter
which is producing the misery.
A 10-cent box means health, happi-
ness and a clear head for months.
No more days of gloom and distress
If you will take a Cascaret now and
then. All stores sell Caacarets. Don't
forget the children—their little In*
sides need a cleansing, too. Adv.
35 BUSHELS
,*ssa
CHILDS' GIANT SUMMER COSMOS
I* po.itu.lyth. bo* aapa*
«nJ baautitul pi4w Sowaa
SmTjaaptaS*?., aMhpluS
prodoctng tfcmaaiufa of flow
ASSESSING THE GAS COMPANIES
Washington County
After Back
Officials Going
Taxea.
Sapulpa—The Prafrle Oil and Gas
Company, a subsidiary of the Standard
Oil Company, was assessed for $397.-
400 omitted taxes for the last six
vears in the Creek county treasurer's
court here Extensions were made on
the rolls In order that the sherlfT may-
proceed to collect same by selling the
properties.
I The proceeding is the result of the
1 order and decision of the supreme
court of Oklahoma a year ago that the
producing leases of the company
should have been assessed for taxa-
tion at what they would sell for as Is
tone in California. Texas and Indiana
and other states. The allegations of
the county and state in the original
suits were that the Standard Oil cor
| potation owned Urge properties in the
Glen pool and has evaded listing sny-
J thine h"' *beir tools and machinery
for ta**,,~n.
Between Friends-
Alice—Somehow, Jack cannot seem
to get up courage to propose.
Marie—Perhaps he's afraid you'd
say yes.'"
tiunjrttjor trial, vi*..-
t rrq F'nJU .U^> aa*
' talal««« of Flow«r T« . St....
fW dow Pralta PM* to ill apply- '•■"J—
a irnm la a world of OhMa Caanaa, DaUfe*
m. I Ha, «to., • « „«r Mncka ara baa* aa« linn —
JOHN LEWIS CHILDS. Floral Park, N.Y.
^J?«^*to<«p5 ^na!,e,^lra^a on\j
Bartlesville—Producing properties
of the Oklahoma Natural Gas Co-
valued at $760,000. were certified to
the county treasurer of Washington
county by the special tax auditors.
The next step in this proceeding will
be the Issue of alias tax warrants to
the sheriff, with which he will be em-
powered to levy upon the property of
| this company in Washington county |
and sell sam^ for taxes due. as In the i
'case of other delinquent taxes.
' This is the third case of this kind j
within a week, the first being in Creek j
! county and the second in Osage coun- i
ty. against the Prair'e Oil and Gas
j Co. and the Gypsy Oil and Gas Co..
I both subsidiary companies of the
Standard Oil Co. The Oklahoma Nat-
ural Gas Co.. against which action
jwas Instituted here, supplies Kansas
1 city and <*• Louis with nstnrai gas.
■•n Fight On TM
ftiAMAMIft Napoleon so said. A man
9IvIINNHIV with a WI
A pretty sure to be a poor fighter. It la
ralmost impoesible—for anyone, man <
if digestion ia poor, to succeed in h
■odaUy—or to enjoy life. In tablet or
Dr. Pkrct'l
Golden Medical DIicovgiy
helps weak atocnaefas to strong, healthy action^-
helpa them to digest the food that makee the good,
rich, red blood which nourishes the entire body.
This vsfetabie remedy, to a greet extent, pats
xbm counter, or In the home are rejuvenated Into vigorous health.
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Cox, Edward F. The Geary Journal (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 19, 1914, newspaper, February 19, 1914; Geary, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc184551/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.