The Geary Times (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 17, 1918 Page: 2 of 8
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Wilson's Answer
r^4mt WW . re* > to ■ % ' ; • •.
■. US ■ ' -** ,
_ .«• . .. • . fvr *
ikH«
•The unqualified ••
kr 1V1- majority of the r. < M
r til* 1'HIM hta'ra «f Apt
felts. Btatea on th« «th <u. "f
- stifles tbe m
■cteton with r*«-."1 tu the •
nicut of th. tth • "! ■ • f ' rkc" -L<
It must I— c e*rt>
[■iii'" of *1 *"
and of the
aod the atted * •-'
trrfitccin^ctt '
vhMh 4-*- Ml prv% d«
ire matter* w!
idvb«n of (kM
i *r.d the pf
the Oftnai |w*rt
er«ru«tk>fi and the
kf: to the judjtment
f the I'mied HtAte*
Me dut> to •> no
f th« United #t r«
kr<i and irwrtai'M#
of the arm;«9 <rf th«
l fc.hr- Mate^
llo teeta ronfl<
and deri
"The BPS- <ie -•
* the I'alted
ort that he . air. *f«
e that lhi* win a'-ao
La
Id thit r.eirher the |
ated a* • brtHrerw
bo the
nc oo 'ho *r
.ortnui th* :l
the *T> • me
of dw t'nHod
IB MallM M*
and ik
their
enforced wlthdr
|.ur«u.<r course of wanton
als>s>s Wr ir "S-> a In direr) rtolatwa of tlx- i
el* illsed m r(ar« -t «• ar«d *lll «aa. if t ot d*«r ..
tWr coMain.r.ot or.lv. Mit oflan of their ver> in',..-.
"Dit cattofia a>ar« tatad aaainat tjcmiaitv cannot
la a owatM of arm* «t„v aeta of inhumar.it>. rt-
ar* cxmtinua*. wl..l they )u*lir look upon
a; from Kl*t-de*s and Fr a
«a ported to i
Ion an<d deenli
Tt la alao In order that than may t
■ Hill " " f that the prarldocit stv.uld very aolrirn
of tka iuitnn.1 ti* of IVrmari) to the language ar>.l
terfria of peace h the . lerrnan government t. -
ronta ned ta ti r -ddrraj of tke president deliver-! a'
tka Fou--h of Joly last.
It -
call the attenti.
tain Intent of ti
m accepted It
Mount VeriK ii i
The hatrurtwii of <
"The l« et a
the sort l.*rt do
alter it- The pre®
pr reder;t
ery arbitrary power anywhere that can seperatrh .
uwn choice. dlaturt> the pea" of the aoriJ. or. if It
deerroiMl at le*M Ita rcd'i* non l« virtual •npatet.i i
.1. >■" heretofore controlled the Herman nation la of
ibed It la within the choice of the Herman nation to
lent's words Ju«t quoted naturally corstltute a condition
If peare la !<• •••ire by the a i i. of the <;*rman pe«l<le
theitiae \ e* The praaident tee a bound f 'n •t.al the * e process of
pence wlU m hia Judgment depend upon the defln teneai and tba .at -factory
character of the gv.arar.tee* ah: h can be giten ir tlna Ijvd.meitu matter
It la lr.de.|«rn lble that the governmenta associated against Certnany should
knoa beyond a peradventure arith whom they are dealing.
•The preaolent alii make a aeparate reply to the royal and Imperial
■overt roent of Auetria-Hungar>
Accept, air the raneaad assurance of my hl*h consideration
* -ROl'KRT LANSING."
TRANSPORT
OTRANTO COLLIDES
ANOTHER VESSEL
WITH
MORE SUBMARINE MURDI
HUNS FRANTIC BLEATING FOR PEACE
Destroyer Brave. P.1..M1 KAISER BOOSTS HIS DROOP* ,wo ,0?w,0t' K,thoUt ***** fr°">
Disaster To Reacuc Men On
Sinking Ship.
A British Port A large Dumber of
American troop* ha tie bee* lost aa tt.e
reeu t of Lbe air.kin* of tbe tnuisport
Oiranto in tb« North Chaaael between
the Scottish and Irish coasts in • col-
lision with tbe Steamer Kashmir Tbe
Olranio after the collision was daabel
to pieces on the rocks off the south
Sco'.t.sh coast, with a probable loss
of 372 American soldiers.
Three hundred and one men were
taken to belfaft by the British de-
stroyer Mounsejr. the only vessel which
made an attempt at rescue in the
terriAe sale Seventeen men were
picked up alive on the Scottish coast.
Of the in American soldiers on
board the Oiranto. 310 were landed.
Se 1 en teen were rescued alive at IsUjr,
leaving 372 unaccounted for
Tbe O Iran to and tbe other vessels
of the convoy were battling with the
heavy seas and high winds. The storm
as so severe and the vlsabil ty so
bad that tbe Kashmir, a former Pen-
Insular ft Oriental liner, crashed into
tbe Otranto suaqrelv amidshtp. The
ING SPIRITS BY REVELLING
AGAIN IN BLOOD OF THE
INNOCENTS
yards.
THREE EI6 VESSELS SUNK;
HUNDREDS OF LIVES LOST
Jap Passenger Ship Htrano Varu. U
S. Horse Carrier T.condaroga and
Lemster in the Irish Sea Pas-
senger Trade Latest Vic-
tims of Huns.
London. Tbe sinking ot the Japan-
ese steamship Hirano Maru, the U
ship Tlconderoga and the
boat Lemater mark incidents oi a new
submarine campaign It is noticeable
also that renewed submarine activ-
ity became apparent In various di
A British Port The Japanese
steamship Hirano Mini of 7.i::5 ton.-,
groan baa been torpedoed and «nnk.
It is feared that 300 lives were losl
The Hirano Maru was outward
bounl for Japan and carried about
400 passengers The vessel was tor-
pedoeJ ami sunk by a Germ n sub-
marine 300 m lea south of Ire ar. l
The few survivors who were picked
up by the American torpedo boat des-
troyer Sterrett have been brough here
They declare that the torpedo struck
th steamer in the forward engine
room.
Providentially the commander of
the American destroyer Serrett heard
the esp'.osion and steered his treesel 1
•;;; *" for tbe point whence it came. He
Dublin mail ,
found the ship had disappeared ^nd
he saw- a mass of people struggling
in the water.
While the American destroyer Ster-
rectlons. apparently along the routes r<>tt ' ^Raged ^e work of pick
followed by steamers carrying Ameri-
can troops.
Approximately 1.000 lives have been
lost Jiy the sinking of the great ves-
Kashmlr backed away badly damaged, «eU without warning r*K;ently by the
ing up the men and women strug-
gling; in the water, the German sub-
marine llred two torpedoes at the war-
ship Both missies, happily, missed
their mark
before, as President Wilson in hit
note plainly invites them to do.
Kaiesr Personally Guilty.
While nowhere in the notes does th<
president openly join with the en
tente statesmen In the demand tha
the "chief criminals" must be dellr
ered up for trial, the president's con
PRESIDENT SENDS HIS FIN- tnlanta point out that he plainly sub
scribes to the doctrine that the gull I from the Otranto or dash
FOR THE BUTCHERS
AL ULTIMATUM TO THE
KAISER'S GANG
but was able to make port
As the bows of tbe Kashmir were
pulled from'' the great hole in the
side of the Otranto. tbe water rushed
in. put out tbe fires and the Otranto
drifted helplessly toward the rocky
coast of Islay island, where most of
the Tuscania victims met their deaths.
Thirty minutes after the crash the
damaged by the heavy seas, appeared
out of the haze In answer to the dis-
tress oal's of the Otranto.
The destroyer stood off about a
hundred feet and then gradually came
nearer, against the great odds of high
| waves and wind which threatened to
mometarily carry her entirely away
her to
German U-boats.
On the steamer Ticonderoga. an
American ship which was torpedoed
Another American Vessel Caught.
New York.—Scores of American
j of bringing on the world' war is per
sonal.
pieces against the side of the wound-
ed vessel.
It will be noted that the preslden | ,A'V ,h" ""foyer neared (he side
a...r« nna.IT iiilUT i nmiTC completely reject- the German sug "f Ofrmnto. the men began to
ALLIES DON T WANT A DEBATE ,e.„on ror«mi.ed . .r 1lhln>to for,y,ron;
range an eaacuation and reminds tht
Terms of Surrender Will Be Arranged
By Fee* and All tbe Hun Will
Have To Do With Them Will
Be To Sign His Name.
militarists that they will accept tha
terms laid down by Marshal Koch ant
the associated commanders. that the]
will have no part in rramlQg them. H<
makes It plain that he does not accep
tbe new German government heade<
her decks
Four times the battered destroyer
came along side and each time the
previous scenes were repnated. At
the end of the fourth trop she had 310
Americans. 236 of the crew, thirty
Prench sailors and one British officer
p . wilson has ,,>r Chancellor Maximilian as anythlni .'"'I' TIJJ' t>OW.. .*M. tul* 4n(1"
Watfrtngton—President Wilson has * ■ having done all possible, she started
answered Germany a peace proposal autocratic, anything lees g creat fof
with a decision which not only fulfills ur« «" Oerman militarism than It.
" , hi. predecessors, and warns the Germai
dipl 'but alao 'diapels the tears ,h,,, unles thet destroy it th< 298 DIE IN FOREST FIRE
of tho,* Who predicted he would .ub- •' «• rnil« d« " |
gtltute* victories at arms with defeats One of the moat Important polntg o
at diplomacy hls nut* tlM( ln which be acknowl
No ffe.ee with kalserlgm. autocracy ,he °erm*n *°,Te™
must |o. no armistice can even be ■ unqualified accepunce of h„
though' of while Germany continue. 'r' " • «> «h'" « '<> ■ '«;
1 1 * < ... <tni that lb«M lerni* provide speciflcall)
her atfocllteu oo laid and sen. one .
tannot^be considered unless it fully I. fo' ,b" u«-"tut«on of . governmen
dl< tatud by the allied commander, in '"oily responsible to the Germ.n peo
the n^Tu in such terms as absolutely P'« fo' ^ un'
providT safeguards and guarantee, lomln.ted by the t.erman mlliUri.U
that Germany's part will not be a The second German note, to whlcl
This in a few word, the president's note 1. an .nawer wat
aa follows:
1.700 miles off the American coast, sailors and so'fllers were killed or j
there were 250 men aboard All but wounded by shrapnel fired by a Ger-
tweuty are supposed to have perished, man submarine after It had torpedoed
The Hirando Maru. a big Japanese the steamship Ticonderoga. I.i0<> miles !
ship, was outward bound from a Brit- off the Atlantic coast, according to :
ish port when torpedoed 300 miles the story told by twenty survivors j
south of Ireland. She carried 400 pas- who were picked up by a British '
sengers Only thirty were picked up. freighter
The Leinster, an Irish mail steain- There were 2'.0 men aboad the Ti- !
er. was caught in the channel and ronderoga. an Americnn steamship of
sunk without warning, carrying prob- 5130 tons, and all but the twenty
ably 300 souls down whj arrived here are believed to have J
All three vessels were sunk with- perished The survivors got away In !
out warning, and apparently every ef- thp oniy fooat which was not de- I
fort was made to destroy all on board nl0|ished bv the shel! fire from t'je ]
without leaving a trace. submarine
| "Our gun crews d!4 not fire more j
Hundred* Lost On Lein.ter, than five or six shots." one of the sur-
Belf.sl. — Hundreds of lives were vivors said: "The forward gun was
lost when the mail steamer Leinster shot .way almost at once Tbe after
was torpedoed and sunk in the Irish gun and its crew was done for almost
Sea Two torpedoes were fired at as quickly Then the men went to
the steamer. One struck near the the boats, but it wag no use, as the
bow and the .teamer sank in fifteen flying shrapnel was spraying the
minute.. decks and men fell in scores, either
The passengers. Including many killed or badly wounded."
. women and children, numbered 687, Seventeen of the men who reached
and the boat carried a crew of seventy, port were members of a detachment
Six hundred may be lost. of soldiers detailed to care for horse.
Survivors s.ld the .ubmarlne fired which were being transported.
MARCH TO BERLIN GAINING IN SPEED
WRIGLEYS
We will win this war—
Nothing else really matters until we do I
The Flavor Lasts
HIS SUDDEN MOVE EXPLAINED
Rasor Demonstrator Was Not Actu-
ated by Desire to Impress Maggie
and Her Companions.
scrap Of paper
Is the president's answer
If It does not bring a capitulation reply 10 the .mentions of
which may be more than an uncondi- preaident of the I'nited States of
t tonal surrender allied diplomats and America the German governmenl
American officials believe it may hereby declares
cause a revolution in Germany The German government has ac-
The d -p:,tch of the presidents re- opted th- terms laid do#n by Presl
Twenty-One Minnesota Town.
troyed By Dleastrous Blase
Pari..—The entire German Iront of the great objective, on their front.
Duluth.— Twenty one towns havt from St. Gobain to the Argonne ha. Virtually all the German line is in
been destroyed with a known deatl cracked on a sixty-mile front and it movement and there seems now to be
list of 2S8 by the fire which swept now appears that the enemy will be no chance for the enemy to reorganixe
ply wh\ followed by the Issue of this
dent Wilson In his addreas of January
formal.-stat. men. at the White llouae * -nd h" ^"Wnt addrea.e, ou
by Secretary Tumulty !,Uu.°Uc* * Permanent peace
Th. government will continue to ° "nsequently. Its obpect In enter
send over 350.wo men with th.-lr sup- ^ 1B,(> dUrlI(ll,)<>n„ WO(lll, ^ only
plies every month, and there will be upo„ pra,.ri(.wl ,|e,..l!s of the p
no ralaxatiuu of any kln«l plication of these terms The Ger
People Must Give Up Kai.er man government bwl eves that th*
rording to this view rovernments of the powers associated
Two middle-aged women nnd
>k>nny boy in knee |mnts stood In j
front of a show window to wntch a I
•Kmonstrntor do thine* with a rar.or. j
His work fnlled to satisfy one of the j
voinen. who said :
"My soul .ml body, why don't he J
|eart up «nd show what his pay-tent j
ci>n do? I like to «ee jieople work likp
they took some Intrust In It."
As she spoke, the demonstrator gnve 1
mi expert slide to the steel nnd held
•t forward to -show the keenness of
,ts edge. The suddenness of this vi-
vacity was explained by the other
wo in tin :
"Lor". Maggie, he muster heard yon ,
f" rough the glass—yen sure have got 1
luth. oral obstacle, forming the keystone ture(J in the ge< t0r tj,e town of Montre- fKolns " |
A dispatch receivel at the Minne of the German defenses in France, ha. court a geypn miies from the Pm M.ggie hail nothing to do with
sot. it.te capital from AdJ.tant Gen been taken without a fight outskirts of Valenciennes and almost '• T'"* untn
northeastern Minnesota. The injured
in Duluth hospitals total 10< Th
towns totally or partially destroyed
are < loquet Moose Ijtk.. Kettle Rlv
er. Kehler, Adolph. Munger. Five Cor
ner., Harney Gr.nd L.ke, M.pl«
Grove. Twig. Marnuni, Mathews. At
klnson, French River, Clifton. Orel
ton. Brookston Brevator. Pike Lak«
and Pine Hall Nearly 100 bulldingt denburg line. , easterly bank of the Scheldt canal,
were destroyed In the suburbs of Du Laon. the last of the group of nat southeast of Douai They have cap-
forced to retreat to & depth of some hi. forces for resistance.
thirty miles before finding a suitable Jhe British are within a few hun-
line ot defense At the best his posi- jre(j yards of Douai. They have cap
tion will be menaced at Its flanks on ture(] the Foubourg d'Esquershin. the
the Olse to the Sambre canal troin uoua; prison and the greater part of
Rtbemont to Landrecies, which lines piers, close to Douai on the northwest,
are very near the Belgian frontier. Tlie ed({e of ueu-St. Amand. three
There will be nothing here like the mites south of Oenain. has been reach-
enemy's strong defenses on the Hin- e(1 by the British in their push up the
A Merc Trifle.
Mother—You have been naughty.
Waldo and I shall have to punish yon
foi it. I hope you know what 1 mean
when I say you have been naughty.
Little Waldo—Yen. mother My
knowledge of philosophy tells me that
naughty Is the diminutive of naught.
Meaning, therefore, that you are abeut
to punish me for less than nothing.
Important to Motliora
Examiue carefully every bottle ot
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
(or Infanta and children, and see that it
Bear, the
Signature of(
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Crv for Fletcher'^ Cantoris
Thgir Kind.
"If you want to be a fnnny inan I'D
teach you the ropes."
"Will they be guy ropes?"
fral Khlnow at Moose I>.ke stated The German .tronghold of l«i Fers. ,|jrectly south of that city
thnt the general fore.t fire situ.tlot together with . great part of lh<- St.
General Gouraui
was well in hand No further spre.« Oob.in massif of which I-a Fer. wf.s of ^ Uerm.n-
Mr Wilson.
has now finally Informed the (.erman
rith the government of the United
can only attain It by getting rid
tbe kaiser and bis system.
of the fires I. feared
A revised count of the bodies at th<
several buildings being used as mor
gue*. places the total number of deaj
brought to Ouluth at UK and ther«
are 103 Injured Most of the injure*
are confined to ho.pital. More bodlei
are being brought to the city eacl
hoar
has
I's troops In'pursuit
have reac! e.I the
people that if they want peace they "•* taken by
President Wilson in hi. address The
\ Germ.n government In accordanct _________
with the Austro Hungarian lour. 1
An .tmlstuo ;t Is true, might come mf.nt for ,hr purpose of br.nulng BILLION DAILY IS NEEDED
first and the details of the downfall ahou,
Urmst.ce, declares itsell ,
of the German autocratic government rMdy to comply with the propositions j
be arranged later Hut this is what an o{ the pr,.a|,|pnt |n regard to ev.cu..
armistice would entail: non. The German government sun
lint, a stop to the atrocities on ((ll| (h.„ ,h, plnt may occasion
laud and .ea and th. systematic des- 1 meeting of a miicd commission
tructloa and devastation in the wake for mB)(ing the necessary arrange
or the retreating German armies. mHnls concerning the eve nation
Then, the disarmament of all the Ger- *pj,p present German government
man force. nd the deposit of their which h.s undertaken the responsl
arms and munitions at points to be bllity for this step towards peace has
chosen by the allied milltury com* been formed by conferences and in
mander. Then, the occupation by agreement with the great majority ol
allied fbrces ot certain German citle. the refchstag The chancellor sup
and strongholds of stragetlc Import- ported n a'l of bis actions bv the will
ance Probably also the occupation of thN •. .1 • ty. speaks In the nam*
of all submarine bases and turning of the G<-r:< >• government and of th.
over ol the German fleet German people "
To Brias Military Power. 1 Signed I "SOl.F.
In .hort. it would entail a taking —
trora Germany of everything with Another Quit*.
which she might break her word to an l^mdoti FV rron \on Husssrek. the
armistice. \ti.frlan pr me minister h.s resigned.
From that polut the United State. The new premier, it s added, possibly
and the allies might proceed to di.* will he Prof Ijmm ••ch with whom ne
pose of all that remained of kaiserlain gotlatlons are under wav to bring
If the German people have not done It about a great n.clflst manifestation
Fivs O.y. Of Campaign Left In Wh.ct
To Baige Nation's Minimum.
a northerly outpo.t at the O ,* , taBk. of the Algne in the that
been captured by the French g 8ou,h Qf Rothe| ( hateau
The I-a Fere railway line ha. porce,n FUe thollIlRud civilians have
been crowed on the high ground be ^ ,|ber>t(fd ,h<i v,„aJ5M anJ
tween Danlzy and Verlsgnv about —
and one half miles east of La Fere
The northern and eastern sections
•f I*a Fere are burning
Notable progress has been ma.* by German portions in Belgium ha.«
the Italians an.I French along the line Roulers
to the east. Where the French have An advance of five miles has beet
reached An.ifon-..me. which is fifteen niade in Belgium by the allies four
miles north of Khelma.
Forests Cover Hun Retreat.
St. Paul bus 'JCKi pluuts capable
nudtieo s|n,rf ' ""r
was entirely due to a clean-faced nmn
a*-o hnd pnnsed to take in the demon-
ic ration.
You couldn't exitect a mere earthly
lemonstrntor to show off n riiior edge
o f o mitblle-ngeil women nnd a
>kinny hoy in kne * pnnts.
| towns retaken from tl.e Germans
The British, French and Belgial
forces In their new drive against tht
Tht
The Germans are expected to cover
their retreat, as usual, with tbe best
of th« natural defen.es the country af
fords, the principal enemy asset In
the present instance being the forests
Jn the area of the backward move
meat.
Between the Oise and Borry-ou Bac
the seventh German army has l een
forred to abandon the line of the All
ette. retiring its right in the forest of
fit Gobain In the Champagne Gen
erai Gouraml is continuing his terrific
onslaughts on hi. dlsorganixed ad-
versary
No Chance To Reorgan tt.
For seventeen consecutive d.ys Gen
eral Gouraud's me. h.ve been pound
poll, district claims tht lug the German positions and contlnu
being the first to sub ug to make inroads upon the defense.
To the north the British armies are
pushing their advances almost to the
point of llbersting Douai. which Is one
Washington Coincident with th<
prey'dent's statement urging suppor
of the fourth Liberty loan, the treas
ury department announced that wltt
only . few days left in the campaign
half of the six billion dollars tola
remains to be subscribed Thl. meant
that the country must invest nearl)
one billion dollars a day in bond, fro ti
now when the three week drive end.
Subscriptions officially reported t<
the treasury department now tota
only 12.79* 411 #MV but official. wnr«
conldent that reports yet to be mailt
would carry the total above the thret
billion dollar mark.
The Minn
distinction 1
scribe Its quota, f210.ooo.non. wltk
every state oversubscribing The Kan
sas City diatrlct h.s sulwcrthed 42 pel
cent of It. quot.
trai is threatened from the north
advance continues
The allies have reached the town ol
Lendelede. lour miles northwest ol
t'ourtrai. and the line runs in front
of Iseghem.
Ni.h Reoccupied By All e*.
Berlin Nish. the capital of Serbia,
has been occupied by entente force.,
Austria Notified Turkey Will Quit.
Am.terdam — The first step takes
by the new Turkish cabinet, headet
by Tewfik I'asha. says a dispatch Iron
Vienna to the Weser Zeitung. was tc
dispatch a note to Austria Hungary ti
the effect that, owing to the millt.r)
situation, Turkey wa* obliged to con
dude a separate peace with the en
entr The central powers requestei
Turkey to aw.lt 'he r-sult of the ex
change of notes with President Wil
-on. but no reply so far has been re
eived from Turke>.
Shades of Scotland's Pride,
Francis Disney of Alhuiiy. secretary I
•f the upstnte public service comiols- I
•Ion. wns n guest nt a dinner at which 1
poetry and Burn* were dis -us*ed.
"Well," said Mr. I'isney. turning to I
n absent-minded physician w ho was I
it the table, "whiit is your opinion of
Burns, doctor?"
"What's 1 hut? Burns?" nsked the
liwtor. "Of ifiurse I couldn't say off- I
mnd. but as a rule tbe hospital Is the |
.iroper place for anyone suffering from
iurns." New York Mall.
May Invade Germany Nest
Washington The smashing
tory the Aagl* American (■>
north of fit Qnent it may be pa
the way toe asrly in
teeif
Spain to S.ize Hun Ships.
Paris Spain, according to advices
.eived bv tbe Temps from the Span
1 frontier, has decided to selte Ger-
of GerMany man ships In he ports to the extent
wholly new .>( lii.bOO tons, in lad luulficalloii ol
(.pet Itlilne Spanish xliipplo# li.ssts Un - Family Allotment Money Requested
stated, lias been Wi«hington The w«r 1:-inaur
vic-
ing
Earthquake Kills 1%0 in Porto Rico.
San Ju *i P R One hundred and
fifty Uvea were lost in an earthquake
in Porlo Rico Almost every town
la the island reports damaged proper-
ty and sf*n rli (t fatalities
• to 31 U Boats Left.
bondon Vice Adhmirsl Sims,
een months Goshmute speaking at Lord Northcllffe's lunch
I lis pah reservation near .-on lor visiting American editors said
Indians in Utah Again on War Path.
Salt Lake 1 or tbe third time In
less than tlH
Indians on th
Aviator. Have Superstition.,
Aviators have their own Kii|M*rstl-
tlons. Joseph B. Llevre. Ju*t com-
missioned n first lieutenant In the nlr
service, nlthotigh he has been flying
for nine years, and Is perhnps the best j
man In neronatitles In America, never
goes up unless be wear* a cap inittle
of the ti p of a silk stocking.
"It Is my sweetheart's." Lieuten-
ant Llevre explains. "If I don't wear
it 1 enn't rt> " New York World.
Accounting for It.
•Maine's husband Is craay alioiit bee
culture."
"Maybe thnt Is the reason she cull,
him Honeybug."
Chicago will give medal* to most
successful war gardener*.
lelpless as a Baby
Bent Like an Old Man and
Suffered Terribly Quickly
Cured by Doan's.
Jno. Rleumke. Jr.. 25SS Courtland
St., Chicago. 111., says: "1 wa.
down with my back suffering from
lumbago. 1 walked like an old man,
bent over. My back pained
terribly and when I
moved my arms my
bark. hart. I finally
had to go to bed and
Just felt sick all over
and was helpless as a
bahy. My kidneys act-
ed too frequently, the
secretions were .canty
and highly colored. I
had terrible pains In the back of my
bead and I felt drowsy all the tlrae.
I finally used Doan's Kidney Pill,
nnd soon felt one hundred per cent
better. When I finished the one
box I wa. entirely cured. The
pains left my back and head and
my kidneys acti-d normally. I am
glad to recommend Poan's to other
kidney sufferers."
C« Dosi'i at As? Star*. «0 ■ Iss
DOAN'S *V,DJiV
FOSTER-MlLBURJt CO. BUFFALO. N. Y
%
unoffi
r fol'ow re.
i*r<and thnt
fth*ne val-
at ambissudi
asked to name the
la this connection.
•hips to Im
II la adde'l
taken. 1 aurance bureau asked eotinr
for
Spain j |i;!4,tiiiti,0oo additional to pay ramlly
has dec ded to make public neat week allotment, and allowances of aoldlera
lleer Creek, i tah. have gone In the that the average number ot enemy
war path The armv ilralt I. said to ! aubmjrlnea operating agalnat mer-
be the i-au-. ..I 1 lie revolt cliant ship, and transports across the
Atlantic was about eight or nine, but
Big Booze Seigure Made. 1 that aometlmc. it ran up to twelve or
Douglas Ariz City and federal offl | thirteen Around th. Hriti.h Isles,
eer. look p -session at Plrtlevllle. . 1 Vice Admiral Sims said, there were
suburb of n.arlv 1.HKI ca.es of whisky |.bout 3.0<>0 antl aubmartne craft in
ed The all the documents amplifying the note during the present fiacal year Prev- I and beer valued ftoin |75.000 to 10t>.-1 operation d.y and night.
.•.rt from the Al.ace sent to Germany on August 1 sdo ,ou, appropriation* have sigreksted | *00 craft there were ICO
I collateral data. | $141.000.00«. I i
Of Ameileal
Kansas City Street rnllwnv u«es slg-
. et.t nickel slug* us tickets.
Craoulaled Eyelids.
V IIB M J F.yet inflamed by espo-
W iuretoSan. DmI and Wind
uickly relitved by Murine
ycRmetfy. No Smarting,
jutt Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggists or by mail Mc per Bottle.
For Beek .1 the Cy« Ira. writ. is
N.rlM ty Remedy Co„ Chlcfa.
livery Woman Wants
Eyes?;
ANTISEPTIC POWDER
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE
Dissolved la watsr far douche. Here
pelvic catarrh, ulceration aad lafW
hy Lydie E.
•or« tnroai ua iori mjm+. Lconoawui
SBSfiBaSttg
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Seger, Neatha H. The Geary Times (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 17, 1918, newspaper, October 17, 1918; Geary, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc184863/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.