The Geary Journal (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 5, 1914 Page: 4 of 12
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THE GEARY JOURNAL
ENDS DYSPEPSIA,
NDiGESJjOH. GAS
"Pape's Diapepsin" cures sick,
sour stomachs in five minutes
—Time It!
"Really does" put bad stomachs in
order—"really does" overcome Indiges-
tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and
sourness In five minutes—that—Just
that—makes Pape's Dlapepsln the lar-
gest selling stomach regulator in the
world. If what you eat ferments Into
stubborn lumps, you belch gas and
eructate sour, undigested food and
acid; bead Is dizzy and aches; breath
foul; tongue coated; your lnsldes filled
with bile and indigestible waste, re-
member the moment "Pape's Dlapep-
sln" comes in contact with the stomach
all such distress vanishes. It's truly
astonishing—almost marvelous, and
the Joy Is its harmlessness.
A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dla-
pepsln will give you a hundred dollars'
worth of satisfaction.
It's worth its weight in gold to men
and women who can't get their stom-
achs regulated. It belongs in your
home—should always be kept handy
In case of a sick, sour, upset stomach
during the day or at night. It's the
quickest, surest and most harmless
Btomach doctor in the world.—Adv.
Trouble Ahead.
"Flubdub, my wife wants to meel
you."
"I feel complimented, Wombat."
"Let me tip you off. I've been blam
ing it on you when I've been down
town late."
RT. REV. ALDAN GASQUET
QUIT MEAT IF KIDNEYS
BOTHER AND USE SALTS
Take a Glass of Salts Before Break-
fast If Your Back Is Hurting or
Bladder Is Irritated.
If you must have your meat every
day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with
salts occasionally, says a noted author
Ity who tells us that meat forms uric
acid which almost paralyzes the kid-
neys in their efforts to expel it from
the blood. They become sluggish and
weaken, then you suffer with a dull
misery in the kidney region, sharp
pains in the back or sick headache,
dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue
Is coated and when the weather is bad
you have rheumatic twinges. The
urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the
channels often get sore and Irritated,
obliging you to seek relief two or
three times during the night.
To neutralize these irritating acids,
to cleanse the kidneys and flush oft
the body's urinous waste get four
ounces of Jad Salts from any phar-
macy here; take a tablespoonful in a
glass of water before breakfast for a
few days and your kidneys will then
act fine. This famous salts Is made
from the acid of grapes and lemon
Juice, combined with llthla, and has
been used for generations to flush and
stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to
neutralize the acids in urine, so it no
longer irritates, thus ending bladder
weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in-
jure, and makes a delightful efferves-
cent lithia-water drink.—Adv.
Well Put
Willie—Pa, what is a luncheon?
Father—The feminine for lunch, my
■on.—Woman's Home Companion.
GIRLS! 6111$! TRY IT,
BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR
I
Make It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxui*
lant and Remove Dandruff—Real
Surprise for You.
Tour hair becomes light, wavy, fluf-
fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus-
trous and beautiful as a young girl's
after a "Danderine hair cleanse." Just
try this—moisten a cloth with a little
Danderine and carefully draw It
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
and in Just a few moments you have
doubled the beauty of your hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at ones,
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dandruff; cleanses, purifies and Invig-
orates the scalp, forever stopping itch-
ing and falling hair.
But what will please you most wfll
be after a few weeks' use when yen
will actually see new hair—fine and
downy at first—yes—but really new
hair—growing all over the scalp If
you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of it. surely get a 25 cent bottle of
Knowiton's Danderine from any store
•nd Just try it Adv.
The. Rt, Rev. Aldan Gaaquet, head
of the Benedictine order of England,
has the gigantic task of reviling the
Vulgate, the Latin Bible of the Roman
Catholic church. The committee of
revision of which he is the head has
already been at work on it for five
yeara and will not complete It for
about seven years more. Abbot Gaa-
quet is now in this country delivering
lectures and raising money to com-
plete the work.
TWENTY-EIGHT BAKICFHOLD^UT
7,465 INSTITUTIONS QUALIFY UN-
DER NEW SYSTEM.
State Depositories Also May Join the
New Federal Reserve System
Under Certain Conditions.
Washington—Official count by treas-
Riry officials showed that 7,465 national
banks have applied for membership
in the federal reserve system, that
eighteen banks have notified the or-
organization committee that they will
not apply and ten have not been heard
from.
The capital of the banks applying
amounts to $1,054,533,554, which is
99.75 per cent of the capital of all
national banks in the country. The
capital of banks not accepting is
placed at $1,990,000 and that of the ten
not heard from at $570,000.
The figures for the state banks and
trust companies have not been tabu-
lated, but sixty such institutions have
asked for approval of their applica-
tions, and it is estimated that their
capitalization will be sufficient to put
the total of all banks applying to date
beyond the $1,100,000,000 mark.
When their report is ready the
banks will be required to subscribe 6
per cent of their stock and surplus to
the stock of the reserve bank in their
district, one-half to be taken within
ten months. The other half will be
subject to the call of the federal re-
serve board.
The organization committee issued
regulations for the guidance of state
banks which wish to apply for mem-
bership in the system. Such insti-
tutions can become national banks or
can apply as state institutions under
certain conditions. The principal con-
ditions are that applicant banks must
first certify their assets and liabilities
and that none are carried at an exces-
sive value; that they shall file copies
of their charters, with a digest of
powers granted.
BECKER CONVICTION ANNIILEI
New York Court of Appeals Decides
Celebrated Rosenthal Case.
The Result.
"Now well have arms going over
the border'
"Tee, and legs ooalng.**
New York. —The conviction of
Charles Eecker, former police lieu-
tenant, of the murder of the gambler,
Hermann Rosenthal, was annulled by
the court of appeals at Albany, the
highest court of the state. He is en-
titled to a new trial, but It seemed
probable that he might go free with-
out facing a second trial. It was made
known that District Attorney Charles
S. Whitman believes that under the
prevailing opinion handed down by the
court, conviction a second time will
be impossible.
Appeals taken by the four gunmen
"Whitey" Lewi.. "Lofty ixmie.-
the Blood." and "Dago Frank- con-
victed as actual murderers of R
thai and whom Becker is accuse
having Instigated to commit the |
crirnt'. was not sustained and they
will have to die in the electric chair. I
probably in March, except in the event I
of executive clemency
osen-
>d of
"CASGARETS" FOR
No sick headache, biliousness,
bad taste or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and fresh
with Cascarets, or merely forcing a
passageway every few days with
Baits, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or
Purgative Waters?
Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let
Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg-
ulate the stomach, remove the sour
and fermenting food and foul gases,
take the excess bile from the liver
and carry out of the system all the
constipated waste matter and poisons
in the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will make you
feel great by morning. They work
while you sleep—never gripe, sicken
or cause any Inconvenience, and cost
only li) cents a box from your store.
Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
have Headache, Biliousness, Coated
Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or
Constipation. Adv.
_ No Change.
The young men of the .town had
bought the vacant lot opposite Miss
Martha Billlngsby's "fashionable
school for young ladies," purposing to
build a club house thereon.
"I am sorry for you," said one of
Miss Martha's friends; "I fear having
these young men opposite yeu in-
stead of that empty lot will seriously
injure your school."
"Oh, never fear," answered Miss
Martha promptly; "I qan assure you
that it will still be an empty lot"—
Neale's Monthly.
IN N. MEXICO
LEADERS SAY CONSIDERATION
OF PROBLEM DELAYS TOR-
REON ATTACK.
NORTH ANO SOUTH DIFFERENT
Bitter Tongue.
It was at a concert. The eminent pi-
anist was embarked upon an ambi-
tious classical program. The single in-
dividual present who had paid for his
ticket turned to his right-hand neigh-
bor, obviously by his bored and supe-
rior air a person whose business it was
to attend concerts—a musical critic.
"Beg pardon," said the individual,
"but isn't that something of Chopin's
—that last number?'
"It Is,' replied the critic morosely,
"when somebody else plays 1L"
To Cultivate Cheerfulness.
Sydney Smith once gave a woman
a score of recipes for cheerfulness,
and among them was to remember all
the pleasant things said to and of her,
to keep a box of candy on the chlm-
neypiece and a kettle simmering on
the hob. Do not give way to melan-
choly; never ask "Why were we
born?" If you are giving to asking
questions, aBk easy ones.
A Medium Kind.
She—James, we must get a plain
cook.
He—But If she's any plainer than
the last one, she'll scare the baby,
dear.
Only a woman who Is in love will
look up to a man who Is socially be-
neath her.
Speaking
Of Lunch
the wife said, "Bring home
a package of
Post
Toasties
—Sure!"
Toasties are wonderfully
good at any meal, and
somehow seem to match
the appetite of both home
folks and guests.
Bits of selected Indian
Corn, debcatelv seasoned,
cooked, rollea thin and
toasted to a rich golden
brown — that's Post
Toasties.
Fresh, tender and crisp,
ready-to-eat direct from
the package. With cream
and a sprinkle of sugar —
"The Memory Lingers"
Toasties sold by grocer*
—everywhere.
Two Sections Have Little In Common;
Carranza and Villa Deny.—
Soldiers Resting On
Their Arms.
Chihuahua.—A plan for the forma-
tion in northern Mexico of a new re-
public is~.being perfected, according
to persistent rumors in circulation
here.
Certain rebel leaders intimate that
the delay of the constitutionalist at-
tack on Torreon is due to the scheme
for the divorce. While General Car-
ranza, civil head of the revolution, and
General Villa, military leader, disclaim
any part in a plan which does not in-
clude the overthrow of Huerta, it is be-
lieved by many here that the proposi-
tion for an independent republic is be-
ing seriously considered by them and
others.
Reports emanating from Mexico
City that the federal garrison at Tor-
reon has been strengthened to a point
where it can make a formidable re-
sistance have added impetus to the
idea of a separation of the north
from the south and General Car-
ranza's coming to Chihuahua from the
Pacific coast is looked upon as pos-
sibly indicating an early adoption of
the plan.
Embraces Five States.
The territory which it is said might
be formed into a separate republic em-
braces the five states along the United
States border—Sonora, Chihuahua,
Coahuila, Nuevo Leon and Tamauilpas,
with possibly the inclusion of Sinaloa.
From virtullay all this territory the
Huerta army has been driven out, the
chief remaining strongholds of the fed-
erals being at Tampico, on the east,
Monterey, Saltillo and Torreon on the
south; Guaymas on the west and
Neuvo Laredo and Piedras Negras on
the north.
Asserting that the revolutionary
leaders may have to content them-
selves with victories in the north, of-
ficials high in the rebel government
admit that one reason for the over-
throw of President Madero was that
he represented the ideals of the north
at the seat of the government in the
south.
Torreon Surrounded.
Most of Villa's soldiers, whom he
says number 10,000 or more, are de-
ployed along the railroad south of here
with their base at Jiminez and Esca-
lon. Why they have been kept idly
waiting is a Question they were un-
able to explain. The belief In Chihua-
hua is that they were sent out be-
cause General Villa did not want to
maintain so many soldiers in one city.
The disposition of the rebels is
At Jiminez, General Montclovlo Her-
rera, 2,000.
At Escalon, under General Maximo
Garcia, 1,200.
Marching across Durango state to
Mapimi, north of Torreon, under Gen-
eral Tomas Urbina 2,500; in Durango
state (southwest of Torreon). under
General Callxto Contreas, 3,000; in
Zacatecas state (south of Torreon),
under General Panfilo Natera. 1,000.
East of Torreon, under General Ag-
nilar, an unknown number.
In Chihuahua City, under General
Aguirre Benavides, 1.300.
The federal garrison at Torreon is
variously estimated at from 6,000 to
10,000.
IlS
Cr
Bale
W
JI0T MADE BY W*RUSJ
BAKING
CHICAGO
Better cookies, cake
and biscuits, too. All
as light, fluffy, tender
and delicious as mother used
to bake. And just as whole*
some. For purer Baking Pow-
der than Calumet cannot be bad
at any prut.
Ask your grocer. ' **. ;
BECEIVED HKHEST AWAKDS
•ffifisSfiWaSaaf
Concerning Grammar.
A sweet little voice—that sounded
like It usually used better grammar.—
Nell Brinkley In the Journal. Sounda
like better grammar ain't being used
this season.—P. P. A. in New York
Mall.
Proof Absolute.
She—All extremely bright men ar#
conceited, anyway.
He—Oh, I don't know; I'm noL
Some things are better left unsaid.
Every breach of promise suit demon-
strates that
Only One "BROMO QUININE"
Valid Reason For Benton Execution.
Washington.—President Wilson and
Secretary Bryan conferred briefly on
the Mexican situation. No announce-
ments were made after the conference
but it is understood the report on the
execution at Juare* of William S. Ben-
ton is awaited before the view of this
government toward the incident >4s
made known.
[ The detsils of the execution sre not
in the hands of the state department
officials but are being gathered rapidly
It Is generally admitted that the case 1
hinges largely on whether or not Ben-
ton went to General Villa's headquart-
er* armed That be was high tempered 1
and had previous difficulties with con- :
stitutionalists is known, but on the
single fact of whetber he had a re- i
volver when he accosted Vflla depends
to a great extent judgment of the I
whole affair Benton's friends denied
be carried weapons.
To re* tb« tennis*, call tor fnll name. LAX&-
BROMO QUININK, Look for •irnator* of
B. W. GKOVB. Cum • Cold in One D«j. 2 So.
A high-class liar Is considered a
high salaried necessity In some kinds
of business.
Hot Springs
Liver Buttons
Make You Feel Fine
If yon want to tone np your liver, put
jour stomach in first-claas shape, dnvs
all impurities from the bowels, and feel
like a real fighter in leas than a week
Ct a 86-cent box of HOT SPRINGS
VER BUTTONS to-day
Ton can eat and digest a hearty meal)
Ton will be free from headache, thai
lazy feeling will go, the ambition that
you once possessed will return, if yon
will use little chocolate coated HOT
BPRINU8 LIVER BUTTONS
as directed.
For constipation there ia nothing so
asfe, so efficient and ao Joyfully satisfy-
ing. They drive away pimples, blotches
and sallowneaa by purifying the blood.
You must surely get a Vox. For free
sampfce writs Hot Springs Chemical Co,
Hot Springs, Ark.
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Cox, Edward F. The Geary Journal (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 5, 1914, newspaper, March 5, 1914; Geary, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc184908/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.