Hollis Post-Herald. (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1920 Page: 3 of 8
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THE HOLLIS POST-HERALD
PAINS NEARLY
DOUBLED HE IIP
Nothing Helped Me Until I
Took Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Wyandotte, Mich.-"For the last
four years 1 have doctored off and on
1 without help. I
Ihave had pains
I every month so bad
J that I would nearly
■ double up. Some-
I times I could not
I sweep a room with-
I out stopping to rest,
1 and everything I ate
I upset my stomach.
iThree years ago
ijl lost a child
Jand suffered bo
I badly that I was out
of my head at times. My bowels did
not move for days and I could not eat
without suffering. The doctor could not
help me and one day I told my husband
that I could not stand the pain any
longer and sent him to the drug-store
to get me a bottle of Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound and threw
the doctor's medicine away. After
GET DECORATIONS
STATE GETS MORE THAN
HALF OF AWARDS FOR
MEN IN RANKS
fWO ARE SLAIN IN LATER RAIDS
Four Out of Seven Awards Made at
this Awarding Were Presented to
Oklahoma Men By Order of
President Wilson.
Washington,—Five men of Company
£>., 358th Infantry volunteered to sil-
ence a German pill box that was send-
ing a withering shower of load into
the organization and seriously inter-
rupting their work during the St. Mi-
FAST l« SOUTH
POULTRY
FLOCKS
"Dodson's Liver Tone" Is Taking
the Place of Dangerous,
Sickening Drug.
You're bilious, sluggish, constipated
and believe you need vile, dangerous
calomel to start your liver and clean
your bowels.
Here's Dodson's gunrnntee I Ask yon
druggist for u bottle of Dodson's Liver
Tone and take a spoonful tonight. If
it doesn't start your liver and straight-
en you right up better thnn calomel
and without griping or making you sick
I want you to go back to the store and
get your money.
Take calomel today and tomorrow
you will feel weak and sick and nau-
seated. Don't lose a day's work. Take
hiel offensive two years ago. Four of a spoonful of harmless, vegetable
them were Oklahoma boyB and the Dodson's Liver Tone tonight and wake
party was under the command of up feeling great. It's perfectly harm-
Sergeant William E. Bryant, son of j less, so give It to your children any
KEROSENE CURES SCALY LEGS
One Application Usually Is Sufficient
to Remove Trouble — Other
Efficient Remedies.
Sealy legs In fowls Is a disease, the
result of myriads of small parasites
which burrow under the small scales
of the leg, and as these multiply and
burrow under, these scales become en-
larged and loosen from the leg, and
the birds are seen picking at the legs
much of the time which proves that
the parasites cause Irritation.
If the disease is allowed to go un-
disturbed it sometimes happens that
the body becomes Infected and the bird ;
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
my own housework. If it had not been
for your medicine I don't know where I
would be today and I am never without
a bottle of it in the house. You may
publish this if you like that it may help
some other woman."—Mrs. Mary
Stender, 120 Orange St, Wyandotte,
Mich.
time. It can't salivate so let them eat
anything afterwards.—Adv.
A man's idea of n silly woman Is
one who laughs at some other fellow'a
fix my cold
i(l ALWAYSkeepDr.King'sNew
I Discovery handy. It breaks up
hard, stubborn colds and stops
the paroxysms of coughing." No
harmful drugs, but just good
medicine. At your druggists,
60c and $1.20 a bottle.
For colds an&c
dk:
New Discovery
Stubborn Bowels Tamed
Leaving the system uncleaned, clogged
bowels unmoved, results in health de-
struction. Let the gently stimulating
Dr. King's Pills bring to you a regular,
normal bowel and liver functioning.
Same old price, 25c. All druggists.
Prompt/:Won't G
To abort a cold
and prevent com-
plications take
The purified and refined
calomel tablet* that are
nauaealest, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain-
ed and improved. Sold
only in sealed package*,
Price 35c. ^
FOR WOMEN
For over half a century DHL
TUTPS LIVES PILLS have been
■old for the Liver.
Bead the folhmlMg from a woman
tton many years. I am now eon*
vinced that they are also the beat
known regulator for other retard-
ed female functions. I have told
many of my friends and now none
would be without them. A few
days before, andyon are all right"
Dr.Tutt's
Liver Pills
Breathe In Health.
That cough or cold in the head can
be ended easily by Hyomei. No stom-
ach dosing. Breathe it through the'
nose and mouth. Money back If It
falls. At druggists.
Persistent Coughs
•re dao|troui. Get prompt relief from
pi*os. Stops irritation; wo thing Effective
•nd ufe (or young and old. No opiates in
PISO'S
W. N. U„ Oklahoma City, No. 47-1920.
ASPIRIN
Name "Bayer" on Genuine
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Bryant of Bos-
well. Okla.
The four Oklahoma boys were
among the seven enlisted men award-
ed the distinguished order cross for
their conspicious bravery upon this J°kes-
occasion by the war department act-
ing under direction of President Wil-
son.
In addition to Sergeant Bryant, the
Oklahomans who received the citations
were Henry M. Amgelly,' private, son
of Mr. an,d Mrs. Gustavus H. Amgelly
of Boswell; Ernest Perry, private,
Drumright; Sergeant Joseph C. Car-
son, son of Mrs. Mary E. Carson, of
Tulsa.
The story of the gallantry of the
Oklahoma boys is recorded in the war
department where it stands out as one
of the most conspicuous of the hun-
dreds of incidents of the great war.
The little band crossed the valley to-
ward the hidden machine gun nest,
in the woods opposite, in the face of Warning! Unless you see the name
heavy fire by the enemy. Entering the , "Bayer" on package or on tablets you
woods they accomplished their mission are not getting genuine Aspirin pre-
in heroic manner and enabled their or- : scribed by physicians for twenty-one
ganization to advaace without further | years and proved safe by millions,
loss. In the attack, however, the little I Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer
group was not so fortunate, Sergeant package for Colds, Headache, Neural-
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
Bears the
fcMSSSSS^j Signature
of
iS>;t
.ALCOHOL"3 PER OENr.
, Avertable PrcparatwnfiirAS
sim.latin^UicFood
, tintjlheStoroadisanriBcMggfr
Bryant being the only one to Join his
company unscratched.
Private Amgelly was wounded se-
verely by the hail of machine gun bul-
lets that met their attack. Private
Puerto Bello, Leyte Island, south Phil-
hand-to-hand fighting that took place
when the group rushed the "pill-box,"
but rejoined the company only to be
killed a few days later in another en-
gagement. Other losses by the volun-
teers were Teddy Jones of Jan, Virgin-
ia, who was killed, and Henry Neigge-
man of Streator, who was severely
wounded.
Twelve days later, September 26,
1918, Sergeant Carson again volun-
teered to rush an enemy machine gun
which hlad concentrated its fire on an
opening in a barbedwire entanglement,
through which the company desired to
advance. Sergeant Carson was suc-
cessful in his mission, but was killed
by other machine-gun fire- before he
could join his comrades, who were ad-
vancing through the opening his dar
ing action had made for them.
TIES THAT BIND TIGHTER
France Never Shall Forget U. 8. Aid
8ays Legues.
Paris.—On the eve of the celebra-
tion commemorating the fiftieth anni-
versary of the republic and the sec-
ond anniversary of the armistice, Pre-
mier Leygues made the following
statement:
"You ask me what are the senti-
ments of the French republic toward
the United States of America at the
moment we are celebrating the fiftieth
anniversary of the republic and the
second anniversary of the armistice?
The French government and the en-
tire French nation feels that the ties
of freidship and esteem binding our
two nations are becoming tighter. Our
two democracies, imbued with the
same ideal, have always been found
■ide by side, whenever1 liberty and
right have been menaced, at all de-
cisive hours of the history of the
world.
"Our two nations salute in joint
transport, admiration and grateful-
ness the American and French heroes
who fell on the battlefields of Bran-
dywine and Yorktown as well as on
the banks of the Marne, the slopes of
Montfalcon and the plains of the
Meuse.
"Never shall we forget the magnifi-
cent moral, material and military as-
eistance which the United States
brought to us during the great war
and which contributed so powerfully
to the victory. The same culture, in-
dependence and human dignity, ani
mate our two nations, always resolv-
gia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache,
Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin
boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of As-
pirin cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger packages. Aspirin is the
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoaceticacidester of Salicycacid.—
Adv.
Even the buckwheat cake has to
(%alt its turn.
GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER
The Remedy With a Record of Fifty-
four Years of Surpassing Excellence.
Those who suffer from nervous
dyspepsia, constipation, indigestion,
torpid liver, dizziness, headaches,
coming up of food, wind on stom-
ach, palpitation and other indica-
tions of fermentation and indiges-
tion will find Green's August Flower
a most effective and efficient assistant
in the restoration of nature's functions
and a return to health and happiness.
There could be no better testimony of
the value of this remedy for these trou-
bles than the fact that its use for the
last fifty-four years has extended into
many thousands of households all over
the civilized world and no Indication of
any failure has been obtained in all
that time where medicine could effect
relief. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
The wise person thinks much and
says but little.
A Case of Scaly Legs.
may finally die of exhaustion. We
once lost a fine hen tills way, not
knowing the cause or remedy, which
is very simple, and hns the advantage
of always being available ut home.
There ure different remedies which
Will remove the trouble, but none Is
better than common kerosene, says a
writer In Successful Farming. To ap-
ply, take the fowl In the hands, hold
thej legs together and immerse them,
full length. In a can filled with kero-
sene; hold them there two or three
minutes. One application will usually
cure, but sometimes a second applica-
tion is necessary. Lard and kerosene,
half and half, is another excellent
remedy, as Is also common machine
oil, or just eommon axle grease well
rubbed In, two or three times at in-
tervals of three days. Soon the scales
will drop off and the legs become
smooth and clean.
The roosts should also be cleaned
off well and rubbed with machine oil,
which will help to rid the fowls of
sealy legs and red mites, as well. Thin
same remedy Is also good in case of
lice. Keep roosting poles well oiled
and rub a little lard under wings and
around vents of Infested birds and
they may be kept practically free from
these pest#.
Cheerfulness and RcsLContato
i ncm.erOoiam.Mo*cnj
S Mineral. NotNahc°ti6i
S"
oJIStfSSg-
JSgSggf"
TcrW
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE CENTAUR COMMNV. NCW VONK CIV*.
DON'T LET THAT COUGH CON TIN UK!
SPOHN'S DISTEMPER COMPOUND
Will knock It In ve.-y short time. At the drat sign of a cough
or cold In your home, give a fow doaca of "SPOHN'S." It will
t-ct on the glands, eliminate ihe illncime germ, and prevent further
' " " •—OHN'B'7 1 •• " *
destruction ot body by dim-nee. "SPOH
urd remedy for Distemper, Influenca, Plnk-Hlye, (Atarrhal Fever,
Coughs and Colds for a quarter of a century. SO cent* and 11.2ft
per bottle ut your drug store.
HI'OIIN MEDICAL, COMPANY.
WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT
Thousands of women have kidney and
bladder trouble and never suspect it.
Womens' complaints often prove to ba
nothing else but kidney trouble, or the
result of kidney or bladder disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy
i condition, they may cause the other or-
gans to become diseased.
Pain in the back, headache, loss of am-
bition, nervousness, are often times symp-
toms of kidney trouble.
Don't delay starting treatment. Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a physician's pre-
scription, obtained at any drug store, may
be just the remedy needed to overcome
such conditions.
Get a medium or large size bottle im-
mediately from any drug store.
However, if you wish first to test this
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer ft Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention thia paper.—Adv.
Transgressors should be made to
pay a road tax.
TURKEYS FOR THANKSGIVING
Begin Feeding Small Ration in Morn-
ing and Larger One at Night—
Boil All New Corn.
The middle of October Is not too
early to begin fattening turkeys for
; Thanksgiving. A pound of turkey will
I bring In far more than the grains
i that produce It are worth on the mar-
; ket. Begin feeding a small ration In
the morning, and a larger one at night.
If the turkeys are overfed In the
morning, they will not go out to for-
age, and will thus lose the best part
of their fattening ration—the natural
food of bugs, grasshoppers and worms;
they will also lose the appetite which
foraging gives. The night meal may
be a mash made of boiled new corn,
potato and other vegetable skins,
with or without bran. Do not give
new corn without boiling, as It Is apt
to cause bowel trouble In the tur-
keys. Sour milk is a most valuable
addition to the ration. Keep cracked
charcoal and grit before them. Don't
give them all they will eat the first
feed; use the same caution In getting
turkeys on full feed ^hat you would
nse for fattening hogs. They must
be kept free from lice, and In clean,
dry roosting quarters.
Kill That Cold With
CASCARA
FOR
Colda, Coughs
S QUININE
AND
La Grippe
Neglected Colds are Dangerous
Take no chances. Keep thia standard remedy handy for the ftrsesnss—.
Breaks up a cold In 24 hours — Relieves
Grippe in 3 days—Excellent for H—dacha
Quinine In thia form does not affect the head—Caacara la best Toole
Laxative—No Opiate In Hill's.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
FOR THE BEST TABLES
MAXWELL.HOUSE
COFFEE
"GOOD TO THE LAST DROP"
SEALED TINS AT GROCERS
>, ^ i ien W ■ a- ■> mil i.i,
One Man Saws 40 Cords a Day
sssgam
wbstlhsrww.
FATTEN COCKERELS IN YARD
SAYS PILES ALL GONE
AND NO MORE ECZEMA
"I had eczema for many years on my
head and could not get anything to stop
the agony. I saw your ad and got one
box of Peterson's Ointment and I owe you
Give Two Meals a Day of Mixture of
Cornmeal, Beef Scraps and Bran
Mixed With Milk.
A healthy cockerel will fatten well
In two weeks if confined In a yard of
moderate size and furnished two
meals a day of a mixture of cornmeal,
ground oats, beef scraps and a little
bran mixed with milk. Another meal,
- the evening feed, should consist most-
ly of cracked corn. Plenty of grit and
charcoal should be furnished these
cockerels so that their digestion may
be of the best.
*aCoa<«f«Xe*CmH
OTTAWA BSSMKESaU,
Cote Dow* Tr~m-8am Up Br fnrsr
Cmth oefssy PoymetHm 6
*^shbhi
CTaMsasyy mm sre. a, mumi a, in, it
ands stffoppy Housewives
•d U, guide th. world toward tattt, | • <«,> IT
s grains deficient in lime;
Pre-War Status Neceaaa-y. I "? ^ave haii Itching piles for 15 years
and Peterson's is the only ointment that
Chicago.—Getting conditions back to | relieves me, besides the piles seem to
a pre-war status was the testimony of j ^a^ue" lUclne.*' 1127 Wa3h'n*"
witnesses before the senate committee 1 Use Peterson's Ointment for old sores,
on reconstruction as the only way to j ^^^b^sfs"commend ITm*!
solve the building and housing prob- orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co.,
lems which confronts the councry. j B"fTnK N" Y
James B. Morgan, cbairman of Board
of directors of the First National Bank
told the committee that readjustment
of building costs would make more
money available for building and
Henry K. Holzman, an architect, sug-
gested prevention of coercion
strikes and lockouts I
Eyes
, Clean - Clear Health/
- - - - - - - - -
1 Writ* fer Frw Car* MilfaHMUOitatklL
Material for Manufacture of Egg
Shells Is Lacking in Food
Given to Fowls.
Fowls need more lime (cnlcinm)
than is ordinarily found In their food.
Most grains and some other foods are
; deficient In lime, and neither the hen
nor the duck can eat enough bulky
food to make good shells during the
heavy laying period. The lime In
oyster shells or ground bone will sup-
ply this need. It Is also important to
provide a regular snpply of vegetable
, foods rich In lime.
are helping their husbands to prosper—are glad
they encouraged them to go where they could make a home of their
own-save paying rent and reduce cost of living-where they
could reach prosperity and independence by buying on easy t
. # "*■ lennsi
Fertile Land at $15 to $30 an Acre
— land similar to that which through many years has yieldad from l<k
to 45 bushels of wheat to ihe acre. Hundreds of farmers in Wester*
Canada have raised ciops in a single season worth more than the whole
cost of their land. With such crops come prosperity, independence, good
homes, and all the comforts and conveniences which for happy living.
Farm Gardens^Poultry^Dairying
are sources of income second only to grain growing and stock raisin*.
Good climate, good neighbors, churches, ^ c—,
schools, rural telephone, etc., give you the
opportunities of a new land with the con-
venances of old settled districts.
and Alb*'*.*, r-du«*d r.ilwuy nta. etc.. writm
Department «f Immigration. Ottawa. Can . m
T. B. HEWITT
2112 Mala St. laasss City. M*
Canadian Government A sent
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White, J. Warren. Hollis Post-Herald. (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1920, newspaper, November 18, 1920; Hollis, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc185282/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.