The Hollis Post-Herald. (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
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THE HOLLIS POST-HERALD
CHILLS, COLDS,
FEVERISHNESS
Black-Draught Is Used by Virginia
Lady for Colds, Fever and
Other Troubles With
Fine Results.
Rocky Mount, Va.—Miss Mae Cblt«
wood, of thin place, recently stated : **I
have used Black-Draught for colda and
•tomach trouble ond certainly have
found It very satisfactory.
When I would feel bad and fever-
ish, as though I was taking a fresh
cold, I would make a good cup of
Black-Draught tea and It would soon
set me all right
I can recommend It as a splendid
laxative and gladly do so. You may
publish my statement."
When you feel chilly, tired, fever-
ish, headachy and feor that you are
taking cold, take a good dose of the
old, reliable, liver medicine you have
heard so much about—Thedford's
Black-Draught. It Is made from
purely vegetable Ingredients, acts In
a gentle, natural way, and by helping
to drive out poisonous waste matter
from your system, It will often, if
taken In time, prevent a chill from de-
veloping Into a cold.
Thousands of people, during the past
10 yean, have found Black-Draught of
benefit In such cases.
Try It, the next time you chill or
aneez«.—Adv.
A Quick Customer.
"A new germ has beon discovered
which makes it almost impossible for
people to tnlk."
"Yo don't sny so!" oxclnlmed Mr.
Meekton. "Where do you buy It ?"
MR. OR MRS.
DYSPEPTIC
Get rid of Indigestion and
Stomach Worries with
"Pape's Diapepsin"
"Kealiy does" put weak, disordered
stomachs in order—"reully does" over-
come Indigestion, dyspepsia, gns, henrt-
buni and sourness due to acid fer-
mentation— that — Just that — makes
Pape's Diapepsin the largest selling
stomach antacid and regulator in the
world. If what you ent ferments and
turns sour, you belch gas and eructate
undigested food or water; head Is dli-
■y and aches; breath foul; tongue
coated, remember the moment "Pape's
Diapepsin" cornea In contact with the
atomach all such distress vanishes. It's
truly astonishing—almost marvelous,
and the Joy is Its harmlessness. A
box of Pape's Diapepsin tablets costs
•o little at drug stores too.—Adv.
HERE'S YOUR AUTO TAX RATE
H*lnw t* a tub!* prepared by the atate hiehway department to «how th«
rate of tux on autumoblie* ranging In prl< e up to 35,0"^ ar.tl on nibtor truck*
with rapucltl)* rur.KH.g up to Ave ton*.
Ia M down the flr t n-'uinn until you flnd the purchaM price of your car
and look acton* the table for the tax lor any y*r u;> to the flfth.
Kate* Applying at Flr t and 8«-oni
Registration* In Oklahoma.
Molorryi lex and Automobile* Hang-
ing In Value From—
9 1
(o
-VJtJ
.VJO
to
*10
3
1VAt
to
7i'U
III..
'
7SO
to
800
HTiO
to
000
HO
to
1,000
2....
lOftl
to
1.100
1.160
to
1.2O0
J.fflO
tJ
1.300
i.ara>
to
1,400
1,4.VI
to
1.800
1.KM)
to
1,800
1.6MJ
to
1,700
2122!
1.7AO
to
1,800
2..2.
I. NiO
to
1,000
1.U.V)
to
2.000
2.0CA)
to
2.100
2222.
2.1.1 1
toO
2,200
X200
to
2,300
,
2.380
to
2,400
2.4WJ
to
2,800
2..VXJ
to
2.600
2.#r.o
to
2,700
2,780
to
2.800
2.KV)
Id
2.000
2,050
to
u.uoo
3.UB0
to
3,100
3. ISO
to
3,200
.22
3.280
to
3,300
*
8,380
to
3,400
.222.
3,480
to
3,500
"Ill
a,mo
to
3.600
3,880
to
3,700
22
3,780
to
3 800
2
'
3,880
to
8,900
3,050
to
4,000
2
4.050
to
4,100
.....
4.180
to
4.200
4.280
to
4,300
4,330
to
4,400
4,480
to
4.500
4,880
to
4,600
4,(150
to
4,700
.....
4,750
to
4,800
4,850
to
4,1100
4.050
to
8,000
Kate on
Mob
Trueku ofthe Following Carrying
Capacity—
3,000 pound* to 4,000
1 F<
« toi Reduced K'ulat
rations.
Third
Fourth
Fifth
Fee for
Year In
1/ar in
l kla
Year In
First Year
oklH.
Ok la.
fio.no
till 00
llo.oO
3i0.00
10 75
10 00
10.00
10.00
11.5U
111 00
10.00
111 1*
12 25
10.00
10.00
10.06
13.00
10,40
10.C0
10.00
13.75
11 00
10.00
lo.oi)
14 50
11.80
10,00
10.00
15 25
12.20
10.00
10.U0
le.oo
12.80
10 24
10.00
16.75
18.40
10 72
10.00
17.50
14.00
11.20
10.00
18.25
14.80
11.88
10 00
10.00
L5.20
12.16
10.00
IP. 75
IS 00
12 84
10.12
20.15
16.40
13.12
10.5o
21.25
17.00
18 GO
10 88
22.00
17.00
14.0'<
11.27
22.75
18.20
14.f'8
11.65
23.50
18.80
15.04
12.04
24.25
10.40
15.52
12.42
25.00
-'II.no
18.00
12.80
25.75
20.60
1648
13.19
28.50
21.80
10 06
13.5t
27.25
21.80
17.44
13.90
28.00
22.40
17.02
14.34
28.75
23 00
18.40
14.72
20.50
23.60
18. SS
15.11
80.35
24 20
19 88
15.40
31.00
24.80
10.84
15.8n
31.75
25.40
80 ::2
10.26
32.50
26.00
20.80
16.64
33.28
26.60
21.28
17.03
34.00
27.20
21.78
17.41
84 75
27 80
22.24
17.80
85.50
28.40
22.72
18.18
36.25
80.00
23.20
18.50
37.00
20. GO
23.68
18.95
37.75
30 20
24 1(1
19.33
8S.0O
30.80
24.04
19.72
SMS
31.40
25.12
20.12
40.00
32.00
25.80
20.48
40.75
32 60
26.08
20.87
41.50
33.20
90.86
21.25
42 25
33.80
27.01
21.64
43.(JO
34.40
27.52
22.02
43.75
35.00
28 00
22.40
Fee for Heduc-d KeeiBtnition.
First
Third
Fourth
Fifth
Heg.
Year.
Year.
Year.
_ S 15
3 12.00
3 10.00
3 lo. oo
20
18.00
12.80
10.00
25
20.00
16.00
12 80
40
32.00
20.60
20.48
00
48.00
38.40
30.72
... 100
80.00
84.00
51.20
300
240.00
102.00
153.80
... 300
300.00
300.00
300.00
HEREAND THERE
WORLD NEWS IN BRIEF
PARAGRAPHS
Action to test the national constitu-
tional prohibition amendment has
been started at San Francisco with
the prearranged arrest of J. J. Dillon
by deputies of Frank M. Silva, direc-
tor of prohibition enforcement in Cal-
ifornia.
♦ ♦ ♦
Five persons of the family of Herb-
ert Forest lost their lives In a fir a
PEACE NOTES.
Considerable boiahevrst forces are i which destroyed their home at Shunlc,
menacing ibe Ukraniaa and Polish a hamlet In the extreme northwestern
rronu, according to a • jaaag* re- of Sullivan, county, Pa., Mr. For-
ceived by the UkTanian mission., badly burned in attempts at
General Petlura. the L'kranian leader, rescue. Is the only survivor,
has started for tho front and Import-1 + + +
ant military events s$em imminent. I A marked increase was reported in
the message says. tho number of deaths In Chicago
t t t caused by Influenza and pneumonia
An official telegram received from recently. Thirty-two persons died of
Danzig reports a collision between1 pneumonia and five of influenza. One
German troops and Poles near Arge- was reported at the Great Lakes
nau (Province of Posen) in which the naval training station, which is under
greater part of the German occupa- quarantine.
tion force fell into the hands of the. + + *
Poles. A vigilance committee, national
t t t ln rcope, to police the retail shoe busl-
Representatives of Franca, Great Dess ■* an aid to the department of
Britain, Italy, Greece, Belgium. Spain. Justice in running down profiteers,
Japan and Brazil, members of the wiU b« offered to the government by
council of'the League of Nations, met National Shoo Retailers' Assosia-
in the ''clock room" of the French for-
OKLAHOMA
80 D. S. C'S TO OKLAHOMA
State is Tenth Among the States in
Awards of M^ala of Honor
Oklahoma City, wtilahoma soldiers
were awarded eighty of the 4,920 dis-
tinguished service crosses given dur-
ing the war, and three of the sev-
enty-five medals of honor.
eign office at 10 o'clock the other
morning for the first meeting in the
history of the league.
* + ♦
Reciprocal interchange of certain
commodities. Including foodstuffs, be-
tween the Russian people and Allied
and neutral countries has been decided
upon by the supreme council ln ses-
sion at Paris.
+ + +
Within the next three months, says
a long semi-official statement dealing
with near eastern affairs, Great Brit-
ain may be faced with a serious bol-
shevist situation in the near East,
which would mean military commit-
ments, according to expert opinion
based on official advices from the
FARMER IS KILLED IN WELL theaters of war.
+ + *
Rescuers Work All Day in Effort to The supreme council has drafted
Save Buried Man. j note to the Dutch government, asking
j for the extradition of the German ex-
H in ton.—After working from 10 emperor. The note refers to article
o'clock in the morning until 5:15 af- | 227 of the Treaty of Versailles, and
ternoon in a desperate effort to res-
cue George Jones from the bottom of
a well where he was buried beneath
six feet of sand which had caved in
upon him, rescuers brought him to the
surface, still alive, but were unable
invites Holland to Join the allied pow-
ers in the accomplishment of this act.
f + +
Two Americans were killed and
three wounded, in a clash with an ar-
mored train of General Semenoff,
to revive him, and he died within a I commander-in-chief of the All-Russian
few minutes. ! army between Lake Bailal and Verkh-
Jones had been laying a curbing at j neudinsk in the province of Trans-
the bottom of the well when the sides Baikalia, according to the correspon-
above him gave way and covered him j dent of the London Daily Mail at
with sand. His helper, unable to get Harbin.
the man out of the quicksand, appealed ♦ ♦ +
for aid and fifty Hinton m n rushod According to the Paris Temps, the
to the farm where it was necessary supreme council at one of its recent
to build supports for the sides of the
well before rescuers could remove the
New York men received 613 the 8and whlch burled Jonef) A phy8lcian
Some men who boast of calling a
spade a spade would puss a snow shov-
el by without recognizing It at all.
STUFFED FROM
CATARRH OR A COLD
Says Cream Applied In Nostrils
Opena Air Passage* Right Up.
Instunt relief—no waiting. Your
clogged nostrils open right up; the air
passages of your head clear and you
can breathe freely. No more hnwklng,
snufllng, blowing, headache, dryness.
No struggling for breath at night;
your cold or catarrh disappears.
Cet a small bottle of Ely's Cream
Balm from your druggist now. Apply
a little of this fragrant, antiseptic,
healing cream In your nostrils, it pen-
etrates through every nlr passage of
the head, soothes the Inflamed or swol-
len mucous membrane and relief comes
Instantly.
It's Just fine. Don't stay stuffed up
with a cold or nasty catarrh.—Adv.
crosses, and put their state .u urst
place. Pennsylvania was second with
411 and Illinois third with 405. Okla-
homa was twenty-second in the list of
D. S. C. awards, and tenth in awards
of medals of honor—the highest deco-
ration the United States government
can give.
One D. S. C. was given men ln each
of the following towns:
Ada, Alva, Bixby, Blackwell, Caddo,
Checotah, Claremore, Clarita, Cleve-
land, Cordell, Crescent, Drummond,
Edmond, Elm, Enterprise, Enid, Flet-
cher, Fort Gibson, Foss, Garber, Gold-
en, Hastings, Heavener, Hennessey,
Lindsay, locust Grove, Luther, Malis-
on, Mangum, May, Meade, Medford,
Miami, Morrison, Newkirk, Oakland,
Okarche, Okmulgee, Orlando, Pawhus-
ka, Perry, Ringling, Ringwood, Robert-
son, Sapulpa, Shawnee, Spiro, Tar Riv-
er, Trousdale, Vian, Walters, Weleet-
ka, Wewoka and Wynona.
Two crosses were given men at Bar-
tlesville, Drumright, El Reno, Mari-
etta and Norman, three at Muskogee,
four at Oklahoma City and six to Tul-
sa.
Medals of honor were awarded
men at Mangum, Okarche and Semin-
ole.
waited at the well all day, but was un-
able to save the man's life after he
had been taken out.
Jones had recently purchased the
sittings decided to recognize the com-
plete independence of Armenia, Geor-
gia and Azerbaijan.
* + +
WASHINGTON.
With resources aggregating $22,444,-
992,000 November 17, national banks
farm on which he lived, and the re- 0f the United States have established
pairing of the well was one of numer- j a new record for growth and devel-
ous Improvements he had begun. He j opment, it was said by John Skelton
leaves a wife and four children. Williams, comptroller of the currency,
in making public figures as to the
bank call of that date. Between the
calls of September 12 and November
17 national banking resources in
creased $829,576,000.
+ + +
Formal announcement that the
Figures filed with the state election American Federation of Labor would
board on expenditures and receipts in oppose, "with whatever power it niay
the republican victory in the Fifth Possess," the enactment of the an ti-
.m
DO D 0 0 J pBsssEfcE^P 0 0 0 0 0
Think twice before you spenk and
look once in the dictionary before you
paint a sign.
WHY DRUSGiSTS RECOMMEND
SWAMP-ROOT
For manj years druggists have watched
With much interest the remarkable record
maintained by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root,
the great kidney, liver and bladder medi-
cine.
It is a phrnician'a prescription.
Swamp Root is a strengthening medi-
cine. It helps the kidneys, liver and blad-
der do the work nature intended they
ahould do.
Swamp-Rnot has stood the test of year*.
It is sold by all dnigcists on its merit
and it should help yon No other kidney
medicine has so many friends.
Be sure to get ^ramp-Root and start
treatment at once.
However, if vou wish first to test this
great preparation sSnd ten rents tc Dr.
Kilmer 4 Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for s
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—Adv.
congressional district show the elec-
tion cost the Harreld committee
$2,015.
Legislation to permit the collection
of gross production tax from oil pro-
duced on Osage Indian land held in
trust by the federal government will
be urged this week upon congressmen
in Washington by Attorney General
Freeling. He will support the request
also that no renewal be given of the
present Indian trust period which ex-
pires in 1931.
Application for an increase in ex-
change rates at Shawnee, following
corporation commission by the South-
western Bell Telephone Company,
February 3 was set as the date for
hearing the case. The increase grant-
ed by the commission to telephone em-
ployes amounts to approximately 7
New Railroad Planned.
Tulsa.—The distance between Okla-
homa City and Muskogee will be
shortened forty miles by the construc-
tion of the Oklahoma Southwestern
railway, announcement of which was
made here by Tom B. Slick, oil oper-
ator, who is to be president. A char-
ter is to be applied for at once it is
said. The proposed railway will ex-
tend from Bristow, in western Creek
county, in a southeasrerly direction
across Salt Fork river. It will open
an oil and coal territory which form-
erly has-been served only by teams-
Quick On His Trigger.
Tulsa.—A. C. Higgins, 65 years
old, Is in a hospital not expected to
live, and O. O. Campbell, a contrac-
tor, is beinc held in Jail pending thu
outcome of the former's bullet wounds J eral aid, according to J. D. Fauntle-
Campbell charges that Higgins as- roy, federal district engineer. Money
saulted his 7-year-old daughter. Thive j available for highway construction in
shots were fired by Campbell who J those counties, Fauntieroy said, is as
told Sheriff Wooley that he went to follows: Canadian and Grady, jointly.
Higgins' hom? after learning of the $76,000 for a bridge; Kingfisher, $3n.-
alleged assault. An examination of I 000 and Kay $394,000. It is expected
the child was mad« by a local physi- \ the federal grants to equal funds raj^
sedition bills now pending In congress
was made recently in a statement is-
sued by Samuel Gompers, president of
the federation.
+ + +
Expenditure of $15,680,625 from war
department surplus funds for ailplanes
and motors would be authorized by a
bill introduced in the house by Chair-
man Kahn of the military affairs com-
mittee. The measure is designed to
carry out the request made by Sec-
-etary Baker.
+ + +
By a vote of nearly 3 to 1 the
senate has passed the water power de-
the increased wage scale announced' velopinent bill, different in some re-
for operators there, was filed with the 6Pec''s 'r0In the measure adopted by
the house in July, but following in
general way the same bill that has
been before congress in one form or
another for the last decade.
+ + t
Employment of a force of 2,500
watchmen to guard G9 million gallons
per cent addition to their former sal- of liquor held in government bonded
aries and is retroactive since Septem- warehouses is planned by the inter-
ber 13. nal revenue bureau to protect the
liquor against thefts, which are oc-
curring daily.
«• + +
United States marines and Haitien
gendarmle recently repelled an attack
on Port Au Prince, the Haitien capital,
by a force of three hundred bandits,
more than half of whom were killed,
wounded or captured.
+ + +
DOMESTIC.
Distribution of the silver Victory
Star to those wounded in the naval
Since the beginning of Oklahoma 1
county's effort to call an election to j
vote on road bonds to match federal !
grants of funds, applications have
been forwarded by Canadian, Grady
Kingfisher and Kay counties for fed-
tion.
+ ♦ *
A call for one of the greatest in-
ternational conferences of commer-
cial and financial figures ever as-
sembled in an effort to find a rem-
edy for the financial and commercial
chaos in whk.u the world has been
left by the war, was issued at New
York following the meeting of a co-
terie of nationally known financiers.
♦ + ♦
Every Indication points to higher
prices for dry goods during the next
few months. The demand keeps up
in excess of the supply, and, In fact,
production 1b so far behind that there
is little hope of Its catching up for
months to come. There Is nothing in
sight to give any hope of anything
cheaper next year.
+ + +
SOUTHWEST.
fee n Brown, a farmer living fifteen
miles southeast of Muskogee, Ok.,
was shot and killed following an al-
leged quarrel over a card game. L. P.
Jennings was arrested. Jennings says
that Brown attacked him with an open
knife and he shot in self-defense.
♦ t +
A sweeping investigation of the
management of the United States
army disciplinary barracks at Fort
Leavenworth has been ordered by
Judge John C. Pollock in the-federal
court at Kansas City.
+ + +
Raymond and Harry Carder, alleged
members of the I. W. W. were brought
to Houston, Texas, from Beaumont
and held for federal authorities. Ray-
mond Carder was one of the 9G I. W.
W. arrested in Chicago about two
years ago and sentenced to one year
and one dav in the federal peniten-
tiary at Leavenworth, Kas.
+ * *
FOREIGN.
The communication concerning the
Bolsheviki menace recently issued by
the war office at London was in con-
sequence of a department policy di-
vergent from that of Premier Lloyd
George, the Associated Press is in
formed upon first authority. '
♦ t +
Revolution or reconstruction ars
the alternatives for Mexico in 1920,
according to a report received recent-
ly outlining the views on the Mexican
political situation of American ob
servers in that country.
4 + ♦
Winston Spencer Churchill, secre-
tary for war; Walter Hume Long,
first lord of the admirality; Baron
Beatty, commander of the grand
fleet, and Field Marshal Sir Henry
Wilson, chief of the imperial general
staff, have left London, having been
hurriedly summoned to Paris for a
consultation with Premier Lloyd
George and other British officials
(here on important military and naval
matters.
+ + +
Premier Clemenceau announced re-
cently that he would retire complete-
ly from politics and devote his time
to the writing of his memoirs. Clem-
enceau wrote to Leon Bourgeois, presi-
dent of the Versailles conference,
which will name the president of
France, withdrawing his candidacy for
the office.
♦ * +
Will the Bolsheviki permit the de-
ported radicals now aboard the trans-
port Buford to be landed ln Russia
or will they be turned back in tho
hope that the agitators will be taken
back to the United States? is the ques-
tion of greatest interest in American
and British diplomatic circles at pres-
ent
+ * *
The project for un agreement on
the Adriatic question has been accept-
ed by Italy. It has also been handed
to the Jugo-Slavs, who have forward-
ed the text by telegraph to Belgrade
A reply is expected at once.
THOUSANDS proclaim
THE MERITS of
PE-RU-NA
lead Their Letters
Mrs. Martha C. Dale, R. F. D. 1,
Cannon, Del., writes: :'I am en-
tirely cured o2 chronic catarrh of
the stomach and bowels by PE-
RU-NA."
Mr. J. Bayer, Glendale, Oregon:
"There is no medicine like PE-RU-
NA for catarrhal deafness."
Mrs. Kate Marquis, Middleburg.
Ohio: "PE-RU-NA curcd me of
catarrh of the head and throat."
Mr. J. H. Collins, Wesson, Mis-
sissippi: "PE-RU-NA makes m©
feel vigorous and able to work
without that tired, weak feeling I
Usually have otherwise."
Mrs. P. Ludvigsen, Austin, Min-
nesota: "I got rid of my liver
trouble and can eat anything sine®
taking PE-RU-NA."
Mrs. L. Hearing, 283 East 169th
St., New York City: "For catarrh
of the head and stomach, I have
found PE-RU-NA better than any
other medicine."
Mr. W. H. Edgar, 49 Cooper St.r
Atlanta, Georgia: "PE-RU-NA
cured me after I had suffered
fifteen years with rheumatism."
Mrs. Leona Dodd, R. No. 3,
Medon, Tennessee: "PE-RU-NA
is a grand medicine for coughs and
colds."
So many diseases are due to ca~
tarrh and catarrhal conditions,
makes PE-RU-NA the best medi-
cine in the world to have on hand
for emergencies and general health
protection. Thousands of families
are never without a bottle of PE-
RU-NA or a box of PE-RU-NA
Tablets ii. the medicine cabinet.
That is the safe way.
You can buy PE-RU-NA any-
where in tablet or liquid form.
Comparisons.
"What an awful eater that man Is!
I believe he takes a peek at every
mouthful."
"That proves nothing on him in the
wny of a big appetite. So does a bird."
SHE DYES HER OLD
GARMENTS LIKE NEW
"Diamond Dyes" Make Faded, Shabby
Apparel So Fresh and Stylish.
Don't worry about perfect results.
Use "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to
give a new, rich, fadeless color to any
fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen,
cotton or mixed goods,—dresses,
blouses, stockings, skirts, children's
coats, feathers—everything.
Direction Book with each package
tells how to diamond dye over any color.
To match any material, have dealer
show you "Diamond Dye" Color Card.
—Adv.
Never Sees It Now.
Mae—If we get a divorce I want a
chance to see the child once a month.
Rae—But that would break your
record.
RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR.
To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum,
a small box of Barbo Compound, and &
oz. of glycerine. Apply to the hair twice a
week until it becomes the desired shade.
Any druggist can put this up or you can
mix it at home at very little cost. It will
gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair,
and will make harsh hair soft and glossy.
It will not co'or the scalp, is not sticky or
greasy, and does not rub off.—Adv.
"Does that author burn the midnight
oil with his toil?" "No, but he burns
the roads with his 'gas.'"
A state of siege has been proclaimed
service during the war will begin at through Germany with the exception
cian who stated that he found little «d by the counties wilf te made~with- once- nayy department announced of VVurtemburg. Saxony and Bavaria
e*idonce of any serioue assault. . out delay.
WAS DISCOURAGED
St. Charles Man Tells How
He Suffered Before
Doan's Cured Him.
"Heavy strains on my back and being
exposed to ali kinds of weather, weak-
ened my kidneys," says John S. Shel-
ton of St. Charles, Mo. "The misery
in my back was constant and I had to
get up several times during the night
to pass the kidney secretions. I got no
rest night or day
and lost twenty-
two pounds in
weight. My eyes
burned as if there
were fire in
them. I also had
dizzy spells and
would feel as if I
were going to
pitch forward.
Sharp catches
would take me in
my back as if
someone were
driving a sharp M .. ..
knife into my Shelton
back. My kidneys were so weak I had
no control over them and the secretions
were scanty and burned in passage. I
had pains in my bladder too. I was
discouraged. I tried different remedies
but received no benefit. I wag advised
to use Doan's Kidney PWs and when
1 did so I wan soon relieved of my mis-
ery. Doan's cured me."
Cat Doan'i at Any Stora, 60c a Bos
doan's
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. V.
Wilson Hunter Is Found Dead. j T- T- Montgomery, Chickasha, and
Ardmore.- The body of John Moore A- H- Burris, Watonga, have been nam
of Wilson was found on th^ banks ed b>' R- H- Wilson, state superintend
of a bayou near Ix>ne Grove, ten ent- as a committee to decide on
miles west of Ardmore near the changes in courses of study for state
Hewitt oil fields. Moore had been normal schools.
recently. ' as the result of widespread riots.
+ + + | ■* + +
Director General Hines has signed Withdrawal of American Red Cross
a national agreement covering rules personnel from Siberia, simultaneous-
and working conditions with the ly with the movement of the Amerl-
Brotherhood of Railway and Steam- can Siberian expeditionary force home-
ship Clerks. Freight Handlers and ward, has been ordered in instruction?
Express and Station Employes. The forwarded to Lieut. Col. Rudolpb P.
killed by a gun shot accidentally self- Drygoods costing- approximately: agreement, it was announced, is re- Teusler, head of the command,
inflicted. His gun was lying beside J75.000 for inmates in state institu troactive to January 1, and will con- : ♦ + 4
him when found. He was a son-in-law . tiuns during the coming three monthf tinue in force duriL£ the period of' The shortage of print paper in Win
of J. F Dillard upon whose land the i was ordered by the state board of puh federal control. nipeg. Canada, haj caut ed the suspen
j discovery well of the Hewitt district I lie affairs from five merchants which + * ♦ 8<oc °' three papers there. They have
| was brought in. Evidence deduced submitted bids. The order includes1 Re^na,d de Koven. American oper- combined and will issue one sheet
Happiness doesn't conrlst of having 1 at the inquest showed that Moore had , 19,500 yards of denim to be made into ' atic comP°ser and conductor, is dead containing the most Important news
everything you want, but In the ability | taken his Run and jcone to the bayou working clothes, upon which tho I ^ ^h,caS° °' apoplexy. He was born which will be placed on bulletin
to get more. I to kill squirrels. I charge Is about 110,000. I at Middletown. Conn.. April 3. 1881. i boarda.
This sooiblntf, lie*I.ng .rat-
ing remedy take* all .f ti - umart
lng pain out or burns, ncalita. nits,
ftpraln*. etc., and <j i - k\y heals tli
Injury. <iet a Me or 70e l «.ttle today
from your druffffint.
HUNT'S
UCHTMING CMS.
Baby Coughs
require treatment with a rcmrdy ttiat coo-
tains no opiate*. f*iao u ml|j but ifTrc-
tive; pleaaant to take. A.k you> <Jiugtm for
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Baldwin, A. A. The Hollis Post-Herald. (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1920, newspaper, January 29, 1920; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc185303/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.