Harmon County Tribune (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1918 Page: 4 of 4
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THE HAkiMON COUNTY TRIBUNE
Lamp
S
Lamps
Sunbeam National Quality
PHONE 134. We Deliver.
Hollis Light and Power Plant
B2ra£'£^r.?^B9£-~iB
Official
Food News
Issued by
| Federal Food Administration for If
Oklahoma.
a
= J. Cecil Brown
| Director of Education. E
I ~ ^
USE OF VICTBRY"
GERMANS CALLED
THEMSELVES HUNS,'
CURE YOURSELF
By u«eing Van Vleck's Gland
The motorists deny that they
see the wai n'm* signs alon-.: the
Kxtracis and seriuras. Send furl highway 3, us thev 'are n.i.T-
22 T fSrzr^Tl^Boo.k whi^:,escrlbe' yo'"J'a9t hey <" «•* no-#**«d
ease and contains hundreds of j'them.
testimonials of Men nnc! Women
cured of Glandular Enlargments.
Goitre, Varicose Veins. Scrofula
and Lung "''rouble, Eczema and
Nervous Prostration, Stunted
t«nowtb, Brain Disorders and
Notice of Guardianship
State of Oklahoma. Icq
County of Harmon. \
In the County Court in and for
Kidnev affection. Weak Minded 1 said Countv and State.
AUTO CASINGS and TUBES
We Have a New Stock of Auto Cas-
ings and Tubes, Guaranteed to Give
Satisfaction and can save you from $3.00
to $5.00 on the Casing*
Come and See Them Whether You
Buy or Not.
Crossland & Son
East Broadway
Hollis, Oklahoma
THE STOREKEEPER UP TO DATE
Dr.HENDERSOiy
" 218r219 Republic Building, 10th and Walnut Sts.,
Kansas City, Mo.
ESTABLISHED 1870-38 YEARS IN KANSAS CITY.
Specialist in Chronic, Nervous and Private Diseases
Consultation free and confidential. No detention from business. Pa*
tients at a distance successfully treated. Charges low.
Stricture And GIfiGt Successfully treated without operation—
Vlllvllllv ailU Vivvi n0 instruments—no pain—no danger.
MM —Describing above diseases—free at office or sent sealed
'Wll piaju -wrapper. Latest Treatment for Blood Poison.
Hours: 9 A. M. to 8 P. M.; Sundays and Holidays 10 to 12 only.
y- ~neo .-J*** *7
Gas masks ure indespensnble articles near the front. This Y. SI. C. A
' canteen manager has been forced to don his "muzzle," but ho is still holding
| his position behind the counter, lie was later wounded while on duty.
| Y. M. O. A, men at the front not only see that the hoys arc furnishe*
| refreshments, but they often help in the care of the wounded. Several Red
1 Triangle workers have been wounded by shell and gas, while a number have
I lost their lives In this service. The sign just over the "Y" man's stooulder
trends: "Our Slogan—Best for the Man in the Mud."
We Will Buy
At Hollis, Okla.
And pay the Highest Market Price for Everything Under
the sun in Iron, and Steei Scrap, Scrap Jro.i, Brass, Cop-
per, Zinc, Babbitt, Lead, Aluminum, Auto Tires, Inner
Tubes, all kinds of Old Rags, Sacks atvd Dry Bones.
Scrap Iron 45c per hundred or $0.< 0 per ton. Old rags $1. per
hundred pounds. Drj BoaesSOc per hundred pounds.
We Are Located Near West End Wagon Yard.
See Us Before You Sell.
BURNSiDE JUNK Co., Hollis, Okla.
The use of "Victory Mixed Flour"
now is being urged by the Oklahoma
feo.i Ministration as a result jf a
new wheat cnaenration program
which has been outlined by Herbert
'. jover in a message to C. B. Ames,
federal food administrator to.' Okla-
homa.'
Amons thr-r things the new rules
which went into effect September 1,
abolishes the 50-50 rule of seiling flour
and wheat substitutes, do away with
the six-pound per person limit oa flour
purchases and dispense with wheat-
less meals and wheatless days
In place of the 50-50 rule there now
is an 80-20 regulation, which requires
the purchase of 20 per cent of eereala
other than wheat in the buying of
white flour. Preferably this should be
done through the marketing of *
mixed flour which will be available for
household use.
It I' desired to insure a supply of
rea>i. ;ed Honrs on the market, and
to Y llers and dealers of all kinds
; ..oarage the use and gale of this
Hour so that the country may be on
u mixed flour basis without the neces-
stly of retailers making combination
sales of flour and substitutes.
All such mixed Hours made accord
ing to the following regulations shcuK
be l.«beled "Victory Mixed Flo Jr." and
are to be labeled with the ingredients
in order of their proportion. The flours
so mixed must be milled in accordance
with the standards of the United
States food administration. No
"Mixed . Flours" (excepl pancqko
flours) shall be 'made or manufactured
except in the exact proportions a* out-
lined belew:
Mixed Wheat and Barley Flour t>hall
be in the proportion of four potm<l« of
wheat to one pound of barley fljur.
Mixed Wheat and Corn Flour <hall
contain the proportion of four >oundi
of wheat flour to one pound of corn
flour.
Mixed Wheat, Barley and Corn
Flour shall contain the proportions ol
eight pounds wheat flour to one pound
barley and one pound corn flour.
Mixed Wheat and Rye Flo£r shall
contain the proportion of three pounds
of wheal flour and not less than two
pounds of rye flour.
Whole Wheat, Entire Wheat, or
Graham Flour or Meal shall contain a|
least 95 per cent of the wheat berry
All these "Victory Flours" may be
sold without substitutes, but at no
greater price than the rtill! :• whole
nalor or retail dealer than <u t e casa
of standard wheat flour.
While the rlx-pyand limit has beer,
done away with, it should be carried
in mind that the rule against hoarding
still is iu effect. This allows no pur
chase of more than a thirty-day's food
supply to be made and this rule wil:
be enforced rigidly, according tc
Judge Ames.
Bremen in July. !900, to quel' the
BoXer uprising in China, Emperor
William said to them:
"No mercy will be shown Xo pris-
oners will be taken. As tho Huns
under King Attila qjade a ^iame for
themselves, which is "still mighty in
traditions and legends today, may the
name of German be so fixed in China
by your deeds, thai no Chinese shall
«ver again dare even to look at a
German askance. Open the way for and undeveloped children made I In the Matter of the Guardian-
culture once for all. I • jii.lt/? ' „ ...
The si idi^rs wrote home letters re- jstrong and healthy. If you can- j ship of Graeie Ru-i^pd, 'Ibertie
lating their deeds, which wwe priuted . not come, write It Will COSt veil | Ruseel!, Ash e Russell, Pollv
' In the Lieiiin Vorwaits under the
(caption, "Letters of the Huns."
So the (Jrrmans were dubbed
| "Huns by the Germans. Fourteen
2'ears lar*r these Geaaans overran
Belgium and did more horrible things
than did the original Huns.
The Germans have made a name
for themsep. ? that will live in tra-
ditions and legends. But to keep this
: kulture fron America we must sup-
port those who are fighting. We must
T
Third Floor
912 Grand Avenue, Kansas City j
Mo,
nothing for advice. i Russell, Fay Russell, Ray Russell
Van Vleck Gland Extract &1 and Vio'a Russell, Minors.
Serum Co. j The State of Oklahoma, to the
Minors and the next of kin to
said Minors above named.
You are hereby notified, that
T. H. Russell has applied for
'letters of Guardianship over
When some men are asked daid Minors and ,that said ap-
t^dtben, ,\nd we must feed them | ivhat they di«i to help win the j p|ication will be heard at the
war, they will i e able to say that regular terra of said Court held
FOOD NOTES. Ithey sat ar"und the han?onts and S at the Court Room of said Co irt
jdemonstated to the oafc-show „n Tuesday the Fifth day of
wars are np longer all bullets anfjthe war could be /or. it they November A I) 14'18 at One
«• i O'clock P." 11. and that notice
"° . jof this preceeding is ordered
i published in the Harmon County
Tribune, a weekly newspaper
published in said County and
blade
Of the 2lo beet sugar factories
France had before tho war, tne Ger-1
mans destroyed 203. Is there any rea- J
on why we must supply the French
■arith sugar?
One thousand Ford tractors have
been purchased by the Canadian gov-|
ernment at cost and will he made
available for tne farmers throughout
Canada without governmental profit.
Just now tho "Soldier of the Soil"
Is as important as the "Soldier of tho
Trench."
"War is making bare the world's
Read The Tribunr
If your child star.9 in to =lwp a,,d lhat ™P'« '
. , . . ... . . |notice be addressed to said
grinds its Ueth whi e slcpinu, . . .
K ^' minors and their next ot kin,
picks at the nose, has a bad at their place of re3idence irl
breath, fickle appetite, pale corn-1 said state, and deposited in the
plexion, and dark rings under) post office with the postage pre-
iupboards; the granaiits are being j i he eye«, it has worm : and as j paid by the petitioner at least
I•" ,heyremain in ,he in,es- iten da'9 l,efore said h"ari"t-
making everything dear except human j tines, that child will be sickly, j Witness my hand and the seal
life; the destructive monster is con-,w/hHE'S < HRAM VERMf-,of said Court hereunto affixed;
thi- th^ 12 h day of ctober
A. l . 1918
E. C. Abernethy
County Judge.
C. H„ Ma Men, Atty.
turning more food essentials than it
Is producing. Want follows hard in
the wake of the chariot wheels of
Mars, and tho whole world is threat
ened with hunger, the menace of
which will become greater with tlie
^TGE dfars out thf worm
wt • nvthena the stomach and
b ,i!« and puts the road tp
h ; h ai d cheerfulness. Sold
prolongation of hostilities. Victory by JI«• 11 i
will go to the combatants who arQ
best fed afnd nourished. The foo<l ~
question is now paramount. Food
production is as essential to victory!
as food savins The ppade and the J
.hoe must befriend the rifle and 5.!:.''
bayonflt."—British Ministry of VooA
Orug Co,
SIMPLY COULDN'T FIND SIZES
r\ v. '
% it*
1 J
HOW TO SAVE ON TWO POUNDS
OF SUGAR A MONTH.
Seven Ways for Daily Sugar Saving
1. Use fresh fruits without su-
gar.
2. Cook dried fruits without ad-
ditional sugar; they already con-
tatin sugar.
3. Can more fruit without sugar;
put up fewer jams ana Jellies.
4. I'se less sugar in tea an<
coffee; von will soon learn to like
It better.
5. Avoid such sugar luxuries as
candy, cakos. chewing gum. sweet
drinks and sodas.
6. Use bonny, maple sugar and
syrups and other sweeteners when
available.
7. Cut ont nil desserts or other
dishes that require much su^ir.
WHY MUST I USE ONLY TWO
POUNDS OF* SUGAR A MONTH?
Seven way* for short Supplies.
1. Our great war program "has
reduced ofir sugar-carrying flwt.
2. The sugar requirements tf
our overseas Army are rery large.
3. Our own sugar crop U less
than we expected.
4 The small island, Cuba, must
feed the world with sugar.
5. We have diverted 50,000 tons
of sugar shipping in order thai Bel-
gium should have food.
6. Germans have destroyed su-
gar beot fields and factories lu
Sorthern France and tlaly.
7. More than 50.000,000 pounds
of sugar have been sunk off our
shores by Herman submarines
We are giving our work, our time
and our money, but "They" are giving
their lives.
Give your neighbor a lift —* .
Elderly Lady Wasted One Whole
Afternoon, and Finally Gave
Up Task in Despair. •
"Gosh! I wish I was—not a Belgian '
—but a pole; not a native of l'oluuil.
but n tall, slim willowy pole, that
could drape herself in the ready-made
dresses which the stores are selling
now, or, rather, offering for sale, for
If every one has my luck, not many 1
Bales are made," i.aid the matronly one j
to her street car companion.
"I am fair (gray), fat and forty (bust
measure), and the other day I went
downtown to buy a—wash dress, we
used to call them, now you ask for a
tub frock. Well, I asked for them and
that was about all. One saleswoman
showed me what she called a simple
little gingham (it looked like the on;s
the nurses wear) for $19.75, and auoth-
er which she said was of hotter quality
for $25. I was prepared to pay the
price, hut I didn't like the gowns. It
was the same way at the other stores
Every thing that was attractive was
only In the smaller sizes.'
"There was one stmpiy made geor
xotte crepe that I thought might b'
becoming to my matronly style, bui
\\l\m I inquired about it, it was a si?.
•Wen-year size. 'Do you 'have I? lu ..
sixty-year?' I asked, but the clerk ig
nored my query.
"I met numerous other women aboui
my build and age during the afteruoo::
at different stores—some of them s«.
often that we grew quite chummy, bur
I don't suppose they fared any better
than I did. I finally met one I knew
and I said to her: 'You might as well
go home. They don't make 'em for us."
"I also looked for a small georgette
hat (they had been advertised), and
the clerk said: 'Yes, we have them, but
you wouldn't want one with friuge ou
it.' She was right. I wouldn't.
"I shopped from 12 o'clock to 5:30
and came home bearing with me the
two articles : had been able to find in
my size—a hair net and a belt. Really
a comfortable costume for hot weather,
but hardly suitable for a fat lady sixty
years old."—Indianapolis News.
After
buildir gs
. t:-airs the\
Loobi
Your
L.ooKmg
over and notng what'
THE CHEERFUL CHERUB
Fly mind is Full oF
little tkoucjkts
About my clotKe.5 ^.rvd
tills t^ncf svcK^——
I wonder could I
.strain them out
Uould wk-^t wa.s leFt
amount "to
muck?
ail need, drive down to our ^~4'
^ rds Mid 'o id up with our reliable build- .
ing materials. |
r J
r g^tr you Quaiity and service at Li e
and Let Prices. ^
Hollis, Okla.
'31 CO.
J
u1 'ikon.0 j-'it
<f < s, t;: , • s
ni wounds ti.« I T
• EATVENT h mo-i! im r *
t When an EFFICIENT «m-
p app'ie4 nrn,v t t1' , ti. v<
s • -<> Ihim.:. r f '«vti< n a; • i •
<l> ben n to Ii"hI a or.- .
• r ;se on man or beast, 1
: )NE IP the IDtiAL AN 11
EPTlCand HEADING A -:EN,1
uv it no * . nd rta r n
nvr, ene\ So'.i H -tlis D't.'t
I
THE CHEERFUL OIERUB
Altkou^k misfortunes
jt.r my soul
Tkey really skouldnt
kotker me
Tkey re incidents -
^ a.lontf tke strblF
Im taking
tkrougk
Eternity.
Dr. J. S. McF aiin
Surgifi", Eve. Ear, Nose, throat
work a =d hionic Diseases gives
pe^ial t tetitijn.
Hollis, Okla.
When the chest fevls o.i tire
at d the throat burns, you have
ii'dineslior, and y :i n-ed HER-
HINE to t lid of the dis-
•vreeable feolin". I' dri-'esnut
(>adly digested food, stre.nyUiors
the stomach and purifies the
bowels. Sold by Hollis Drug Co.
rthy Bar.k otticiau utt Gray.
"By the way. Jit... Sinai;, that check
you deposited the other ,1uy came back
marked.'No funds.'" "Oh, thanks! I
won't deposit^it this time. I'll fffh it
bstead. '—Life.
I
Daily Thought.
| A single grateful thought turned
heavenward Is the most perfect prayer.
—Lesslng.
CE2SHE? .-'^SPILLS
DIAMOND
BRANO
Nance Oil Co. handles only
best of oils.
LADIES I
Aak r nr rur*l«t for Cnt-CHRS-TER •> ,
DIAMOND BI - ' '
Cold metal'.!
Ribbon. '
BmwUt i ...
DI AUOm BR )V PTI.T.R, |->r twrrtT-6W
years repsrdeU as U«st,Safest, Always Reliable.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
SUB, EVERYWHERE iSSSS,
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Bell, J. Fred. Harmon County Tribune (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1918, newspaper, October 31, 1918; Hollis, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc233691/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.