Harmon County Tribune (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1918 Page: 3 of 5
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T • R IT M IT
com-
i those
d twen
earn
id con-
United
•y must
o gives
rto
11>#
for
home
A QUIET PLACE TO READ
IHIMHIPI—Mil ill|l,i|iII,i|i1IW,i WBBKm
HAS A BIG JOB
PILES—RUPTURE
RECTAL
DISEASES Cum! Without
Surgery by njy
■III ■ IIIBPAT IIPTIIAR no hospital—no operation—no detention from
Rllkl HIHCVI ItltinVH business. Curable cases guaranteed. Consulta-
tion and examination Free. 20 j cars' continuous practice in Kansas City.
iAIIf Free at office or sent pealed. ITours: From 0 u. m. to 3 p. m. Even-
rWVH ings: Mondays, Wednesdays and .Fridays, C to 8.
SUNDAYS AND HOIJDAYS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. •
Republic Building, Tenth and
Watoot Mt«,, Kwuiu city. Hi
OlJilllaiS AiXil UULi l' l 15 15 X A|.frVM
,*J, HENDERSON; M.D-
■MOW City, Mo,
i ini. nmagy
NOTICE
Hprses. Mules and little Mares,
Vanted, broke or unbroke. From
$15 up to as good as grows.
We will buy any day.
Hollis, Okia.
EXHIBITS ARE MADE LIFELIKE
Mounting of Natural History Objects
In Their Native Surroundings
Add to Their Interest.
la the development of the modern
museum three stages hnve been recog-
nised—that of the collection of ob-
jects for record, that of supplying ma-
terials for research and that of ap-
plying the collections to public educa-
tion. The educational Idea Is now be-
ing developed by Instructive display
arrangement, loan exhibits for public
and private schools and special lec-
tures. The most notable feature is the
mounting of natural history ob-
jects in the midst of their native sur-
roundings, and much attention Is be-
ing given nt large museums—such a 3
the American Museum of Natural His-
tory of New York—to grouping ani-
mals In their natural environment of
shrubs, trees, flowers, rocks and oth-
er objects. In the new exhibition
halls of t^e museum of the California
Academy of Sciences, the case for a
large mammal or bird habitat group
Is 25 feet, long, 12 deep and 18 high,
with a plate glass front 15 feet long
and 10 high. Each of the two halls—
one devoted entirely to California
mammals and the other to California
birds—Is 180 feet long by 00 wide and
11 of the large cases have been placed
In the mammal hall with six In the
bird hall. Skylight Illumination gives
greater brightness In the cases than
outside, preventing troublesome re-
flection from the glass. As a repre-
sentative group may be taken that of
the San Joaquin valley elk, a species
of deer now preserved In a few reser-
vations, and this Is shown by several
Individuals standing or crouching in
the grass near tree-bordered water,
with low hills In the distance, the
painted backgrou d seeming a con-
tlMntlon of the real scenery.
If v if <*hi!d is pale and si ■ <iv,
.•ks at the nose, starts in the
M.n ' srri' d Ui" let-Lh while
<1 --oinpr, it is a sure sign of
worms. A remedy for the r.
parasites will be found in
w;SITE'S CREAM VERM I
• 1 - ^ It •> \t on'v c!ea"9 nut the
:<jr it rest<• **>.« hea-th
het'rf- t.rss. Price25c ner
sold • uliis Druuf < o.
A Good Residesc?. tc
Refit See Jno.i'etamar
at
T 1
a r
'sr-frr.
\ ' . • • : S•< ,
G. S. Bilheimer.
ti. S. Bilheimer of Denver, Colo., lias
•eon appointed Southern department'
cnmpnign director for (he next big
drive for funds to continue the war
work being done by the Red Triangle
forces In the army camps of the United
.States and overseas, army Y. M. <>. a.,'
the \. W. C. A., the Wur Camp Com-
munity Service, the Salvation Army,
•!te National Catliolle War council, the
American Library association ami the
Jewish Welfare board.
Mr. HUhetiner Is one of the foremost
men In the Y. M. C. A. movement,
ile is a member of the International
• ommlttee oi' (he organization. t, inein.
I «r of the National \\j r Work council
and a master organluei and executive, i
He successfully directed the last army
Y. M. C. A. drive for the Southern de-
partment. comprised of Texas, Arkan-
sas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arizona and
New Mexico, and was unanimously
chosen for the larger responsibility of
the approaching campaign, during
which the country will be called upon-
to support the Y. M. C. A. and other!
important way work agencies.
.Mr. Bilheimer will be located at'
Dallas during the campaign period. He
will have an able corps of assistants'
and specialists on his staff to carry
< ut the various activities connected!
with a campaign of the magultnde of'
the forthcoming financial drive,
Mr. Bilheimer was chosen to direct'
the entire United War Work campaign'
for funds to finance the work of ihe
seven war work agencies because of
his successful experience and his un- j
usual ability. His selection came dl- :
rect from the Now York headquarters
of the consolidated campaign, with the
solid approval of the people of the •
six Southwestern states, who are under I
his leadership, to furnish their part
of the jJ170.5p0,Q<rH) which the nation
will be called on to contribute between
November 11 and 18.
A valuable dressing for flesh
wound?, burns, scalds, old sorep.
rash, ohafed skin, is BAL-
LARD'S SNOW LINIMENT,
<t is both healing and antiseptic'
Sold by Hollis Drug Co.
ECZEMA REMEDY
POSITIVELY the best remedy fuv
fhat dread disease Eczema. Also
Itch, Barber's Itch, Ringworm, Toe
Itch, Sweaty, Galdea or Bad
Smelling Feet. Price $1.00.
*MANKIN'S DANDRUFF
REMEDY and hair tonic abso*
lutely REMOVES the Dandruff,
prevents the hair (ailing out, also
stops all itching on first applies
iion. Price $1.00. 9
MANKIN'S HEALING SALVE
has no equal for old sores, car-
buncles, Inflamation of any kind,
Etc. Price 50 cents.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
OR MONEY REFUNDED
The above ai tides for sale by all firs!
dass Druggists.
• THE MANKiN REMEDY CO, *
Oklahoma City, U. S. K
frade
-ti- — -
For the best of oil see
Nance Oil Co.
The properly of the McBride Coal Com-
pany at Hollis. Consisting of Four 50ft.
Lots, Warehouse, office, scales and loo ft.
of Coal Bins.
Will give I 2 months time or will trade
for Farm or other property.
Will take a good Ford Car on same
C. E. SMITH, Erick, Okla.
PLENTY TO DO AND EVERYBODY DOING IT
Every man for himself and devil take the lonesomest. Is, apparently, the philosophy of Uncle Sam's soldier bova
In the great military camps where they arc undergoing Intensive (raining for the real' thing "over there" Here in
a typical scene in an a,-my Y. M. <\ A. bulldlnfi an hour or two before the formal entertainment begin* On tit.
stage one of ihc boys i:i khaki is leading an Informal "slug song." About two score of the fellows are up there will*
him. and n must be a pretty good song, for it can be seen that about half the crowd in the building is facing the
music. But this doesn't disturb the nine or ten checker games, seen In the foreground, in the least nor does It get
the goat of the scores of fellows wh«> are grabbing a few minutes in which to write to the folks at home The man In
the extreme right front of the picture has received a newspaper from "the little old town back there " while the bov
seen standing In the v ery center of the picture plainly ad mils himself to be either on a "point" or on a "pose"—it's
nobody'" business which. The V. M. C. A. huts are the soldiers' dubs, churches, homes and whatever else they want
to make them. The principal cantonments of the country contain from ten lo twenty large "Y" buildings to nav
nothing of the huts overseas and outposts on the Mexican border, '
HOT BROTH FOR "BUDDIE"
Z
OA we
Hot broth is always welcomed by our ineij "over there." hat when It Is served by a "regular Ainerlcnn woina.;
jt Is doubly welcome. Photo above was taken at a French Hold hospital "somewhere in France," and shows
M. C. A. canteen girls serving th< convalescents. "Sow.-thing to wnrm you up a bit, huddle," heard at the o^ter
edge of a tent is sure to bring instant response from the inside of the tent. The American Red Cross nurses, Salvn-
J;°n/my lassies and Y. M. C. A. canteen girls hold them-elves in readiness for any and every kind of service,
them (3'e" ,H glll<i l° ^ them' whatevor ,he,r lll,ssl" - f'"" '"'lug Americans, it is good Just to feast one's eyes on
! THE ARMY MAN'S BANK
S3
A bonking hour in a Y. M. C. A. building of a Southern deparfineut camp. The army "Y" Is the soldier's flnaiw
jclal agent; it takes his savings und deposits them for him in a local city bank; It sells him Thrift stamps; it Issues*
him express money orders, and In certain cases keeps money and valuables for him temporarily in the building.:
One "Y" man in each building Is authorized to act as the agent of the express company to Issue money orders t<*
the soldiers. The banking service nud the Thrift stamp sab s encourage the army man to save his money, and this lat
I made more possible by the free comforts, conveniences and entertainments offered by the Y. M. C. A |
THE CHEERFUL CHERUB
fly $Kdr ?S5 conquers
every woe.
Thouoh poor e^rvcf
3nrk*fcJ 1 I $5rope.
Through life t. song
is in my het^rt —
I'm th^nkf-ui for
R/VC*"" i
the Cheerful cherub
V/Ken people, wetr
lon^Kt red t^n
It- ^rt>"tes upon my
nerves
As vken subvrt^rv
trolley ct.rs
Go screeching
round the
curves.
RTC*""
THE CHEERFUL CHERUB
I'm Ftrtoo uje.d to
bein^ smtxt —
I jit. tlone tnd think
so much
I rr\is/ hrtA/e thought
some clever tkou^hts
I didnt recognize
such!
■M
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Bell, J. Fred. Harmon County Tribune (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1918, newspaper, November 7, 1918; Hollis, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc234069/m1/3/: accessed May 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.