Tyrone Observer. (Tyrone, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 23, 1909 Page: 2 of 12
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their wedding journey.
I
STATE
CAPITAL
"Waiter, when are you going to
bring us that roast chicken?"
"Why, you've already eaten your
dinner, sir!"
jThen bring we the check!"
"But you've already paid, sir!"
AGONIZING ITCHING.
Eczema for a Year—Got No Relief
Even at Skin Hospital—In Despair
Until Cutlcura Cured Him.
"I was troubled with a severe itch-
Ing and dry, scrufy skin on my ankles,
feet, arms and scalp. Scratching made
It worse. Thousands of small red pim-
Pie. formed and these caused intense
Itching. I was advised to go to the
hospital for diseases of the skin. I did
bo, the chief surgeon saying: "I never
saw such a bad case of eczema." But I
got little or no relief. Then I tried many
w-called remedies, but I became so
bad that I almost gave up in despair.
After suffering agonies for twelve
months I was relieved of the almost
unbearable itching after two or three
applications of Cuticura Ointment. I
continued its use, combined with Cuti-
cura Soap and Pills, and I was com-
pletely cured. Henry Searle, Little
Rock, Ark., Oct. 8 and 10, 1907."
Potter Drag * Chem. Corp., Bole Propg. Boston.
The Exception.
In a home where the mother is
ficmewbat aggressive and the father
good-natured and peace-loving, a
child's estimate of home conditions
was tersely expressed the other day
While dressing, the mother paused in
the act of putting on her shoes and
said: "I certainly am easy on shoes,
I have worn these for four months. I
don't know what you would do, John
If I were not. I am easy on every-
thing." The little girl looked up from
her dolls and remarked: "Except
father. —Success.
items
Guthrie, Okla.
Gllstrap Named Captain.
Governor Haskell appointed and
commissioned H. B. Gilstrap of Chand-
ler captain of the company of okja-
homa National Guards located there.
Earl Howard Paroled.
Governor Haskell paroled Earl How
art, convicted in Grady county of vio-
lating the prohibitory law and sen-
tenced to ninety days on the roads
and to pay $300 fine. The parole was
recommended by practically every
minister in Chickasha. Howard s pa-
role was recommended some time ago
by the pardon board, but refused at
that time by the governor.
Important to Mothers.
carefully every bottle of
«7 fOKI A' a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over fto Years!
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Tabbed and Filed!
Mrs. Crawford—You must love vour
husband very dearly if JOu save all
the letters he sends you while you're
in the country.
Mrs. Crabshaw—I'm keeping them
tor comparison, my dear. I'm sure to
<atch him in a lie.—Judge.
Accounted For.
Landlady—This is a bronze turkey.
Starboard—Ah, I see; survivor from
the bronze age.
Another Grand Jury.
The legal barrier which had existed
to the calling of another grand jurv
m Oklahoma county was removed
when Chief Justice Kane, at the
quest of District Judge George W.
Clark, set the dates for a term of
court in Oklahoma county beginning
January 3 and continuing until April 2.
The call for a grand jury was not is-
sued "because the terra dates had not
been set.
Cannot Inspect Scales.
In an opinion to a milling company
at Kingfisher, Attorney General
Charles West states that neither the
state grain inspector nor his deputies
have any authority to inspect scale?.
The milling company submitted let-
ters received from a deputy inspector
urging the cotrfvany to submit to an
inspection of its scales. The attorney
general holds that the deputy had no
authority to make such a request.
8UFFERED TERRIBLY.
How Relief from Distressing Kidney
Trouble Was Found.
Mrs. Elizabeth Wolf, 388 W. Morgan
St., Tipton, Mo., says: "Inflammation
of the bladder
reached its climax
last spring and I suf-
fered terribly. My
back ached and
pained so I could
hardly get around
and the secretions
were scanty, fre
quent of passage
and painful. I was
tired all the time and very nervous I
began using Doan's Kidney Pills, and
after taking a few boxes was cured
and have been well ever since."
Remember the name—Doan's. Sold
by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster
Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y
LEW18' "SINGLE BINDER/*"
A hand-made cigar fresh from th«
table, wrapped in foil, thus keeping
fresh until smoked. A fresh cigar
made of good tobacco is the ideal
smoke. The old, well cured tobaccos
used are so rich in quality that many
who formerly smoked 10c cigars now
smoke Lewis* Single Binder Straight
5c. Lewis' Single Binder costs the
dealer some more than other 5c cigars,
but the higher price enables this fac-
tory to use extra quality tobacco.
, There are many imitations; don't be
! fooled. There is no substitute! Tell
the dealer you want a Lewis "Single
Binder."
Our idea of heaven is a place big
enough to make it possible for people
to be without neighbors.
Stated In Cold Figures.
It costs on an average about $250
to cure an incipient consumptive or
to care for an advanced Vase of tuber-
culosis until death. If he is left in des-
titute circumstances without proper
attention he will surely infect with
his disease at least two other persons,
and possibly more. Considering that
the average life is worth to society
in dollars and cents about $1,500, the
net loss which would accrue to a com-
munity by not treating its poor con-
sumptives in proper institutions would
be, for each case, including those who
are unnecessarily infected, at the very
lowest figure, $4,250. On this basis, if I
the poor consumptives in the United
States who are now sick were segre-
gated from their families, and either
kept in institutions until they died, or
else cured of their disease, the sav-
ing to the country would be the enor-
mous sum of $1,275,000,000
Mr*. AVInslow's Soothing Symp.
I For children teething, softens the gum*, reduces Id
flainmatlon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 85c a bottle.
It's one thing to run into debt and
another to crawl out
and
Better a poor marTaMarge than a
rich man in jail.
Big List of Names..
Initiative petitions containing 63,335
names, gotten up by the federation of
commercial clubs of the state, pray-
ing for a vote on an amendment to the
constitution of Oklahoma giving rail-
roads authority to acquire or build ad-
ditional lines and to secure right of
way by condemnation proceedings
have been filed with the secretary of
state.. The petitioners represent ev-
ery county in the state and numiber
2o,333 above the legal requirement..
His Retort.
Newzance—Do you know, young
man, that five out of six people who
suffer from heart trouble have brought
it upon themselves through the filthy
habit of smoking?
Karmley Really! And possibly you
are aware that nine out of ten people ^
who suffer from black eyes can trace BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS
the complaint to a habit of not mind -
Ing their own business.—Pearson's
Weekly.
S ...
El\x\r<j$ex\wa
Cleanses the System
* i EjjectuaWy
Dispels colds and Headaahes
[ dwsVo CowsWpaVvon;
Ac\s waUxraXVy, \vu\y as
a LaxaVwt ■
Bes^ov MenWoxnen avv&Ctuli-
veu-youn^ and 0\4.
To get VVs beneJxtVoV ejfec\s.
always buy \Yte Qox\u\we<.
n*ai\ufoctuned by the
CALIFORNIA
Fig Syrup Ca
Z5 "Guaran^
In the Northwest.
Secretary Ed. O. Cassidy, of the
school land department, confirmed the
announcement previously made that
the sale of the new college lands, lo-
cated in the extreme northwestern
part of the state, would commence
about May 1. The sale of indemnity
lands has commenced at Chandler,
and will be concluded on March 8.
Some little time will necessarily be
required between that date and the
opening of the sale of the indemnity
lands.
Fecr Increase in Rates.
Oklahoma business men, mill op°r->-
tors, dealers in sand, coal, brick, lum-
ber and other building materials, are
here from various parts of the state
making affidavits that if there is an-
materials increase in Oklahoma freigfti
rates their business will be so restrict-
ed as to be practically ruined. Attor-
ney General West is securing the affi-
davits and forwarding them to St
Uuis for use in defending the pqesert
Oklahoma freight rates against tht
injunction suits brought bv the rail
roads in the U. S. circuit court
It is said that a cat has nine lives
but a cat isn't in it with an old cow
when it comes to kicking the bucket.
HABIT'S CHAIN
Certain Habits Unconsciously Formed
and Hard to Break.
one size only, regular price 50*per bottle
westesh cfihada
Afhat Governor Deneen, of Illinois,
Says About It: 9
governor Deneen. of Illinois, owns a sen.
fc^t,on °'^rirKay5
An ingenious philosopher estimates
that the amount of will power neces-
sary to break a life-long habit would
If it could be transformed, lift a weight
of many tons.
It sometimes requires a higher de-
gree of heroism to break the chains of
a pernicious habit than to lead a for-
lorn hope in a bloody battle. A lady
writes from an Indiana town:
"From my earliest childhood I was a
lover of coffee. Before I was out of my
teens I was a miserable dyspeptic, suf- j
fering terribly at times with my stom-
ach.
"I was convinced that it was coffee :
that was causing the trouble and yet
I could not deny myself a cup for I
breakfast. At the age of 36 I was in
very poor health, indeed. My sister
told me I was in danger of becoming I
a coffee drunkard.
'•But I never could give up drinking
coffee for breakfast, although it kept
me constantly ill, until I tried Postum.
I learned to make it properly according
to directions, and now we can hardly
do without Pcstum for breakfast, and
care nothing for coffee.
"I am no longer troubled with dys-
pepsia, do not have spells of suffering
with my stomach that used to trouble
me so when I drank coffee."
Look in pkgs. for the little book "The
Road to Wellville." "There's a Reason "
totU:?.u,ne' tn,e- -d ^
m
an interview:
esp* ffisfos,'
i° arePoct£in acros8
the boundary in thou-
sands, and I have not yet
met one who admitted
he had made a mistake.
They are all doing well.
There is scarcely ■ com-
munity in the Middle ?r
WMtcna States that has
§^tcTe^?X^.AhbS:
125 Million Bushels of
Wheat in 1303
f°r
er * 17() ooo.ooofoo lu cnsl, "
_JTreo Uomentcadnof 160 acres
If Ml
mttps
Pf^nph'et ' J,ant Wp*t, ••
aSd low "enle™'Savit?ble •O0Mti<;n
&TiOSSWSt oWwl0
Vaa" or to Canadian Gov't^-eat.'
J. S. CRAWFORD
• Nin,h Street, Kansas City, Mo.
address nearest you.) [1]
Best for Baby and Best for Mother
CURE
TO EtST m
Is fine for children and adults, very pleasant
to take and free from opiates, it soothes
and heals the achmg throat and assures restiul
nights to both mother and child.
All Druvgicu, 25 cents.
k
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Tyrone Observer. (Tyrone, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 23, 1909, newspaper, December 23, 1909; Tyrone, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc272543/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.