Tyrone Observer. (Tyrone, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 16, 1910 Page: 2 of 12
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Reasoning of Youthful Mind.
A schoolmistress whose hair was
of (he blackest hue, was one day giv-
ing a lespon on a coal mine to a class
in Suffolk, England. To make the les*i
son Interesting as possible she went
on to say she had herself been in a
coal mine. A little lad put up his
hand, and when pointed to said:
"Please, teacher, is that what made
your hair so black?"
TWO-CENT FARE DEAD LETTER
GNAT CAUSES PELLAGRA.
FEDERAL COURT LETS OUT ROCK
ISLAND AND FRISCO.
Btatk or Ohio Crrr or Tout do. i
Licas COL'.VTT. f ss"
Ffuxk J. Cramer roak« oath that he Is senior
parti; r of the ftrm of f. j. Cheney A Co.. doing
m the City of Toledo, County Bnd stats
nforesald, and that said firm will [jay thr sum of
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every
r ise of Catarrh that caaDot be cured by the use ai
11 all's Cavankh cuke.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence
this 6th day of December. A. D.. 1886.
j w■ gleason.
I t Notary Pvbi.io.
Mall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and arts
directly ujion the blood and mucous surface* of tha
system. Send for testimonials, free.
f. J. CHENEY 4 co.. Toledo, a
Sold by all DruKirlsu. 75c.
TaXc null's Family Fills for constipation.
Comprised Together Approximately
Half of the Trackage in the
State of Oklahoma.
Harvard College.
This celebrated institootion is pleas-
antly situated in the barroom of Par-
ker's. in School street, and has poopils | temporary injunction
from all over the country. I had a let- Oklahoma rates.
Guthre.—The lines of the Rock Is-
land and Frisco systems in Oklaaoma,
comprising together approximately
one-half of the trackage in the st^te,
passed out from under the two-cent
passenger and freight rates by an
order of Judge W. C. Hook of the
Unied States circuit court of appeals,
transmitted here to Circuit Clerk Har-
ry L. Finley, granting the railroads a
against the
ter yes'd'y, by the way, from our
mootual son, Artemus, Jr., who is at
Uowdoin college, in Maine. He writes
me that he i3 a Bowdoin Arab. & is it
c\im to this? Is this boy as I nurtured
with a parent's care into his child-
hood's hour—is he goin' to be a grate
American humorist? Alars, I fear it is
too troo. Why didn't I bind him out
to the Patent Travelin Vegetable Pil
Man, as was struck with his appear-
ance at our last county fair, & wanted
him to go with him and be a Pillist?
Ar, these boys—they little know how
the old folks worrit about 'em—From
Life's Reprint From Artemus Ward.
A Cynical Synonym.
"Poor Myra Kelley," said a maga-
zine editor at the Authors' club in
New York, "was almost as distressed
as Mr. Carnegie at the spirit of graft
and crookcdnoss rampant among us.
"The young writer, at a dinner of
magazine contributors, said that we
worshiped wealth—that was our trou-
ble. Then she crystallized her mean-
ing in an anecdote.
"She said that one man asked an-
other:
" 'What position does Blank hold in
the community?'
" 'A very honorable position,' was
the reply.
"'Is he wealthy?'
" 'Wealth and honor,' said the other,
'are synonymous terms in America to-
day.' "
The Rock Island and Frisco sys-
tems filed suit after the Santa Fe and
Katy had won their temporary injunc-
tions. The grounds alleged by the
Frisco and Rock Island are substan-
tially the same as those on which the
first ro^ds attacked the state rates,
viz.: that they were confiscatory.
Practically all the railroads of trie
state are now cut from under the
state freight rates and two-cent pas-
senger rate. The Santa Fe, Frisco,
Rock Island, Katy, Midland Valley
and Kansas City Southern obtained
temporary injunctions; the Iron
Mountain now has an injunction for
such an injunction pending with Judge
Committee on Oisea&d in Europe Says
Corn Is Not to Blame.
London, May 34.—Dr. Sambon, a
member of the Field committee which
has been investigating the disease
pellagra, telegraphs from Rome that
the committee has definitely proved
that maifce* or Indian corn is not the
cause of pellagra.
The committee finds that the para-
j eltic conveyor of the disease is the
"simulium repans," a species of biting
gnat.
At the Bovine Faucets.
"I sent my little boy on his first visit
to the country last week," said a Wash-
ington Heights milk dealer. "Although
my boyhood was passed on the old
farm, Willie has grown to the age of
eight in the city. He had been watch-
ing Uncle Hezekiah milk the cow on
his first evening, and when he re-
turned to the house his aunt asked
him:'
" 'Is Uncle Hezzie through milking
yet, Willie?'
'"Not yet,' answered Willie. 'He
has finished two faucets and has just
begun on the other two.'"
Still a Chance.
"Have you ever loved and lost?"
asked the sweet young thing.
, "Not yet," replied the man who had
been divorced three times.
The grandeur of life may come
through its combats, but its sweetness
comes through the cheery portal of
content.—Robert Collyer.
Lewis' Single Binder 5c cigar equals
in quality most lOc cigars.
When a man dries up like a mummy
he usually thinks he is a saint.
His Pull.
"Does that 'ere thin, stoop-shoul-
dered, dyspeptic-lookin' drummer that
you bought so much from today sell
any better or cheaper gobds than the
fat one ye turned down so hard yester-
day?" inquired Hi Spry.
"D' know as he does," confessed the
Squam Corners merchant, "but his
views on the criminal rapacity of the
trusts are a whole lot sounder."—
Puck.
HEALTH
His Excellence.
"I tell you," said one man to an-
Hook. I he lesser roads, such as the other as they emerged from the dimly
Wichita Falls and Northwestern, tue lighted corridor of a concert hall, "I
K. ( . M. & O., the M. O. & O., the Ok- j envy that fellow who was singing."
lahoma Central, the Fort Smith and "Envy him!" echoed the other
Western, the C. O. & W., have been j "Well, if I were going to envy a sing-
exempted from the two-cent passen- er I'd select somebody with a better
ger rate by the state corporation com- voice. His was about the poorest I
mission. The Midland Valley was ex- ever heard."
empted by the state also, but got a "It's not his voice I envy, man,"
fedral injunction in addition on ac- was the reply. "It's his tremendous
count of competitive rates.
courage."—Ladies' Home Journal.
The Bald-Headed Man.
"The wife's clothes must match the
husband's hair this year."
"That's all right; my wife's dresses
are always decollette."
The fact that Hostett-
er's Stomach Bitters has
helped thousands of sickly
people back to health during
the past 56 years should
convince you that it is the
i medicine you n^ed for Indi-
gestion & Stomach Ills,
WESTERN CANADA
What Prof. Shaw, the Weil-Known Agri-
culturist, Says About It:
The deeper love's roots the less It
runs to flowers of rhetoric.
A Taste
A Smile
And satisfaction to the last
mouthful—
Post
T oasties
There's pleasure in every
package. A trial will show
the fascinating flavour.
Served right from the pack-
age with cream or mi'.k and
sometimes fruit — fresh
FEED CHILDREN
On Properly Selected Food.
Big Dividends.
It Pays
IB
stewed
or
"The Memory Lingers"
Pkgs. 10c and 15c.
Sold by Grocers.
Postum Cereal <.,o., L'd.
Battle Creek, Mich.
After the Pullman Company.
Attorney General West has filed be-
fore the interstate commerce commis-
sion at Washington applicatfon for a
hearing in an effort to compel the
Pullman Sleeping Car company to re-
duce its charges for the use of the
upper berths below that charged for
lower berths. In addition to the Pull-
man company, the Santa Fe, Southern
Pacific, International and Great North- j
ern. Trinity and Brazos Valley, Rock If parents will give just a little In-
Island, Frisco and Missouri, Kansas telligent thought to the feeding of
and Texas Railway companies are their children the difference in the
made defendants. health of the little folks will pay,
many times over, for the small trouble.'
A mother writes saying: "Our chil-
Admits Grandfather Clause Petitions, dren are all so much better and
Holding the petitions recently filed Wronger than they ever were before
by the Democrats initiating a grand- ma^e a change in the character of
father clause amendment to the con- * e ^00<^ ^Q have quit using pota-
stitution were regular and contained *oes three-times a day with coffee
the reuisite number of names, Secre- an,fvS0 muc^ roeat.
tary of State Cross overruled the pro- . w. &*ve the little folks some
tests of Republicans and Socialists *ru^ Cither fresh stewed, or canned,
filed against the petition recently. ! sPme Grape-Nuts with cream, occa-
This action opens the way for a vote S1°na^> some soft boiled eggs, and
on the grandfathr clause at the No- some Postum for breakfast and sup-
vember election if a special election Per- Then for dinner they have some
be not calld meeanwhile to vote on aU(* 1 e&etables.
this and other pending propositions. ' ^ould *>e hard to realize the
change in the children, they have
grown so sturdy and strong, and we
attribute this change to the food ele-
ments that, I understand, exist ir.
Grape-Nuts and Postum.
"A short time ago my baby was
teething and had a great deal of stom-
ach and bowel trouble. Nothing
seemed to agree with him until I tried
Grape-Nuts softened and mixed with
rich milk, and he improved rapidly and
got sturdy and well."
Read "The Road to Wellville," found
in pkgs. "There's a reason."
Ever road the above letter? A new
« ne appear* from time to time. They
•.re Kenulue. true, aud full of Siumuia
For a New Boys' Dormitory.
At a meeting of the state board of
agriculture the college committee was
authorized to advertise for bids fui
the erection of a boys' dormitory at
the Connell school of agriculture at
Helena, to cost $6,000. The proposed
new building will accommodate from
75 to 100 students. The board has ar-
ranged to secure warrants amounting1
to $30,000 to pay contractors on esti
mates submitted covering work ii
progress on new buildings at the vari
ous agricultural schools.
S?nA
I would sooner raise cnttle in Western
Canada thnn in the cora belt of
the United States. Feed
is cheaper and climate
better for the purpose.
Your market will im-
prove faster than your
farmers will produce the
supplies. Wheat can bo
grown up to the &ith iiar-
allel (SOU zuiies north of
the International bound-
aryl. Your vacant land
will be taken at a rate
beyond present concep-
tion.' e hnve enough
people in the United
Btates alone who want
homes to take up this land." Nearly
79,000 Americans
win enter and make tlieir homes
In W estern Canada this year.
1!)09 produced another large
crop of wheat, oats and barley.
In addition to which the cattle
exports was an immense item.
Cattle raising, dairying, mixed
farming and grain growing in the
provinces of Manitoba, Saskat-
chewan and Alberta.
Free homestead and pre-emp-
tion areas, as well as lands heid
by railway and Jand compnnies, will
provide homes for million*.
Adaptable soil, healthful cll-
xnate, splendid school* and
churches, and good railways,
tr * or settlers* rotes, descriptive
literature Last Best West." how
to reach the country and other par-
ticnlars, write to Snp't of Immi-
gration, Ottawa, Canada, or to the
Uonndiaa Government Agent.
J. S. CRAWFORD
Ho. 125 W. Ninth Street, Kansas City, Mo.
(Use address nearest you). (2i
iP5 p Send postal for
h ff1 IP Free Package
i 3 I ia ira ol Paxtine.
Better and more economical
tban liquid antiseptics
FOR AIJL "iTOlUET USES.
I
Gives one a sweet breath; clean, white,
germ-free teeth—antiseptically clean
mouth and throat—purifies the breath
after smoking—dispels all disagreeable
perspiration and body odors—much ap-
preciated by dainty women. A quick
remedy for sore eyes and catarrh.
A little Paxtine powder dis-
solved in a glass of hot water
makes a delightful antiseptic so-
lution, possessing extraordinary
cleansing, germicidal and heal-
ing power, and absolutely harm-
less. Try a Sample. 50c. a
laige box at drufgiits or by mail.
Paxton «"oilet Co., Boston. Mass.
ft
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Tyrone Observer. (Tyrone, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 16, 1910, newspaper, June 16, 1910; Tyrone, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc272604/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.