The Greer County Democrat (Mangum, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, January 16, 1914 Page: 3 of 10
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GREER COUNTY DEMOCRAT. MANGUM. OKLA.
TAKES OFF DANDRUFF ouwtwt «*s win s hqnoerful crowtk if
IT
I
HAIR STOPS MUM
ttrtc) Try TM N«k«i Hair TMck,
GliMi f\ # ••awllful-N#
M*r« OUHtNf tcalpu
Wltfcili IM miaul** after an •pptv
rat lob of H d r n* ytnt cannot Bt4 I
|it«lr ir r vt 4a ltd ruff or falling hair ■
and jronr cal|> *ill not iteh but what
• ill pkaM >"« tooat will b« afiar a J
fa* u a. * hen you *#>• m«
balr. fina and do n at Drat rem • but
raally na h*ir—gro lag all otar tba
Mil
A lliil* P 4«rin« lannrdlatalf dnu |
bias Ilia b#aut> of jour hair No dlf- !
farvnra tow dull fad«d. brlitla and |
Bermggy, Ju i tnolaton a rW>th villi
Dander in* and carefully draw It
through your hair, taking ona small
atrand at a time Th* affect In amaa-
Ing your balr will ba light, fluffy and
wavy, and ban an appearance of
abundance: an Incomparable luatar.
ao fines* and lusurlanca
Oat a tS cent bottle of Knowlton'a
Danderlne from any atora. and pro*#
that your hair la aa pretty and aoft
pa any that it baa Wu neglected or
Injured by raroleaa treatment--ihat'a
•II—you aurely. ran have beautiful balr
and lotfc of It If you will juat try • lit-
tle Danderlne Adv
•MAOOWI O' COMINO tv|ST(
'an
i '• lula i
d a
THE CARAOUN WEST
Hie Cities of Western Canada
Reflect the Growth of the
Country.
The
iab on
(bat tin
TI
WRIGLEYSw
SPEARMINT
soothes your throat! (
Oidn't Pan Out.
Mra. Macon—What became of your
flreleaa cooker you thought ao rau< h
of?
Mra. Kgbert—Oh. I "Bred" It
Roff, a
i combined
I luuona ol
I A cam(i
dents to
| haa been
can.
A thou
when nre
In the
vtlle
Af,-r a quarrel. Frank Jenklna. a
negro, shot ami killed hla wife, at
Tulsa. ami tbco turned the gun on
blmaelf. He W||| d,e.
D W. Obern, who haa been direct-
or of the geological aurvey of Okla-
homa university, haa roalgiifd. C.
W. Shannon ia hla succeaaor.
. ti.
alga to bring 1.000 new real-
Afton during the year 1914
started by tbe Afton Auuri
■and cblckena were burned
dealro> «d all the building*
f'ope chicken reach near Weat-
According to the recent cenans
taken of Sand Spring* by order of the
j '",ard of county commlaal'onera. that
ECZEMA ITCHED AND BURNED !lown now baa a population of 1,160
. Lean than |60 waa secured by hurg-
lara blew the safe of the poitofflo at
| Morris. an oil town on tbe Frisc o ruil-
| road ten milea aoutheaat of Okmulgee.
Oua Tutton. who, with hla brother.
Tol Tytton. and Gal Christian, la
charged with the murder of John Sims,
i came to Durant and surrendered to
i the offlcera.
i A .thousand <JolJars' worth of jew-
elry. stolen several weeks ago from i
the home of Dr. H. B. C. McKeftzle of '!
hnid wqs, recovered by officers from
three bqys. ui i
i
K. F D. No. fr, Maryvllle. Tenn —
"My baby, when three months old,
took eczema on hla face and bead.
Me bead and one aide of bis face
were almost in a solid sore. The ec-
zema at first waa kind of a rash and
then it broke out In water pimples
and they would burst and looked very
bauly It would itch and burn so bad-
ly that he could not rest dt all and
his hair just all fell out at once till
bis head waa perfectly bald He could
not sleep at night and was very cross.
"I tried remedies without any. relief
at all; he only got.worse all the time
until I used Cuticuna Soap end Oint-
ment. He had great relief the first
application He was aogn cured and
bis hair began to grow back and now
be has just beautiful fine hair and
has no sign of eczema." (Signed)
Mra II. D. Clabough, Jan. 28, 1913
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book Address post-
card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.
Many a man's unpopularity is due
to the fact that he always tells tbe
truth.
after field of waving grain, tboqaand^
' and hundreds of thousand* or them
Farm bands and laborers are at aork
converting the virgin prairl* with
more fields Pasture land in rnn 4i
I rectlon on which cat tin am f«* «lliu.
I thriving and fattening on the i-rasae*
, (hat are rich in tw.fb milk and la*.
Moperttes. hm it i, unfortunate thai
, more cattle are not a*en That ho*
! ever. Is correcting lt**lf. Here «e
I have In a larg>' measure, the evidence
I of the wealth thai hHpa to build ut<
(he rifles and It shpuld not be forgot
' ten that the cities themselves have as
cltlaena, young men who have come
fron. other parts, and brought wlib
iliem the experience that has taught j
them in avoid the mistakes of eastern ,
and southern cities. They also are 1
Imbued wjth the western spirit of en- j
terprlse, energy and push, and ao
Western f'anada has Its cities At a :
banquet recently given in Chicago, a !
number of prominent citizens of Win- !
nlpeg were guests Atnoug the speak '
era was Mayor Deacon of Winnipeg
In speaking of the remarkable growth j
of that city, which in thirty years has 1
risen from a population of 2,000 to one ■
of 200.000. he spoke of It as boing the !
.gateway of commerce and continued- j
"Now. how great that tide of com- I
merce is you will have some concei - j
tion of when Ltell ypu that,the wheat |
alone grown In the three prairie prov-
inces this, year is .suffic ient to keep a
steady stream of one thousand bush-
After smoking
it cools your
mouth—makes
it moist and
refreshed.
• Mr*.Wlnalow'« Soothing Syrup for Cblldraa
teething, Motions the (rums, reduced Inftamma
Uon,allays pain,cure* wind coiic.JSc a botileJUt
But It takes a good cook to roast the
janitor to a frazzle.
"Quite "Nifty"!
| That's the way you I
should look and feel all
I the time. Nature never ■
intended you to be sickly |
and run down, with poor
| appetite, imperfect diges-
els per minute continuously night and
day going to the head of fhe lakes for
'Arvnrritn* . « . • ■ ■ • i f{""ep and one-half months, and in ad-
'ulsa no!?nffl e8 COm,>i,^iaa the U'ti0n lo ,hat the oa,s a,ld barlev
P°8tofflet. receints for ,hf «« f$ould supply this stream for another
(our montlwi.- .... .
, "Th.e.- Yal*."s of the grain crop, alone
jfrown in the three prairie provinces
would be sufficient to build any of our
great transcontinental railroads and
all .their equipment, everything con-
nected with them, from ocean to
ocean.
"Now, If we are able to do this
with only ten per cent, of our arable
-- -o-'co <uui|jiifu <ia me
Tulsa postoffict, receipts for the year
1913 aggrpgated $117,000, compared
with $88,000 in Hi2. An increase of
more than 40 per cent ifc aliown.
Effective January J, an order has
come from the main^ offices of the
Rock Island to the Chickasha officials
of that company, laying oft practical- }
ly every machinist and boiler maker in
the Chickasha shops.
The wealth of the Indians in Okla-
homa makes it difficult for mission-
aries to direct them in the ways they
should go, said Mrs. John Markoe to
the members of Indian's Hope Asso-
ciation, at Philadelphia.
Believing much difficulty will be en-
countered in securing a jury to try
the Reuter case. District Judge R C
Alen at Bartlesville, ordered a special
venire of 200 jurors drawn. This
makes 270 jurors already drawn
IV appetite, imperfect diges- ■
I tion, clogged bowels and |
■ a lazy liver. Stir these
I organs to healthy action I
I by the daily use of I
IHOSTETTERSI
|Stomacfi Biffersj
WMttemore's
¥ f Shoe Polishes
Finest Quality Largest Variety
: Fifty school teachers, representing
twenty-five counties, in conference at
Tulsa, decided to ask C. D. Allen, su-
perintendent of schools at Marshall
Okla., to become a candidate for state
superintendent of public instruction
Arrangements have been made for
the drilling of a test oil well at Con-
way, twelve miles east of Ada as soon
as the roads are dry enough for the
machinery to be hauled out to the
Place. Melvin Cornish and Governor
D. H. Johnson have charge of the
It will not be long until telegraph
wires are strung into Wilson, accord-
ing to George Grooms, superintendent
of wires for the Ringling railroad. The
telegraph department of the Ringling
railroad will be owned it is under-
stood, by a subsidiary company.
As the result of pouring kerosene
into a stove of burning wood, Mrs
Lew Hawkey and small child who
lived a short distance from Inola,
twelve miles south of Claremore, we*
both burned so severely that death re-
sulted.
land under cultivation what will our
possibilities be when 288,000.000 of
acres of tbe best land that the sun
shines on is brought under the plow?
Do you not see the portent of a great,
vigorous, populous nation living under
those sunny skies north of the 49th
parallel? And If with our present de-
velopment we are able to do as we
are doing now, to purchase a million
dollars' worth of goods from you every
day of the year, what will our trade
be worth when we have fully develop-
ed the country?
"Now, who shall assist us to devel-
op this great empire that is there?
Shall it. be the alien races of southern
Europe or shall it be men of our own
blood and language? In the last three
fiscal years no less than 358,000 Amer-
ican farmers have come into Western
Canada, bringing with them goods and
cash to the value of $350,000,000. And
I want to Say here that no man who
sets foot on our shores is more en-
tirely and heartily welcome than the
agriculturist from the south.
"So long as these conditions remain
/ consider that this is the best guar-
anty that the sword will never again
be drawn in anger between the twe
great branches of the Anglo-Saxon
race. The grain crops of Western
Canada in 1913 have well upheld the
reputation that country has for abun-
dant yields of all small grains.—Ad-
vertisement.
Heartburn and
flatulence dis-
appear
Enjoy smoUng
more by enjoy-
ing this goody
that improves
your breathy
teeth, appetite,
and digestion.
Be SURE It's
WRIGLEVS
CAUTION!
w
Dishonest persons are
wrapping rank imitations to
look like the clean, pure,
healthful WRIGLEVS• These will ^
be offered principally by street fakirs, peddlers.
and candy departments of some 5 and 10 cent
stores. Refuse them 1 Be SURE it's WRIGLEVS*
BUY IT BY THE BOX
oi most dealers — for SS cents*
Each box contains twenty 5 cent packages.
Chew it after every meal
■uamm
GILT EDGE the ealy!«! .h~ diemat th.1 pom-
. , * .,w r"' ,,lara w.. —uwr-
coau.ni OILy BUckt and polish* ladie.* and
Children • boon and tkoe*. shines without rub-
bing, 25c. 'French Glons.*' 10c.
STAR combination (or denning and polishing nil kinds
ti rua et or tan shoes. 10c. "Dandy" site 25c.
QUICK WHITE" (in liquid form with sponge)
«utcklycleans and whitens dirty csnvss shoes.
10c and 25c
BABY ELITE combination for gentlemen «rho take
snde in having their shoes look AI. Restores color sad
to sll black shoes. Polish with a brush or doth. 10c.
If yoor denier does sot keep the kind you want, send
•s the poce ia stamps for n full nxe pecknse. charges paid.
^ W HI I TEMORE BROS Ac CO
^ Cambridge. Maas
The Oldest mnd Largejrf \1anmfocfurer* af
Shm /V«An in the H'srU
■JH'MiHII'FnM
I BMOack Kjr., TM* (M. DM I
| l toa. |
Rev. William D. Mathews of Wynne
wood has announced he will oppose
Kate Barnard for the democratic nom
ination for commissioner of charities
and corrections. Mathews was chap
lam of the senate in the last session
of the legislature.
After living as "common law" hus-
band and wife for more than three
years, C. Fuchus and Mav Fuchus
who were arrested at the Centra;
hoel at Tulsa, for violating of the citj
ordinance, were married in the ma
tron's office at the police station.
The first public reception and ban
quet ever given in Wilson were tend-
ered by General Manager Jake L.
Hamon of the Ringling railway to a
party of twelve citizens of Ardmore
constituting the Ardmore committee!
that guaranteed a bonus of $G5,000 tc
Hamon and his associates.
Two men have resigned the position
of county assessor of Coal county
and the office is going begging. It
yields $1,200 per year, but the assessor
has to pay all expenses, including dep-
The amount of the shortage of
j former County Treasurer Wainwright 1
of Muskogee county probablv never I
will be determined exactly. It is
J claimed that Wainwright embezzled 1
the first cent of money received in hia (
j office The shortage grows dally but |
j an estimate places the total at
! 112.000.
Curiosity.
Maud—\yhy didn't you protect your-
self when Jack kissed you?
Betty—Why, at first 1 was speech-
less, and then I thought I would see
how many times the impudent fellow
would dare to do it.
Individual Clock.
A gentleman in a club In Grand
Rapids, Mich., formed the hopeless
and harmless habit of taking too much
to drink—alcoholically speaking—be-
fore he went home every evening,
says the Popular Magazine.
"How does he know what time to
go home?" asked a stranger in the
club one night.
"It's this way," exclaimed a mem-
ber. "He goes to the head of that
long flight of stairs leading to the
street. If he falls down them, he
knows it's time to go home."
A GRATEFUL OLD MAN.
IS EPILEPSY CONQUERED?
New Jersey Physician Said to Have
Many Cures to His Credit.
Red Bank, N. J. (Special)—Advices
from every direction fully confirm
previous reports that tne remarkable
treatment for epilepsy being admin-
istered by Dr. Perkins of this city, is
achieving wonderful results. Old and
stubborn cases have been greatly j now to iceepTrom having BacShI
benefitted nnH mnnv oacKacne.
Mr. W. D. Smith, Ethel, Ky., writes:-
"1 have been using Dodd's Kidney Pills
for ten or twelve years and they have
done me a great deal of good. I do
not think I would be
alive today If it
were not for Dodd's
Kidney Pills. I
strained my back
about forty years
ago, which left it
very weak. I was
troubled with inflam-
w n emiiu mation of the blad-
W. D. Smith. der Dodd,s KIdney
Pills cured me of that and the Kidney
Trouble. I take Dodd's Kidney Pills
Evolution of Billiards.
The development of the billiard ta-
ble has been interesting. In those
far back days when billiards seem first
to have become an indoor game, a bil-
liard table was about the size of a
big room. The average table was 30
feet long and 18 feet wide. The size
was gradually and irregularly de-
creased. until the present standard
carom table was introduced at a bil-
liard tournament held in Samson hall,
Philadelphia, in 1864.
Odd Expressions.
"There is one thing which 1 cannot
understand."
"What is that?"
"Why high-colored versions of the
truth are called white lies."
Red Cross Ball Blue gives double value for
your money, goes twioe as far as any other.
Don't put your money into any other. Adv.
Extremes meet, but they don't al-
ways speak as they pass by.
-
benefitted and many patients claim to
have been entirely cured.
Persons suffering from epilepsy
should write at once to Dr. H. W.
Perkins, Branch 49, Red Bank, N. J.,
for a supply of the remedy which is
being distributed gratuitously.—Adv.
Precocious Child.
"Mamma, why did you marry papa."
"So you've begun to wonder tool"—
Louisville Courier-Journal.
am 77 years old and a farmer. You are
at liberty to publish this testimonial,
and you may use my picture in con-
nection with it." Correspond with Mr.
Smith about this wonderful remedy.
Dodd's Kidney Pills, 60c. per box at
your dealer or Dodd's Medicine Co.,
Buffalo, Y. Write for Household
Hints, also music of National Anthem
(English and German words) and reci-
pes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent Xree.
Adv.
The less a man knows the more ad- j
vice he distributes.
Sooner or later a man's illusions de-
velop into experience.
Best Laxative
For Women
Ladies, give little chocolate coated HOT
SPRINGS LIVER BUTTONS a chance
to drive out constipation forever They
never fail. They are so wonderfully
good, s=afe and gentle that the famous
physicians in "Hot Springs, Ark., pre-
scribe them regularly
They speedily put the liver, stomach
and bowels in the finest of condition,
drive out the decomposed matter, and
purify the blood.
Thousands upon thousands n.se them
for headache, nervousness, lack of appe-
tite, and that lack of ambition feeling.
They are great for clearingthe complex-
ion of piinple«and blotches. Ail drug-
gists sell HOT SPRINGS LIVER BUT-
ror~
lan mwrm —■ ■. II... A-UI MS. Miller V,nH|
[ot Springs Chemical Co., Hot Springs,
Ark
iREGORWf CrODS in i
yWestern
iffl All parts of the Provinces of '
j Manitoba, Saskatchewan and !
Alberta, have produced won- >
j derfui yields of Wheat, Oats, ,
Z/jlvQ Barley and Flaa. Wheat graded
//' from Contract to No. 1 Hard. 1
weighed heavy and yielded from 20
to 45 bluheU per acre; 22 bushels waa
' about the total average. Mixed Farm. I1
' in« may be considered fully as profit- J
j able an industry as grain raising. The V
y excellent grasses full of nutrition, are I
/, the only food required either for beef 1
, or dairy purposes. In 1912, and again in i
r 1913, at Chicago. Manitoba carried off i
. the Championship for beef deer. Good \
} schools, markets convenient, climate ex- U
I cellent. For the homesteader, the man j
I who wishes to farm extensively, or the J
f investor, Canada offers the biggest op- |
i portunity of any place on the continent.
J Apply for descriptive literature and
| reduced railway rates to
Superintendent of
II Immigration,
f Ottawa. Canada, or to
G. A. COOK
129 W. 9th Street
Kansas City. Mo.
. Canadian .
I Government Agent I
THE BEST STOCK
SADDLES
able prices, write for frn#
„ illustrated catalogue.
A. H. HESS & SON
315 Travis Si. Houston. Tsa.
\TREE TREATI8.
f 5.® I-wK-h Sanatorium.
Ind anapolis. Ind. haa
published a booklet which
CANCER
•boot theoaoM. of Cancer a£u tells k« od J for^TlV*
Wnediag. odor. etc. VV rite lot it today, mentioning bado.
RE A D T R .Q of this paper desiring
i. M U C n O io boynnyttenir
ti In iu columns tfcooitf insist uh d tu vinir what
s a « tr f..r -. '"v, f - ^ , a.-K.i
liSed a as iviuuiiM MW >U lUBINt H|WI
.... ... tike 7 ask for. refusing mil substitutes
*iOT SPRINGS LIVER BUT- (
'OXS on money back if not satisfied Mnnev in I nan 1 w*Dt ropriMiiuii
>lan for 35 eenta. For free aample writ® — ,■ r.iTT'n. ■'Wff
lot Nnnnrrc I homn><j ) P.* Ua Wn.i..
fal
w. N. U . Oklahoma City, No. 2-1 14.
You Look Prematurely Old
LA CREOLE" MAIS DRESSING. PRICE, i.OO, rwtall.
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Taylor, J. E. The Greer County Democrat (Mangum, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, January 16, 1914, newspaper, January 16, 1914; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc280376/m1/3/: accessed March 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.