Taloga Times-Advocate (Taloga, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 19, 1922 Page: 2 of 10
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TALOGA TIMES-AD VOCATB
WOfiiO NEWS FOR
THE PAST WEEK;
Events of General Interest from
All Sections Put Into Short,
Concise Paragraphs.
NEWS FROM VARIOUS CAPITALS
Brief Mention of What la Tranaplring
In Thla and Othar Countries
of tha Globs.
Peace Note*.
A
the
note of Kemal Pusha demands
retirement of all the Brittah
troops from the Aalatlc aide of the
atralts. as the French and Italians
have done, and say a In case of acqui-
escence he will mlthdraw the nation
•list forces "slightly" from the neu-
tral zone.
* + +
Grave feara for a recurrence of gen
eral warfare in Europe as a result of
the Near East crisis are occupying
the minds of British official circles,
It Is stated in authoritative London
quarters.
+ + +
Events are approaching a climax.
The Turks^ have occupied the entire
neutrar zone on the Asiatic aide of the
Dardanelles, with the exception of the
Chanak area, around which they have
established infantry units in a semi-
circle, virtually investing the British
lines.
+ + +
Ten Greek-owned vessels steamed
into the harbor at Smyrna recently,
under protection of the American flag,
and took off twenty thousand refu
gees and vicltims of the fire. The
American navy, under Rear Admiral
Bristol, is striving valiantly to save
the remainder.
* * +
Possible war between Great Britain
and Turkey was at least temporarily
averted by an eleventh-hour declara-
tion of the Kemalists that they would
respect the neutrality of the straits,
pending an armistice conference. The
declaration relieves the situation,
which even the British had admitted
was critical.
+ + +
The collapse of the throne of
Greece, coupled with reports that at
least four other governments in the
Near Ea^t are tottering, leaves the
chancellories of Western Europe
alarmed and anxious at the possible
trend of events in the next few days
+ + +
Washington
Almost eight months after the close
of the conference at Washington on
the limitation of armaments, the trea-
ties and resolutions agreed upon by
the participating powers remain inert
and practically lifeless, due to the fail-
Tire of several signatories to make
them effective by ratification.
+ + +
The railroads of the country carried
411,429,349 tons of freight during the
quarter ended June 30, 1922, an In-
crease of 3.31 per cent over the ton-
nage carried during the correspond-
ing period of last year, the inter-
state commerce commission an-
nounced recently.
James A ."tillman. formerly presi-
dent of the National City Dank of
New York, was denied a decree In hla
| suit tor absolute divorce against his
Ife. Anne I'. (Flfl) Stlllman. and
Baby Guy Stlllman was declared le-
gitimate In the findings of Pastel J.
(•Irason. referee In the case
+ ♦ *
Seventy-four railroads have now
signed the Baltimore |ieace agreement
which was ratified by the federate
■hop crafts unions September 13, ac-
cording to an announcement by Joh*
W. Scott, secretary of the railway
employees' department of the Ameri-
can Federation of Labor.
♦ ♦ +
Judge J. W. Willett of Tama. la.,
wag unanimously elocted contmandcr-
In-chief of the Grand Army of the
Republic at the business session of
the annual encampment being held In
I'es Moines. He Is the first naval
veteran to be elected head of the
G. A. R.
+ + +
The Chamber of Commerce of the
'nlted States, according to D. A Skin
ner. secretary, "Is determined that
there never will be a bonus bill with
a cash provision." "We are deter-
mined to kill any such attempt," he
declared In Omaha recentlv.
* + +
Eight men have been arrested at
Needles, Cal., by deputy United States
01 LAHOMA ROTES
News Front All Sections
of the State
All special guards on Its property In
Dewoy county have been eliminated
by the Frisco railroad.
On lis tour through all states of the
union, the Equity "Qeorgc Washington
memorial (raveling Bible was on the
altar of Albert Pike Masonic lodge 163
at Guthrie.
Apple picking In northwestern Clm
arron county will begin about October
15, according to preseQt Indication*
The ciop is the heaviest In five years,
orchard ownera say.
W. W. Osgood of Muskogee, was
elected grand master of the I. O. O. F
lodge In Oklahoma, at the state con
ventlon of that lodge which h>ld its
annual sessions In Ada.
Theories of foul play and arson were
being investigator by Wilson officers
as a result of the Are which destroyed
the Travelers' hotel, burning S. J.
Latham, tank builder, to death.
NARKETREPORT
Contracts have been awarded by the
city council for paving twenty-four
marshals on warrants issued at Los ( blocks of the residence district. Eight
Angeles-on indictments returnd by a blocks are to be paved with asphalt
federal grand jury which investigated and sixteen with brick at Purcell,
charges of conspiracy to impede inter-
state traffic.
+ + *
Ex-President Wilson has presented
to the congregation of the First Pres-
byterian church of Staunton, Va„ a
bronze tablet in memory of big father.
Rev. Dr. Joseph R. Wilson, who was
pastor of the church from 1855 to
1857.
+ + +
Southwest.
Mrs. W. E Montgomery of Quapaw, Fe raj)roaj
Ok., was killed and her two daughters, j
1 1 tA ^ . .
Thirty thousand bales of cotton will
be ginned in Jackson county this sea-
son, according to estimates of gin
men. This is expected to make Jack-
son the banner cotton county of Okla-
j homa.
The First National bank of Guthrie
, has been named depository, effective
: October 2, for all passenger and
j freight money of the Oklahoma divi-
sion of state branch lines of the Santa
14 and 10, are believed to have been
fatally injured when a car driven by
Mr. Montgomery went into a ditch
near Springfield, Mo., recently.
+ + +
That the name of George R. B. Ped-
dy. Republican and independent Dem-
ocratic nominee for United States sen-
ator from Texas, cannot be legally
placed on the official ballot for the
Nevember general election was the
ruling of the state attorney general's
department.
+ + +
City employees of El Paso. Texas,
who are members of the Ku Klux
Klan must resign. Mayor Charles
Davis announced. Assistant District
Attorney Vowel] declared that he may
demand presentation of the local Klan
membership list to the grand jurv.
+ + *
Oscar Vannoy, 26. was found guilty
of first degree murder and sentenced
to life imprisonment at Ardmore. Ok., '
following his trial in the Carter Coun
Volume one of the Compiled Laws
j of Oklahoma, 1921, is off the press
and ready for distribution, Judge
• Thomas H. Doyle, of the criminal
court o fappeals. and one of the sup-
I' ervisors of the work, announced.
Purcell Pavement Project Launched.
Purcell, Okla.—Contracts have been
awarded by the city council for paving
twenty-four blocks of the residence
district. Eight blocks are to be pave.l
with asphalt -and sixteen with brick,
i Conferring degrees on 125 candi-
dates by the grand lodge, holding of j
a business session and the semi-an- j
nual dinner of the past grand rep- j
resentatives association of the pas-
grand lodge officers with another
meeting open to all delegates, was
the program.
From a livestock show standpoln',
the Oklahoma State Fair and Exposi-
tion was the most successful in its
history, also, according to those who
May
MkiIh-i imrrtll) Arm on ll*M
I'll'U. I milled but ai'liw ti.-limnil for
mill« In moat market*. lieaty re
«• l|4s •likening markri at Mttimaix*-
Alfalfa atrong at Kanaaa City.
Wiwiteil M<|'l. No. 1 timothy N'aw York
i'hll .l.|i.lila JO. I'lllaburgh (19.00,
| In. IkiihII |lt. Chicago «2S. Ulnn.i,(">il.
I. VI. Ml |M,„|. n,..*,. Kanaaa City 114 M,
Nil. I alfalfa Kanxaa CUy -<> Jft. No. 1
IMalrte Kalian* City 12, Ht. Lamia Il.V.'iO,
Minneapolis fid.
Mill feed maikrt essler. Iiuriaanl of.
rtitnga by mill* and Impruvrnirnl In
tiMiwrnrrit «n<! receipt* rr«t>on lbli fur
lower quotation*. Htiyrm tallant and
country trade rHtn tant to «t<w-k up at
pr« «<rit price*. l.lriiM-« «l meal and cotton*
meal In irotxl nupply. <l*mtirul fair,
i orn feed# firm, demand light, produc-
tion ffuuri. (Hulen feed an.I alfalfa meal
antiunion lint hanged. Quoted Sept. Jl*
In an |H. middling* Iff, flour middling*
f.3, Minneapolis. Stf percent «ottnnae<d
meal #.*14 Memphis; Jtt Atlanta; .14 per-
cent Unwed meal $41? Minneapolis, #lu-
len feed fOO.fcft Chicago. white homlfty
feed $1'4.&i Ht. houl*. No. I alfalfa meal
$45? Ht. Louis.
Oral a
Grain prices unsettled during the week
and show only fractional change* at
eloae. War news wan the dominating
Influence. On the .loth break In stock
market and weakness In Minneapolis,
September wheat caused decline but more
serious watr news started rush to cover
and close was strong. Corn unaettled at
times but had Independent flrmne**.
< ash corn demand exceptionally good
hut transportation illfTk ultlftf restricting
business. Closing prices In Chicago cash
market: No. 2 red winter wheat $1.12;
No. 2 hard winter wheat 1.11; No. 2
mixed corn 64c; No. 2 yellow corn 64c;
No. 3 white oats 40c. Average farm
prices; No. 2 mixed corn in central
Iowa 52c; No. 1 dark northern wheat in
entral North Dakota KOc. Closing future
prices: Chicago I>oc. Wheat $1.05%; Chl-
ago Dec. corn 3© Vic; Minneapolis Dec.
wheat l.O#** ; Kansas City Dec. wheat
W^c; Winnipeg Dec. wheat OiSfrc.
Ualrj Products
Butter markets firm during the week.
Receipts lighter following seasonal de-
crease in production. Storage butter
moving in fairly largte quantities in a
wholesale way. Prices of fresh butter
are now the highest they have been this
year. Closing prices, score butter:
New York 44c; 1'hiladelpbia 46c; Boston
43c; Chicago 42c. Chee e markets firm
during the week. Demand has continued
good in spite of advances early in the
week averaging to 2 cents. Held cheese
beginning to move. Trices at Wisconsin
piimary cheese markets Sept. 2t : twins
23c; daisies 23c; double daisies 22%c;
longhorns 23l,*c; square prints 24l/jc.
C'ettoa
Spot cotton prices declined 72 points
during the week. New York Oct. future
contracts declined 101 points. Spot cot-
ton closed at 19.95 cents per pound; New
York October future contracts closed at
20.12 cents.
Aspirin
Say "Bayer" and Insist!
Unless .vou nee the name "Bayer" on
package or on tablets you are not get-
ting the genuine flayer product pre-
H-ribed by physicians over twenty-two
years and proved safe by millions for
Colds Headache
Toothache Lumbago
Earache Kheumatlsm
Keuralglu Pain, I'aln
Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
only. Each unbroken packuge contains
proper directions. Handy boxes of
twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug-
gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100.
Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Mnnoacetlcacldester of
Salicyllcacld.—Advertisement.
Spoiled Diamonds.
Among the crown jewels of the
llapsburgs were two large diamonds
it ruby tint which were always re-
garded as especially valuable and
whenever the royal Jewels were placed
mi exhibition these stones were under
special guard. It was necessary some
time ago to dispose of the Jewels, and
js they were being prepared for ex-
ilbltlon, prior to being offered for sule,
they were put through a wash which
■fortunately removed the color of the
precious stones and left them perfect-
ly white. Instead of demanding a
fabulous price as ruby diamonds, they
were sold simply as white stones.—
Chicago Journal.
FIFTY YEARS AGO
A young man who practiced medicln*
in Pennsylvania became famous and
waa called in consultation in manr
towns and citiea because of hla suc-
cess in the treatment of disease. This
waa Dr. Pierce, who finally made up
his mind to place eomo of bis rnedi-
cinea before the public, and moving to
Buffalo, N. Y., put up what be called
his "Favorite Prescription," and placed
" druggists In every state.
Dr.Pierce's Favorite Prescription baa
long been reoogniaed as a tonic for
diseases peculiar to womankind. After
suffering pain, feeling nervous, dJcsy,
weak and dragged - down by weak-
nesses of ber sex—a woman ia quickly
restored to health by its use. Thotri
sanda of women testi/y that Dr. Pierce'•
Favorite Perscription haa entirely
eradicated their distressing ailments.
More recently that wonderful dis-
covery of Dr. Pierce's, called An-qrio
(for kidneys and backache), bas been
successfully used by many thousands
who write Dr. Pierce of the benefits
received — that their backache, rheu-
matism, and other symptoms of urio
acid deposits in joints or muscle's have
been completely conquered by its use.
Send 10c to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.,
for trial pkg. of any of his remedies, or
write for free medical advice.
Cuticura Soap
The Safety Razor
Shaving Soap
aMconSauethmof wtthoolmng twlmlt.
IF YOUR
ty district court for the death of two have a,tended and exhibited for nearly
persons who were fatally injured
when struck by a motor car that he
was alleged to have been driving
+ + 4-
In a recent attempt by five bandits
to hold up the First National Bank
at Eureka Springs, Ark., two were
killed, a third fatally wounded and
two others shot and captured by citi-
zens who responded to the bank's
alarm.
* + +
As a result of a quarrel over 50
cents, said to be the change recefTed I
from a purchase of moonshire whis- j
ky, Ernest Franklin. 19, is dead at his !
score of years. It was rated the
best stock show in the southwest so
far this season.
In most sections th® opinion exists
that only oil Is produced in Okmulgee
county, but R. P. Trent, county agent,
says that agriculture is forgoing to the
front. In 1921 there were 35,000 acres
in wheat and the crop totalled $300,000
bushels. All of this wheat was ship-
ped outside to be milled, there being
no flour mills in the county.
Farmer* and pardners should study
snakes, says W. H. Barton, head of
home near Meridian,. Ok., and Isaac I the 8cience department of Okmulgee
highschool, -who had a snake exhibit
at the Okmulgee fair. He had fifty va-
rieties of snakes in fluid, and a few live
reptiles. He declares that the popu-
lar idea of all snakes being poisonous
is erroneous. There are but three
snakes that are dangerous and really
poisonous—rattlesnakes, cotton mouth
or southern moccasin and the copper-
head.
a *. * * I White, his cousin, 20, is a fugitive
A campaign for enactmnt of a uni- j from justice
versal service act, under which all the + + .
nation's resources—manpower, capi- Foreign.
tal, utilities and industry—would be The British have ordered the evacu
"drafted" automatically upon a future ation of the town of Gallipoli, accord
declaration of war, will be launched ing to an Athens dispatch to the Ex
l)y the American Legion at its annual change Telegraph. The evacuation
convention in New Orleans next order was reported in a message to
lnonth- 1 the ministry of interior from Gallipoli ]
* + + + + + |
An attempt to wreck the federal The Greek ministry has resigned ! Steel is being assembled at points
government's program for checking Very important changes are impend a!on& Santa Fe line through Osage
coal profiteering under the new Win- fng. but present Indications are a c°ont.v, and the laving of the rails will
slow-Cummins coal law will be made peaceful solution of the crisis will be i bc8'n this week, according to railroad
shortly by a small group of operators, found. The king has proclaimed roar I ^npineers. Girders on the big bridg
•according to information reaching jjial law. Eight thousand troops at
government officials. i Solonica have revolted.
+ + + + + +
United States Senator Thomas E. ! A plot to blow up the provisional
Watson of Georgia died suddenly at government building in Dublin and as
his home in Washington the other sassinate the members of the Irish
■day. Death was said to have resulted cabinet was frustrated the other day
across Caney river have been laid ami
if nothing happens trains can proceed
| from Owen to the C. W. Stephens
ranch, twenty miles out of Caney. Kan.
j Flat cars and coal cars are being
I used for shipping sine and lead ore
Oklahoma Cattle
Cattle receipts aho* a goo.1 percent of
increase over last week. It was princi-
pally a beef anil fe«Jer offering and b>-cf
| that was available for packer use moved
I at prices 10 to 2ft cents lower. Some
I well-finished yearlings sold for Jli. 1.1
| which averaged 6s«i pounds. Orass-fed
I and heavy steers ranged between fT.im
and Finish a .il quality of killing
cows excelled anything offered In a long
time. The market is fall ly active, buy-
ers paying steady but uneven prices. A
few loads of grain-fed cows and heifers,
which had plenty of weight sold around
?').|J0 to 7.23. Finish of tills character
was hard to find In ste«rs-a few saifs
in straight grassers nothing around |3.(Jo.
The calf market opened uneven and i.
closing $1.3u lower than for correspond-
ing period last week. H.flO being top foi
light weights. Medium kinds runfcen
from $5.2ft to tfl.OO and heavies were ",p
to bring much over Sft.OO. Ail but fleshv
desirable lights, mediums and top heavier
are hard to moif at any price.
The stocker and feeder market reflect
ed some of the loss realized on the othei
classes of cattle, principally 2ftc lowei
for the fore part of the week, however,
due to good country demand In the cast
and _ north, which resulted in an earlv
disposal, the market landed back on a
steady and snappy basis. Demand wv«
principally on light weights and quality
secondary.
Oklahoma Hogs
Jft.40 has been the basic top for tn.
entire week In the hog section, with bulk
ranging 8.10 and up. Receipts were fail
and quality medium.
Oklahoma florae, and Mules
The Horse and Mule Auction w
Opened last Tuesday with an otTering of
400 head. The kinds offered ranged from
young stult to mature animals. Th.
prices have been very satisfactory. Ther.
were plenty of buyers and in general,
the trading is demanding 13 to 13-8, rang-
ing In age from three to six years, and
broke. Good chunks for southern trade
tn demand, off kinds not so much in de-
mand ami only sell at fair prices. Okla-
homa City being so centrally'located i
a very desirable place for the southern
buyer to ship from, and with fair patron-
are, this will be one of the snappiest
horse markets holding auction. There Is
on hand at all times, a good supply oi
all kinds of mules and prices to suit.
DYED HER DRAPERIES,
SKIRT AND A SWEATER
WITH "DIAMOND DYES"
Each package of "Diamond Dyes" con- • |
ains directions so simple that any woman j
:an dye or tint faded, shabby skirts, I
Irenes, waists, coats, sweaters, stock
ngs, hangings, draperies,' everything like
lew. Buy "Diamond Dyes"—no other i I
tind—then perfect home dyeing is gnaran- I
*ed, even if you have never <lyed before. , I
Tell your druggist whether the material '
'oil wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether
t is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. Dia- i
nond Dyes never streak, spot, fade, or
■un. So easy to use.—Advertisement.
All men are born helpless, and some
sever outgrow It.
Uses "Cutter's"
Serums and Vaccines ht is
doing hi* be*t to con*erve your
VETERINARIAN§§=H
The Cutter Laboratory
L+b*'*frj thst A* n #u / Htw"
Berkeley <U.S.Lic«i*) California
Tft
P CDF
tt'sPills
I • SPEEDY RELIEF FOR
CONSTIPATION
A woman who laughs to be polite
Joes It better than a man.
Hair Thin ?
j lr—It TltAliM*
Ike roots mod stop® b lr falling out —fills b*14
•pot* rapidly. Try It! At all rood dniffglets. 73c
or direct tron HIS3K• QJJS. Qafak. M
Ajrenta—We guarantee our hemstitch attach-
j tnent to do ifoud work on all machines. Writ#
1 for Instructions and sample of work. Oriental
Novelty Co.. Bo* 11. Corpus Christ I. Teiaa.
A
UNION OF
INTEREST TO
WOMEN
Healthy Housewife—Happy Home
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Has Helped
Form Many
from acute attack of asthma, from A mine was discovered beneath the ' ,h<" oklabon,a kansas mining die
which Senator Watson had suffered building Two clerks were reported j ,nc' °n accoun' of tb« serious short
j age of bav cars caused by the railroad
strike. Ordinarily ■•hipp^ni are partic-
ular about shipments of ore and It Is
to
prPVfnt the stuff from wasting through
the cracks.
recurrently several years. He was 66 to have been arrested
.years old. + + +
+ + + More than one hundred persons , . .
Domestic were killed when the Falconara Fort | 'hat ar" "nf'd
Five men, three mine surveyors near Spezia, July, blew up when light
and two miners, were killt-d and three ning hit the powder magazine. The
miners were injured slightly in an force of the blast wrecked the town
explosion recently in the Lake Creek ot San Terenzio
mine, one and a half miles northeast + 4. 4,
of Johnston City, ill. Kjng Constantlne has abdicated in
+ + + favor of Crown Prince George it was
rf«MvWa,LfnfhUnne<! .'n Bru8s',!f! re' officially announced at Athens In a ror me e,
1^1 , Belg'an government message to the Greek people the king months the total Joss was *2->l lf 6 S50
has decided to contribute to th,- pro- stated that, for the national Interest I as compare, with $224 Ul S fe -he
posed loan to Austria which is being peace and onitv. he had abdicated ' ' ' ,he
considered by the League of Nations faror of the crown prince.
♦ ♦ + i + + +
B,ds for a $16.000.0Wi issue of 6 per Several hundred students of the ' Work hM started on a 1100,-
cent h rty-year bonds for the Haitian Woodlawn high school at Birmingham building on Fast Main whlc i
government were opened in Washing- Ala., were stricken with ptomaine «he us*-d by the Hale-Halseli Groc
ton by representatives of that govern poisoning as a result of food eaten *"ry company at Ada A new side track
ment and the lsetie was awarded, eub at the school s lunchroom, according 1 he built by the M K A T rail
£ '° iUe «o authorities Several are said to be , road to accommodate the new bouae
to the national flty Company severely ill. but no fatalities have
♦ ♦ ♦ bifn reported I Pf*d Strubte of McAlester waa
More than thirteen thousand bills + + + I elected president of the Oklahoma
—13.711 by actual coirnt—of all sorts' devolution be« b> tr« r m g). j Health aasodaUos at a sp«rtal
and deecriptions were introduced tn bania. said recent advices from Va- j.®?*'1"* of h*«ly elected boardtf
the house since the sirty e*venth con Iona Insurgents, having defeated the at the cloee of the business
g"? *5nt, '° rork ,a A«wll 1921. regular troops, are marching north Struble has b~n <onn cte<
* °P It tbMt 0t ,h" W"d Tbf " OMtaC *■ I W"h !fe" e er since ,u
B tun ber 1.067 were pmswI panic j foundation.
Although fire l"s-<s (Hiring August
totalled $21,579,500. the smallest
monthly record in the past two years,
the loss lor the eight months of 1922
have reached terrible proportions, aay
fire Insurance men. For the eight
In j period in 1921. There were 296 fires
J in which the loss was $10,000 or over.
RAILROAD READY FOR RAILS
Trains to Run on Santa Fe Branch
Soon in Osage.
Owen, Okla.—Steel Is being assem-
bled at points along the new Santa Fe
line through Osage county, and the lay-
ng of the rails will begin this week,
according to railroad engineers. Gird
ers on the big bridge across Caney
river have been laid and if. nothing
happens trains can. proceed from Owen
to the C. W. Stephens ranch, twenty
miles out of Caney, Kan.
Ten miles of the thirty-six miles ot
the branch are already laid with rails.
.<nd ten additional miles are to be
laid this week. This area has been |
delayed by several washouts. Qult
a number of bridges on the final six |
t'f-n mil<-s Into Pawhuska are to be
built and considerable grading work la
being done now.
In Pawhuska the San'a Fe Is doing
considerable wor* A long, deep cut
Is lwlng made and there Is much fill-
ing that is being done, together with
the draining of the proposed switch
yard.
For the ailing, half-siclc housewife
auch a union is impossible. Often
times even the slightest form of
housework cannot be accomplished.
Yet the work must be done.
Many women struggle along for
years suffering from some form of
female trouble that make their lives
miserable and their homes far from
happy.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound has helped thousands of
ju t such women regain their health
and strength. Just give your thought
to the following letters and remem-
ber that the women who wrote these
letters knew how they felt before
taking the Vegetable Com pound and
a (rain afterwards. It helped them—
let it help vou.
Had Nervous Spells
Horatio. Ark. — "I had nervous
spells and awful bad feelings. My
right side and my back hurt me all
the time and 1 had been going down
In health.for six or seven years. For
three years I had not been able to do
my work without help. I weighed
only 95 pounds when my husband's
mother persuaded me to take Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Now I heartily recommend it to all
suffering women, as 1 have gained
weight and health. I can do all my
wor«, anything I want to do."—Mrs.
Jim Rearick, Horatio, Arkansas.
Reading, Pa.—"I waa a nervous
dly 1"
to ht
Through the advice of friends I have
ing,
wreck and could hardly dermy house-
work. I always hod to have nelp (
would never have got it done.
been taking Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound for my nerves
ana Lydia E. Pinkham's Blood Medi.
cine for my blood and I am feeling
fine and doing my work all alone. I
can recommend these medicines t«
any one, for they certainly helped
me. I suffered for five years and
Lydia E. Pinkham's medicines pulled
me through." - Mrs. Walter U.
Stoyeh, 1218 Mulberry St.,Reading,
Pa.
Recommends the Vegetable
Compound
New Orleans, La.—"I have found
relief from my troubles by taking
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
r>und and I praise i* wherever I go.
c,
could not do my wurk as it should
be done for 1 would sometimes have
to lie down because of the pains I had.
A friend induced mn to take your
Vegetable Compound and 1 have got
great results from it I keep house
and am able to do all my own work.
1 recommend your Vegetable Com-
pound tomy friends who nave troubles
similar to mine."—Mrs. T. FoKCK-
Ler, 1915 N. Derbigny St., New Or-
leans. La.
Flat Cars Used For Zin< Shipments.
Miami, Okls~Flat cars and coal
cars are being used for shipping inz?
and lead ore from the Oklahoritii-Ran
sas mining district on account of the
serious shortage of bbs car* caused by
the railroad strike. Ordinarily ship-
pers are particular ahoutuhtpirients of
#re and It s ses(e< la |px cai*,rhat
are are lined to prevent life stuff from
wasting through the cracks. The cam
available at present are for the
most part those which come to
the field leaded
SICK HEADACHE
Take a good dose of Carter's Little Liver Pills
then take 2 or 3 for a few nights after. They restore
the organs to their proper functions and Mralitks
and the causes of it pass away.
THEY REGULATE THE PCWELS aad
PREVENT CONVT: PATTON
StJINI; Ss l Dm*;Saal Prke
aforrtssMiTH's
P (hillTonic
•OLD SO YEARS - A PINK GENERAL tOMO
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Taloga Times-Advocate (Taloga, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 19, 1922, newspaper, October 19, 1922; Taloga, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc281674/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.