The Chattanooga News. (Chattanooga, Okla.), Vol. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 9, 1920 Page: 3 of 4
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THE CHATTANOOGA NKWS
4 >
Kill That Cold With
CA5CARA E> QUININE
_ .. FO* . AND
c»lil, C*Bjk. TQM\^ La G
rippe
Neglscted Colds are Dangerous
Take no chances. K..p this standard remedy handy for the Bret UMM
Breaks up a cold In 24 honre — Relieves
Grippe In 3 days—Excellent for Headache
Quinine In this form does not affect the head—Caacara la beet Toole
Laxative—No Opiate in Hill's.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
11 ay and Feed.
The holiday accumulation und limited
demand ror In y in causing depression in
tlu' principal distributing markets. Price®
are generally $1 to $3 lower than last
week's quotations. Prairie in good de-
mand at Chicago and Minneapolis be-
cause of light receipts, buyers consider
prices of all hay high compared to grain.
Quote No. 1 timothy; Chicago $30, Cincin-
nati $30..V). New York $37 .V). Atlanta
$37.50. No. 1 alfalfa : Memphis f33, Kan-
sas City $L'7. No. 1 Prairie: Kansas City
$15, Chicago $2?i, Minneapolis $i!0. Wheat
feeds easier especially middlings. Cotton-
seed meal and linseed meal weak. Gluten
f«-ed off $1. hominy feed unchanged. De-
mand remains light and stacks parth .1-
lurly of high nrotein and heavy whtat
feeds are excel:ont. Stocks of gluten feed
reported light Southeastern and north-
eastern markets report shipment price for
bran $1.5(1 per ton lower. Quoted—gluten
feed $52 Philadelphia bran $31, middlings
$-7 Minneapolis; bran $40.50, middlings
Events of State
Wide Interest
liver
You're as Sick or
as Well as Your
How's your liver! Are you constipated, bilious, grouchy!
Ilava you dizzy spells, dull headaches, bad taste in your
mouth, foul breath! If so, you need Dr. 1 hacher't Liver
and Blood Syrup; which has been knocking out troubles of
your sort ever since the good old southern doctor first pre-
scribed it away baci in 1852. On sale at your drug store.
blood
If yon would stay young in health us yon prow older in years, hare a
care for your blood. Dr. Thocher's Liver and Blooi Syrap puts life
iuto your blood; purifies and enriches it; makes it tone up the whole
system. Also keops your Bocueli open and is a tonio and a cleanser com-
bined. Good for the whole family. Sold at your drug store.
Andy Anion. Thompsonville. HI., wrot*
Aug. 31, iyl«! "I feel tbst I should send in
my testimonial for Dr. Thacher't Liwf
Ue4icin0. which I have used for twelve
years. Before I used it I could not do s
Whole days work; because I was so weak in
my kidneys, but I am now strong and
healthy"
J. M. S*uton. Box 147, Oeala, Fla., wroU
Jan. 12,1919: "I used a bottle of jour
l)r. Thacher't Li»*r And Wood .Syrup In
my family with a four-year-old child
that had bad kidneys, caused by
measles. Found it to do more good
thso all the medicines that 1 sver got
hold of."
SeU Preps. * BUm. THACHER MEDICINE C0.,cwtte»n». te. u. S.
Three boys playing in a field near
the Sapulpa city limits unearthed a
quantity of automobile accessories and
three uew tires in a haystack.
There are more quail in Oklahoma
this year than in any previous season
since statehood, it was said at the
office of the state game and fish war-
den. The thirty day open season be-
gan Dec. 1.
Charles R. Borne is organizing head-
.. , - „„. . -. I quarters company of the Oklahoma
J.iH northeastern market. White iioininny ,, r . , . ,
$35 St. Louis. No. l alfalfa m.-al *.«> Kan- Heavy Artillery, which will be compos-
»"n City, llnsi'iHl meal J4.r> Huftalo: 0f approximately 100 men. Includ-
Mlnnea polls; red dog $.">1 Boston; 30 per , . . ,
cent cottonseed meal $41 northeastern ! this company will be the regi-
murketa; best pulp $44 Chicago. ; mental band.
Fruits and Vegetables:
Nortnern round white potatoes moving Curtailment in the livestock produo-
slowly at shipping stations, prices I.r. flon has hp#»n dt^Aidv f#»lt recentlv at
lower per 10) pounds, closing *l.tk) to uon naa Deen aeepiy ,e11 recently ax
$1.85. Carlots in Chicago. $1.80 to $1.00. (the Oklahoma City stockyards and,
Middle western jobbing markets tnoder- while all leading markets show a con-
utely lower at *2 to $2.80. Movement • ... ,
lighter; 4,00(i ears shipped week ended siderable loss, the shrinkage here is
November !!.*», compared with 5,207 cars : even more than the average.
preceding week. Apples fairly steady at
f. o. b. markets. A 2l/i Baldwins, $4 10 »h3n a_riUC «n otrnwhor.
to $4.a per bbl.; northwestern Wlnesaps More than acres 111 s,rawDer
mostly $2.10 to $2.25 per box. Eastern ries and a large acreage in other ber-
Baldwins advanced $1 Pittsburgh, closing 1 rieg wI11 be ,)lanted by Adair county
$5.50 to $<5. Shipments have been de- , _ . ,
creasing rapidly for past three weeks; ; berry growers next spring. Orders al-
barreled 1,487 ears, boxed 1,258 cars week I ready have been ina.tr. for crates and
ended November 25. Danlsti type cabbage 1
steady at $10 per ton bulk, western New
York shippiig points. Prices irregular in
consuming markets, eastern markets
closing $12 to $25. Movement much lighter,
shipments falling below 500 cars for
first time in several weeks. Supply
coming chiefly from New York state.
Onions steady at shipping points and in
consuming centers, excelt some sales in
Pittsburgh as high as $2.25 early in the
week. Shipments 3K8 cars week ended
November 25. compared with 537 cars
previous week. Virginia sweet potatoes
slow and we.ik, eastern consuming mar-
kets losing additional 25c per bbl., reach-
ing $1.75 to $3.50. Shipments decreasing
steadily; 381 cars week ended November
Then
is Genuine
Wamlngt Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets,
you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by
physicians for 21 years and proved safe by millions.
Accept only an "unbroken package" of "Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin," which contains proper directions for Colds, Headache;
Pain, Toothache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago.
IIMmdj Urn boxes ol 12 Ubkrts eoet but a few eente—Larger packages.
Is tfea tr*4* mark •* »*r*r Manufacture of Monoa*eUMkdAwt«r at BaiUr licaold
?OH/y
IN EVERY STABLE
Spohn's Distemper Compound
Is the one Indispensable remedy for contagious and Infectious
dl8«a<ies among horses and mulea. Its success as a preventive
and cure for DISTEMPER, PINK EYE. INFLUENZA, COUGHS
and COLDS for more than twenty-six years Is the highest trib-
ute to lta moiit an a medicine. It 1b endorsed by the best horse-
men and live stock men In America. Buy it of your druggist.
60 cents and $1.20 per bottle.
SPOIIN MEDICAL CO., Goshen. Ind., V. 8. A.
He Was No Gambler.
Tommy, a small Presbyterian, was
being examined In the catechism by
the visiting minister. ,
"What Is meant by regeneration?"
asked the dWlne.
"Why, It's just being born again."
replied the Victim, with some mater-
nal prompt In?.
"And wouldn't you like to be born
again?"
No reply to this, even under pa-
rental pressure, until finally, In des-
peration, the truth came out: "I ain't
taking no chances on being a girl!"—
Judge.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
tor Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of|^/
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher"8 Castoria
Needs Help to Keep It.
"Say, Bill, csn Jim keep a secret?"
T. F.—Yea, bat it would be Just like
him to tell some one that he couldn't.
—Boys' Life.
Famous Fish Family.
Pickerel Is dlmunitive for pike, and
Is applied to the smaller species of
the pike family and to the young of
the larger species. It Is most often
applied to the banded pickerel, which
seldom exceads 12 inches in length. The
niuskellunge is a very large species
of pike, sometimes attaining a length
of eight feet. It Is found In northern
fresh waters of North America, and is
a famous game fish.
boxes to pack the 1921 crop In.
The corporation commission grant-
ed the Oklahoma Railway company j
Reprisal.
Music Teacher—Johnny, don't you
know what your mother sends you here
permission to raise Its rates on freight, ! 'or' „
and passengers. Express Johnny-* or spite. She wants me
to be able to play worse than the girl
In the next flat.—Boston Transcript
How's This?
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will
do what we claim for It—cure Catarrh or
Deafness caused by Catarrh. We do not
claim to cure any other disease.
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is a
liquid, taken Internally, and acts through
the blood upon the mucous surfaces of
the system, thus reducing the inflamma-
tion and restoring: normal conditions.
All Druggists. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Narrow Minded.
A narrow-minded man is one who
won't admit it, but really believes that
the world would be better off If there
were no one living on it but himself.—
Detroit Free Press.
Don't think a floating debt is neces-
sarily a light one.
FOR THE BEST TABLES
MAXWELL HOUSE
rftrrrr
"GOOD TO THE LAST DROP"
SEALED TINS AT GROCERS
'• .-v.---?;,- ; 4 *• :
Harvest 20'® 45 Bushel to Acre Wheat
in WESTERN .CANADA,JL
Grain:
Save the 23rd. grain prices fell continu-
ously during the week. Chicago December
wheat reaching a new low level on the
26th, due to heavy selling of futures.
Sentiment continues bearish due to gen-
eral economic conditions and liquidation
In .-ill lines of trade. Bankers In Chicago
end New York becoming alarmed over i>ig
break in wheat, fearing disastrous conse-
quences unless stopped. Milling demand
for cash wheat slightly improved, but
flour buyers still holding off. Mills averag-
ing only 50 percent of capacity, which is
without precedent at tMs season of year.
Scarcity of soft red winter wheat indi-
cated by premiums over December in
Chicago markets. No. 1 red winter. 8 to
32c over December; No. 2 red winter. 26
to 30c; No. 1 hard winter, 8 to 10c; No.
2 h:i rd winter, 0 to So in Minneapolis;
No. 1 dark northern brought 10c over j
Minneapolis December on the 26th, and
No. 2 5c over. Corn market seems on
good basis. Strong demnnd for new yel-
low. No. 3 selling 5 to 6c over December j
and No. 4 4 cents over. Only fair de-
mand for mixed corn. For the week Chi-
cago December wheat lost lOVio. closing ;
$1.53, and corn 1%c, closing at 6r»e. Min- i
neapelis December wheat lost 12%e at i
$1.4114: Kansas City 16^c at $1.46; Win-
nipeg 23c at $1.61. Chicago March wheat '
closed at $1.48ty; May corn at 71VjC. j
Minneapolis March wheat, $1.45%: Kan-
sas City, $1.43; Winnipeg May, $1.64.
Cotton:
There was little recovery in prices for
Bpot cotton and future contracts on No-
vember 23 and 24, but this was not main-
tain'.I, ami on Novt-mbrr L'*> neven of the
ten designated spot markets closed at an
average of 15.39c, the lowest price this
, season. New York .December futures lost
j 120 points, closing at 15.35c.
Livestock and M«*at»:
Compared with a weeks ago, hogs at
Chioago $1.7') lower today. Sheep and
lambs lost f,0c to 75c. Cattle advanced
75c to $1 net on beef steers and about
I 25c on cowtf. Western range cattle up
50c. Veal calves down $2. November 26
top Chicago prices; Hogs, $10.25; yearl-
ing steers, $17.75; good beef steers, $15.50;
heifers, $12.25; cows, $10.25; feeder steers,
$10.50; westerns, $12.25; veal calves, $13:
fat and feeding lambs. $11.50; ewes, $4.75.
Due to Uveral supplies weakness in live-
stock markets and the Thanksgiving holi-
I day, frerh meat prices showed substan-
j tial declines for the week. Beef was the
j least affected, declining an average of $1
j per 100 lb#. Pork declined most, today's
prices on fresh loins ranging all the way
I from $3 to $11 lower than those of a week
ago. Veal broke $3 to $5; lambs and mut-
ton, $i to $3 per 100 lbs. November 26
pricot on good grade meats: Reef, $17 to
$21; veal. $20 to $23; lamb, $24 to $25;
mutton, $13 to $14; light pork loins, $22 to
$82; heav yloins, $23 to $26.
I Dairy I'ruductH:
| Butter markets .unsettled during the
week and prices broke sharply on the
26th. Closing prices 02 score; New
York, 60c; Chicago, 53c; Philadelphia,
61c; Boston, 58c. These prices represent
declines of about 5c in eastern markets;
8c Chicago. Weakened conditions attri-
buted to surplus on markets and light
demand in anticipation of lower prices.
Foreign butter also a factor. Two ship-
ments aggregating 448,000 lbs., received
from Denmark during week. Argentine
butter hard to move on account poor
quality. Shipments domestic reported
having been made for eastern markets
back to interior points, where supplies
are temporarily short. Regardless of
holiday weeks, cheese business fairly
good. Stocks moving rapidly at Wiscon-
sin primary markets, with quite liberal
shipments to eastern markets reported.
Fall defects in quality beginning to ap-
pear and this is expected to slow up
trading. Trading has been on slightly
higher basis than Inst week. Majority of
Wisconsin sales; Twins. 25*4c; daisies,
26Hc: double daisies, 26c; Young Amer-
icas, 28c; longhorns, 27c.
expreus and passengers.
rates will be increased approximately j
20 *>er cent, and freight rates 35 per |
cent.
Owing to the short time remaining
to the democratic administration and
the consequent k>ss of private prac-
tice J. Berry King of Muskogee declin-
ed the appointment as United States
district attorney for eastern Okla-
homa.
Shortage in the funds of the Citi-
zens' State bank of Coalgate, recently
taken over and reoragnlzed by Fred
Dennis, state bank commissioner, have
been established to the extent of $269,-
000, according to E. N. Holland, county
attorney.
Nearly 150 people were fed by the
Salvation Army at Sapulpa in the an-
nual Thanksgiving distribution of bas-
kets which the army holds. Prisoners I
in the county jail were sent candy, !
fruit and nuts and a table was set for
wore than fifty.
The ideal of the vocational classes ;
in the Sand Springs schools, provided i
for under the Smith-Hughes act, has (
spread all over the state, J. W. Bridg* :
es, state supervisor of vocational ag-
riculture, said, after an inspection of
the work here.
Okla+ioma soon will receive $13,500
from the federal government to be
Bpent for vocational rehabilitation.
Governor Robertson accepted the fed-
eral appropriation by a formal state-
ment several weeks ago directed that
should unite to work with federal or-
ganization in using the money.
The most elaborate effort ot Tulsa
high school students will be staged in
the high school auditorium December
10, l>y the girls' gymnasium classes.
It will be "Gifts of Time," and under
the supervision of Miss Ethel M.
Mealey, director of girls' physical
training, and Miss Louise Buckley, as-
sistant.
Members of the Jackson County
Cotton Growers' association are con-
sidering plans for exporting the 1920
crop to European markets. Plans
were discussed at a meeting here for
assembling the cotton at Altus, ship-
ping it to a compress where it will bo
reclassified and shipped to the near-
est port. The association would re-
ceive 3 per*dent to cover the expense
ol handling.
Approved claims accruing from
March and April lists of income tax
returns paid to the government from
this district, will total approximately
$14,000. Refund checks, 2,000 in num-
ber, to cover this amount, will be paid
through the internal revenue office
here within the next six weeks, rev-
enue officials announced.
Mrs. Roy Hoffman of Oklahoma City
has accepted an appointment to the
joint committee of the European re-
lief council. The appointment was
accepted at the request, of Mrs. Rob-
ert E. Spear, president of the nation-
. .... .... IIA- w ' al board Of the Young Women's Chris-
THE LAW DOES NOT APPLY tion association, and Herbert Hoover,
chairman of the relief council.
TENSE PRESSURE
ON HER HEAD
"My Sides, Back and Head
Pained Me Just All the Time,"
Says Alabama Lady, Who
Took Cardui and Got Well.
Uniontown, Ala.—"After the birth of
my baby, I came near dying," writes
Mrs. Maude Felts, of Uniontown.
! was In an awful condition. ... It
Just looked like I would die.
"I couldn't bear anyone to even
touch me, I was so sore, not even to
j turn me In bed. My sides, back and
! head all pained me, Just aJl the time.
\ "We had the doctor every day and
he did everything he knew how, it
| looked like. Yet I lay there suffering
such Intense pains as seems I can't
j describe.
"Finally, I said to ray husband, 'let
i us try Cardui' . . . He went for it at
once, and before I had taken the first
| bottle the . . . came back, the soreness
began to go away, and I began to
j mend. The Intense pressure seemed
all at once to leave my head, and be-
j fore long I was up.
"I took three bottles and was well
and strong and able to do my work.
I Lelleved Cardui saved my life. . . .
I cannot praiae It enough for what
It did for me."
If you are a woman, and need
a tonic—
Take Cardui, the Woman's Tonic.
Adv.
Felt Himself Wanting.
"I've often been struck by the ex-
treme hauteur of salesladies. Don't
you suppose merchants suffer from
it?"
"I know one who does. He tells me
he feels like sneaking in the rear door
of his establishment because he sus-
pects that his personal appearance
does not meet with the approval of
his clerks at the front door."
Dirty San Francisco.
San Francisco has some of the dirt-
iest streets In the United States, if
not in the world, and what makes this
condition more Inexcusable Is the fact
that It should be an extremely oasy
city to keep clean and healthful, says
the San Frnnclwo News Letter. In
the first place, we do not have to con-
tend with the volumes of smoke and
soot coming from hundreds of fac-
tories such as the eastern cities are
cursed with; in the second place, wa
could devise a way of using the ocean
water to wash streets and sidewalks
with (salt water Is a mild disinfect-
ant) ; and thirdly, we are blessed with
an equable c"nate thus making street
cleaning an easy matter every day in
the year.
A $20 gold piece Is a nice round
Sure
Relief
indigestjq*
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
BELL-ANS
FOR INDIGESTION
Cuticura Soap for the Complexion.
Nothing better than Cuclcura Soap
daily and Ointment now and then as
needed to make the complexion clear,
scalp clean and hands soft nnd white.
Add to this the fascinating, fragrant
Cuticura Talcum and you have the
Cuticura Toilet Trio.—Adv.
Naturally.
She—"Dear, I want to get a new car-
pet this winter." lie—"That is a prop-
osition I put my foot down on."
TtiirtyRunningSores
Remember, I stand back of every box.
Every druggist guarantees to refund the
purchase price (60 cents) if Peterson'®
Ointment doesn't do all 1 claim.
-I guarantee it for eczema, old sores,
running Bores, salt rheum, ulcers, sore
nipples, broken breasts, Itching skin, skin
diseases, blind, bleeding and Itching pile*
as well us for chafing, burns, scalds, cuts,
bruises and sunburn.
"I had 30 running sores on my leg for
11 years was In three different hospitals.
Amputation was advised. Skin grafting
was tried. I was cured by using Peter-
Bon'B Ointment."—Mtb. F. E. Root, 287
Michigan atreet, Buffalo, N. Y. Mall or-
ders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Buf-
falo. N. Y.
Colds Stop Quick.
Breaks up a cold in six hours; noth-
ing gives quicker relief in coughs and
colds than Hyomei. Goes right to the
spot and kills the germs. Money back
If It falls. At good druggists every-
where.
AppetiteKeen
and Bowels
Relieved
You can relish your m^als without fear
of upsetting your liver
or stomach if you will
put your faith in
Carter's Little
Uvtr Pllla.
Foul accumu- A
lations that i
po'ison the •
blood are ex- ^
pelled from the bowels and headache,
dizziness and sallow akin are relieved.
Small Pill —Small Dose—Small Pries
IITTLE
IVER
PILLS
i.
t
Think what that means to you in
<good hard dollars with the great de-
/ mand for wheat at high prices. Many
farmers in Western Canada have paid for their land
from a single crop. The same success may still be
yours, for you can buy on easy terms.
Farm Land at SI5 to $30an Acre
located near thriving towns, good markets, railways—land of a
ows 20 to 45 outhala of wheat to the acre.
kind which grows 20 to 45 bushels of wheat to the acre.
Good grazing lands at low prices convenient to vour grain farm en-
able you to reap the profite from atock raising and dairying.
Learn the Facts About Western Canada
—low taxation (none on improvements), healthful climate, good
schools, churches, pleasant social relationships, a prosperous and
I^^UluitrBU^P^Urator#, mar*, dweription of fana opportanitks js
Manitoba 8ask*tch«wan and Albarta, raductd railroad ratal, etc., writ*
DtpartBMOt of louaigratioa, Ottawa, liansds. or
F. EL HEWITT, 2012 Mali Stmt. KANSAS CITY, ffu.
Cmadlan Government Agent.
Withholding of Grain Not Probed By
U. S. Departments.
Washington.—Because farmers' co-
operative organizations are exempt
from application of anti-lruct laws, the
department of justice has given no
l consideration to the campaign for the
i withholding of crops, from the mar-
kets until prices advance, It was said
by Frank K. Nebeker, special assistant
to the attorney general in charge of
anti-trust prosecutions.
Earthquake In Spain.
Ijondon.—A dispatch from Madrid
says an earthquake shock was felt In
I Northwestern Spain. It lasted for sev-
j eral seconds. There are no details of
I damage or possible loss of life.
Cardenas Held For Madero Murder,
j Mexico City.—Francisco Cardenas,
[ who has been formally charged with
the murder of former President Ma-
dero in 1913, has been arrested In
Guatemala City, Guatemala, according
to advices received here. Ha will be
brought here for trial.
The first aniiual pure-bred sow sale
and swine breeders' convention con-
ducted by the Animal Husbandry de-
partment of the Oklahoma A. & M.
college at Stillwater, will be held Feb-
ruary 18, the department has announc-
ed. Heretofore the department has
has been disposing of Its surplus stock
at private sale, but this year, to se-
cure as many swine breeders at the
convention as possible, the surplus will
be sold at public auction.
"If each member will get at least
one more to Join we shall at least
double our number," Fritz Blumer
thai, adjutant of the Oklahoma City
post of the American legion, said
when discussing the new membership
drive which started.
Governor J. B. A. Robertson and the
city commissioners of Pawhuska h..ve
been petitioned in a resolution by the
Commercial club to hasten the conclu-
sion of the mandamus proceedings In-
cident to the ousting of the city com-
missioners in April by a vote of 768 to |
41.
"California Syrup of Figs"
Delicious Laxative for Child's Liver and Bowels
Hurry mother I A teaspoonful of
"California" Syrup of Figs today
may prevent a siclc child tomorrow.
If your child Is constipated, bilious,
feverish, fretful, has cold, colic, or if
stomach Is sour, tongue coated, breath
bad. remember a good "physio-laxa-
tive" is often all that is necessary.
Children love the "fruity" taste of
genuine "California" Syrup of Figs
which has directions for babies and
children printed on the bottle. Say
"California" or you may get an lmU
tation Lg «vruo. Beware I
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The Chattanooga News. (Chattanooga, Okla.), Vol. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 9, 1920, newspaper, December 9, 1920; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc287205/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.