The Curtis Courier. (Curtis, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 9, 1911 Page: 3 of 8
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THE SHCTY-HRST
MANY BIG TASKS ARE LEFT OH
PERFORMED—PREilDF.NT
HEARS THE NEWS.
HASTILY CALLS EXTRA SESSION
April Fourth Data Set for New Con-
grete to Meet in Extraordinary
Suasion—B-g Appropriation
BHta AM Get Through.
Washington. D. C.—The alxty-flrat
congress, heedless of one of the moat
ini|M>rtant legislative tanks eel before
It, ramc to an end shortly after noon
today. Within the hour following
President Taft had Issued a procla-
mation calling the new congress to
meet In extraordinary session at noon
on Tue.-day, April 4. He will then sub-
mit for ratification to a house over-
whelmingly Democratic, and to a sen-
ate barely Republican, the reciprocity
agreement with Canada. The McCall
bill, carrying that agreement Into ef-
fect, and pasaed by the house, met to-
day, at the hands of the old senate,
the death freely predicted for It.
The president, in the room reserved
for him In the senate lobby, heard the
news with resignation.
Congress provided funds to continue
the woark of the temporary tariff
board for another year. It was at the
request of the Democrat a of the house
and senate that President Taft flked
the date of the extra session on April
4 The new Democratic ways and
means committee of the house, which
also Is to serve as the new "commit-
tee on committees,” will meet Monday
to take up Its labors. A full caucus
of Democratic members of the new
house will not be held until April 2.
In the meantime the plans for the ex-
tra session will have developed.
AH of the tig appropriation bills
finally managed to squeeze through In
time to secure the approval of the
president. The work of whipping
these measures into final shape and
engrossing them taxed to their utmost
the system at the capital and at the
government. printing office. Blight
hills carrying more than $700,000,000
were rushed through In the last 48
hours of the session.
When the excitement and uncertain-
ty as to the fate of the appropriations
bills had died nwav, and the vice pres-
ident’s gaval had fallen In adjournment
of the senate, the news oame that
Senator Dailey of Texas had resigned.
It was said he was "miffed” over the
action of his Democratic collegues !ti
not following his leadership during the
past few days.
John Brown Is Villifled-
Topeka, Kr.n.—Charges that John
Drown was a “murderer," a "bush-
whacker," a “sneak," an "assassin,”
an ’anarchist." and a “rebel," were
made upon the floor of the house to-
day In the discussion of a hill to ap-
propriate $2,800 for the John Drown
Park at Osawatomie, Kan. J. N.
Brown of Butler, a Democrat, offered
a written explanation of his vote in
the bill in which he said, referring to
John Brown: "With the instincts of
an anarchist and the hand of an as.
sassin, his career in Kansas was one
of lawlessness and crime." A motion
to expunge the matter from the record
was lost, and it will go down as a part
of the history of the Kansas house.
NEW LINE IN CENTRAL OREGON.
Will Open Up 5,000,000 Acres of
Government Lands.
Poi tland, Ore.—The long-heralded
invasion of central Oregon by the Hill
lines will become a reality on March
1, when passenger and freight ser-
vice will be Inaugurated between
Clarke, Wash., on the north side of
the Columbia river, and Madras, Ore.,
115 miles up the Deschutes valley.
The new line will open a fertile and
well developed territory which hereto-
fore has been difficult of access for
lack of transportation facilities. Set-
tlers have been going in by team for
the past few months In great numbers
ai'd filing on the free homestead lands.
There are 5,000,000 acres of govern-
ment innd that will be made immedi-
ately accessible.
Valley Center Woman Suicides.
Valley Center, Kan.—Despondent be-
cause of ill health and worried about
the settlement of an estate in which
she was interested, Mrs. George David-
son hanged herself at her ho ue In
this city.
A denarous Olft
Prcfeoaor Man)og ku jurt issued a
a»-»t beautiful, useful sod complet* al-
■xnae. It (unUini not only all tire eri-
entitle information cuunm.ug the ni «>n »
-base*. in all the latitudes. but baa u-
uatratrd art u l. a on b- tr to read char-
acter by t.hrt nologv, palmiatry and birth
month. It alao tell* all about card read-
ing, birth (tones and their Ri<amng, and
given the inter)KY-uti. a of dream*. it
trachea beauty culture, manicuring,
fives weights and Ueuturea end antidot.t
lor poison. In fart, it ia a Masauine Al-
manac, that nut on!v gives valuable in-
formation, but will afford much amuae-
ment for every ruemUr of the family,
especially for part.es and evening enter-
tainments. Fanners and people in tha
rural districts will find this Almanac al-
most invaluable.
It will be sent t<* anyone abaobitely
fr*a on application to the Munvun Rem-
edy Company, J’iuladelphia, l’a.
A FASHION PUZZLE.
This la merely two ladles of fashion
endeavoring to identify each other.
HUD SOLID MUSS OF HUMOR
T think the Cutlcura Remedies are
the beet remedies for eczema I have
ever heard of. My mother had a child
who had a rash on its head when it
was real young. Doctor called it baby
rash. He gave us medicine, hut It
did no good. In a few days the head
was a solid mass; a running sore. It
was awful, the child cried continually.
We had to hold him and watch him
to keep him from scratching the
sore. His suffering was dreadful. At
last we remembered Cutlcura Reme-
dies. We got n dollar bottle of Cuti-
cura Resolvent, a box of Cutlcura
Ointment, and a bar of Cutlcura Soap.
We gave the Resolvent as directed,
washed the head with the Cutlcura
Soap, and applied the Cutlcura Oint-
ment We had not used half before
the child’s bead was clear and free
from eczema, and It has never come
back again. Hie head was healthy
end he had a beautiful he&d of hair.
I think the Cutlcura Ointment very
good for the hair. It makes the hair
grow and prevents falling hair."
(Signed) Mrs. Francis Lund, Plain
City. Utah, Sept. 19,1910. Bend to the
Potter Drug A Cbem. Corp., Boston,
Mass., for free Cutlcura Book on the
treatment of skin and scalp troubles.
Down With ’Em.
Toung Lord Fairfax, in a brilliant
after-dinner speech at the club house
In Tuxedo, praised women.
"Down with the misogynist," said
Lord Fairfax. “Down with that cyni-
cal type of male brute who says with
the Cornish fisherman:
"Wlmmen’a like pilchards. When
’em’s bad ’era’s bad, and when ’em’s
good, ’em’ only middlin’.’ ”
LEWIS’ "SINGLE BINDER."
A hand-made cigar fresh from the
table, wrapped In foil, thus keeping
fresh until amoked. A fresh cigar
made of good tobacco Is the Ideal
smoke. The old, well cured tobaccos
used are eo rich In quality that many
who formerly smoked 10c cigars now
smoke Lewis’ Single Binder Straight
6c. Lewis’ Single Binder coats 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 la no substitute! Tell
the dealer you want a Lewis "Single
Binder.”
Scoundrel’s Last Refuge.
Patriotism le the last refuge of a
scoundrel.—Johnson.
TO DRIVE orr MALARIA
_ AND Hl’ILD Cl* THE SYSTEM
Tak* the OM Standard UHuYKS TASTKLBSS
CHILL TONIC. You know what you are taking.
Tha formula It plainly printed on every bottle
a taste-
malaria
all
are for W yean.
Vk
ice US ceuta
The entire >bj«ct of true education
is to make people not merely do the
right thing, but enjoy the right thing.
Fore Throat Is no trifling ailment. It
will sometime* carry infection to the en-
tire aystem through the food vou eat.
Hamlin* Wizard Oil cure* Sore Throat.
A mind content both crown and
kingdom is.—Robert Greene.
IP TOU FSB BALL BLtlE,
Get Red Crow Ball Blue, the beat Ball
Blue. Large 2 os. package only 5 cents.
One kind of a bruts Is a man who
refuses to flatter a woman.
FRENCH BEAN COFFEE,
1 CENT A P0UN0
It will grow In your own garden
Ripening here In Wisconsin in Shi
days. Splendid health coffee and cost
ing to grow about one cent a pouud
A great rarity; a healthful drink.
Send us today 15 cents In stamps
and we alii mall you package above
coffee seed with full directions and
our mammoth seed and plant cata-
log free. Or send us Si cents and we
add 10 package* elegant flower and
unsurpassable vegetable seeds, suffl
clcut to grow bushels of vegetables
and flowers. Or make your remittance
40 cents and we add to all of above 10
packages of wonderful farm seed ape
claltles and novelties John A Salzur
Seed Co., 182 S. 8th St, I* Crosse, Wls.
A Cautious Answer.
"Now. Johnny.” said the geography
teacher, “what la the capital of Portu-
gal r
"I dun’no’, Mias Flanders.” said
Johnny, “but from what I beam tell of
the extravagance of the late king they
ain’t much left."—Harper’s Weekly.
THE YOUNG BRIDE'S
FIRST DISCOVERY
Their wedding tour
they entered
ing t(
their
had ended, and
. ----------—v home to eettle
down to what they hoped to be one long
uninterrupted blissful honeymoon.
young bride’s trouble*
_____J-UDU
But. alas!
in, — I.,-,, ,B, miru iu n-auiT lire
iving with cheap big can baking
•bon begin when she tricd to reduce the
of li
cost __
powders.
bhe soon discovered that all she got
was a lot for her monev, and it was not
•11 baking powder, for the bulk of it was
cheap materials which had no leavening
power. Such powder* will not make light,
wholesome food. And because of the ab-
sence of leavening gas, it requires from
two or three times as much to raiae cakes
or biscuits as it does of Calumet Baking
Powder.
Thus, eventually, the actual cost to
yon, of cheap baking powder*, Is more
than Calumet would be.
CheaD baking powdera often leave the
bread bleacheci and acid, sometimes yel-
low and alkaline, and often unpalatable.
They are not always of uniform strength
and quality.
Now the bride burs Calumet—tha per-
fectly wholesome hexing powder, moder-
ate in price, and alwraya uniform and re-
liable. Calumet keepa indefinitely, make*
cooking eaay. and ia certainly the moet
economical after all.
The teat of whether you are edu-
cated la, can you do what you ought,
when you ought, whether you want to
do It or not?—-Herbert Spencer.
I*ADIKa CAN WEAR SHOES
one alee smaller after using Alien a Foot Kaae,
the antiseptic powder to \>a shaken Into the
ehoea. It makes tight or new shoes feel eaay.
Kt'um nfatitutn. For Free trial package, ad-
dress Allen 8. Olmsted. Le Koy, N. Y.
When the fight begins within him-
self, a man’s worth something.
Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, eoftena the gums, reduces Inflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. Bo a bottle.
Common sense In an uncommon de-
gree Is what the world calla wisdom.
YELLOW CLOTHES ARE UNSIGHTLY.
Keep them white with Red Cross Ball Blue.
All grocers sell large 2 ox. package, 5 oenta.
What sculpture la to i block of
marble, education ia to a human soul.
TO CURB A COLD IK OWE DAY
fafls1u!“cnre.T‘l
uaOVK a signature Ison each box. Ho.
It Is more disgraceful to distrust
than to be deceived.—Rouchefoucauld.
For constipation, biliousness, liver dis-
turbances and diseases resulting from im-
pure blood, take Garfield Tea.
Give a girl a present, and she will
not worry about the future.
9 o<> Dkui'sJ
ALCOHOL-A PER CENT
Avrff table Preparation Tor At •
Mating it* Food and Regula-
ting Ae StoMctn and Bowels of
Kiwis < hildki n
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful
ness and Rest Contains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narcotic
a* sou > snmrtM
Ansin S—4 ■
Mx Asm •
AMv/AAs* •
Jhim JhJ •
yemef •
(«4m1iJUi<
AswiiV -
A perfect Remedy forComtipa
lion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea.
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish-
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP
Fac Simile Signature of
The Centaur Company,
NEW YORK.
V t ti iniiiilli s o| J
^ DoS I 2k J j C I SIS
CUSTOM
For Infant! and Children,
The Kind You Hava
Always Boi
Bears the
Signature
of
Guaranteed under the Food aij
Copy of Wrapper.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
GASTQRIA
DISTEMPER
Flak Eye. EpIsnoHe
.Shipping Fever
k Catarrhal Fever
flar* cardan 4 pogttl prevent I v*. no matter how h<>r**wat any star* in Infaetai
^twoo^erM|l?o ** A* ?hod>n 9 1 Art' ('n Blood and 11 lands ^ eipela the
twill MEDICAL CO., USSSZXS, 60SHEM. 111., II. 1 h
THE NEW YORK VACUUM CLEANER
uThe Cleaner that Cleane**
No Dust or Dirt Escapes its Powerful
Double Suction. Most Efficient and
Durable. Least Expensive.
Theee cleaner* lighten housework, im-
prove the sanitary condition and clean,
tineas of tha homo. Neceaaary to good
housekeeping.
Active agent* are making $30 to ISO
pet week and building up a perma-
nent bu.ineee celling the.e machines
They cell taadily when properly
preeentad.
We Brant an
intelligent Agent for this territory
NEW YORK VACUUM CLEANER CO. _
MaikrUe* BdMhfc Broadway aad 34th Street NEW YORK ul W
W. L. DOUGLAS
(Ere I *2-50*3 »3-5o& *4 Shoes
W. L. Douglas shoes coat more to make than ordinary shoes,
because higher grade leathers are used and Relucted with greater
care. These are the reason* why W. L. Douglas aboeaare guar-
anteed to hold their shape, look and fit better uud wear longer
than any other shoes you can buy.
rmewA/tr or substitutes. •«
Tha genuine have W. L. Douglas name and tha ratal)
pr»«a stamped on tha bottom, which guarantee! full value
and protect* tha wearer against high prices and inferiorahoea.
UEFUSE SUBSTITUTES CLAIMED TO BE ‘JUST AM GOOD'
II your dealer cannot gw
for Mall Order (’:
prepaid.
Catalog* ^Vioeg^arnMI1*1 ‘t’f
_________________________ „ .......... Bov*1 Shoe*
Ikouglaca, 143 Spark St.. Hmklc, Hew. 82 00.82.SOASS.OO
Remedies are Needed
' Were we perfect, which we are not, medicine* would
not often be needed. But since our ryitema have be*
come weakened, impaired and broken down through
indiscretions which have gone on from the early ifei,
through countless generations, remedies ere needed to
sid Nature in correcting our inherited and otherwise
acquired weaknesses. To reach the east of stomach
weakness end consequent digestive trouble*, there is
nothing *o good ns Dr. Pieros’* Golden Medioal Discov*
ery, a glyeerio oompound, extracted from native medio*
**■ root*—aoid for over forty years with great satisfaction to all users. For
Week Stomach, Biliousness, Liver Complaint, Pain in the Stomach after eating.
Heartburn, Bad Breath, Belching of food, Chronic Diarrhea end other Intestinal
Derangements, the “Discovery” is a time-proven and moat efficient remedy.
The Genuine ham on tta
outside wrapper the
Signature
Too een|t afford to eeoept a seoret nostrum as e substitute for this non-eloo*
nolle, medicine or known coMroamoN, not even though the urgent dealer may
thereby make a little bigger proftt.
_Dr- Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate end invigorate stomach, liver and
Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy.
A COUNTRY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS
in New York City. Best features of coun-
try and ciiy life Out-of-door sports on
school park of 35 acres near the Hudson
River. Academic Course Primary Claasto
Graduation. Upper class for Advanced
Special Students. Music and Art Write
for catalogue and terms.
■la lam * Shs IHke. MwrWt Awme. miBM SLMU
WANTED KSKTBft
few wrrki completes. paactlcatl
Instructions, unlimited prao-
tlee; tools donated, boeltlong
guaranteed flxMreBfurnlahed
For shop. reduced tu 1 ti on price,
waters while learning, dtplo-
5 Fine POST CARDS [DCC
w Send only 2r stamp and receive| T
0 very finest Gold Etnbdesed Cards! Ilhll
frb£,
Capital Card Co.
to Introduce pout card offer.
, Dept. 70, Topeka. 1
W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 10-1911.
Many a man who swears at & big
monopoly Is nourishing a little one.
Garfield Tea has brought good health to
thouaands! Unequaled tor constipation.
6ome women are good to look at,
but bad to be tied to.
IRRIGATED FARM
IN COLORADO
Any alt* tract you wont—8100 per acre buys a special 100 *cr* farm
close In to Denver—liberal terms—write uh oliout It—also send for
• Special Bargain List" Irrigated Farms In Colorado anddult quick.
C. W BONK LAND CO., »U riser, first lilkui Rut SMg., Denver, Col.
You Look Prematurely Old
Bsoauss of thoas ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Uaa “LA ORIOLE" HAIR DRESSING. PRICE, ii.00, retail.
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The Curtis Courier. (Curtis, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 9, 1911, newspaper, March 9, 1911; Curtis, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc406092/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.