The Manchester Journal. (Manchester, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, April 13, 1917 Page: 3 of 8
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THE MANCHESTER JOURNAL, MANCHESTER, OKLAHOMA
, Old Looks?
(BY DR. L. H. SMITH)
Persons suffering from too much nrlc
acid in the system frequently look older
than they should. They age faster and
the appearance of gray hair or bald-
head in early years is, indeed, often a
sign of uric acid. The face appears
lean and haggard, lines and wrinkles
appearing in young men or women.
The best way to combat this prema-
ture age nnd the obstruction to the
arteries and faulty circulation is of the
simplest: Drink copiously of pure water
between meals. This will not make
you fat, as it is only the water taken
with the meals that fattens. Obtain at
any drug store a package of Anurlc,
double strength, which is to be taken
before meals, in order to expel the uric
acid from the system. The painful ef-
fects of backache, lumbago, rheuma-
tism, gout, due to uric acid in the blood
should quickly disappear after treat-
ment with Anuric.
TEXAS NEWS
Tyler, Texas.—“I am 53 years old,
and for the last
three years I have
been afflicted with
kidney trouble, no
relief from the med-
icines I took. At
last I took one fif-
ty-cent package of
Dr. Pierce’s Anuric
Tablets and the
very first dose
helped me, and I
continued to Im-
prove. I took In all six paknges. I nm
very glad to testify.”—DAVID VIL-
CHEZ, 414 E. Social St.
Every package of Anurlc is sure to
be Dr. Pierce's. You will find the sig-
nature on the package just as you do
on Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription,
the ever-famous friend to ailing wom-
en, and Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery, proven by years to be the
greatest geuerul tonic.
An Exception.
Johnnie’s father had a comfortable
Income that did not require that he
should have any settled occupation, and
the only thing in the nature of work
that Johnnie had ever seen him do was
to write checks. At school Mary an-
nounced that her father was a doctor.
"My father is a lawyer,’’ said Ed-
ward.
Johnnie thought a moment, and then
said: “My father pays his debts.”
Time it! Pape's Diapepsin ends
all Stomach misery in five
minutes.
Fantastic.
A government official, condemning a
suggested war economy of a rather
fantastic nature, said at a Washington
dinner:
“This economy reminds me of the
private who visited the canteen and
asked for a pound of bacon.
“ ‘Yes, sir,’ said the canteen keeper,
‘and what kind of bacon do you pre
for?’
“ ‘That there nice, long, streaky
kind,’ said the private. ‘Then I can
use the rind for shoe-laces.’ ”
COVETED BY ALL
but possessed by few—a beautiful
head of hair. If yours Is streaked with
gray, or is harsh and stiff, you can re-
store It to its former beauty and lus-
ter by using "La Creole” Hair Dress'
lng. Price $1.00.—Adv.
Do some foods you eat hit back—
taste good, but work badly; ferment
Into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,
sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or
Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's
Diapepsin digests everything, leaving
nothing to sour and upset you. There
never was anything so safely quick, so
certainly effective. No difference how
badly your stomach is disordered you
will get happy relief in five minutes,
but what pleases you most is that it
strengthens and regulates your stom-
ach so you can eat your favorite foods
without fear.
You feel different as soon as "Pape's
Diapepsin" comes in contact with the
stomach—distress just vanishes—your
stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch-
ing, no eructations of undigested food.
Go now, make the best investment
you ever made, by getting a large fifty-
cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin from any
store. You realize in five minutes how
needless it is to suffer from indiges-
tion, dyspepsia or bad stomach. Adv.
Fates of Queens.
Why do we think enviously of those
who are “born to the purple,” and con-
sider them lmppy nnd fortunate when
their lives lire .shadowed by sorrows
and perils that those of humbler sta-
tion never know? Eugenie, once queen
of fashion and empress of France;
Cnrlotta. hopelessly tirnd : Elizabeth of
Belgium, an Exile in England; Natalie,
one-time queen of Serbia, discovered
last summer doing menial tusks in a
French hospital; Alexandra of Bus-
sin, at the mercy of an unfriendly
people—surely those tire not women to
be envied. Fpon the leaves of the
ages we find countless other tragedies
that have been associated with queen-
ship—Mary Stuart and Marie Antoi-
nette come at once into mind.—Detroit
Free Press.
Realistic Art.
Mother, Peter says that his grand-
father was in the Revolution. Were
cut relations there, too?”
"Yes, dear, both your groat-great-
grandfuthers were in the Revolution.
“But, mother,” said Freddie, “I
should think they would have been too
old to go to war. They look like they
were a hundred in the dining-room
paintings."
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove’s
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen
eral Tonic because it contains the well
known tonic properties of QUININE and
IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out
Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds
up the Whole System. 50 cents.
Small Ones.
“Tills writer does his best work In
the-small hours."
“That kind of hours would suit
me.”
NOT MANY NEW MEMBERS SIT-
TING IN EXTRAORDINARY
SESSION OF CONGRESS.
FIRST WOMAN IN THAT BODY
Miss Jeannette Rankin of Montana
Creates Favorable Impression—Pre-
caution for Safety of Legislators—
Appropriation Measures to Be
Brought Up at Once.
New York city lias 30,422
fact tiring establishments.
mann-
WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS.
Every woman takes great pride in
having her home well kept, in having
the family wash done early In the
week. Good bluing is needed even
more than good soap. Be sure to use
Red Cross Rail Blue.—Adv.
United States
stammerers.
contains 200,000
Duluth. Minn., nnd Gary. Inti., will
Boon he connected by trolley lines.
One pair of potato beetles may have
60.000,000 descendants in one season.
Knew What Dad Would Say.
Jack, the three-year-old brother of
the new and historic Bollefontaine
Avenue twins, has taken up his dad’s
burden in a remarkable manner, con-
sidering his years. A neighbor lady
Hilling on the twins the other night
expressed her approval of them, and
then turned to Jack and asked:
“Jack, may I have your little sis-
ter Betty?”
Jack consented readily.
“Ami how about little brother Bob—
may I have him, too?”
Jack said sure.
“Well, what would pnpn say when
he came home and found them gone?”
“Oh," said Jack, “he'd say, ‘You’re
very we’eorne. ”
There is more power In kindness
than there is in dynamite, but it takes
longer to dtwelop it.
No Eggs, Milk or Butter
The following recipe shows how an appetizing,
wholesome cake can be made without expensive
ingredients.
In many other recipes the number of eggs may
be reduced one-half or more by using an ad-
ditional quantity of ROYAL Baking Powder,
about a teaspoon, in place of each egg omitted.
EGGLESS, MILKLESS, BUTTERLESS CAKE
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 cup brown sugar
1 i cup* water
1 cup seeded raisins
2 ounces citron
M cup shortening
The old method (fruit cake) called for 2 eggs
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 * teaspoon salt
2 cups flour
5 teaspoons Royal Baking PowdM
DIRECTIONS—Put the first eight ir gredients into saucepan and boll
thre* minutes. When cool, add the flour hi d baking powder which have been
si'tcd together: mix well Bake In moderate oven in loaf pan (round tin with
hole in center is best) for 35 or 40 minutes. Ice with white icing.
Booklet of recipes which economise in eggs and other
expensive ingredients mailed free. Address Royal
baking Powder Co., 125 William Street, New York.
BAKING POWDER
Made from Cream of Tartar, derived from grapes,
adds none but healthful qualities to the food.
No Alum
No Phosphate
No Bitter Taste
By GEORGE CLINTON.
Washington.-—Congress has assem-
bled in war session. Seriousness of
purpose marked the opening. There
was a shadow upon all the members
present, but through it gleamed the
light of resolution.
The first session of the Sixty-fifth
congress is in extraordinary session.
With the exception of one year there
has been either the usual long session
or an extra session in every year since
William H. Taft took office. This ses-
sion of congress is the first one which
has been compelled to face virtual war
renditions since McKinley spoke to
congress in May, 1898, in behalf of a
war with Spain which should free the
Cuban people from the yoke, and put
an end to the terrorization and tyran-
ny visited upon the people of the I’earl
of the Antilles.
Congress today is a familiar-looking
body. The Democrats held control of
the last house by a majority of be-
tween twenty and thirty, and as tlie
house is pretty evenly divided be
tween the two parties at this session
It can be seen that only a compara-
tively few Democrats have been sue
coedcd by new Republican members.
Most of the Democrats who held office
in the last congress have been re
elected, and this is true also of the Re-
publicans.
First Woman Member of Congress.
Every person who entered one of the
galleries of congress on Monday for-
got for a minute the war conditions
which prevail and centered thought
and eyes on tlie seat occupied by the
first woman who ever has represented
a district of the United .States in the
congress of the nation. Miss Jean-
nette Rankin of Missoula, Mont., rep-
resentative-at-large from that state,
bore herself modestly and well in an
exceedingly trying position.
There are many oidtiraers in the
prt sent organization of the house. Jo-
seph G. Cannon of Illinois, former
speaker, still holds his place, and with
him is Isaac R. Sherwood, Democrat,
of Toledo, O., who Is eighty-two years
old and who was brigadier general dur-
ing the Civil war. General Sherwood
has boon n pronounced pacifist until
recently. The other day he canceled
a speaking date which he was to make
before a gathering of peace promoters
and issued a statement in which he
declared lie was willing to go to wur
and intimated that lie would like once
more to lead troops.
Watch Legislators' Safety.
In a way congress at this session is
meeting under guard. Washington
has the appearance in part of a
city “which expects things to hap-
pen.” Perhaps there is no real
expectation that anything is to hap-
pen, but the officials believe there is
nothing like taking precautions.
On the day that congress opened no
man. woman or child was allowed to
carry a package into the capitol. Even
umbrellas were barred from the house
and senate chambers, because in the
folds of an umbrella it is possible to
conceal things if one is so Inclined.
Extraordinary measures were taken
to protect the president of the United
States and all the other high officials
of the government on the day of the
opening of congress, and the same
precautions will be taken hereafter.
Washington has beeti affected by a
fever of suspicion.
So far as specific cases are con-
cerned there was no truth In the ru-
mors which floated about. Men of
high standing in the community suf-
fered from idle gossip of the inconsid-
erate. It may be that there are real
cases of treasonable intent in the
capital and that they will develop nnd
punishment be meted out. but so far
as the first eases \ver$ concerned the
stories were brewed In the teapots of
the afternoon gossip table.
Appropriations in Order.
At the last session of the last con-
gress the lawmakers provided for the
navy but loft the army without any
sustenance. One of the first acts of
congress at the extraordinary session
just opened will lie to sanction the
army bill carrying large appropria-
tions of money.
It is barely possible that if it had
not been necessary for the president
in the closing days of the last session
to ask authority of congress to arm
merchant ships of the United States,
all the appropriation bills might have
been passed. The house had disposed
of them and the senate had taken care
of several of them, hut there were
four or five Mg supply measures to
which the senate could give no con-
sideration because the days of the
closing hours were taken up with dis-
cussion which resulted In a contro-
versy concerning the patriotism or
lack of it of certain senators, a con-
troversy of which t he echolngs are
still heard.
When the house passed the army ap-
propriation bill it. of course, was sent
at once to the senate. There It was
amended in the committee on military
affairs. One of the amendments was
a proposal for universal military train-
ing. When it becaiue evident that the
senate would not have time, because
of the filibuster on the armed-ship bill,
to give consideration to the army, the
senate authorities stopped printing
copies of the amended measure. There
are only a few copies in existence to-
day in printed form. The demand for
copies of the bill has been enormous.
Army officers and civilians all over
the United States have written to con-
gressmen for copies of the amended
senate bill, but there were only a few
to lie had.
Why Measure Was Not Printed.
Tiie interest in tins army measure
is tremendous. The reason that sena-
tors would not authorize the printing
of the measure in large quantities was
that knowing the bill could not be
considered, they did not care to spend
the money for printing something
which might be entirely changed in
form ns soon as the extraordinary ses-
sion began, and a new army measure
was proposed.
All appropriation bills must origi-
nate in the house of representatives.
So it is that the present house must
recast the army bill, or at any rate re-
pass it in the form in which it was
passed at the last session. Great in-
terest centers in the action of the
house in tlds matter. It may be that
the members will agree to tack onto
the bill the amendment which Senator
Chamberlain put on it at the last ses-
sion and which provides for universal
military training.
In a war crisis a call for 500,000 vol-
unteers means, of course, that the
American people would have a half-
million men in training in compara-
tively a short time. It is being urged
by some members of congress that if
tills shall happen there will be no
necessity for the passage of a univer-
sal military training measure for an-
other year, because the men for whose
training it would provide for the first
year would come under training any-
way through the operations of the call
for volunteers.
It will make little difference proba-
bly, so far as debate is concerned,
whether tlie house actually presents
a universal military training measure
at this session, for the interest in the
subject is alive. The senate is certain
to take it up and debate it. The whole
country is interested and letters for
and against the proposition are com-
ing by hundreds in every mail.
Major General Wood’s New Command.
Which will be the more important
military command, the department of
the East, which is being deUnquished
by Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, or the
department of the Southeast, of which
the transferred major general is to
take command?
Leonard Wood has been outspoken in
his demands for preparedness, and at
times the spirit of his words have
seemed to he critical of the administra-
tion. The best military opinion seems
to be that Wood’s new command will
be more important than the one which
he has relinquished. He will have
charge of the department which in-
cludes the southeastern states with
their coast lines. If the United States
ever is to lie invaded by the armies of
European nations the invasion will be
attempted by way of the country over
which Wood will exercise military con-
trol. It is possible, therefore, that the
genenfl has been promoted rather than
demoted. There is a sharp difference
of opinion about the matter, however.
Bell's Long and Brilliant Career.
Some second Kipling should write
W. L. DOUGLAS
“THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE”
$3 $3.50 $4 $4.50 $5 $6 $7 & $8
Save Money by Wearing W. L. Douglas
shoes. For sale by over9000 shoe dealers.
The Best Known Shoes in the World.
vy7. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bot-
W tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and
the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. The
retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San
Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the
price paid for them.
'T'he quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more
■t than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart
styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America.
They are made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Mass.,
by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and
supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest
determination to make the best shoes for the price that money
can buy. /I
Ask your shoe dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes. If he ean- (f 'w.
not supply you with the kind you want, take no other
make. Write for Interesting booklet explaining how to
ret shoes of the highest standard of quality for the price,
by return mail, postage free.
LOOK FOR W. L Douglas a/Lrf
name and the retail price
President W. L.
.FOR MEN
AND WOMEN
stamped on the bottom.
Boys’ Shoes
Best In the World
$3.00 $2.50 & $2.00
W. L. Douglas Shoe Co.,-
185 Spark St., Brockton. Mas..
The Biter Bitten.
An Indianapolis wife took one of her
children to a throat specialist. The
specialist looked into the juvenile
throat. “Tonsils poorly taken out,” he
declared crisply. “Have to be done
over again.”
Then followed a brief explanation, of
the reason why the offending tonsils
should be attended to again. “Who did
this work?” asked the doctor, his face
assuming a keenly professional air as
though he must know who had been
thus derelict in his profession.
“You did," said the mother with a
smile. And the doctor smiled too.—
Indianapolis News.
We Want Reliable Men
to act as our agents. If you can
show us A No. I references wo
can show you the way to a good
income. Draper Oil & Ga* Co.,
308 Barnes Bldg., Wichita, Kane.
W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 15-1917.
WOMAN’S CROWNING GLORY
Is her hair. If yours is streaked with
ugly, grizzly, gray hairs, use “La Cre-
ole” Hair Dressing and change it in
the natural way. Brice $1.00.—Adv.
Turn About.
“Young Blithers took up law and
dropped it.”
“Yes?”
“He then took tip medicine and
dropped that."
“What’s he doing now?”
“He’s in the hospital with a broken
leg and several fractured ribs. He
took up aviation and that dropped
him.”
It is sometimes difficult to distin-
guish between a sympathetic person
and a curious one.
Los Angeles in 1916 paid out near-
ly $15,000,000 for new buildings.
Ran Francisco last year spent $18,-
837,173 for new buildings.
FALLING HAIR MEANS
DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE
Save Your Hair! Get a 25 Cent Bottle
of Danderine Right Now—Also
Stops Itching Scalp.
Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy
hair Is mute evidence of a neglected
scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf.
There is nothing so destructive to
the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair
of its luster, Us strength and Its very
life; eventually producing a feverish-
ness aud itching of the scalp, which
If not remedied causes the hair roots
to shrink, loosen nnd die—then the
hair falls out fast. A little Danderine
tonight—now—any time—will surely
save your hair.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Danderine from any store, and after
A Worthy
Kidney Medicine
I am very well pleased with the results
obtained from the sale of Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root for the past fourteen years,
and my customers after taking it speak
very favorably concerning benefits ob-
tained. It has proved very valuable in
the treatment of bright’s disease (diag-
nosed as such by a physician), and I really
believe it is a very fine preparation and
worthy of recommending.
Very truly vours,
S. E. WILSON. Drugg-st.
Oct. 14, 1916. Altoona, Kan.
Breve What Swsmp-Rool Will Do For Yoa
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer <fe Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bot-
tle. It will convince anyone. You will
also receive a booklet of valuable infor-
mation, telling about the kidneys and blad-
der. When writing, be sure and mention
this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one-
doliar size bottles for sale at all drug
stores.—Adv.
Suitable Excitement.
“Current events are lively."
“Yes; sending electric
through people.”
thrills
SOAP IS STRONGLY ALKALINE
nnd constant use will burn out thd
scalp. Cleanse the scalp by shampoo-
ing with “La Creole” Hair Dressing,
and darken. In the natural way, those
ugly, grizzly hairs. Price, $1.00.—Adv.
the first application your hair will
of one of the deeds of J. Franklin Bell. | take on that life, luster and luxuriance
The general went over to the Philip- : xviiich is so beautiful. It will become
pines as a first' lieutenant of the Sev-
enth cavalry. He had not been in the
islands long before he was put in com-
mand of a volunteer force composed
almost wholly of regulars whose terms
of enlistment had expired, but who
were willing to take ou a short term
of duty to help in the clearing up of
the work which they aided in starting.
Guides led the force to the vicinity
of a Tagalog village. Night fell aud
the Tagalogs were all unsuspicious of
the approach of the white enemy. At
three o'clock in the morning, when
sleep always hangs heavy on the eyes.
Bell led his men toward the village.
The Tagalogs had sentinels posted
along an outlying Hue. After the man-
ner of the people of the plains the
' soldiers crept silently between the
' pickets, only one of whom was vigilant
enough to detect the presence of the
| enemy. He was silenced before he
hud a chance to raise a cry or u shot.
Village Easily Captured.
Straight into the village went Bell
at the head of his men. Dawn streaks
were beginning to show in the sky,
hut the warriors were asleep past the
ordinary waking, for were not the seu-
tinels posted, and were they uot bound
by every tradition of tribal honor to
be awake and watchful?
General Bell had given his men or- '
ders. Tiie village was cordoned with
troops aiul there wasn’t a mousehole of |
escape. Bell has a whimsical limp or. I
In the very heart of the Tagalog vil- j
Inge was an old muzzle-loading brass
cannon, a trophy taken by the Taga-
logs from the Spaniards of another
day, and which the natives were hop-
ing to use against tiie equally bated
Americans. Bell detailed a loading
party of three men. The three be-
came boys again and they rammed tiie
piece full of powder and grass wadding
after the manner of the loading of n
Fourth of July cannon on the village
green in the home land.
The light of coming day was strong
euougli for the conducting of opera-
tions. A lanyard was pulled and tiie
brazen piece roared out its reveille.
The sounds of it shook the foundations
of the Tagalog huts. It roused the war-
rior sleepers as would the cracking of
doomsday. They came armed but
i naked to the fray. The Tagalogs
| looked on bayonet points ami dowr
I gun barrels aud surrender came.
It might be well to remember that
the lengthening of the days doesn’t
prolong the reckoning of a thirty
days’ obligation.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that It
Bears the
wavy and fluffy and have the appear-
ance of abundance; an Incomparable
gloss and softness, but what will
please you most will be after just a Signature of
few weeks’ use, when you will actual- In Use for Over 30 Years,
ly see a lot of fine, downy hair—new Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
hair—growing all over the scalp. Adv. -
- If a man tells a woman she has a
Humanity is unequnlly divided be- musical laugh, she will fall for any old
tween those who can’t stand prosper- joke he may get off.
lty and those who can’t get any to
stand.
North Dakota and Mississippi have
nearly nine-tenths country folk.
The custom of hand-shaking dates
| back to Henry II of England.
The mills of fashion grind swiftly,
but they grind exceeding finery.
Superior, \Vis., now has 45 miles of
paved streets.
A brave man
dentist's chair.
loses his nerve in a
Kalispel,
mill.
Mont., is to have a paper
Chile is 2.000 miles long.
.....
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ile mam ... __
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Wood, E. A. The Manchester Journal. (Manchester, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, April 13, 1917, newspaper, April 13, 1917; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc497807/m1/3/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.