The Dacoma Enterprise (Dacoma, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, April 14, 1916 Page: 2 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE DACOMA ENTERPRISE
U
SAGE TEA BARKENS
HAIR TO ANY SHADE
JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!lltl!llllllllllllllllllllllilUIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIl|
Don’t stay Gray! Here’s an
Old-time Recipe that Any-
body Can Apply.
The use of Sago and Sulphur for re-
storing faded, gray hair to its natural
color dates back to grandmother’s
time. She used it to keep her hair
beautifully dark, glossy and attractive.
Whenever her hair took on that dull,
faded or streaked appearance, this
simple mixture was applied with won-
derful effect.
But brewing at homo is mussy and
out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at
any drug store for a 50 cent bottle of
"Wyeth’s Sago and Sulphur Com-
pound,” you will get this famous old
preparation, improved by the addition
of other ingredients, which can be de-
pended upon to restore natural color
and beauty to the hair.
A well-known downtown druggist
says it darkeps the hair bo naturally
and evenly that nobody can tell it has
been applied. You simply dampen a
sponge or soft brush with it and draw
this through your hair, taking one
strand at a time. By morning the gray
hair disappears, and after another ap-
plication or two, it becomes beautifully
dark and glossy.
Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Com-
pound is a delightful toilet requisite
for those who desire a more youthful
appearance. It is not intended for the
cure, mitigation or prevention of dis-
ease.—Adv.
Paragraph
History
Current Events at
Home and Abroad
Told Briefly.
^inmmiiiiuiiiiLiiiniiHiHiiimmiTiiTiiTiiTiiTimiTiiTiiiiti
Late War News
Exports of domestic merchandise
valued at $220,426,021 shipped from
New York during February establish-
ed a new record in exports for a sin-
gle month from an American port.
Wireless reports from Zurich state
that Holland has closed her German
frontier and massed all her available
forces there.
A Proviso
“Don’t be surprised if I call you
up at your oflice, my dear.”
“I won't, If it is tc call me down.”
There is a slight lull in the battle
raging about Verdun following the vio-
lent fighting by which the French re-
gained a footing in the village of Vaux.
Cotton exports from Galveston dur-
ing the month of March amounted tc
129,351 bales, less than half that of
last month and about one-quarter of
the record for March, 1915, when 460,-
430 bales were shipped. The decrease
is attributed to war conditions, short#
age of tonnage and light demand.
Mexico
General Carranza published a decree
authorizing the secretary of the treas-
ury to purchase paper money of the
present issue to the value of $1,000,000
gold, Mexican. The paper money is to
be destroyed.
Ten persons were killed and eleven
injured in Scotland in last Sunday
night’s Zeppelin raid, it was officially
announced. There were no casual-
ties in England.
James W. Gerard, the American
ambassador at Berlin, sent an inquiry
to the German foreign officers con-
cerning the sinking of the liteamship
Berwindvale off Queenstown.
When a man offe’s you something
for nothing, you w'il save money by
going out of your vay to avoid accept-
ing It.
RELIEF HAS
BEEN PERMANENT
Says Cardui Built Up System When
Other Medicines Failed. Believes
It Saved Her Life.
General Zupelli, minister of war, has
resigned on account of ill health.
King Victor Emmanuel has accepted
his resignation and appointed General
Paoli Morrone, commander of an army
corps, to succeed him.
* 9 ♦
The Germans in a fierce attack on
French positions northeast of Hill 295
in the Lemort Homme region, some
three miles east of Malancourt, gain-
ed a footing in some of the French
first line trenches but were immedi-
ately driven out in a vigorous counter
attack.
General Gavira received a telegiam
from General Bertani at Madera in
which General Bertani claimed to have
authentic information that Villa,
wounded in the leg, was between Nara-
iquipa and Bachiniva. He also said
that if any Villistas were headed south
of Satevo they were independent of
their leader.
• * *
Coincident with the receipt of news
that American troopers again had
clashed with a force of Villa bandits
near Guerrero, it was learned at the
state department that the United
States had renewed its representations
to General Carranza regarding the
shipment of supplies to General Persh-
ing over the Mexican railroads.
Hopes Women Will
Adopt This Habit
As Well As Men
Glass ot hot water each morn-
ing helps us look and feel
clean, sweet, fresh.
The German imperial chancellor, Dr.
von Bethmann-Hollweg in outlining
the attitude of Germany before the
reichstag characterized as “the silliest
of all the imputations” against Ger-
many the report that at the end of the
war Germany would take measures
against the American continent and
attempt to conquer Canada.
Domestic
Hendersonville, N. C.—Mrs. M. A.
Redmon, of R. F. D. 1, this place,
writes: “I wish to state that before
having taken Cardui, my condition of
health was all run-down, and had been
that way ever since my marriage two
years ago last May. I only weighed
107 pounds. My average weight i9
135 pounds. I had such awful pains
at times I could hardly go... I had
severe pains in my back and abdomen,
and could scarcely do my work... I
could not lift anything heavy.
“In November, 1913, I began taking
Cardui. I thought I would give it a
trial though my family doctor, -
had set the date for an examination
of me... I saw my improvement after
taking the first bottle... I am getting
fat and w’ell, and in March this year
I weighed 128 pounds. .. Your Cardui
tonic built up my system when all
Geo. H. Edwards, republican, defeat-
ed Mayor Jost, democrat, for re-elec-
tion at Kansas City.
In municipal elections at Chicago,
the republicans lost all but a very few
seats in the council.
James B. Angell, president emeritus
of tHe University of Michigan, died
at his home in Ann Arbor. He had
been critically ill for more than a
week.
* * •
The steamer Constitution, owned by
the Carribean & Southern Steamship
Co., of Mobile, has been sold to an
agent of the European allies for
$700,000.
Reports to the department of justice
indicate that there now is no longer
any doubt that Felix Diaz has landed
in Mexico. Officials have been in-
formed that he is at the head of a con-
siderable force in the south of Mexico
and received material aid through
Gautemala. It is the first official in-
formation of the revolutionary leader’s
whereabouts.
• * •
In his proclamation calling on the
Villa bandits to lay down their arms,
General Jacinto Trevino, commanding
the Torreon district, stated that this,
by authority of the first chief, would
be the last call. The bandits must
lay down their arms within ten days,
he said, to obtain personal guarantee
of safety. Negotiations for the sur-
render of some of these bandits are
reported to be in progress.
Happy, bright, alert—vigorous and
vivacious—a good clear skin; a nat
ural, rosy complexion and freedom
from illness are assured only by clean,
healthy blood. If only every woman
and likewise every man could realize
the wonders of drinking phosphated
hot water each morning, what a grat-
ifying change would take place.
Instead of the thousands of sickly,
anaemic-looking men, women and
girls with pasty or muddy complex-
ions; instead of the multitudes of
“nerve wrecks,” “rundowns,” “brain
fags” and pessimists we should see a
virile, optimistic throng of rosy-
cheeked people everywhere.
An inside bath is had by drinking,
each morning before breakfast, a glass
of real hot water with a teaspoonful
of limestone phosphate in it to wash
from the stomach, liver, kidneys and
ten yards of bowels the previous day’s
Indigestible waste, sour fermentations
and poisons, thus cleansing, sweeten-
ing and freshening the entire alimen-
tary canal before putting more food
into the stomach.
Those subject to sick headache, bil-
iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism,
colds; and particularly those ° who
have a pallid, sallow complexion and
who are constipated very often, are
urged to obtain a quarter pound of
limestone phosphate from any drug-
gist or at the store which will cost
but a trifle but is sufficient to demon-
strate the quick and remarkable
change in both health and appearance
awaiting those who practice internal
sanitation. We must remember that
inside cleanliness is more important
than outside, because the skin does
not absorb impurities to contaminate
the blood, while the pores in the thir-
ty feet of bowels do.—Adv.
Foreign
King George has placed 100,000
pounds sterling at the disposal of the
treasury.
* * *
The troops at Swatow and Chao
Chow Fu, province of Kwang Tung,
declared their independence of the
central government on March 29.
* * •
The steamer Wakatsu Maru, bound
from Nagasaki for coital points, has
been wrecked on a sunken rock.
Eighty-ni,ne passengers and sixteen
sailors are believed to have been
drownd. The Wakatsu Maru was a
vessel of 2,520 tons.
James C. Bulger, soldier of fortune, -|-he
reserves of wheat are practic-
convicted of killing 1> loyd F. Nicode- j aiiy exhausted in Holland and the As-
mus, must hang the week beginning SOCjated Press is informed on the
other medicines failed. I feel and look
like a different person... I am Btill...
praising it to my friends,. .. for I can
truly say I believe it saved my life.
My relief from all pain has been per-
manent.”
If you are run-down In health and
need a tonic, take Cardui, the woman’s
tonic. It will help you.
For sale by all druggists.
If time were nfoney, the average
man would have hia watch geared to
run 48 hours u day.
May 21, according to a decision Mon-
day of the Colorado supreme court.
* * %
The strike declared by 10,000 farm-
ers and dairymen about Chicago has
compelled twenty-eight milk plants to
quit business. The milk producers are
on strike to force the dealers to pay
them $1.55 per 100 pounds.
With nearly two-thirds of the vote
in last week’s democratic state pri-
mary reported, it is aparent that Dr.
Charles Hillman Brough, who resign-
ed the chair of political economy in
the University of Arkansas to make
the race for governor, has been nomin-
ated over Judge L. C. Smith, of De-
witt. and Secretary of State Earle W.
Hedges, of Little Rock.
very highest authority that the govern-
ment intends to buy 100.000 tons in
America to form the .needed reserve.
Several Dutch ships have been re-
quisitioned under the ne wship law to
bring these supplies from America.
# * *
Maj. Gen. Gearge W. Goethals, gov-
ernor of the canal zone, made an ex-
amination of the slide area in the
Gaillard cut to satisfy himself regard-
ing conditions where he said after-
ward the situation looked even more
favorable to him than he had ex-
pected, and that April 15 would remain
unchanged as the date for reopening
the waterway. General Goethals ex-
pressed the belief tHat the canal would
not be closed again to traffic on ac-
count. of slides in the cut.
A Reminder.
Dealer—This is the best parrot we
have, but 1 wouldn’t sell him without
letting you know his one fault; he’ll
grumble terribly if his food doesn’t
suit him.
Miss Fitz—I’ll take him; it will
seem quite like having a man in the
house.
Druggist Gives Highest Praise
to Kidney Medicine
For the past fifteen years I have been
selling Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root and
my customers are always satisfied with
the results obtained from its use and they
speak in the highest terms regarding
Swamp-Root. I have used it in my own
family and the results were the most fav-
orable. I believe it is a fine medicine for
kidney, liver and bladder diseases and I
always recommend it for such troubles.
Very truly yours,
CHAS. BRUTON, Druggist,
Jan. 5th, 1916. Dover, Tenn.
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer b-to.
Binjhamton. N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & 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, he sure and mention
this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one-
dollar size bottles for sale at all drug
stores.—Adv.
Common Sense.
"Darling, fly with me.”
"Stay down on earth, Freddie, and
I’ll consider your proposal.”
1
1
t
I
4 i
i
*
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Watrus, P. B. The Dacoma Enterprise (Dacoma, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, April 14, 1916, newspaper, April 14, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc825449/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.