The Osage County News (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, May 21, 1920 Page: 4 of 8
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THE 01 AGE COUNT? NlWi, Friday, May SI, 1920.
J. W. Hunt and son Harry were
Tulsa Sunday.
Your
Value
Depends upon your re-
sults. Pain and suffer-
ing may cause your re-
sults to be poor.
That Headache, Neu-
ralgia, Backache or Sleep-
lessness can be relieved
by-
DR. MILES*
Anti-Pain Pills
The Great Pain Relief
No bad results follow use.
Concerning one of the in-
gredients medical authorities
say:—
"No medicine is more deserv-
ing of confidence with the view
of combating pain in all its
forms.”
Mead off pain and suffering
by keeping a box handy.
Money back if first package
fails to relieve.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
Charles Lookout was in Tulsa Tues-
day on business.
E. Hester of Granite, is in the city
on a visit to his brother, J. L. Hester.
The Catholic Guild met yesterday
at the home of Mrs. R. J. Woodring.
Mrs. F. A. Sawyer went to Bigheart
Tuesday on business and to visit with
friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Watson were
in Fawhuska the first of this week on
! business.
Eari L. Bird of the city of Hominy
! is in the city this week, attending to
business.
J. R .Laws was in Tulsa and Okla-
homa City the first of the week on
business.
Francis Revard of Bartlesville was
a Fawhuska business visitor the first
of this week.
W .K. Hale of Fairfax was in the
city the first of this week, attending
tr. business.
W. B. Linville and brother „.
Linville, were in the city the first of
this week, looking after interests
Pawhuska.
Ts't
sts in I |
►
■V*
Drummond Brothers of Hominy are
in the city this week, attending to busi
ness and mingling with their PawHus-
ka friends.
Mrs. C. O. Nelson returned the
first of the week from Enid, to which
city she had gone for a short visit to
her mother.
Wm. U. Bennett of Fairfax was in
the city the first of the week attend-
ing to business matters before the
county seat.
Mrs. James Ball returned home the
first of the week from Arkansas City
where she has been visiting relatives
for several days.
Bert Sipe of the Ferguson Motor j
Co., was in Wynona Wednesday on i
business for that hustling and live- \
awake company.
Representative Wesmeyer of Fair-
fax was in the city the first of this
; week on business.
C. L. Ivellam was in Pawhuska from
Bartlesville Tuesday on a visit to S.
C. Burnett and wife.
Don’t Drug Kidneys
Rub Backache Away.
Instant Relief! Rub Pain, Soreness
And Stiffness From Your Back
With "St. Jacobs Liniment.”
Mrs. Chas. A. Duncan left Wednes-
day for Kansas City, where she will
be a few days with relatives.
Mrs. Edwin Fitzpatrick of Wlchi-:
ta, is in the city for a few days on a
visit at the George Alberty home.
0. T. Caspary was in Wichita the
first of the week on business for the
T. J. Carter Lumber with whom he is
employed.
Prudom Addition
HOUSES
New 3-room house, lot 50x140 ....................$2,250
New 5 room house, garage, lot 50x224 .......... 4,500
New 6 room house, lot 50x224 ................... 4,250
Commission paid to brokers. Possession at once.
For Particulars see
HORACE J. SMITH
PHONE 264
Kidneys cause backache? No!
They have no nerves, therefore can
not cause pain. Listen! Your back-
ache is caused by lumbago, sciatica
or a strain and the quickest relief is
Soothing penetrating "St. Jacobs
Liniment.” Rub it right on the ache
or tender Bpot, and instantly the pain,
soreness, stiffness and lameness dis-
appears. Don’t stay crippled! Get a
small trial bottle of “St. Jacobs Lini-
ment” from your druggist and limber
up. A moment after it is applied you’ll
wonder what became of the backache,
sciatica or lumbago pain. “St. Jacobs
Liniment” stops any pain at once. It
is harmless and doesn’t bum or dis-
color the skin.
It’s the only application to rub on a
weak, lame or painful back, or for
lumbago, sciatica, neuralgia, rheuma-
tism, sprains or a strain.
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FELLOWS: See This
Isn’t it a smart Style? You’ll like it much bet-
ter when you see it on your foot. It is a Dunlap
shoe — a line made to appeal to young men who
want smart footwear.
AMBROSE & ARCHIBALD
“WE FIT THE FEET”
O
■sift. n^i mfr. mifti «
:
Mrs. A. T. Woodward and Mtb. W.
T. I.eehy returned home yesterday
fr cmTulsa where they had been to
attend grand opera.
Lee Dixon, who has been in Deni-
son, Texas, for the past couple of
weeks, on a visit to his sister, return-
ed to Pawhuska, the first of last week,
and has resumed his duties with the
city.
The More careful you are to buy the Best
Groceries A-d Meats
The more certain you will be to buy the
kind we sell
Graham (8>j Caudill
For Service
7th and Kihekah
Kodaks
Our patrons who purchased a
Kodak from us during the Christ-
mas season say they would not be
without one at present. A Kodak
makes pleasures where otherwise
you could not achieve them.
We have a complete assort-
ment of
EASTMAN
KODAKS
to suit each and everyone.
Call and let us show you just
what you want.
Hurt & Whiteker
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS
Mrs. Eliza Tinker, who spent a few
days in Pawhuska the latter part of
last week, returned Monday to her
home in Skiatook.
Carey Crane w4b in the city the
first of the week from Tulsa, where he
has a good position. He went from
here to Kansas City to spend a few
days before returning to his work in
Tulsa.
Mrs. C. M. Crouse of Arkansas City-
is at the Jiome of her sister, Mrs. Elsie
M. Bruce for a visit to the Bruces and;
her Pawhuska friends.
Mr. and Mrs. George Kennedy who
have been here from Eureka Springs,
Arkansas for the past several days,
left the first of this week for their
home after a very pleasant visit here,
to their son.
Templar
The Superfine Small Car
Selecting a Car
The Templar Motor Corporation is building the finest car
of moderate size that skill and money can produce. Tem-
plar cars are designed to fulfill the demand for a medium
size car of superfine quality which incorporates the beau-
ty and refinement of design to, be found in the higher
priced products, and the quality of materials and the
workmanship which heretofore has been confined to the
large, higher priced cars.
To-day the automobile buyer is looking, first of all, for
performance; next, appearance; and then, true economy,
not only in gasolline and tires, but in upkeep as well. He
demands a car that is light, flexible in traffic, one which
will take all ordinary hills on high—a car that will run
every day in the year with little attention, and one so de-
signed thqt all parts are easily accessible when adjust-
ments are necessary.
The Templar is superfine in quality, beautiful in appear-
ance, light in weight, small in size and inexpensive to
operate. It is luxuriously comfortable, easy to control,
and most completely equipped. It is the pioneer in a
field heretofore without exponent. It is the rich man’s
demand—quality and economy; it is the poor man’s need
—economy and quality.
PHONE FOR A DEMONSTRATION
Several New Models Have Just Been Received
♦
Ferguson Motor Co.
“Right Now Service”
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The Osage County News (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, May 21, 1920, newspaper, May 21, 1920; Pawhuska, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc825999/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.