The Dacoma Mascot (Dacoma, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1918 Page: 5 of 8
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THE DACOMA MASCOT
THIS WEAK,
NERVOUS MOTHER
THE MAMIES SCODE ACAD
Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham’t
Vegetable Compound
Restored Her Health.
Philadelphia, Pa.—“I wa« very weak,
always tired, my back ached, and I felt
sickly most of tho
time. I went to a
doctor and he said
I had nervous indi-
gestion, which ad-
ded to 'my weak
condition kept me
worrying most of
the time — and he
said if I could not
stop that, I could
not get well. I
hearaso much about
Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Com-
pound my husband wanted me to try it.
I took it fora week and felt a little bet-
ter. I kept it up for three months, and
I feel fine and can eat anything now
without distress or nervousness."—Mrs.
J. Worthline, 2842 North Taylor St,
Philadelphia Pa.
Had Her Choice.
The daughter of the family was very
proud of her white shoes, but the only
trouble was that white shoes nowadays
don’t stay white long. So the daugh-
ter was constantly buying shoe polish,
and white shoe polish and cleaner, be-
ing In demand, was very high-priced.
The situation was getting rather criti-
cal when the daughter’s birthday came
along.
“Daughter,” said her father at the
breakfast table that morning, “these
are war times, but m try to give you
a present this year ns usual. You can
either continue to have white shoes,
or you enn continue taking music les-
sons. But both of them will break
There’s Magic, in
The majority of mothers nowaday*
overdo, there are so many demands
upon their time and strength; the result
Is invariably a weakened, run-down,
nervous condition with headaches, back-
ache, irritability and depression — and
en<
me up.
rv.
r 4i
Different Circumstance*.
She—Do you love me less than you
i did a week ago, when you bought me
flowers and candy every night?
He—No, but pay day is a week off
nnd I generally get broke about the
, middle of the month.
Col. Charles E. Doyen, commander
Df the regiment of marines in France
Who whipped the Germans at Chateau- —-
Thierry.
Maybe the cheapest way to live Is
to chew nothing but words. But we
confess it’s tiresome.
7*
£
ii
Red Cross Ball Blue
A hundred years ago, the magio,
dazzling whiteness it gives to the
coarsest as well as most delicate
fabrics would have caused its user
to be hailed aa a witch. To-day
ahe is the envy of her neighbors,
at much less labor to oc
lerself.
Makes clothes beautiful.
Buy it—try it—and you’ll stick to it.
• Mi mil good process
6 Cents Almost Free!
SUBS GET 2 MORE VESSELS
You Can Now Eat
aoon more serious ailments develoj.
It is at ouch periods in life that Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will
restore a normal healthy condition, as
it did to Mrs. Worthline.
Stoker's Act of Bravery.
In these days of yndersea warfare,
when the blow Is often struck without
warning, a new danger is added to the
already hazardous tasks of the ship’s
firemen. Speed is an essential In
beating the U-boat, and this requires
constant work. Recently the bottom
blow valve of a boiler was carried away
on a vessel of the United States navy.
One of the crew was Aloyslus Fawcett,
a fireman, first class. With two others
he made his way through a steam-filled
flreroom and fought a passage through
a hot cloud In the engine room. Here
he helped haul the tires at a critical
moment. The nerve and quickness of
the act saved the boiler nnd the ves-
sel from serious accident. Fawcett en-
listed In the navy in 1911, at Cin-
cinnati.
IN THEIR RAID ON THE
ATLANTIC COAST
Attacks of the U-Boats Appear to Be
About Over for the Present
at Least.
Your Favorite Food
Without Any Fear
Careful Patient.
A woman whose throat had troubled
her for a long time grew impatient at
the slow progress she was making nnd
made a complaint to her doctor.
“Madame,” he said, “I enn never
Cure you of this throat trouble unless
you stop talking and give your throat
complete rest.” v
“But, doctor,” objected his patient,
“I’m very careful of what I say. I
never use harsh language or anything
of that kind.”
Doping It Out.
“What’s on the menu today?”
“You mean what’s off. That’s the im-
portant point.”
DoYou Know
The Fine Flavor
‘v'POST
TOASTIES
IS FOUND
IN NO OTHER
CORN
LFLAKES
Washington.—Sinking of the British
steamship Harpathian, 100 miles off
the Virginia capes, by a German sub-
marine was announced at the navy
department. The entire crew was
rescued by the steamer Palmer, which
arrived in Chesapeake bay.
The submarine used a torpedo. One
member of the British crew was in
jured. The Harpathian was a freight-
er of 2,800 tons net.
An announcement from the navy de-
partment said the Norwegian steamer
Eidsvold was sent to the bottom forty
miles off the Virginia capes. The en-
tire crew was rescued by a navy sup-
ply ship. Details of the encounter are
lacking.
It is evident that the raiders had
been moving steadily southward of the
New Jersey coast. The raiders^were
closer in shore when they attacked
the Eidsvold than on any previous oc-
casion except when they launched the
mines picked up off the Delaware
capes. The tanker Pratt apparently
struck one of these mines and a num-
ber of others unexploded have been
gathered up in the same vicinity by
patrol craft.
The French tanker Radioleine’s un-
successful attack off the Maryland
coast, probably was a hundred miles
north of the place where the Eids-
vold was sunk eight hours later.
Confidence In the measures taken
by the navy to deal with raiders was
expressed in the senate by spokes-
men on both sides. Senator Lewis of
Illinois, democratic whip, and Senator
Lodge of Massachusetts, republican,
Joined in declaring that the navy was
on the alert and ready for the enemy.
Kramer Says: “Ea tonic* Rids Weak Stomachs of
Acids, Gas, Heartburn, Food Repeating
and Stomach Miseries
What miserable feelings are caused
by an upset stomach I That dull,
heavy, “bloated” sensation that follows
a full meal, robs good living of half
its pleasures. Is there any way out
for you sufferers with stomach weak-
ness?
Yes; H. L. Kramer, the man who
originated Cascarets, has found a sure,
quick, relief for Indigestion, dyspepsia,
“sour stomach,” heart-burn, formation
of painful gases, “bloating,” etc., etc.
He calls his stomach relief EA-
TONIC, nnd It certainly is making a
wonderful record. Countless thous-
ands of people who formerly ap-
proached their meals with dread, now
eat their fill of their favorite foods
without fenr of the after-effects.
Mr. Kramer says: “My EATONIO
tablets are the solution of the age-old
problem of Indigestion and all forms
of stomach misery.
“EATONIC neutralizes the adds,
that form the painful gases, "sweet-
ens” the stomach, and gives the gastric
Juice a chance to do its work as It
should.
“To promote appetite and aid diges-
tion, take EATONIO tablets—one or
two after each meal. They are per-
fectly harmless. Eat them Just like
candy.
“For distress after eating; sour,
‘‘gassy,*’ acid stomach, vertigo, nausea
and belching, and that wretched,
pulTed-up, “lumpy” feeling, after over-
eating; there Is nothing to compare
with EATONIO Tablets."
All druggists sell EATONIO —— BOc
for a large box. Watch out for imita-
tions. The genuine bears the name
EATONIO on each tablet—guaranteed
to do all that Is claimed; or If yonr
druggists don’t carry EATONIO—send
to Eatonlc Remedy Co., Chicago, 111.
M’ADOO ASKS 8 BILLIONS
Urges New Revenue Bill Be Drawn tc
Obtain That Amount.
Carter’s Little liver Pills
You Cannot be A Remedy That
Constipated
and Happy
Small Pill
u
Small Dole
Small Price
Makes Life
Worth Living
Genuine been signature
'CBoSS^l
Washirgton. — Secretary McAdoo
recommended in a letter to Chairman
Kitchin of the house ways and means
committee that the new revenue bill
be drawn to raise $8,000,000,000 by
taxation, one-third of the estimated
$24,000,000,000 expenditures in the
fiscal year 1919.
nrMinnsi
Ftr MALARIA, CHILLS and FEVER.
BOLD FOR BO YEARS.
ALSO A PINE GENERAL STRENGTHEN*
INC YGNIC. Sol* by All Drue Star**.
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The Dacoma Mascot (Dacoma, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1918, newspaper, November 7, 1918; Dacoma, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc826485/m1/5/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.