The Quay Times (Quay, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, May 24, 1918 Page: 2 of 4
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NERVOUS
PROSTRATION
May be Overcome by Lydia
El Pinkham'a Vegetable
Compound — This
Letter Proves It
West Philadelphia, Pa.—
thirty yean I have been marri
Skin Tortured
Babies Sleep
After Cuticura
See* 2Se. Oliiam JS aad SO.
The h II Ion ik-ciI America and Amer-
ica needs you.
To keep clean and healthy take Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They ref-
late liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv.
Tills may be a progressive age, but
It is said that they still drink coffee
from saucers in St. Louis.
More Grub.
“What we need." declared the first
Itusslan, “is a man on horseback.”
"Yes," assented the other one, “we
could use a little horse meat, that's
true."
No Personal Quarrel.
A man. when asked why he wished
to Ik* exempted, said he had no per-
sonal quarrel with Germany. The offi-
cer in charges said:
“What would you do If on going
home you found n cutthroat In the
house with your wife?”
“I would leave him to his fate,”
the tnan replied.
His Great Gratitude.
“I have given nil my ready money to
the Red Cross and other worthy causes.
I Iihvo mortgaged my home to buy Lib-
erty bonds. Tell me. If you cun. of
something more that I can do to show
my appreciation of the beneficence of
our glorious government?”
“Considering your financial circum-
stances," said we, “It would seem that
you have done enough—"
“Knougli!” tie interrupted. "I have
not done half enough ! Why, the good,
kind government hus taken my trifling
son in-law In the draft! Hl-randy-
dnndy-oh!” We left him, still chort-
ling like a laughing hyena.—Kansas
City Star.
IN ALL LANDS
CONCISE REVIEW
OF WEEK'S NEWS
During ths
lied, Ibivi
been In bad health
and bad several at-
tacks of nervous
prostration until it
seemed as if ths
organs in my wbols
body were worn
out. I wss finally
persuade) to try
Lydia E. Pinkhams
Vegetable Com-
pound and it made
a well woman of
me. I can now do
all my housework
and*advisa all siting women to try
Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetable Com-
pound and I will guarantee they will
derive great benefit from it.”—Mrs.
Frank Fitzgerald, 25 N. 41st Street,
West Philadelphia, Pa.
There are thousands of women every-
where in Mrs. Fitxgeraid's condition,
Buffering from nervousness, backache,
headaches, and other symptoms of a
functional derangement It wss s
grateful spirit for health restored which
led her to write this letter so that other
women may benefit from her experience
and find health as she has done.
For suggestions in regard to your con-
dition write I.ydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co., I.ynn, Mass. The result of their
40 years experience is at your service.
wimpsmTk
\N @diulT3®rid(S
fall hr SO Tan ro* H4UUA. CHILLS 4TO ma
A.— • r — (ml StmoAtsiai T»k At All Dr»j Kn
WarDemands
Saving of Sugar,
Saving of Fuel
Use of other -
Crains withWheav
-No Waste.
Grape-Nuts
answers every
demand. Its an
economical, nour-
ishing and deli-
cious food, a build-
er and maintainer
of Vigor and health.
Try it.
“ There's a /Reason"
War Newt.
Germany's resumption of the gigan-
tic offensive against the Allies on the
west front baa not yet materialised.
In various sectors there have been
local operations which have no bear-
ing on the situation as a whole. Rut
along the entire front there is a quiet
that might be encouraging were it not
that the Germans are known to be
moving up men and materials for a
new move In the mighty drive launch-
ed March 21.
♦ ♦ ♦
A big enemy ammunition dump at
Cantlgny was fired by the American
artillery the other morning. At the
same time two fires were started in
Montdldier, followed by numerous ex-
plosions. The weather continued
misty and rainy.
♦ ♦ ♦
An important section of high
/round near the Vyverbeek river, north
of Kemmel, has been captured by the
French in a strong attack. Both Hill
44 and Uoddezone Farm, which lie be-
tween Im. Clytte and Vierstraat. were
stormed and occupied, thereby giving
the French positions which had been
a bone of contention for many days.
4- 4- 4-
Prisoners recently captured declare
that the German losses in their attack
between Yoormezeele and La Clytte
May 8 were heavy. Especially severe
casualties were Inflicted by the allied
machine guns which were worked to
the last minute
+ + •*■
British military forces have been
heavily engaged In fighting in the
Ypres and Somme sectors. The French
have made a notable advance at Grt-
vesnes. where they took the part of
the town which had been in German
hands for three weeks.
♦ ♦ ♦
Italy's contribution to the reserve
army General Foch Is building up be-
hind the lines in France for supreme
emergency uses numbers nearly 250,-
000 men, official dispatches say. and
the force Is being strengthened stead-
ily
* + ♦
The allied defense on the Flanders
front to the southwest of Ypres has
again been tested by the Germans and
has been found adequate. Two divis-
ions of Teuton troops were employed
on a relatively short front and were
sent Into the fight under cover of a
terrific artillery fire.
+ + +
“At the close of the fighting In the
La Clytte-Voorraezeele sector," says
Field Marshal Haig’s report from Brit-
ish headquarters in France, "the
French and British positions on this
front were completely re-established."
+ + +
Washington.
Merchant ship construction by the
United States and the Allies already
has passed the real danger point and
ships are being launched faster than
they are sunk. Officials pointed to
this fact as proof of the wisdom of
the American policy of building an
enormous merchant fleet.
4-4-4-
Investigation by the Federal Trade
Commission of the production and
supply of agricultural Implements and
the prices fanners are compelled to
pay for machinery is authorized in a
resolution introduced by Senator
Thompson of Kansas and adopted by
the Senate.
4- 4* 4-
Official French statistics on the sub-
marine warfare received in Washing-
ton show that the total losses of the
allied and neutral ships, including ac-
cidents at aea, were approximately
only one-half as great during April,
this year, as In April, 1917.
+ + ♦
Every citizen may act as a volun-
teer detective to assist government of-
ficers in ferreting out persons suspect-
ed of disloyal actions or utterances,
sa-ys a statement issued the other day
by Attorney General Gregory.
4- 4- 4-
National Memorial Day, Thursday,
May 30. is designated by President
Wilson in a proclamation as a day of
public humiliation, prayer and fasting.
The people of the Nation are asked
to gather that day In their places of
worship and pray for the victory of
the American armies, which will bring
a t-eace founded upon mercy. Justice
and good will.
+ + +
Domestic.
Sworn statements, letters and tele-
grams from the files of the army In-
telligence service were read Into the
senate record recently to show that
Gutzon Borglum, while holding a per-
sonal commission from President Wil-
son to inquire into the government’s
aviation program, was negotiating se-
cretly for the formation of a private !
airplane company to take war con
tracts and capitalize his friendship
with the President
+ 4- +
William Morris Hughes, premier
of Australia, has arrived in this coun-
try with a party of Australian offi-1
cials en route to a war conference in
London. Passengers on the vessel said
a German raider had attacked and
damaged a British transport on which
the premier had sailed previously.
4 4 +
Miss Katherine Stinson, avtatrlx.
was sworn in recently as a postal clerk
and darted for New York In her air-
plane. carrying a number of especial-
ly addressed letters for delivery In
that city.
IMll laity rights were granted wom-
en of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
South, at a recent meeting of the gen-
eral conference, now In session at
Atlanta, Ga.
4 4 4
Speaking In the House. Representa-
tive Kahn of California, ranking Re-
publican on the military committee,
declared that In his opinion class one
of th# draft would be exhausted with-
in a year and that before the war
was over the United States would
need 8.000,000 men In Europe.
♦ ♦ +
M me Leonina Botchkareva, foun-
der of the famous Russian women's
Battalion of Death, has arrived in this
country from Russia en route to
France, where she said she expected
to meet death on the battle field.
♦ ♦ ♦
Six known dead, scores Injured and
property damage running Into the hun-
dreds of thousands of dollars resulted
from a storm which swept through
Central Illinois and Iowa recently,
reaching the proportions of a tornado
tn many sections The storm was ac-
companied by torrential rains.
+ ♦ +
Resumption of wire communication
with every district In northeastern
Iowa swept by the recent tornado, re-
suited In cutting the death list to
seven with two or three reported prob-
ably fatally injured.
* ♦ *
Secretary Baker announced recent-
ly he had appointed Marlen E. Pew
of the committee on public informa-
tion as his personal press representa-
tive “for the puriose of centralizing
the distribution of Information to the
public with regard to the activities
from the B ar Department."
4- 4- 4-
Eight soldiers were killed and twen-
ty-six Injured when a wooden railroad
coach filled with members of the 321st
Infantry went over a trestle at Camp
Jackson, S. C. All of the men were
from southern states.
♦ + *
More than 500,000 bushels of hoard-
ed wheat have been found In Illinois
and placed upon the market, it was
announced by members of the state
food administration recently.
+ ♦ +
Southwest.
What agents of the bureau of In-
vestigation of the United States De-
partment of Justice believe to be a
plan of large proportions to obstruct
the draft has been nipped at Tulsa,
Okla., by the arrest of Dr. C. A. Mar-
shall, a dentist; Dr. W. E. Nichols, a
physician, and a third person whose
name the federal officers refuse to
disclose.
+ + +
The City of Bonhsm. one of the
largest wooden steamships ever
planned, was launched successfully at
Orange, Tex., recently. The vessel is
320 feet long and 47 feet wide. It waa
designed by A. A. Daugherty.
4- 4- 4-
Second Lieut. Louis Eddy Drvls is
dead from Injuries received earlier in
the day, when his plane from Elling-
ton Field near Houston, Tex., crashed
to earth after having been thrown Into
a tail spin by engine trouble. Second
Lieut. A. Lawrence, vyho was in the
rear seat, was uninjured.
4- 4- 4-
Lieutenant George Sherman, stu-
dent officer at Post Field school for
aerial observers, was killed recently
when an army airplane in which he
was making a flight fell 300 feet. The
pilot of the machine was only slightly
Injured.
4- 4- 4-
Government agents raided the Dan-
iel Hotel at Plcher, a mining town in
Oklahoma, and found ten gallons of
nitroglycerin, two cases of nitrogly-
cerin tubes, six cases of dynamite
caps, two instruments to discharge the
explosives and four army hand gren-
ades. Mrs. Samuel Daniel and a man
were arrested and taken to Muskogee.
4- 4- 4-
Foreigfn.
The Associated Press has been of-
ficially Informed that the statement
sent out from Ottawa attributing to
the war committee of the British cabi-
net the announcement that it had
been decided not to use the American
Army on the western front until it
became a complete and powerful
force, was due to an error, which has
now been corrected.
4- 4- 4-
British mounted troops after cap-
turing Kirkut in Mesopotamia, pur-
sued the Turks for a distance of twen-
ty miles to the northward, says an of-
ficial statement issued by the war
office.
The army council haring considered
the explanations tendered by General
Frederick B. Maurice has decided
that he shall be placed forthwith on
retired pay.
4- 4- 4-
German submarine operations from
the harbor of Ostend. Belgium, have
been seriously hampered for a time,
If not rendered Impossible by a d*r-
Ing raid made on the harbor by the
Priiish the other morning.
4- 4- 4-
Dispatches from Moscow sav the
newspapers there declare an ultima-
tum was recently given by the Ger- j
man ambassador which demanded the
Immediate execution of measures mak-
ing Russia virtually a German colonv
4- 4- 4-
So confident is the Entente of its
ability to withstand any drive the
Germans can launch that it has been !
decided not to use the American
army until it becomes a complete and
powerful force, according to a cable
summary of opsraUons ou the west-
ern front.
THE ROLL OF HONOR.
CapL Lloyd B. Russell, Manchester,
killed lu action.
Many schools In Oklahoma are us-
ing maps which teach the children
that Oklahoma la still a territory and
that Guthrie la the capitol.
Hop cholera has been found on the
farm of J. T. Dll beck. near Norman.
Government Sorghum Seed
Past experience has demonstrated
that any part of Oklahoma is likely and a strict quarantine established to
to be visited by a hailstorm or wash- prevent spread of the disease
out, necessitating a replanting of william E. Mickle, adjutant general
crops, and the eorghums are best and chlef ot Btaff. United Confederate
adapted to this purpose On the ad- veterans, announced at New Orleans
vise of officials of the dtate Board of thnt the 1918 annual reunion of the
Agriculture and State Agricultural veterans would be held “positively"
College, the U. S Department of la juisa> okta.. September 25 to 27.
Agriculture at Washington, D. C. pur- , ____. -
chased a supply of sorghum seed to be Th. Rev S. X. Swim me pastor o
heid in reserve at Clinton. Oklahoma Methodlatchurch atVcMka ».d
for such purposes. Seed M Blackhull '0"n®rly h“»d of th# °dd ™OW.,| of
kafir. Dwarf kafir. Dwarf rntlo. feterlta, Oklahoma, announce, hi. re. Ignat lorn
Black Amber. Orange and Sumac sorgo f Swlmme w 11 go to Texas and for
(cane) can be obtained at cost from ‘“e Pre.ent will engage tn other than
thi.re.erve j mlnl.terial work.
The cost of such seed for planting A Red Cross sale last week at Buf.
Is only 10 to 20 cents per acre. You falo, netted more than $1,700. A pig
can not afford to plant unreliable seed 1 sold for $19; a can of peaches $5; one
when this Is available and at your egg. sold repeatedly, netted $23.20; a
command There Is available seed at pound of butter sold for $47.50; one
the following prices f o. b Clinton; hen and chicks brought $12.50, and a
4000 bushels Dwarf Kafir at $3.00 per $5 hill sold for $8.5b.
bu®h‘‘1 .. Leonard Berry, Sapulpa, Lester Ogg,
6000 bushels Blackhull Kafir at $-.85 Hartlesvllle; and Loren Lee Wal-
per bushel. ton. Alva, have been commissioned as
1000 bushels Dwarf milo at $- .*0 per B#cond lieutenants In the non-flying
, section of the aviation signal corps.
2000 bushels Sweet Sorghum aeed Walter Alonzo Howard of Chelsea has
(Sumac. Orange, and Black Amber) at bt.pn commiMloned ftrgt iteuteuaut In
SO EASY! CORNS
LIFT RIGHT OUT
DOESN'T HURT AT ALL AND
COSTS ONLY FEW CENTS.
Magtc! Just drop a little Free rone
en that touchy corn. Instantly It stops
aching, then you lift the corn off with
the fingers. Truly! No humbug I
$4 85 per bushel.
8000 pounds Sudan grass seed at
21 cents per pound
Orders will be shipped promptly In
2 bushel lots DrafJ or post office
money order payable to “Disbursing
Clerk! Department of Agriculture.’
Send your order to L. N Farr, Clinton,
Oklahoma.
John Graham, 69 years old. of Ben
gal. died from Injuries sustained when
he was thrown from a mule.
Mrs.* P. C. Crossllng and her four-
months-old daughter were drowned
while attempting to ford a swollen
creek east of Fort Gibson.
In th# district court at McAlester.
a Jury found Robert Miller guilty of
blowing a safe at Blocker, February
19 and fixed his penalty at twenty
the medical corps.
Plans for registration of men who
have become 21 years old since the
general registration last June are be-
ing made by AdJ. Gen. E. H. Gipson,
who has asked local boards for lnfor.
mation which will be compiled prior
to the president's proclamation set.
ting a date for the men to register.
It Is estimated by General Gipson that
$0,000 men will be registered In Ok-
lahoma under the new act. In the
United States 1,000,000 men are ex-
pected to be registered, both esti-
mates being on a basts of 10 percent
of the general registration.
The director of expenditures In the
United States railroad administration
announced that no order will be is.
sued suspending work on the Santa Fe
extension from Owen to Pawhuska In
Osage county. The question of wheth.
years in the state penitentiary
Four trunks containing explosives worj, on t|,e jjne between Pawhus.
of various kinds were seized at Plcher
by representatives of the department
of Justice and police officials in a rail
on a rooming house The wife of the
proprietor and a roomer were arrest-
ed and taken to Miami for investiga-
tion.
A wagon placed across the approach
to a bridge on the Ozark trail five
miles west of Mangum blocked the
way of whisky runners and Sheriff
Henry arrested both men, B. F. Harris
and A. F. Holmes of Lawton, seized
the eighty-one gallons of whisky they
were hauling and confiscated their
automobile
While playing with a 22-calibre rifle,
John, the flve-vear-old son of Mrs. J.
ka and Fairfax shall continue Is still
under advisement. A delegation of
Pawhuska citizens, in company with
Oklahoma representatives, recently
protested to the railroad administra-
tion against the Issuance of a pro-
posed order that would have stopped
w-ork on both ends of the Line.
W. E. Nichols, practicing physician,
and C. A. Marshall, a dentist of Tulsa,
were arrested there by officers of the
department of Justice, charged with
furnishing drafted men with a drug
that affected the eyes and created
symptoms of tuberculosis that caused
rejection of the "patient" when exam-
ined for the draft. Federal officers
say that they have evidence, gath-
F Cochran, of Frederick, pulled thoiered during a period of nt least seven
trigger and fired a shot which enter- months that satisfies them that the
ed the body of his three-year-old broth two men have extended their opera-
er. Odle. Inflicting a wound from whirn tlons to all parts of the country The
the Injured boy died several hours j customary charge for their services
later
Oklahoma City voted by a majority
of almost seven to one that $200,000
worth of bonds shall be Issued for
new school buildings and Improve-
ments on the old ones, to relieve
crowded conditions and bring the sys-
tem out of Its antiquated status. The
Bister Items, a proposal to make an
Increased levy for the budget and to
tax property to provide a
maintenance of playgrounds were
overwhelmingly favored The vote on
the budget w-as: Yes, 6393; no, 550.
The vote on the playgrounds was:
Yes. 6010; no, 949. The figures In-
dicate that nearly 500 women voted
Virtually all Oklahoma mills are out
of wheat. While several of the mills
have not yet received their full allot-
ment of wheat from the federal grain
corporation, others already have used
their full allotment. Those that have
not received their full allotment are
experiencing trouble In getting It.
Some of the mills are making corn
flour, kafir flour and corn meal. The
demand for wheat substitutes is de.
creasing, however. A few mills are
making rye flour, but this Is no longer
considered a substitute.
J C. Gilmore of Oklahoma City was
elected grand chancellor of the grand
lodge of Oklahoma. Knights of Pyth-
ias, at annual conclave, at Muskogee,
J. D. Carmichael. Chlckasha was chos-
en grand vice chancellor; Thomas O.
Ross, Chandler grand prelate; Albert
O Romlns. Hobart, grand keeper of
r«tords; John Knox. Perry, grand
master of exchequer; J. P. Thurman,
Okeene, grand master at arms; W. W.
Holden, Kellyville, grand inner guard;
John Powers, sr . Lehigh, grand outer
guard and N. D. Dossey, Okemah,
grand trustee. Oklahoma City gets
the next convention.
Rioters led by "Hobo" Wiggins. I.
W. W. organizer, and Fred Kroeger,
charged with being a Working Class
Union leader, held In the federal Jsil
at Muskogee on charres of pro-Ger-
manism and disloyalty attempted to
mutiny and for half an hour there
was riot within the Jail. The inside
guard was beaten over the head,
prisoners held on other federal charges
were roughly handled and the riot
threatened to result seriously, when
Chief of Police Art Harris summon,
ed a hose wagon from the fire de-
partment and drenched the gang ,
is said to be from $75 to $100.
Damages of $250,000 each for an al.
leged libelous story that appeared la
The State Banker of April, 1917, in
connection with criminal charges that
bad been brought against the Com.
monwealth Trust Company of Hous-
ton, are asked by Charles H. Garnett
and W. F. Bland in a suit brought
at Oklahoma City against C. K Board,
fund for maud the the state bankers' associa-
tion. The article in question, which
detailed the manner in which the
trust company carried on Its opera-
tions, referred to the men arrested
In this connection as “crooks." aud
“swindlers".
Try Freezone! Your druggist sells
a tiny bottle for a few cents, sufficient
to rid your feet of every hard corn,
soft corn, or corn between the toes,
and callouses, without one particle of
pain, soreness or Irritation. Freezone
Is the discovery of a noted Cincinnati
genius.—Adv,
Clumsy at It.
Edith—llow- does Fred make love?
Marie—Welt, I should define It as
unskilled labor.— Boston Transcript.
MARCH TO VICTORY
Courage Is a matter of the blood.
Without good red blood a man has a
weak heart and poor nerves.
In the spring Is the beat time to
take stock of one's condition. If the
blood Is thin and watery, face pale or
pimply, generally weak, tired and list-
less, one should take a spring tonic.
One that will do the spring house-
cleaning, an old-fashioned herbal rem-
edy that was need by everybody nearly
50 years ago Is still safe and sane be-
cause It contains no alcohol or narcot-
ic. It la made up of Blood root, Gold-
en Seal root, Oregon Grape root,
Queen's root. Stone root. Black Cherry
bark—extracted with glycerine and
made Into liquid or tablets. This blood
tonic was first put out by Dr. Pierce
in ready-to-uae form and since then
has been sold by million bottles as Dr.
Iierce’s Golden Mtslicnl Discovery. If
druggists do not keep this In tablet
form, send 00 cents for a vial to Dr,
Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel. Buffalo, N. Y.
Kidney disease carries away a large
percentage of our people. What Is to
be done? The answer Is easy. Eat less
meat, eat coarse, plain food, with plenty
of vegetables, drink plenty of water
bstweea meals, and take an uric arid
solvent after meals for a while, such as
Anurlc (double strength), obtainable at
aimnst any drug store. It was first
discovered by Dr. Pierce. Most every
one troubled with uric acid finds that
Anurlc dissolves the uric acid as hot
water does sugar. You can obtain a
trial package by sending ten cents to
Doctor Pierce’s Invalids' Hotel and
Surgical Institute in Buffalo, N. T.
riTATEHOUSE BREVITIES
For Constipation
Carter’s Little
Liver Pills
will set you right
p over night
Purely Vegetable
Small Pill, Small Does, Small Price
Carter's Iron Pills
Will restore color to the face# of
tboee who lack Iron in the blood,
aa moat pale-faced people do.
Say "Nope”!
to your Grocerman
Ed L. West, former treasurer of
Caddo county, must face trial on a
charge of receiving and using Interest
from public funds, as a result of ac-
tion by the criminal court of appeal*
in reversing and remanding two cases
which the state appealed.
A minimum price of 35 or 40 cents
a thousand feet for domestla gas will
be asked by the Oklahoma Natural
Gas Company, after the question of a
minimum price for Industrial gas la
disposed of. The net rate In Okla-
homa City now is 25 cents a thou-
sand.
The state board of education has
approved the recommendation ef Dr.
Stratton D. Brooks, president of the
state university, to Increase the sal.
aries of members of the university
faculty, effective September 1 The
new increase In salaries. It was ex.
plained, will be met by the retrench-
ment resulting from the granting of
leaves to twenty-two members of tbo
faculty and by combining many of the
various departments
That Oklahoma will Increase ths
food supply of ths nation by $16,-
927,500 as the result of the state-wide
garden movement is the estimate
made by J. W. Bridges, director of [ gw ■ gw __
the garden bureau of the state council Kpfl [:rflCC Rail RIlIP
of defense. This estimate la based on I ***" ** Udi> Dull DIUC
reports received from fifty counties
which will produce a total of 225,670
gardens or 338,550 for the state The
value of each garden is placed at an
average of $50. Oklahoma county
leads In the number of gardens with
a total of 24.900. Oklahoma City being
credited with 22,326.
If he trie# to put over on
you something “just as
good m"
In the words of the immortal Josh
Billings—"There suit no sich thing.**
There is j*oeitivelv nothing as good
as, or equal to RtD CROSS BALL
BLUE for producing clothes of suoh ,
white purity aa bring a blush to new 1
fallen snow. “
Try It Prove It f
6 Cents Everywhere
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Cranston, C. M. The Quay Times (Quay, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, May 24, 1918, newspaper, May 24, 1918; Quay, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc908076/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.