The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, February 14, 1913 Page: 2 of 8
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The Orlando Clipper
-—
W. L. LANTER, Ed. and Pub.
ORLANDO. OKLAHOMA
OMIWMA NEWS NOTES
l ive cotton Kins will be in opera
tion in Eufaula this fall.
Six hundred participated in the wolf
drive ut lllackwell, and one coyote
was captured.
'I Me Tulsa postoffice made a Kain of
20 per c<*i)t last month over the same
month a jear ago.
Work on Kufaula’s $75,000 sewet I
system and water extension is pro- |
pressing satisfactorily.
The ground liog failed to see his
shadow, and, according to tradition j
there will be an early spring.
The Santa Fe railway is replacing j
the eighty-pound steel rails along its
roadbed with ninety-pound rails.
A company organized at Manitou j
lias been quietly securing leases and
will shortly begin boring for oil.
The Ministerial association of Law-
ton has put the kibosh on dancing, j
card games and Sunday theaters.
The smelting plant at Sand Springs
is expected to be completed by the
end of the month and in operation
thereafter.
Terlton will soon have gas lights I
at the depot and on the main street of j
the town, which is an advance in the |
right direction.
Business men of Manchester, Grant i
county, mean to bore for oil and gas
and have already subscribed $1,400
for that purpose.
The Noble county poultry show re-
cently held did not only break even,
hut the sum of $29.07 was found on
hand after all expenses had been paid.
Kingston, Mansliall county, is to
have more brick and concrete build-
ings on Main street, the contract for
several new ones already having been
let.
Some miscreant threw a whisky bot-
tle through the plate glass in front
of the A.ltus city hall building, thus
venting his spleen on the city offi-
cials.
I
Duncan Is preparing to htfltl a pea- i
nut carnival this coming fall, and from
all reports, it will be a hummer in
every way and "all that the name im- i
plies.”
There is a movemnt on foot to dig
for coal on the outskirts of Checotah.
A company has been organized and |
several hundred dollars' worth of |
stock sold.
Seventeen new locations were made
in the Terlton oil field in one day and J
one well was brought in. Loks as if !
things are picking up in that district j
in the oil and gas line.
Caddo will soon vote on a bond issue
for the installation of a sanitary !
sewerage system for that own. Vuri- I
ous estimates have been made, rang-
ing from $10,000 td $25,000, on the
cost of the work.
The mayor of Shawnee received a
letter from a peanut products factory |
in Texas offering to establish a factory
if the farmers in the vicinity will
ugre to raise more peanuts.
Ponca City school teachers have !
taken precautions against possible loss
ot life in case of lire by drilling tlio 1
school children in a tire drill until
they have become so they'can empty
the building in less than ninety sec-
onds.
The city of Stonewall has been per-
manetly enjoined from using the
sehoolhouse sinking fund for the pur j
pose of instating an electric light plant.
The injunction was issued Saturday
by Judge McKcown who holds, liow-
evr, Stonewall may vote a bond issue J
for that purpose. 4
HAVE YOU TRIED THIS?
Simple Prescription Said to Work
Wonders for Rheumatism.
This has been well known to the
best doctors for years as the quickest
and n ost reliable cure obtainable for
rheumatism and backache. It has been
published here for several winters and
hundreds of the worst cases cured by
it in a short time. “From your drug-
gist get one ounce of Toris compound
(in original sealed package) and one
ounce of syrup of Sarsaparilla com-
pound. Take these two ingredients
home and put them into a half pint of i
good whiskey. Shake the bottle and
take a tablespoonful hefore each meal
nnd at bedtime.” Results come the
first day. If your druggist does not
have Turis Compound In stock he will |
get it in a few hours from his whole-
sale house, Don't be Influenced to take J
some patent medicine instead of tills. I
Insist on having the genuine Toris
compound in the original, one-ounce,
scaled, yellow package. Published by the
Globe Pharmaceutical laboratories of
Chicago.
One Ray of Sunshine.
“John, you are sure it Is safe in
this yacht?"
“Yes, my love."
“Anil you know how to sail it?’’
“My sailing master does.”
“How long will it take us to
cross?"
"About two weeks.”
"Oh, dear, there's so much to worry
about on a yacht."
"There's one thing that needn’t
cause you any wory."
"What is that?”
“The cook can't leave until we get
to Liverpool.” — Louisville Courier
Journal.
Surprise for Mother.
A Chicago school teacher tells with
great gusto of the shrewd little “col-
ored brother” who once arrived at
school provided with a most unusual
excuse for tardiness. "I couldn’t help
bein' late, please, teacher,” he bubbled, j
shrilly. "Somepin happened to us las' j
night. My maw, she went ter bed wit' I
a headache, and when she wakes up
dis mornin’, dere’s two little quins
(twins) one on each side ob her, and
—she won' know nuffin 'bout ’em tell
she wakes up. An' my maw, she so
s’prised, she cain't get up ter get me
ready for school!”
One at a Time.
She—When we are married, dear, !
I must have three servants.
He—Certainly, darjing. But try to
keep each as long as possible.—St. |
Louis Post.
A DIFFERENCE.
It Paid This Man to Change Food.
“What is called ‘good living' eventu-
ally brought me to a condition quite
the reverse of good health,’ writes a
N. Y. merchant.
“Improper eating told on me till my
stomach became so weak that food
nauseated me, even the lightest and
simplest lunch, and I was much de-
pressed after a night of uneasy slum-
ber, unfitting me for business.
“This condition was discouraging,
as I could find no way to improve it.
Then I saw the advertisement) of
Grape-Nuts food, and decided to try
it, and became delighted with the re-
sult.
“For the past three years I have
used Grape-Nuts and nothing else for
my breakfast and for lunch before re-
tiring. It speedily set my stomach right
and I congratulate myself that I have
regained my health. There Is no great-
er comfort for a tired man than a
lunch of Grape-Nuts. It insures restful
sleep, and an awakening in the morn-
ing with a feeling of buoyant courage
and hopefulness.
“Grape-Nuts has been a boon to my
whole family. It has made of our 2-
year-old boy, who used to be unable
to digest much of anything, a robust,
healthy, little rascal weighing 32
pounds. Mankind certainly owes a
debt of gratitude to the expert who
invented this perfect food.” Name
given by Postum Co., Battle Creek,
Mich. “There’s a reason.”
Ever mid the above lettert A otn
one appearx from time to lime. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
Interest. Adv,
l
"Are you first in anything in school,
Earlie?”
EXCELLENT!
“First out of the building when the
bell rings.”
ECZEMA BEGAN BY ITCHING
Goldsboro, N. C.—“My daughter suf-
fered from eczema. The trouble be-
gan in the ears by itching and run-
ning water, and later it formed pus
and became very offensive. She began
to scratch it and it went into sores.
When the scabs came off there was
a yellowish watery discharge. The
outside of the ear was one solid sore.
She tried several different remedies
but received no relief. She had been
troubled with it between one and two
years when she finally began using
Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment.
“She had not made hut two treat-
ments when all the scabs came off and
the flesh just looked very red and
dry. She kept up the treatment four
or five weeks and she was entirely
cured. It also cured other sores on
the children, especially chapped feet
on one of the little boys.” (Signed)
Mrs. W. H. Edgerton, Jan. 24, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address
poet-card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”
Adv.
The love of money is the easiest
of all roots to cultivate.
BEFORE AND
AFTER MARRIAGE “
Advice Given Mother in Regard to
Young Daughter Proves Val-
uable to Daughter Even
After Marriage. *
Pollock, Tex.—“When I was a girl,
about 14 years of age,” writes Mrs.
Winnie Delaney, of this town, “I was
in awfully bad health. I tried differ-
ent treatments, but they did me no
good.
A friend advised my mother to give
me Cardul, the woman’s tonic. She
gave me one bottle, and it Btraighten- '-»>k
ed me out all right.
I did not have any more trouble un-
til after I was married. I had several
bad spells then, but 1 began taking
Cardui again, and my health started
to improving right away.
I can safely recommend Cardui to
all women sufferers, as I think it is
the greatest Avoman's medicine on
earth.
You may publish this letter if you
wish.”
Cardui Is good for young girls, as
well as older women, because It con-
tains pure, harmless, vegetable ingre- i
dients, which act gently, yet surely, 'Ax
on the delicate womanly organs. It is
a tonic prepared exclusively for wom-
For more than 50 years, Cardui has
been in widely extended use, by wom-
en of all ages, and has given entire
satisfaction, as a remedy for rebuild-
ing womanly health and strength.
You can rely on Cardui. It will do
for you, what it has done for thou-
sands of others. It will help you.
Begin to take Cardui, today.
N. B.— Write to: Chattanooga Medicine Co.,
I-adies Advisory Dept., Chattanooga, Tenn., for
Strcial Instructions an your case and 64 page book,
"Home Treatment for Women,” sent in plain
wrapper. Adv.
Determined to Be Observed.
"You may announce that I intend
to retire to private life," said the in-
dustrious statesman.
“What for?" ^^0*'
"It seems to be the only method
just now by which I can attract pub-
lic attention."
It is far better to make your mark
in the world than it is to be an easy
one.
Can i
You (
Truly i
Say J
“The Appetite is Keen”
“The Digestion is Good”
“The Liver is Active”
“The Dowels Regular”
“General Health fine”
Nature intended you to enjoy these privileges
and if there is anything wrong with the Stomach,
Liver or Bowels we urge a trial of Hostetler’s
Stomach Bitters immediately. It will tone,
strengthen and invigorate the entire system,thus
preventing Sick Headache,Indigestion,Dyspepsia,
Sourness, Biliousness, Costiveness, Colds, Grippe
and Malaria. Try a bottle today, but be sure it’s
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach Bitters
4
Y
The Genuine has out Privale Stamp over neck of bottle
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Lanter, W. L. The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, February 14, 1913, newspaper, February 14, 1913; Orlando, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc910993/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.