Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1920 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cimarron Valley Clipper and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THE COYLE CLIPPER
WOMEN OF
MIDDLE AGE
• ——. ■ ■
May Pass the Critical Period Safely
and Comfortably by Taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Summit, N. J.— “I have taken I,ydia
E. Pinkliam’s Vegetable Compound dur-
ing Change of Life
and 1 think it is a
good remedy in such
a condition. I could
not digest my food
and had, much pain
and burning in my
s t o iji a c ii after
meals. I could not
sleep, had backache,
and worst of all
were the hot Hashes.
I saw in the papers
about Vegetable
Compound so I tried it. Now I feel all
right and can work better. You have
my permission to publish this letter.”
—Victoria Koitl, HI Oak Ridge Ave.,
Summit, N. J.
If you have warning symptoms such
as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes,
headaches, backache, dread of im-
pending evil, timidity, sounds in the
ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks
before the eyes, irregularities, con-
stipation, variable appetite, weakness,
inquietude, and dixziness, get a bottle
of Lydia K. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound and begin taking the medicine at
once. We know it will help you us it
did Mrs. Koppl.
His Vacant Dome.
Borielgh—Yes, the hullel struck my
head, went careering into space and—
Miss Keen How terrible! I>id they
get it out?
GET SLOAN S^FOR
YOUR PAIN RELIEF
You don’t have to rub it in
to get quick, comfort-
ing relief
Once you've tried it on that stiff
joint, sore muscle, sciatic pain, rheu-
matic twinge, lame back, you'll find
a warm, soothing relief you never
thought a liniment could produce.
Won’t stain the skin, leaves no muss,
wastes no time in applying, sure to
give quick results. A large bottle
means economy. Your own or any
other druggist has it. Get it today.
35c, 70c,
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
Lesson
(By REV. i n i ll/aUAii.U, D I).,
T«n<-her of Engltih Bible In th* Moody
Bible Institute of Chicago.)
(Copyright, lyi’O. YW-tern Newspaper Union)
LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 1
PETER AND JOHN IN SAMARIA.
(May bu used with missionary appltta-
lions )
LESSON TEXT—Al ts 8:4 25.
(iOLUEN TEXT— Ye shall tie wltnesHes
Unto rut- hr.iii in Jerusalem, and In all
1
termost part of the earth Acts 1:8.
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL ll Kings
17:24-31; Luke 10:33-35; John 4:1-42.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Telling Olliers About
Jesus.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Peter and John In a
Strange City.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP-
IC—Three Missionaries and Their Tri-
umphs.
I. Preaching the Word Everywhere
(v. 4).
After the stoning of Stephen the
enemies of the Lord wore more active
than ever in their efforts to stump
out the new faith. With Saul as their
leader they rushed back to the city,
dragged from their homes and Im-
prlsoniMl those who confessed Christ.
In this the devil overreaehed himself,
for the believers took flight and went
everywhere preaching the word. The
time had come for the wltnes^benrlng
to extend beyond Jerusalem and Ju-
dea. Preaching was not confined to
the twelve. The Lord thus makes the
devil’s wickedness to furl her his own
purpose. Frequently, in the hour of
trial, Christians see more clearly their
j duty and bestir themselves to perform
It. If Christians will not move on,
j Hi:1 Lord will shove them on.
II. Philip Preaching the Gospel in
| Samaria, (vv. 5-13).
Hitherto the gospel had reached
| only Jews; now its scope broadens
and a Jew Is preaching to Samaritans,
and Samaritans are rejoicing in the
gospel of Christ proclaimed by a Jew.
Ills preaching was fruitful for multi-
tudes believed Iiis» message. Much Joy
In lids Samaritan city followed tin* re-
ception of the message. Roth Samar-
itans and Jews were looking for
vnErxn
IfjeifCI
CAB!
TC
m
nm
Keep Your Liver Active, Youi
System Purified and Free From
Colds by Taking Calotabs,
the Nausealcss Calomel
Tablets, that are De-
lightful, Safe and
Sure.
Physicians and Druggists are ndvis-
ing their friends to keep their systems
purified and their organs in perfect
working order as a protection against
tho return of influenza. They know
that a clogged up system and a lazy
liver favor colds, influenza and serious
complications.
To cut short a cold overnight and to
prevent serious complications take one
Calotab at bedtime with a swallow of
water that’s all. No salts, no nausea,
no griping, no sickening after effects.
Next morning your cold lias vanished,
your liver is active, your system is puri-
fied and refreshed and you anj feeling
tine with a hearty appetite for break-
fast. Eat what you please—no danger.
Calotabs are sol<1 only iu •riginal
sealed packages, price thirt y fiv e
Every druggist is authorized to refund
voiir money if you are not perfectly
delighted with Calotabs.— (Adv.)
Paradoxical Quality.
“Then* arc not many square men
like him."
"Not enough to go ’round.”
No king or nobility, or other per-
son or class can give a government
which 1h best for the people, sim-
ply because nobody can give you
what is best for you, for that which
Is best for you is what you work
out for yourself. A benevolent
monarch can give his subjects ev-
erything except the one thing
needful—responsibility.
The most precious. Clod-given
privilege of a mftn is his right to
make his own mistakes, to stub his
own toes, and burn his own fingers,
drily so he learns and grows.—Dr.
Frank Crane.
MISCELLANEOUS DESSERTS.
GLORIOUS! I'M NOT BILIOUS NOW!
r
Yesterday 1 was Sick, Headachy, Constipated but I tooK
“Dodson’s Liver Tone”—not Sickening Calomel!
A close student of human nature
seldom lends money to bis friends.
A WONDERFUL REMEDY
FOR KIDNEYS, BLADDER
URIC ACID
Through failure of kidneys to net,
through congestion, inflammation, any
person’s condition is ripe for disease
to fasten its hold upon the system.
At I>r. IMerce’s Invalids’ Hotel and
Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., there
has been tested for the past few years
a new remedy for kidney, bladder, uric
»c!d troubles, rheumatism, gout, and
such ailments ns follow, and so many
cases, both acute and stubborn, have
(’’hr 1st, so they were glad to know that j yielded to this wonderful remedy that
the < ’lir 1st had come. Christ Is the
one name and person who will break
E
m
“I Was So Weak That
I Could Not Walk
Rich-Tone Is Making Me Strong and
Healthy.”—Says F. Maese.
MI wn* very weak find nrrvoni. tin4
lo*t nil my appetite nnd litnl heroine Id
■weh n bud physical condition Unit ni
time* 1 could not walk. I anw your nil-
vertIncmciit on Itleli-Tone nnd mu now
taking It. I feel no much better that 1
take pleasure In recommending Rich-
Tone to nil my frleudM nn the very best
tonic In the world."
Take RICH-TONE
and gain new energy
IHcli-Tonc mnke* more red corpnnclea
enriching nnd purifying the blood. It
contain* all of the elementa Hint nr(
needed mont In niniiif nlnlng Mtrengtli
and vigor. Itlch-Tone rent* the tired
nerveN, restorer* Appetite, Induce*
healthful nleep-— It gbe* you nil tlmae
thing* which mean energy nnd well,
being. tiet n bottle today—only 01.00
A« nil drug store*.
A. B. Richards Medicine Co., Sherman, Texas
j down race prejudice. In him there
I Is unity and real brotherhood, for he
! Is the universal man. The only hope
I of the world is Christ.
So great was Philip’s success that
Simon Magnus professed faith nnd was
! baptized. Simon was a sorcerer who
I by magical devices had made n great
j reputation, gaining control of many
of the credulous and Ignorant, so that
they regarded him as some great one
from God (v. 10). The people turned
I from this sorcerer to the gospel of
Christ.
III. Peter and John Sent to Samar-
; la (vv. 1 I 17).
The church at Jerusalem w»nt two
I of Its best men to encourage the work.
I They discerned that the Spirit had not !
yet fallen upon the believers, so they I
laid hands upon them and the Spirit
was given unto them. These Snmarl- j
| tans were really converted, regener-
i a ted, but had not yet been filled with
the Spirit’s gift. Believers should
seek the Spirit’s gift at once, for thl»
will exclude the interests of the world.
The mission of Peter and John shows
the unity of the church—the mother
church gave sanction to the new work
In Samaria. Much of the work of the
modern evangelist is a failure be-
cause It Is not properly followed up
by those who will Instruct and bring
the converts Into relationship with the
living church.
IV. Simon’s Wicked Request (vv.
18-24).
When Simon saw that the power of
Peter exceeded that which be pos-
sessed nnd that It was received
through the laying on of hands, he of-
fered money for the gift. This net re-
veals the hypocrisy of this man. He
professed faith and was baptized, fol-
lowing after them for a selfish end.
! To desire nnd seek the gift of the Splr- !
It for selfish aggrandizement Is to be
| guilty of Simon’s sin. All traffic in
j sacred things has been called "Sl-
I mony." from the name of this sorcer-
er. Peter told Simon that be had '
I neither part nor lot In this matter,
I that he should repent of Ills wicked- !
ties* and ay to <h I f r 1
lie requested Peter to pray for him.
Simon practice# the art of soreory
for gain and Influence. Now that he
found his profits diminishing nnd Ids
Influence waning, he endeavored to ac-
quire new power. All persons who
use their religion to further their am-
bitions to get gain are guilty of lids
eln. Sometimes men Join the church
for business, social, and political rea-
sons; sometimes official positions are
coveted for the prestige and power
they give. Let all who are using the
name of the church for business pur-
pose's be warned by Peter'*1* rebuke!
Let Simon's doom 1 •.• - < <f war.'-
lug to all!
Dr. Pierce decided to name it Anuric,
and arrange for its distribution to the
public through medicine dealers every-
where. You will find it many times more
active than llthla, dissolving uric acid
as water does sugar.
Obtain a bottle of these tablets today
from your druggist. Simply ask for
Anuric Tablets (anti-uric acid) and no-
tice the gratifying results.
PERSONAL MENTION
Stroud, Okla.—“I suffered for a
year with kidney
trouble. I saw
Dr. Pierce’s ad-
vertisement in the
paper nnd wrote
for a trial pack-
age of ‘Anuric.’ It
helped me so much
I went to the drug/
store nnd bought
a supply of Dr.
Pierce’s medicines.
I bought four bot-
tles of the ‘Golden
Medical Discovery,* one package of the
‘Anuric Tablets’ and a vial of the
‘Pleasant Pellets.' The 'Golden Medical
Discovery’ nnd the ‘Pellets’ cured me
of bowel trouble, and the ‘Anuric’ of
the kidney trouble.”—Mrs. Mary Jane
Fisher, Route 5.
CHEST CLOGGED UP
WITH HEAVY COLD?
Don’t give it a chance to
“set in”—use Dr. King’s
New Discovery
T'
UTS
Till* toothing, hvalltitr. penetmt
In# remedy take* ail of tie iun*rt
Ing pain out of burn* itcslii*. cut*.
unruiiiM #tc. ami nutcWy In*.*
tne Injury (iet a H!. or 70c bottl*
today from your drutrtrlat.
_ [HUNT'S
LIGIITMVNG OIL
rnrni/i ro eoiipvitr mmovkd t>r Dr. Barer’*
LULI'V I L \ Kr*cfcl* mi linn i Yu i 4.1X ' i bp
f t1 tu M to £;“a,v» LVkUA
The Coal.
Tlio jjnnl on which our pys* niuet
be Hot Is n church thnt will. In It*
own corporate life, conspicuously ex-
press ihe Christian Ideal of fellow-
ship and brotherhood, and at the same
time strive persistently to mold nn-
tlonal, Industrial and social life In
accordance with the principles whlclj
are the fountnln light of all Its days.
HAT dangerous stage where a
cold or cough or case of grippe
might got the better of you may
be nearer than you think. Prompt
action with I >r. King's New Discovery
will avert a long siege.
For fifty years it tins loosened'con-
gested chests, dissipated tiglit-pueked
phlegm, broken vicious colds ana
coughs. Give it to the youngsters—
take it yourself. There will be no disa-
.......able after-effects.
title, nnd SI.Jo u bottle. At your
druggist’s. Give It u trial.
Bowels Become Normal
—liver livens up, Idle flows freely—
headache, biliousness, tongue fur,
Stomach-sourness, disappear when Dr.
King's New Life Fills get in their
natural, comfortable action.
Purgatives, never pleasantly correc-
tive, sometimes Imliit-forming, should
mil b* taken to rni k the sj t< m vio-
lently. Nature* wnj the wnj of Dr
King's New I il'e Fills gently but
firmly functioning the bowels, ‘elimi-
nating the intestine-clogging waste, and
ftnmiut tng the mo d t 1
Cleanse the system with them and
know the boon of regular bowels. Hoc
at all druggists.
mmmm
U M*.*m* **i*t*i*M**i***» Jm v
I ' • wimI i! Lort’ iqf anrmtli Jj
of Hunt'* I tk’i titliiK <mi .| vo*
■ -ta1 ' iti.I n «■' fr •
■ • » k t * i t ■
N «■
1 net *n.1 70c
m
Delight In God’s Work.
AH p at art la the expression of
mnn s delight In God's work, uot In
*»•*» own- ItusUlo.
ri lifts YajS
UGl-ITOGBSSca OBI.
Mitchell
Eye
Sal ve
For SORE EYES
A VOID dropping
r\ atrong itrujf* in
eye-' s,,r. f' Spi A , all
or other irritation Tl>«
old simple remedy that
briny* comfortin»i re
Hof i* be*t. U< all
dt-uyuit't vr fiy nail.
HAll K RIU KF.l. l*r
215 Jfastuaitaa Street. N T
How to keep the house attractive,
the table supplied with appetizing
viands, nnd the
members of the
household in per-
fect health lias
been n problem
since the days of
_ Eve. With the
& Increasing scarci-
^ ty of domestic
labor, the question of getting the nee-
< *sary work done is beconfiing acute.
Good cookery and dainty meals are of
'itnl importance, but no woman who
‘‘has a soul above buttons” cares to
*pend the best part of her time cook-
To simplify our living at less cost
of energy without too great loss of the
seemingly Important things is the
need of the day.
It Is possible to have wholesome
food and attractive desserts made with
but little time. As expense must enter
into the account of 95 per cent of the
American housewife’s plans it Is not
so easy to have things good, Inexpen-
sive and easy to prepare, together
with variety.
A steamed pudding, which may bo
made just before dishing up the din*
nor and allowed to steam 15 minutes,
is:
Fifteen-Minute Pudding.—This pud-
ding meets nil of the qualifications, is
good, attractive in appearance, not ex-
pensive and Is easy to prepare. Sift
a cupful of flour with a tensponful of
baking powder and a quarter of a tea-
spoonful of salt; add half a cupful of
milk; beat well and drop a spoonful
Into buttered custard cups; add a ta-
blespoonful or two of canned cherries,
Juice and all, or any juicy rich fruit;
add another spoonful of the batter
and place the cups in a pan. Pour in
boiling water to come up halfway on
the cups, cover and cook 15 minutes
without uncovering. Serve with cream
and sugar, poured round the unmolded
pudding.
"It’s terrible brave to try to save
A girl on a runaway horse;
You could do that of. course;
But did you ever think of trying
To keep from crying
When you’re tired and hungry and
cross;
You couldn’t do that of course.”
POTATO DISHES.
Beginning with soup nnd ending
with dessert, one may have potatoes
In * every course
in the meal. One
wo u1d hardly
care for such a
meal, but It Is in-
teresting to note
how valuable the
potato is as a
food.
Potato Cream Soup.—Take a cupful
of boiled mashed potatoes; scald one
quart of nulk, and two slices of onion
in a double holler. Hub the potatoes
through a sieve, and add the milk, re-
moving the onion; put into a double
holler to heat. Melt three tablespoon-
fuls of butter, add two tublespoonfuld
of flour, mix and pour some of tne hot
mixture over the thickening, and cook
until smooth. Add to the soup with
a little chopped parsley.
Hashed Potatoes.—(’hop cold boiled
or baked potatoes Into small jits. Sea-
son with salt and pepper and chopped
parsley. For one quart of chopped po-
tatoes, add three tablespoonfuls of but-
ter. Beat the butter and turn In ♦he
potatoes; stir until they begin to
brown, then add one-fourth cupful of
thin cream, and set hack to brown on
the hack of the stove. Fold like nn
omelet, and serve with the brown crust
nn top. Garnish with parsley. Do not
put potatoes through a meat chopper
for this dish, ns the hits should not he
nt all mushy. A good hash should al-
ways he chopped In the chopping bowl.
Meat loaf Is much better done so, rath-
er than ground in the meat grinder.
Potato Cake.—Cream together one
cui f'i|J of sugar nnd half a cupful <>f
.butter substitute; add the yolk of an
egg and heat again; add one cupful of
hot mashed potato, half a cupful of
s#eet milk or cold woter alternately I
with two cupfuls of flour sifted with
two teaspoonfuls of baking powder.
Mix two squares of grated chocolate in
*. *t’ ii to the
mixture. Add one-third of a teaspoon-
ful each of cinnamon, cloves nnd grat-
ed nutmeg nnd one-third of a cupful of
chopped walnuts. Fold In the beaten !
white of the egg. Bake In a loaf or I
in layers. Thls*eake will keep moist
for weeks. *
Potato Candy.—Bake two medium-
sized potato s and while hot remove
from their skins Into a warm mixing
howl. Mash until nil the lumps are j
removed, then add three pounds of
powdered sugar, a half cupful at a
time. The amount of sugar will de-
pend upon the slz(4 of the potatoes.
Wherf thick enough to mold add tlavon
lug, nuts, fruit ot any co’or.
You’re bilious, sluggish, constipated.
You feel headachy, your stomach may
be sour, your breath bad, your skin
sallow and you believe you need vile,
dangerous Calomel to start liver and
bowels.
Here’s my guarantee! Ask your
druggist for a bottle of Dodson’s Liver
Tone and take a spoonful tonight. If
it doesn’t start your liver and straight-
en you right up better than Calomel
nnd without griping or making you
sick I want you to go back to the store
and get your money. /I
Take Calomel today and tomorrow
you will feel weak and sick and nau-
seated. Don’t lose a day. Take a
spoonful of harmless, vegetable Dod-
son’* Liver Tone tonight nnd wake up
feeling splendid. It is perfectly harm-
less, so* give it to your children any
time. It can’t salivate.—Adv.
SOLD FOR 60 YEARS
For MALARIA,
CHILLS anti
FEVER
Also a Fine General
Strengthening Tonic.
SOLD BY ALL DRUG STORES-
FATES ATTEND BABY'S BIRTH A - ' ninny men reason In a cir-
_______ j ole; that’s why there is no end to their
Peculiar Superstition That Has Strong arguments.
Hold on thp Poorer Classes
of Greece.
Almost every nation has some par-
ticular superstition or belief about
babies, and these result in actions
which vary all the way from the ut-
terly absurd to t he terribly tragic.
The peasantry of Greece firmly believe
that the future of every child is de-
termined by three fates, known as tin*
Moral. In the popular mind these
fates are three old women, whose
habitation is a mountain cave and
they come together to a house where
there is a new-born child. In prepara-
tion for them, all furniture is set aside,
thnt their tottering footsteps may not
he impeded, and refreshments in the
shape of honey, bread, cakes and wine
nr* sot out for these important though
invisible guests. Money; too, is placed
on the table, as a bribe, for it is be-
lieved that in the gift of these fates
are all good things as well as had.
lTndcr no circumstances must a child’s
beauty be alluded to while the Moral
may he in the house, or they will cer-
tainly make its good looks, disappear.
Catarrh Cannot fie Cured
by LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they
j cannot reach the seat of the diar'ise.
! Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ-
enced by constitutional conditions. HALL'S
i CATARRH MEDICINE will cure catarrh.
It is taken internally and acts through
the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the
! System. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE
is composed of some of the best tonics
with
known, combined
th some of the best
bina
A New One.
They wore still out in the conserva-
tory and Tom lmd Just asked Sally to
marry him. She had said, ‘‘I don’t care
if I do,” and thus they were engaged.
# “Tom, dear,” she began, “am I the
only girl—”
“Now, look here. Sally,” he inter-
rupted, “draft ask me if you are tlie
only girl I ever loved. You know as
well as I do—”
“Oli, that wasn’t the question nt nil,
Tom,” she answered. “I was just going
to ask if I was tlie only girl that would
have you?”
No matter how little a man believes
In religion he detests Irreverence in a
woman.
, blood purifiers. The perfect .combination
of the ingredients in HALL’S CATARRH
j MEDICINE is what produces such won-
derful results In catarrhal conditions.
Druggists 76c. Testimonials free.
F, J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, Ohio*
Suspicious Youngsters.
“I got to admit,” said Sol Mannhei-
mer, theatrical manager, “that I’ve
been handed one.”
“How’s that?”
“I gave a hundred dollars apiece to
ray three nephews today. They in-
herited it under a will that I was
executor of. I took the money up to
them in nice new bills,, and after I’d
| passed it out, I said:
"Now. boys, I’ve given each of you
a hundred dollars, which is your own,
j to do as you please with. I want you
I to tell me what’s the first thing you’re
I going to do with it.” And they ail said:
‘Count it.’”—Cincinnati Times-Star.
Anything for Ballast.
I was calling on some friends .one
evening when during the conversation
tin* host iuquiiA’d about my aunt and
uncle, who were planning to drive to
Florida.
After I had given some information
concerning the trip the host said: “l it
bet they'd be glad to lmve us go with
them/’
“Surely,” T replied. “They’d hi* glad
to have anybody.”
”llin! Some class you put us in!”
Then I spent a most embarrassing
moment trying to explain.—Exchange.
Even when a woman weighs her
words she gives good measure.
It Is said that all the world loves a Get up with the lark, but don’t dla-
lover, but the proof is missing. t_rh others with your larkings.
Sleep Is Sweet
*—so if cof fee
plays tricks with
your nerves and
breaks your rest
try
Instant
POSTUM
*
Ibis economical bever-
age has.a rich coffee-
like Davor that truly
satisfies.
i
Hade by
Postum Cereal Co. Battle Creek, Mich.
•Sold by Grocers and General Stores.
i
v
JO
1
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Wandell, Clarence F. Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1920, newspaper, January 29, 1920; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc911770/m1/2/: accessed April 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.