Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 5, 1921 Page: 3 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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• ' • i-
' . • "" - : ■
THE COYLE CLIPPER
v* •
THIS WOMAN’S
' EXPERIENCE
Brings a Ray of Hope to
Childless Women
Lowell, Mass.—“I had anemia from
the time I was sixteen years old and
iwas very irregular.
Ilf I did any house-
I cleaning or washing
II would faint and
I have to be put to
| bed, my husband
] thinking every min-
Jute was my last
lAfter reading your
I tex t-book for wome o
II took Lydia E.*
jpinkham’s ,Vegeta-
I ble Compound and
I used the Sanative
Wash, and have never fell? better than
I have the last two years. I can work,
eat, sleep, and feel as strong as can be.
Doctors told me I could never have
children—I was too weak— but after
taking Vegetable Compound it strength-
ened me so I gave birth to an eight
pound boy. I was well all the time, did
all my work up to the last day, and had
a natural birth. Everybody who knew
me was surprised, and when they ask me
what made me strong I tell them with
great pleasure, ‘ I took Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound and never
felt better in my life.’ Use this testi-
monial at any time.’’—Mrs. Elizabeth
Smart, 142 W. Sixth St.^Lowell, Mass.
This experience of Mrs. fftnart is surely
*atrong recommendation for Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It is
only one of a great many similar cases.
Renew your health
by purifying your,
system with
Special Session, Eighth
Oklahoma Legislature
Quick and delightful r»i
lief for biliousness, colds,
constipation,* headaches,
and ’stomach, liver ana
blood troubles.
The genuine are sold
only in 35c package*.
Avoid imitations.
They Jo
\ tHe work |
I without
griping.
Dr.Tutt's
Liver Pills
©• o
I — CONSTIPATION
- UPSET STOMACH
126 MAMMOTH JACKS
irggln for you. cotne quick,
CLOU’S .JACK ftTAKAfl
ilar ltaplds, Iowa
I have a bargain for
W. L» !>«•(
Cetlar liapids.
But Seldom Are.
Cobb—“Does lie consider liimself »
Mix ixiiii?’’ Webb—“Yes. Men of small
caliber usually do.” ^
Red Cross Rail Blue should be used
in every home. It makes clothes white
as snow and never injures the fabric.
All good grocers, 5c.«r -
Drawing Is the art of marking
around one’s thoughts.
Fame is an undertaker.
GENUINE
BULL"
.DURHAM
tobacco makes 50
flood ciflarettes for
10c
Florida Oritcr Culture Offer* Life-Time la*
route to non-resident.*, without drudgery,
rain, hoeing, plowing or fertiliser. Free infor
mutton—12.000 word*—Including U. S (Joy-
eminent quotation*. Government $10,000 eur-
vey. eurorn utatementa. Oy»t.*r Grow ere Co-
operative Association, Apalachicola, Florida
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 19-1921
Abandoning its original policy of al-
lowing no new buildings for state in-
stitutions, the appropriations commit-
tee of th* house of representatives
recommended bills for passage Mon-
day which carry appropriations aggre-
gating $1,048,107. Virtually all the
money represented In the bills is to
erect new buildings or to complete
those already started.
« The change in policy is the result
of decision of the house last week to
interpret the messages #of Governor'
Robertson as allowing the legislature
to consider appropriations for build
lngs where such buildings are neces-
sary for proper maintenance of. Insti-
tutions. Virtually all the hills recom-
mended for passagj Monday were
passed by both branches of the legis-
lature during the regular session, but
failed <(f final enactment because cler-
ical details were not finished before
adjournment. *
The University of, Oklahoma del^
ciency bill became law Monday aft-
ernoon. It was the second bill since
$he opening of Jhe special session to
recolve the signature of Oovernor
Robertson. It provides $257,983 for
salaries and-matntpnance .of the uni-
versity for the remainder of this fis-
cal year. Regular appropriations for
the university, made by* the legisla-
ture two years ago, were entirely ex-
hausted seven weeks ago, and no sal-
aries have been paid since*that time
because of delay in passage of the de-
ficiency bill.
Deficiency appropriation of $100,000
for A. & M. college Is expected to
become law Tuesday. U has been
passed by both house of representa-
tives and senate, and, on Monday the
enrolled copy was signed by Speaker
Schwab of the house and sent ta the
senate for the final signature of the
presiding officer there.
The house Saturday passed senate
bill No. 2, appropriating $120 926.56
to retire public, building bonds and
pay Interest upon them, and the bill
was signer! by the speaker. ’
House bill No. 48, appropriating
$10,000 to pay tuition of inmates of
orphanages who attend common
schools was stricken from the calen-
dar.
The house reconsidered ns action
of Friday which killed house bill No.
17, making appro-jh iation for the sum-
mer school at state normal schools,
and referred the bill to the appropria-
tions committee. *
The house adjourned early Satur-
day afternoon to meet again at
o’clock Monday afternoon.
The upper house of Khe legislature
"did nob touch its calendar Saturday
due to the fact that had passed the
majority of measures ready for final
roll call and also to a shortage of
members.
Throe «So1dier relief bills were pass
ed on final roll call. They had been
recommended for passage earlier in
the afternoon by the house to com-
mittee of the whole R. C. Mardie of
Norman presidfcg. The Mils were
house bill No. 9, establishing a tuber-
culosis sanatorium at Sulphur; house
bill No. 1#. enlarging University hos-
pital for soldiers. .$
Tbe house defeated house bill No.
17. appropriating $14,599 for support
of the first half of»the summer term
at state normal schools. I. L. Harris
of Oklahoma county gave notice that
ho would ask later to have the vote
reconsidered.
The house gave unanimous consent
to have senate bill No. 2, appropriat-
ing $120,296.56 for paying principal
and interest oj public building bonds,
placed on the calendar on geneval or-
der, #without reference to any Stand-
ing committee.
From Governor Robertson a mes-
sage was received saying the inten-
tion of the message delivered at the
beginning of the session was to open
up necessary building construction as
a subject of legislation.
The house passed house resolution
No. 4 by Admire memoralizing con-
gress to enact a protective tariff upon
oil, and house resolution No. 5, intro-
duced Friday by Pullen, directing the
payment of $9.80 to Representative
E. A. Herod cf Woods county as mile-
age due him for attendance at the
regular session of the legislature.
By reqqcrt of Ben F. Harrison au
thor of the resolution, house concur-
rent resolution No. 1 was designated
as joint resolution No. 4. It author-
izes the state board of public affairs
to spend certain unused funds for
capitol maintenance. 1{ was referred
to the appropriations committee.
Measures pa^ed by the senate Fri-
day were senate bill No. 1, making
appropriations for all state depart-
ments; senate bill No. 15 appropriat-
ing $200,000 for the operation cf un-
ion graded and consolidated schools;
senate bill No. 24, making a $323,000
appropriation to pay deficiency certifi-
cates issued by the governor; senate
bill No. 26, making an appropriation
of $7,349 to pay the Pinner Construc-
tion company for barracks built at the
Oklahoma Military academy at Clare-
more; senate bill' No. 26, providing
funds to pay the Santa Fe ralway for
the construction of a switch near the
capitol grounds; senate bill No. 19.
creatine a commission of educational
survey and appropriating $20,000 for
its use; senate bill 29, providing aid
for the finishing of certain bridges In
the state, and senate bill No. 13 creat-
ing a soldiers’ relief commission and
appropriating $1,525,000 for hospital
buildings.
It was marked in the upper house
Thursday that senate republicans,
who raised no bbjection when Luther
Harrison of Ada, called attention to
the fact that the bill bore a total of
$35,000 lower than it carried when it
was passed by the senate before, and
moved that tine vote be taken with-
out amendment, with one exception,
voted against the measure* when !t
came up for final roll call.
Speaker Schwaba, announced tlfe
appointment of Murray F. Gibbons of
Purcell, McClain county, to be chair-
man of the committee on soldiers’ re-
lief, succeeding Victor M. Locke, Jr.,
of Pushmataha county, who is not ex-
pected to attend the special session.
The speaker announced also the
monies of ftie new appropriations Com-
mittee, S. D. Bailey, of Snyder, Kiowa'
county, being continued as chairman.
The speaker appointed L. K. Salter
of Alfalfa county, R. C. Hardie of
Cleveland county and J. C. Qraham of
Love county to ascertain the bills
which were passed during the last
session but which did not become law
Passage of deficiency approplation
bills fo the University of Oklahoma
and A. & M. college, attended by per-
sonal attack upon Stratton D. Brooks.
I resident of the university, bemuse
lie bad permitted the creation of a de
nciency, was the accomplishment of
thy house of Apresentatives Thurs-
day.
“Don’t you thing wo ought to have
enough confidence in the head of the
university to pay the bills he ere
ates?” inquire^ Sam A. Neely
Ralph C. Hardie of-Norman, a re-
publican, defended President Brooks’
action In spending more than-his ap-
propriation and rebuked Harp’s at*
tack. Hardie gave as an example of
an emergency needs that had caused
the spending of more money than was
provided for the university the fact
that provision was made last fall for
teaching only twenty sections of the
freshman English class, whilp unex-
pectedly large enrollment forced the
unversity to provide for seventeen
additional sections.
♦ Vote on the university deficiency
appropriation bill, providing $257,900
ASPIRIN
Name "Bayer” on Genuine
w
A”
Speeches and Lectures.
• The line Chump Clark s services '
were sought some months ago by a I
small western town that was under-
taking to put one of those Chuutau- \
qua Affairs over the plate.
“We would like to know,” the chair- .
man of the committee inquired, “how I
much you would charge to come and }
make us a speech.”
. Champ Cliyk named his flgilrp and
added? “I’ll come and lecture, if
pcfkslble, for tliyt amount, hut it will
he a lecture, you understand, and not
a speech. I charge money for lectures,
i»ur when 1 nialtf a .speech It is for
nothing.” »
Americans Like Milk.
The average#American is becoming
a confirmed milk* drinker. He con-
sumes twice as much as in former
generations. The consumption of milk
Warning! Unless you see the name
•Bayer’* on package or du tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre-
scribed by physicians for twenty-one
years and .proved safe by millions.
Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer
package for Colds, Headache, Neural- >ll'r capita was 44 gallons last year,
gla, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, witliout counting up dairy products
Lumbago and for Fain. Handy tin such ns butter, choose and ice ertaun.
boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of As- "’bile milk is not very cheap at the
plrin cost few cents. Druggists also preset^ time, oWiufi to the cost, of
sell larger packages. Aspirin Is the I labor, railroad charges and the sear- ]
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of , <-M> of. bi-ewer s grains, still the prt
Monoacetlcacldester
Adv.
•f Salieycacld.— sent (lay facilities of obtaining milk
in prime condition Is largely respon-
sible for the increasing ns*.
Find the Cause!
It isn’t right to drag along feeling
miserable—half sick, hand out what is
making you feel so badly and try to
correct it. Perhftps your kidneys are
causing that throbbing backache or
those sharp, stabbing pains. You may
have morning lameness, too, headaches,
dizzy spells and irregular kidney action.
Use Doan's Kidney Pills. They have
helped thousands of ailing folks. Ask
your neighbor!
An Oklahoma Casa
R. J. Gilbert, re-
tired farmer. NV.
Sixth St., Newkirk,
Okla4 says: ”1 was
n • r v o u a and ->t
times I had dizzy
spells. The action
of my kidneys
caused annoyance
and the kidney se
Cretions
am
1 had bad
scanty
were often
nd painful,
bud back-
aches and c o u 1 d
hardly lift any-
thing or stiaighten up after bending.
Finally 1 used Doan’s Kidney 1 *i 11a and
they made me stronger and better In
every way."
Get Doen’s St Any Store, 60c ■ Bo*
DOAN’S ‘V.TIV
FOSTER-M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.
Springtime.
‘The Lord loveth a cheerful li\A r.”—
Exchange.
Don’t look for n bankrupt at a char-
ity souphouse. That's where his vic-
tims congregate.
* Catarrh
Catarrh is & local disease greatly influ-
enced by constitutional conditions.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE* is
Tonic an4 Blood Purifier. By cleans
the blood and building up the System
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE restores
normal conditions and allows Nature to
do its work.
All Druggists. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Grim Relics of War.
Battle relics, cloth of all kinds and
description interwoven with the roots,
also bits of hones, leather, rubber and
buttons were found in the sprouts of
nursery stock fruit trees which arrived
in Salt Lake City recently from
France. Thq trees were Evidently
gdown on one of the battlefields of
France, and in the roots of one or tin*
Tonic'*an^Blood^’purIflo™^By* cleansing sprouts was n strip of bloodstained
■’ *-• ' ' *■ — bandage. One of tbe trees bad grown
When a woman says that she has
seen better days, it means that she
recognizes cut glass when she sees It.
ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE DOES IT
When ahcea pinch or corns and bunions
of ALLEN'S
fn^in the seed through the link of a
large watch chain. ^
Quality and Equality.
From a dramatic review: The piny
has one of the most evenly balanced
casts we have ever seen—all rotten.—
Boston Transcript.
FOOT = ...
Iseptlc powder to be shaken j MS WHO.
into the shoes. It takes the sting out of
corns and bunions, gives instant relief to |
ache, get a packag<
EASE, tfce antiseptii
A man whom the world calls great
may lit* a small potato liioibe eyes of
corns and bunions, gives instant relief to
Smarting, Aching, Swollen feet. 1,600,000
pounds of powder for the feet were used
by our Anny and Navy during the war.—Adv.
--W-T-
A Kentucky journal mentions a
“yawning oil well” in that state.
Somebody must have been boring it.
for salaries and maintenance for the
remainder of this fiscal year, was
sixty-four yes, thirteen no and fifteen
absent. Members voting no wste, re-
publicans, Cummings, Everhart, Harp,
Keenan, Ottinger, Sharp Trevathan,
Tylee and* Speaker Schwabe; demo-
crats, Johnson, King, Shilling and
Whitaker. Absentees were, republi-
cans, Ballance, Denny Harman, Har-
ris, Locke. Matthews Rogers, Scofield
KBd Steffen; democrats Ilrice, Graves,
Hornbeck, Nance Pearson and J. B.
Smith.
Charles Whitaker of Eufaula open-
ed the attack upon the university de-
ficiency bill by proposing an amend-
ment reducing the total to $137,000. of
which $100,000 should be salaries and
$37,000 for maintenance. »
The bouse passed without discus-
sion Thursday tw® other appropria-
tion bills, one setting aside $100,000
to pay expenses of the special ses-»
sion of the legislature, and the other
reappropriating $3,000 given by form-
er legislature to the PanhiAbMe Agri-
cultural and Mechanical college at
Goodwell, Texas county. The new bill
permits the use of lapsed funds to in-
stall a laundry. *
Large scale amendments were add-
ed to the bill appropriating $3,000
for salaries of teachers at the first
half of the summer term of Central
State Normal school at Edmond.
Porter Newman of Durant introduced
an amendment making appropriations
of a similar nature for other normal
schools as follows; Tahlequah, $909;
'Alva, $1,847; Weatherford. $707; Ada,
$2138 and Durant $3000. William
Dodd of Logan county offered an
amendment giving $3,000 for the sum-
mer term of Negro Agricultural and.
Normal university at Langston. ,
Why the lights were turned off at
the capitol is the question which
Glenn R. Horner of Okmulgee, mem-
ber of the senate, felt called upon to
investigate Tuesday following an an-
nouncement of John Golobie he would
ask that a committee be appointed in
the senate to look into this prob-
lem. A shnila^ committee*has been
appointed in the house.
"At that session the board of affairs
asked for an emergency appropria-
tion of $15,000. The state audivor'3
books show that the full amount of
the $25,000 representing $10,000 ap-
propriated by the 1919 legislature,
and $15,000, an emergency appropriat-
ed by the 1921 legislature, has not
been paid out, but that there la a
balance of $2,233 on hand."
After the upper house settled its
policy and construction of the gover-
nor’s message in such a way it gives
‘authority to the introduction of all
appropriation measures, It went to
work and had cleaned its calendar at
the hour of adjournment. The only
major measures failing during the af-
ternoon session was that which would
hand the common schools $400,000
The senate, without enough votes
to pass a single measure, Thursday
afternoon was driven to the recourse
of issuing processes for absent mem-
bers. The sergeant-at-arms of the up-
per house by order of the members
present, filed telegrams to^senatorg
who were out of the cltyuand the
president, M. E. Trapp, lieutenant
governor, served notice the body In
the future would operate under “the
call of the house,” which means doors
will be locked
4-
“O ITnppy Dry” sang tlie laundress
as she hung the snowy wash on the
line. It was a “happy day** heeuu.se
she used Red Cross Ball Blue.
The man who will not listen to safe-
ly rules may have to listen to ifti am-
bulance gong.
Pay $5 for a dog and he will be as ;
agreeable companion us if you paid
$500 for him. . %
New Life for
Sick Man
| Eatonic Works Magic]
“I have taken only two boxes of
Eatonic and feel like a new man. It
has done me more good than anything
else,” yerites C. O. Frapplr.
Eatonic to the modern remedy for
neld stomach, bloating, food repeating*
and indigestion. It quickly takes up
and carries out the aridity and gas
and enables the stomach to digest the
food naturally. That means not only
relief from pain and discomfort hut
you get the full strength from the food
you eat. Big box only costs a trillo
with ymtf druggist’s guarantee.
DEAD SHOT
42SlM\Rat Killer
' PAT KILLER\ N° no smell. Eaten
T 1 reaffily when
VSEijfc
reatlily when mixed with
according to direc-
tions. Dries them up, no
1 bait.
An inherited name may he hut a
shadow larger than tlfe man behind
It.
If y6u are nlwnys on the square
you need nave little fear of ever fig-
uring in a triangle. • •
bad otjpr. Price 25 cents.
For sale by all dealers.
Mlg. by Dead Shot Chemical
Co., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Heat expands and cold contracts; .
that is probably why the days are
longer in summer than in winter.
Let Cuticura Be
Your Beauty Doctor
Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c.
Why Castoria?
YEARS ago Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups were the remedies
in common use for Infants and Children; Castor Oil so nauseating /is to bo
almost impossible and the others all containing Opium’ in one form- or another,
but so disguised as to make them pleasant to the taste, yet really to stupify tho
child and give the appearance of relief from pain. *
It required years of research to find a purply vegetable combination that
would take the place of these disagreeable, unpleasant and vicious remedies that
from habit had become almost universal. This was -the inception of, and the reason
for, the introduction of Fletcher’s Castoria, and for over 30 years* it has proven its
worth, received the* praise of Physicians everywhere and become a household word
among mothers.
A remedy ESPECIALLY prepar6d for Infants and Children and .no mother
would think of giving to her baby at remedy that she would use for herself,
without consulting a physician.
m
•Pi i
Npt Contents 15 fluid Draolmj
ASTORIA
.ALCOHOL " 3 PER GENT.
0 reparation forte -
1 similatintj the Food by Regula-
p tintlthcStoiwicIis and Bowels “i
-----—
111
S!* j$f|; Therein* Promoting Digestion'
i«.? f L 11 Cheerfulness and RestXontaus
L: -V | neither Opium,Morphine nor
j Mineral. Not Narcotic
\pwnptmSxJ
JbMUM
atrn
; * fmtnfm ____
A he!pfui Remedy fbr
Constipation and Diarrhoei
and Feverishness ana
Loss of Sleep
lesirttinfi therefrotnanuuawv-
facsimile Signature?*
The CeFiav" Goto>«®
WKW "YORjC
w
Children Cry For
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
ft 1 gffliff
* Have You Tried It?
Everybody las read the above headline; how many believe it?
Have you a little-one in the home, and has that dear little mite
when its stomach was not just right felt the comforts that come with
,the use of Fletcher’s Castoria? You have heard the cry of paiu.
Have you heard them cry for Fletcher’s Castoria? Try it
•Just help baby out of its trouble tomorrow with a taste of Cas-
toria. Watch the difference In the tone of the cry, the look In the
eye, the wiggle in the tiny fingers, The^transformation is complete—
froqj pain to pleasure. Try it.
You’ll find a wonderful lot of Information about Baby In the
booklet that is wrapped around every bottle of Fletcher’s Castoria.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
TM« CINTAUN COMPANY, NSW YORK
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Wandell, Clarence F. Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 5, 1921, newspaper, May 5, 1921; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc912288/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.