Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 6, 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
ffTREADY
FOR “FLU
Keep Your Liver Active, Your
System Purified and Free From
, Colds by Taking Calotabs,
the Nausealess Calomel
Tablets, that are Dc-
. lightful, Safe and
Sure.
SUNDAY WORKING IN OKLAOMA
Physicians and Druggists nro advis-
ing their friends to keep thxir systems
purified and their organs in perfect
working order as a protection against
the 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 tako one
Calotab at bedtime with a swallow of
water—that’s all. No salts, no nausea,
no griping, no sickening after effects.
N'cit morning vour cold has vanished,
your liver is active, your system is puri*
ted and refreshed and you are feeling
fine with a hearty appetite for break-
fast. Eat what you please—no danger.
Calotabs are sold only in original
sealed packages, price thirty-five cents.
Every druggist is authorized to refund
your money if you are not perfectly
delighted with Calotabs.—(Adv.)
Modern Poetry of Motion.
The orchestra softly played
“Kiss Me Again.”
She gazed into Ids ryes
And breathed a sigh.
“Your dancing is like a porm,"
She said.
“Yes, yes, go on,” he
Murmured.
“An Amy Lowell poem;
The feet
Are all mixed up,”
She answered. —Record
•Pi
Ur>, «
mi
11
t
’ Lift off Corns!
i ■
Doesn’t hurt a bit and Freoionc
costs only a few cents.
Wm. A. Sunday, the strenuous evan-
gelist is now engaged on a seven
weeks attack on the devil in Oklahoma
City.
N-E OKLAHOMA
FIRST REPORTS TELL OF
FIVE DEAD AND A DOZEN
HURT
LOCAL STORM NEAR CHELSEA
And the Casualties Are All Among
Farming People.—Lusta, Pryor
and Miami Are Also Hit
By Wind Storm.
\
lOjJ
Muskogee Five people are known
to have been killed and a dozen or
badly hurt in a tornado which swept
a wide path through the countryside
north of Chelsea, just before dusk
Sunday.
The known dead are:
Mrs. John Griggs.
Mrs. Henry Purcell and infant.
Lewis Madden.
— Rot haway, old man, first
| name unknown.
Among the more seriously injured
1 arc:
John Griggs, a leg broken and in-
jured internally. i Sugar Company Hikes Price.
Henry Purcell, chest crushed. \ Salt Lake City The I tah Idaho Su
The storm, originated ahoyt o^e Far Company. l.c . ' product s in the
MORE BENEFITS FOR SOLDIERS
INSURANCE PAID UP BY THE
NEW PLAN
Value of Policies Would Increase An
nually; Loans Possible Under
New Plan.
V vM
I tee virtually decided to include n
their soldier relict legislation program
I a plan of paid-up insurance, Jts value i
to increase annually by compound in \
I ten • I. . lifi on v* nil || !«..iii; < . ,!U be ob
I tained from any postolfice.
With this addition, former service
men might elect any tno of the fiv<
♦ follow ing plant in< lu h d ... t
lican program:
, A cash bonus of $1.25 a day for each I
da\ oi • m v H '4,
Aid in buying farm lands, to be re-
] claimed by the government..
Aid in buying city homes.
A id in their education.
Aui in their insurance.
To popularize their four plans the ;
republb*af:fi propose to allow $1.75 a i
‘f.r each day s'ervice, instead ol
j the $1.25 cash bonus as the basis for I
computing farm and home aid, loans
j and tlie amount of financial aid each
; man might receive in the form of edu-
{ caticnal training.
The average period of service for
world veterans was 400 days, they satd
J explaining that under the insurance
I plan, the average veteran could re
I ceive a paid-up insurance policy ol
j $1,857, payable to him in cash at the •
end of twenty years, or immediately |
to his heirs in event of death.
The loan value of the insurance— *
; denoted in the legislation as adjusted
service certificates would not accrue;
; until the end of the third year the
! plan had been in force, and at that j
time an ex service man, with a record
of 400 days service, would be entitled
to a loan of $551. This would be the
cash value of his “certificate” at Miat
time at five per cent, interest com ,
j pounded annually.
This plan, if adopted universally by !
the world war veterans, would cost the
government far more than the cash j
bonus of $1.25 a day. committeemen
said. Estimating that 3.590,000 ex
pen ice men will be affected by the
bill, committeemen declared that th*
ultimate cost of the insurance plan, if
adopted by all, would he approximate- •
ly $6,000,000,000, The cash bonus, it
was estimated, would cost $1,807,000,
I 000 if accepted by all.
Baby Specialists.
THAI! there are Physicians who specialize on Infant ailments' you know. All
Physicians understand Infant troubles: all Physicians treat them. It is hie
profession, his duty, to know human ills from the Stork to the Great Beyond.
But in serious cases he calls in the Specialist. Why ? He knows as every
Mother knows, or ought to know, that Baby is just a baby, needing special treat-
ment, special remedies.
Can a Mother be less thoughtful ? Can a Mother try to relieve Baby with
E remedy that she would use for hersSlf? A'sk yourself; and answer honestly!
Always remember that Baby is just a baby. And remembering this you
will remember that Fletcher’s Castoria is made especially for Infants and
Children.
Children Cry For
Shjpt Contents 15Fluid Drachm
IGSEESB'
W 4
| ......... "II nil il illiMHH III I m
With your fingers 1 You enn lift off
any hard corn, soft corn, or corn be-
tween the toes, and the hard skin cal-
luses from bottom of feet.
A tiny bottle of “Freezone” cost9
little at nny drug store; apply n few
drops upon the corn or callous. In-
stantly it stops hurting, then shortly
you lift that bothersome corn or cal-
lous right off, root and all, without
one bit of pain or sorenes^ Truly 1
IS’o humbug!—Adv.
Identified.
This,” smiled the fond young wife,
as she passed a plate of pudding to
her husband. “Is cottage pudding. 1
nw.de it myself.”
^ The husband tasted it.
“I d have known It was cottage pud-
ding,” he returned.
“Would you7” she asked, delighted.
“Yes; rcan taste the plaster and
the wall-paper."—The Queenslander.
WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND
SWAMP-ROOT
For many years druggists hare watched
with much interest the remarkable record
maintained by Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Hoot,
the great kidney, liver and bladder medi-
cine.
It is a fchyiician’i prescription.
Swamp-Root is a strengthening medi-
cine. It helps the kidneys, liver and blad-
der do the work nature intended they
should do.
Swamp-Root has stood the test of years
It is sold by ail druggists on its merit
und it should help you. No other kidney
medicine has so ninny friends.
Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start
treatment at once.
However, if you wish first to test this
great preparation send ten cents^ to Dr.
Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
►ample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—Adv.
Concluding the Ceremony.
The Justice of the Twice—Do you
take this woman to he your lawful
wedded wifi*?
The Bridegroom—I do.
The Justice -jThon I pronounce you
man and wife. And remember you
asked me to do this. Don’t ever blame
Die. ^
FRECKLES
Now h the Time to Get Kid of
The** Ugly Spot*.
• There's no longer
feeling aahamed of yoi
—double Ntrungth Is guumntee
mile north of Chelsea and Bwept west
uud north.
All of the known dead are farmers,
who were killed when their homes
| more badly hurt in a tornado which
j awept a wide path through the coun-
tryside north of Chelsea, just before
dusk Sunday.
were, destroyed, with the exception of
Lewis Madden. He was riding horse-
back along a country road when the
tornado struck him
Madden was snatched from his
horse by the wind and hurled into a
gneadow more than 400 yards from the
Toad. His horse was unhurt.
{Waiter Sutherland was driving to
Chelsea with eight friends in his wag-
on when they saw the storm approach-
ing. Sutherland hitched his team to a
telephone post afid hi; part.' ran a
few yards ahead and fell taco for-
ward in a ditch. The storm passed
overhead without injuring any of
them The horses and wagon were
carried away.
Other reports told of a tornado at
Lusta, several miles east of Chelsea
and about twelve miles northwest of
| Choteau. All IvH^hone and telegraph
[ wires to nearby towns are dyj'p, byt
I passengers aboard trains which had
| passed through tjje Ho| ipswe^t area
inter-mountain region announced an
increase in their price of refined sugar
from a thirteen cent basis to 22.75
*
retail prices of beet sugar here from
16 to 28 cent i mind, The ( cinpanv
has declined to state the reason lor
the advance.
ALCOHOL-3 PER ^nt.
, AV^elabtePreparationferA*
' similatin^UieFooil tryRe$ul«-
rtm>UwSinmariis and Bore*1?
Thereby Promoting
Cheerfulness and lteslfoata®
neither Oplnm, Morphine nor,
MinertU. Not Narcotic
'PmnpJtmS**
Snrrui
hm+rwwrx rbn# ^
AMpfulifcraedyfor
Constipation and Diarrhoea
nnd Feverishness and
facsimile SijnaWj0*
tstflW YOHK-
i
Exact Copy cl Wrapper.
The False and the True.
Advertising by the use of large space, the expenditure of huge sums
of money have placed on the market, have put in your home, perhaps,,
many articles that today have been discarded, as you will readily admit.
Do you recall anything that has more modestly appealed to the
public than has Fletcher’s Castoria: modest in all its claims, pleading
at all times—and truthfully—for our babies ?
The big splurg, the misleading claims may win for a time, but
the honest truth-telling advertiser is like the old story of the tortoise
that beat the hare.
Mothers everywhere, and their daughters, now mothers, Bpeak
frankly, glowingly, enthusiastically in praise of Fletcher’s Castoria.
Speak of it lovingly as a friend that has brought comfort, cheer and,
smiles to their little-one.
There are substitutes and imitations as there are for the diamond,
for anything of value. One might almost say that that which is not
copied has no value. So you have had the signature of Chas. H.
Fletcher and a copy of the genuine wrapper kept constantly before
you that you may guard against the false and the untrue.
MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CUSTOM*
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
A
▼ M If CINTAUR COMPANY,
* * w YO mu C I T V.
Long Ball Game.
Boston The major league record
for the number of innings in a single
game went to smash when for twenty-
six innings, three hours and fifty min
utes, the Boston and Brooklyn Nation
als battled to a one to ore tie on
Braves field. Joe Oeschger for Bos-
ton and Leon (.’adore for Brooklyn
stayed on the box for the entirt dis-
tance.
Naturally.
“The hygienic experts set their faces
against kissing.”
“Who doesn't?”
BEDFAST EVERY
WINTER; STOMACH
• TROUBLE GGNE
Mrs. Mershon Found Speedy Relief
After 18 Years’ Suffering.
the slightest need ot
•our freckles, h» othln*
Heed
these homely spots.
Simply K't *4n ounce of Othln#—double
itrengih from your druKsiat. und apply a
little of It night and morning and® you
ehoul'l *-oon *'•« that even the worst f’-ukh-i
have begun to disappear, while the lighter
i nee have vanished entirely. It le seldom
that more than one ounce i* needed
pletelv char the akin and vain
Clear complexion
He aure to auk for the double strength
Othlne RN thin le aold under iuarantee o/
tt-oney back If It falls to remove trickle*.
Some prefer to do their hnyumklng
t,\ gUSligllt. .
b* aui
coin
QtltUl
declared that from a distance, they
! had seen farm houses picked lip by
j tlie wind and dashed back to earth.
Three miles north of Chelsea, Otis
I Ragan lived with his three children in
a brick farmhouse. Terrified by the
roar of the storm, he gathered his
children ftbout him and tht> huddled
I together in a corner ol a room, wait-
i ing for the tornado to strike. The en-
tire house was demolished. As the
walls were lifted, the four fell outside
into ■ hi >ard ih bila how< jjed down
I upon them. All are badly hurt.
___
« wind
sweeping this district caused estimat-
! ed damage in Ottawa county alone of
$50,000.
Houses were unroofed, barns and
' (Tiber outbuildings were overturned or
I destroyed. Trees were uprooted and
fences and wires torn down. An air-
; plane, belonging to a Joplin company,
I on the local landing field, was deiuol-
i ished.
Arapaho - Striking after dark. Sat
I unlay night, violent wind storms blew
I down derricks, houses, and other
j buildings, and windmills, and did otter
| damage. No lives were lost.
i
W1 r
to reports njicliin the dispatcher’s
oi f!<. by round •>!’* ut 1 in* " hen It
*
miles nortjiw •*»• of Chi 1 * .iu.
' Jf-
i Dallas. The element of the demo-'
cratlc party of Texas which sought to
a dent \v II on and i la
administration met det€*at In .a verlt-
I able political landslide In the deniiv
cratlc preidnct ronventlons, according
Ao additional informutiou.
Fire Destroys Many Buildings In Texts
Gorman, Texas. Fire originating in i
a livery stable from an undetermined j
cause destroyed more than a dozen !
buildings here and for a time threaten- '
ed the entire business district. The
loss is estimated at $100,000. Among,
the most important buildings destroy-
ed were the Connor hotel I’n byt- r- i
ian churyhx t wp stores, a meat
market and a bakery.
- •
Sugar 31 Cents Wholesale Price.
Chicago.—Sugar reached the high- j
PBt price on record in Chicago, accord- 1
Ing to commission men when a 1,000
pound lot sold for 31 cents a pound
wholesale Buyers as tempted to* buy
more by offering 32 cents, but there i
was none for sale.
Even Were New Suits Not $4-0.
Sir Oliver Lodge says that dying is
like discarding an old suit of clothes.
To some of us doing the latter is al-
most .ns hard as dying, truly.—Bos-
ton Transcript.
Consistent.
“He Is a most consistent critic.”
“So 1 judge by his running com-
ments on fugitive poetry.”
The average man thinks he sees the
image of perfection, every time he
humps up against n mirror.
Georgette and Tricotine.
“Tricotine, I hear some silly girl l©
going to marry Algy.”
“Yes.”
"Isn't it ridiculous?”
“Well, I don’t know what to
Georgette. I'm the girl.”—Louisville
Courier-Journal.
Every man who has the courage of
i Mis convictions lias to have a lot of
t.
A bird in the hand is vulgar. Use f.
knife and fork.
Reprieve On Eve of Electrocution.
Ossinging. N. Y. Governor Smith,
in a message received at 7 o'clock in
the evening, reprieved four w< n who
were to have been put to death in the
electric chair at 11 o’clock.
Labor Refuses Booze Resolution.
•Cleburne,
federation of labor, in annual conven-
tion refused to consider a resolution
endorsing beer and light wines. The
vote against consideration. 4 73 to 204
'•aine attei a If ni’tl'.'• and 1m! • * d»-b T*
Bryan Sees A Warning.
Pittsburg, William Jennings Bryan
in a statement issued here declared
that the recent primaries were a warn-
ing that demon at ic senators should
for ;! ■
tIon of the peace treaty.
Rxkfeiier Gives Church Carge
New York A $2,000,000 contribution
to the new world movement of the
Northern Baptists was received 1 :■
wire from John D. Rockfellor u. It
brought tli*» total subscriptions to the
U to I Th-
is $lP",i»< • ^ou. The ^amp.u: n i it
| of that of the interchurch world move-
j meat for $336,000,000. Rockf< lh r had
j previously given $450,000 to tt t :< i
(jhurcl .i f ol
I made outright. Of ♦lie second half
$500,000 is to be added to the land
win u it i taches $G2,500.0UU
“I Mad suffered from Btomach trouble
/or 18 years, and had spent hundreds of
dollars doctoring. Every winter I was
bedfast most of the time. 1 commenced
taking Milks Emulsion last fall, and be-
fore 1 had taken six bottles my stomach
trouble disappeared and 1 have had no
return of it since. This is the first win-
ter in 18 years that 1 have not been bed-
fast. 1 also give Milks Emulsion to the
children for croup, with splendid re-
sult.'- —Mrs. \V. G. Mershon, Brazil, Inil
Thousands of people who have suffered
for years from stomach and bowel
troubles, as Mrs. Mershon did. have found
fl,a turn? wyt'derful relief and lasting
benefit from Milks Emulsion.
Milks Emulsion is a pleasant, nutritive j
food and a corrective medicine. It re-
stores healthy, natural bowel action, do-
ing away with all need of pills and pliys- j
ics. It promotes appetite ami quickly ;
puts the digestive organs in shape to as-
similate food. As a builder of flesh ;Aitl j
strength Milks Emulsion is strongly rec-
cniT: i Mttftl it those wlici'i sickness h;tv
weakened, and is a powerful aid in re- t
elating and repairing the effects of wast-
ing diseases Chronic stomach trouble |
arid constipation are promptly relieved—
usually in one day
This is the only solid emulsion made,
and so palatable that it is eaten with a
spoon like ice cream.
No matter how severe your case, you
are urged to try Milks Emulsion under
tills guarantee-Take six bottles home
with you, use it according to directions,
and if not satisfied with the results your
mcney will be promptly refunded. Price
ftfr and $1 20 per bottle The Milks Emul-
sion Co . Terre Haute, IniL Sold by drug-
gists every where—Adv.
’
•*\\i ctiii'ss wont s off with the waning I
of the honeymoon.
Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Re Cured
I...... ,, i iu at ions as they cannot reach
' the diseased portion of the ear. There is
v
that is i v a ■ onstitutlon it ft n.t dy
* »'m-
• . - irfi ■
1 * tl • System. Catarrhal Heafness Is
a 'R,d i an inflamed condition of the
rr,: ns lining of th*1 Eustachian Tube
V n,-n this tube is inflamed you have a
., i.iing 8oi l or md • rfe< t heat ing ana
v h* n It is • ' "r**ly closed, Peafness Is tlu*
I( ' unh the Inflammation can be re
. d ami this tube restored to Us nor-
'8
* • , • Many caaea of I *• ■;• rnw>. •
i t • by Catarrh which is an inflamed
• 1.' •' ' • v )|
^ > ' I ’ \ 1 t or *
Peafnef
l>e cured by HALLS
MEDICINE
Every man, woman and child in the
world has “Liver Trouble” some times.
Many of them Die from it and never
realize it. Eo use in this. And folks
are learning better. Thousands have
found out that Dr. Thacker's Liver
and Blood Syrup will relieve “Liver
Troubles”. Will keep the Bowels open
and the Blood rich and red. You ought
to try this old doctor’s prescription—
before “Liver Trouble” gets in itsdead-
ly work on you—like it did ou “Bill.”
(jet it from your drug store.
M
*1
Of '-itarrhiU Tv/mw th.^rnrmot
Mr.ua ni r,.
, All 1 irm-’irlit. Circular* free
‘ M.
\ woman wliO Isn't curious Is u
j curiosity. •
_
I. " c want you to see the Dixie Razor and try it the r After tri till vou wont to
I Keep it send us SITS and we will send ><«u » fine ,oir*Ji no tree If you don't
lwantlt return tout. FUl out blank below and mail to u«. rbe rmzoi will t>e sent
| you by return mail.
DIXIE MANUFACTURING CO., UNION CITY, GEORGIA
IT' ' "■ v : '
| uay^ If I iMpruor Mui pay for it p.-i.ioptly yui ar. u . uii mo i I i.U , u KA/.o|. Hum-, hlhL i6i)
I NAM* .................................................... ............................
Ip °- ................................................ irrATS ... K.r.D. .......
V f
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Wandell, Clarence F. Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 6, 1920, newspaper, May 6, 1920; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc912634/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.