The Mulhall State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 5, 1923 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The State Journal (Mulhall, Oklahoma) and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THE MULHALL STATE JOURNAL
fiat Rid of that Sough
I It io due*™* to lot th«n rubj
‘ A tonic laxmtiv© of diroct ood
pmidva action
upon th« mu*^
ouo mem-
. bronoa f
9 whatfoo
Fm-
Tm
ImratioB*
Po-ru-na has proved
the reliable treatment
for ridding the eystem
of all catarrhal poisons.
It aids digestion, stimu-
lates the liver and bowel
action, enrichea the blood,
tone© up the nervoua aye-
tern and soothes the inflam-
ed and congested mucous
linings.
Honest snd dependable
is the verdict of thousands.
Sold Evsrjrwhors
Tablets or Liquid
T3he
AMERICAN
® LEGION©
This Department Supplied t>
Klon News Service.)
.Copy for
the American legion
SPEED AMAZED
MRS. O’DONNELL
rapidity of Improvement Follow-
ing Use of Tan'ac Was Aston-
ishing. She States.
Better Than Pills
;Rr Liver Ills.
Economical Stove.
The ever Increasing cost of coal has
ie<l to the development of a heating
stove that will burn sawdust or the
lower grades of coal that are unsuited
In the ordinary stoves. There is a
separate magazine Inside tlie drum
of the stove, and this can be taken out
and packed with fuel. A removable
oore is placed in the magazine be-
fore the fuel is packed in and is with-
drawn when the magazine is replaced
In the stove. The space occupied by
this core forms a central draft open-
ing through the lied of fuel.
Fresh, sweet, white, dainty clothes
for baby, if you use lied Cross Ball
Blue. Never streaks or Injures them.
All good grocers sell it.—Advertise-
ment
with It,*’ declared Mrs. M. C. O’Don-
nell, 1012 S. Walker St.. Oklahoma
City, Okla.
“My stomach was giving me a world
of trouble, and I was in a dreadfully
nervous, run-down condition. 1 couldn’t
i eat anything much hut the lightest
of food, and even then Indigestion and
gas caused me untold misery. Many
| n:glits l awakened witli such smother-
ing sensations 1 simply thought l
would suffocate.
“1 heard so much good about Tanlac
I decided to try it. and while It has
not yet had time to rid me completely
of my troubles, it is making wonderful
headway. I have a much better appe-
tite, my sleep lias become a great deal
more restful, and 1 feel ever so much
stronger in every way. I think Tan-
lac is just wonderful.”
Tanlac is for sale by nil good drug-
gists. Over 37 million bottles sold.
Tanlac Vegetable I'ills are nature’s
own remedy for constipation. Sold
everywhere.—Advertisement.
Still Practicing.
“I suppose your friend, the doctor,
having married a very wealthy woman,
has given up his practice."
“Not entirely; he’s now treating her
pocketbook for obesity.”
Where They Get the News.
Visitor—Then you have no local
newspaper here, my good man?
Villager—Naw, sir, but us ’live a
sewin’ meeting every Friday, an’ that
seems to answer the purpose.
Mon are a good deal like butter—the
softer they are the more they spread
themselves.
ALLENS
FOOT * EASE
Fbr Corns. Bunions.
HSjfijfeJired and Achino
POEM BY DISABLED VETERAN
Member of Prescott (Ariz.) Post Makes
Appeal to Buddies to Become
Legionnaires.
Inspired by patriotic addresses made
at a recent meeting of the Kartiest A.
Love post of the American Legion In
Prescott, Ariz.. Robert Lee Beveridge,
a disabled veteran, found that lie was
unable to sleep when he returned to
the hospital following the meeting.
Thinking of the Legion’s appeal to
men who fought together during the
World war, the feelings of Beveridge
crystallized into a poem which was
read for the first time by Mrs. Harry
T. Southworth, Arizona national ex-
ecutive commltteewonmn of the Amer-
ican Legion Auxiliary, at a recent
meeting in Prescott addressed by Al-
vin Owsley, national commander of the
American Legion. The disabled man’s
poem follows:
Say, Bud. hav© you Joined the Legion
yet?
Now don’t get amcry and swear.
For we never can be pure strangers,
you know.
For look at the memories we share.
6o I’m asking you. have you Joined up
yet
You ought from that button you
wear.
There's a fight ahead and you ought
to be
An American Legionnaire.
You’re s comrade of mine and I lovt
you. Bud.
Remember the gas alarm
And the O. D shirt
That was caked with dirt
\nd served as a cootie farm.
• How we used to think in our careless
way
That taps was a sweet goodnight
Till, with heads bowed down.
We heard taps sound
At the burial after the fight?
Are yon putting your shoulders to the
wheel.
And shoving with sll your might
To finish the fight you began in France.
Or have you steered clear of the
fight?
Have you forgotten Belleau. St. Mlhlel
and Argonne
And your buddies you left over
there.
And vour crippled chums who are need-
ing you now
Come on. he a Legionnaire.
You’re a romrnde of mine, for haven’t
we fought
On Flanders Field of France
And ducked our bend
To the serenm of lead
Or checked the Germans’ advance?
We’ve tightened our belts a notch or
two
Then over the top we've strode.
With a Yankee grin
On a stubborn chin.
Or hiked down a shell-torn road
Of course you belong to the Legion
ma n
Your service has won you It
Thf re's no one can take it away from
you.
Rut vou haven’t been working at it.
ft's a duty yon owe to the fallen slain
| That you cannot shirk or share;
j It's to fight the fight as you used to Different.
. , “Ah, Jerry," she sighed, "I am afraid
As a militant Legionnaire , , , , .. ..
you are growing cold ! Don t you re-
member, dour, how before we were
married you used to sing to me: ‘Every
Morn I Bring Thee Violets?’ And every
night roses, dear?"
“Yes, Mary; I did that, honey,” he
replied, wearily. “I didn't know, then,
how it was going to feel every Satur-
Of the 150 enses of o\ service men I day to bring you my envelope.’’—Rich-
MILITARY SPIRIT^ GRIPS HIM
“Daddy’' Schick, Commander of Mb
non Department of Legion, Mae
Long Been in Service.
Charles W. (“Daddy”) fc-hlek, coin
mander of the Illinois department of
the American Legion, «bi h member
of a military organization that has
been in existence since 1877. known
then as the “Governor’s Guards.”
This organization, in earlier days
one of the smartest military organiza-
tions, was the nucleus of the Illinois
5 Pass. Sedan
*860
f. o. b. FUnt,
Mich.
“It didn't serin like I could tret any
better until I began taking Tanlac,
but this medicine has me Improving j National Guard, and Its history dates
■o rapidly that I’m Just carried awuy
back to the track zouaves of the
Civil war.
Their proficiency In arms, which
made them the envy of every other
organization, was founded on tactics
and training given hv the gallant Ma-
jor Ellsworth, the first northern officer
to fall in the war. who was u protege
of Abraham Lincoln.
Only five of the original company
from which the “Governor's Guard"
was formed me alive, and “Daddy”
Schick, who was a member of tlie drum
corps, is one of them.
The organization participated In
many military contests, which were
frequent in earlier days, and was once
In competition with the famous Meyer’s
Cadets of Toledo. The Toledo organ-
ization went through the manual of
arms blindfolded. But the lllin ds or-
ganization stepped out on the drill
field and without a single command
executed tlie entire manual.
Commander Schick’s World war
service was unusual. At the very be-
Airplane Used Petroleum.
What appeared to some as an epoch-
making event in the development ot
airplane ami automobile motive power,
is tiie recent successful trip near Co-
penhagen, Denmark, of an airplane
using petroleum as engine fuel, says
Popular Mechanics Magazine. It was
observed by experts who witnessed the
test that the plane flew Just as well as
with gasoline, that there was less vi-
bration and no soot formed nor was
there any self-ignition in the engine,
which ran 100 1 ess revolutions than
normally.
CHILDREN CRY
FOR “CASTORIA"
Especially Prepared for Infants
and Children of All Ages.
Mother! Fletcher’s Cnstoria has
been in use for over 30 years to relieve
babies and children of Constipation,
Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea;
allaying Feverishness arising there-
from, and, by regulating the Stomach
and Bowels, aids the assimilation of
Food; giving natural sleep without
opiates.
The genuine bears signature of
LITTLE AID WAS NECESSARY
Most All Ex-Service Men and Women
Treated in Mavo Hospital Able
to Meet Expenses.
Charles W. (“Daddy") Schick.
ginning of the war he left u position
with a prominent life Insurance com
puny to become enrolling officer of the
United States navy.
Stationed with the naval reserve
force of Illinois, lie enrolled approxl
mutely 10,000 men. He later received
nn assignment to sen, and served
foreign waters. He left the service
with tlie rank of lieutenant.
He became a charter member of the
naval post of the American Legion
Chicago, composed entirely of men
who served in tin* navy, and in 1021
was named commander of the post
Under his guidance the post attained
u membership of live hundred.
"Daddy,” ns he is familiarly known
to every Illinois Legionnaire, has one
failing. His early training is respon-
sible, perhaps, when he served with
tiie “Governor’s Guards.’’ If there
a drum in sight lie is certain to get use
of it. At New Orleans lie usurped tiie
place of a member of an Illinois drum
corps In the parade, and forsook his
place of honor at the head of the 111!
nois delegation just to get to bent that
drum.
The All-Year Car for Every Family
Economical Troniportotiow
Chevrolet Is leading in the great shift of public demand to
closed cars because this company has the world's largest
facilities for manufacturing high-grade closed bodies and
is therefore able to offer sedans, coupes and sedanettes at
prices w ithin easy reach of the average American family.
Si* large body plants adjoining Chevrolet assembly plants
enable us to make prompt deliveries of the much wanted
closed cars.
As soon as you realize that your transportation require-
ments demand the year 'round, all-weather closed car. see
Chevrolet first and learn how fully we can meet your
requirements at the lowest cost obtainable in a modern,
high-grade closed automobile.
Prices 1• o. b. FUnt, Mich.
Two-Pitta. Roadster .
Hve-I’utui. Touring
Two-Pita©. Utility Loup©
Four-Pa**. Sedanrtte
Ss 10
828
t»K§
8 SO
Five-Pa©*. Sedan . • . $R6#
Light Delivery , . 810
( lommerclal ( liaaaia . 428
Utility Kipreta Truck Lhaaaia 875
Dealers and Service Stations Everywhere
Chevrolet Motor Company
Division of General Motors Corporation
Detroit, Mich.
Lumber F-roduction.
Since 1905, with tlie exception of
one year, Washington lias led all the
states in the production of lumber;
Oregon comes second, followed in turn
by Louisiana, Mississippi, California,
Arkansas, Alabama, Texas, North Car
ulIna. Wisconsin and Florida
The Art of Selling.
Secretary Mr. Terry said'to tell you
lie Is too busy to talk to you today.
Life insurance Agent—Tell lilui h*
won’t have to say a word.
Insist
a
Gourtpsy oprns ninny doors and lark
of courtpsy loaves thorn open.
£♦♦♦♦♦♦!
rfa
POSTER CONTEST IN SCHOOLS
Trial package and a Foot-Ease Walking
Doll sent Free. Address ALLEN'S FOOTa
BASK, I* Hoy, N. Y.
“ DON’T ~
DESPAIR
If you are troubled with pains or
•chea; feel tired; have headache,
indigestion, insomnia; painful
passage of urine, you will find
relief by regularly taking
LATHROP’8
HAARLEM OIL
The world’s standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder apd uric acid troubles and
National Remedy of Holland since 1696.
Three sizes, all druggists. Guaranteed.
Look for tha name Gold Medal on every
box and accept no imitation
Coated Tongue
Nature's Warning
of Constipation
When you are constipated,
not enough of Nature’s lu-
bricating liquid is produced
in the bowel to keep the food
waste soft and moving. Doc-
tors prescribe Nujol because
it acts like this natural lubri-
cant and thus secures regular
bowel movementsby Nature’s
own method—lubrication.
Nujol is a lubricant—not a
medicine or laxative—so cannot
gripe. Try it today.
Nujol
• tg ui »*T o»r.
A 1 IIBRICANT-NOT A LAXATIVE
j find women fronted during one month
! nt the Mnvo hospital. Rochester. Minn,
only seven required nfd from the local
Lecrion members, noeordinir to reports
made to department ffieinls of the
American Legion in the state
The Legionnaires sit Rochester found
some time ago that a serious problem
had developed in their eit^ when
many former service men and women,
learning of the reputation of tiie Mayo
clinic, would come there practically
without funds and even though receiv-
ing treatment, faced serious conse-
quences. In order to meet tills de-
mand for service, certain post funds
were set aside and the service officer
Instructed to handle these cases.
Since that time demands for aid
from these patients have practically
ended, according to post officials,
though willingness to help is still tiie
part of the Rochester Legionnaires.
Some degree of Legion care is of-
fered to every former service man or
woman who becomes si patient in the
hospital hut the requests for financial
aid show that most of the patients are
self-sustaining during the periods of
treatment. The cases in the hospital,
from all parts of the country, were as
follows:
AlnhnmA 2, Arizona 1, Arkansas 2.
California 2. Colorado 2. Florida 2,
Idaho 2, Illinois 11. Indiana 5. Iowa 1C,
Kansas 4. Michigan 8. Minnesota 24.
Missouri 0, Montana 0. North Dakota
3, Ohio 2. Oklahoma 6. Pennsylvania
0, South Dakota 7. Tennessee 1. Texas
1, Wisconsin 10. Wyoming 2, Canada 4.
mond Times-Dispatch.
WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND
SWAMP-ROOT
Slightly Insinuating.
Mrs. Mugg's hud the reputation
among tradesmen of quibbling over
the fraction of a cent, and she was
Itvlpg up to it In iier argument with
tiie ice man.
“Is that all the Ice 1 get for ten
cents?" she demanded peevishly.
“Don’t worry, lady,” lie replied, as
patiently us possible. “Some day you
might he in a place where you couldn’t
buy tliis piece for a million dollars.”—
American Legion Weekly.
For many years druggists have watched
frith much interest the remarkable record
maintained by Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root,
the great kidney, liver and bladder medi-
cine.
It is a physician’* 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 all druggists on its merit and
it should help you. No other kidney medi-
cine has so many 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 &. Co., Binghamton. N. Y., for a
•ample bottle. When writing he sure and
mention this paper.—Advertisement.
“Not Me,” Said He.
In entering a playhouse one evening
the doorman asked me for my ticket,
and I said, “The man behind has it.”
You cun imagine my feeling when ,
the man behind replied, “Not me.”
My husband had stopped to talk to
some one and I had walked right in.—
Exchange.
Kansas Children Interested in Amer-
ican Legion Campaign for En-
dowment of Orphans’ Home.
School-children of Kansas are evinc-
ing great interest in tiie American
Legion campaign for endowment of
tiie proposed home for orphaned chil-
dren of tiio.se men who gave their
lives in tlie World war This Interest
lias been heightened by tiie announce-
ment of a poster contest to be con-
ducted in the schools.
Fosters will he submitted with a
view to attracting attention to the
campaign for endowment of the home,
which lias already been presented to
the Legionnaires of the state. Three
grades have been arranged—students
from tiie high schools of tiie stute;
pupils from tiie sixth, seventh und
eighth grades, and from tiaose below
tiie sixtli grade. Substantial cash
prizes will be given in each one of tiie
classes. Ail posters sent in will be
made use of by the Legion in its cam-
paign. hut only the best posters will
go to tiie judges for selection of win-
ners. Tiie superintendent of schools
is to determine the best posters of the
three grades and forward the three to
headquarters of the Legion in Topeka.
The Great
American Syrup
Every Purpose
ShknodA
AMERICAS HOME SHOE POLISH M. m.
Black • Tan • White • Ox-Blood - Brown
ShIMNA preterve* leather »« paint preterve* building*.
Quick and niy to u«*. Shi«e« m a bony.
’fejsE.*1 p?“
Genuine Brule Dnuhe, juC 6t. the hand. Bnnp
deut around the note and the brilliant ShinoU thins
•ppiiet the polish thor- with • few strokes.
The Shine to. Min.
Human Nature.
Nellie—Stic took him for an idiot.
Milly—Yes. But she took him.—
London Mail.
Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin.
On rising and retiring gently smear
tiie face with Cuticura Ointment.
Wash off Ointment in five minutes
with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It
is wonderful whnt Cuticura will do
for poor complexions, dandruff, Itching
and red, rough hands.—Advertisement
Expressive.
Bantus—You ain'.t such a much I
Martha—Well, you ain't anything to
write home about, 'cept'n on paper
with Mack edges.—Bouton Transcript.
They All Love Him.
Blackstone—"To a rich man every-
j thing is relutlve.” Webster—"Yea, fro-
| qmntly poor relative*!"
Sweet Charity.
A big burly man called at the rectory
and when the door wns opened asked
to see the rector’s wife, a woman well
known for her charitable impulses.
“Madame,” lie addressed her In a
broken voice, ‘‘I wisli to draw your
attention to the terrible plight of a
poor family In this district. Tie
futlier is dead, tiie mother Is too II1
to work and the nine children an
starving. They are about to he turned
Into the cold, cold streets unless soim
one pays their arrears In rent, whiel
amounts to fifty dollars."
“How terrible!" exclaimed the lad.\
“May 1 ask who you are?"
Tiie sympathetic visitor applied li
handkerchief to ids eyes.
"I'm the landlord,” he aobhei
—American Leirlon Weakl»
Foolishness-
hoy to work
passing.
-trying to get a small
while a brass hand is
Tonsorial.
Tiie haldlieuded man with a heavy
beard: “Gimme a whisker-cut und a
hair-shave, ami make it snappy!"
Too many day dreams are to the
efTeet of how nice It would be to be
"led Into temptation."
Piles Can Be Cured
(Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding)
Many sufferers have been made very happy
over the results obtained from the use of
PAZ0 OINTMENT—-60c at any Drug Store.
(Follow the Directions Carefully.)
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Calkins, R. T. The Mulhall State Journal (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 5, 1923, newspaper, July 5, 1923; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc912815/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.