The Chandler News-Publicist (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, May 1, 1914 Page: 3 of 8
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FRIDAY, MAY I, IBM
OKLAHOMA STATE DEBT, FUNDS
AND INVESTMENTS, I8H0 TO ioi:l.
that ia the United States no proper
records are kept of births In the
p Washington, D, C April 3I - %TolTc£
Preliminary flgurea from the forth- failure to register the birth of a child
eoming bulletin pertaining to national,^ the nlother dear,
and state indebtedness and lands and ..The imp„rtance of a birth record
investments have been given out by ] is ¥ery well mustrated by the case.
Director VS. J. Harris, of the bureau recently brought to the attention of
of the census, depaitment of com-1 tije children's Bureau, of a young
Swiss immigrant who„comlng to this
country and settling in Indiana, was
killed, leaving a widow and infant
child. The mother, in dire poverty,
had trouble to keep herself and her
baby alive by scrubbing and sewing.
One day there came to her an offi-
cial letter from the government of
Switzerland, stating that her late
husband's brother had left twelve
thousaud dollars to this child. All
that was demanded was proof of
identity, with the customary birth
certificate. But there was no such
certificate, and the much-needed
money was lost.
“Another instance of the kind,
likewise in Indiana, had to do with
a farm which was left to a girl by
her grandfather. Being twenty-one
years of age, she was entitled to the
property. But a dispute arose. Her
father, who had the use of the farm
during her minority, claimed that she
was only nineteen. There was no
birth certificate to prove her age.
But, happily, a neighbor remembered
that a valuable cow belonging to the
grandfather had given birth to a calf
on the same day that the girl was
born. The birth of the calf had been
duly recorded, and, this evidence be-
ing accepted by the court, the young
woman obtained possession of her
farm.”
the census, department of com-
merce. The bulletin carries informa-
tion for the state of Oklahoma, as
well as for the other states and the
United States. The data were com-
piled under the supervision of Mr.
John Lee Coulter, expert special
agent in charge of the inquiry on
wealth, debt and taxation.
The bulletin which will soon be
issued will contain statistics for each
state for each year from 1890 to
1913, inclusive, as'far as statistics
are available, and will also contain
details for the year most nearly cor-
responding to 1880, thus making it
possible to show the general move-
ment during a period of over 30
years. The bulletin will show the
total debt of the states as well as
many details, such as the various
classes of outstanding bouds and
special debt obligations to public
trust funds. .It will also show the
floating debt and its component parts.
Under “Funds and investments” will
be shown separately all the different
funds, and in each case cash and se-
curities will be shown. The j>opula-
tion of the states for each year under
consideration will be used, and the
per capita debt (less sinking fund
assets) will be given.
An inspection of the tables for Ok-
lahoma in the bulletin soon to be is-
sued shows marked changes in the
bonded indebtedness; $48,000 in 1894
was entirely paid oft in 1903. No
further bonded indebtedness is re-'
ported until 1908, when $1,460,000
of bonds were issued, increasing in
1912 to $3,055,000. No special debt
obligations are recorded. The float-
ing debt shows a remarkable increase
from $27,000 in 1893 to $4,190,000
hi 1912.
In the case of funds and invest-
ments the securities increased stead-
ily from year to year with the ex-
ception of 1905, which shows a slight
decrease; the rise was again imme-
diately apparent, the year 1912 re-
cording $5,163,000, compared to
$46,000 in 1893. The cash fluctuat-
ed throughout the period, though a
marked general increase is shown
from $223 in 1893 to $1,114,000 in
1912.
No sinking fund assets are report-
ed. Although the population in-
creased during the period under con-
sideration, it was not sufficient to
offset the heavy increase in the debt,
hence the per capita indebtedness
shows a marked increase.
In 1893 the total debt of Oklaho-
ma at the close of the fiscal year,
September 30, was $27,000, advanc-
ing in 1907 (the year of statehood)
to $876,000 and in 1912 to $7,245,-
000.
The population of the state in-
vision for taking the census, merely
providing for the report of the num-
ber of school children residing in
the district on January 15th previ-
ous to be made to the county super-
intendent after the annual meeting
in June. No report of the census
was made to the state superinten-
dent until the county superintendent
made his annual report jvhich was
not received in some instances until
the month of January following, or
a year after the census had been
taken.
Superintendent Wilson inaugurated
creased from 423,000 in 1893 to 1,- a plan for taking this census and
STATE SCHOOLS SHOW GAIN.
Oklahoma City, April 30.—Re-
ports from the county superinten-
dents show that the scholastic popu-
lation of Oklahoma for 1914 has
made a gain of 18,097 over that of
1913; 575,101 in 1914 and 557,004
in 1913. The enumeration was taken
between Jauuary 15th and February
1st and is the first census taken un-
der the provisions of the new school
law.
Two years ago Supterintendeut
Wilson discovered that In many
school districts the enumeration was
the same as the report of the attend-j and minor state officials and
ance which indicated that the census [also worked in harmony and effective
had been taken from the teacher’s i service.
report of the attendance for the1 ‘‘If the republicans and progres-
school term. The law made no pro- sivee could make arrangements by
PROGRESSIVES FOR JOHN FIELDS
The following form John Golobie’s
Guthrie Register should be food for
thought for the progressives of Okla-
homa. Golobie has all along been
recognized as one of the leaders of
the moose party in this state, he at-
tended the re. cut republican s.ate
convention held in Oklahoma City
and at that time expressed himself
as delighted with the selection of
John Fields as the republican nom-
inee for governor.
John Fields for Governor.
“In accepting the nomination for
governor before the republican con-
vention John Fields did so with ‘dis-
tinct understanding that if the repub-
lican vote in the primary election
should be smaller than the progres-
sive vote he would withdraw from
the ballot because he would not will-
ingly be the means of dividing the
opposition to the democrats.'
“John Fields is the one man in
either progressive or republican
parties in Oklahoma upon whom both
could unite, with an assurance that
he would be elected governor, with-
out playing into either party’s ad-
vantage when governor.
“The question then is, is it worth
while for the progressives alike to
make party sacrifices in order to
wrest the administration of affairs
out of the democratic hands.
“Everybody knows that John
Fields does not think in terms of
politics, but in terms of business, and
he is the best known man and most
liked man outside the baltwick of
party politics.
“He considers the republican nom-
ination but an endorsement, not a
nomination. Why cannot the pro-
gressives and republicans now get
together and make the necessary ar-
rangements to put up a solid, front
against the democrats and win in
November?
If John Fields Were Governor.
“Missouri had Folk, a democrat
for governor, and the legislature and
all the other state officials republi-
can, and yet Governor Folk and the
republicans worked in harmony and
gave Missouri a satisfactory state
government.
Next term it had Hadley, repub-
lican, and a democratic legislature
they
THE CHANDLER NEWS-PUBLICIST
OIL AND GAS IN OKLAHOMA AND
ARKANSAS.
Report by the United State?* Geologi-
es I Survey on Fort Smith-Foteau.
ArkuitsuM-Oklahonin Oil and Gas
Field.
851,000 in 1912. While this was
remarkable increase, the indebted-
ness increased ever faster and the
per capita debt rose from $0.06 in
1893 to $3.91 in 1912.
In comparison with the state of
Oklahoma, we And that taking the
entire debt (less sinking fund as-
sets! for the 48 states, the per capita
debt according to the latest report is
$3.52, or $0.39 less than the per
capita debt for Oklahoma, and while
the per capita debt for the 48 states
fell during tile period from $5.48 to
$.i.fi2, that for Oklahoma rose from
$0.06 to $3.91.
At the present time about 2 per
cent of the total population of the
United States will be found in the
state of Oklahoma, and 2.1 per cent
of the total debt (less sinking fund
assets) is attributed to that state.
HOW A BABY LOST *12,000.
In the May Woman's Home Com-
panion appears a very interesting
article entitled “The Safeguard of
the Child,'' by Julia C. Lathrop, chief
of the Children's Bureau in the Unit-
ed States Department of Labor. In
the course of the article Miss Lath-
rop shows the importance of the reg-
istration of births. She makes the
point that thousands of children's
lives could be saved if in the first
few hours of life they could have
proper attention. She also proves
prepared blanks for this purpose. As
this form was not prescribed by law
the results were not entirely satis-
factory, he therefore recommended
that the legislature prescribe the
present form as the only one to be
used which was done. The reports
are now made promptly and under
oath the returns indicate that this
method has given general satisfac-
tion. Upon these reports the state
school funds are apportioned and for
this reason Superintendent Wilson
desired that the reports be accurate
and that ever}' safeguard he given the
taking and the reporting of the
scholastic census.
-i--|—I--■—J—I—I—J—-t--
“Advertising is tilling who
you are, what you an*, where
you are and what you have
t*» offer the world in I lie way
of service or commodity. Tin*
only man who should not
advertise Is the man who
has nothing to offer.”—El-
bert IIMilliard.
|
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which they would elect no one else
but John Fields for governor they
would perform a great service for
the state.
As To Party Ail vantage.
“If the republican and progressive
organizations are playing simply for
an advantage for the national cam-
paign of 1916, they have neither the
support of the rank and file of their
parties behind them.
“This is a state, not a national
campaign.
“The rank and file of the progres-
sives are probably as anxious to vote
for John Fields as the republicans.
Had he been placed before a progres-
sive convention for nomination he
would have been as enthusiastically
endorsed as he was by the republi-
cans.
“It happens that he has been
‘stolen’ by the republicans, not that
the old line leaders wanted him, but
because the old line leaders saw that
the rank and file republicans wanted
him.
“But should the progressives have
the good sense to sacrifice their
party between now and next Novem-
ber and elect a governor that would
prove satisfactory to the people of
Oklahoma, they would reap as much
advantage in party credit for 1916 as
the republicans.
“John Fields as the chief adminis-
trative officer of the state, would uot
be a political governor. He would
play no politics. He would give no
advantages to the republicans.
“And after next November the
progressives and republicans would
have two years yet to fight out their
1916 differences.”
A recent report of the United
■States Geological Survey shows that
there are gas wells with production
as high as 4.250,000 cubic feet a day
near Fort Smith, Ark., and that there
are other wells with smaller produc-
tion in neighboring acres, near Mans-
field, Ark., and Poteau, Okla.
The geologic anticlines am! syn-
clines of this region are easily recog-
nized from surface exposures of the
rocks, and the finding of the gas in
the crests of the anticlines indicate
that they control, in large measure
at least, the locations of the gas
accumulations. Oil has not been
found in these fields, but areas of
similar structure farther west are
locally oil-bearing. The map accom-
panying the report shows the areal
geology and the locations of the antl-
cliues, synclines, and faults.
R4*|Mirt 4iu <1101111 Pool, Okla.
The geology.of the Glenn oil pool,
in Oklahoma, has never been de-
scribed in detail until recently, when
a short paper appeared that in part
supplies the need for information
concerning this remarkable pool. The
stratigraphy of this economically im-
portant region has been determined
by studies of an area which extends
considerably beyond the oil field, be-
cause little of the stratigraphy can
be discovered in the field itself. As
a result of these studies the forma-
tions exposed in the area east of the
field have been correlated with those
encountered in drilling in the Glenn
pool.
A structure contour map of the oil
pool accompanies the report and
shows a slightly interrupted and
westward dipping monocline with
minor folds which have largely con-
trolled the accumulation of oil and
gas. The contours (Hues of equal
altitude) represent elevations on the
top of the Fort Scott limestone
(known to drillers as the “Oswego
lime”).
These two papers, Structure of the
Fort Smith-Poteau gas field, Arkan-
sas-Oklahoma, and the Glenn oil and
gas pool and vicinity, Oklahoma, by
Carl I). Smith, from the United
States Geological Survey’s Bulletin
541-B, which may be obtained free
on application to the Director of the
United States Geological Survey.
VIA AIR TO EUROPE.
Rheumatism (Juickly Cured.
“My sister’s husband had an at-
tack of rheumatism in his arm,”
writes a well known resident of New-
ton, Iowa. “I gave him a bottle of
Chamberlain’s Liniment which he
applied to his arm and on the next
morning the rheumatism was gone.”
For chronic muscular rheumatism
Liniment Sold by A. I) Wright, adv.
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Is Your Properly Insured ?
Losses Reported to Fred B. Hoyt, insnrance Agent, to Date
Charles Holloway, barn, insurance $1000 00, total loss.
Meredith Jenkins, barn, insurance $200.00, total loss.
County Farm, house and barn, insurance $1200.00, partial
loss.
Roy Hoffman, barn, insurance $1500.00, partial loss.
Frank Haase, barn, insurance $1000.00, partial loss.
Mrs. Martin, house, insurance$1000.00, partial loss.
Union National Bank, (farm) insurance $700.00, partial loss.
Dr. Fagaines, house, insurance $1500.00, partial loss.
All Losses Promptly Adjusted and Claims Settled Without
Loss of Time
FRED B. HOYT
C handler
Oklahoma
For several years past airmen have
hopefully looked to “next year” as
the one in which the Atlantic ocean
would be crossed in a vehicle of the
air Each year has brought its dis-
appointment; and while the feat will
undoubtedly be accomplished some
day, it seems unlikely that 1914 will
be able to credit that milestone to
its records. In some respects the
event seems even farther off than
three years ago. While experienced
explorers are at this moment battling
with untried routes in the Antarctic,
none of them has either a dirigible
or aeroplane in his outfit. They have
air-propelled sledges, but no air
craft.
To the layman the dirigible,
though slower in Its movement than
a plane vehicle, seemed the more
likely to succeed; but the destruc-
tion of the Vaniman and several Zep-
pelins in mid-air has made him
sqcptical. At present the only suit-
able gas for the purpose is hydrogen,
the explosive dangers of which are
well known. It has even been ques-
tioned whether a dirigible may not,
under conditions of very cold, dry
air, by its own passage generate
something in the nature of the pale
blue flame sometimes seen in cold
weather on fast-moving belts. in
which case a very small spark and
a very minute gas leak would be as
efficiently deadly as a thunderbolt.
In aeroplanes, construction is strong-
er than three years ago, the power
is greater and much more depend-
able, and long-flight records have
been made. The Mediterranean has
been spanned in flight; mountains
with their great variety of atmos-
pheric conditions have been crossed.
However, as yet no airman has made
a flight of 1,700 consecutive miles
over water. To the innocent by-
stander, w ho is not supposed to know
anything about flying, it would seem
sensible, though commonplace, for
some one to fly his machine 1,700
consecutive miles over some inland
water, like Lake Erie, for example,
before casting off the dock lines on
a trip across the big pond.
In the opinion of Sir Hiram
Maxim, the dirigible, in war at least,
is a failure. He says: “We have
come to the end of our tether in
dirigible balloons; they are useless
and practically Impossible. It is
nothing less than madness to sacrifice
any more lives and treasure in at-
tempting what is manifestly an im-
possibility.”
Some day a vehicle will fly the
gap; it may even be perfected in
time to qualify Tor the $150,000
prize offered by the San Francisco
Exposition for an around-the-world
flight. However, the day, predicted
by Kipling, when air craft landing
inland wilf take New York as a port
off the map may be considered as
sufficiently remote to cause no im-
mediate anxiety.—H. H Windsor,
in the May Popular Mechanics Maga
zine.
PUBLIC HEALTH DEPT. . .
Conducted by l)r J. C Mahr, ••
State Commissioner of Health • •
The principle topic of Interest at
the present time is the possibility of
war with Mexico. General Sherman
once said that “war was hell,” and
this saying has since been used as a
fact, consequently the public’s at-
tention will be drawn to the expense,
the loss of life, and how incurred,
should We engage in war with Mex-
ico. But, how many have ever real-
ized that we have a greater enemy
within our midst, preventable dis-
eases, that is destroying more lives,
every three months than it takes to
man our entire army and navy; that
preventable diseases are resjionsible
annually for more fatalities than all
our wars, and that in addition to
our fatalities 1,500,000 people are
consequently incapacitated, suffering
from attacks of preventable disease
that its annual economic loss is five
times greater than the anuual cost
of our army and navy; that every
day preventable diseases in the Unit-
ed States cost Uncle Sam 1,800 lives,
more than a regiment, and this is an
economic waste of four million dol-
lars. Uncle Sam is not neglectful,
and takes steps vigorous to protect
his soldiers and sailors from pre-
ventable disease, but he is neglectful,
in our opinion, to this extent, that
but a trifle is spent in the protection
of the unprotected populance. Just
enough to let them know that he is
aware of their suffering. Seventy-
two dollars is spent on every enlisted
man in the protection of his health,
and our government can only spend
two and six-tenths of a cent in the
protection of the great army of
American people. It Is our citizen-
ship that our government must ul-
timately depend for the army of de-
fense and perpetuation of the nation
Why should the health of the citizen-
ship be held so cheap?
Everyone recognizes that the first
duty of Uncle Sam Is to provide for
national defense, but aro wo aware
of the fact that it costs this nation
$285,000,000 annually for national
defense? This is three dollars per
citizen for support of the army and
navy to protect us from an enemy
without.
Just a few years ago the United
States engaged in war with Spain,
and history repeated itself, for wher-
ever men are assembled in large
camps epidemics of disease soon pre-
vail. These diseases that prevail as
epidemics are preventable. There
were more lives lost In1 the Spanish-
American war from diseases that
were preventable than were lost the
result of gun-shot wounds. At that
time we had reason to fear yellow
fever, typhoid fever, smallpox, ma-
laria, diarrhoe-a and dysentery. To-
day We know that if proper precau-
tions are taken but few will be at-
tacked. The impossible has been ac-
complished, the Panama canal has
been built and the principle reason
for our success was the application
of the knowledge science has given
us in practically applied sanitation,
and the prevention of diseases. So
we have reason to believe that in
case we engage in war with Mexico
the application of our present knowl-
edge in the prevention of disease will
save many lives and much sicknoss,
and render our army much more ef-
fective.
The government has taken every
precaution to fully equip and render
the hospital corps both efficient and
effective in combatting diseases that
are preventable.
But few of these principles practic-
ed by the army and navy In the pre-
vention of disease would save many
hundred lives annually in Oklahoma.
Vaccination of the soldiers against
typhoid fever has eliminated this
disease from the army camps. Vac-
cination against typhoid fever, if
practiced by the citizenship of the
state of Oklahoma, would eliminate
typhoid fever from the state of Ok-
lahoma, and thus save three hundred
lives annually and the expense for
over seven thousand cases of typhoid
fever annually.
The average expense incurred by
a typhoid fever case is oue hundred
and fifty dollars, so vaccination
against typhoid fever in Oklahoma
would save $1,500,000 annually.
If the city authorities would re-
quire the arrest of offenders who!
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THE WORLD’S BEST FILM FEATURES
At the ODEON THEATRE
Every Saturday Afternoon and Night are Feature Dates
and the Very Best Filins Obtainable Will be Sliowu
These features are Extra and the regular service
of three reels will be shown also. The first of these
feature films will be shown Saturday afternoon and
night. Note the list already booked:
May 2—"Moths,'1 4-reels.
May 9—"Battle ol (irllyshurd," 3-reels.
May 16—“Bobin Hood," 4-reels.
May 23—“Gangsters of New York,” 4-reels.
May 30—"Letjion of Province," 4-reels.
June 6—“Fru Fru," 4-reels
June 13—"The Great Leap," 4-recls, Kentucky feud story.
June 20—"Joseph in the Land of Edypt.” 4-reels.
June 27—"Cardinal Richleiu's Ward,” 4-reels.
OUR MUTUAL GIRL EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT
The Prices Remain fhe Same, 5c and 10c
The Odeon Theatre
R. J. HOOVER, Prop.
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PROGRESS AND RESULTS OF
CATTLE-TICK ERADICATION.
It is generally well known that a
vigorous co-operative campaign for
the eradication of the cattle tick in
the south and southwest has been iu
progress since 1906, the work being
conducted jointly by the bureau of
animal industry of the United States
department of agriculture and the
state and county authorities within
the area quarantined for Texas fever.
It is also well known that this partic-
ular tick, scientifically known as
Margaropus annulatus, is the carrier
of Texas fever, and transmits the dis-
ease to cattle, thereby causing enor-
mous losses to the industry, and oth-
erwise crippling it iu numerous ways.
About two years ago an effort was
made to secure direct evidence from
the cattlemen and farmers concerned
as to the results of the work up to
that time, and the replies received
were for the most part highly ap-
preciative of the work accomplished
and of the benefits derived there-
from in those sections which had
been cleared of ticks. A compilation
of these replies was made and pub-
lished as Bureau of Animal Industry
Circular 196, entitled “Some Results
of Cattle-tick Eradication.”
From Oklahoma the following
statements were received from prom-
inent stock raisers and shippers:
The eradication of the tick in our
county was the most beneficial of
anything that has been done. It not
only protects our cattle from disease
but we get much better prices. The
Texas fever is a thing <>f the past in
Caddo county S. M Warasley, Cad-
do county.
There were pastures here before
the tick eradication where the cattle
practically all died There is one
pasture right here in 1901 that all
the cattle died except two and they
were sucking calves We cleaned up
the pasture and have never lost any
cattle since G E. Burkett, Lincoln
county.
of my cattle every season with the
fever and now l don’t lose any. I
hope this good work will still go on.
M. B. Sparling, Ottawa county.
It coBt me about $2,000 before I
fully learned that ticks killed cattle.
—H. F. Caulk, Caddo county.
I have Just shipped in one car of
purebred cows, aud I have two neigh-
bors that have shipped in a car each.
Before tick eradication we could not
handle this class of cattle, as they
would die with the fever.—Win,
Howell, Ottawa county.
. , I think It is one of the greatest
maintain heaps of disease Dreedm.- th|ncs ever done for our county when
uurli'liro An lhair nrannnmi nu.l i.e I, I
garbage on their premises, and pub-
lic sentiment would demand that the I
offenders be punished, there would be
fewer occasions for clean up days and
less expense, and life would be •> | an'a “teiV t‘he truth
more pleasant during the hot sum
mer nights, and sleep m<
the ticks were cleaned out of it
j\Vhen it was first advocated I fought
hut. now 1 am for It stronger than
11 fought it, and will say to any one
lost 20 per cent
IT CAN BE DONE.
Somebody said that it couldn’t be
done,
But he, with a chuckle, replied
That “maybe it couldn’t,” but he
would be one
Who wouldn’t say so till he tried,
So he buckled right in, with the trace
of a grin
On his face. If he worried, he hid
it.
He started to sing a* he tackled the
thing
That couldn’t be done and he did
it.
There are thousands to tell you it
cannot be done;
There are thousands to prophesy
failure;
There are thousands to point out to
you, one by one,
The dangers that want to assail
you;
But just buckle iu with a bit of a
grin,
Then take off your coat and go to
It;
Just start in to sing as yon tackle
the thing
That “cannot be done” and you’ll
do it.
—Capt. Theodore Valiant, Wash-
ington, D. C.
TERMS IN POLITICS.
•stful.
VOltdll) SPARED
child Cross? Feverish? Sick?
A cross, peevish, listless child, with
coated tongue, pale, doesn’t sleep;
• ats sometimes very little, then again
ravenously; stomach sour; breath
fetid; pains in stomach, with diar-
rhea; grinds teeth while asleep, and
starts up with terror ;ill suggest a
Worm Killer something that expels
worms, and almost every child lias
them. Ktckapoo Worm Killer Is
needed (Jet a box today Start at
once. You won’t have to coax, as
k lekapoo Woi i Killer | v Cand
oon faction. Ex pals tha worm the
cause of your child’s trouble ,,r«
at your druggist.
SEVERE PUNISHMENT
Of Mrs. Chappell, of Five Year$’
Standing, Relieved by Cardui.
Kidney Troubles Attack Chandler I
Men nnd Women, Old and Young.
Kidney ills seize young and old.
Often come with little warning.
Children suffer in their early years, j
Can’t control the kidney secretions.
Girls are languid, nervous, suffer
pain.
Women worry, can’t do daily work
Men have lame and aching hacks.
If you have any form of kidney ills
You must reach the cause—the
kid neys
Doan’s Kidney Bills are for weak
kidneys.
Have brought relief to Chandler
people.
Chandler testimony proves it.
Mrs. T. J. Dunn, 420 Steele Ave.,
Chandler, Okla., says: “We hav- i‘”“ "T ■. j j
. ,i Ki,!..... 1,11 , I was almost cured. It did me more
t.....roven ver, valuable “ ' {S*foU,er medicines 1 I,
did not take Doan’s Kidney Pills my 1 1 ’ P g r*
self. I can recommend them on ac
H wh*t they did In my fkm ,, , • , , ,
l.v They gave relief from irregular Cardu,‘ Several are now taking it.’
Mt. Airy, N. C.—Mrs. Sarah M. Chap-
pell this town, says: ‘ I sulfcrcd for
live years with womanly troubles, also
stomach troubles, and rny punishment
was more than any one could tell.
I tried most every kind of medicine,
but none did me any good.
I read one day about Cardui, the wo-
1 i d to try it I
had not taken but about six bottles until
My friends began asking me why I
looked so well, and I told them about
Cnidiii ^UPral nrp nnu/ taLrin<r it "
Candidate—A man who loves all
the people.
Campaign—Open season for loving
same by candidates.
Campaign Pledge- Unsecured note
given by candidates in exchange for
votes.
Election Day—Expiration date for
above pledges.
The Voter—A king (or queen) on
one day a year and a three-spot on
• 36 4
A common carrier
for transportation
adv.
Two forest officers, in Washington
ind Oregon, an* writing popular de-
scriptions of the trees on the Crater
+1 and Mt. Rainier national parks, for
kidney action and pains in the buck
I’rlco 50c, at all dealers. Don’t
dimply ask for a kidney remedy get
Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that
Mrs Dunn had Foster-Milhurn Co.,
Props.. Buffalo, N. Y.
Do you, lady render, suffer from any
of the ailments due to womanly trouble,
such as headache, backache, sideache.
sleeplessness, and that everlastingly tired
feeling?
If so. let us urge you to give Cardui a
trial. We feel confident it will help you,
Wyoming. n**arly just as it has a million other women in
the past half century.
Be: in taking Cardui to-day. You
14 All druggists.
Gannett Peak
14,000 feet In elevation, and th
''bUi-T f r, , niialn In flit- 1 ,tt• •. ,,, Iannr
fho divide between the Bonneville won’t regret it.
»nd Hrldger national forests
the use of visitor* to the parks
Uomf roads will Increase health,
happiness, education, religion and
morality.
> ooga Medic
A
•• on your case end 64 page bo>k. "Home
lor Women." ui plain wrapper. N.C. 184
tnstr
TraauntuU
the other 364.
The Platform
used by parties
purposes.
Plank Special car provided in a
platform for a doubtful faction.
Reform—A universally desired im-
provement in politics.
Reformer—An impertinent busy-
body.
Republican—A man at & way sta-
tion yelling to the train to come
back for him.
Progressive—Man ahead of the
train building track.
Democrat Man in the engine cab
wondering how to run the blamed
thing.
Socialist- Man trying to trade the
train for an aeroplane
Stinging Rebuke—When the other
side wins by 100.
Magnificent Indorsement — When
our side wins by 100.
Personalities — Criticism of our
candidates by opponent.
Flaying Him Alive--Discussion of
opponent by our candidate.
Signal Honor- Appointment of a
friend to office.
Got It On the Pie—Securing of of-
fice by political opponent.
Statesmanship—Securing of post-
office building by congressman.
Record—Something that requires
more than theory.
The Mob—Us.—Collier's Weekly.
Eure for Htoniurli Disorders.
Disorders of the stomach may be
avoided by the use of Chamberlain’s
Tablets. Many very remarkable cures
have been effected by these tablets.
Sold by A. D. Wright adv.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Nichols, L. B. The Chandler News-Publicist (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, May 1, 1914, newspaper, May 1, 1914; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc913591/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.