The Chandler Tribune (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 21, 1919 Page: 3 of 8
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IT’S NOT YOUR HEART
IT’S YOUR KIDNEYS
Kidney dls^nfle l« no rrsp^'lcr of per- dlately. r*• ■ - • >thlnp, ea n.
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or do not amount to much. You may
i i-’ct to have your r putation haul-
<i and overhauled by the goss.ps, and
these will not all be women either.
While we would not like to be held
responsible for all that is said at
s,-,-ing circles and ladies’ tea-parties,
neither would we be willing to answer
for all the conversation at banks, gro-
ceries and other places where men
congregate. What post mortem ex-
amination of dead characters! What
sumptuous dishes of tittle-tattle are
concocted here What fires of martyr
dem are here kindled about innocent
victims! How quickly and beautiful
the heads fall beneath the ax of the
self-appointed executioners. Talk of
gossip as something light and airy,
too feathery almost to grasp- It is a
serpent, with its head held high in
market places and public meetings,
its folds coiling on every side.
Did you ever stop to think that all
the best things in life come without
cost to ourselves? They are given
freely. The things that in their value
are without money and beyond price
are also in the method of their ac-
quisition without money and without
w. ulnftf . It is self-consciousness. A
nig to look when she extends her
hand Will hold it out as stiff as a
pump lm lie. If sue is worried about
the appearance of her walk she will
stalk over the landscape like a wood-
»n dummy. What a person does grace
fully is done unconsciously. So if a
person would learn grace she must
first learn how to do things uncon-
sciously and she can only learn to do
things unconsciously by doing them 1
often.
Some men respond more slowly to
the touch of a woman’s hand dis-
played their homes and upon their
surroundings. The task may seem
hopeless to the wife at times. But
' sooner or later the effect will show .
( itself. There is something in every ;
man which responds to a higher and :
; gentler influence. Let his home be
! rough and he will be rough. But in-
i fuse into that home a softening touch
he it ever so simple, and the man feels
1 it even though he may not directly
j notice it. He imbibes it unconsciously
! and its effect is sure upon him.
Health
About
Gone
Many thousands of
women suffering from
womanly trouble, have
been benefited by the use
of Cardui, the woman’s
tonic, according to letters
we receive, similar to this
one from Mrs. Z. V. Spell,
ofllayne, N.C. “1 could
not stand on my feet, and
just suffered terribly,”
she says. ‘‘As my suf-
fering was so great, and
he had tried other reme-
dies, Dr. - had us
get Cardui. . , 1 began
improving, and it cured
me. 1 know, and my
doctor knows, what Car-
dui did for me, for my
nerves and health were
about gone.”
TAKE
W’e fear many good housewives | s
make a serious mistake in giving too i =
much time to Sunday cooking. Other i =
perhaps are equally in error by over- 3
working on Saturday, so that they j 3
cannot properly rest or enjoy the Sab ' 3
bath day. Parents and children ought j 1
to be more to each other. A day of | =
uplift and delight it ought to be made j =
in every home.
' ! - ' 1
Two persons will not be friends j =
long if they cannot forgive each oth- j |
cr’s failings.
The social neighbor is not always
the useful neighbor, yet each in her
The Woman’s Tonic
She writes further: “ I
am in splendid health . . .
can do my work. 1 feel I
owe it to Cardui, for I was
In dreadful condition.”
If you are nervous, run-
down and weak, or suffer
from headache, backache,
etc., every month, try
Cardui. Thousands of
women praise this medi-
cine for the good it has
done them, and many
physicians who have used
Cardui successfully with
their women patients, for
years, endorse this medi-
cine. Think what it means
to be in splendid health,
like Mrs. Spell. Give
Cardui a trial.
All Druggists
place has special influences to exert
of equaily beneficial consequences. ' ==
The sympathetic neighbor is also a
1 popular one, but she has to exercise i
continuous tact, lest her solacing in- ! =
fluence may occasionally be overdone ] ==
1 or utilized at untimely periods. The j =E
inquisitive neighbor is always a dread 33
to everybody within the reach of her [ ==
inquisitive curiosity, as she does not j is
seem to have any intutitive respect j=
for others’ feelings as regards their ; §|||
[ divulgence of personal affairs to an i }ES
outsider. i ==
One reason why so many girls and I §p
boys, men and women, too, are un- ! |i|
interesting, is because they try so I |ijj
hard to be like somebody else rather ==
than be content to remain himself or j |||
herself in life. In nature you don’t |=
see an oak posing as a willow, or a ' ==
i black duck as a yellow leg, or a lilac I g==
1 as a peony, or a dog as a cat. Be |=
natural and you’ll be all right.
Mothers, train your boys to be neat
in the house. They should be taught
to look after themselves, and to keep
j their hats and coats in their proper
1 places. Teach them this habit and
I you will also do a kindness to the
boys by teaching them neatness and
self-respect.
Men give up a great deal for their
families—their time, their strength
the knowledge they have gained in
life’s experiences—they spend every-
thing freely for their home’s sake,
and the homo should pay its debt in
much outspoken love.
ously or with more attracts
grace our early Fall Showing.
early showing of coats, suits
AND FROCKS.
Here are Coats, Suits and Frocks typical of a new
season, each garment embodying the latest style fea-
tures, combining in its development high quality and
skillful designing, preparing your fall wardrobe will
be a simple and delightful task after a visit to our
ready to wear department.
Autumn Millinery Modes
When one has
waited with al-
most breathless
anticipation it
is gratifying to
learn that here
in complete
readiness is a
display intro-
ducing F a s h-
We take pleasure in introducing
to you ‘that Farrfous line of Clothing
- --—
ion’s Millinery Creations for a New Sea-
son. Since it is possible only to hint at the
Charms a visit here will unfold, it re-
mains for you to avail yourself of our
earnest invitation to view personally each
new and beguiling mode.
NEW SILKS THAT LEND EXQUISITE
CHARM TO FALL FROCKS.
It is a delightful service to introduce to you these new
“Fall 1919” silks Their very beauty suggests that
little added trimming is necessary other than self puf-
fings, flutings and bandings to adopt them to the
mode. The saleslady in charge of the silk department
will be glad to show you these beautiful new silks.
We are Sole Agents in this city for
this Wonderful Brand of Clothing
for Men and Young Men.
AUTHENTIC STYLES
Men’s and Young Men’s Fall Suits
Of course, you’ll find favorite navy in every
New Fall Suit Style. But you’ll he surprised
how well you’ll look in these dull striped un-
finished Clothes winning favor just now.
Higher lapels and new pocket slantings as
well as longer Coats outline some new feat-
ures. These attractive new Fall Suits are
coming in every day by express. Come in
and see them.
Shoes For Service
The kind of Shoes we sell “Stand up” under
all conditions of service. The leather used is
specially prepared for the purpose, and fash-
ioned into footwear by Shoemakers that
know their business.
In buying Shoes that we carry assures you
that service and comfort will be yours.
A few of the well known makes that we carry
are as follows: “Sweet Sally Lunn” for wo-
men, Buster Brown and Kewpie for hoys and
girls and the famous Bostonian and Emmer-
son Shoes for Men.
Boys, as well as girls, should be
taught to help in the house. How of-
ten we have been disgusted to see
■ the girls are made to help with the
J housework while the boys are allowed
j to play checkers, or sit at the fire
toasting their toes.
Home should be—
“A world of strife shut out;
A world of love shut in.”
FOR SALE—New set of Carpent-
|(er tools, large oak chest cost $100.
MWill sell for $5000 Writ: J \. Pots
,ers, Sparks, Okla., Route 2. 8-14-3t
LOCAL ITEMS OF INTEREST
It is proverbial that country
churches do not have as large a mem-
bership as they ought to have, that
even many members do not attend
church regularly, and that the funds
of the organization are exceedingly
low'. That there are too many
churches is claimed to be the reason
for this condition. Some communi-
ties have attempted to remedy this
by uniting all denominations to form
one big community church. The
maintenance expense was thereby
lowered, and a new active interest,
an interest affecting the whole com-
munity was aroused in regard to af-
fairs of the church. The greatest
difficulty in the community church, tient should he bled, Tap him, and
however, is the fact that the people take a few ounces of blood from him,
of different denominations are un-'no matter how weak he might be.
• . f . 'iWoll, the white stripes on a barber
willing to sacrifice points of doctrine 1 , , .
, ! pole signify the bandages that bar-
and church government in order that ; bprs over the wounds caused
all can live together in peace.
How many of our readers can tell
us what the stripes on the barber pole
signify? You see the pole with it’s
stripes and you know- there is a bar-
ber shop hack of the pole, hut here
the knowledge of the average person
[ceases. In the early days the barbers
(lid the bleeding for the community
because surgeons were not as plenti-
ful as now. The first thing thought
necessary way back to the time ot the
Pilgrim fathers was that every pa-
by bleeding people.
The boy who has the freedom of
the streets after nightfall without
business or permission, is cultivating
la dangerous habit. Any place where
| a boy has no business is no place for
him, be it on the street, in stores or
' in the livery barn. A boy that is all
(right will prefer his home, friends,
books, newspapers to the class found
on the streets. Business men of all
kinds look upon the hoy loafers as the
“dead beats” of the future. Boys, if
you will adopt the right habits now
you will, in manhood, be useful to the
[ world. You will be a source of com-
\ fort to your parents and friends, and
you will have the satisfaction of look-
. ing back upon a well spent past.
People take newspapers nowdays,
read them and then throw them way.
i They never think what a source of
'pleasure and profit—or reminiscence
and thought, a file of even a few
numbers of such a paper would be to
them twenty or thirty years after-
wards. Pay for your papers and
then keep them.
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The Chandler Tribune (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 21, 1919, newspaper, August 21, 1919; Chandler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc915008/m1/3/: accessed May 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.