The Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 92, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 19, 1912 Page: 3 of 8
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TUESDAY EVENING. NOV . 1-.
PAWNEE-NEWS HERALD
add to life of ties
buckled under train
,'k
Dr.PRICE'$
Creamgaking POWdCT
Has a dietetic value greatly beyond the
conception of anyone who has not used 11.
. It will make your food of a dehoous taste,
a moist and keeping quality, and a diges
tibiUty not to be obtained from otto
tiling 'powders or leavening agents.
B««t mote important than all else, Dr.
' Ratine Powder, being a pore, cream of tar-
, fa, powder, carries only healthful quaUbe*
, to the food-no alum, no l«me phosphate.
oivc no information as to
J VARIOUS PRESMRVATIVE TflEAT'
MENT8 THAT WORK WELL.
I Neither Metal Nor Concrete Being
' pound Effective a. a Sub. .tut.
for Wood, the Railroad.
Had to Do Something-
In many
found for wood^Thsgrea^
CRITICAL PERIOD WHEN
"KICKED."
TRACK
This Should Keep
theBaby Healthy
. HI nail'T III (OMl! !
! WHEN IT IS 11.1. DON'T BKCOMK
| ALVHMH. HIT ««VE THIS
fine laxative.
1
\
k**t powd« ejve - *£?££ are
Sfcalun, is s^y n-U^hei,
SiTgSexpo'^n the newspapers,
b .Ua because the alum people know thrtpob;
licitY would «op ,ht'f^'nt5S rticle o( food
rtftfSUTe'X been concealed
an vmhealthful ingredient.
AMERICAN CIVIC
ASSN. MEtTS
THREE DAT CONVENTION WIL1
KI8CCS8 HUMCIFAI.
PROBLEMS.
Uv Associated Press.
Baltimore, Nov 19. _ Problem
confronting American cities, andthe
adrunco methods being followed In
progressive communities to mee
then, will be the basis of discus-
toon at the eighth annual conven
iion of the American Civic Associa
lion which opens here tomorrow
for sessions covering three days^
Well knowp students of municipal
affairs, including loading figures in
women's national organizations and
municipal exports from Canada will
participate In thn round table dis-
cussions and the business meetings
llt which over a score of Important
pap. rs wilt be presented.
activities of the convention
' _ t mtinirinfll
Trie acuHutxj w — , ,
cover a wide 'range of municipal
matters. Ambassador James B y
o, Great Britain is to speak on the
general subject of ••National 1 arks
Li-he Need of the Futur*. The
majority of the addresses, however
will be upon researches
o, a municipal character These
include discussions of the
board nuisance," public Pau city
lrc0 planting, back yard toPr°™"
ment, smoke prevention fly
ing, and many other subjects.
I ,„A with the American
Associated wltn „_,irinnl
Civic Association are many
The National Municipal League wU
itn work through its Bec
rotary Clinton Rogers Woodruff, of
Philadelphia. ^
ren^r'olge —
man of Fremont. 0., Its vice chair-
1 aw Frederick Olmsted, who
will represent the National Confer-
erence on City Planning; M .. Ua
Mechlin of Washington, the Am
ican Federation ol^
Wilson of Toronto, the
Horticultural Association.
The last two conferences of the
Ask Your Doctor
Is alcohol* tonic? No! Does
it make the blood pure? No!
Does it strengthen the nerves.
Nol Is Ayer's Sarsaparilla a
tonic' Yes! Does it make
the blood pure? Yes! Does ,
strengthen the nerves? Yes 1
Ask your doctor about this.
j C Ayr 0 -
firefly
SHAWNEE
TO
KANSAS CITY
WHILE YOU SLEEP
Leave Shawnee:5:05 «\ M
Arrive Kansas Ci«> 7.^5 A wi.
IhroughMeep" "u'"'
Oklahoma City or El Keno.
For Fur'be' l artleularaCaH M.
Rock Island Passenger Station.
American Clvle Association were
held In Washington. 8lnce the last
meeting many new communities
have undertaken lines of civic de-
velopment suggested through the
conferences of municipal workers.
Keports are to be presented at this
meeting upon almost a nation-wide
campaign against the house fly
The session of the convenUon Wed-
nesday afternoon will be in par
a "house fly session" with Edward
Hatch. Jr.. of New York, chairman
of the Fly-flghtlng Committee, pre-
siding. Mr. Hatch will report upon
the work of the national anti-fly
committee; Dr. Jean Dawson upon
lhe fly crusade In Cleveland, and
Murray upon the Wash-
Interesting discussions are expect-
ed over thu bill board problems
based upon a Paper by Raymond
B Fostick, former commissioner o
accounts of New York. Mr. FosUck
made investigation of the bill board
situation in that city and will make
recommendations a to regulations
for advertising signs. Henry
llaker of baltimore. U to discuss
another Important municipal sub-
ject. that of smoke prevention and
general discussion is expected on
01 IDC
ore so arranged as
to need but little
wood when com-
pared with the
other material
which IS1""9 ,nt0
their construction
Steel cars are to-
day the type which
1, likely to preva .
The time will
come when wood
will pl > B
less rart In the
construction of or
dlnary P'lva<«
house, than it did
formerly or It does now.But there
1. one place where no
to he possible for w„K , and tea ^
It Is also true that nellie
: 'the0r7llroU.d engineer prefer, the eld
fashioned wood kind of He.
This ha. created a distinct problem
JX'raiiroad. Tie, become worn
Z** ti
"ftraffl^" increased, d.^nd tles
Wore they demand
Formerly all
for the engineer to mane m ,
Z so many ties for the
construction The ties came as ea
as could well * J"'h,ch
all along the road had
would make up Into "P^ld tle.^ ^
and chsstnut treea^ei^ ^ ^ al a
very 'rewKrosble figure But that was
before the P^ce of lurnberwent^ky
The situation wa. so rr,tl"
resulted In instant action on the part
sir-.-aSsrtt:
which is quHe ai Important " *
, f Th^T ha*e been wa-
wood may be IncreasedV*ri°U^pt-
tv« - : ~n,
a. twenty-five year. If the pr«*ervs
. .
,r« #d It Is thought that tne HI«
Of ,h. railroad tie hu^been trtetedhT
the various mean, of preser
which have been adopted.
The whole matter .how. how the
railroad, are being constantly called
upon to solve new problems and how
re ful they are In
s—isrssKts
aihle situation
Fortunately Car. Were Movln(, a
,o« R.«. o' ^.ed and Aoc ent
w . Avoided-How the Ralls
Are Replaced. often dlfficuit to tell Just what
, -ith Ms the matter with a crying. poovIh..
a . .rni vears ago a work train with ^ ^ _ h[ld t00 younK to express
'.hoard waB running un- f(.ennKs in words, but us a gen-
70« men aboard ^ ^ "rder* Iral rulo the mother will find thai
across a bridge (™re (a a tendency to constipation,
over the 3oUth I which has brought on a lieadacn
canadian river In nervou8ne8. The little one h «
Texas Sixty i«t paln but fPOls "out of sorts
m
has no
Texas, sixiy pain, DUt lecie uuv v — .Bm,h
train wa. stopped sands ^ ^ emergencies, amon
in a moment. be montlonf.(i Mi
IU ®
It could not pull
past the kick.
The train bad to
be cut in two nd
the track repaired
In order that It
might proceed
houso for BVicn
whom may be mentioned Mr. H-
Head. Mgr Head Drug Co., •<>"
Worth, Tex., father of Clarence Car-
roll Head, and Mr. L. Sutton. 463
Alaska l'lace, Denver. Colo Thw
and others are glad to say that Syrup
Pepsin saved them many an (line s
II f in oroer - pepsin saveu
Li might proceed am, many a larg0 d0ctor bin, for by
,t,^r time a kick on the same r*U-, administering it promptly, when t
Another t m . a handcar ,irl)t symptoms of Illness were no-
road threw a lab into the llcedi they prevented a serious ail-
ment.
road threw ft " the
loaded with ties from a bridge Into me
river below the
On a strip of track through jn^
nockv mountains, where
, mwan lal 1 during the last. W
i winter, and not ."-l;«aauntut^
i ,u0w had disappeared, 'ou, f a
' were discovered where the rails, «
account of ihe '
had been thrown ctea)..
What 1. known as a He* up
be looked for on a lon
passes 04 er .1 •"« #«nan
knoll The reeptog and sun expsn
i ika /ails to move down
.Ion ha. cauaed the knoll,
hill and Jam together at
There the strain ftnaliy becotnest«>
There tne th, track,
great and tip In he atr g^^ ^ ^
sometimes as high as
the ballast. 4 . tr^ch
On taking the creep ou
the men start at
or incline, where J?'11 ^u.
farthest apart. The ■*'*• . ,
from the plate •'"^Vt^ng
'h"V\hT rail-"ar^^lven back until
ram. the ran. are ■__ ___
It Ib so pleasant tastinK that no
child will refuse It, and as It does
not srlpe, tho child Is glad to take
It again. A bottle can bo obtained
of any druggist for fifty ccntH or
one dollar, the latter being the she
bought by families already familiar
with its merits.
Syrup Pepsin ia for all the famils
from infancy to old age, and becauBe
of Its mildiH'SB families should pre-
fer it over all other remedies. It is
absolutely safe and reliable. Yon
CLABENCK CABBOLL HK.ll>.
will never again give cathartics,
pills, Baits or such harsh physics,
[or they are usually unnecessary,
and in the case of children, women
and elderly people are a great shock
to the syBtem, and hence should be
aVIfdno member of your family baa
ever used Syrup Pepsin and you
would like to make a personal trial
of It before buying It In the
way of a druggiBt, send your addrees
-a postal will do-to Dr. W. B.
Caldwell, 411 WashlnKton, BL. Monti-
cello 111., and a free sample bottle
will be mailed you. Results are al-
ways guaranteed or money will De
refunded. ^
TESTIMONY
OF FIVE WOMEN
Proves That Lydia E. Pink-
ham'g Vegetable Com-
pound Is Reliable.
rw'tio"rails are driven ba« uo- WnUSW^Ij, Ooyernor wllB0n won
there Is no lonisr ^*.t0f|n * .hort I ^P^^ChaJge of Life, ss .t made jhard word or a split inflhitive.
in the oblong plate holee in througnt well woman after
Um*'.M. T™ flve-lnch gap In the 1 l^GART. This Is democracy's chance to
K. H. Jeffrey's Ilanelng Iteheel ever
[ the Mammoth CloUlag Stere. Pbe^
g« . "lm
Now will the caretakers kindly re-
move the peanut shells and waste
paper from the lawn of Armageddon.
! Those who have been standing at
Armageddon may now relax a little.
Governor WllBon won wlthoot a
Penn.,
Horace McFarland of Harris-
president of the asso-
will open Its convention
tomorrow. Cardinal Gibbons is ex-
pected to deliver tee opening invo-
cation. The morning's session will
be devoted to organisation conduct-
ing work related to that of the
American Civic Association. Each
afternoon of the convention will be
devoted to a "round table" discus-
sion of municipal affairs. Major
Chas. Hopewell of Ottawa, Canada
Walter B. Griffin of Chicago, who
won the $8,000 prise for designing
a new capital city of Australia, and
Miss Zona Gale of the General Fed-
eration of Women's Clubs, will be
among the speakers during the con-
Llvss Without Alt.
Whlls th. snsll ha. lungs, heart ana
a general ctreulstlon and Is In evet7
. .„ ai breathing creature. It
r"n*nsverthsle.s sal.t Indefinitely
without inhaling the ls«t breath of
at, th. element that Is usually consid-
ered th. essential to existence In all
crestures .upplled with lung.
^mon. the great host of "orgentssd be-
iZ ' to sxperhnents by Spallansan
lhn.V.P~ve<l teat any or all th. usus
Its rti.tenc. or In s«y way Impair-
lu iu function..
%he common snail retreat. Into his
. Jll on te. approach of frosty -sate
„r ,nd the opening or mouth of
.hell Is hermetically sealed by s ss-
erstton which U of . silky texture and
srrjsitfyr
U IS deprived of three of the four
element, of llfs
air, water and nourlshmsnt.—Harpers
Wsekly.
tima as the worn y
r k" ^r.XflrnoCw r T baeh
Z un. th. curv.. st th. bo-om of
""Kl^rrfe^^'teking out a
rail, throwing the iraek inte l^ne an ;
-urc:r^r^r.
SIGNALS. THEN STOPS TRMN
Tested In England, to Prev.nt
Beilroad C°Hlt|ont.
A demonstration was given ^ Loa-
V°8 W to prevent railroad .«.dent.
nf electrio automatic slg-
, were v^ade witn i
train. T ( Westsrn rali-
comoti^es on th.
rosd oa s disuse. -.cUon of test sys
'* Klectrlc Wire, wero run hsjjlde the
'r^tesX.^Wh-te^rin en
'er. a block In which there U snother
,ra,n a whlsle blows In the esb
mediately afterward «the"*|^
•^l^r.rr.d - points
mechanic climbed out
Win the locomotives • *£..£
lame block the warning hi.ties b .
the electric "°J^red
the engines stopped wltel
yards of each other.
Beedville. Oregon.
New Orleans. La. —
"When passing through
the Change of Life I was
troubled with hot (lashes,
weak and diwy spells and
. backache, lwaa notfitfor
I anything until I took Ly-
I dia E. Pinkham s Ve?e-
1 table Compound which
1 proved worth its weight
I ingold tome." - Mrs t.AS
I TON BUJNDEAU, 1541 Po-
1 lymnia St., New Orleans.
Mi5hawaka,Ind.-''Wo-
men passing through the
Change of Life can take
This Is democracy's chanee to make
a home run with all tee bases full.
Thus the Outlook 1b able to retain
jits contributing editor.
An egotist is a man wUo bclieveB
that if he were to bide his light
under a bu.hel the whole world
would be In darkness.
When a girl screams on getting
kissed It is usually In a whisper.
Change of Lite can ui^t.
nothing better Uian Lydia
E. I'inkham's Vegetable
Compound. I am recom-
mcndingittoall my friends
because of what it "as
done for mc. -Mn:C"£?'
RauER, D23E. Marion SL,
Mishawaka, Ind.
Alton Station, Ky.-"For
months 1 suffered from
troubles in consequence of
my ago and thought 1
could not live. Lydia b.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound made me well
and 1 wantother "ufTennjf
women toknow about it,
Mrs. Emma BAlLKy. Alton
Station, Ky.
Delsem, No. Dak - I was
through Change of Life and fe ^^ry
F. M- Thorn. Delsem, No. I)ak
Many of the doormats with "Wel-
come" on are dirty liars.
SUAW>EK K08PHJDLD TBT THIS.
K A. Reynolds 4 Son. Druggi« .
atate that sny one who has consO-
patlon, sour stomach or «« on tee
Stomach. Should try simp e bu<4
thorn bark, glycerine, ete.. as eon-
pounded in Adler-i-ka. tee new^Oa^
man Appendicitis remedy. AS INOIJE
DOSE bring, relief almost INSTANT-
LY and Shawnee people are su^
prised how QUICKLY It
simplo remedy antl.epUclre. tee £
ge'tlve organs and draws off tee 1^
purities. F. A- Reynolds * Bon. |
Druggists
UnnW..sry "sllrosd FsUlltl^
-Stop, look both ways, listen, and
walk along the tracks, srs ln-
. .inn* that would. In the light of
: 'pS.W .tatlstics, material
^reduce tbe number of fstelitles on
.1 railroads If carefuly observed.
The majority of the people killed by
M nt are classed as "trespasBers
of 10,396 killed on the railway. In
?.11 5.2*4 were trespasser. In ten
the total number of death, by
«.««. of which only
i 840 were of passengt t-
Hard te Nam. Lsrg.M Ds ot
Altsr careful comparison It may be
aUted that the biggsst .tetlona In the
world are—(1) Th\
l acara (*) Watsrloo, London. <•'
th. Pennsylvania.railroad .tatlon to
New York city. The lattsr has a
rssssrAWM
lu r« and third a. te th. number
of platform. Watsrloo Is Unit as to
platform., third In acrsag. Wd ttW
alao In rsgard to the numbsr of trains
d^r puslng in and out Who. thsre
?o« .hall dsclds which I. ths biggs., j
' .tatlon 1
riw.r ef Al" rak...
some Idea of the power of an sJr
hraks msy be gslned from the follow-
ing facts: It take, a powerful loco-
nf ive drswlng a trsln of ten psssen
cer cars S distance of about
miles" rsach a speed of 60 miles r-'
hour on s straight and level track.
The brakes will stop the sanie tra n
from a speed of 60 miles an hour In
700 feet Roughly. It may bs
i train may be stopped by the hraaes
^n shout /per "nt of the dlsU.cs
thst must be covered to glvs It lis
(/eed.—Science Cons octua.
Q. nmwi , . . - • —
Think about this
when you buy Flour
Extreme care, watchfulness, ability, the most mcxlert
equipment ami only the choice* wheat .ngur. id
'•CI 1 MAX" FLOUR the highest tjiuility every day in
tlie year Daily tests make unif ity certain. His
impossible for any lot <>f
"CI M <X"
F LOli;
to fall hf.l -w s(
wive-* It'.u'il tli
iitistleil \ rfi-
Fl-(> : -* ■
l.ila- •' 'i'
Kl.t i- "e
I. An rapi'
u'Orth of
t his net'
i i- the ti''
Oilrl I 1
II lie st<>'
- Shawnee house*
I MAX" i hey are
"01.1MAX"
iu«l exp use are
\VOKni-M ltfi
tli 1
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Weaver, Otis B. The Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 92, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 19, 1912, newspaper, November 19, 1912; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc91812/m1/3/: accessed May 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.