The Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 236, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 23, 1919 Page: 4 of 4
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FOUR
TI IF, SHAWNEE DAILY NEWS-HERALD
THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 23, 1919.
CTIO.N u> HIM s
rmtoovt
l'Hi;VIOl\SLl
f i).
eferred I
by Walla
Pi
fur action.
In# an * j,v
re—Providing f« r | .
opted, 35 to 1
ar terns for county officials, rej
rod to committee on state and couu-
nfifairs.
by Wallace—Fixing salaries fcric
Cif district judge* referred to commit- priations
sioi
Knie-*-Eni
lers to ma
on I
flciencjr appropriation
illy adopted by jaj r()in:i
Wallace—Flxin* juris
es of the peace, refei
aeral ord
I1 bold!
or deficiency in
ate
a Appropriation
reme court, refer-
approprUttonr
reatin* the C*pL
and county trf-
ourt, finally | of
Authorizing! i
a to accept tiei
Woodward,; con
or b contingent \0. S7. by Leap- Authorizing sur-
j vey in counties where there is no
ovlding penal- county surveyor, referred to commit-
es. referred to I tee on state and county affair*
nd taxation j Senate Join Resolution No. 2. by
lit—Regulation j Wallace- Authorizing the submission
o i;riuK laud oomiuia-
wirVey of Red river-
to committee on appro-
•urrept Resolution No.
m.i Thirty-six Orhers—
jbntiSHion of a < onstitu-
fient to provide for a
em of goo l roads, refer-
lee on road* and high-
II o use.
iced previously in the
ferrert yesterday to the
ial
onal amendment rela
pirn
ao 17: , by Broadbent—For erection
j and equipment of home for the sup-
| rintendent of the school for the deaf
• ; t Sulphur^ go committee on 'appro-
priations.
; So. ISO. by Broadbent of the House
and Draughon of the Senate -.Main-
tenance appropriation for the school
VOU can't help cutting loose joy'us
* remarks every time you flush your
smokespot with Prince Albert—it hits
you so fair and square. It's a scuttle full of jimmy
pipe and cigarette makin's sunshine and as satisfy-
ing as it is delightful every hour of the twenty-four!
It's never too late to hop into the Prince Albert pleasure-
pasture ! For, P. A. is trigger-ready to give you more
tobacco fun than you ever had in your smokecareer.
That's because it has the quality.
Quick as you know Prince Albert you'll write it down
that P. A. did not bite your tongue or parch your throat.
And, it never will! For, our exclusive patented process
cuts out bite and parch. Try it for what ails your tongue 1
Toppy red bag,, tidy red tint, handsome pound and hair pound tin
l,unudor. -anJ ,ha, clever practical pound cry.tal glau hJZidor with
sponge moutener top that hcept the tobacco in sueh perfect condition
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
MM HOT WATE1
IF TOtU B1ESME A
8ay we can't help but look
better and feel better
after an inside bath.
iiutnit- for the deaf at Sulphur, to committee
istitutionai on appropriations.
No. 181. by Morgan of Creek—Abol-
ishing capital punishment, to com-
mit toe on c riminal jurisprudence.
So. 1V2, by Ruth- Authorizing coun-
ty commissioners to make comprom-
ise settlements in certain tax cases,
to committee on county and township
government.
No. 183. by Newman—Regulating
the weighing of cotton, to committee
on cotton warehouses.
No. 1S4. by Newman—Authorizing
county commissioners to increase the
pay of certain deputies, to committee
on fees and salaries.
No. 185, bv Olmstead, Walden and
Hay—Fixing compensation of road
supervisors, to committee on roads
and highways.
No. 186, by Harris. Ruth and But.
terfield—Appropriation to pay the
ost for the state in certain litigation,
o committee on appropriations.
No. 187, by Biddison—Amending the
statutes relating to street improve-
ments, to committee on municipal cor
porations.
No. 18S. by Biddison—Regulating
the construction of highways through
towns, to committee on roads and
highways.
No. lS'.t, by Ambler—Relating to the
terms of office of county commission
ers. to committee on flections.
No. 190, by Graves—Amending the
threshermen's lien law, to committee
• general agriculture.
No. 191. by Williams—Increase the
salaries of certain deputies in county
offices, to committee on fees and sal-
aries.
No. 192. by Neff Creating the of-
fice of state referee, to judiciary No.
1 <> look One's best and feel one's
best is to enjoy an Inside bath each
morning to tliurti from the system the
previous day's waste, sour fermenta-
tions and poisonous toxins before it
is absorbed int? the blood. Just as
coal, when it burns, leaves behind a
certain amount of incombustible ma-
terial in the form of ashes, so the
food and drink taken each day leave
<« the alimentary organs a certain
amount of indigestible material, which
if not eliminated, form toxins and
Poisons which are then sucked into
the blood through the very duct3
which are intended to suck in only
nourishment to sustain the body.
If you want to see the glow of
healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see
your skin get clearer and clearer, you
are told to drink every morning upon
arising, a glus.i of hot water with a
teaspoonful of limestone phosphate
in it, which is a harmless means of
washing the waste material and tox-
ins from the stomach, liver, kidneys
and bowels, thus cleansing, sweeten-
ing and purifying the entire alimen-
tary tract, before putting more food
into the stomach.
Men and women with sallow skins,
liver spots, pimples or pallid com-
plexion, also those who wake up with
a coated fongue, bad taste; nasty
breath, others w
❖
A Stubborn Cough •?
Loosens Right Up
Amendment Hard to Repeal.
A law of congress can be quickly re*
'filed or altered if it falls to work
dl, but n Constitutional amendment
is practically beyond repeal. Though
86 stutes are required to put an amend-
ment into the Constitution, it takes
only 13 to keep it there, even agtrinsi
the will of all the others.
ThI* Iiomc-mnd* remedy In a wonder V
for quirk reatilU. Kaiil? and T
cheaply made.
ilere is a home-made syrup which mil-
lions of people have found to be tin* most
dependable moans of breaking up stub-
l>Orn couffha. It is cheap and simple, but
yen prompt in action. Under it., heal-
injr. soothing influence, chest soreness
go« s, phlegm loosens, breathing becomes
easier, tickling in throat stops and you
get a good night's restful sleep. The
usual throat and chest colds are con-
quered by it in 24 hours or less. Noth-
ing better for bronchitis, hoarseness,
croup, whooping cough, bronchial asthma
or winter coughs.
To make this splendid cough syrup,
X)'fI" j°ui?r,e8a,of t>inPX into a pint
>ottle and fill the bottle with plain
granulated sugar syrup and shake
thoroughly. If yoti prefer, use clari-
fied rnoliisses, honey, or corn syrup,
instead of sugar syrup. Either way,
you get a full pint—a family supply—
of much better enqgh syrup than you
could buy ready-made for three times
the money. Keeps perfectly and chil-
dren love its pleasant taste.
I'inex is a special and highly concen-
trated compound of genuine Norway
Dine extract, known the world over for
ts prompt healing effect upon the mem-
I STOP CATAURH! OPEN
NOSTRILS AND HEAD
•
] Says Cream Applied in Nostrils ,
? Relieves Head-Colds at Once. •
If your nostrils are clogged and
your head is stuffed and you can't
breathe freely because of a cold or ca-
tarrh, just get a small bottle of Ely's
Cream Balm at any drug store. Apply
a little of this fragrant, antiseptic
cream into your nostrils an let it pen-
trate through every air passage of
your head, soothing and healing the
inflamed, swollen mucous membrane
and you get instant relief.
Ah! how good it feel3. Yours nos-
trils are open, your head is clear, no
more hawking, snuffling, blowing; nb
more headache, dryness or struggling
for breath. Ely's (.'ream Balm is jus*
what sufferers from head colds and
catarrh need. It's a delight.—Adv.
Peculiar Form of Bread.
The Indians along the Columbia
river make a kind of bread from a
moss that grows on the spruce fir tree.
This moss Is prepared by placing It In
heaps, sprinkHng it with water and
permitting it to ferment. Then It is
rolled Into balls as big as a man's
ii.'Od, and these are baked in pits.
Persons to Avoid.
Unwelcome are the loiterer, who
makes
the
er fo
praise
he never keeps;
asks advice he nev-
the boaster, who seeks for
«i* does not merit; the com-
plainer. who whines only to be pitied;
the talker, who talks only because he
loves to talk always.-—Selected.
The Comb Toter.
Miss Myrtiila says she might In lime
grow to love a mart who totes « little
comb around In his pocket to comb bis
mnstachc with in public, but she's not
going to try it unless there's a law
passed requiring her to.—Macon Tele-
graph.
Friendship.
Friendship Is a strong and habltua
Inclination in two persons to pro
mote the good and happiness of on*
another.—Spectator.
Busy Bee
CONFECTIONERY
A. L. BECK, Prop.
Hot and Cold Drinks,
Light Lunches,
Candies and Cigars
9 East Main St.
"I ^
r li j- • - vuuet-w ui j iiiex will
full directions, and don't accept any-
linn? else. Guaranteed to (rive absolute
MtisfaetioD or "itev promptly rcfui-.ilcd
The i'inex Co., Ft Wayne, Ind.
—— - 'ho are bothered with
headaches, bilious spells, acid stom-
ach or constipation should begin this
phosphated hot water drinking and ~tt a• • i
"usTont „r,rwcrroun"ed ~ ss
A quarter pound of limestone phos-
phate costs very little at the drug
store but is sufficient to demonstrate
that junt as soap and hot water clean-
ses, purifies and freshens the skin on
the outside, so hot water and lime-
stone phosphate act on the inside or-
gan.-!. We must always consider that
internal sanitation is vastly more im-
portant than outside cleanliness, be-
cause the skin pores do not absorb im-
purities into the blood, while the
bowel por^s do.—Adv.
GASKILL UNDERTAKING COMPANY
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Ambulance Service
120 North Bell Street—Office Phone 371
Night Phones 850 and 546
f
WANTED—UnitedStates Liberty Bonds
Highest prices paid for all I*jues in any quantity. Where
parties have purchased Liberty Bonds on installments and
desire to bell, we will pay off balance due thereon and pay
you full market difference in cash. Also want bank or respon-
sible business firm to buy bonds for me In every town in Okla-
homa. See, phone or write.
Elks Building
Ernest E. Radford
PHONE 781
Shawnee, Okla
Syrup Keeps Down Food Costs
now's go- tious and healthy and at the 1
1 /i nearly all same time not cost so much. 1
I havemcreased Syrup isone of these few foods, I
I *n as -j !t a ffood Not: only is it healthy but it 1
1 of .?w^C°v!-S1?ei mor.e burnishes to the body the fuel 1
odfood which will be nutri- needed to keep it going*.
Dunbar's King Komus Syrup is the sym i for
jou to buy. It is made in Louisiana i sfht
where the sugar cane grows, and the „yrup
has the flavor of the cano itself. It is pure
and unadulterated. It is put \:p m a model
factory in sanitary cans. Because Dunbar's
King Kornus is pure you get full food value.
h 13, therefore, the cheapest in the end. Eat
more Dunbar's King Komus Syrup and keep
uow n the cost of living. Ask Your Grocer.
Is!
Ifililllli!
, - t v
rHHiPWiiiHgili; m
Dunbar Molasses and Syrup; Co.
New Orleans
Memphis
New York
Shawnee Music Festival
LUCY GATES, Soprano, Metropolitan Opera, New York.
Heqi-y I. Fink, Dean of American Critics, writing editorially in
the New York Evening Post, on Saturday, Feb. 16, 1918, said in part:
. here is an American colorature singer whom 1 consider not only the
equal to Galli-Curci, but her superior, because she has more luscious
and a warmer voice, which is also true to pitch. Her name is Lucy
Gates. On referring back to the Evening Post file in find that 1 was
able to bestow on her more unreserved praise than I have bestowed
on any performance by Galli-Curci that 1 have heard."
OSCAR SEAGLE, Famous Baritone.
The London Times writes: "Such singing as Mr. Seagle's would
be memorable at any time, for his baritone voice is a fine one, his
skill in using it without flaw, and he has an unerring feeling for style."
And so Mr. Zeigler of the New York Herald comments- "His
years in \ aris seem to have made him so familiar with French music
that he sings like a Frenchman, and few singers capable of such inter-
pretation have voices of such beauty as his. With perfect phrasing,
smooth tone and even legate he presented them. Dclicate shading of
tones made them a delight. The enunciation was also admirable."
No more careful exponent of the real are of tone is ever heard in
Minneapolis, or elsewhere for that matter. Dr. Storrs in Minneapolis
1 nbune. , r
MISCHA LEVITZKI, Distinguished Pianist.
Richard Spamer in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat says' "Mjcha
Levitzk, whose age is given as twenty-one, played a piano recital at
Sheldon Memorial last night which is destined to be a memorable event
in the lives of the large audience attending."
(In the order named) <
February 12-13-14
Season Tickets, (Reserved) Now Selling at Box Oflice
Savoy Theatre
>
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The Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 236, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 23, 1919, newspaper, January 23, 1919; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc93116/m1/4/: accessed May 19, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.