The Rocky News (Rocky, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1916 Page: 4 of 6
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Why That Lame Back ?
Morning lument-ss, sharp twinges
when bending, or an all-day back*
ache; each is cause enough to sus-
pect kidney trouble. Get after the
cause. Help the kidneys. We
Americans go it too hard. We
overdo, overeat and neglect our
sleep and exerclBe and so we are
fast becoming a nation of kidney
sufferers. 72% more deaths than
in 1890 is the 1910 census story.
Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Thou-
sands recommend them.
A Taut* Cam
A. B. Johnson, Bee-
vllle, Texas, says: "A
year and a half ago I
realised my kidneys
were affected. When
lifting, a sharp pain
caught me across my
back and I had to give
■up. The kidney secre-
tions passed too fre-
quently and scalded
terribly. Three boxes
of Doan's Kidney Pills
put my kidneys In
good Bhape and for _
the past several years T have had no
further need of a kidney medicine."
Oat Dean's at Any Stare. lOeaBaa
DOAN’S viav
VOSTER-MILBURN CO- BUFFALO. N. Y.
latr# TV/i m
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure
CARTER’S L1TT
LIVER PILLS nev
fail. Purely vegeta
ble — act i
but gently
the liver.
Stop after
dinner dis-
tress-cure 1
indigestion,'
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE,
Genuine must bear Signature
BLACK
LEG
LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED
by Cutter’s SlMklsu Pills. Low-
priced, fresh, reliable: preferred by
Western lUtafcmen* because they
ether veeelnes fair.
_. sues
. . •re ether veoelnee
IVrite for booklet end teetirnonUl*.
10-dose pke*. Bluektee Pills fl.00
BO-dees pkfe. Bias kief Pills 4.00
Use any Injector, but Cutter’s beet.
j e1
pretest whi
Writ.
The superiority of Cutter products is due to over II
peers of specialising in vaeeleea and serums only.
Insist en Cutter's. If unobtainable, order direct.
DAISY FLY KILLER “TSIS “
flies. Neat, oleai
S'
ell
en, or-
namental, convenient,
cheap. Sit
sssson. Made of
metal, can’teplllor tip
over; will not soil oi
Injure anything,
Guaranteed effective.
All tsslsrs orteent
expreee paid for 11.00,
■▲SOLD BOUSES, MO De Kalb See.. Brooklyn, H. T.
Her Love Hung on a Hair.
"I see where a Detroit wife left
her husband because he wore a wig."
"Pshaw! that was but a bald ex-
cuse.”
Perhaps a little exaggeration mixed
with your talk would make it more in-
teresting.
For Thrush
and Foot
Diseases
Sow Your Stock
HANFORD’S
Balsam of Myrrh
A LI N I MiNT
For Galls, Wire
Cuts, Lameness,
Strains, Bunches,
Thrush, Old Sores,
Nail Wounds, Foot Rot,
Fistula, Bleeding, Etc., Etc.
Made Since 1846.
Price 28c, 50c and $1.00
um || pa ■ OR WRITE
All Dealers
ECZEMA!
••Ilnnt’e Cure" In Ktiarantord to
•Lop and permanently cure that
terrible itching It In com-
pounded for that purpose and
yonr money will be [
ration
cure
yonr money will be promptly
refunded without (liieetb
if Hunt’s Cure fall* t
m
Hunt’s Cure
Itch. Boema,Tetter. King Worm
or any other skin dlaeaae. 600
the box.
Forisle by all drug stores
or by mall from the
ft. B. Richards Medicine Co., Sherman,Tei,
Every Woman Wants
ANTISEPTIC POWDER
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE
Dissolved in water for douches stops
pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam-
mation. Recommended by Lydia E.
Pinkham Med. Co, for ten years.
A healing wondar for nasal catarrh,
core throat and sora eyes. EconomicaL
Hu nlnfldiuiy chanting and lemiciiiil rawer.
Saauele Free. 50c. all diunub, or by
t Ml. The P.itnnToflrt Company. Doeon, Mia, j
GALLSTONES
THE ROCKY NEWS
REORGANIZATION OF PATROL
FUNSTON OUTLINE8 PROPOSAL
FOR REDISTRIBUTION OF MEN
United States Troops to Recross River
Unless Band of Raiders Are
8ighted Soon.
San Antonio.—MaJ. Gen. Frederick
Funs ion has begun consideration *wl
a plan for the re-organization ol
the border patrol. Relieved of diplo-
matic responsibilities and having un-
der his direct control almost 50,00(1
men, be outlined to his staff a redis
tribution of forces that he believed
would guarantee the protection ol
American residents from Mexican
raiders. Already forces at border sta-
tions have been strengthened and in
dlcatlonH are that the greater part ol
the regular troops and militia thal
have been sent into the three bordei
states will shortly be In shape and
position for quick service along the
international line.
General officers will be in charge
of the patrol districts. The district
commanders will include Brig. Gen
James Parker, commanding the Flrsi
cavalry brigade; Brig. William A
Mann, commanding the Second brig
ade at Luredo, Texas, and Brig. Harr)
A. Greene, who has been ordered t<
report at headquarters here from Fori
Leavenworth. It is improbable that
more troops will be sent to Colone
Sibley, who is in charge of the little
expedition that crossed into Mexic,
near Boqualias as a result of the rale
at Glenn Springs and Boquillas a weel
ago.
Return of Cavalry Expected.
Four troops of cavalry and a ma
chine gun detachment are now oper
ating close to the line, scoutlni
throughout a limited territory soutl
of the border, but there never hai
been any intention of sending forwar,
at that point a punitive expedltioi
that would compare in Bize to that O!
General Pershing in the state of Chi
huahua. If the cavalry that Is oper
ating south of Boquillas fails to local,
any bandits -within a few days Us re
turn to stations north of the line ii
probable.
Army officers here are deeply in
terested, however, In the efforts tht
Mexican troops were reported to b«
making to run down the bandits wha
raided the Big Bend district, and whe
yet hold aB a prisoner Jesse Deemers.
the American storekeeper. It Is re
garded here as not impossible that
the Mexican troops may cut off tht
retreat of the bandits toward the in
terior and force them back into th«
front of Colonel Sibley’s cavalry.
Pershing Forces Massed.
ReportB from General Pershing ar»
characterized as merely routine. Since
negotiations between Generals Scot,
and Funston and Oeneral Obregon anti
Bubsecretary Amador began at Eli
Paso, General Pershing has made nc
effort to prosecute the campaign
•gainst Villa. His forces have been
withdrawn until his entire column ol
more than 14,000 men is almost a com-
pact unit.
With the exception of the Thirtieth
»nd Third Infantry, one battalion ol
the Third field artillery and one com-
pany of coast artillery, all the addi-
tional troops ordered to report to Gen-
eral Funston have arrived. The Third
will be sent to Fugle Pass, but it has
not yet been decided Just where the
Thirtieth will be stationed. Four ol
the eleven companies of coast artillery
brought here have been sent to border
stations. The remainder have been
mobilized at Fort Sam Houston. The
militia mobilization at Douglas, Co-
lumbus and San Antonio is completed.
Here there are encamped three regi-
ments of Texas militia, a squadron of
militia cavalry and a battery of field
artillery and a field hospital company,
also of the militia.
The mustering into the regular mil-
itary establishment of the militiamen
will be begun at once, although much
of the preliminary work has been
done. The medical officers who have
been examining the men estimate that
the percentage of tlioso who would be
rejected was almost negligible. A
slightly greater percentage Includes
those who do not care to be sworn
In "for the term of their enlistment"
but Major Stevenson, adjutant of the
brigade, said that an inevstigation in-
dicated at least 85 per cent of the
guardsmen would take the oath with-
out hesitation.
It Is not expected thnt any of the
militia will be placed in stations of
greater responsibility for some time.
Many of the companies contnln re-
cruits and the work of drilling them
and hardening them will be conscien-
tiously looked after.
DllflllllllimiltllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIMIIIIIIIIII
IhilTi
Paragraph
History
Current Events at
Home and Abroad
Told Briefly.
Mexico
El Paso.—Army posts and stations
Hong the border nre on their guard
Ignlnst incendiaries following two
Ires at Fort Illlss, where flames of
unknown origin destroyed a store-
house, three cavnlry stables, three
horses and some tents.
Army officers express the opinion
that nil investigation will disclose that
the fires could not have been of spon-
taneous or accidental origin. It was
snld there was no attempt on the am-
munition house.
HAIRRBALSAM
A tollitt preparation of merit.
Helpe to erotilrate dandruff.
For Kaetoring Color and
Beauty to (fray or Faded Hair.
60o. and $1.00 at Lruxirleta.
—
Avoid oporetlons. Poettlr* rotund y— pn 1? I?
iNo oil)—RoaulU enr*i Writ* for otir r
Liu Hook of Truth and Fatria To* I lay. • —
SaluiiNM R».4r C,..D,pt.C-K,I If S.DwUn Si ..Cites**
Army Bill Pastes.
A standing army of 206.000 men enp-
\ able of being expanded In emergency
to 254,00 men and barked by federal-
ized National Guard of 400,000 as a
reserve finally was agreed upon by
house and senate conferees on the
army hill. The minimum enlisted
strength would be attained under the
conference agreement within the next
conference agreement within the next
five years and it is stipulated that
at no time shall tbo total be less than
yo.ooo.
illlllltilllUUIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIUIlUII
Late War News
The wrecked Zeppelin, L-20, was
blown up by the military authorities
at Stavanger, Norway, when It began
to roll in a strong wind.
• • m
The British steamships City of
Lucknow, Hendon Hall from Portland
and Louisburg, C. B., for Rotterdam
has been sunk.
• • •
Twenty-six aeroplanes were shot
down by German aviators on the west-
ern front In April. The German losses
last month amoi
aeroplanes.
•
The governme
policy of immed
sory enlistment
Asquith announ
commons. This
add from 300,00(
army.
Contantinople
among the fore
Kut El Amara
erals and 510
fleers. The Br
sopot amian car
20,000.
The city of Cuernavaca was captured
by the forces of General Pablo Gon-
zales after twelve hours of fierce fight-
ing.
• • •
The war department has Instructed
military commanders on the border to
stop all shipment of war munitions te
Mexico.
• • •
..A letter received at El Reno from a
soldier at the front says that two
American troopers committed suicide
at Namiquipa.
• • •
President Wilson has received an
appeal to intervene in the cases of
Mexicans recently convicted of mur-
der in connection with Villa raids on
Columbus, N. M.
• • •
Five hundred cavalry remounts and
pack mulerf were received from Okla-
homa stations. The animals are to be
used to replace animals lost by Gen-
eral Pershing’s command.
see
— *• — *'l4nntv gr#VV.
CALOMEL WHEN BIUOUS? HO! STOP!
ACTS LIKEJMMITE ON UVER
I Guarantee “Dodson’s Liver Tone” Will Give You the Best Liver
and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Had—Doesn’t Make You SickI
Stop using calomel! It makes you
■lck. Don’t lose a day’s work. If you
feel lazy, sluggish, bilious or consti-
pated, listen to me!
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when It comes into contact
with sour bile, crashes Into It. breaking
It up. This is when you feel that aw-
ful nausea and cramping. If you feel
"all knocked out,” if your liver la tor-
pid and bowelB constipated or you
have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue, If breath is bad or stomach
sour Just try a spoonful of harmlese
Dodson’s Liver Tone.
Here’B my guarantee—Go to any
drug store or dealer and get a 60-ceat
— IR.b. €%
spoonful and If it doesn’t straighten
you right up and make you feel fine
and vigorous I want you to go back to
tbe store and get your money. Dod-
son’s Liver Tone 1b destroying tbe
sale of calomel because It Is real liver
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore
It cannot salivate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson’s Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to work and clean your
bowels of that aour bile and consti-
pated waste which is clogging your
system and making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that a bottle of DodBon’a
Liver Tone will keep your entire fam-
ily feeling fine for months. Give It to
your children. It la harmless; doesn’t
and they like Its pleasant taste.
The curtain -
set at naught
launched agai
French recen
Man’s Hill. T
the only fighi
French and 1
guns, howeve
tlvity on vari
lent bombard
vicinity of H
dun. The G<
shells in gr«
skull bridgeh
ern front,
heavy artille
mans and R,
of Krevo. T!
Isolated inf
gress on th«
Turks starts
against the
glon of Ba
Erzingnn.
German Ge:
superintem
Turkish tr-
defense me
coast.
Athens
ern Epiru
Greek civ
Supplement to The Rocky News
MEMORY
BUY
Msmsmsmm
Smith .Ir;f:°;:[rbr;d Hard(wff,' fr°m ^
lutely FREE Come ’ P'*CC o{ Al,ummum Ware abso
_ '“ome ,n and ask us about it.
you buy” °Ur ,m' 09 S-°~‘ a"<* Cool Stovo. bo,ore
j p . . Pr'ces me right on our Grocerle. 0*1 c»
C°ol Stove,. W ashing Machine. R ,,?”"’’
Trucls, Farm Implement, of allT j d8*?*’ Wa«°ns-
I Paint8: °i,s: Glass and all kinds of" Sb ,,mi‘r8^Mower8;
1 come in and trade with us. ^ Hardvvare so
Your business earnestly
solicited and will be
appreciated by
Taylor & Smith
Wm. L
on charg-
ure of h)
Savings
again be
States s
ousted.
The T
pany, of
fleet of i
vessels '
rect frei
flag bei
Aniericp
Africa.
In ret
workeri
Manufa
the Ii
Worke:
its mei
estinia
person
Rev
and I
died
years
had n
The
luper
State
eost r
In cr
navy
by C
plem
eight hundred men.
• • •
Stimulated by the enormous war de-
mand, copper production last year In
the United States passed the two bil-
lion pound mark for the first time In
the history of tho Industry. The total
value of the 1915 smelter output of
primary copper was $242,900,000, an
Increase of $90,000,000 over 19lt.
• * •
Two steel companies at Brecken-
ridge, Pa., employing 3,500 men, grant-
ed wage Increases of from 5 to 13 per
cent. A 10 per cent raise wus given
to 750 men by a Washington, Pa.,
tube company.
• • •
The Overseas News Agency an-
nounces that the Scandinavlan-Amerl-
can liner Frederick VIII, from New
York to Christiana was held up at
Kirkwall and her American malls con-
sisting of 2,000 bags were removed.
• • •
The abolition of eleven of the fed-
eral reserve banks, leaving one to
handle the government's business was
advocated before the unnuul conven-
lion of the Kansas State Bankers’ As-
•oclatlon. Thttf would effect a saving
In operating expense of $1,600,000 a
year to member buuks.
|000000«000000000000
f For Cistern or Well
Cleanin«~ and Plaster-
ing, call phone No. 65.
I will appiesiate the work and
give you good, honest work.
s Frank Barnes «
<J22?°0000000000€>OOOOOOOOOOOOC>OOOOOOCXXVVVXo«««^ f |fl v '«"»■» ami
---!°00^000000000000000000 fWe.sof eoery kind.
R F " We laid har |,«.s„|e our
In loving memory ofonrdarl.
A Wh° Passed away
Apri! 27, 1916, We jler cjli](J
d««»re to tell |ler friends and
neighbors something 0f l)0.
wonderful life, of her patient
sickness ami death, ami of
her beautiful burial.
N;-ver was just such another
inor, ier so patient and just with
nature 8tan<iinKOf **’c'* ‘ hilds
, “^ e, bo as to control each one
Jy l<)Ve a,ol,H and iihvhi |,v
ear- in,d hi return her child-
•his love rosn-h a degree
now, that she j.s g,)ne We fr,eJ
'' vv"iKierfnl strength ,|,.„vv
lllmvi,1Nt° t,,H *reat' hevn,ld !>v
]' visible chords of love, even
J those same Coo,- s (11-ew (le|.
O'"’ near fat,, wm, passe,J
"ay I'*nr months aim.
!hoI<>r after .sue Waa Kono only
W wm ' UVe< ho,,y st'Hined to he
f 7'" ,,S' '-!• Hpiril seemed
Trrrr,'!’ ■" «'«»**
hi "ho had gone before and
i M '"’H after three v\ee|<8 ,,f snf.
•‘"f.'ve were foil e, i to lav
Body fro,,, -ig,,,.
oh-U.at In-r spirit had been go-
going r.,1 I„m for„ays and
o*--last sad hnywasn^r
away, as was fitting hes lovely
i ";'" --mnei.t a„d
, "" 'T of
IcisJ fg ^ ",atC" r,l«
hkef', uf indestructible steel
cavered with gray plush. The
Church being decorated with
the saniM colors ami beautiful
Club j luncheon Was served |,y Mie
(f'om I.astW ek) hostess, the table being attr c
RtVh.rd.on ......roi.lery wh^
■t last Week win. I
I He me ting adjourned early
e umrnh-.H goimr i„ a ’
Tl
Chib met last week with Mrs I Tl,
' 1 Mid Hedges, who had as sneo Li * f!"g adjourned early
/hI guests Mesdames Varnum th* i"'""1 in a body to’
«"d Gud noge, and Mils Wf? rZhTe °f HMfl Mrs. Bur.
hams, of Corde,l. * * * »»«ower was given
After the usual hour of nee in E,rl Eb*’'Junior,
l-work . dainty two coursJsiiiJ. v "ith M™-
father, where they'L'iLp"*"/
8lde’ 111 the lovliest spot of th®
lot el y cemetery of Bellevue
United in life f,)r
years, united m death, united in
Heaven for ull eternity.
Appro^-mc* Place,
at any prip« „ auch
tai.-LL.'!.': - *u nift r£
7 «uu Jsuraal.
Much of the 1915 apple crop has not
been sold says a statement issued by
the department of agriculture. Thirty
per cent of the apples put In cold stor-
age by December 1, 1915, It Is said
are still waiting to be consumed. Only
a backward spring, according to the
department, cun start a free movement
of the remainder of the crop.
» • •
A bill was pasted by the house
appropriating $200,000 asked for by
Secretary Baker for expenses of mili-
tia training camps this summer.
• • »
The agricultural bill, carrying $24,-
500,000 and a rider providing a new
cotton futures law, and uniform fed-
eral grain grading law, and n federal
warehouse system was passed by the
house.
• • •
The federal reserve board announced
that It would put into effect June lo
Its new plan for country-wide check
clearing and collection. Under the
plan the actual cost of clearing anil
collection of checks will be assessed
against member banks In proportion
tto the.’r ubi* of the system.
own business we wou»u
to mind ours.
Every woman’s pride, beautiful, clear
n-hite clothes. Use Red Cross Ball Blue
All grocers. Adv.
There was a time when thimbles
were an important part of a woman's
Jewelry.
Btrvufliu,
If you suffer from any of the ail-
ments so common to women try
Cardul, the woman's tonic. For sale
by all drugglstB. Adv.
As long as it Is only tnlk, let the
other fellow have his way. Why
should you care?
_ Buy materials that last
Certain-teed
Fully guaranteed
—beet
responsibility
Roofing
For tale by dealore
everywhere
at reaeonable price*
General Roofing Manufacturing Company
World's laroetl manufacturer! of Roofing ami RuUding Papen
S' !.•»!«■< PHUb.rtk D-trail Si.ht.SH, flMtH.tl
Saw Oriassi lei lei** ■'■»•.l-u, lau.i City ,«tll KaSlia.pall. iUull ailleiaS Hiiitee Lm4m lySaij
Tell your dealer that
Curtlfl, Booth A Bentley Co., Oklahoma City
_are wholesale distributors ol Certain-teed Producta
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March, Clyde J. The Rocky News (Rocky, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1916, newspaper, May 18, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc937428/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.