The May Bugle. (May, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1914 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Buffalo/May Bugle and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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SYNOPSIS.
Percy Par row, yountf »rl«>nM*t In
■nureh of u Jot), entern Hie office or
••It,,ms" Mefnrthy of York. Mc-
Carthy tins Just been br-aten*^ Y "
iinunymoui ni«*wiK« ordering blm to <!_•
t„ Europe. Ho < om not take the n o
mi«e m piously Harrow K »* J P >’•
elevator to try for u position with I r.
Knox Btnl.lenly the , tectrlc apparatu*
In the Atlas building go.* out of husi
ness. Expert* are unable ''.loon 8 ^
trouble All nt once, without apparent
reus,in, electric connection* are ra*tor,,'.|,
The next evening McCarthy '»
that unless he leave* at oncc for l.o' 0
ii Mtirn will b6 sent him fit six I rompi
1v at that hour the entire electric appar-
atus of New York Is cut off. ' "r‘f
row thinks he has a clue. H! , *
the help of Jack Warford. a college ath
lets They visit McCarthy and offei to
run' down the cause of hi* "W"1'' fun-
trouble. McCarthy ha* Just received an
other warning by wireless. At six a
deathly stillness falls on theAtlasbund
lug Plotting out all sound Next day th
whole town Is thrown Into darkness an
oil hearing suspended. I rof
the noted scientist, becomes Interested In
the phenomena. Harrow's theory Ik that
the man who Is sending the warnings has
discovered Home force by which he
cut through the vibrations of electricity,
light and sound. McCarthy has dlsap
peered. Harrow place* Eldrldge In P '
session of all the facts In the case and of
Ids own theories In relation thereto and
challenges him to solve the mystery.
More terrifying messages come. I ar-
row, through the newspapers features
the people. He fears the Unknown will
stop the vibrations of heat which would
mean complete annihilation of a_ lire,
animal and vegetable. The "n '™n
threatens to wipe out the city T hous
ands of people ties. Harrow sits non-
chalantly receiving wireless messages In
McCarthy's office while Eldrldge experi-
ments with the purpose of locating tn<
TTnknown. Eldrldge's experiments fall
The city Is thrown again Into a panic anil
everyone Is trying to escape. The mayor
and some of his cohorts are found frozen
to death In the eltv hall while In tbe
midst of a crooked deal. A message from
the Unknown threatens death to all in
three hours Harrow declares the time
to act has come. A reign of terror pre-
vails In the City. Eldrldge admits to the
committee of capitalists that he has fatt-
ed. Harrow brings Into the office an In-
sane old man whom he Introduces as the
Unknown, and whom he had captured tn
the office next to McCarthy's.
terles. a man can absolutely slop vi-
bration of either heat, Bound, light, or
electricity length. It Is entirely a ques-
tion of simple formulas. Hero they
are.”
Ho held out four closely written
pages bound together with manuscript
fasteners.
‘‘No man has ever before attained
this knowledge or this power,” went
on Harrow, lifter a moment; “and
probably never agalji In the history of
the race will exactly this combination
of luck and special talent occur. These
four pages are unique.”
He laid them on the edge of the
table, produced a cigarette, lighted It,
picked up the four pages of formulas,
and held the burning match to their
edges. The flame caught, flared up
the flimsy paper. Harrow dropped the
burning corners as it ecorched his An-
gers. It fell to the floor-, flickered,
and was gone.
Jack leaped forward with an excla-
mation of dismay. The old man bound
to tlie chair did not wink, but Btared
straight in front of him, his eyes fixed
like those of an owl or a wildcat.
“For God’s sake, Harrow!” cried
Jack Warford. “Do you know what
you have done?”
"Perfectly,” replied Darrow calmly.
"This is probably the greatest achieve-
ment of the scientific Intellect; but It
must go. It would give to men an
unchecked power that belongs only to
the gods.”
without the slightest hesitation. Hut
aa I told him at the time, a man. must
have Imagination and human sympa-
thy to gut next to this sort of thing.
“Leaving all science aside, for the
moment, what do wo And In the mes-
sages to McCarthyT First, a command
to leave within a specified and brief
period; second, a threat in case of
disobedience. That threat was always
carried out.”
Harrow turned to Mrs. Warford.
"With your permission, l should like
to smoke,” snld ho. “I can follow my
thought better.”
"lty all means,” accorded the lady.
Harrow lighted his clxarette, puffed
a moment, and continued:
“For Instance, at three o'clock he
threatens to send a ‘sign’ unless Mc-
Carthy leaves town by six. McCarthy
doeB not leave towti. Promptly at six
the ‘elgn’ comes. What do you make
of It?”
Nobody stirred.
"Why," resumed Darrow, "how, If
Monsieur X was a hundred miles or
so uway, as Eldrldge figured, did tie
know that McCarthy had not obeyed
him? We must suppose, from the
probable fact of that knowledge, that
either Monsieur X had an accomplice
who was keeping him informed, or
he must be near enough to get the In-
forpiation himself.”
"There is a third possibility,” broke
in Jack. "Monsieur X might have sent
along his ’sign’ at six o’clock, any-
how, just for general results."
Darrow nodded his approval.
"Good boy, Jack,” said he. "That Is
just the point 1 could not be sure
about. Hut finally, at the time, you
will remember, when I predicted Mc-
Carthy’s disappearance, Monsieur X
made a definite threat. He said,” ob-
served Harrow, consulting one of the
bundle of papers he held in his hand:
"My patience Is at an end. Your
last warning will be sent you at nine-
CHAPTER XXII.—Continued.
Ho proceeded carefully and method-
ically to carry out his expressed In-
tention. When he had finished the
task he heaved a deep sigh of relief.
"I’m glad you feel that way, too,”
said Jack. "1 didn’t know what might
not happen."
"Mo. either,” confessed Darrow
"But now I think we’re safe.”
He proceeded on a methodical
search through the Intricacies of the
apparatus. For a time Jack followed
him about, but after a while wearied
of so profitless an occupation, and so
took to smoking on the window-ledge.
Darrow extended his Investigations to
the bookcase, and to a drawer tn the
deal table. For over two hours he
sorted notes, compared, and rumi-
nated. his brows knit In concentra-
tion. Jack did not try to Interrupt
him. At the end of the time Indicated,
the scientist looked up and made some
trivial remark.
“Got it?” asked Jack.
“Yes.” replied Darrow soberly. He
reflected for several minutes longer;
then moved to the window and looked
out over the city. Absolutely motion-
less there he stood while the night
fell, oblivious alike to the roar and
crash of the Increasing panic and to
the silent figures in the darkened room
behind him. At last he gave a sigh,
walked quietly to the electric light,
and turned it on.
"It's the biggest thing—and the slm-
pleet—the world has ever known In
physics, Jack.” said he, “but it’s got
to go.”
"What?” asked Jack, rousing from
the mood of waiting Into which he had
CHAPTER XXIII.
How It All Was.
For his share in the foregoing Percy
Darrow was extensively blamed. It
was universally conceded that his ac-
tion tn permitting Monsieur X to con-
tinue his activities up to the danger
point was inexcusable. The public
mind should have been reassured long
before. Much terror and physical suf-
fering might thus have been avoided—
not to speak of financial loss. Scien-
tific men, furthermore, went frantic
over his unwarranted destruction of
the formulas. Percy Darrow was va-
riously described as a heartless mon-
ster and a scientific vandal. To these
aspersions he paid no attention what-
ever.
Helen Warford, however, became
vastly Indignant and partisan, and In
consequence Percy Harrow’s course In
the matter received from her its full
credit for a genuine altruism. Hal-
lowell, also, held persistently to this
point, as far as his editors would per-
mit him, until at last, the public mind
was somewhat calmed, attention was
more focused on the means by which
the man had reached his conclusions
rather than on the use of them he
had made.
The story was told three times by
its chief actor: once to the newspa-
pers, once to the capitalists from whom
he demanded the promised reward,
and once to the Warfords. This last
account was the more detailed ahd
Interesting.
It was of a late afternoon again.
The lamps were lighted, and tea was
forward. Helen was manipulating the
cups, Jack was standing ready to pass
them. Mr. and Mrs. Warford sat in
the background listening, and Darrow
lounged gracefully lu front of the fire.
“From the beginning!” Helen was
commanding him, 'and expect Inter-
ruptions.”
"Well," began Darrow, “it’s a little
difficult to get started. But let's be-
gin with the phenomena themselves.
I’ve told you before, how. when 1 was
In Jail, 1 worked out their nature and
Powdered the
Sill of the
T alcum.
Do^r With
thirty this morning. If you do not
sail on the Celtic at noon, I shall
strike,’ and so forth. The Celtic sailed
at noon, without McCarthy. At twelve-
thirty came the first message to the
people calling on them to deliver up
the ‘traitor that is among you.’ How
did Monsieur X know that McCarthy
had not sailed on the Celtic? The an-
swer Is now unavoidable: either an
accomplice must have sent him word
to that effect, or he must have deter-
mined the fact for himself.
“I eliminated the hypothesis of an
accomplice on the arbitrary ground of
plain common sense. They don’t grow
two such crazy men at once; and one
crazy man Is naturally too suspicious
to hire help. I took It for granted.
Had to make a guess somewhere; but,
contrary to our legal friends, I be-
lieve that enough coincidences indi-
cate a certainty. But if Monsieur X
himself saw the Celtic sail without
McCarthy, and got back to his instru-
ment within a half-hour, it was evi-
dent he could not be quite so far away
as Eldrldge and the rest of them
thought."
“One thing.” spoke up Jack, “I often
wondered what you whispered to Sim-
mons to Induce him to pass those mes
sages over to you. Mind telling?”
| "Not a bit Simmons is an excep-
tional man. He has nerve and Intel
| ligence. 1 Just pointed out to him the
possibility that Monsieur X might
have control over heat vibrations. He
saw the public danger at *>nce, and
1 realized that McCarthy’s private
the "fact that'they ^ must* draw'their rights in those messages had suddenly
power from some source that could be become very etna . m
exhausted or emptied. You have read Jack nodde ’° R oa ’
Eldrldge's reasoning as to why he “I had already,’ proceeded Darrow
thought Monsieur X was at a distance j "found out where the next wireless
and on a height. He took as the ; 8ta,um
To do so I did not have to loave my
chair. The papers did it for me. They
took pains to establish the farthest
points to which these modern plaguee
of Manhattan reuebed.”
Darrow selected several clippings
from his bundle of papers.
“Here are reports Indicating High-
bridge. Corona, Flatbush, Morrlsanla,
Fort Lee, Bay Ridge as the farthest
points at which the phenomena were
manifested. It occurred to nobody to
connect these points with a pencil
line. If that line Is made curved, In-
stead of straight. It will be found to
constitute a complete circle wboBe
center Is the Atlas Building!”
The uudienco broke Into exclama-
tions.
’’Going back to my former Impree-
slons, I remembered that the pall of
blackness extended this far and that
far In the various directions, so that
it required not much imagination to
visuulize itaus a sphere of darkness.
And strangely enough the center of
that sphere seemed to be located
somewhere near the floor on which was
Installed the United Wireless instru-
ments. It at once became probable
that what we may call the nullifying
impulses radiated in all directions
through the ether from their sending
Instrument.
"Next 1 called upon the janitor of
the Atlas Building, representing my-
self as looking for a suitable office
from which to conduct my investiga-
tions. In this manner I gained admis-
sion to all unrented offices. All were
empty. I then aeked after the one
next door, but was told it was rented
as a storeroom by an eccentric,gen-
tleman now away on his travels. That
was enough. I now knew that we had
to do with a man next door, and not
miles distant, as purely scientific rea-
soning would seem to prove.”
“But Professor Eldrldge’s experi-
ments—” began Jack.
"1 am coming to that,” interrupted
Darrow. "When Eldrldge began to
call up Monsieur X, that gentleman
answered without a thought of suspi-
cion; nor was he even aware of the
very Ingenious successive weakenings
of the current. In fact, as merely the
thickness of a roof separated his re-
ceiving instrument from the wires
from which the messages were sent,
it Is probable that Eldrldge might
have weakened hie current down prac-
tically to nihil, and still Monsieur X
would have continued to get his mes-
sage.”
"Wouldn’t he have noticed the
sending getting weaker?” asked Jack
shrewdly.
"Not until the very last. Our send-
ing must have made a tremendous
crash, anyway, and he probably read it
by sound through the wall.”
“But at about the fifty-mile limit of
sending jve lost him,” objected Jack.
"You mean at about two o’clock In
the morning,” amended Darrow.
Eh? Yes, It was about two. But
how did he get on to what Eldridge
was doing?”
He read It In the paper,” replied
Darrow. “At twelve the reporters
left. At a little before two our enter-
prising friend, the Despatch, issued
an extra In Its usual praiseworthy ef-
fort to enlighten the late Broadway
jag. Monsieur X read it, and knew
exactly what was up.”
‘How do you know?”
’Because I read the extract my-
self.”
“But even then?”
“Then he began to pay more atten-
tion. It was easy enough to fake
when he knew what was doing. For
all I know, he could hear Eldridge
giving his directions.”
The company present ruminated
over the disclosures thus far made.
"About the City Hall affair?” asked
Helen finally.
“I used to sit where I could com-
mand the hall,” eaid Darrow, "and,
therefore. I was aware that Monsieur
X never left his room. To make the
matter certain, I powdered the sill
of the door with talcum, which I re-
newed every day after the cleaners.
You remember we got to talking very
earnestly In the hall, so earnestly that
I, for one, forgot to watch. When I
realized my remissness, I saw that the
powder on the sill had been disturbed,
that Monsieur X had gone out. ^
"My first thought then was to warn
the people. To that end I was on my
way to the Despatch office when sheer
chance switched me Into the City Hall
tragedy. 1 possessed myself of the
apparatus—"
"That was the square black bag!”
cried Jack.
"Of course- and hustled hack to tl»e
Atlas Building You can bet I was
relieved when I found that Monsieur X
had returned to his lair.”
"Talcum disturbed ugain?” asked
Jack.
"Freclsely."
"And the black bag?"
"Contained merely a model wireless
apparatus with a clockwork arrange-
ment set to clotte the circuit at a cer-
tain time. That is why Monsieur X
was not Involved In his own catas-
trophe.”
"I see!”
"Then all I had to do was to sit still
and wait for him to become danger-
ous.”
"How did you dare to take such
chanceB?" cried Helen.
"I took no chances," answered I)ar-
“Dou’t you see? If he were to
row.
attempt to destroy the city, he mur.t
either Involve himself In the destruc-
tion, or he must set another bit of
clockwork. If he had left his office
again 1 should have seized him, broken
into the office, and smashed the appa-
ratus.”
’But he was crazy,” spoke up Mrs
Warford. "How could you rely on his
not Involving himself In the general
destruction?”
“Yes, why did you act when you
did?” seconded Helen.
“As long as he held to his notion of
getting hold of McCarthy,” explained
Darrow, "he had a definite object in
life, his madness had a definite outlet
—he was harmless. But the last mes-
sage showed that his disease had pro-
gressed to the point where McCarthy
was forgotten. His mind had risen to
a genuine frerfzy. He talked of gen-
eral punishments, great things. At
last he was in the state of mind of the
religious fanatic who lacerates his
flesh and does not feel the wound.
When he forgot McCarthy, I knew it
was time to act. Long since I had
provided myself with the requisite
key. You know the rest.”
Flame Caught, Flared
Flimay Paper.
loyally
turmoil
rted a
Up the
,e of the
•omblaed
I definite
fas
by
nliiar *u!
which n
►nr*. Th
i
* common f i jerlmenl
sound* * ill produce a
is just like that By
means of this, within the radius of bis
sending instrument and for a period
pf time np to the capacity of U.» bat
on a
basis of his reasoning one fact in con-
nection with the wireless messages
we were receiving—that they were
faint, and therefore presumably far
distant or sent by a weak battery. He
neglected, or passed over as an im-
portant item of tuning, the further
fact that the instrument In the Atlas
Building was the only instrument to
receive Monsieur X's messages.
“Now, that fact might be explained
either on the very probable supposi-
tion that our receiving Instrument
happened in what we may call Its un-
dertones to be the only one tuned to
the sending instrument of Monsieur
X: or it might be because our Instru-
ment was uearer Monsieur X’s Instru-
ment than any other. This was un-
likely because of the quality of the
sound—It sounded to the expert op-
erator as th<
lance. Ncv*
hiiity. Take
n^Arij io ire
ather. Tbet
other.
rictlj
A NURSE TAXES
DOCTOR’S ADVICE
Paid is Restored to Health by
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound.
Euphemia, Ohio.-'4 Because of total
Ignorance of how to care for myself
when verging into womanhood, and from
taking cold when going to school, I suf-
•ered from a displacement, and each
rionth I had severe pains and nausea
which always meant a lay-off from work
for two to four days from the time 1
was 16 years old.
“I went to Kansas to live with my sis-
ter and while there a doctor told mo of
the Pinkhani remedies but I did not use
them then as my faith in patent medi-
cines was limited. After my sister died
I came home to Ohio to live and that
has been my home for the last 18 years.
“The Change of Life came when 1 was
47 years old and about this time I saw
my physical condition plainly described
in one of your advertisements. Then I
began using Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound and I cannot tell you
or any one the relief it gave mo in the
first three months. It put me right
where I need not lay off every month
and during the last 18 years I have not
paid out two dollars to a doctor, and have
been blest with excellent health for a wo*
woman of my age and I can thank Lydia
E. Pinkham’sVcgetable Compound for it.
“Since the Change of Life is over I
have been a maternity nurse and being
wholly self-supporting I cannot over
estimate the value or good health. I
have now earned a comfortable little
home just by sewing and nursing. I
have recommended the Compound to
many with good results, as it is excel-
lent to take before and after child-
birth.”— Miss Evelyn Adelia Stew-
art, Euphemia, Ohio.
If you want special advice write to
Lydia E. Piukham Medicine C'o. (confi-
dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence.
CHAPTER XXIV.
What Happened Afterward.
There remains only to tell what be-
came of the various characters of the
tale.
McCarthy, on whom the action start-
ed, returned, but never regained his
political hold. Darrow always main-
tained that this was only the most ob-
vious result of his policy of delaying
the denouement. People had been
forced to think seriously of such mat-
ters; and, when aroused, the public
conscience is right.
Darrow demanded, and received, the
large money reward for his services in
the matter. Pocketing whatever blame
the public and his fellow scientists
saw fit to hand out to him, he and Jack
Warford disappeared In command of
a small schooner. The purpose of the
expedition was kept secret; ite direc-
tion was known only to those most in-
timately concerned. If it ever returns,
we may know more of it.
’ Eldrldge went on being a scientist,
exactly as before.
Simmons received a gold medal, a
large cash sum, any amount of news-
paper space, and an excellent oppor-
tunity to go on a vaudeville circuit.
Hallowell had his salary raised; and
received in addition that rather vague'
brevet title of “star reporter.”
Helen Warford Is still attractive and
unmarried. Whether the latter condl
tion ie only pending the return of the
expedition is not known.
As for the city, it has gone back to
its everyday life, and the riffles on the
surface have smoothed themselves
away. In outside appearances every-
thing is as before. Yet for the present
generation, at least, the persistence of
the old indpendent self-reliance of the
people is assured. They have been
tested, and they have been made to
think of elemental things seriously
For some time to come the slow pro-
cess for standardization has been ar-
rested.
(THE END.)
Have Thought for Deities.
While repairing a temple the Chi
nese cover up the eyes of the idols.
In order that the deities may not be
offended at the sight of disorder.
gh It cam*
> from a
die-
iheleaa. it
w a» a p<
)SSl‘
by itself.
it was
not
d a posstb
illty aa
tbe
*■*
*.•
number of other
considerations of
I do oot hesitate to
##jr tin
by th<
ftbouM
e wer* &
•CifHltlfic
D pOftlOCl.
t tf I had been influenced only
> scientific considerations. I
ka*e followed Kidridgea lead
is located. Monsieur X must
be nearer the Atlas station than to
this other. It was. therefore, easy to
draw a comparatively small circle i
within which he must be located.”
"So far so good.” said Helen, "How :
did you Anally come to the conclusion
that Monsieur X was in the next of- ;
flee?”
“Do you remember,” Darrow asked !
Jack, “how the curtain of darkness
hung about ten or twelve feet inside i
the corridor of the Atlas Building?”
“Sure,” replied Jack.
“And do you remember that while
the rest of you. Including Eldridge.
were occupied rather childishly with ,
the spectacular side of it. 1 had dis-
appeared inside the blackness?-
’•Certainly."
“Well, in that time I determined the
exact extent of the phenomena. I
found that it extended In a rough
circle. And when I went outside and
looked up—something every one else
was apparently too buay to do—I *i*
ihnt this phenomenon of darkness also
extended above the building, out into
open space. At the moment i noted
the fact merely, and tried to fix in
my own mind approximately the dt-
rnenskms. Then here ts another point'
when the city wide phenomena took
Korea.
Korea has practically become a part
of the Japanese empire. At any rate
the Japanese control in that country
Is complete, and the chances are that
that control will never be withdrawn
—not, at least, until Russia dominates
the whole Asian mainland, if that
time ever comes. The population of
Korea is 12,000,000, and the area 82,-
000 square miles; nearly *wice that of
the state of New Yura..
JUDGE CURED, HEART TROUBLE.
I took about 6 boxes of Dodds Kid-
ney Pills for Heart Trouble from
which I had suffered for 6 years. I
had dizzy spells, my eyes puffed,
my breath was
short and I had
chills and back-
ache. I took the
pills about a year
ago and have had
no return of the
palpitations. Am
now 63 years old,
able to do lots of
manual labor, am
and weigh about
Judge Miller,
well and hearty
200 pounds. I feel very grateful that
I found Dodds Kidney Pills and you
may publish this letter if you wish. I
am serving my third term as Probate
Judge of Gray Co. Yours truly,
PHILIP MILLER, Cimarron, Kan.
Correspond with Judge Miller about
this jvonderful remedy.
Dodds Kidney Pills, 60c. per box at
your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co.,
Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household
Hints, also music of National Anthem
(English and German words) and re-
cipes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free.
Adv.
In most cases the milk of human
kindness yields more buttermilk than
butter.
W. L.D
UCLAS
LIKE SO MUCH “DEAD HORSE"
Man Who Paid Debt With Check Will
Die In the Belief That He Has
Settled Twice.
A man made a bet with his wife—
which was indiscreet.
The wife w-on—which was foreor-
dained.
Which is why the driver asked the
cashier to ask the grocer to ask the
man's wife to ask her husband to
write a duplicate check. Which is
why the man feels like he Is paying
that bet twice.
Pure Fiction.
“We enjoyed your visit so much."
“Say. Central. I’ve been waiting
The man wrote the wife a check for j minutes.
$5 tn payment of the bet—which was
sad.
The wife cashed the check nt the
grocery, but forgot to endorse It—
which was natural
Tbe grocer, despite the lack of en-
dorsement. paid tt to a packing house
collector— which was careless
The packing house collector turned all summer.
It m—which was all .in a day s work. “I’ve got
A packing house office man diacov- night “
ere,; tbe lack of endorsement—which
was good "vork
He handed it hack to the driver and
docked the driver's salary—which was
system
Tbe driver placed tbe check in his
white duck coat and sent it to the
laundry—which was unwise.
The laundry mntilated tbe check be-
a hat that cost less
My wife and I never had a word
with each other.*1
“I never wore
than I S3.”
“I've had only one drink today."
“I never put myself out for com-
pany"
“We did not have a fly in the house
to meet a customer to-
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY
WEARING W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES.
For 31 ye;\r* W. L. Dou*rla* hn» MuaranUred th#
value by having his name and tne retail price
■tamped on the sole before th** shoes leave the foe-
tory. This protects the wearer »«raln*t high price*
for toferror shoo* of other make*. W.L. Doug's*
»hoe» are always worth what you pay for them, if
you coaid see l ow carefully XV . 1. Douglas shoes at*
Iliad*, and the high grad* leathers used, you would then
understand why they look better. 81 better, hold theif
shape and wear longer than other makes tor the price.
If the W. I. Dons.as shoes are not for sale tn 5 our
Ttctnity.order direct from factory. Shoes sent eyery-
wheie. Postage tree in ihe t\ h. VX rite l«>r I llue-
triat e.l t'Htales showing how to order by mail
W. L. DOUGLAS, ilii Spark St., Brockton.Maa*.
A GOOD COMPLEXION
EUiMNTEED. USE ZONA POMADE
the beauty powder compressed with healing
agents, you will never be annoyed by pun-
pies, blackheads or facial blemishes. If
not satisfied attar thirty davs' trial your
dealer will exchange for 50c m other goods.
Zona has satisfied for twenty years—try it
at our risk. At dealers or mailed. 50c.
have trouble keeping ZOKA COMPAIT. V!CH!T1. KANSAS
place, 1 again dntnrmfotU Unix ax tent- ( > ond recognition—mtucU wng nnviae
\Y e never
servant*.“
“I was reared In luxury and refine-
ment."
“When the baby came their happi-
ness wa* complete "—Smart Sec
When a woman denounces the rosatp
habit, she usually goes far enough to
name those who ought to quit u.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
A « <*f tt +t t*
iMMaxmie tAMtrvC.
Ftf R flilRmi Cfliflf mmd
ity tsCrtf «r TmdmA HsAr*
a .1 >• »'S'. . Ft*
W. N. U- WICHITA. NO.
Way, Oklahoma
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Farmers' and Business Men's Co-Operative Association. The May Bugle. (May, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1914, newspaper, November 5, 1914; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc941165/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.