The Supply Republican (Supply, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 29, 1921 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Fort Supply Republican and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Pore* brings new energy,
Inert Mod strsngth, and grsstst
sndursnes to ths w«k. wssrf
and worn out A't tsllsbls drug-
giata ban it—Get a bottle tods*.
Fbree
TONIC
VA.' Wo»fcrVtvbuildvr
A 1 PROFESSOR
ASK VERNON HENDRY
•novo UNIFORM DmWIATWNAl
Sunday School L
» Lesson* m
(By REV. t* B K1TZWATEK. D. D..
Taachar ot English Hlbls In Ihs Moody
Bible Inatllula of Chicago.)
Coiiyrlgbt. 1*11. W**t*rn N»w*s*i>«r Ualoa
THE REPUBLICAN. SUPPLY. OKLAHOMA
i CWul
Wichita Directory
n f today U what YOU want
Success| today i* what yoo can get
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIUI ltod*F wiUcometo you ii
today you begin hie nghL
How
R09-1I Browna Building, Wichita, Kana
machine work
Of all klndb WEEDING ANI) AUTO It'
pairing. Manufacturer* of Aratylrna gooara.
tora. 'ACM!N SW"*'
•IB W. lawla at. Wlchlla. Kaa
REPUBLIC TRUCKS
O. J. WATSON MOTOR CO.
Car. Daualaa and Waco St*. Wichita, Kana
SEWING MACHINES
”Aorric«"°i» snsisc.-'M
HRWIMI MACHINE EXCHANGE
(IIRanii l.l. Su.rt rk.aa a IW wuaiu. taaa
Ask Your Barbar for
Shaw'* Superior Quinine Hair Dreuing
/f'e Boiler
S.D. SHAW BARBF.K SUPPLY COMPANY
Wichita. Kanaaa
Gold Medal Crackers
Are Batter
Bay Them by I ha Can
Soatkwnt Cracker Ce. Wickite. Kama
Enter any time
Positions Secured
Wichita, Kana
LESSON FOR JANUARY 1
THE REVOLT OF JEROBOAM.
LEHBON TEXT-1 King* IJ 1 M.
UOl.DKN TEXT-Thou ohajl not make
unto Ihee any graven Image, or any Itts-
neoa of any thing that la In heaven above,
er that la In tha aarth beneath, or that
la In tha water under tha aarth, thou
ehall not bow down thyaelf unto them
nor aerve them —Ka. 20 t. A
KEFERKNCB M AT lilt IA L — I Hinge
u43. 13.17-14. au. II Ctiron. 12 and U.
lea 44 * 20.
■I'lUMAKf TOPIC—The Story of Two
Klnga.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Two Klnga Who tka-
obeyed Ood
INTEKMKDIATK AND SENIOR TOPIC
-Two Hinge Who Lost Their Opportunl-
YOUNO PBOPI.E AND ADULT TOPIC
—Induetrial Unrert and lie Cura.
The movements lending up to the
division of the kingdom begun during
Soloniou'g reign.
I. Tha People’a Demand (vv. 1-4).
This wan ontiloned by the burden
of excessive taxation and enforced
labor required by Solomon In ortler to
build root Iy houses and temples for
his heathen wives. Owing lo the mul-
tiplicity of Ids wives, tills tmenme very
burdensome. The people were groan-
ing under Its weight. Upon the ac-
cession of the new king, ltehoboam.
the people through their lender, Jero-
boam, came with the request that
their burdens he made lighter, promis-
ing loyalty to him on the condition of
lightened burdens.
II. Rehoboam’g Foolish Decision
(vv. 5-15).
rill
t 4
JILT NOT ALWAYS A FLIRT
In Fact, Writar Assarts, F*w of Tham
Daaerva tha Condamnation That
Thay Dacalva.
MOTHER! MOVE
CHILD’S BOWELS WITH
CAUFORNIA FIG SYRUP
j^Y-
W:
>■
©Awo"/*»W» Corner V 2*. A*"*’*’Ac* -
Camosns’ Oardan In Macao.
116 S. Lawrence
R AStl.Y MADE With
Dj c'aClilla Mixture—Tfca
MODERN CHILE MAKER
Free Information. Write
W. A. DYE. Wkkito. Am
Pitch, OraYel, Built-Up Asphalt
panil AnbeatoR Roofing applied
ef«
<Pr*i>tr*4 by th* National Oeographle So
clMy, WaBhlngton, D c.)
Two hills stretching to the sea so
us to form a charming hay, and be-
tween them an ancient, half-8panlsh,
wholly southern city; Its roofs tufted
with verdure, rising one above anoth-
er on terraced slopes; Its houses with
their once guy lints nil faded, Imsklng
In peaceful decrepitude In a sunshine
like that of June; the town fust
usleep; the harbor silting lip; the
wulls crumbling; the Iron gi.vtlngs
rusting; the pavements turning green;
...... .- , | | the gables nodding like old gruy heads,
1. ltehoboam consulted with t >e o d |i8teiilng to the same old sto-
Knntin? anywhere. Let u» refer you to
•tvviua^ our work near you.
SOUTHWESTERN ROOFING CO.
127 H S. UwranM Ava. Wichila. Km
Bosch Magneto
Sales and Service Station
We Repair All Makes of Magnetos
WICHITA MAGNETO COMPANY
•01 S. Merkel Wichita. Kaaa
Mrs. McCormick
Storage and Remodel
f 2271E Douglat, Phone 0-1*1
Wichita. Kwii.
yJttcnJ Dague
Salesmanship School
Politlonl Secured
WICHITA i KANSAS
STEIN BROS.
ItatfacMrer. F|NE FIRS
Coronado iioul _
1(M E. William St. WitkiM, IlU.
Did 3h. Admit It?
“Well, remarked a gentleman, after
a long argument on the question of
man's superiority over wotnun, “at
least there Is one good, *weet and per-
fect tiling which a man cun have and
a woman cannot."
“Never I" cried Ids wife, passionate-
ly “NeverI 1 deny Itl Wlmt do
you mean?"
“A wife."—The Scotsman.
Real Dilemma.
Parker—Wliut's wrong? You look
worried.
Streeter—1 am. I wrote two notes
—one to my broker, asking him If he
took me for a fool, and the other to
Miss Golding, asking her If she would
marry me. While 1 was out somebody
telephoned “Yes," anil I don't know
which of them It was!"
Cutlcura for Pimply Faces.
To remove pimples und blackheads
smear them with Cutlcura Ointment.
Wush off In five minutes with Cutl-
cura Soap and hot water. Once clear
keep your skin clenr by using them for
dully toilet purposes. Don't fall to In
elude Cutlcura Talcum. Advertisement
The Frank Man.
“And am 1 the only girl you have
ever—"
“Walt a minute, Molly. Rcfore you
ask me that, do you want me to lie
and (latter you. or tell you the truth
and sutlsfy your curiosity?"
men (vv. 5-7). He at once consulted
the old men of experience who hail
been Solomon's advisers. Being ac-
quainted with the conditions ns Im-
posed by Solomon, and knowing the
temper of the people, they advised
that the people's request be granted.
2. ltehoboam consulted the young
men who had grown up with him (vv.
$-11). These young men were most
likely half-brothers, sons of Solomon's
many wives. Being thus brought up
In the luxury of the hnrern, they were
Ignorant of the real rights of the peo-
ple; therefore they advised that the
burdens be Increased.
3. ltehoboam follows the advice of
the young men (vv. 12-15). At the ap-
pointed time he announced his pur-
pose to the people, lie answered them
roughly, asserting Ids purpose to In-
crease tlielr burdens and sorrows,
ltehoboam lost the great opportunity
of Ills life.
III. The Revolt of the Ten Tribe*
(vv. 16-24).
Upon ltehohoam's announcement of
his rash pur|H»se, all Israel cried out,
"What portion have we In David!
Neither have we an Inheritance in the
eon of Jesse: to your tents, O Israeli
Now see to thine own house, David."
Behoboam's attempt to collect tribute
from the ten tribes was met by ston-
ing Adoram, the tribute gatherer, so
that he died. Rehohoam's failure to
tieed the advice of experienced men
caused the work of two generations to
be undone In a moment.
IV. Jaroboam's Substitute Religion
(vv. 25 ;t:t).
1. He established calf-worship (vv.
25-33). (1) His pretext for (vv. 26, 27)
He feared lest the religious unity
should heal the political separation
Ills pica was that the people would
go back to Jerusalem to worship, and
therefore would gradually he led to
acknowledge allegiance to ltehoboam,
and his own life would be taken. This
act of his had Its root In his heart of
unbelief. Ood had promised through
the Prophet Ahljnh to build him
sure house, even as he had built for
David (I Kings 11:38). Hud he be-
lieved Ood, this fear would have been
dispelled. Jeroboam only used re-
ligion to secure personal ends. He
was too shrewd a politician to do
away with religion. He knew that re-
ligion was a powerful factor In man's
life. (2) The calves set up (vv. 28-30).
When Jeroboam set up these Idols he
said, "It Is too much for you to go up
to Jerusalem: behold thy gods. O
Israel, which brought thee up out of
Egypt." HU reltglou was the religion
of convenience.
2. His scheme of worship (vv.
81-83). (1) He built houses of high
places (v. 31). This was against the
dtrect conimnnd of God. (2) He made
priests of the lowest of the people
(v. 81). God had set aside the tribe
of Levi to fill the office of priesthood
In this again, he disobeyed God. (3)
tie changed the dH.v of the feast of
the tabernacle (v. 32). The time of
this fenst was set by Jehovnh (Lev.
23:88-34). (4) Jeroboam himself In-
trudes Into the priest's office (v. 33)
This act of presumption on his part
was the climax of his godless acts.
All this grew out of a wicked heart.
Taksn In Turn.
“Let's see. whom were we discus-
■lng?" “I forget I Who went out of
the dressing
Mali.
room lust?"—London
^ Morning — 1
Israel Turns From Moses.
Anil when the people saw that Moses
delayed to come down out of the
mount, the people gathered themselves
together unto Aaron, and said unto
him. Up, make us gods, which shall go
before us; for *s for this Moses, the
man that brought us up out of the
land of Egypt, we wot not what Is
become of him-—Exodus 32: L
eepVour Ey;es
b-4- 1 *#en.-l
Faith Is Substance of Things.
Is the substance of .things
for, tbe evidence of things not
Hebrew*. UP
rles—such Is Macao, the Fur Eastern
outpost of the Portuguese traders of
the Sixteenth century, the Monte Car-
lo of the Orient, mid one of Portugal's
few remaining jwissesslons In Pacific
waters.
Macao Is situated on the west side
of the Pearl river. Forty miles across
Is Hongkong; eighty-eight miles to the
north lies Canton, sent of the South
China government. Macao was found-
ed In 1557. Prior to 1887 there np-
penrR to have been no documentary
evidence of u formal cession of this
territory, the Portuguese claiming,
however, that they received It ns a
reward for destroying the horde of
Mongolian pirates that harried the
southern coast of China; and the re
nmlns of the old harrier across the
narrow neck of land separating the
peninsular town from the rest of the
Island of Heung Chan, and once guard-
ed by Chinese soldier*, gave color to
the Portuguese claim. However, all
doubts were laid to rest In 18S7 when
formal cession was made by China to
the Portuguese.
Macao's Rl*e and Fall.
So marvelous wns the growth and
prosperity of this Portuguese settle-
ment In Its youth that It excited the
envy of the enrly Dutch traders who
In 1622 attempted Its conquest. The
spot where the Dutch lender wns
killed by a round shot from Monte
fort, which wrote finis to that at-
tempt, Is now marked by n monument.
Macao continued to be a flourishing
mart up to 1841. the British East In-
dia company and the Dutch company
meanwhile obtaining n foothold there.
The British free trade propaganda of
the "Forties" excited a demand for a
free port nt Macao, to which the Por-
tuguese demurred. Great Britain then
secured the Hongkong concession,
made that a frae port In 1845, and
the decline of Mucnn as an entrepot
dates from that year.
Not only Is Macao the site of the
flrst Eurottean claim made on Chinese
soil, but It has cultural ties with Eu-
rope closer knit than the political re-
lationships of controverted areas to
the north. It contains the oldest ruin
In China that Is associated with Eu-
rope, and the tamarind and banyan
shade the gardens where the Por-
tuguese Chaimer, Cnmorns, composed
half of the Luslads, celebrating the
discoveries of the Portuguese explor-
ers who opened lip for the West the
secrets of the East. It Is one of the
half-dozen of the world's great epics.
Camoeni' Placs of Exile.
Luis de Cninoens, the star of Lusl-
tanlan poetry, became enamored of
Catharine d'Atnyadn, lady In-honor to
Queen Catlmrlna of Portugal, which
so enraged the king that he banished
the poet to Macno, nbout 1567, where
he remained for five years ns admin-
istrator of the effects of deceased per-
sons n melnncholy office for a poet
and lover. Returning In 1572, his ves-
sel was wrecked, his small savings
were lost, hut the poem which has
been translated Into every civilized
language was saved to an appreciative
posterity. A monument to Cninoens
marks tbe spot In the grotto where he
composed his noble epic.
Macao has snoozed peacefully away
on its Island In late years while con-
troversies have raged around the hand-
ful of other foreign holdings on the
Chinese coast. But recently the gov
ernment of Southern China is reported
to have demanded that there he a
“cleanup" In the city, a procedure,
which If carried out would entail rec-
ognition of the Southern China govern-
ment as flflfll as acceptance of Its right
to rule in what has long been consld
ered Portuguese territory.
Once In Mucao the traveler may re-
main to contemplate an out-of-thek
way shrine of European history. But
that Is not why most folk board the
dally boat from Hongkong to go there.
It Is a summer resort for the Canton-
ese becuuse of Its exposure to the
cooling monsoons In mld-suminer.
Opium smugglers and gamblers. In re-
cent years, have loomed large among
Its transients. Formerly the Chinese
coolie traffic also had a headquarters
here. Within a century Its waters may
have warranted the characterization
of one traveler who called them "the
most dangerous waters of the world
from a police standpoint," and added
“a river trip Is spiced with the risk
of piratical attack."
Revenues From Gambling.
The Ideas of Henry George and oth-
er tux theorists have found a niggard
soli In Macao, whose fiscal policy la
simplicity Itself. I'oo-chee and fan-
tan provide the revenues of the city.
It has been said that half the minted
pieces of the Far East find their way
sooner or Inter to the guinbllng boards
of Macao, and the old Illx dollar, the
Mexican peso, and the American dime
are clinked upon the tables of the
jeunesse doree, or of the 'rickshaw
coolies and harbor riff-raff of the town,
while a dully flow of men, women und
dollars crosses the estuary from Hong-
kong to Macao and pours Into the
hells of the Boa do Jogo, or gambling
street.
Fan-tan Is the favorite game, but It
Is nothing like the card game of that
name known to Americans. The Chi-
nese croupiers sit enthroned before a
square marked nt the corners with
the numbers 1, 2, 3 and 4. The hanker
reclines lielilnd a grating, smoking a
long pipe. Overhead Is n gnllery run-
ning all around the room and forming
a sort of ceiling, pierced only by a
hole the size of the table. From this
gnllery the bets are made, and the
stakes are alternately let down and
drawn up, accompanied by the sound
of drawling minstrelsy.
The croupier takes a handful of
small coins and covers them with a
reversed bowl, while money Is laid
on one of the four numbers. When
the betting has ceased be lifts the
bowl and separates the coins with his
wand. Then he counts them by fours,
and the remainder, or the lust four,
If there be no remainder, represents
the winning number. Each huzard Is
a one-to-three wager, and the hunks
pny on that basts, after deducting the
house tvercentage. A number of these
licensed gambling dens, graded accord-
ing to the limit of wager allowed, pay
the revenues of the city of Macao.
Attractive to Travelers.
Present dny Macao Is not marred
for the casual traveler by either Its
flair for fan-tan or Its thriving trade
In opium. The latter Is shipped away
to wreak Its havoc; the former brings
the bizarre and the adventurous. The
city of today Is one of the few Far
Eastern coast towns which have not
been caught In the resistless current
of commercial progress, and for that
reason It presents some Interesting
studies to lovers of the picturesque.
He who lands from a steamer Is
captivated by Its blend of Portuguese
nnd Chinese people, by pagoda and
western church, nnd when the sum-
mons of hunger lends him to a hotel
that has been called the cleanest and
most beautifully sltunted In the Or-
ient, the contrast persists. He may
order the famous Portuguese colnres
with his yellow water chestnut pasties,
and choose either ultra-qccldentnl
game dinners or pudding of cdkgula ed
duck's blood nnd sugar-preserved bam-
boo shoots. There ure but 4,000 Por-
tuguese resident there, but they rep-
resent a four-century Impress that
their nationality lias made upon th*
total population of about 75,000.
After dinner tbe visitor may stroll
nlong the l’raya Grande, both the
Broadway nnd the Iliverslde drive of
Mneuo. Having shopped and slummed,
he Anally will be led to catch the
deeper romance of the city tn the
grotto where the poets have carved
lines of praise to the one-eyed soldier
poet who wrote the glory of farthest
West Europe on an Island of nearly
farthest East China.
The psychologist, or mind doctor,
lees love as a disease or affection of
the mind. Not a disease In the phys-
ically destroying sense, but an obses-
sion or overcrowding of Ideas and
emotions in one particular direction.
Most persons think that the “Jilt"
la a heartless flirt. As a fact, among
many lovers who suddenly put a full
atop to ‘heir love affairs, there are
few of the callous type.
As a rule, psycho-analysts sny, the
"Jilt" Is often at a loss to know why
he or she has ended without a word
of wanting the sweet association with
another, which should have reached
Its perfection In murriage.
All the psycho-analyst can do Is to
explain to these lovers why they act-
ed as they did, and remove from tlielr
harassed minds the Idea that they are
(It only for lunatic asylums.
When a person falls In love certnln
Ideas and emotions form In the brain.
Tbi'se emotions all center round the
object of attraction. As the love In-
tensifies these Ideas become "massed”
as It were; they grow In strength, very
often subduing whole parts of the lov-
er's personality and obliterating even
deeply rooted principles. At certain
stages of his passion he Is certainly
not himself.
The sudden reversion which com-
pletely wl|>es out the state of love and
causes him to Jilt his sweetheart may
come from a variety of causes. What
sometimes happens Is similar to thut
which occurs when n seasoned toper
suddenly takes to religion, or a man
of fixed principles unaccountably
chnnges his politic*.
Some seemingly trivial Incident sends
Its message to the deepest recesses of
the mind and stirs Into violent activ-
ity his store of hidden but sleepless
memories. To put It In another way,
the mental “haze" of love Is dispelled
and the mind Is deluged with sanity.
The love that grows upon the rock
of quiet friendship and mutual appre-
ciation has nothing to fear.—Ex-
change.
Important French Discovery.
It has been claimed thut the beauty
of old oil paintings Is enhanced by the
darkening of the pigments which oc-
curs In the course of centuries. This
clnlm bus been contested, but the ques-
tion has never been settled. A discovery
by tbe French scientist, M. t’lerre
Lambert, lias tuude It possible to view
paintings us they originally appeared,
by means of polarized light, says an
Illustrated article In the Popular Me-
chanics Maguzlne. An Intense light
from an nrc or Incandescent lump of
Sow voltage Is Inclosed In a luntern
provided with u condenser, followed by
a lens which makes the rays parallel
during tlielr pnssage through the polar-
izing apparatus, a Nlcol prism. A dl
verging lens then eulurges the pencil
of luminous rays and lights up the
entire picture, the plane of which Is
almost normal to the axis. The ob-
server, looking through the Nlcol prism,
Is able to And a position In which the
superficial reflections are completely
suppressed. Old dull pictures become
perfectly distinct, colors more Inteuse,
•nd the details otherwise almost In-
visible nRsume the value they had
when originally painted.
Hurry, mother I Even • sick child
loves the ‘fruity" Uste of "California
Fig Syrup" and it never fills to open
the bowels. A teaspoooful today may
prevent a sick child tomorrow. If con-
stipated, bilious, feverish, fretful, ban
cold, colic, or If atomach Is sour,
tongue coated, breath bad, remember a
good cleansing of the little bowels la
often all that Is necessary.
Ask your druggist for genuine “CalW
fomln Fig Syrup" which has directions
for babies aud children of all age*
printed on bottle. Mother I You must
say “California' or you may get aa
Imitation fig syrup.—Advertisement
NEWTON’S THEORY WRONG?
Idea Held for More Than Two Huiw
dred Years I* Vigorously Com-
bated at Erroneous
Here Is a test for one kind of Intel-
lectuality. From July 1 to January 1
the earth falls about 3,000,000 mill?*
toward the sun to perihelion; then
from Janunry 1 to July 1 tills weight
of heavy earth moves upward from
the sun the 3.000.000 miles to the
starting point again. This movement
toward nnd from the sun takes place
every year.
This Is the third century that nma
has been taught by Sir Isnnc Newton’*
theory to believe that the sun attract*
the earth so fust In this fall of 3,000,-
000 miles from July 1 to January 1
as to cause this great weight to rush
pust the sun nt perihelion and to rise
up from the sun 3,000,000 miles from
January 1 to July 1, to tbe starting
point again.
Any man who believes this Idea ha*
missed the truth, and as long us he
believes It he never can be able to un-
derstand the simple truth that ex-
plains electricity, magnetism nnd th*
cause of all changes of weather.
The Idea of the sun's attraction pull-
ing the earth fast enough to cause It
to go past the sun and move upward
from the sun to the original height
from which It started Is an Ignorant
Idea akin to those Ideas of misguided
people who tinker with perpetual mo-
tion machinery. It Is a blight on In-
tellectuality.
The effect of this erroneous Idea—
whose authorship was scrambled over
by Hooke and Newton—which has been
exploited over 200 years, has been to
retnrd the progress of all physical
sciences, because the true explanation
of the cause of the earth's movements
Is the fundamental principle upon
which nil physical sciences depend.
Here Is a sample of the public opin-
ion of a couple of centuries:
Nature and Nature's laws lay hid ta
night
God said. "Let Newton be”—and all was
light.
The world Is so good-natured that
It lets Its good nature get away with
Its good sense.—D. A. N. Grover, in
the New York Sun.
Floating Palaca.
The most extravagantly appointed
yacht, writes a yachting correspond-
ent, I ever sailed in wns the wooden
Eleanor, owned by a Mr. Sinter. She
cost over $2,000,000, and a description
would baffle a far abler pen thnn mine.
I shall never forget my sensntlons the
flrst time I peered Into the kitchen.
The walls nnd the floors, being all
silver-plated, made me think for the
moment that I was on board the yacht
Monte Crlsto. The bathroom for vis-
itors was of real silver; that fitted In
the servants' qunrters electro-plated,
The vessel was Just like a hotel; there
was n steam laundry, a machine for
the manufacture of Ice, a slaughter-
house and a billiard room so hung ns
to be quite steady unli*ss there wus a
heavy sea on. The yacht actually
boasted a smoklug room, a Btudlo, a
library and t large nursery.—Ex-
change.
Give a womnn hnlf n chance and she
Fashions In Eating.
Etiquette Is a strange affair. It
changes so indisputably that what In
one century will be called polite. In
another will be dubbed the climax of
vulgarity. Take that simple matter,
for example, the drinking of tea from
the saucer. When tea was .first used.
It was drunk from a dish. In old col-
lections of china many of these quaint
pieces will be found; they are shallow
baslDS devoid of bandies altogether.
Then someone Introduced cups with
handles and saucers. Old-fashioned
folk did not care for them, and as a
protest they poured their tea Into tb#
saucer, and drank from It there, hark-
ing back as far as they could to tha
old beloved “dish.” But as to be old-
fashioned Is usually an unpardonable
social crime, people who were up-to-
date determined that to drink from
the saucer was a vulgar habit, Just as
bad as eating with a knife—a custom
you will see very admirably brought-
up persons practice abroad, and ba
thought none the worse for It either.
No man who has an automobile
needs a hobby to occupy hls leisure
time.
Dyspepsln sours a lot of the milk at
will proceed to boast of her ailments, human kindness.
u
[ravii*:
H. C. L. Pinches King George.
Owing to Increased expenses, King
George hns found It necessary during
the past few years to supplement the
Income he receives from the state out
of bl* private resource*
Never say “Aspirin” without saying “Bayer.”
WARNING! Unless you see name "Bayer” on tablets,
you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by
physicians over 21 years and proved safe by millions for,
Colds Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions.
Handy tla box as ol II tablets— Bottlss of *4 and 100— All druggists,
gapirto la «*• MS* Mi* eg kin tUaateaUM at M*mmmU*ci4*M** W S«ll«yl»—SM
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View two places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Cox, Ed F. The Supply Republican (Supply, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 29, 1921, newspaper, December 29, 1921; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc951062/m1/6/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.