The Choctaw Herald. (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 21, 1915 Page: 3 of 4
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HARNESS AND SADDLES
Our shop is equipped to turn out better and quicker
work on Harness and Saddles. Expert shoe repair
men. We handle a complete line of Harness, Oil, etc.
Mail orders receive prompt attention.
Frazier Bros. Shoe Shop
103 1-2 Jackson Street
HUGO, OKLA.
COMB SAGE TEA IN
LIFELESS, GRAY
Look young! Common garden Sage
and Sulphur darkens so naturally
nobody can tell
Grist
Mill
Started
I have started the prist mill on
West Main Street, Hugo, and
am ready to make your meal
and chops. Will take toll of cash
Bring Your Corn In
Co-Operative
Milling Co.
Grandmother kept her hair beautifully
darkened, glowy and abundant with a
brew of Sage Tea and 8ulphur. When-
ever her hair fell out or took on that
dull, faded or streaked appearance, thi
W| m M H'nil>,e mixture wa* applied with won-
ilerful effect. By asking at any drug
store for "Wyeth's Sage arvl Bulpthur
1 By United Press. Wi"kl get a^g"
I ucu7 viipu n t 1,- tl i bottle of tbia old-tune recipe, ready to
I NEW YORK, Oct. 16. — The an- use, for about 60 cents. Thia simple
I nouncement has been made by Lord mixture can be depended upon to restore
Reading that England and France ! "atura' color and beauty to the hair and
may soon seek a second big loan from ! ^ B°aIp
the United States. The subject con-
C f
| Locals and Personals %
{•+++H-+++++++++++++4-V++++++
John Rogers was in from Long
Creek Saturday on business.
W. R. (Dutch) McIntosh of McAl-
: ester was in the city Saturday.
| A. Joseph of the Boston Store re-
! turned Friday night from McAlester,
j where he took a high Masonic de-
i gree.
Prof. W. T. Hopper of Ervin was in
the city Saturday shopping and tak-
ing in our many beautiful stores.
stituted the main discussion in finan-
cial circles here today.
Lord Reading would add nothing to
the statement, other than that the
C. E. Bearden, an old settler from
southeast of the city, was in town
A well-known downtown druggist says Saturday on business.
everybody us«b Wyeth's Sage and 6ul-
c: * • °< - ">• —*
applied—it's bo easy to use, too. Yon , Sunday in Hugo.
comb or Boft brush
' wwujjcu it oumd or boil DruHtt ;
second loan will come either now or i draw it through your hair, taking VV . F. Armstrong of Ft Towson
later 1 0116 atrium nt * finu> d« *- au !
HAS FINE SWEET 'TATERS.
Eppie E. Baker, a good farmer
from north of this city, brought to
our office Saturday a bunch of fine
sweet potatoes. Mr. Baker states he
had one quarter of an acre in sweet
potatoes, and dug a yield of one hun-
dred bushels. He said he had six
acres in cotton and made enough off
the six acres to finish out a bale he
started last year.
Moral: Cut out the cotton.
! Thursday morning Sterling Stamp-
i er, U. S. deputy marshal, made a so-
j journ to McCurtain county and pick-
ed up Guy Short, L. A. Nease, the
one strand at a time." By morning the , ,
gray hair disappears; after another appli- ! Up y ay
cation or two, it io restored t> its natural
color and looks glossy, toft aud abun- Miss Addie Permerter of Antlers
j was a Hugo visitor today.
INVESTING IN BETTER HEALTH Misses Ruby^ier and Corell
.. ,, ,1 Berry of Antlers, were guests of Ver-
snne man wou,d P^posely ex-, da Mull,ns gunday
pose his family to disease, yet thru j
ignorance or neglect thousands of Ok
lahoma are doing this very thing, at
tremendous cost in both health and
money. In Arkansas, each year pri-
or to 1901, a certain farm laborer , .rJ
spent $75 to $150 a year for medical | land school, for Indian?, was in town
attention to his family, whose mem-1 Monday .
ters had malaria most of the time
Dude Nelson, a good farmer from
the Goodland community, was in the
city Monday.
Silas Bacon, principal of the Good-
By United Press.
is conceded in military circles'^erf j a constab,e, and the>' raln barrels, in which thousa
General Mackenzen appears to realize i t°J, an7tW ^ I ™0Sqmt0S were Propogated. The
the importance of haste and report* ^ miles north house was unscreened, and mosquito
say that he is driving against ? arrived at their bars wer not used. In 1901 this man
Serbian defenses regardless of llesj^ and sniJ ' °" I * T"
i vt- i_ j- i , , and spied a man cooking at a
and a N.sh dispatch says that his k>s- furnace of an nncit distill ^
ses are enoi-mous, but the weight of! arregted him and hfe pave higryname ^
K ViBen Petty" About fifteen minutes
| later one Bob Burns showed up and
It is admitted that the invaders j he was also arrested. The officers
can reach Constantinople unless the found in barrels and casks around the
Serbians are reinforced. ! still only three or four gallons of fin-
rhe conviction is daily growing ished whiskey, hut thev found almost
that the French and English will 1000 gallons of soured mash ready
abandon the Dardanelles campaign at! for the distill. The genial owners
least tempororily in order to use the ■ made the proposition to Stamper that
trops there now, and rush to the aid | if he would bring in the wood they
of Serbia following the British dec- would make him some whiskey in
laration of war on Bulgaria. about an hour.
It is expected that France and It-! The copper worm of the still was
aly will soon issue proclamations of j arranged in a novel way. A spring
M. D. Lingo of the Goodland com-
munity was in Hugo Monday.
His house was in a dry sandy field,
and the surroundings had the appear-
ance of healthfulness. Disliking hard
water, this farmer kept a number of j Oscar Horton, a progressive farm-1
rain barrels, in which thousands of i er of near Cody, was in the city Mon-
TheI day.
like nature.
DRINK HOT TEA
VOn A BAD COLD
i branch ran down the side of a hill
! near the still and a long wooden
j trough was placed in the branch and
J the copper worm whs In the trough.
j Thus the natural pressure of the wat-
| er wormed the worm. The worm was
B™.*! % WUa" ,,ack.fg0 Hamburg I brought hack to Broken Bow and left
the
pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the mamder of the still property was de-
tea, put a tup of boiling water upon strovwi nn tho ««♦
it, pour through a sieve .and drink a
5Tr befaw*reUrfng.^H .^ttVosS 'n0P™ for «me. Burns is
effective way to break a ool<l and cure ! a Tan(rer to the law, he having
grip, as it opens the pores of the skin, i served a term in the Ft. Smith jail on
relieving congestion. Also loosens the I a whiskey charge. The men are now
bowds, thus driving a cdld from the I in the Hugo jail.
Try it the Bert time you suffer from 1 ■
iysra; mrs. bassey pardoned
was induced to equip his house with j
screens and hie beds with mosquito j
bars. In addition, he poured oil on top
of the water into his barrels, and |
drew the water through spigots, j
TTiis was done at a cost of $3.50.
Since that time his medical bills |
have averaged not more than $15 a I
year. His was a cotton country, and I
it has been shown that for every dol-
lar spent for medical attention in
malaria cases, there -was a loss of $3
in labor.
FARM DEMONSTRATOR HERE.
-'7«J
m
Remington:UMC
Rifles and Cartridges
for Real .22 Sport
FN the .11 caliber as in the high-power
arms, your shrewd sportsman selects
his rifle and cartridges for renults.
And when you «tart tn I* critical, there's no
here t«. -top short of Kemitiglnn-CSIC.
Mailt >r. Shot model- -in Mirif-Action models,
"h ,;I' : ' niou« Remington-1WIC solid breech — and
>u. th< Autoloading model that successfully handles ti
fomingloti Autoloading rim-firt urUidges :vitkout reloading.
Yor real .22 sport, get your rifle and cartridge# from the
d'.-ulcr v. .. . displays the Red Ball Morh of Rtminito«-UMC
Sold by your home dealer and 1633
other leading merchants in Oklahoma
~ V* Remington Arms-Unio
. Woolworth Building 233
Union Metallic Cartridge Co.
Broadwty; New York City
Ml
SOU, JIBED FEET
Good-bye gore feet, burning feet, swol-
len feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired
Feet.
Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions and
raw spots. No
more Bhoe tight-
ness, no more limp-
ing with pain or
drawing up your
face in agony.
'TIZ" i, magical,
BY MARGARET MASON.
(Written for the United Press.)
At pictures of your granny
When she was young, my dear,
You used to laugh and giggle;
But loflk now in your mirror
And you will plainly see
You're dressed up just like dear
stroyea on the spot. Everything! ers, and be at the chamber rooms on
irave evidence that the still had been j Saturday to consult with any one de-
m operation for some time. Burns is siring to see him.
Mr. Wyatt will fill a long felt want
in this county, and comes here highly
J. A. Wyatt, the recently employ-
ed farm demonstrator for this county,
arrived last night with his family.
He will enter on his duties immed- . I?1®,™? J
lately, to demonstrate the improved geT y o* r^/wt
methods of farming to the farmers raiaery. Ah! how comfortable your feet
of this county. f«eL Get a 25 cent box of "TIZ" now at
He will have his headquarters with ' any druSB«t or department store. Don't
the Chamber of Commerce here. He i ^,eet\^d ,eet
has arranged to spend the first five j tired. A year's g^^tlld
days of the week out with the farm-1 * money refunded.
old granny,
And mighty chic yon be.
| by wiring out sideways over the hips,
j This bulids you out sideways like Vel-
! esquez's celebrated portrait of the
Spanish Infanta.
If you don't care for these side ex-
: tensions, Fashion is most elastic this
year and allows a rear extension with
equal impunity.
It is the good old bustle again, of
Abe Silverman, the Grant merch-i
Bab Pais and Stiffness away with
a small bottle of old honest
Bt Jacobs Oil
| Mrs. Matilda Bassey, who was sen-
; tenced to a life term in the peniten-
tiary some two years ago for murder
of a stepchild, has been pardoned by
Governor Williams. This case will be
remembered as causing great excite
ment in Hugo. Mrs. Bassey was
charged with administering strych-
nine t0 a stepchild at Boswell, the
. . , Justice Billings of Kent
recommended by the district super- j today on business.
visor of both the state and federal!
departments of agriculture.
When your back ii gore and lame j ehi'<1 dy'nR m 'he schoolroom. The
or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism haa '• woman was tried in Hugo and given a
you stiffened up, don't suffer! (Jet a Hfe sentence
25 cent little of old, honest "St i !tro R • ,
Mrs. Bassy is about forty years of
at any drug store, pour a ■
- *—J ' age, and now resides in Dallas with
Jacobs Oil , — I „
little in your hand and rub'it right
into the pain or ache,' and by tlie time relatives.
you count fifty, the soreness and lame-
ness is gone.f '
Don't 'stay,crippled! ThU soothing, ^'1,^ «
penetrating • oil needs to be used only COMO, ITALY, Oct. 18.—The fam-
once. It takes the ache and rain right °us trial of Porter Charlton, the
out of your back and ends the misery, young American who is on trial for
It is magical, yet absolutely harmless wjfe m„rH„r i.ai„ •, . .
and doesn't burn the skin. wire-murder in Italy, said in court
Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica I today '^at he had just discovered that
Wd lame back misery so promptly! during the period that his mind was
I blank, he had slain his wife, placed
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ryburn of j her body in a trunk and sunk the
Boswell spent Sunday in Hugo. I whole in Lake Como.
mm
Ik
ED L. REED
J. H. COFFMAN
Choice Farm Loans Wanted
Low Rates-Long Time
REED & COFFMAN
Hugo, - Oklahoma
A washout north of this city on Sat-
urday afternoon has badly discomod-
ed the Frisco passenger trains. The
washout is north of Antlers and this
side of Talihina. All the trains are
coming down to Talihina and then
backing to Poteau and using other
railroad tracks going by way of Ash-
down to reach this city. The yester-
day's day trains ran late last night
and this morning's early train reach-
ed here at about 12 o'clock today.
At Kinlock, west of this city, is an-
other washout, but it is understood
that trains can cross this in a few
hours.
The parts for the pump station
which were on No. 5 reached this city
last night at about 11:05, and a crew
of workmen were on the job at the
pump station at 12 o'clock last night.
-v waa^ "IU UU3WC again, OA
course, brought up to date by being
formed of rippling folds of skirt back
— breadths. This back draped bustle
NEW YORK, Oct. 14.—This year's effect is much favored on formal ev-
type of girl is the daguerotype!! ening gowns of heavy satin or velvet
-- — , °PS- m'tts, bustles and pantalets that are very decollete and long of
flji? r'ght off. —not a thing is missing. train.
all the''poisonous 5 ^ 0r thn!e seasons there has Quit« ^e most reminiscent of dear
•■-nidations which 8 threat of pantalets in the off- old granhy's youth is a model jacket
puff up the feet. but they have made very few ap- suit of black and red wool plakL It
' ' 'Prances in the "oning" as 'twere, has a short full skirt and little short
is year it really looks as if they j full jacket which once removed tte
were going to hang on to the lower; veals to startled modern eyes a little-
limbs some of our very best family, low-necked waist of the plaid abso-
trees, however. ,uteIy sleeveless save for tiny cap-like-
I hey are really most attractive, j puffs of the plaid over each shoulder,
these 1915 pantalets. Those for wear ! With this sleeveless day-time gowtu
with street and daytime frocks are ! are worn quaint kid gloves reaching
!arf ff Wlde an<5 volumlonus as di- j midway of the forearm and laced up
ant. was up today on business. k S ' *° wlth the smart; the side. (
fur-banded gowns now so popular the; These side-laced gloves are quite
down I r,a'e s are also finished with a . the newest feature at hand and are
band of fur around the ankles and worn with every sort of daytime toil
sometimes a niching of trie material' ette. Black lace mitts are also per-
ChS™ ,th# fUr, miUed With dressy afternoon frocte.
Charmmg lace and net pantalets j Though the gloves are laced they are
like those we saw occasionally last | not lace, you understand, whereas the
Will Walker of Valliant spent yes ®eason are for wear with the fluffy j mitts are not laced, but are lace
dance frocks whose skirts are almost j The little top hats worn over one
as short and bouffant as those of a eye, the flowing window curtain veils
Jrick A. new note is' the little round muffs and rippling
ruck m e\ening pantalets by a very shoulder capes of fur the extra high
straight ^ 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ w« £
and hind!T P!u °£8 nCSe bellc i hiph ribbon 'aced cothurns for even-
loot ^ "r v * °r si'ver Ka|- in« a]I- a are old stuff lifted from
^penkintr'H'f h II the heydey of our granddame's youth.
this^talH h ' 8 Tei JSe 0f Quite the on,y thinP em to
, ? 18 shown on a have overlooked in our wholesale
t„_ evening frock worn in Marie copying is of course what would have
Tempests present play. It is a gown profited us the most-meaning of
ice anHPnv0Ur.if , ^ bod" C0Urse her ^vely old-world tact and
ice and over the full, extremely full, courtesy.
and short, extremely short, skirt U
an even fuller over-skirt of white tulle ! Reports received here today are to
Ben Griffith of Valliant visited
with relatives here yesterday.
terday in Hugo.
INCREASING THE SPAN OF LIFE
By United Press.
LONDON, Oct. 18.—The Austro
Germans are still pushing southward | manhood
through Serbia, but the progress of swimmer
the allies in the north against Bui-1
garia is swifter.
The Serbians are still resisting the
Teutons desperately. The allies have
not yet encountered serious opposi-
tion. The capture of Strumnitza gave
the allies control of the Saloniki and
Nish railway for fifty miles north of
Salonki. Their object Is said to be to
reach Nish and strike at Sofia from
that base. Bulgarians have reported
to have crossed the Serbian frontier
In these days men do not live to the
cge of Henry Jenkins, born in York-
shire, England, in 1501. But accord-
ing to Dr. John B. Murphy, the re-
nowred Chicago surgeon, who recent-
ly delivered an address at Oklahoma
City, the medical profession has in-
creased the life of the human race in
civilized countries from an average
of twenty years to an average of for-
ty years.
Popular education in matters of
bodily health should bring further in-
crease. In the case of Henry Jen-
kins, the records show that he lived to
I the age of 169 years, that an oath in
| court was administered to him 140
j years before his death, and that when
he was 100 years old—in his young
he was a remarkable
TWO FAMILIES WATERBOI'ND.
Word was received by Mayor Han-
na this morning that two families on
Kiamichi were waterbound and that
the water was knee deep in the
houses and still rising.
Mayor Hanna immediately dis-
patched two wagons with boats to the
scene. At this time no further word
has been received from them.
fifty miles north of Strumnitza and j place is thought t0 be on Horseshol
cut the railroad off from the Serbian Like.
town of Vrania. The fall of Strum-
f- • . , . , , v wniw vuiie neports received here today are to
arou^th h 8 v°f 8"Ver pall°0n 'the effect that Red " atrain on
S^nt art^T Cre 8nd tHere a rampa<?e- and has ™8ed 'bout 26
Stiff wHoon r°wgnys- The.feet- Kiamichi is as high today as it
stiff ga loon acts delightfully i„ lieu was in the flood of 1904.
effect^ PVe desrab,e crinoline C. D. Nease was down this morning
. . . on his motor car and drove a stake
wlir;, lnde€)dy. though we aren't in the river and watched it for fifty
vet wf ar Tr ° fa °ne<i ho°Ps minutes- In that time it rose ten
JL , ar€,g,?UmK the results inches.
with less bulky and more sanitary
^wXmo^TX WirC". . Wilkie Collins and J. K. Price of
around . ° « firing is done Grant were up today attending court.
skirts vet anoth* V* Justice P" Warren was up from
another is obtained. Ft. Towson today.
nitza was preceded by the repulse of
forty thousand Bulgarians.
Misses Sallie Russell and Pauline
Walden, who are teachers in the
schools at Swink spent Sunday with
home folks and returned to Swink
thjs morning.
A couple of men hailed Chief of
Po'.ice Watson last night and address-
ed him as "kid." They had too much
of the cup that cheers they were
locked up.
Bill Guvnes and family moved out
to their farms west of the city today.
COAL
We have made arrangements with our mines
so we can sell you best grade of coal at $6.50
Ton—Spot Cash. Phone your orders, No. 1
Clem Lumber Company
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Curd, Jesse G. The Choctaw Herald. (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 21, 1915, newspaper, October 21, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc97817/m1/3/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.