Newspaper Page Text
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GIRL BECOMES EDITOR
STILLWATER, OKI«A., Jupe 14-—A
precedent was broken at the Oklahoma
Agricultural and Mechanical College here
at the amnual student election when Miss
- .. Bull Dog Brand
[0 :., Fly and Insect Powder
) .
%/ /Blow It Into Cracks—Where Insects Hide
! Comes in a clean, convenient holder—the Patented
Bellows Package. Punch a small hole in the point of ,
| the triangle, squeeze the bellows, and it will shoot a
[ fine Stream of powder into any corner or crevice.
(i Made From Flowers—Safe and Sure
e il Harmless to mankind, but quickly exterminates
/ bugs. Kills flies and mosquitoes, also roaches, ants,
S 8 bedbugs, and other plant and animal vermin. Use it
AP in kitchens, around stores and hotels, and at house
"&\ cleaning time,
‘AR N If you cannot buy Bull Dog Brand fy and Insect Powder at your
%’f o dealer’s, send us his nameand 10c. We will mail you a package post
e e FRANK LABORATORIES
.. CINCINNATI, OHIO 9
|5
A
BAYER
=
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“Bayer Cross’ on
Genuine Aspirin
Eor Toothache
Headache
Earache
Neuralgia
To Stop Pain In Teeth and Gums!
’Szfe and Proper Directions in each Bayer package.
Don’t ask for Aspirin Tablets—say "Bayer"’l
Of e o
payer-abietsofAspirin
Boxes-of 12 tablete—Botbles of 24—Bottles of 100—Also Oapsulos.
Aspirin i the-trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monosceticacidester of Suleyiadd
PR ET | 7
e ; : ' .
R A WAR-TIME ILL THATS SPREADING
e EUNT’S SALVE CURES IT!
2 BT‘.F‘.D in the war trenches of Furope, s wave of ordi
‘ nary ITCH is spreading over the country, This skin
4 disease, history shows, has always prevailed, following
,'a~ b wars and the concentration of armies. It was common
during the Civil War and following that eonflict. There
was an_epidemic of the Itch after the Spanish-American
: War. Now history is repeating itself after the great
a 7 European atru@uile.
3 . R Returned soldiers and those with whom they come in
& g | contact will find a recognised remedy for the Itch in
4’ N Hunt's Salve, commenly kEbown as “Hunt’s Itch Cure.”
/4| , | Many a veteran of the late '9o’s will testify to its merits.
! ‘ It directions are followed HUNT'S SALVE will
. ) prove a never fnlh'ni cure for all forms of the Iteh, and
M your druggist will tell you so. He sells HUNT'S SALVE
\'v ’ under a strict guarantee to refund the purchase price to
P ‘l\ > any dissatisfied user, :
L k | A Medford, Oklahoma man, among thousands whe
; praise HUNT’S SALVE, says:
' > “Some people dislike to call it the Itch, but candor compels me to admit
I had it badly, Your Hunt's Salve, however, cured me after many other
remedies had fotally falled. One box completed the cure—the first up lication
lffur;i‘ed tyvméde;rt‘u.x' rellef. My advice to those who have to mclx, is to
{ S 6 unt's Aalve.
-‘]l;um's Balve 1s especially compounded for the treatment of Itch, Eczema,
gworm, Tetter and other itching skin diseases and is sold on our guarantee
Egn rellat;ln drruf stores, org{t’ will be sent direct by mall if your locAl druggist
not supply *rice Toc per e
i B. RICHARDS MEDICINE COMPANY, INC, SHERMAN, TEXAS
¢ SOLD LOCALLY BY COURSEY & MUNN.
‘AWhy Lack of Iron Keeps Women
Weak, Nervous, Fretfulast Run-Down
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In commenting upon the alarming iron deficiency in the blood of the
_Mverage woman of today, Dr. George H. Baker, formerly Physician and
RT T T W o
Surgeon’ Monmouth Memorial Hos
pital of New Jersey Sald:
“What women need to put roses in their
eheeks and the springtime of Jife inte their
gtey (8 not cosmetics or stimulating flm‘n.
d rlonty of rich, pure red blood, With«
%ut it no woman can do credit to h'ru-l(
or to her work. llron is one of the great
est of all strength and blood bullders, and
1 have found nothmg in my experience so
effoctive for helping to make _strong,
honlln”,(.rru-(l-t»lond-»;l women as Nuxated
,}rou. om & careful examination of the
formula and my own tests of Nuxated
“Syron 1 feel convinced that it 18 a prepara
tion which any pbrnclnn can take himselr
or prescribe for his patients with the wut.
most confidence of ohwnh’ highly ben
efielal and satisfactory results”
. Dr. Ferdinand King, s New York physis
clun and medical author, says:; "I have
NUXATED IRON
"~ For Red Blood, Strength and Endurance
Grace Bneary, of Carmen, was elected ed
itor of the 1919-1920 Orange and Black,
the student ;weekly plgorl It is the first
llma'thnt a girl has been elected to the
position,
///’EX
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While Plenty of Red
Blood Rich in Iron 8
K 3 LY
Helps Make Them STR |
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Strong, Healthy ~?fl;‘ugé |
: 6 mail s d) |
and Beautiful. ¥LI ;,I‘\
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How Organic Iron— ;’f‘iuf\,jficj‘ : I
Nuxated Iron-— Helps Jst T
Solve Problem of Sup- £ "“
plying Iron Deficiency, fi’&.fifg‘{i 4
Thereby Increasing the |
Strength and Endurance l
of Delicate Care.worn G
Women in Two Weeks
Time in Many Instances,
Many a woman who ought
still to be young in feeling is
loging the old-time vim and
energy that makes life worth living
simply because her blood is thinning
out and possibly starving through e Al
lack of iron It is through {ron in 5 ]I
the red coloring matter of the blood %
that life-sustaining oxyvgen enters thoe 4
body and enables the blood to change
food into living tissue, muscle and
brain
strongly emphasized the fact that doetors
should prescribe mfire organic ron—Nux
ated Jron-—for thelr mnervous, run-down,
weak, haggard looking women patients
Lack of iron in the blood may often trans
form a beautifal sweet-tempered woman
into one who is cross, mervous and irritable
w-one who makes life a burden to hereelf,
unhearable for her husband, and disagres
able for her children. When tha iron goes
from the bloed of women, the roses go
from their cheeks.'”
1t you are not wtrong or well you awe it
to yourself to make the l:llovru tent:
Hee how long you can work or how far
‘ou can walk without becoming tired
ext t;lw :v:’o 'flva-.‘rhlln (:‘hlou of or:fl
nary Nuxate ron ree times r da
after meals for two weeke 'hr:n l-‘-’v
your strength ngain and see how much
you have gaiped,
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for Feople Who Think — SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1919,
Never So Much (}rnifi or So Many Cattle and
Sheep in America as Now—Surplus So Great
Exports Make Little Impression Upon If,
By ARCHER WALL DOUGLAS,
Chief Statistician of the Chamber of Commerce of the U. 8.
WASHINGTON, June 14—The price
of food products is a very confused
and uncertain gtory, There are two
elements in it—the domestic and the
foreign situation, The former is sim
plicity itself, so far as the facts are
concerned, but not as to the way
‘prices are behaving. For apparently
neither logic nor facts have anything
o do with the situation.
There are in this country, in grains,
in meats and other food products,
t stores, far greater than at this
time last year and much beyond our
domestic requirements, According to
Government and reliable private esti
mates, there was on April 1, 1919,
more wheat and corn in this country
than we will either consume or export
at the present rates and still have
some surplus to carry over into the
next harvest, Yet wheat is not easy
to be had, and in many cases com
mands a premium over the Govern
ment fixed price, Corn s equally
scarce and at exceedingly high prices.
Apparently the farmers are holding
much grain on their farms because
they find it to their interest to do so,
Mearwhile we have the prospect of
the greatest winter wheat harvest
ever known only a month away. If
this harvest fulfills its present prom
fse we shall have for export more
E’heat than we have ever sent abroad
efore or probably can find ships to
transport.
There are more cattle and sheep in
this country than for several years,
and more hogs than ever before in our
history. The Government's own stite.
ment is that the psoduction of dressed
meat in 1918 was never before
equalled in the history of this er any
other country, and that the surplus
was so great that the extra demand
for export made little impression on
it. Yet hog prices reached the high
est known point only a few weeks
ago.
It ought to be perfectly plain from
these undeniable facts that the prices
of food products—one of the serious
factors in the cost of living-—have no
warrant whatsoever from the situa
tion in this«countey. Apparently they
are sustained sclely and entirely upon
the prospect of a heavy and unusual |
demend from Europe in the future,
PRICE OF WHEAT KEYSTONE.
Concerning the demand, there does
not appear to be any aecurate and re- |
liable information obtainable, and un
til something more definite be known,
and the full extent of the prospective
European demand becomes evident,
there can be no logical reason why
the prices of food products should not
decline,
The price of wheat is the keystone
of the situation.: Should the Food
Control Corporation change the form
of its guarantee to the farmer, and
pay the farmer the difference between
the market price and_ the Government
guaranteed price, there would ensue a
deciine in all food, dairy and poultry
products that would bring the price
of these articles back to a more
natural level,
It is an unpalatable but undeniable
fact that, mo matter how worthy our
motive or how urgent the emergency,
we can not interfere with the laws of
supply and demand and escape the
penalty. And the high prices today of
food products are the price we are
paying for the war control of food
which we rightly deemed so vital and
80 necessary. 4
With the signing of the armistioe
there was no langer any doubt in the
mind of the average man that prices’
must recede from the abnormal high
level caused by war's demands. It
needed only the exercise of ordinary
common sense to realize, when Gov
ernment orders ceased, there was
npothing to take their place, and in |
most lines of business it would soon
be a case of supply exceeding demand
Consequently, after November 11 all|
gpeculative buying in commercial lines
came to a sudden end and there en
sued that policy of purchasing for im-.
mediate peeds only which prevails als
most unchanged to the present time.
It is a curious, though paradoxical
fact, that an era of declining prices 18
usually marked by eautious buying of
the hand-to-mouth variety, The ob
vious reason is the consciouness of
the buyer that his next purchase will
probably be made at lower figures, 50
that each purchase is as small, as
possible and for as limited a space of
time: That this policy has been s 0
moderately in evidence as compared
with periods of falling prices, such as
usx.rl and 1907-8, is due to a cus
rious psyechological problem, wholly
the result of the war,
DRAWS VITAL DISTINCTION.
The gonstant succession of shocks
and horrors we epcountered from 1914
to 1019 finally made us callous to any
thing out of the ordinary, and taught
us to face an uncertain and troubled
future with both courage and resolus
tion. So when the war came to an
end there was no financial or com
mercial cataclysm, but merély busi
ness going on much as befare, only in
a more cautious and conservative
manner, Nor was there such a pres
gipitate decline in prices, which in the
past invariably marked the end of an
‘abpormal period of prosperity such as
the war brought us.
Now in normal times and under
natural conditions the dominant sacs
tors in the rise and fall of prices are
the laws of supply and demand,
Kven during the war the laws of
supply and demand worked automat.
jeally. Zine and lead first went sky
ward In price when the sudden de
mand came for them early in the Bu.
ropean war, Later on, when producs
tion greatly increased under the stim
ulue of an unusual demand, prices
slumped to about one-half of their
highest figures, and have never re
covered,
Today there i far more eurrvency in
clreulation=-or rather in being--than
at the time of the highest peak of war
prices, Yet prices of most commodi,
ties, save food products, have appres
ciably declined since that time,
The real truth, In a few words, g
that with increased prices and a larg.
er volume of business, caused by a
great demand, there Is more money
needed to do business with, The in
creased prices call for more eurrency
~the inereased amount of eurrency
does not eause the rise In prices. The
theoretic economists have simply con
fused cause and effect and put the
cart before the horse. There can be
no intelligent understanding of the
present situation in prices until this
vital distinction is clearly understood.
At the present time the great pro-l
ductive enterprises other than .xrl-‘
culture—mining, lumber and manu
facturing—all show a reduced output
compared with the war period, The
domestie demand is the principal prop‘
of the situation and is one almost en
tirely of replacement and upalr.“
There are none of those great con
structive and development enterprises
which demand so much material and’
empley so much labor. There is but
little building, save here and there
where it can no longer be deferred.
There are a good many steel ships
being built, but very little in the way
of railroad construction.
OUR EXPORT &%‘MNE‘B GROW-
Our export business is growing, hm‘
it is hampered by lack of ships, and
the great demand for materials to re.
build ruined Europe is still in the fu
ture. In a word, supply exceeds de
mand, and the market has passed
from the seller to the buyer. lgqtur-‘
ally and inevitably, under these con
ditions, prices of all lines—save food
products—are declining, but in a most
orderly way and after a fashion which
does not, as in the past, discourage
buying, but actually stimulates it.
Where staple articles have declined in
price, they are being freely bought
for immediate needs, although with
the perfect consciousness on the part
of the purchaser, that they may g 0
somewhat lower latdr on. It is no
tieeable, however, that the buying for
future needs is much restricted,
The war industries hoard, with very
good intentions, realized that there
would be no general resumption of
buying on a large scale until the pub
lic felt that prices had received a
more reasonable level than prevailed
during the war. 8o the board thought
to bring about that result all at once
without waiting for the slow process
of natural laws. If they had known
more of the trend of thought among
the people they would have saved
themselves and others a Jot of useless
trouble and not “messed up” the sit
uation as they have succeeded in do
ing.
The idea of the board to reduce
1 wiii gladly send any Rheumatism sufferer & Sim
ple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free that Completely
Cured me of a terrible aittack of muyscular and in
flammatory Rheumatism of long standing after ev
erything else 1 tried had falled me. 1 have given it
to many sufferers who believed their cases hopeless,
yet they found relief from their suffering by taking
these simple herbs. It also relieves Belatica prompt
ly, a 5 well as Neuralgia and is & wonderful bloea
purifier. You are most welcome to this Merb Recloe
if you will send for it at once. I belleve you will
consider it a godsend after you have jaut it ie the
test. There is nothing injurious contained 'u it, snd
you can see for yourself exaectly what you are uk%
1 will gladly send this Recipe—absolutely free -
any sufferer who will send name and address. W. 8.
SUTTON, 2650 Magnelia Ave., Los Angeles, Cal.
—Advertisement,
——————————————————————————
)
More than 5,000 persons have taken
the Dr, W, J. McCrary Pellagra Rem
edy, every one of whom has been per
fectly satisfied with results of treat
ment. If it doesn’t cure to your satis
faction, it costs mothing. Pellagra
treated in all stages. Treatment taken
in privacy of home; eontaips no hab
it-forgning drugs; total gost small;
terms easy; results guaranteed. De-~
lay i# dangerous; investigate now!
Big 50-Page Book Free!
This book explains ali; sent free in
plain, sealed wrapper to all who wnite
for copy, Send for gour. copy today—
it may save your life,
Have You These Symptoms?
Tired and Drowsy feelings, accom
panied by headaches; depression or
state of indolenee; roughness of skin;
breaking out or eruptions; hands ped
like sunburn; sore mouth; tongue,
lips and throat flaming red; mueh
mueus and choking. indigestion and
nausea; diarrhea or eonstipation;
mind affected—and many others.
Write for book now.
)
Dr. W, J. McCrary, Inc, Dept 106,
Carbon Hill, Ala. |
O ——— e e
ASTHMASUFFERERS
A New Home Methed That Any One Can
Use Without Discomfort Or
Loss of Time.
We have a new method that econtrols
Asthma, and we want you to try it at our
expense, No motter whelher your coss
of long wtar ® or recent development,
whether It in 1 nt as Hay Fever ol
Chronie Asthnu you shogld send for a
free trial of our methoed No matter t
what elimate ¥ | ne matter what
YOUr Bge or o L I you are trou
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Heve you promptiy
Wa anpe to sond it to the
apparentiy l \ where all forn
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| fumes, 'patent smok ete., have falled
]\\'r wWant to show every ene at eur ex
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to end all difficult breathing, mll wheez
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This free offer toon important to neg
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simply maill e n below Do it today
FREE TRIAL COUPON I
l-‘lf"N;QHll ASTHMA CO, . Room 244
Ningn and Hudson Streets, Buffalo,
A
l Sond free trinl of your method to:
Arms Found
In Refuge of
Prince Henry
OME, June 14.—1 n a search
R of the home of the fugi
tive, Prince Henry of
Prussia, the ex-Kaiser's brother,
206 hand-grenades, 65,000 rounds
of rifle ammunition and 60 rifles
were found.
The popular clamor for the ap
prehension of the Prince is in
tense.
prices at once to bed roek, and then
to assure purchasers that there was
no longer any danger of declines was
both impossible and impracticahle,
and, so far as the public was con
corned, would produce distrust in
stead of creating confidence,
What happened was what might
have been expected, and the last state
of the situation was Worse than the
first, because ill-advised,. though well
meant, interference created in some
lines a distrust which it was its prim
al purpose to dispel. If let alone, as
it probably will be, the situation will
take care of itsef, in a perfectly nat
ural and normal way, as it has been
doing ever since the armistice was
signed.
Gets-It” Peels
Any Corn or Callus Comes Off Peace.
fully, Painlessly. Never Fails.
It's almost a picnic to get rid of a
corn or callus the “Gets-It" way. You
spend 2 or 3 seconds putting on 2 or 3
drops of “Gets-It,” about as simple as
Use “Gets-It,” peel off corn this way,
putting on your hat. “Gets-1t" does
away forever with ‘“contraptions,”
“wrappy”’ plasters, greasy ointments
that rub off, blood-letting knives, and
scissors that snip into the *“quick.”
“Gets-It"" eases pain Your *“jumpy”
eorn shrinks, dies, loosens from the toe
You peel the corn painlessly from yous
toe in one complete niece That's
' where the picnic comes in—you peel it
off as you would a banana peel Noth
ing else but “Gets-It” can do it Get
peaceful, eommon-sense ‘“‘Gets-It."”
‘“GGets-It,”’ the guaranteed, money
baeck corn-remover, the only sure way,
costs but a trifle at any drug store
M'f'd by E. Lawrence & Co. Chicago
IlL.—Advertisement.
pE—————————
The business of living, when boiled down to its clearest essence and
all the froth skimmed off, is just a matter of thinking. sl
Each of us is continually thinking ideas of our own and swapping
them for the ideas of others. If there is a famine of outside ideas
we shrivel up ourselves. Children with “nobody to play with” are
unhappy and unmanageable. ?
From thinkinz with our heads to doing with our hands is but a lit<
tle step and then our thoughts become things. i
1t is beeause men of America are so unfettered in theif thinking
and doing that this country is such a fine place to live in. - It'is also
beeause these thoughts are freely radiated and spread broadeast, in
the distwibution of manufactured things and in the distribution of
the facts about them (advertising), that this country is such a fine
place to live in.
The originator of an idea is not much better off than before he orig
inated it till he gets some one else to absorb it and enjoy it and hene
fit by it.
The man or woman surrounded by better thoughts and things but
who pays not the slightest attention to them is not mueh better off
than the one with “nobody to play with.”
The advertisements in the papers are thoughts — telling you
about the ideas that other men and women have thought out for
your happiness. Read the ads. They are the voices from hundreds
of thousands of looms, shops, foundries, studios, laboratories,
where millions of mindg are turning pleasant thoughts into worth
while things for your comfort.
The Atlanta Georgi Sunday Ameri
e Atlanta Georgiananddunday American
Clean, W holesome Newspapers for Southern Homes
Wedding License Issued
. .
To Mutes via Fingers
(By International News Service.)
WAUKEGAN, lILL., June 14~—Hyman
Berpstein, Balt Lake City, and (harlotte
M. Taylor, Ohicago, deaf and dumb gouple,
were married here. When they applied
for a murrlufia license at t(he county
court the elerk cavorted with his fingers
until some of the digits threatened to
became digjointed in elieiting the usual
questions and answers, He finally !ot thn
nformation that Bernstein was 30 years
of age and Miss Taylor 31. Then, under
the kindly tweo of a constable, they tra
versed to a Justice of the Peace, who,
with the ald of his fingers, thumbs, pad
and peneil and a few other accessories
for transmitting intelligence, united the
two in the holy bonds of matrimony.
BN AN \\§\\\-Y QAN Il 112177, )L ’7’(//;2f;77
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-\ __ _ — e G -‘ /-
;/ £\ o/ Chewing-Tobacco that NATURE Flavored «;»%
,uv‘f-I THERE is the secret of good chewing tobacco! | ’_f‘}"%&
g nfi No amount of artificial curing or flavoring can -2 ‘I"‘l:i
II Jin: B take the place of sunshine and pure air. AN
TR ; 'R
B | BROWN & WILLIAMSON'S ¥ \;:
Gl ¢ 7 G
II(.‘I‘ A ” ¢ ‘fl
. :I )\) \I i "M
N CHEWING TOBACCO 2y
%‘f A cured Nature’s way, and aged in storage. It is sweet .‘
/¥ £3 XY and fragrant, with none of the flavor lostin the makit;lg.
I 3 J Men like thé convenient “brcak"d)lug. which just fits
&y the pocket. Make friends with “SUN-CURED” To-
N\va bacco; you are sure to like it. I
~\ d _", BROWN & WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CO. [ %
’‘“ THITANDSH WINOTQU-AALEN, MARTH CAROLINA R 2 ‘
( ‘ ‘*»’g#‘ API S i v{y,’. T ‘.y-ai\‘ R\ ,-,.‘\-: ‘Q//,, Bit ,’/\"s"\.\ S X y
.
Ohio Farmers All ‘Het
' ,
Up’ at Airpane Noises
(By International News Nervice.)
BANDUSKY, OHIO, June 14.—armers
hrrenlmull are all “het up.” 'The new
Oleveland-Chicago alr mall service gbes
right over their farms without so much as
asking Imrnnuiou. And, believe It or not
3: you like, their live stock has been ren
ered highly nervous because of the loud
whirr of the propellers and the sharp ex-
Blollnnu of the maotors on the airplanes.
1d Dobbin has become more skittish than
he has been since the day he first saw an
automobile, And an i(nnocent little lamb
became so excited that it ran tlnrnugh a
screen door, losing all of its wool 08t
master Ryan suggested ear mufflers and
told the rmnpluimur farmers if that didn’t
work to “tell it to Burleson,”
Final Drive of War
Cost Belgians 29,000
PARIS, June 14.—The final drive
against the Germans, from September
23 to November 11, last year, ecost the
little Belgian army 1,012 officers and
10,066 men killed and wounded, Of
this total 2563 officers and 3,083 men
were killed
. The relatively low proportion of
killed and wounded {8 explained by
the fact that most of the fighting was
done with rifle and machine gun,
which have throughout ‘t'lu war
proved less deadly than shellfire,
Ninety per cent of the losses fell on
the infantry,
9A