The Olney Enterprise. (Olney, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, March 7, 1919 Page: 2 of 12
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THE OLNEY ENTERPRISE
BLACK-DRAUGHT A
FAMILY MEDICINE
Some Kind of Stomach Trouble
With Cramps .and Terrible
Pains Made This Oklahoma
Man’s Life Miserable Un-
til Black-Draught Re-
lieved Him.
Chiekasha, Okla.—Mrs. J. W. Walker
recently said this: “We use Black-
Draught as a family medicine and
think it is the only liver medicine
made. My husband makes it up and
uses it as a tonic as well as a laxa-
tive. I use it for headache, sour stom-
ach, a full heavy feeling after meals,
which I suppose is indigestion, and it
certainly does me a lot of good.
My husband had some kind of stom-
ach trouble—we don’t know just what.
It would strike him just any time in
the day and cramp or pain him just
terribly bad. Someone told him how
to make a tea of the Black-Draught,
which he did. It did him so much
good, it removed the cause and cured
him. Since then we have praised the
Black-Draught to our friends, and
gladly do so.”
Seventy years of successful use has
made Thedford’s Black-Draught a
standard, household remedy. Every
member of the family at times needs
the help that Black-Draught can give
in cleansing the system and prevent-
ing or relieving the troubles that come
from constipation, indigestion, lazy
liver, etc.
Try Black-Draught. Sold by all drug-
gists.—Adv.
Slightly Sarcastic.
“Do you feel able to take a few let-
ters. Miss Pounder?”
“Why, certainly. That’s what I’m
here for, isn’t it?”
“I suppose so, but my request came
so soon after your last telephone con-
versation that I was afrain you would
be exhausted.”—Birmingham Age-Her-
ald.
SAGE AND SULPHUR
DARKENS GRAY HAIR
It's Grandmother's Recipe to Restore
Color, Gloss and At-
tractiveness.
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound-
ed, brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray. Years ago the only way to
get this mixture was to make it at
home, which is mussy and trouble-
some. Nowadays, by asking at any
drug store for “Wyeth’s Sage and Sul-
phur Compound,” you will get a large
bottle of this famous old recipe, im-
proved by the addition of other in-
gredients, at a small cost.
Don’t stay gray! Try it! No one
can possibly tell that you darkened
your hair, as it does it so naturally and
evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft
brush with it and draw this through
your hair, taking one small strand at
a time; by morning the gray hair dis-
appears, and after another application
or two your hair becomes beautifully
dark, glossy and attractive.—Adv.
No Discrimination.
Friend (in Windfall’s art gallery —
Ton certainly show excellent discrimi-
nation in the selection of your pic-
tures.
- Windfall—Discrimination? Not on
your life; I’m too broadminded for
that! Why, if the price is right, 1
don’t care a dang whether the painter
is American, Dutch, Dago, Pole, Bul-
garian, Chinese, Eskimo, or even Ger-
man.
Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications as they cannot reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There is
only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness,
and that Is by a constitutional remedy.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE acts
through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces
of the System. Catarrhal Deafness is
caused by an inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube.
When this tube Is Inflamed you have a
rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and
when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the
result. Unless the Inflammation can be re-
duced and this tube restored to its nor-
mal condition, hearing may be destroyed
forever. Many cases of Deafness are
caused by Catarrh, which is an Inflamed
condition of the Mucous Surfaces.
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any
case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot
be cured by HALL’S CATARRH
MEDICINE. *
All Druggists 76c. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio.
He that would know the truth of
things must leave the beaten track.—
Locke.
When some men begin to talk, oth-
ers wonder why the age limit of the
kindergarten should be restricted.
RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR.'
To half p'nt of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum,
A small box of Barbo Compound, and %
oz. of glycerine. Any druggist can put this
up or you can mix it at home at very lit-
tle cost. Full directions for making and
use come in each box of Barbo Compound.
It will gradually darken streaked, faded
gray hair, and make it soft and glossy. It
will not color the scalp, is not sticky or
greasy, and does not rub off.—Adv.
T remolo.
Germania may still sing patriotic
songs, but not in Metzo-soprano.—Car-
toons Magazine.
When Baby is Teething
GBOVH’S BABY BOWBL MHDIOINB will correct
the Btomach and Bowel troubles. Perfectly harm'
less. Bee directions on the bottle.
It is an unusual woman who can
smile at a compliment—and then for-
get it. /
LOWELL DOES NOT
AGREE WITH LODGE
PRESIDENT OF HARVARD CANNOT
FOLLOW DOUBTS OF MASSA-
CHUSETTS SENATOR.
Atlanta, Ga. — Recommendation of
the executive council of the league
of nations would not necessarily be
binding on the nations members of
the league, Dr. A. Lawrence Lowell,
president of Harvard university, said
here, addressing the southern con-
gress for the league of nations.
Dr. Lowell, the principal speaker at
the night session, referred to an ad-
dress in the senate by Senator Lodge,
in which the Massachusetts senator,
warning the American people to
weigh carefully the. constitution of
the league, said it should be made
clear whether the recommendation
of the league’s executive council
would be binding on the member na-
tions.
“I have the greatest respect for
Senator Lodge and have almost al-
ways agreed with his opinions,” said
Dr. Lowell, “but I find it impossible
to follow his doubts in this case.
The word ‘recommend,’ as distin-
guished from ‘decide,’ order, require,’
would seem to have a definite mean-
ing in common usage and in law.
It means making a suggestion for
the consideration of some one else
who is at liberty to accept the rec-
ommendation or not, as he thinks
proper.
“To me it seems perfectly clear
that this is what the delegates from
the fourteen nations who agreed to
this report intend, and if that was
their intention, and the language
really is capable of a different con-
struction, no doubt they would be
willing to make it clear.”
Dr. Anna, Howard Shaw and Cap-
tain Thomas G. Chamberlain, U. S.
A., of San Francisco, also spoke.
Necessity for the organization of
a society of nations as part of the
peace settlement to be reached at
Pai’is was emphasized again by Wil-
liam Howard Taft. The Atlanta con-
ference is the last of nine, held in
different sections of the country, and
at all of which Mr. Taft delivered
virtually the same message.
Carlton Recognized as Committeeman.
Washington.—O. S. Carlton of Dal-
las is democratic national committee-
man from Texas by action of the
national committee here at its gen-
eral meeting. Judge Poindexter of
Cleburne resigned from the old state
committee following the primary elec-
tion of 1918, and Carlton was elected.
Several weeks ago the executive
committee here required a statement
showing that the state committee
was legally constituted and that a
quorum was present when the action
was taken.
Princess Patricia Weds Naval Orfficer
London.—Princess Patricia of Con-
naught and Commander Alexander R.
M. Ramsay, R. N. were married at
Westminster Abbey Thursday. . No
other social event since the outbreak
of the war has created such public
interest. Crowds assembled early
in the day along the route over
which the princess drove with her
father, the duke of Connaught, from
St. James Palace to Westminster Ab-
bey, about which throngs waited pa-
tienly for a glimpse of the popular
bride|
President of Oregon Soviet Resigns.
Portland, Ore.—H. M. Wicks, presi-
dent of the Oregon council of sol-
diers, sailors and workmen, organ-
ized here a few weeks ago with the
declared purpose of following Rus-
sian soviet methods has resigned
with the explanation that he had
found himself out of harmony with
the council’s advocacy of syndical-
ism.
No Special Session Till June.
Austin, T|6xas. — Governor Hobby
has authorized ,the statement that he
would not call an extra session of
the legislature immediately after the
adjournment of the regular session,
but would wait until the middle of
June, probably the 16th or 17th.
U. S. Employment Service Indorsed.
Austin, Texas. — Governor Hobby
has signed senate concurrent resolu-
tion No. 27 indorsing the United
States employment service and urg-
ing its extension and continuance.
Senate Passes Wheat Guarantee Bill.
Washington. — The administration
bill appropriating $1,000,000,000 to ful-
fill the government’s guarantee of
wheat prices to the farmers for the
1919 crop has been passed.
Norman Hapgood Denmark Minister.
Washington.—Norman Hapgood of
New York has been nominated to be
minister to Denmark, succeeding Dr.
Maurice Egan, who recently resigned
because of poor health.
Houston Man Heads State Chamber.
Dallas.—The joint executive com-
mittee of the Texas Chamber of Com-
merce, in session here has selected
James Z. George of Houston as gen-
eral manager, completed the person-
nel of the directorate, adopted a fi-
nancial plan and transacted other
important business pertaining to the
welfare of the new association. Mr.
George, who .is general manager of
tlie Chamber of Commerce of Hous-
ton, will begin his duties March 1.
FILIBUSTER TACTICS
FAIL IN THE SENATE
"VICTORY LOAN” BILL IS GIVEN
FINAL PASSAGE SHORTLY
BEFORE 7 A. M. SUNDAY.
Unprecedented Mass of Legislation
Awaits Action and Many Impartant
Measures Will Fail of Passage.
Washington.—The senate remained
In session all Saturday night to pass
the loan bill, the keystone measure
of the calendar, adjourning shortly
before 7 o’clock Sunday morning,
while the house held a business ses-
sion, disposing .of the conference re-
port on the hospital bill.
Passage of the loan bill without a
record vote and in the identical
form in which it came from the
house definitely marked .the course
of future legislation and gave assur-
ance that President Wilson would
not find it necessary to change his
plan of deferring a call of the new
congress until after his return from
France, probably in June. Most re-
publicans favored an earlier extra
session, but after republican senators
at a recent conference failed to reach
any decision as to the advisability
of obstructing the loan bill, no fili-
buster was undertaken.
Although many important bills, in-
cluding the $720,000,000 navy appro-
priation measure with it\ -authoriza-
tion of a new three-year building pro-
gram, and the $1,215,000,000 army
hill, apparently are doomed to cer-
tain failure, administration leaders
believe that none is of sufficient im-
portance to require an earlier call
of congress.
Final action by the house on the
$1,000,000,000 wheat price guarantee
bill will be taken and will go to the
president. Another important bill
now regarded as certain of enact-
ment is the general deficiency appro-
priation measure, carrying/ $750,000,-
000 additional for the railroad ad-
ministration.
Of other important bills remaining,
leaders have planned to pass the
diplomatic, hospital construction and
military academy appropriation meas-
ures and that repealing the war
revenue law’s tax of 10 per cent on
semi-luxuries.
Besides the army and navy bills,
legislation which seemed certain to
fail included the $850,000,000' sundry
civil bill, which contains $660,000,000
for the shipping board, and the oil
and mineral land leasing, and the
water power measures. Disposition
of the agricultural appropriation bill
containing the senate rider amend-
ment proposing repeal of the day-
light saving law and many other
measures, still was regarded in doubt.
Suffrage leaders admit that there
is no possibility of congress acting
upon the compromise equal franchise
constitutional amendment resolution
at this session.
Work Against Cotton Embargo.
Washington.—Representatives fronj
the cotton-producing states do not
feel that their movement for removal
of the embargo against free ship-
ment of cotton to European coun-
tries is closed, according to recent
statements made. It is understood
that the American delegates have
represented to the French that raw
cotton might he pennitted to enter
Germany and Austria under restric-
tions as a means of making it possi-
ble for those countries to pay the
war indemnities.
Denies He Was Offered Bribe.
Austin, Texas.—Land Commissioner
J. T. Robison says that, he had at
no time charged anyone with at-
tempting to bribe him. This state-
ment is made as a result of the in-
troduction in the house of a resolun-
tion calling for an investigation of
the general land office, particularly
with reference to the alleged charge
by Mr. Robison that he had been
offered a bribe.
Special May Be Called Soon.
Austin, Texas. — Governor Hobby
will not insist on postponing the
called session of the legislature until
next June, as he previously announc-
ed, if a majority of the members
want it to follow the present session.
(4,000,000 IS VOTED
Would End Federal Wire Control.
Washington.—The Senate Commit-
tee has reported favorably the reso-
lution of Chairman * Bankhead pro-
viding for termination of federal con-
trol of telegraph, telephone and other
wire utilities Dec. 31.
Postmasters to Meet at Mineral Wells
Ennis, Texas.—A. H. Buie, presi-
dent of the Texas Postmasters’ asso-
ciation, announces the annual meet-
ing of that organization at Mineral
Wells, May 27, 28 and 29.
Victory Loan Bill Recommended.
Washington.—The Victory loan bh
providing for a $6,000,000,000 short-
term note issue has been favorably
reported by the senate committee.
Italy Removes Import Imbargo.
Washington—The War Trade Board
announces that Italy has removed
its import embargo on shoes and
leather. American exporters, how-
ever, must obtain on Italian import
license before shipping these com-
modities • uM:
HOUSE PASSES TO THIRD READ-
ING SENATE BILL MAKING '
APPROPRIATIONS'.
Senate
Austin, Texas.—A bill has been in-
troduced in the senate which seeks
to prevent picture shows, theaters
and dancing halls, circuses and other
similar shows from operating on Sun-
day.
The bill to permit married women
to become officers, stockholders, sub-
scribers and directors of corporations
has been finally passed.
A concurrent resolution prescribes
that faculties and regents of Texas
university and A. & M. college be
recommended to grant diplomas to
soldiers, sailors and women Red
Cross nurses, who were former stu-
dents, who completed three-fourths of
their courses before entering the ser-
vice. The resolution was adopted.
A concurrent resolution introduced
in the senate indorsed a joint reso-
lution adopted by the legislature of
tire state of Alabama to lift the em-
bargo on cotton now that the war
is over was adopted.
Austin, Texas.—The senate bill to
sell the mineral rights or lease land
supposed to contain oil, gas, coal and
lignite, belonging to schools, the uni-
versity or asylum, now unsold or
which may hereafter revert, and.land
of islands, salt water lakes, fresh
water lakes, bays, inlets, marshes,
reefs, river beds and channels* was
considered in the senate Thursday,
but failed of engrossment.
The hill providing for the appoint-
ment of county school superintend-
ents by county school boards “in-
stead of being selected by the peo-
ple as heretofore,” was finally passed.
A stubborn fight was waged in
the senate on the bill to create a
woman’s bureau of the department
of labor, with a woman in charge,
at a salary of $2,000 a year, to look
after the welfare of women and chil-
dren wage-earners throughout the
state. The bill was passed finally.
The industrial welfare commission
bill has been finally passed by the
senate after being materially amend-
ed. ’flie committee substitute for the
original hill, which was accepted, pro-
vides for the creation of the commis-
sion composed of the head of the
bureau of labor statistics, who shall
be chairman, the chairman of the
industrial accident board and the su-
perintendent of public instruction.
Austin, Texas.—The senate hill pro-
viding for the election of county school
superintendents by the county boards
of school trustees instead of by the
people’s vote, as at present, was sent
to engrossment after a prolonged de-
bate, by the vote of 14 to 10.
The bill requiring landlords to file
notice with the county clerk when a
tenant becomes six months in arrears
in the payment of I'ent on a store
building was recently passed.
The bill providing for an increase of
the salary of a probation officer to $2,-
400 in counties of 100,000 population
or over containing a city of'over 70,-
000 was finally passed.
The bill providing an appropriation
of $25,000 for the Live Stock Sanitary
Commission to inspect and destroy
cattle afflicted with tuberculosis and
reimburse the owners of such cattle
was finally passed.
The bill providing for clothing the
county and districts courts of Travis
county with concurrent jurisdiction, in
cases involving violations of the elec-
tion laws in other counties of the state
failed of passage in the senate after
a prolonged debate. ,
The senate has adopted a concurrent
resolution commending the work of
the federal employment service in
bringing employes and employers to-
gether and recommending its continu-
ance. x
The senate bill providing for the
employment of special traffic of-,
ficers to enforce the traffic laws in
counties and for their payment by the
county commissioners out of funds
derived from the sale of motor licens-
es before the money is forwarded to
the state highway fund, was finally
passed.
Austin, Texas.—In the senate final
passage has been recorded the house
bill creating a State Board of Dental
Examiners and regulating the prac-
tice of dentistry. The measure pro-
vides for a board of six members,
who shall pass upon all applications
for license to practice dental surgery
in Texas and, furthermore, issue new
licenses for those already held by
dentists practicing at this time. Any
dentist who shall advertise or solicit
business under any nom de plume or
corporation name shall be deemed
guilty of a misdemeanor and subject
to a fine.
Appointed Judge of Appellate Court.
Austin, Texas.—Judge T. D. Cobbs
of San Antonio has been appointed by
Governor Hobby as associate justice of
the fourth court of civil appeals at
San Antonio.
Bill Provides for Discharged Men.
Washington.—The house has adopt-
ed the conference report on the bill
permitting soldiers, sailors and ma-
rines to retain their uniforms when
discharged and allowing them 5 cents
a mile for traveling expenses home.
House
Austin, Texas.— The house has
passed to third reading the senate
bill appropriating $4,000,000 for the
public schools of Texas. Two efforts
to reduce the amount failed. The
final vote was 107 to 9.
A bill has been introduced in the
house to prevent state, district, coun-
ty or city officials from appointing
or supporting relatives for appoint-
ive public places. It is known as the
nepotism bill. It would prevent such
support on the part of an official of
a relative within the second degree
of affinity or the third degree of con-
sanguinity.
Before a constitutional convention
is called in Texas the people must
express a desire for it. That is the
substance of the concurrent resolu-
tion as it has been amended and
adopted in the house.
Austin, Texas.—Modification of the
anti-trust laws is contained in a house
bill just introduced. It would limit to
four years the time for bringing ac-
tion for alleged violations of the law.
Increased pay for judges of Texas
was finally provided in the house.
The bill now goes back to the senate
with amendments.
A joint resolution seeking to amend
the constitution that the profits of
the prison system, may be divided be-
tween the state and its prisoners
or their dependents, has been intro-
duced in the house.
The house has passed to a third
reading the senate bill t,o remove the
restrictions on the size of oil pipe
lines and place *them under the di-
rection of the railroad commission
as common carriers.
The house has refused to pass
the bill which provided for the re-
peal of the Ferguson land tenant
law. The vote was 95 to 31.
A house bill has been inti’oduced
to prevent any judge from granting
an injunction to restrain surface
drilling.pn the petition of an adjacent
landowner, unless the landowner can
show that the individual or concern
offering to drill is not financially
able to pay losses that may occur to
the mineral of adjacent lands.
. Ou the eve of the consideration of
the ranger bill in the house efforts
are being made to harmonize the dif-
ferences between those supporting
that measure, those advocating the
bill which was drawn in the adju-
tant general’s department, and the
independent element, which is not
committed to either proposition.
By a vote of 198 to 19 the house
adopted the resolution submitting an
amendment to the constitution to em-
power the legislature to issue road
bonds against the state automobile
license funds. „
The house adopted the report of the
fee conference committee on the sen-
ate bill to amend the method of grant-
ing law licenses in Texas'?
The House Committee on Corpora-
tions has reported favorably on the
senate public utilities bill.
The bill providing a fine of from $10
to $100 for any one who takes and uses
the horse or dumb animal of another
without consent of the owner was
finally passed. «
A bill to make the English language
the official language of Texas has been
introduced in the house. It was pre-
sented at the request pf the Council
of Defense of Travis county. It pro-
vides that all official business in
Texas shall be transacted in the Eng-
lish language.
The bill to clarify the statute aggmst
candidates for office paying the poll
tax of another was finally passed. It
provides that any person who pays or
procures another to pay the poll of
any citizen of this state except as per-
mitted by law shall he guilty of an
offense and punished.
The bill to repeal the appropriation
for state normals at Kingsville and
Nacogdoches has been defeated in the
house by a vote of 59 to 67. The nor-
mals will he constructed.
A joint resolution has been intro-
duced in the house seeking to combine
the offices of tax collector and tax as-
sessor in the counties of Texas. The
measure would let' the people vote on
such a constitutional amendment Nov.
4.
A bill to require all ginners to
charge for ginning on the amount of
lint obtained was introduced in the
house. \
The house engrossed the bill to al-
low the regents of the university of
Texas to issue bonds on lands now
held by the institutioii.
Austin, Texas.—After a day of de-
bate the house has engrossed the bill
levying a 2 per cent tax on the re-
ceipts of gro^s oil production. Pre-
viously it was voted down, 62 to 58,
the committee amendment to fix the
tax at U/i per cent. An amendment
to fix a graduated tax on the amount
of production was lost by 69 to 47.
The final vote on the measure was
104 to 12, with five present and not
voting.
The free textbook bill was finally
passed in the house. It is a senate
bill and goes to the governor for
signature.
County to Vote cfn Road Bonds.
Dallas.—A road bond issue of $1,-
400,000 to be submitted to the voters
April 1, has been approved by a ma-
jority of the Dallas county commis-
sioners’ court.
Hobby Signs Important Bill.
Austin, Texas.—The bill which per-
mits foreign corporations ousted from
the state for the yiolation of the anti-
trust laws to return to Texas, and
the free-textbook bill have been signed
by Governor Hobby.
What Is the Cause of
Backache ?
BY DOCTOR CORNELL
Backache is perhaps the most com-
/non ailment from which woiiicn puf-
fer. Rarely do you find anybody free-
from it. Sometimes the cavjt^jdL °b*
sc-ure, but Dr. Pierce, of BY.,
a high medical auth^rjt-y.^^K the
cause is very often a form ofMitarrh
that settles in the delicate mexjfn-aaea
of the feminine organs. When these
organs are inflamed, the first symp-
tom is backache, accompanied by bear-
ing down sensations, weakness, un-
healthy discharges, irregularity, pain-
ful periods, irritation, headache and
a general run-down condition. Any
woman in this condition is to be pit-
ied, but pity does not cure. The
trouble calls for Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription, which is a separate and
distinct medicine for women.' .
It is made of roots and herbs put up-
without alcohol or opiate of any kind, for
Or. Pierce uses nothing else in his pre-
scription. Favorite Prescription is a nat-
ural remedy for women, for the vegetable
growths of which it is made seem to have
been intended by Nature for that very
purpose. Thousands of girls and women,
young and old, have taken it, and thousands
have written grateful letters to Dr. Pierce
saying it made them well. In taking
Favorite Prescription, it is reassuring to
know that it goes straight to the cause oi
the trouble. There is but one way to-
overcome sickness, and that is to overcome
the cause. That is precisely what Favor-
ite Prescription is intended to do. -
Rend 10c for trial pkg. of Tablets.
Address Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.
Constipated women, as well as men, are
advised by Dr. Pierce to take his Pleasant
Pellets. They are just splendid fer cos-
tiveness.
Practice Patience.
■ Impatience can never wait until
filings are right. It lights the fuse
before the mine is properly laid..
Wants to start building before the
foundation is. constructed. It wants
to try issues with the world before it
has learned its problems. It explodes
upon its best friend before it learns
the reasons for his actions. The whole
business is folly, but it’s only human
nature. Patience is apt to err on the
side of caution, hut it. never sacrifices;
its interests to passion. It never re-
pels its loved ones by demanding the-
unreasonable. It just waits for the
facts and then spares what caa’t be-
helped. Those who don't understand:
it often regard it as a mark of weak-
ness, hut that’s because they do not
know life. Patience is the very es-
sence of the best that is in the gwi~
and it brings the best into human life.
Only big souls have it.
SKIN ERUPTIONS ON THE FACE.
are unsightly and mar the appearance-
of many a woman whose face would,
be otherwise attractive. There is no-
need for this. Just get a box of Tet-
terine and use it regularly and you will,
be surprised how quickly pimples..
blotches, itchy patches, etc., disappear-
and how soft and clear the skii#"be-
comes. Nothing better for eczema and
other skin troubles than Tetterine.
Sold by druggists or mailed for 50e. by
Shuptrine Co.,- Savannah, Ga.—Adv.
It is easy for a man to love his «eigh-
bor as himself, provided she is young:
and pretty.
It's all right to pray for the things
you want, but it’s a gpod .idea to work
for the tilings you actually need.
Plenty of exercise, fresh.air,
regular hours—is all the pre-
scription you need to avoid
Influenza—unless through
neglect or otherwise, a cold
gets you. Then take:—af
once
24 hours—relieves grip in i
back If it fails. The genuine box has a Red top
with Mr. Hill’s picture. At All Drug Stores.
HERE’S RELIEF
FROM THOSE
TERRIBLE
HEADACHES
Those terrible headaches are relieved almost
iyr: "I have been sub-
I My head would ache so badly at times tha
scarcely stand it. Doctors seemed to lie i
give me relief, though I tried several of them,
many kinds of headache medicines and tab-
led*. About a month or aix woeks ago.I tried Hunt't
Lightning Oil, which gave me almost instant relict and I
am glad to aay that I nave been entirely free from those
dreadful headachea ainca. From my own experience I
can aay that Hunt's Lightning Oil U without an equal a*
a reliever of pain, and I only wish that I had uj«d it aev-^
eral yeara ago.—Mra.W.T. Dixon. Sherman,Texai.
A Wonderful Remedy for Rheumatism?
Neuralgia, Etc.
Stmpl, rub HUNT'S LIGHTNING OIL on —It pen,
trates, giving a pleaaant sense of warmth and making
. the pain fade sway, almoat aa noon as the appiioa-^,
lade. Its stimulating effect to the
jam i* not equalled by any other
nL At all drugstore! in 70c ai
Mltlea. or sent d'rect from
, A.D. Richird* IMIciae (V, la
Ol SaZKMAK. TEXAS
LIGHTNINTG fll|j
and took
mm
Get Longer Better W
Shear with a machine andleave no second cats i
scar the sheep. Use a Stewart No. 9 Ball Beari
Shearing Machine. Gets 15% more wooleasily i
quickly. Removes the fibre comoletelv. makmi
quickly. Removes the fibre completely, making
longer and better selling. Le -ves a smooth, eve
ubblefor next year’s growth. -- -
for itself. Price $14. Sendui
arrivaL W rite for catalog.
CHICAGO FLEXIBLE SHAFT COMPANY
Dept. B 172, 12th Street and Central Ave., Chicago,
stubble for next year’s growth. Machine soo-
pays for itself. Price $14. Send us $2—balance o
arrivaL Write for catalog.
WEEKS’
BREAK-UP-A-CO
TABLETS
1 FOR COLDS AN D LA GRIPPE
LSo stood you can afford to insist and see
yTthat yon eet srenuine like package shown
best druggists <j5gg
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Shuffler, R. The Olney Enterprise. (Olney, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, March 7, 1919, newspaper, March 7, 1919; Olney, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1105394/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Olney Community Library.