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The Ottawa Herald from Ottawa, Kansas • Page 4

The Ottawa Herald from Ottawa, Kansas • Page 4

Publication:
The Ottawa Heraldi
Location:
Ottawa, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4 1- i FOUR. THE OTTAWA HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1918. REPORTED ON TB CASES. CUTICURA HEALED Ease baby's 'wmmmM in gp Hps til i 111 mil emerge tvom this 3 -4- IK dm 1' SILK GINGHAMS. Women simply over the new silk ginghams.

There's something so delightfully young about them and irresistibly Priced everywhere $1.75 to $2.00. Special for Friday and OQ Saturday i si FANCY GEORGETTE AND CHIFFON. Special for Friday and Saturday SILK CHIFFONS. Special for Friday $and? Saturday PLAIN TAFFETA AND SATINS. mm These are remarkable range of colors is wonaerrui the best.

4 A i if Or SS.S ti i CI ti. it i EKPOR Sll TROUBLE On Arms, Neck and Boay. Full of -Blisters and Little Piniples. An Awful Torment. Used One Box Cuticura Ointment and One Cake Soap.

Cost 75 Cents. had a very bad skin trouble and It almost ran me crazy. First it came on my arms, then on my neck and body. The skin became red, and when I scratched the itchy places became full of blisters, and under the skin was all full of little pimples. They were an awful torment.

saw an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and used a sample. 1 bought aboxofCuticuraOint-, ment and a cake of Soap which healed me sound and (Signed) Miss Jennie Smith, McLean, IlLJuly 16, '17. v. Not' only are these super-creamy' emollients wonderfully effective in eczema, rashes, pimples, dandruff and baby skin troubles, but once the skin is clear, the scalp clean, they keep them so if used for every -day toilet purposes. Sample Each Free by Mail.

Address post-1 card: "Cuticura, Dept. Boston." Sold everywhere. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c at Los Angeles, that he has been corn-missioned an officer, to work for the orphan and refugee children with headquarters in Paris. He was notified that he was booked to sail May 1st and that his ticket was waiting for him at New York.

Rev. Clark has been in this Work for many years, one of the largest child saving institutions being at Omaha, which he was instrumental in founding. Rev. Clark expects to visit his father B. Clark at Hol-yoke, on his way to New York, but will be unable to visit here as he was not routed through Ottawa.

Rev. Clark is a seminary classmate of Dr. S. p. Price of Ottawa.

OVERSEAS CASUALTIES Washington, April 24. The casualty list yesterday contained forty-three names, divided as follows: Killed in action, 2 died of wounds, 1 died of disease, wounded severely, wound ed slightly, 27. The list follows: Killed action: Privates Frank G. Kane, TJaniel L. McGafigtin.

Died of wounds: Priv. Winford Ploof. Died of disease: Byj-beer Privates James Frederick Court ney, George Lyeth. Joe Payne. Wounded severely: Lieut, Bernard McMeel, Sergt.

Henry G. SchWanz, orp. Oasmier P. Kubiak, Mechanic Joseph P. AVittcamp, Privates Charles P.

Allen, AV'alter A. Antoniewiez, J. Cleary, Tony Plazzito, Flem Stapleton. AVounded Slightly: Lieuts. Thomas Holmes, Harry D.

Corps. William Carstens, George E. Egan, Edward B. Piekarki, John Thompson; Privates Joseph J. Aleskandrowivz, Eugene M.

Binion, James 'W. Burke, Henry Burt, John Ericksrin, Bernard F. Erwin, Raynor A. Fairty, Frank E. Henry; Corp.

William L. A. Flamme; Privates F. Melvin, Robert J. Nicholson, Thomas Okleja, Harry N.

Rainey, Harry E. 1 Reed, Frank T. Savage, George F. Sehirick, Arthur L. P.

Tarr, Foster Thomas, Harold. Walker, J. Edwin Wickman, Neal E. Wood. 60c 'BSff'Sf, Butter Fat 's Interests GOOD BUSINESS If you can save money 4on your clothes, it's good business providing the clothes fit, are stylish arid of fine quality.

We lean save money for you and, give you everything you have been Hart Schaffner Marx clothes 'are good business. They're all wool made in models-to fit everyfig-: ii're they S.wear Idrig and always look well. Ralph -Peasant's Clothes Shop' Stairss r- The Home of Hart SchafTner Marx i' If. AmericarIs to beictorious every one of- iisr must do part--' Buy a -Liberty WILL HELP FRENCH ORPHANS. Rev.

A. W. Clark Has Been Made A- Commissioned Officer. Mrs. Crater, has.

received word, from her.brother, the Rev. A. W. Clark DRY GOODS CO. FIRST GAS A Public Health Banquet and Meeting to Be Held Soon.

At the public health meeting yesterday afternoon, held at the Chamber of Commerce rooms, Miss Maud Bolt who was sent into this county to ex-amine'the eighteen tuberculosis cases discovered in the military draft, made her report. These cases are at the early stages and are to be taken up for treatment at the state sanitor-ium at Norton or at Home. A committee consisting of John Scott, president of the Ottawa board of education, Mrs. F. A.

Clark and Dr. W. A. Powell, pastor of the Federated church, was appointed to arrange for an occasion for considering public health work Ottawa, to enlist the organized support of the This will consist of a banquet, it is planned, with addresses by several who, are informed on this work, probably on Wednesday, May 8, at 6:30 p. m.

Further announcement will be made soon. The outlook is considered encouraging by those who attended the conference yesterday. Miss Bolt revealed facts as to the tuberculosis situation in Ottawa and assured the city of aid ready to be given by the state board of health. DISPATCHERS TO CHANUTE. The order installing a corps of three dispatchers here for the Santa Fe, under the pending change of division headquarters on the Southern Kansas, has been rescinded, at least temporarily, according to information at the local station.

It is understood that for the present the dispatching will be done from Chanute. S. D. electrician, who had been, making changes in. the office rooms here to accommodate the expected operators, was ordered this morning to stop work here and to proceed to' Chanute and install instruments there.

It is said at the local headquarters that the new change may be only temporary. Cut This Out and KeeD It. Every mother of young children should cut this out and keep it. that she may know what to get when her children have whooping cough. "We first used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in our home about three years when our daughter May had whooping cough, and it proved to be such an excellent medicine for this disease that I willingly recommend it.

It never failed to rejieve those whooping: spells. -ip the phlegm and eive immediate relief," writes Mrs. Ethel Price. Mattoon. 111.

Adv. CONSIDERING CITY- SCALES. Mayor B. F. Bowers and Commissioners E.

E. Pember and. David FJinchpaugh went to Emporia this morning to investigate the city scales and the city market which have been in use there some time. Similar arrangements have been proposed here. For a long time there has" been more or less agitation in favor of a well regulated city market here.

Considerable stuff of all kinds is marketed here every week, particularly through the summer and fall. A set of public scales also is in demand. The only scales available now are privately owned. POMONA BOY IS SHOT. Lloyd Cole, aged 15 years, son of Mr.

and Mrs. O. N. Cole of Pomona, was' Accidentally shot by a 22 rifle yesterday afternoon, the ball passing through one hand and entering the breast. He was promptly attended by a surgeon and although the ball was not extracted, the wounds are not considered dangerous.

The boy was employed on the farm of his brother-in-law, George Wheeler east of Pomona. He was using a riding plow and carried the rifle to have it handy for rabbits. In some unexplained manner it was exploded with the above results. BREWSTER SPEAKS TONIGHT. Attorney General S.

M. Brewster of Topcka came here this morning and spent the day visiting friends. He will speak tonight at the brotherhood the First Methodist church on a patriotic subject. Luncheon will be srved at 6:30 o'clock and Mr. Brewster's talk wiU follow.

The. brotherhood also wHl elect officers. Mr. Brewster is one of the Republican candidates fcr governor. Stop Itching, Eczema Never mind how often have tried and failed, you can stop burning, itching eczema quickly by applying a little zemo furnished by any druggist for 35c.

Extra large bottle, $1.00. Healing begins the moment zemo is applied. In a short time usually every trace of eczema, tetter, pimples, rash, blackheads and similar skin diseases will be removed. For clearing the skin and making 'it vigorously healthy, always use zemo, the penetrating; antiseptic liquid. It is not a greasy salve and it does not stain.

When others fail it is the one dependable treatment for skin troubles of all kinds. The E. W. Rose Cleveland. O.

1 fr 3 Just Received Second shipment of I Oil Stoves and Ovens 4 Buy while the assort- may be the last we can buv. Young and Pember i FAILURE jglr I for Coughs Colds Don't let the little one suffer. Dr. King's New Discovery loosens the phlegm and gives quick relief, and being- mildly laxative it helps brin the child's physical condition up to normal. Dr.

King's New Discovery should be kept on hand to nip 'those fits of It has helped thousands of children during the past 50 years. (jet it at your druggists Constipation Causes Sickness Don't permit yourself to become constipated, as your system immediately begins to absorb poison from the backed-up waste matter. Use Dr. King's New Life Pills and keep well. There is better safeguard against illness.

Try it tonight, -All druggiss WAS WOUNDED IN FRANCE ABNER LLOYD GIBSON IS IN U. S. MARINE CORPS. A Telegram From General Barnett Last Night Did Not Give Any Particulars. According to a telegram received last night from Major General George Barnett, commandant of the United States Marine Corps, Washington, D.

Abner Lloyd Gibson of Ottawa was wounded in action in France on April 13. Particulars, General Barnett said, would be wired later. Gibson is a son of Mr. and Mrs. W.

G. Gibson of 409 West Eighth street. The telegram, addressed to Gibson's mother, Mrs. Mary V. Gibson, ani receiveu about midnight last night, was as follows "Regret to inform you that Abner Lloyd Gibson was wounded in action on April 13.

No' particulars received. vf further report, will advise you by telegraph. George Barnett, Major General, Commandant." Gibson who is well known here, was 21 years old last January. He was enlisted April 22, 1917 and underwent training both at Paris Island, S. C-, and Quantica, Va.

He left the United States for France about September 22 last year and is believed to have landed about the; first or second week iriOctober. His mother received word, in a letter reaching here March 7, that he was ill in a hospital for a timeT- The telegram stating that he had. been wounded was the first advice reaching here of his participation in active service at the front. It is pbelieved he must have, taken part ir the recent British repulse of the Ger-. man drive.

A. D. ROGERS KNOWN HERE. Cincinnati Man Who Died on Train Married Birda Piersol. Albert Dunlap Rogers, son-in-law- of Mrs.

M. E- Piersol, 322 Walnut street, whose death was announced in The Herald yesterday, died on board a train between Cincinnati, O. and Nashville, according to news dispatches. He. was a director and general sales manager of the Cincinnati Rubber cpmpany and probably was making a trip in the interests of the firm when stricken.

Mr. Rogers was quite well known here At one time he represented the Simmons Hardware company and had headquarters in Ottawa. He met Miss Birda Piersol, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Silas Piersol, and they were married on April 25, 1900 eighteen years ago tomorrow.

From here they went to Vicksburg, and later lived in other southern cities. Eight or nine years ago they went to Cincinnati. Mr. Rogers was one of the organizers of the Cincinnati Rubber company. Last summer a reunion of the Piersol family was held here and Mr.

and Mrs. Rogers and their three children were here for some time. Mr. Rogers was a son of the late' Judge' John Rogers, who was a federal judge at Fort Smith, Ark. He was appointed during President Cleveland's administration.

Judge Rogers had also served a number of years in Congress. Mrs. Rogers will leave Cincinnati tonight for Fort Smith where the funeral will be held Friday. Following the funeral she and the children will come to Ottawa to spend the summer with Mrs. Piersol according to a message received this morhingl Besides his widow, two sons and a daughter, Mr.

Rogers also is survived by three brothers, John H. Rogers and Randolph P. Rogers of Kansas City and O. G. Rogers of Fort Smith, and a sister, Mrs.

M. Johnson of Fort Smith. Mrs. Rogers has three-brothers, George and Enoch Piersol Oklahoma City who are expected to attend the funeral, and Guy Piersol of Topeka. Mrs.

M. E. Piersol, the moth- will not be able to CASTOR For Infants and Children WEATHER REPORT Probable showers tonight and Thursday; rising temperature MI; $1.75 $1.00 $1.50 values the qual- m0 PIPE LINE A Shaped Like a Bullet. The Rantoul Lumber Grain company has given out a large nutnber of pencil holders shaped like bullets, extolling the virtues of fiantoul, which have made quite a hit. 1QJ save in buying be- Music Co.

Main Street every one of ua must do his part. 5 i A 1 DAIRYMEN. Sweet Milk Vrpe'flr attempts at a gas pipeline to carry the fuel across country niark'et at greater or less distance, were in 1870. They were unsuccessful. The line was of wood pipe with a bore of seven inches and was 25 miles long.

It led from what is known as the old Beebe well in Ontario County, N. to Rochester The pine, sections of pipe were driven with mallets into couplings which were ordinary carpenter's mortise and tenon joints, soaked in hot pine and coal tar. Leaks were stopped with burlap and woolen blankets, soaked with pine and coal tar, held in place with clamps. Theeffort to transport gas by pipeline twenty-live miles to Rochester blight have been successful had not someone blundered after the line had been laid fifteen miles. A valve was opened by mistake which threw the entire well pressure on the line and ruined it.

It was abandoned loss 1 million dollars. A 2-inch pipeline to Titusville, five miles long, was built in 1872 and was the first successful cross country pipe-line. Froni the time of completion of that line the natural gas industry began a steady and phenomenal growth. 53 CV KANSAS NATURAL GAS CO. the END TO LIGHTLESS NIGHTS.

Conservation Measure Discontinued Until September 1. Lightless nights will be discontinued commencing tommorow night until September 1, according to an order issued at Washington Monday by Fur-1 Administrator Garfield. The federal administrator sent the following telegram to state administrators: W-At the earnest. request of the Liberty Loan committee I have decided to suspend operation of the lightless night order beginning on next Thursday night. By reason of the late hour of lighting brought about by the daylight saving law, the lightless night order will remain suspended until September 1 next when it will again become effective." Restricted use of electricity in street lighting and advertising on Thursdays and Sundays was ordered by the fuel administration last.

December to conserve coal. In Ottawa the white way in the business district has been running on a restricted schedule, except on Saturday nights. Only the lights that are permitted to burn all night three to a block have been used during the IT IS SERIOUS. Some Ottawa People Fail to Realize the Seriousness of a Bad Back. The constant aching of a bad back, The weariness, the tired feeling, Tne pains and aches of kidney ills May result seriously if neglected.

Dangerous urinary troubles often follow. An Ottawa citizen shows you what to do. Mrs. Elizabeth Clem, 635 N. Mulberry says: "My ankles were stiff and swollen and they bothered me when I was walking about.

My hands were so stiff I couldn't close them and it was almost impossible for me to do any housework. Sharp, piercing pains extended from my kidneys all through my back. Doan's Kidney Pills removed the pains and swellings." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Clem Foster-Milburn Buffalo, N.

Y. Adv. "I TANK SO XKIDKR" It may be so, that Robinsoa Crusoe, did sew. If so, he also, did sew by hand, by reason of a sewin; machine famine oh his island. Don't sew like Crusoe.

We have some standard makes, priced to sell. Drop in. V- DIXSMORE SECOND HAND STORK. MPI ity This 24 cents higher than station price ii for Butter Fat. Sell your milk and get the 1 extra price.

OTTAWA GONPENSING GO. it Country Your Own i if'; week. Other street lights were operated on tne 'moonlight schedule during the winter. In Topeka. Rev.

Frank Dale made a business trip to today. I 1 1 Are Scarce and Crop Conditions Are You better select one side have' more to choose from. Good dependable mahogany and oak cases, in satin finished cases arranged when -A iauiiders By giving up luxuries and some of the comforts and conveniences whicjilyou can deny yourself without serious hardship, you will save mate-- rials which our soldiers need, and without which they will be seriously handicapped. By investing the money youtnus save in Liberty Bonds you will still further aid the government ln" buying food; arms, ammunition and supplies for the army and navy. thanioney you so invest will come back to you, with interest at a 4ime when yon may need it far more than you do DoWi Y9nr thrift and economy and self denial NOW will be a help taryour country in its time pf greatest need, and viU be the highest service that you can render your- self "and those dependent on you.

now, and Clarendon and Holland pianos in some in glass, others COQC Clflfl $LOO up to $4Uu desired. El THE PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK South If America is to be victorious Is i 119 Bfaiit. Buy a Liberty bond. 1 i 104 S. flain i si.

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About The Ottawa Herald Archive

Pages Available:
31,043
Years Available:
1882-1922