The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 11, 1912 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
KETCH WAS CANDIDATE ™w"se
SELECTED LIST, LONG
PRESIDENT DRAWNOUT
HEARING NOW
DOZEN COUNTY CASES SLATED
FOR RENEWAL BEFORE
NEW JUDGE.
NEED CHAMP CLARK SPEAKER;
HIGH PRAISE IS GIVEN WILSON
Correspondent
Praises Ferris
I "No man worked harder than I did i tudes but strikes straight from the
for the nomination of Champ C'lark ' shoulder
I for president of the United State*
and, God knows, no man would h«ve
loved better to see him in the presi-
CASHIER OF LAWTON NATION-
AL BEAM CHAMBER OF
COMMERCE
___ i The case of W. T. Wynu versus
FILINGS, CLOSED ON SATURDAY1 J°'1n Barnhard which has already
SHOW <> OUT FOR
COUNTS OFFICE.
FIGHT COUNTY DIVISION MOST ARE DEMOCRATS
Business Men Plan Campaign To Hundred More For Township Places,
Save South End; Hold Smoker
Next Week.
♦ ♦♦*♦«♦♦♦♦
THE NEW OFFICERS.
President, Frank L. Ketch.
Vice President, J. T. White.
2nd V. P., J. Elmer Thomas ♦
Secretary, Roy F. Champlin. ♦
With Legislative Jobs, Raise
Number.
♦ : From Monday's Daily.
♦ County candidates for township
♦ and legislative office, nearly two
♦ hundred persons in Comanche county
♦ | are asking to be elected to office this
year, according to the records of
Chas. H. Shaw, secretary of the coun-
dential chair but, after all, it may be
better that the Raltimore convention
turned out as it did. For we
need old Champ Clark, with his wide
MAN ON GROUND TALKS OF
.. SPEECH AT BALTIMORE BY
OKLAHOMAN.
He stands for something
And that is what the people will
demand of the men who seek office in
this campaign. I am going to throw
myself into the r:tmpa!gn for Gov-
ernor Wilson's election, just as 1
would have done had the nomination
leadership, to continue as speaker of j ^'°ne to Champ Ckrk, and I want to ,1id not attcnd the Baltimore conven-
the house and. with a democratic j Oklahoma return the heaviest tiorli there ttre sevPraI features that
president in the executive mansion, j democratic mafoi.tv, this fall, that IT,i(rht bo of interest. The prelimln-
keep the democratic forces In con- h*s ever been recorded since ballots ;iries leading up to the time of nomi-
Ifresr united for a thorough-going bega i tr. be cast this state." ,„tion Thursday morning, the ses-
sion lasting from 8 p. m. Wednesday
A correspondent for an eastern | J-
per writing on the Baltimore conven-
tion, has this word of praise for Rep-
resentative Scott Ferris of Lawton:
To those of the Oklahomans who
until 7 p. m. Thursday; the nomina-
| tions occupying the time from mid-
♦ ty election board, who is today at-
♦ i tempting to untangle the flood of fil-
♦ i ings for places on ballots, the last of
♦! which were received in his office Sat-
Treasurer, Guy C. Robertson.
Directors, Frank L. Ketch, J.
T. White, R. A. Sneed, A. R.
McLennan, Guy C. Robertson, - j
♦ Robert Landers, J. Elmer Thorn- ♦,urday night.
♦ as. John A. Fain, John N. Shep- ♦ For county office alone sixty-one . .
♦ ler, E. L. Gregory, M. S. Simp- ♦ i candidates are filed and these added | U,nder advisement but it is said that
♦ son, M. Koehler. ♦ j to the ono hundred or more candi
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ dates for township honors and the fil .
From Saturday's Daily. ings for legislative positions which | cJourt ,s "ot acquainted with the evi-
dence advanced in the former hear-
passed through five court hearings
and, although with but a $20 cow
involved, cost the litigants nearly $2,-
; 000, is before the county court today
on motion for new trial and, since
the county court is presided over by , . . ^ .
a new judge who has never heard the dm>n^ati(On h. interests of Mr. Ferns was greeted by en-
testimony in the case, is said to stand thlupe0Pk- ! thusiastic applause when he appeared
a fair chance of being heard again. That wa" the ^.ration of Con- I efore the great audiencc which con, _ „
It was decided during the winter in 8res*m«n Scott F,,rris in "■ sP«*h Plet.e,y Pa<*ed «venue. And the niKht untn after (lay,|Kht. The atten-
favor of Wynn. 8t th<? Younfr Men's demo"a'ic audience had stayed through five «on of the enormous throug of ap-
Today was the fir.c sitting of the ?U" r"t,fi<-ation meeting and jubilee, preceding speeches, interested in proximately 15,000 persons was re-
county court, under the regime of ht every feature of th. ratification pro- j speotful enough until after the 3rd
Judge S. I. McElhoes, elected tempor- ' 4wlth. ^ ^ilson aii, Rrt™' tl . . I nomination which included Under-
ary judge succeeding Jas. H. Wol- P,resld*nt and (hamP Clark speaker The mating v.as rpenrd by W. E. i wood, Clark and Wilson. After this
verton. |° 8 democratlc h°u*e. we'll be ableLeckie of Cache, eonnty chairman of j the crowd had little patience as the
Along with the cow case are alt0 *'Ve an ^ministration that the th, young men's democratic league,; nominations that followed were con-
dozen or more others which come in ! Pe°f e. appr°Vp' ^ continued. .State Senator J- Elmer Thomas fol-|8ldered ,8 favorite son compliments
for requests for new hearing on the
same grounds—that the evidence ad-
vanced was not sufficient for the de-
cisions reached. Judge McElhoes has
taken all of the twelve or fourteen
there is storng probability of new
I trial because of the fact that the new
These are the newly elected officers
of the Lawton Chamber of Com-
merce. chosen at last night's meeting
of that body.
r rank L. Ketch, the new president
succeeding R. W. Thompson, is cash-
ier of the Lawton National bank and
has been identified with almost every
booster movement inaugurated in the
city. For a number of years he
served as treasurer of the Chamber
■of Commerce and, when not treasur-
er. has almost continuously been a
member of the board of directors. His
most signal success in the promotion
of new enterprises, perhaps, was; in
heading the committer which financed
the purchase of "university place,"
first bought for a Baptist university
and later used as the place of locat-
ing the Cameron state school of agri-
culture.
Roy F. Champlin, secretary, was
reelected without opposition.
Revival Of Interest. .
A campaign will immediately be
instituted to revive interest in the
commercial body and, to this end, a
great booster smoker is to be held on
Friday evening of next week, follow-
ing which a campaign will be opened
for new members and the taking up
of new enterprises.
Fight County Division.
One of the first efforts of the bui-
ness men will be to open a campaign
against the division of Comanche
county in order to form a new coun-
ty out of the southern half to be
known as Cotton county.
A committee composed of A. R.
McLennan. Frank L. Ketch, S. I. Ms-
Elhoes. John A. Fain, Guy C. Robert-
son, Robert Landers and R. F.
Champlin was appointed to assume
charge of the anti-county division
campaign and it was announced that,
at the meeting of next Friday night,
resolutions will be prepared for ad-
option setting forth the reasons why,
as Lawton sees it, the county should
not be divided.
man in this country ever deliverd a
stronger, abler, or more clean-cut
have gone to the secretary of the
state election board will bring the tot-1l, (fS'
al list, savs Mr. Shaw, to almost the ! Jud*e McElhoes announces that,
I hereafter, the county court sessions .... , _
two hundred mark. t address than the great speech Gov-
„ . , „ _ , i will begin promptly at 9 o clock each „ . .
Most Are Democrats. 1 •* * . ernor Wilson delivered at that ban-
Due, chiefly, to the fact that none He ur*es attorneys, especi-'
but democrats have serious assurance PromP^ 'n attendance.
of final election, the candidates be-! "
fore the nrimarv are mostlv of the <PubIlshed in Weekly Constitution
tore the primary are mostly ot tne June ^ Ju|y 4 and
democratic faith, fortny-orve of the, 1912.)
sixty-one county candidates bein^: NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE OF
"It is not merely from a partisan lowed with a brief talk about Gov-; and as the various spell binders at-
reason that I am willing and glad to ernor Wilson himself, Wendall John-1 tempted to speak, they were cut
support Governor Wilson as the son with a talk on "our friends, the, short by the impatient sleepy audi-
democratic candidate—he is deserv- enemy," and John M. Young telling once.
ing of every ounce of energy every of the prospects of victory in No-! Next came the secondin)f of the
democrat can give in his support. He vember. Geo. D. Key, who, outside nominations of the three leading can-
is a big, brainy, clear-headed, whole Senator Gore and Mr. Ferris, was the didates. Each in turn had been cut
hearted man and a tower of strength only man from Lawton to the demo-1 short by the impatience of the audi-
in th,. fight for progressive govern- cratic convention, gave an interesting ence, and the clamor that prevented
ment. I heard him in Washington at r;sumc of the proceedings of the con- anvbodv from hearing what was miiH
anybody from hearing what was said.
the Jackson-day banquet—and no vention, declaring that, despite the ; When Oklahoma was called Scott
quet. He does not deal in glittering
I generalities or high sounding plati-
of
democratic success. The Lawton
Booster band furnished music fc
the evening.
democrats and the remaining twenty
divided up between republicans and
socialists.
Some Come Up Missing.
There are three democratic candi-
dates, announced in the newspapers
and active candidates in the field for
the past several weeks, whose names
do not appear in the list of filings—
either because they neglected to file
LAND.
Notice is hereby given, that in pur-
suance of an order of sale issued out
of the District Court of Comanche
county, State of Oklahoma, oti the
12th day of June, 1912, In an action
wherein The Central Investment
company, a corporation, was plaintiff
and George A. Orcutt, Alvina Orcutt,
J. Y. Morgan and E. F. Applegate
were defendants, directed to me, the
undersigned sheriff of Comanche
or because their filing papers have county, Oklahoma, commanding me
become entangled with the flood of V* 'eyy UP°" and se" the following
„ , ., , , I described property, to-wit:
township officers and thus far have j The East hg,f (1_2) of th(l South.
been overlooked. They are Harvey wes[ quarter (1-4) and lots No. S and
Miller, candidate for treasurer; J.; 4 of Section Nineteen (19), Town
JL Carter and J. M. Hooper, candi- shiP F°ur (4) North of Range Fi'
dates for commissioner from the east- *e„en .£"> We®1 °.ff the Indian Merldi-
.. . : an, lying and situated in the said
ern district. | county of Comanche, Oklahoma,
It was impossible to secure a list j to satisfy a judgment and decree of
of township filings for this after- j foreclosure in favor of said plaintiff
noon's paper and it may be that these' ®ndfla^a'(n®^^aid^ defendants, George
three county candidates names are j
mixed with township officers so that
bitter battle of ballots, the conven- Ferris slowly made his way to the
lion closed in the most genuine spirit j speaker's stand and his tall com-
harmony and enthusiasm for manding figure faced the great audi-
ence which was evidently prepared to
show i'.ipatience at further speech
making, his voice rang out so clear
and distinct that it commanded re-
I spect and the question was passed.
Who is he- And he, unlike the others,
proceeded uninterrupted making ev-
ery other Oklahoman present feel
that Oklahoma so far as oratory was
The state of Oklahoma has sixty- American industry to build for the lonc,>rned ^'as in the first rank, be-
three miles of railroad to every ten future. They have gone over the cause no c earer voice "or stronger
OKLAHOMA LEADS SOUTHWEST
IN RAILWAY MILAGE PERCENT!
thousand inhabitants, according to southwestern situation thorough!y| poIit[cal loKic wa3 advanced by any
statistics on the subject just issued and have seen that, in respect to the •sPe" pr at any t'm® during this
by the government. This grouping of up-building of a great diversified in- invention which include! the
figures further shows that in this re- <histri ' commnnwonHh nkluhnm. ower of the nations orators, and
figures further shows that in this re- dustr!-' commonwealth Oklahoma
spect Oklahoma leads the entire hi peer. There are states that1., ,
southwest there being in Texas just proouce larger annual valuations °SP r°m 6 sou' west- enry of
most conspicious among them were
they will be found later.
Who Have Filed.
These have filed for the various
county offices on the three tickets:
District clerk—R A. Sneed, C. O.
Arnold, R. B. Compton, Jno. R. Hill
! A. Orcutt and Alvina Orcutt obtained
and made in said Court on the 8th
day of December, 1911, for the sum
of $243.45 and costs $17.35 with in-
terest thereon at 10 per cent from
the tenth day of Decem-
ber, 1911, and an attorney's
fee of $50.00 and costs accruing, and
a further judgment In favor of the
A. McTaggart, and J. R. Capshaw, answering defendant, J. Y. Morgan
democrats; George M. Malvern, re-;a!ld gainst said (lefendant. F. F. Ap-
(Published in Weekly Constitution
June 27-Tuly 4-11-18-1912.)
State of Oklahoma, County of Co-
manche. In the District Court.
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
Maud Jelf, plaintiff, vs. Jim Jelf,
defendant.
Defendant, Jim Jelf will take no-
tice that he has been sued in the
above entitled cause by the plaintiff,
Maud Jelf, upon a petition filed there-
in on the 30th day of April, 1912, for
divorce, upon the grounds of deser- .. , . t-. i r : *
tion and abandonment for more than F,! >'>cani Franklin, socialist,
one year preceeding the commence-
ment of *his actior. and tho custody
of their minor child; unless you ans-
wer said n'-tition or otherwise plead
to said pe'itio -- ' '"ors th
thirty-eight miles of railway to every agricultural products and states thatiTLXa.3 and ''oh"*0" are masterfU
ten thousand people; in Missouri do the same in minerals, but there is sf1°" j™' 'rginia pro a y coming
twenty-two; in Arkansas thirty-four, no state in the entire group that can ,lCX 1 V\i?ma exas' ln * e
and in Kansas fifty-three. combine both in the sSme proportion. command of "j1* *reat "'""My, now
That Oklahoma should lead in the As only twenty-five percent of the recess uni on ay a a. m.,
population proportionate mileage in farm land is under cultivation and ^ °*>e e « - oc may
the southwest is attributed by traffic as not that fraction of the coal, oil j 6 r° e"
experts to the general location and and natural gas resources have been J
the incomparable grouping of raw developed, it is Inevitable that within
material found in the sixty-nine twenty-five years the state will be the
thousand square miles of territory. A greatest industrial and population
leading official sums the situation up unit between Chicago and Galveston.
as follows: Hence the probability that there will
"The state of Missouri is over half be more new lines built in the near
a century old, while Oklahoma is future."
less than a decade past statehood.Yet Few people are as well qualified to
the latter has 125 percent more rail- scientifically gauge the future as are
way mileage to the ten thousand in- the great generals of transportation
habitants than the former; ninety and they rightly estimate that Ok-
percent more than Arkansas; eighty lahoma will set the pace of rapid de-
ui! I c TV 1 : . ' P'egate, for the sum of $599.96 with nercent
publican; J. F. Dickerson, socialist., jnterest thereon at the rate of 8 per , _ •
County Judge—H. N. Whalin and; cent from December 10th, 1911, for!pore more than Kansas. Principal as the state possesses the variety and
A HERO IN A LIGHTHOUSE.
For years J. S. Donahue, So. Hav-
en, Mich., a civil war captain, as a
lighthouse keeper, i verted awful
wrecks, but a queer fact is, he might
have been a wreck, himself, if Elec-
tric Bitters had not prevented. "They
cured me of kidney trouble and
chills," he writes, "after I had taken
other so called cures for years,
without benefit and they also ira-
percent mora than Texas and nine velopment for the next half c.ntury1 plov®^d I"5' £fow* at seyenty, I
•' am teeling nne. ror uyspesia, lndi-
r„n , o'clock A. M.. on said day, at the|A r.IRL'S WILD MIDNIGHT RIDE.! ',Published
Cunning- east door of the Court House, in the
W. C. Henderson, democrat; H. R. an attorney's fee of $115,00 and for cause of this is to be found in the dis- abundance of natural resources that
Blanding, republican; A. G. Sechrist, ? i' V , the ;5th I position of the {raffic captains of fit her for the vanguard position.
™ ....... ...... . - Jn pai|y Constitution'
July 8, 9, 10, 11 and Weekly J
July 11, 18, 1912.)
Notici of Estimate, Comanche Coun-
ty, Oklahoma.
Notice is hereby given that at a
regular meeting of the Board of
County Commissioners of Comanche
county, Oklahoma, held in my office
gestion, all stomach, liver aud kidney
troubles, they're witl.^ut equal. Try
them. Only 50 cents at Jones Bros.
County Attorney—S. M „ v lllc
ham, J. A. Diffendaffer, A. J. Burton! City of Lawton, in said County and | To. warn PeoPie of a 'earful forest
and T. B. Orr, democrats; Fred R. | State, offer for sale and sell to the fi,'e in the Catskills a young girl rode
Ellis republican. [highest bidder for cash, the said j horseback at midnight and saved
Ti vnnovtaKni'n r\ pa m 11/ih I. Tr . , ,
many lives, ller deed was glorious
highest bidder for cash, the said | horseback
... „ j t /** r. n property above described, or so much
Sheriff—w. E. Nix and J. C. Oill- thereof as will satisfy said julgments
espie, democrats; Geo. W. Bushey and j with interest and costs.
C. N. Cannon, republicans; T. E. Per-! Witness my nand this 19th day of
due, socialist. I June, 1912.
Treasurer—Joe I. Torter and W. J.j
By J. R. HEFLEY, Under^ Sheriff.
Donald, democrats; R. V. Hofer, re-
publican; E. S. Maple, socialist.
Superintendent of schools—Jennettj
S. Crosby, Clarence P.ybolt, Harry
E. Thompson, Joseph A. Dickson, J.
A. Hutcheson. and W. E. G. Humph-
ries, demrc-ats; J. C. Ferrier, re-
dav of August, '912, said petition
will he taken as true and judgment
rendered against you granting said
plaintiff a divorce and the custody of
the minor child as prayed for in said
petition.
Dated this June 2fi, 1912.
(SEAL.)
OVE HARRIS, District Clerk.
McF.LHOES, FERRIS & RHINE-
FORT, Her Attorneys.
Mrs. Harry Campbell ftf n<
Cache was in the" city today shopping
and visiting friends.
HAIL INSURANCE
GROWING CROPS
LOW
HATES
GUY O. MILLER
"n the Allev—Olty National Bank H'iitf.
Ragister of deeds—Charla Critcli-
• democrats; N. W. Gatewood, soci-
alist.
H-rvevor—S. A. Joyner, democrat;
E K Kerby, republican.
County clerk—Dick Harris, Her-
"IN A BAD WAY."
any a Lawton Reader Will Feel
Grateful For This Infor-
mation.
When your back gives out;
Becomes lame, weak or aching;
When urinary troubles set it.
Your kidneys are "in a bad way."
Don't delay—use Doan's Kidney
Pills.
Here is good evidence of their
worth.
J. R. Rogers, Marlow, Okla., say
''ert Hodge and Sandy W. Gregory, "I have the same words of praise for
d.mocrats; D. Y Wilson, republican; Doan's Kidney Pills today as I did in
J. B. Emerick, socialist. j 190H. I never fail to highly recom-
Assessor—H. B. Roberts and E. L. .mend this remedy because it proved
Gordon, democrats; Fred W. Smith,! beneficial. I have never had to use a
but lives are often saved by Dr.
King's New Discovery in curing lung
trouble, coughs and colds, which
might have ended in consumption or
pneumonia. "It cured ine of dreadful
cough and lung disease," writes W, R.
Patterson, Wellington, Tox., "after
four In our family had died with con-
sumption, and I gained 87 pounds."
Nothing so sure and safe for all
throat and lung troubles. Price 50c
and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaran-1 Estimated fees from coun
teed by Jones Bros. | ty officers ...$17,000.00
(Court Fund to be raised by
LOST—Ladies engraved watch, on I nd valorem taxes
locket chain, between 11th and'^or * Insane Fund to be
♦ ♦
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦
GERONIMO.
(Advocate.)
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦
♦ ♦
♦
♦
♦ ♦
A. H. Meyer was a Lawton busi-
ress visitor Monday.
Messrs Shelton and Mullins were
on 'he 0th day of July, 1912, the fol-!ln.l/aWt0" ^l0"day-
lowing estimate was made for the' Mr' and Mrs' SMton and da'«f*ter
expenses of said Comanche county forl^1 S,Unaay aftern°on at the S. Q.
the Fiscal year ending Juns 30th,
1913
Salary Fund
to be raised
Miller home.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Robertson en-
joyed a visit from friends of Lawton
by ad valorem taxes ... .$20,000.00 j
' Sunday.
Kilpatrick
aud Mrs.
Park. Liberal reward. Stella Patton,
Walter, Okla., Route 3. 7-5 d2t wltp
H. W. HANNA.
Lawyer and Pension Attorney
Notary Public.
Practice in all the Courts.
republican; Forest Waters, socialist, kidney medicine since I gave my ti - 31- ^ ^ve- Lawton, Okla.
Weigher Lon Rhodes, J. A. Ad-|timonial. I had been troubled for a
ains, Levi H. Iloskins. democrats; ycar or two w;th a kidnev difficulty' "ave That Building of Yours Insured
Wm. J. Murphy, republican; Charles!an(j just before using Doan's Kidney Against Fire See
Edwards, socialist. rills I had an attack of La Grinpej NELSON & HOWELL,
Commissioner Lawton district—B. which settled in my kidneys. One' Over Lawton National Bank.
F. Hall, Joe T. Cheek, Jas. F. Wood-1 morning while stooping 1 was seized Their Companies Are Safe and
| Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
j spent Sunday with Mr.
■ Blakely, west of town.
innnnnJ Mrs' T' L' Meyer and dauKhter.
Mary, departed for Iowa, Monday
, , . , 'morning or a visit with relatives
raised by ad valorem i , , . .
and friends.
., • Oj Everybody plan to attend the big
1,sinuate if County Farm . , .. . „ • . ^ n •
celebration at Geronimo, August 3ro
Elaborate preparations are being
. . , , , . made and everv- one is planning on
iaised by advalorem taxes 15.000.00jhaving d tjme
3'ipply Fund to be raised
by ad valorem tax.es 2,000.00, Buy it now. Chamberlain's Cholic.
' '111 e" ' "ni to ,e Cholera and Diarrhoea R?medv is al-
raised by ad valorem taxes 2,500.00 most certain t0 bc needed before the
i epaiate ,,t oo -urn. to 'summer is over. Buy it now and be
I orepared for such an emergency. For
2,000.00 3a]2 {,y an dealers.
is not purchased $1,000
Road & Bridge Fund to be
liff and Chas. A. Madden, democrats; j with a sharp twinge across my back.
F. W. Hammond and G. H. Roberts, ^ fhe kidney secretions were unnatural
republican. ; and annoyed me terribly. Doan's Kid-
Commissioner eastern district—W. ney Pills Were being advertised and I
O. Weaver, Aug. Q. Dickson, and got a box. They helped me and I
'as. L. Wills, democrats; 1. F. Mai-j jorocured another, J appreciate the
oney, republican; F. R. Brewer, so-
cialist.
Commissioner western district—S.
L. Cox and J. J. Davis, democrats; G.
H. Frampton, republican; Owen Met-
calf, socialist.
Old papers for sale at this office.
value of Doan's Kidney Pills in such
cases."
For sale by an dealers. Price 50
.cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the
nited States.
Remember the name—Doan's—and
take no other.
Sound.
JAMES L. LEWIS.
Physician and Surgeon.
Office Hours: 10 a. m. to 12 m. 2 to
4 p. m.
Office over Central Drug Store.
Office Phone 100 Res. Phone 94.
Geo. D. Key J. E. Michalson.
KEY & MICHALSON.
Attorneys At Law.
Keegan Building.
Phone 208. Lawton,
be raised by ad valorem
taxes
County School Fund to be
raised by advalorem tax
es 1,000.00 [
Dipping Vat Fund to be
raised by ad valorem tax?s 2,000.00
Total to be raised by ad
valorem taxes $66,550.00
Witness my hand and official seal
this 8th day of July, 1912.
(SEAL.) J. M. HAYNES,
7-8 d 4t w 2t County Clerk.
Place your ads In the Constiution
Okla.! for results.
PNEUMONIA
left me ivith a frightful cough aud
very weak. I had spells wh. u leouidl
hardly breathe cr speak for 10 to 201
Diinuti-s My doctor could no? help!
11 . but I tt;us completely tund by!
DR. KING'S
Nsw Oiseoverv
Mrs. J. E. Cox, Joliet, 111.
50c AND $1.00 AT ALU DRUGGISTS.
I)—1—1111 iiHHHW I Ml ||
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.
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.
Shepler, John N. The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 48, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 11, 1912, newspaper, July 11, 1912; Lawton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc120089/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.