The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 270, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1917 Page: 3 of 4
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Thursday Evening, June 21, 1917.
THE LAWTON CONSTITUTION
PAGE THREE
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Principally
About PEOPLE
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Payne and chil-. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Blanchard have,
dren will spend nex: week at Medi- pone to Golconda, 111., for a two
cine Park. i weeks' vacation where they will visit
i at the home of relatives. Mr. Blanch-
j Fresh Loganberries at Whites. ard is connected with the Pedigo,
6-20 It Shoe store.
Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Flood are spending
the week at Medicine Park. :
E. A. Everton has returned from Miss Marie Beaver, who has been
FOR SALE—Lumber for sheeting. Texas, where he went to have teaching in the high school at Sham
Call 650 or 552 6-21-2t an operation performed upon his eyes, rock, Oklahoma, during the past year
has returned to spend the summer in
Phone 7"4 fur plumbing repairs. D. New telephone directory goes to this city.
E \ndrews 11-21 23 25 Press June 27th. All corrections should.
' ' l>e made before that date. Pioneer Tel. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Wilson and fam-
A. L. Lund puts in window giass. and Tel. Co. 6-20&22. ily of Duncan were here last evening
Phone 194. 411 D Ave. 9-15-tf visiting for a few hours with Rev. Sat-1
Bob Lawrence left yesterday for terfield and family, and afterwards
T. L. Smith was a business visitor in Oklahoma City, where he will take an motored to Medicine Park, returning
the city yesterday from Chickasha. examination for enlistment in the na- this morning.
Pictures, frames, choice moulding ICE CREAM SOCIAL.
at A. L. Lund, 411 D. 12-14tf Bathing pool now ready at Mineral j
Wells. Open every afternoon and The Allendale school, 8 miles south-
See the new feather and satin hats j evening. 6-19 5tp east of Lawton will give an ice cream
for mid-summer wear at Walkup & .social Friday night for the benefit of'
Russell at Dowdy's. 6-19 3t FOR SALE—Lumber for sheeting, j Red Cross. Everybody invited. '
Call 650 or 552. 6-21-2t
R. C. Short of Oklahoma City, was ! ^-
here yesterday transacting business Mr. and Mrs. Earl Harter, who are!® "
affairs. here from Dallas, were guests Monday: £ f1
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nelson at their | • **.3 QC t Cl
Join the Club. Put a Famous Hoos-.f ™ near the mountains
ier Cabinet in the home at $1 a week.
Jones Furniture Co. 10-6tf New felt Gage hats at Walkup &
{Russell. 6-19 3tj
Foot Comfort in our
Men's low shoes.—Joe . . lodging. 1
Lodging—for a nice quiet clean
place, call at the Midway. Corner 1st
and C avenue. B. F. James, Prop.
6-18 6tpl
CAPONS BRING BIG PREM-
IUMS AT THE PACKING
PLANTS-OPERATION
IS EASY ONE.
WAY 10 STOP EGG LOSSES
Operation Adds At Much as Three
Pounds to Weight of Male Bird
And Greatl) Increases
Value.
'JWJ T'ttrtT'Tt*W3vrtza&&Y? • • • sx&oxjj
DAIL THOUGHT.
witty
Wolf's.
6-20-3t
Ray Robertson is confined
home on account of a case
mumps.
of
FOR SALE—Lumber
Call 660 or 552.
for
sheeting.
6-21-2t
We do hemslittning and picoting.
Bring us your work. Prices reason-
able. Singer Sewing Machine Cf., 317
3rd St. Phone 162. 3-19tf
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Martin of Fred-
erick were here yesterday visiting
with friends.
New telephone directory (roes to
press June 27th. All corrections should
be made before that date. Pioneer Tel.
and Tel. Co. 6-20&22
A. L. Lund has just received the
largest shipment of window shades
ever brought here. Prices right.
A. L. West was here yesterday from
Oklahoma City looking after business
matters.
Comfortable shirts for
hot weather .-Joe Wolf.
S-20-3t
C. B. Lines, auditor for the Green
Stamp company from New York City,
and G. E. Williams of Oklahoma City,
were here on business today for the'
firm.
Some new numbers in
Manhattan Shirts, just
in.—Joe Wolf's.
Laugh not too much; the
man laughts least
For wit is news only to ignorance:
Less at thine own things laugh;
lest in the jest
Thy person share, and the conceit
advance.
Make not thy sport abuses: for the
fly
That feeds on dung is colored
thereby. —Herbert.
In the big spring and summer drive
Tor greater food production the capon
should not be overlooked. The capon,
as most everybody knows, is the un
pexed rooster.
Here are some of the ways In which
■v j the capon can help solve our food
® problems, as outlined by Harry Km-
c«j bleton, poultry specialist for the Ex-
& tension Division of Oklahoma A. & M.
® College:
1 Weighs an average of 3 pounds more
on same feed than the rooster.
Brings a premium of 10 to 15 cents
a pound over rooster because of great-
ly superior quality of meal.
Absence of rooster from flock means
TONS OF HONEY GOING TO
WASTE BECAUSE OF
SO FEW BEES.
U EST 8a POUNBS SWEETS
i i-cc Kcsping Club Organised for Boys
and Qirls of Oklahoma—Two
Colonics Enough for
Beginners.
In these days of food shortage and
It r'i costs we hear a great deal about
t.'c crow and the hen and the backyard ,
r.urden us if they were the last line of
entrenchments between an army of
privation and a starving public. But
v.hat ulout the humble bee?
Ah, indeed, there'r the sting! We
ha.e failed to cultivate the acquaint-;
ii.ee of this worker. Time was whe*
t av.. ! once used as a substitute
f >i ! < ey. Then came the sugar trust
.un! Improved methods and honey be-
a ubstitutc for sugar. The bee
n:>{.ed to hold on, but honey came
!o be look ti upon as a luxury instead
f a table necessity.
Wo are a sweet toothed people.
llac!i one of us is supposed to con-
umo about eighty pounds of sugar,
Golden Rule Store
This Week
Men's Best Overalls $1.25
Men's Best Jumpers $1.25
Men's Pauls $1.48. $1.75. J1.96, $2.25
Men's Underwear, Union Suits 50e, 75^ 95*
Men's Bluf> Work Shirts «. ;,gCi 7^
Men's Straw Harvest Hats 10c, 20c, i.'r
Men's Duck Tennis Shoes 75^
Ladies. We still have some Japa Silk at the old price
Ladies'-Vests f IOC, 15c, 25c
Ladies' Union Suits 30^ 35Ct 4^
Spool Thread 5c, or ♦> for 2f>c
Good Ginghams 10c, 12c, 14c and cheap at the pnee
We still have a few l-adies Hats at very low prices. We have lew
prices on Childrens and Ladies Tennis Shoes. Come and visit our stcr*
for we are the low price store.
THE GOLDEN RULE STORE
J. E. JARVIS, Prop.
6-20-3t
Mrs. J. E. Radcliffe is enjoying a
visit from her brother, Benjamin Gat-
El O. W. Club
With Mrs. Payne.
Mrs. Chas. Payne was hostess to the
E. O. W. club yesterday afternoon at
her home on Summitt avenue. A
profusion of yellow nasturtiums were
used for decorations and the three
course luncheon was featured in the
es, who is taking a vacation from his same color scheme. The time was tak-
duties with the Ridenour-Baker Co., ofjen up in sewing and discussing the
Oklahoma City. I Red Cross work. Members present
j included Mesdames Angus, A1 Autry,
New telephone directory goes to | Asbury Autry, J. V. McGee,Westbrook,
press June 27th. All correction sshould | P. Jones, Pugh, Stewart. Mesdames
be made before that date. Pioneer Tel|Clint Dunn and J. W. Moseley werej
and Tel. Co. 6-224221 special guests.
Infertile eggs and therefore, a gifeat
j saving in egg losses. U4ilM ttUWUl puuuuo
The capon beats the hen as a mother equivalent, annually. At the
and will bring more young chicks present price of sug.«r -but why give 1
through the spring rains and other the only sure thing about
dangers. • upar prices Is that they are highor j
Here. then, nre four big advantages 1 oday than they were yesterday and
of the enpon. tomorrow will be still higher. Any-
1 Sir Chanticleer has too long lorded ; WUyt what the writer started to say
It over the poultry yard, clipping the was (jiaj jn QUr mobilization of re-
nap of late sleepers by his loud crow i Kources we may have overlooked an
and wasting his energy In fighting ri- j udustria! army that for efficiency i
vals. Fertile eggs have lost the farm- jlug even those terrible Germans out-
prs of America many thousands of
dollars. The work of eaponlzlng is
fairly simple and, with experience, few
birds need be lost.
The best way to learn caponizing b
from some one who has already at-
tained proficiency in the work. If
there is no such person in your com-
munity the art can be learned by
itudy of directions in bulletins. These
bulletins will be supplied free by writ-
ing to Extension Division. Oklahoma
A. & M. Coilege, Stillwater
Tn a general way it may be said that
WE USE THIS SPACE JUST TO TELL
YOU
Wi' art1 showing n fine 'issortment of Egyptian Tistue
Ginghams. Colors made of dependable dyes.
Price -5c a yard.
Nerviceabl
.lust the material for —Summer
—Suits
j. d. dowdy
315 D Ave.
Lawton. Olda.
Dr. C. W. Maier, who recently gave, ()m, (Vclock Lullch.
up his office in Lawton, came downjeon at Mj|Ie|< Hom(.
last night from Oklahoma City to be! n„as w,.r,, i for th. j„_ en is tavoreu. irarreu ana yyoiib ; - • h ""
here for a few days on business and coration8 yesterday when Mesdames; RockB' "uff 0r|,inKt«n" "d Rhode Is- Jlate has enacted a law to protect bee,
corations yeiteMay wnen .Mesdames |&n(] Redfl are favored by the market | from diseases and harmful insects by
elapsed—the bee army.
Prof. C. e. Sanborn, entomologist at
Oklahoma Ogrleultural and Mechanic-
Hi College at Stillwater, says that
Oklahoma harvested about 1 250,000
pounds of honey last year. He esti-
mates that this was just about one-
five hundredth of the available nectar
that nature provided. On that basis
the potential possibilities of Oklahoma
would be about 312,500 tons of honey
In one year, which would supply,
three times over, the amount of sac-
charine food needed.
purposes the following season and not Prof. Sanborn says there are about
used for spring frying may be capon- 25,000 hives of bees in Oklahoma. Our
Ized profitably. The narket shows apiaries range from one to 100 colo-
preference, however, to certain types. n'eB each. The most popular of the
For instance, the yellow :«?gged chick Improved varieties of bees In this
favored. Barred and White tate is probr^jly the Italian.
The
Lawton Refining
Company
A Good Refinery in a Good Town.
Manufacturing
High Grade Petroleum Products.
Phone 247.
Railroad and Bell Ave.
pleasure.
Bathing pool now ready at Mineral
Wells. Open every afternoon and
(evening.
Stewart Miller and J. Rowell enter-j Ijegjlorns and 0ther small breeds are Importation from the ontside of de-
tained the Wednesday Auction Bridge not jn demand. Black feathered and eased stock or equipment.
club and Mesdames Bixby, Chas. black shanked birds are not wanted. It is not too late to start now with a
Moll and Leo Ozmun as special; Purebred stock is favored because of few colonies of bees, says Prof. San-
born. For the beginners, two colo-
cockerels are nles of Italian bees in a complete one
6-19 5t p; gUest8 the home of Airs. Miller greater uniformity,
with a one o'clock luncheon. Mrs. J. F.i ear'>' hatched
We are Riving one-fifth of all our Miss Zelma Ensley, manager of th<- Witney ,vas suct.e3sful in making top best fnr cal)onlzinK These should be and one lialf story hive will be sufllc-;
the right weight about the latter part
if May. This means that they have
1 long growing season to develop size
sales this week to the Red Cross So-!Western Union at Nowata, Okla., and gcore an(j Won the club prize. Mem
eiety. Come in, buy this week and help' formerly an employee in the local of- ljerg prcsent were Mesdames J. F.
the Red Cioss. Walkup & Russell at j fice, is here this week visiting with her Pitney, Rol Robertson, L. M. C.ens- before being put on the market be-
Dowdy s. 6-19 3t mother, Mrs. Ensley. man, Arch Parmenter, Stewart Mil- tween the Christmas and Easter holl-
l« r, Chas. Graybill, Joe White and E. days. Cockerels should be caponized
P. McMahon.
Miss Maggie Williams has arrived Fresh Fish and Spring Chickens, al-
from Marlow, Okla., for a visit with so oleomargerien at the Gartrell
her brother. Bob Williams. , Meat Market. Phone 149. 414 D Ave.
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Northcutt and
MOXb\ TO LOAN. an(j jyjrs j0bn Katron and daugh-
I have plenty of money to loan on^ ^ motored to Lawton this
morning from Cement and were the
i guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Fergu-
lent. This will probably cost about
$20. An average of 100 pounds of
honey the first year from two colonies
would not be unusual Some beekeep-
er:* produce this much honey or more
from a single colony, but the beginner
City Property.
l-9tf
F. S. SNEED.
son and Miss Minta Northcutt for the j time has been set fcr 1:30 and it is
day.
lust as the head parts, including corah will probably feel amply rewarded witk
md wattles, begin to develop. They 50 pounds of good quality honey fro:.*,
ire usually about a pound and a half a single colony. As with anything else,
South Side ^ to a pound and three quarters when the beginner should not plunge deeply
I ndies to Meet this takes place. into the business.
For the benefit of the Red Cross Mr. Erobleton recent ,y sent out to ^ start has been made this year In
society, the ladies of the South side 1 large number of packing plants deal- rajHjng Oklahoma's standing as a bee
will meet tomorrow afternoon at the ln chickens a list^ of questions on state by the organization of a bee keep-
Lincoln school building to sew. The !,,ma" ,Ca""".S' . In« club by the extension division of
Plumbing Guaranteed
against defects, which is a guarantee of your health and pocketbookB.
Guaranteed goods only carried, which adds the manufacturer's
guarantee to ours. All work guaranteed. Ask our customers if we
make our guarantee good. .
STEAM, HOT WATER ANI) VAPOR HEATING.
ALBERT H. MITSCHRICH
With Wolverton Hardware Co. Phone 255
ANNUAL PICNIC,
judgment, business judgement, and
honest dealing that has mad^ their
secured name a synonym racing in the
east.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
I can sell your Lawton property j
and get cash for it. Mrs. Ulman Williamson and child-
6-6tf FRANK S. SNEED. ren> w^0 have been here the past
month visiting at the home of her par-
Wlthout exception the heavier
hoped all tfcose who have promised to weifhts, eight pounds and over, were
spiles showed remarkable uniformity. A & M ColIege> Any boy or glr,
! assist with the work will be present.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Brunskill and
chiktren of Elgin spent yesterday at
Medicine Park.
BUY A HOME.
Pay on installment plan and get
benefit of coming advance in Lawton
property.
6-&tf FRANK S. SNEED.
ents, Mr. and Mrs. F. Schwarte and
family, will leave tomorrow for their
home in Birmingham, Ala. They will be
accompanied to Oklahoma City by
Misses Jennie and Gertrude Schwarte.
FOR SALE—Lumber
CaH 650 or 552.
for sheeting.
AMERICANS AT THE FRONT.
favored. Prices of 20 cents to 25 cents
1 pound were offered for capons eight
mounds and over. This was in Febru-
ry, 1917. Milk finished capons were
tUowed a oremium over range fatten-
ed birds of about three cents a pound
by some packers. Others preferred t<*
Duy range fattened stuff and finish in
Mrs. W. R. Stroud of Memphis, Tex.,
was an over night guest of her sister,
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Tedford and Mrs. Stewart Miller and family, and
daughter Mrs. T. R. Keegan and chil- left this morning for Chattanooga,
dren will motor to Temple in the Tenn., for a visit with friends. She
morning to spend a few days at the was accompanied to Oklahoma City by
beme of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Yielding.
ranCHESTER SPILLS
TOE DIAMOND DlANB.r A
L*4ImI A*k r**'Draate* for A\
inabm<niru4/a^
k I'111* in Rc4 « d ««I4 metallic
I bote*, sealed with Blue Ribboa.
I Take M other Bnj '
UraoM. AUfwOiri.
DliliM BRAND L
rears k no mas Best. Safest. Always Rcttabte
S6U BY DRUGGISTS EVEftYIIIOS
t Rlltaa.W '
.c&lSVnre
PILI.A. fort*
her neice, Miss Elizabeth Miller who
will visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Jess Watson. Mrs. Stroud was accom-
panied to Lawton by her husband, who
returned to his home at Memphis this
morning.
Many Styles in Straw!July
Hats.—Joe Wolf'..6 ^ °ct
Dec.
Jan.
A. L Lund puts in win- Misses Ruby Kmi Myrtle Garner left
- I today for New Orleans and from that
tow glass. Phone 194|p^« w'u *°1Jby brl to N>.* y°rk'
^ J where they will make an extended vis-
i it with relatives. Miss Ruby will take
.a special course of study in domestic
' j science while in New York at Colum-
bia University, preparatory to her
work for the coming year in the Law-
ton schools.
By United Press.
LONDON, June 16. — Coupling
freight cars on the Northwestern Rail- their own plants. There is a demand
road at Kenzie street and California for capons around the holiday season,
avenue, Chicago, is what Paul Gassard February and March are good selling
of Council Bluffs, Iowa, often looks J10"ths Some markets make little
6-21-2t back 0„ remini.cently aa he lies in the ""crimination as to season, offering to
.. . , . . ^ 'juy at any time.
hospital here, recovery from a Ger- Mo(it farmer„ wl„ fin(J ,hat ,heir
man bullet received at Vimy Ridge. produce merchants who ordinal-
Gassard participated in the murderous |]y buy poultry of all kinds are ln po
assault on the Royal Canadian Rifles sition to furnish information as to the
at Vimy on Easter Monday. He was future markets on capons. Practically
the first man to join the 97th, Batalion, county agents In Oklahoma
the American Legion. As for his wound tea,ch the operation of caponizing
,.fi ■ i . t „ . Many farmers and poultrymen have
—"It might have been worse' he says. .. ' . . , , .
Had experience in caponizing and will
be glad to teach their neighbors. If
aone of these sources are available,
the poultry raiser still has an oppor-
tunity to get Information regarding ca-
ponising by writing to Mr. Embleton
Close 11 Stillwater. For generations Ameri-
9_ ' eaa farmers have castrated surplus
_ ^ calves and pigs and caponizing Is not
2o.30 9m% ajore difficult or dangereus
25.33 ;or the subject. In the main, the tame
25.38 arguments for castrating calves and
pigs hold true for caponlzlag.
between the ages of eight and eighteen
years can enter the contest. Valuable
prizes will be given. Full details of
this contest can be obtained by writ-
ing to the Boys and Girls Clubs De-
partment, A. & M. College, Stillwater,
Oklahoma.
Farmers or townspeople interested
in beekeeping should write to Prof.
Sanborn at Stillwater. Circular No.
34, published by the Extension Divis-
ion of the college, covers the subject
for beginners. There are no charges
on bulletins or any form of informa
tlon which the coi'ege can supply on
this subject.
A special car has been
free of charge to take the members of' ^ ,
. 10 . , When the Graves^nd tracK was es-
the Baptist church and Sunday school;
. A •, „ . T1 m An tablished the brotherly partnership
on a picnic Friday at 2 p. m. All; . * r
. . . .. . „ . that had existed from the time the
members are to meet at the church at 1
t D . fill , . d, washington market stall was aj>anaon-
1:30 p. m. Bring well filled baskets. , ,
•'d. Michael made a disastrous trip to
The Indian school is thf place. There . . ,
... . . t,. r,,,, , England after this, and later became
will be a ball game, Ft. Sill vs. Indian * '
connected with a stable which sent Ben
the Latonia and
Kentucky Derbies in 18&6 and ir\ the
Suburban handicap the following year
Handspring was the last horse of
any repute under the ownership of
Phil Dwyer. This horse won the With-
ers stakes at the Belmont track and
(■later captured the Brooklyn handicap.
school, sack race, tfcree legged race,,
— • 11 Brush to victory
potao race, swimming in fresh
bathing pool. Supper at 7:30
Constitution Telephone 76.
COTTON MARKET.
411 0 Ave.
COAL
Will Be High and Hard to Get Thin
Frfl.
Buy all you can now while we can
get Rood clean coal and can give you
service.
Phone
Payne
* • • •« •**•
♦ MAXWELL. ♦
♦ The World'a Greatest Motor Car •
• Value ♦
• GILKEY-JARBOE HARD- •
's Coal Yard \* I
NEW YORK.
25.54
.25.37
25.48
25.47
NEW ORLEANS
Open
July j...24.30
Oct 24.65
Dec. 24.80
Jan 25.00
New York spota 25.70.
Galveston spots 25c. Sales 802.
Close
24.50!
Catton Pay* far Education.
William Hayea of Logan County. Ok-
,.i|B., baa been awarded a ichalarakiy la
the Oklahoma Agricultural and Ma-
24.66 riuuucsi collage, goad for tl!6, for aa-
24.80 tahUahiag the hlgheet grada made by while adding It,
Cor. 3rd and F1
iny member of the Boyi Cotton Club
if Oklahoma. The Oklahoma Cotton
New Orleans spots 24.56. Sales 780.: >•«! Crushera AsaeciaUon will prerlde
'the acholar hlp. available next fall.
ViUftm grew 2.372 peunda of seed
cotton on an acre of ground, eatming
la ait profit ef $143.22. He bad the
205 second highest yield and the third
1.82 highest profit ln the state. The con-
1.5614 test waa based on yield, pre&t, exhibit
l.-'iflVWd r«P0rt-
KANSAS CITY GRAIN.
July Wheat
Sept. Wheat
July Corn
;Sept. Corn .
Dec. Corn .
. .2.01
.. 1.79
..1.38%
..1.04
1.05
GET RID OF TEXAS TICKS.
Or. L. L. Lewis Gives Plan for Treat-
ing Small Herd Without Vat.
Dr. L. L. Lewis, Head o' the veteri-
nary department of Oklahoma A. & M.
College at Stillwater, gives the fol-
lowing directions for treating cattle
for Texas fever ticks when there are
not enough to justify building a dip
ping vat:
"M ke an arsenic dip by taking com-
mercial white arsenic, eight pounds;
sal seda, twenty-four pounds; pine tar,
one gallon. Take a galvanized tub,
place In this twenty-Ave gallons of
water, bring this to a boll and add the
white arsenic slowly, stirring all the
time until dissolved. Add the aal seda
In the a*me way, stirring slowly until
dissolved. Remove the tub tom the
Are and add one gallon of pine tar In
a email stream, stirrlag thoroughly
Make t)P any watei
lost by evaporation. This will glvt
twenty-five gallons of a stock solution,
which can be kept In large jugs or a
keg. When ready to use, take one
gallon of this stock solution and sdd
te It 19 gallons ef water. This ma
terlal can thea be applied to the rat-
tle and It will prove very effective In
kllliag ticks. Apply it with a inop or
pump, such as la used for spraying
fruit trees, and spray the cattle with
it"
FARMERS'
ADVERTISING
COLUMN
DWYERS' DEATH REMOVED
AN OLD TIME RACE MAN.!
By H. C. Himilton
(United Press Staff Correspondent.),
NEW YORK, June 21.—When Phil |
Dwyer died in this city two weeks ago |
one of the best known men in th rac-|
ing game was gone. Known mainly as ^
president of the Brooklyn Jockey club [
and the (Jueens County Jockey club, he
was known to racing men the world
over as a stubtle power in the race j
game years before horse racing became
tainted with bad betting and crooked j
races.
With Michael F. Dwyer, a brother,| rrM t„ r.rn*; >ub*crltxr* o< Ike Lawte*
Phillip Dwyer organized the Brooklyn CoosUtsOoo la Clinch. s«4 Cotton (Sea-
Jockey club and built the old Grave- j murk advertising. Waata, For Sale an*
send track, where the Brooklyn handi- j"*°
cap and many other noted eastern
classics were run. When it finally went
out of existence Phil Dwyer took over
the Acqueduct trark, ther a mile cir-
cuit, tranaforrned It into a milt and a
quarter course, and ti uisferr*d the
Brooklyn handicap arid other classics
which had made the Gravesend track
famous.
In the Washington market" for years
the two Dwyers conducted a butcher
business, relinquishing it finally to
become the owners of Radamanthus, a
horse of more than usual ability. The
butcher business soon was shoved com
eoi reesret I
Write itie eds oat, cout tks werde, aet
null then t* u Lewtoe Cnoetttttloa.
FOR SALE-Good brood mare aud celt,
Mare is good driver and work horse.
Can be seen nt Guy Henderson's
3 1-2 miles west of Lawton. Tetepbae
998. tf
BIG BONE REGISTERED POLAND
CHINA MALE PIG FOR 3ALB—
Exceptionally well bred oil both sides.
Price $15. Must be sold within ten
pletely into the background and thereldays. Inquire of Mr. F. Baiter dtoens
wai laid foundation of shrewd horse State Bank.
6-21 5t
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The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 270, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1917, newspaper, June 21, 1917; Lawton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc129477/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.