The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 293, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 19, 1917 Page: 3 of 4
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Thursday Evening, July 19,1917.
THE LAWTON CONSTITUTION
PAGE THREE
u
1 7
Principally
Aboul people
A. L. Lund puts in window glass
'bone 194. Ill D Ave. 9-15-tf
1*ro Sessional
A.nd 'Business Cards
♦ ♦♦♦♦4 ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ + + «
♦ DR. ED PUGH ♦
♦ Veterinarian ♦
♦ Office and Hospital. 316 E Ave. ♦
♦ Phones—Office 20; Residence 874 ♦
♦ Lawton, Okla. ♦
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦*♦<>♦♦ <>♦♦♦<> + «
————— Pictures, frames, choice mouidi^sr
♦♦+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+* +♦+« it A. L Lund, ill D.
♦ DR. J. C. DISS ♦
♦ Optometrist • E. K. Brown of Clinton, spent the
♦ Specialist in Eye Culture and ♦ day in Lawton.
♦ >ili ING GLASSES ♦
♦ Office, Optical Parlor, 411 D Ave. ♦ Remember Bohl, plumber, phoiu
FILL THAI SILO
S. P. Phillips of Snyder was a bus-
ess visitor in Lawton today.
PHONE 100
1131. 7-7 ti
LARGE VARIETY OF SILAGE
CROPS ADAPTED TO
OKLAHOMA.
SORGHUM SURER THAN CORN
Silage Comes Nearest to Furnishing
Pasture Substitute of Any Feed.
Yield Is Large and Co?t
Is Small.
Sports
! . . .'
HIGGINS KEEPS ON
BUILDING GOOD ('LI'11.
♦ DRS. MITCHELL & PIN NELL «
♦ Eyes, Ears, Nose and Throat «
♦ Glasses Fited, Lenses Ground ♦
♦ and Duplicated. ♦
♦ Rooms 202-3-4-19 Koehler Bldg. «
♦ Phone 172 Lawton, Okla. ♦
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ JOHN M. YOUNG. ♦
♦ Lawyer ♦
♦ Pioneer Building ♦
♦ Lawton :: Oklahoma. ♦
♦ «
♦ DR. H. W. SMITH •
♦ Dentist ♦
♦ Third Floor in Koehler Building ♦
♦ Phone 956 ♦
♦ «
• •
♦ JOHN F. THOMAS *
♦ Attorney e
♦ Practice in All Courts ♦
♦ Stevens-G&lyon Bldg., Lawton, Ok. •
♦ e
A daughter was born to Mr.
Mrs. Edwin Peters yesterday.
Everything green that can be got-
ten at White's.
Remember
1131.
Bohl, plumber,
7-13tf
phone
7-7 tf
Join the Club. Put a Famous Hoos-
:er Cabinet ir. the home at >1 a week.
I«.nes Furniture Co. 10-6tf
Jitney service and country drives, al-
so alfalfa hay for sale. Texas Wagon
Yard, 401 F Ave., Phone 29. 6-29tf
The ladies of the Beal Heights Pres-
byterian church will serve ice cream,
sherbert, cake, and cones, on the
church I. wn, Friday night. Ten cents.
7-19 It
♦ E. B. DUNLAP •
♦ Ph/sician and Surgeon •
♦ Office Hours 10 a. m. to 12 m. •
♦ 2 to 4 p. m. ♦
♦ Koehler Bldg., 3rd Floor. •
♦ Office Phone 15—Res. Phone 735 •
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦
♦ W. C. HENDERSON ♦
♦ Attorney and Counselor at Law •
♦ Phone 873 ♦
♦ Room 407, Koehler Building. •
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•
♦♦♦«♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦
♦ LEON L. COLE, M. D. ♦
♦ Specialist ♦
♦ Chronic Diseases and Eyes, Ear, ♦
♦ Nose and Throat. ♦
♦ Glasses Fitted ♦
♦ 3rd Floor Koehler Bldg. •
♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
A. L. Lurd nas just received the
largest shipment of window shades
ever brought here. Prices right.
Green grapes, 4 cents a pound, will
not deliver less than 25 lbs. Phone 104.
7-19 2t
Ernest Scroggins, division superin-
tendent Memphis Street Railway Co.,
Memphis, Tenn., is visiting his cousin,
J. W. Scroggins of Baird, Okla.
A. J. Bell, the well known piano
tuner, is here this week. Phone 822.
7-19 3tp
Remember
1131.
Bohl, plumber,
phone
7-7 tf
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
I can sell your Lawton property
and get cash for it.
6-5tf FRANK S. SNEED.
♦ A. T. HOW ELI <
♦ Insurance and Surety Bonds ♦
♦ Koehler Building
♦ Phone 362. *
C. W. CLIFFORD ::
Jeweler and
Optician
Phone 75
Specialty in
Fitting Glasses
:: 229 C Ave.
r<.r Km mi l
II. T. A. REWARD
The An ti Horse Thief Assoc!
utlon No. 4.Vi "f Roselunri
offers the following stnodloc
rewards t>>r evidence that will
lend to the recovery of prop
erty stolen from any member
of the Koseland Lodge, nnrt
evidence to convict thief:
$10 for petit larceny and f'-'<
eny. I,s. W. PRICE.
JOHN GILDER
General Contracting
Modern residence building a specialty
Don't fail to get my estimate; plans
and specifications furnished on
application.
Office 809 Fourth et.
LAWTON :: OKLAHOMA
Mountain Park
Man Arrested By
Federal Officers
C. B. Miller, Mountain Park, was
brought to Lawton late yesterday aft-
ernoon by Deputy U. S. Marshall Mil-
ler,and arraigned before Commission-
er Blanding, charged with transport-
ing. Miller is said to have gotten off a
train from Wichita Falls, at Frederick,
with a suit case or two full of li-
quor. Tillman county officers arrested
him and held him for federal officers.
Miller waved prleiminary. Failing to
make a $500 bond, he was placed in
the county jail here.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
vSfc I * " d n'1 ' vv
ViJ TnlP oihrp,hinlre0r yoiir'
I / {if "Mlffirlst. A k f :( 111 4 I! '
S Jr l? "lAMIlsn III1AMI |'||.|H, (,; «5
A IT ye '--••'•••«'>•• % !-si. bJie t. A i • :••• Up!,.t!0
r SOLD BV t> 'l!i'(i:sis KtmHEW
A. L Lund puis in win-
dow glass. Phone 194
411 I) Ave.
K^9K -
THE INVISIBLE BIFOCALS6lasses w e
can grind new ones while you wait.
RALPH HOLT,
Opposite City Hall.
♦ MAXWELL. «
♦ The World's Greatest Motor Car ♦
♦ Value ♦
♦ GILKEY-JABBOE HARD- ♦
♦ WAKE CO. ♦
♦ ♦♦*©■>♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•«
Printing
FOR SALE
Old store building at 21 D Ave., con-
tains about 20 thousand feet good lum-
ber, suitable for grainery, barn, sheds,
etc., make me an offer.
Good four room house to rent on
Waldmann additon $5.00 per month.
Wagon yard now running and doing
good business for sale or rent.
Payne's Coal Yard
Phone 82S
Are You in Need of
Tags
Cards
Blanks
Folders
Dodgers
Receipts
Envelopes
Statements
Bill Heads
Invitations
Picket Heads
Letter Heads
Call at this office
Good Work Is
Our Specialty
Because of prevailing high prices of
grain there is an increased interest
among stock rai ig fanners iu silage
crops. The following article on the
possibilities of silage crops for Okla
homa was prepared by Prof. M. A
Beeson of the department of agronomy
A Oklahoma Agricultural and Me
chanical College at Stillwater:
livestock farmers in general recog
nize the necessity of silage. Milk cows
give more milk at a lower cost where
silage comprises a large part of the
ration. Beef cattle respond well to a
properly balanced silage ration and a
majority of the cattle marketed from
the corn belt have been silage fed
Other livestock also eat silage to ad
vantage although the benefits are not
so great.
"After all. the most important ques-
tion is. does silage pay? It has paid
in most instances where it has been
tried and in cases where it has not
proven profitable, it was probably
through no fault of the silage. The
advantages of silage are many. It in-
sures a crop of desirable roughage
and gives a large yield per acre at a
comparatively low est per ton. In
sections affected by drouth, it saves a
large per cent of the corn crop that
would otherwise be wasted, in the
form of stalks and fodder. It is eco-
nomical to store, as about half of the
space is required that is required to
store hay. Silage is palatable and will
keep the stock in a thrifty condition.
In summers where the drouth destroys
the pasture it furnishes a succulent
food during these seasons. A larger
number of cattle can be kept on the
same acreage of land than may be
kept on forage crops cut for hay.
"The principal crops for silage in
Oklahoma, are corn, grain sorghums
and cane or saccharin sorghums.
There Is very little difference in the
feeding va'ue of corn, grain sorghums
and cane silage. Therefore, the one
should be grown which gives the larg-
est yield per acre in that particular
section. Where corn does well, as a
rule it is advisable to grow it in pref
erence to the sorghums for a silage
«^rop.
"On the rich bottom land In the
°a8tern half of Oklahoma, corn is the
best crop for silage. On poor upland
underlaid with liardpan, corn cannot
be depended upon and should not be
planted. It does not pay to grow corn
on poor land even for silage. Corn
phould be limited to the same area
for silage production as for grain pro-
duction. When growing corn for sil-
age. the land should be tilled the same
way as when grown for grain. Some
advocate thick planting when the crop
's to be used for silage. Where there
Is an abundance of rainfall, it may bo
planted thickly, but where water Is
the limiting factor it will seldom pay
to plant corn any thicker for silage
production than for grain production.
"The feeding value of silage will de-
pend to a large extent on the amount
of grain present. The best silage will
be produced from corn when it is cut
st the time the kernels are well dentetf
and glazed.
"In the western half of the state,
kaflr and cane are the best silage
crops, since they stand the drouth
much better than corn. Kafir will no
doubt make the best silage of any of
the grain sorghums and It should be
handled In the same way for silage
production as for grain production.
The grain should be practically ma-
ture before putting it in the silo and
If the stalks are a little dry, some
water should be added as the silo is
being filled.
"Cane gives a very high yield of
green material for silage and the qual
(ty of silage produced from cane ir
satisfactory. One valuable character-
istic of cane and grain sorghums for
silage purposes is that they remain
preen even after maturity. This keeps
the plant In a good condition to put
In the silo and gives a longer period
for harvesting Texas Ribbon cane i?
#ne of the largest late varieties and
is a heavy yielder. Sumac and
Orange cane have also proved valu
able for silage purposes In this state
"Corn and cane or kafir and cane ol
Hoout equal parts make a good silage
However, when growing two different
crops for silage they should be planted
so that they will mature for silage at
the same time, since they should b«
mixed as the silo Is being filled.
"The silage crops are very heavj
and should be planted as near the silo
as possible In order to save dlstanci
In hauling.
"Silage has passed the experimental
stage and can be considered as on€
of the necessities of modern agricul-
ture where there is sufficient stock on
the farm to demand It."
TO UUILD LP both tho fir. !i and rtrmpth
of rale, puny, scrofulous
children, lor young or old
people, get l)r. Vierce's
(k>idrn Medical Discovery.
It's the best thiv.ir kn. wn
for a wast,-d body and a
w eako n o d Fy: t < r.:. I ti
thoroughly purifies tl.i
Llood, enriches it n:.i
makes ei.octlvo every nat-
ural m< ..n8 of cle; :: !: r ,
ivy a!-'. and n< i:ri l.i:
t! Inn srci
from ! v< pncunumlr,
or other i! ullitatlng di •
eav r.otliiv.g can I
It as an appetizing, r . torative tonic : >
ring Lack health arid vi^or. < :
j tvous a: 1 g :n ral debility, fcicli i :
Tablet or Liquid form.
i'urify and rid your blcod of V. )
1 lints and poisons that mill:J it cc£J
La disease 10 fasten Its hold.
Mrs. Hei t. cAfnnjnniiRY, 604 South Main Ft.,
McAlfitrr, Okla., toys: "When I hn«i
monia anil i!it> not (r«*t welt as 1 Hhoulii, ! • - ti
LKvtor l'ler,. * Oolden Medical Dimovery nnj
" Favorite l'rwtcrlptlori.' The two toffetht-r mod 3
mo <«h>1 mmriim- nt onr««. My •ppotlto camj
11 .ixl until my health wua rcator. J
JAPAN LENDS 25
MILLION TO FRANCE.
By United Press.
TOKIO, June 20.—(By Mail.)—Ar-
rangements have been completed here
for the flotation of a $2.1,000,000
French loan, to be used in the pay*-
ment of France's war purchases iu
this country. It is understood that
these amount to more than $25,000,-
000. At first France proposed to bor-
row $50,000,000 but Japanese bankers
decided against so large a sum. The
loan will yield 5 1-2 per cent to in-
vestors.
This issue will bring Japan's financi-
al aid to the Allies up to $135,000,000.
By H. C. Hamilton
(United Press StatF Correspondent.)
NEW YORK, July 10. One of the
most surprising things in big lea;. :e
baseball, aside from t • astonishing
form showed by the Cincinnati Reds,
is the truly remarkable way the Card-
inals have been behaving since a
change of ownership gave Miller Hug.
gins a real chance to exercise his true
ability.
Ball players have come and gone in
St. Louis since Mrs. Britton stepped
out of the way. Huggins has been
quick to size up the good ones and sep-
arate them from the bad ones. He has
displayed some of the finest looking
young ball players the big leagues
have glimpsc-u for several seasons—
and he's still going strong.
Huggins' latest purchase was a
young fellow named Goodwin, a right-
hand pitcher from the Milwaukee
American association club. Sufficient
recommendation is zipped into the* big
circle through the announcement that
Branch Rickey, first saw him work,
and decided he was to be puichased re-
gardless of the price to be paid. In
view of the fact that George Sinler and
Ernie Kobb, besides several others,
received their first strong recommen- . -,„r nnn„nn
. , al aid to the Allies up to $135,000,000
dations from the new president of the r) • , . i
....... . , ,, , Russia in two loans, has received $t 0,
Cardinals, it is safe to say that God- «AA , om «na aaa
... „ „ 000,000; Britain was given $;>0,000,0()0
win s advance notices will not fall
down.
Huggins always has been just as
good a manager as he is proving today.'
reason he never has proved it with any Pearl to Be
more vim in reaching high points in * ' . fi r>
the National league standing couldn't DlirieCl at til RcilO
be stronger stated in view of the re-
versal showed when the Cardinals j The remains of W. R. Pearl, who
were sold. His David Harum opera- died Wednesday morning at his home
tionB among clubs of the league, in at No. 12 Second street, were shipped
which he fished out player after play- to El Reno this morning by the Ritter
er and made them stars after other j Undertaking companj uterment will
clubs declared them no good have prov- take place there Friday. The deceased
ed his worth at sizing up players. 's survived by a wife , two children,
It was Huggins who located Rogers five Mothers and two sisters. One sis-
Hornsby sunning himself in Texas andjter, Mrs. E. B. Grant lives at the In -
gave him a regular jo1. Also, it was'dian school. Mr. Pearl had been em-
Huggins, who picked up a youth nam- ployed at the Lawton Cigar Factory
ed Watson one day, gave him a big as a cigar maker. Mr. and Mrs. E. B.
league job, and lives to se his efforts Grant and Earnest Willet, accom-
rewarded by Watson's remarkable panied the body to El Reno.
success. This year he has trotted out
the league's leading batsman—Walter BUY A HOME.
Cruise, and has uncovered a new pitch-
er in Hortsman who looks mighty1 Pft\' °n installment plan and get
sweet. benefit of coming advance in Lawton
Huggins has developed—not pur- property.
■chased—the makings of a champion-j6-6tf FRANK S. SNEEO.
ship baseball club. If he can keep on
adding a touch here and there for an- Oxford War Professor
other year the Cardinals are due to nr. n \171_ . a
lells What America
Should Do In the War
last December, and now France re-
ceives $25,000,000.
win a pennant for St. Louis.
ways the statesman and in a demo-
cratic country the people must under-
stand and sympathise with the states-
man If he sees tor) i.v: ahead they
won follow and if t'ae popular ideas
on the subject of war arc not true the
greatest It;, .er may be crippled.
in the military sphere the first
thing i3 the choice of a commander
and h! assistants. When raising a:-
army !'"* vital matter is the choice
and education of the officers. In the
11aininvr of troops all soldiers will say
the thin; to aim at is discipline and
the l;es; ncans of giving it, providin*:
the offlct i j have been well chosen a .id
rightly tauj.. t, is to teach the soldiers
to shoot and Ir march.
'In war," saki \V !«on, writing to
his brother Joseph, 1 :>.c men are no-
thing. One man is everything.'
At the end of his career Napolecn
dictated a pamphlet which he called
Notes on the Art of War. the purpose
of which was to explain to govern-
ments and nations about to go to war
how to set about it. He said "the prin-
ciples of the art of war are those
which guided the great captains of the
past—Alexander, Hannibal, Caesar,
Gustavus, Adolphus, Turenne, Prince
Eugene and Frederick the Great." Re-
viewing the campaigns of these com-
manders Napoleon pointed out that on
all tho vital points the practice of all
of them was the same. He then re-
viewed his own campaigns and con-
cluded by saying that "you should
make your war as they made it and
model yourself upon them," for there
is no other way of mastering the se-
crets of war. In other words ,4a know-
ledge of the high parts of war can be
obtained only by studying the history
of great campaigns and by experi-
ence."
In an army that has passed through
a long period of peace, experince is
necessarily lacking; a knowledge of
war is possessed only by those who
have studied it in the way Napoleon
recommended. Such a student was the
late Admiral Mahan of the United,
States Navy. No writer in any coun-!
try has shown a stronger grasp of,
war or better illuminated by his writ-
ings its larger aspects, especially in(
all that concerns maritime warfare.
My first point is: Warfare cannot
be conducted without knowledge, but
in the choice of a commander the
first requisite is not knowledge, but i
character. If I were looking for a com-
mander-in-chief I should search above|
all for a man of hi{ h purpose, who, 1
could besure, would tnink only of his
duty, only of his country and never of
himself. In war more than in any oth-
er of the affairs of life, the saying
holds good, "If thine eye be single
thy whole body shall ge full of light."
I think that Grant as a general and
as commander of thearmies in the Civ-
il War had the single eye and he had
a remarkably strong character. Sher-
man before setting off for Atlanta,
spent an evening in conversation with
an int? ^at? friend, one of his best cav-
clry gent:... , v.r.j reports that late
at night they talked a little about
Grant. After a pause, Sherman, look-
ing in th^ fire, said:
' I know a lot more a out hiEtory
and law and war than Grant docs, bat
I'll tell y< u where he !.?ats mc and
where he beats the lot of l-s. He
doesn't care a damn for what he can't
see the enmy doir.n and it r r/.e
like hell."
Sher . .t i was a good judge f t'.e
kind of character that a corr.rr.arvJer-.
in-chief requires. «
In the second piece your command-
er must have that grip of affairs and
breadth of view which are generally
associated with a liberal education and
which give to tho^e who know him the
impression of a man of larger than
the common mold.
Nothing ir, more fatal in war than
the oppointment of generals for any
other reason than their capacity for
generalship. More battles have been
lost by the appointment of command-
ers for political or personal reasons
than from any other single cause.
The knowledge of war comes only
in the third place because this can be
sup | lem«nted for the commander by
others, hile character cannot. The
knowlfcvi^e of war acquired by the
method laid down by Napoleon n'1
be possessed by the commanders prin-
cipal assistant, whose title in Euro-
pean armies, is either quartermast-
er general or chief of the genral
staff. .
This officer's function is to relieve
the commander of the burden of in-
finited details, which, if they absorb
him, are apt to weake- his grip on the
whole.
♦ LEGAL NOTICES ♦
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
(I'liblUlied Lawton Constitution July 18 to
August a. Ineltmlve. 1W17)
State of nklahoiiiii. t'ouiaiiehe County, 3ft.
In the County C ' rt.
In re mutter the extate of Chan. It. San-
ders, deceased
VOTIt'K OF HALK OF HEAL KHTATE.
Notice In hereby jclven that In purmiance
«>f an order of the County Court of the
County of Comanche and Htate of Oklaho-
ma. made on the ltlth day of July, 11117. In
the matter of the entnte of Chan. R. Snn-
dern, deceased, the undertdfned, iih admin-
istratrix <if the eNtate of said deeeuned, will
sell .ii private sale t" the highest tddder
f« r caul), subject to confirmation by said
County Court, on Friday, the ,'lrd day of
AujruHt, 101". nt 10 o'clock A. M. ut India-
homa In said County of Comanche, all the
rltftit, title. Interest and estate of the said
Chan. It. SandeiM nt the time of hiH death
and all the right, title and Interest that the
«old estate bits by operation of law or oth-
erwise accrued in and t-> all the <-crtain
loth, pieces or imrcelH of laud situated, ly-
Iiik and being "i the County of Comanche,
State of Oklahoma, bounded and described
as follows, to-wlt:
Lots 4-fi.fl.-'.V2«.L'7-28-2 and :U) in
block It!: Lots 1-l'-.H-4-liO-:tO-31 and 32
In block IK all In Town of Indiahoma.
Comanche County, State of Oklahoma.
Hlds must be In w riting and may he l£ft
at the office of 11 V Wballu. att< • Q*:r «t
law, or may be delivered to the adni.ii.^ira-
trl* personally or may be filed In the of-
fice of the Judge of the County Court,
hated this ltlth day of July. 11*17.
MA LIN OA c SANDKR8.
Administratrix.
By 11 N WHALIN.
Her Attorney.
Farmers who have no silos should
give r.erlous consideration to the prob
leni In the western part of the state
: the pit silo has proven satisfactory and
I is cheaply constructed. Above all.
! there should not be an empty sllc
where livestock Is to be ted.
Cor. 3rd and F '"32SHSZSH525HSZ5E5il5i535a?H5E5HSHCl
LEON ARD BACK ING DOWN
ON PROMISES.
By H. C. Hamilton
(United Press Staff Correspondent.)
NEW YORK, July 10.—The country
is beginning to wonder if Benny Leo-
nard was serious when he announced
after winning ihe lightweight champ-
ionship from Freddie Welsh that he
would immediately join some branch
of the United States army or navy,
and that his fights would be against
only the best men in his division.
Since that announcement Leonard
has fought twice—against a "steup"
each time. He has been matched for
an encounter in Philadelphia with
Johnny Gilbane and the fight is to go
only six rounds.
Leonard turned down one of the
best offers the country ever heard of
for a bout in that class when he refus-
ed Matt Hinkle's offer of a $25,000
purse for a fifteen round go in Ohio
—and no tlecision was attached to the
articles for the bount. Kilbane anil his
manager had set their signatures to
the agreement and were ready to go;
ahead.
One of two things happened to Leo-
nard when he recieved that offer. He
either figured Kilbane far too danger-
ous to battle for fifteen rounds or he
decided that fighting six rounds for a
wad of money was more renumerative
than battling fifteen rounds for a
slightly larger wad.
The bount in Philadelphia doesn''
promise anything , and if Leonard
doesn't show at his very best he will
be soundly panned. The unpopulari y
of Freddie Welsh and his record of
many no-decision alleged fights should
(>e a warning to Leonard. There are
many young lightweights aching foi
a crack at his crown and they would
be willing even to take him on in ten
round bouts. The fans want that kind
of action—not the six round kind even
if it is with Johnny Kilbane as an
antagonist.
Besides, as was stated, the country
wants to know how about that enlist-j
ment. Leonard probably will find some
insistent questioners regarding that
when he enters the ring at Philadel-
phia.
What has become of the old-fashion-;
ed housewife who thought all groc-
ery store groceries were "stale"?
(By Spencer Wilkinson, Professor of
Military History, Oxford Univer-
sity. Written for the United Press.)
LONDON, July 5.—(By Mail.)—In
my judgment the important matters
for a nation going into war are these:
First of all, the statesmen and the
people should have a true conception
of the nature of war and of the char-
acter of the particular war they are
taking up. Otherwise the leading can-
not be right. The supreme leader is al-
1
Lawton Marble Works
;N0. A. GUTHRIE, Proprietor.
-22 C AVENUE.
LARGEST STOCK OF I'l.V
:SHED MONUMENTS CARRIER
BY AND DEALER. SAVE
MONEY BY COMING TO THE
SHOP AND BUYING.
1=
ICE! ICE!
If you would guard your family's healtlio, wateli the refrigerator's supply of ice.
Keep tlie milk sweet, the food fresh and cool. Do not he without ice at this time of
year, at least.
And how it will add to the enjoyment of your food and drink.
The refrigerator regularly filled with ice means cool, healthful food and drink
refreshingly served. It means crisp vegetables, sweet milk, and healthful meats.
Keep your refrigerator full of ice this summer.
Report any discourtesies on the part of drivers.
COMANCHE ICE
COMPANY
Phone 899
A & Railroad
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The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 293, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 19, 1917, newspaper, July 19, 1917; Lawton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc129500/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.