The Daily Ardmoreite. (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 245, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 18, 1911 Page: 2 of 6
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Ardmore Tuesday July 18 1911
PAGE TWO
THE DAILY AROMOBEITP
Silt ItaiH) arDmortilf.j
By The '
ARDMOKtEITE PUBLISHING CO.
FIDNKV CJwf President.
Lnteicl ;it
.is ;
than i hii v effect upon the com
tug nii'idii.il conventions il' I lii' pill'-
ties. Colon' I f. II. Douglas of Muskogee
hu jiri -filled a scheme for ) ir--n t -ing
sewn-1 lie tanning to tanners along
Mill- lilll' (if till' Fl'ISeO 1 tUl I IK n-tcniim
.-eiiou-t a! tent ion at tin- hands of the
CARTER CO. officials of iliai raijwa.v. Mo Kiigg"'ti
Or ARDMORE. t - dividing of 'In- :ne Into live ills
'cih' It is legal j irlels. -J ik-Ii district being live 1 1 1 1 1 -
mi each siile of tlK' l-risco light ot
MS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ! v ay In barge of live well-trained
NATIONAL SCRIBES i
MEET IN DETROIT;
on i
Cla
iflice at Ardinore
ss Matter.
OFFICIAL PAPEM
AND THE CITY
If It is ;n An!. i
Tho Daily Ardinoreite lop one full
year will 'le sent to the winner In
eaeh county who offers their prizes
through the AMtuorelte. 2i:tf
Lovt County.
Jordan Realty Company I 10 O0
Marietta National Hank 10.00 i
Kirn State Hank 10. nO i OPENING SESSION
First National Hank
II. K. Drau-;hon
S. Westheiiner & Co...
Sam HiHik
Jnu. I. I .on don Co
Sam Strauss
The Daily Ardmoreite.
One Y .i"
One M .nth
One Week
The Weekly Ardinoreite.
One 'War l .Mail
fix Months
agricultural agents and to make at
'"'"! Iraetisf onVix to those who are
. .ro
. .15
.11.00
will
K. M.
J W
H. S.
N F.
ro
Tlueo Months 2
T. M.
Phones.
Bmlnos Manager's Office
City 'Minor's Office
I .inn; Distance
. . .r.ns
.538
Any erroneous reflection on the
ihararer staudin;; or reputation of
any person t ! i til or corporation
! inn to embrace tin-plan ami worn up y a.
a laixe denion rat ion Held which Tynes
' would he .1 credit to tile country.
' The fort W in ih Ueeonl In referring
! to the bltieniess indulged in truthfully
j remarks: "When this campaign is
lover and its passions have I'ooled
j.sonie good men are going down on
'their knees and ask Ooil to ioigi
I iheni for hearing false witness against
1 their neighbors.''
Cul well ..
Scmlon .
Scott
Kelley &
Thompson
& Miller
llurch & Hoyu
V. L. 1 lagan ..
Knas AI-. Lofton
Son .
10.00
10.00!
10.00
5.00
5.0H I
5.00 I
5.oo :
5.00 I
2.50.
2.50 !
2.50
2.50 '
2.50 I
2.50 '
2.50
OF THE 26TH
ANNUAL CONVENTION OF EDI-
TORIAL ASSOCIATION.
Detroit .Mich. July 3 8. Editor
from all partes of the I'nited States
and Canada are here attending the
convention of the National Kditoriall
a-Mjciaticn which began this morn-
ing. During the three days' esriion there
Printype Wins!
New Oliver Typewriter Equipped With "Book Type" Makes Tre-
mendous Hit With the Public "Typewrites PRINT."
Sells for 1 7 Cents a Day
Nearly -v ry loading new-spa ;cr in
. count rv has cheerfully responded
which may appear In the columns ot tl m .t.:ii to furnish the Coined
The Ardinoreite will hn gladly cor- j i .. in this city with a copv
reeled upon Its being brought to tlie'j. js p.iing room free.
attention of the management i o
I Former IVoMdent Hot.ila Is in
Arrimore Tuesday July 18 191 1 i v.4 iugtou to protest against the
.H nana
STORES UNDERSELL MAIL ORDER
HOUSES.
W hile a certain number of people In
Ihirt con in it y patronize the mall ol-
der Jiousos of the law cities the
gnat majority Live found it cheaper
aiul much more witisfiictory lo ileal i
wlih our local merchants. j
Oocaslonifly the mall order concerns!
offer genuine bargains hill thelrj
prices oil .staple lines of good. such as.
earrled in stock here a- almost In-1
variably higher. An Interesting .lis
mission on IhU very point took place
the other day. ' 1
A farmer came in to make Koine pur-:
chusei anil remarked "If 1 had time ij
would order these from of Chicago. I
I could wave money by doing so." I
Tho merchant hiipciied to have thoj
entalog of the II rm 111 ipiestion an) as!
he pulled It from under the counter j
he said: i i
"I'll bet you that by the time you
figure In the freight my prices are the
low..!."
So they carefully looked up the
prices or every article and found that
with one exception the local store was
actually underselling the mall order
house. The farmer discovered that be
had saved exactly $7.S5 by buying the
article at home.
It Is much more convenient lo deal
wilh the local stores. The goods lire
delivered imtnediah 1 and there are
no annoying delays no bothersome
"red tape" no corresixmding hack and
forth when goods are not satisfactory.
(1 :
"llerkham county is one section r'
the slate that is uoiug to have some
corn next fall' in the assertion of Sen-
ator Hoh KclinK of Klk City "There
Is some good corn on our bottom land-
though -of coins. II is in l.n.l shape
on the uplands. The cot'ot crop is
also ill good condition anil vve n t -i'
lug to have a big crop of broom coin
Ibis year. Yoii know Klk City I- one
of the greatest broom corn centers :m
llie world and I believe it will con
tlnue lo hold that record. The nice'
V. litis vve lmvo nieived lately have
caused a teeling of cotitlilence among
ti.e rmei s of our part of the state
u I buvi.e-s a: Klk City is good. It
' -tl; i re:; lor a niiuiber of larue
. -e- . I h is . Mretnelv 1arg
$IO.iiiMiiiiin loan and Wall street pro
tectorale over lloiiduias.
In Host on the pay nf vouenter trol-
ley and cable vehicles are called "l're
layment cars."
Mis'ouri lias passed a law agains'
"cussin' " telephone girls.
See
night.
the
coronation
t'
at Majestic to
JULY
i 1
!- a ti i.i
o-
:. C
dipiitt of Texas.
'lie 'lev I lopilient
le I'll In d States
18 IN HISTORY.
1i;.'t'i Wattle of Warsaw which cert-
l iiiues three days.
i;u."- The Duke of Marlborough de
I'eaicd the French near Tlrlemont.
1 mi I - Viiolition societies began to
dwindle as the value of the cotton
gin became known.
IVM-The Hi's) chain bridge In
Kngland thrown over the Tweed 1ST
feet wide.
is.". I Hurricane at Davenport UU
caused tremendous loss of life.
Three hundred persons were 11'. of
yellow rover in Culla.
lS'il rresident "Lincoln Issued call
for r.iHi.iillil additional volunteers.
1STI Reciprocity treaty between
Canada and the I'nited Slates dis-
cussed by Dominion Hoard of Trade
and -.titer commercial bodies at sit.
John's .'. 1!.
ist'l Federal troops which had
been on strike duty in Chicago were
o'-ilereil back to their iM.sts by (ien-
era 1 Miles.
!svs 'I he president Issued his proc-
'aina'ion regarding tile government
o' S.inMago dc Culm.
The t it st troops for l'orto Kico.
nambi ring i'..'.'nu men under lieuerai
ilsoti cdiiHiioiicetl inbarking at
Charleston lieiieral S. liv nil's brluade
had alieady left Tampa for the same
i1' st mat 'on.
1 : 1 1 1 Cam! Trunk railway strike
hcuan.
Boys' Corn Clubs.
All merchants and farmers anil
huslness men who want to stimulate
the corn chi'-s by offerng )irics
re reques ed to write the Ardmore-
ite. stating the prizes tliej offer.
Dtinoia In Carter count v ilrbe for
Carter county prizes those from
Uue county will be for prizes In
that county ami ihe same In Jeffer-
son Johnston Marshall and Mur-
ray and any other counties that de-
sire to get busy. The prizes will
be run inderin telv In fhe columns
of this paper to s'imnlate the work.
Itandolph 2.50
Carter County.
Firm Natl. Hank ArTinore. . I 10 00
Sam C. Woods 2 60
Ardmore National Hank 10 00
M D Smith 0 uu
Webb's Studio
Kirs! State Hank ln."0
l T. Rex mat 5 00
V estheimer A'- Dauhe sail of clothes.
John C. Mulkey 2.50
William (i.-ecn --
! Dunn fc lilliain 2.00
W. F. Warren 2.50
II. K. Mobley 2.50
M M. Hright 2.50
i For the best acre of corn grown
in Carter county no restrictions A.
C. llo iiitni of Ardmore will award a
?;: barrel tank valued at J2S.O0.
Hargrove College Prizes.
. Dr. W. 11. Martin president of Har-
grove College is interested In the gen-
i et til development nnd welfare of the
country and he lias generously offered
)( give free tuition In Hargrove Col-
i lege for two full semesters to the boy
or girl in Carter county who wW the
i first prize at the fair this fall. The
piizcs are not limited to one product
j hut includes cotton corn fruit pea-
I nutu potatoes or anything; else that
1 prizes are offered on at the fatr.
i Dr. Martin says he does not care
if there are as many as twenty-five
I of them. As a second prize on a l
i will be papers and discussions of all
i i.l. .... it uilimviul and npwg wi-ifinl!
I 1 ....I .. 1 . ..f 1... nan'Mutmpu tft I
and relation
Ihe publjc.
In Detroit life s worth living
Kvery day:
h Detroit we are giving
Joys away.
In Detroit it is true
Thai our skies are always blue.
There's a smile for me and you
lilitlie and gay.
t i ...... I MT..I. Ii.ti' IV "Wi. I.. W
J'CIII.II 1111 II. .in. I . ' .
t'l our fair cltv" was the slogan sound-
ed today by roprcentat ives of the
municipal and state governments the
board of commerce; and the newspa-
pers of Deiroit at the opening session
of the twenty-sixth annual convention
of thn National Kditorial association.
The welcome mat was displayed at
the door of the Hotel l'ontchartrain.
the official headipiarters of the gather-
ing of the nation's scribes and Edgar
A. fluest jMX't laureate of Detroit
sung his sweetest in honor of the vis-
iting editors.
Milton II. McRea long prominent in
American journali.sni ns the. associate
of James K. Scripps in the Scripps-1
Mcltae league of newspapers wel-
corned tho fourth ostaters both as aj
journalist and as president of the.
Detroit board of commerce. Twenty-!
these different products he oners i"" ."'"" ""-.
i I Tr.e.t u-nR tlie.
tu lion free for one semester. iiie.c'u ....
. ... I.ii.l..ii..ivin nf Hw
are valuahle ones ami win ami "
Another a real Oliver Innovation PHINTYPK.
' Some months ago without announcement we
placed The I'rintype Oliver Typewriter on the
market.
Today one-third of our output of Oliver Type-
writers are Printypes.
It's more than a success. It's a revolution in typo-
writer type!
I'rintype Is the most lie.autiful readable attractive
at tent ion compelling type ev er evolved for type-
writers. ' Thousands of dollars have been expended in pro-
ducing this wonderful typewriter type yet you pay
only the regular price of ?100 for the complete nia-
hine the new Oliver No. 5. equipped to write in
I'rintype. You can buy The I'rintype Oliver on the
famous 17-Cents a Day Purchase Plan.
I'rintype is virtually book type the type which the
eye has been trained to grasp quickl'. '
The I.Vm which the crystallized experience of cen-
turies proves best for the print page.
GREAT BEAUTY AND ATTENTION VALUE.
I'rintype Is the very soul of symmetry. The nliad-
ings give body refinement and life which are utterly
lacking In the old style thin outline letter and num-
erals. It's a delight to tlie eye.
A letter written in Printype attracts the eye It's
magnetic. A I'rintype letter Is so strikingly attrac-
tive so forceful so distinctive that one unconscious-
ly picks it. out from a mass of mail to read first.
Its perfection compels attention.
A large part of our sales have resulted from let-
ters like this sent by Interested correspondents to
users of the new machine: "For goodness sake
what machine did you use to write that letter?" The
answer a I'rintype Oliver makes the sale.
AIDS EYESIGHT PREVENTS ERRORS.
PrintyiHi aids nnd rests the eyes. None of the
strain on the optic nerve that sharp thin outline
type imposes. This elimination of effort makes it
a positive pleasure to read Printype correspondence.
Ask the opinion of your oculist or optician. He-
knows the value of Printype!
Printype makes every letter every numeral every
Pr? rvtyp
TypcWri't&r
The Standard Visible Writer
character employed in tho whole wide range of com-
mercial transactions perfectly plain.
Wherever accuracy is demanded Printype is worln
a premium.
A PRINTYPE TEST BY LINOTYPE OPERATORS.
One of the hundreds of interesting Printype tests
was made by various newspaper -publishers. Lino-
type operator of equal dexterity were pitted against
each other in a speed contest. One set of operators
were supplied with copy written with tlie regular
typewriter face. f
Tlie opposing operators were supplied with copy
written in Printype.
it was found that the linotype operator could in-
crease his output ten per cent setting- from "Prin-
type'' copy over copy written with the ordinary "out-
line" typewriter type.
Ask Us To Write You a Letter on The
Printype Oliver Typewriter
We want to write you a specimen letter on The Printyi Oliver
Typewriter and forward a copv of the book "A REVOLUTION JN
TYPEWRITER TYPE." Ask us for details of the "17-Cents a-Day
Purchase plan" which has added so many thousands to the ranks
of typewriter users.
We urge upon you the importance of investigating the new face
in Typewriterdom Printype.
Address Sales Department.
The Oliver Typewriter Company
102 W. 9th St.. Kansas City. Mo.
prizes
nine of Carter county
greatly to the y
i prizes.
' Johnston County.
First National Hank Jlslio-
i uiingo I
' American State Hank Tlsho-
l ui;n--o
The Tishomingo State Hank
Tishomingo
I. II. (ilasgow the Manhattan
Mong it
Davenport t Son
I. H. llutchens
Uobertnon & Mason
Dudley Hi'.-.v. shot gun
Dykes t Aminurs
i Mrs. N. Ai.' ims a dictionary and
holder.
i A Hoyde horse col'a
I'. If. Lucas Son & Co
P. W. Arnold H Son
Lulu Danial
I'M (iieene
lios. Chance
O. T. Lifter
W. I-?. Hrogdon
W.
D.
W.
D.
L.
Kdmond 100
Sadler ...
Sawery .
Watson .
Dykes &.
red
grade pig
Co
20.00
5.O0;
2.50
LOO
1.00
5.00
a
the
' hl'K
1 :-:-.i!
i mat;.
1 n ' i
icf.ai
in .
ha.
.pn
tel.
i 11
lieiisiv e
Tai gov-
ot Cli
vers
IMW 11
V IMC
i
V.i
It'll
5.00
Ran
If You Want
in pi' --
-.-t . tat
:h
del
in
i
:ile
cn-in.
regon
IV. N.
Will ie
ll. e st. i
N..i
..i
i i r. s
North
bur
h
a 1 i' i!ii.i.' rli'i" lot;
I i.i .. a w 11 lead '.'lie
a i'Oc'ii I o'e on can-
resi h i- ..ii.i v c presi
tor .t in. i v .!.'. ' ions
.- that have adopted the
id' titial e'en-nee law
Dakota. March !;: Wis
No iiaska. April IT;
New .I.T-i) May
uslderaiile int. rst
Apr' I 2;
Apr:! !!'
turallv '
taken in 'he
.- as tl.eir
COlltes-s n
actio'.! will
R
E
S
U
L
T
S
XT'OU can et
them by atl-u-rtisinp;
in this
paper. It readies
the best class 2 of
people insthis
coinmunitv.
Use this paper if
you want some
of their business.
Co oi:e
heifer valite
.1. c. Smith one
value
Tishomingo Abstract
Joe Lewis
.1 A. Howard
Hen II. Colbert rolana-Chir.a
gilt value
W. J. Milburn Milbnrn Ok. ...
C H. Wiser
First National Hank Miiburri
Okla
The First State Hank Milburn
ukla
Premium bv J. R Chas'ine
do!ph. Ok. one god Poland-Oliina pis l
to the boy that raises best ten ears
of corn in Johnston county. Tbls
corn to be raised from my seed corn
value 25 00
Cotton Premium.
First prize. Robert J. Gilliam. .$10.00 '
For tho best acre of cotton grown
in C.irrer county uo restrictions as '
to aue of grower the fo lowing :
prizi s are offered:
Chickasaw Compress Co $
W. F. Warren
H. E. Mobley
J. H. Siragins ...t
M. Cortran
More Good Prizes.
I v'h to offer fn::owing prl.-es for
o:ir -al; sr.ovy or exhibit:
Cr.e peiligrri d Duroo fig ra'ue
5J". ; lest acre com.
:e pedigreed Duroc p'c value
$.'.".; best a. i cotton.
reception committee
that welcomed the delegates to the
second annual convention of the Na
tional Editorial association held in
I Cincinnati. J. P. Paumgartner of
5 no ' Santa Ana Cal. president of the as-
i so'eiation retiponded to the addresses
jjno'of welcome.
! Tho National Editorial association
was foiuided m iss.i ny t 01. 11. 11. Her-
bert editor of the National Prinler-
H has met only
once iK'tore 111
twenty-two years ago. Sixty-four state
and sectional editorial associations
i.re alTillated with the national body
and all have pent delegat to the
meeting convened today. The mem-
bership Includes editors of metropoli-
tan dailies and country weeklies.
The closing session will he held on
Thursday and afterward many of tha
delegates will go on an excursion to
Ouohec and intermediate oints in
Canada. This trip will afford an op-
portunity 10 investigate the reciproc-
ity question from the Canadian view-
point lletvveeii sessions In Detroit
there will be motor rides about De-
troit visits to the great automobile
factories and a steam trip.
What shall we do with the pres.
agents and seekers of free publicity?
is one of the burning issues before
the convention. As Detroit is tho cen-
ter of automobile manufacturing
which employs more press agents
than any other industry not even ex-
cepting presiili iit-hooming the editor
1 will probably have an opportunity to
00 ..... .;. hrrirt inln nrnelice. For
5 00 weeks ll.
-troit have been
writers overtime in order to lead up
the inno.-ent
ncvv.sv items about
B.00
5.00 -
lohnson. Hdw . 21 cal.. rif e. """""" ' v
- ....I .....1 41. nl ..ia
.- in 01 ce 1 1 1 .1 e 1 I'ciimi. 111111 in...
2.5ft I
2.50'
5.00;
2.00 !
2.50
2.50
2.5l)
2.50
1.00 :
LOO
CHANGES SERVICE
FIRST NEWSPAPER
CAMPBELL'S NEWS LETTER WAS
FIRST GROWTH TO 24235 PE-
RIODICALS. '
across tlie Styx and visit the office of
a mc-trapolltan newspaper he would
look with awe at tho mighty presses
louring fort li from masses of whirl-
ing cylinders steady streams of twenty-four
page papers all printed cut
pasted and counted at the rate of from
30 Oco to L'.n.nOO an hour.
In tho composing room he would
11 11 il that tho cases from which th
old fashioned printer set the typcliad
. J been discarded for tlie linotype nnd
It seems hardly possible that two j "oiiot.vp.
Imndi-e.l and seven vears have missed! Should he visit the' editorial depart-
sinco John Campbell launched
Ihe mejit
Hoston News Letter America's first j
regularly issued newspaper. On April
24 1 701 he published the initial copy
oT his pioneer journal an
lie would behold the impossible
men taking messages by telegraph
from the most distant cities and coun-
tries over copper wires and others
event of actually talking with people they can
such great importance that Hoston be-j"ot. see hundreds and event thousands
came known ever after as a literary j of miles away.
cen(cr j So sw iftly are changes made in the
r eouipment of the modern newspaper
Campbell who was postmaster or 1 1 1
.... . n f nl'ha-t witl'in half a century every type
I I I e It." I . . . I l .... ' . ... ILHU..ffU.l V. .
?ood cotton crop which is now possi-
ble the country will bo in no worse
condition than for the past thro
years.
(iood rains have fallen over alnios-.
the entire state lwing lighter it
seems right at Mnrlow than any place
ri porting.
-
Read the Want. Ads.
Railroad TimcTable
SANTA FE.
Northbouns
' 12:07 a. m."
3:06 p. m.
No. B
No 12
No. IS
Southbound.
of machine now in use will have been
discarded.
5.00
2.00
LOO:
field until 1710. when the Hoston Oa-
zette made its appearance. The "rivalry
between the News Letter and the f!a-
zette was hot and bitter but in the
end the Gazette was driven out
business. Although within' the next
few- years other newspapers were
founded tho News Letter kept on the
even tenor of its way for soventy-
came to its end I """""J" "'orning Marlow and the
1 steady-
Glorious Rain at Marlow.
0f Marlow July 17. Last Saturday af-
ternoon the country just west and
southwest of Marlow was visited by
ja line rain in fact the best rain the
i country has .sen in most three years.
it
two years when
with the Hritish evacuation of Bos-
ton. Tlie first number of the News let-
ter -which was a weekly consisted of
a single half-sheet printed on both
..... 1. TVna. "
publicity promoters of IV- sines io .u. ... F..s.-. """i.
pounding thoir type-1 quanei-s oi u.e sj.....' was ....
with Hritisli pontics nnu an account
editors with bright and; of the opening 01 parnamem. 1 n
thotr icirtleulnr local news coiisimcu ui iiiicb suui .
No.
No.
No.
.11:28 a. m.
. 4:14 a. m.
. 4:25 p. m.
. 1:15 p. ui.
FRISCO SYSTEM.
Westbound.
No. 525 .' 9:35 a. nr.-
No. 503 12:30 p.m.
No. 527 3:15 p. m
No. 505 8:55 p. m.
Local Freight.
No. 515 :00 p.m..
(Daily except Sunday.)
Eastbound.
makes of car.. Although
their literary productions to the news-
pa i rs free of charge many of the.
5.00
2.50
2.50
5.00
they give paragraphs. New York was represent
ed by two items. Providence two New-
London by one and Philadelphia by
. ... V. 1tf
editors are peevish on the press agent two. in u.e lower .-u.ii.-r o.
subject and apply harsh epithets to ' Pniw appeared the first advertisement
the philanthropic gentlemen. L. R Printed on American soil.
Palmer of New York manager of the Circulations' In those early newspa-
American Newspaper Publishers' as- per days did not count for much. The
sociation. will address the convention News Lettor had been in existence
on the subject of 'Free Publicity." twenty years before it had secured
The contention is being held ill the 300 subscribers. The newspaper was
big meeting hall of the hotel oh. well a new thing and as the thrifty Ros-
i. 'lo.iinp- hotel which emplovs a very tonians were as a rule opposed to
clever press agent.
country east was visited by
down-pour for a few hours. The rain
Sunday aUso extended to the country
on the west side. While most all the
old corn has been ruined by the dry
weather farmers are planting all
inds of feed crops and the cotton is
still doing well with few exceptions.
Taken altogether the country has a
fine chance to recover to a slight ex-
tent the fearful damage done by the
drouth. June corn cane maize kaffir
and other late feed crops will do well No. 652
yet if the rains continue and w ith a No. C74
No. 50i! V:20 a.m.
No. 521 . .- 12:40 p. ni.
No. 526 - C:05 p. m.
No. 504 - 4:00 p.m.
Local freight.
No. 543 6:00 a. m.
(Daily except Sunday.)
ROCK
ISLAND SYSTEM.
Westbound.
No.
No.
673
C51
Eastbound.
1:43 p. m.
8:30 p. m..
7:30 a.m.
3:15 p. m.
1 innovations it took many years 01
patient work to convince them that
they ought to buy and read their local
Nn'ii-i" of Reouest fcr Parole.
I hereby give notice to the public paper says the F.ditor and Publisher.
2.501 that I will apply to the Governor of Although the spread of journalism
the S'ate of Oklahoma for an Indef was slow when the News Letter stis-
lnite extension or the temporary pa- penned punncai ion ... 1....
role cran.e.l me. which expires on the in Massachusetts seven newspapers;
loth d.iv of Julv. 1H1 and that appli- in New Hampshire one
cation will be made and presented to Island one: in Connecticut three;
nor on the date of the expir- Pennsylvania eight; in ew
Rhode
in
York.
and
i tho Cove
oi.m. f mv innitinrarv narole. three; in Maryland. Virginia
1 ti :n uhieh T shrill nsk North Carolina two each; In South
1 nr .iu.iiiu - -- ----- --
(!. oa:r !; I. Red chickens val
ue. $7.50; best 10 ears corn. ! for indefinite parole or pardon is that Carolina three; In Georgia one; or a
vii i ...-0.1 i r-r.r. r.ttr n pm nt miiltr nf the offense charged total of 33 all weeklies.
Also I will giv a pa r of registered i against me.
i Duroc pigs value $50 to the party 211m A. EJNLOK.
Use This Paper
showing the highest ncortr.g regis-
tered Duroc hog any age f ora any
part of Oklahoma.
W. P. POT AND.
Ice want aos ere important to you
when you decide about "where to go"
for that wit
According to Ayer's Newspaper An-
inutl of 1911. there are in 1ho l"nited
States at the present time 24.235 pe-
riodicals of which 2614 are dailies
and 17260 are weeklies.
If John Campbell could return frora
Where To Go This Summer?
Round Trip Fares are Reduced
1 via
To
California
Mexico
Massachusetts
Michigan
New Mexico
Virginia
Oregon
To
Washington
Minnesota
Mississippi
Montana
New York
Washington I).
Wyoming
C.
You sleep in the finest of electric lighted wleepers; you dine in
handsome dining ears serving delicious FRED HAKVEY meals
and you ride in roomy comfortable chair cars when you go via
'Frisco Lines the Convenient Route'
Tickets are on sale June 1st to September30th. 1911 final return
limit October 31st with privilege cf ttop-over at practically all im-
portant points cn route.
For full information concerning rates route etc. call on or
address:
C. O.
L. C. HER1SDO.M. Atf-nt
Frisco Lines
Ardmore. Okla.
J CKSO. D. P. A
Frisco Lines
Oklahoma City Okla.
1
I
1
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Daily Ardmoreite. (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 245, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 18, 1911, newspaper, July 18, 1911; Ardmore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc145614/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.