The Hollis Post-Herald. (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 23, 1919 Page: 2 of 8
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THE HOLLIS POST-HERALD
State
News
Notes
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Recall of wisener filed
Union Man Said To Be Against Mayor
of Muskogee.
Muskogee.—Petitions asking that a
special election be called to decide the
question jot recalling Mayor John L.
Wisener were filed with the city clerk
here. Union men incited by Attor-
ney W. G. Robertson were respon-
sible for the filing of the petitions.
Over 400 names were on the peti-
tions, and only 362 registered voters
are necessary to have the election
called. City Clerk Gilbert will deter-
mine within the next 10 days whether
enough registered voters have signed
the petitions.
The attempt to recall Mayor Wise-
ner is the result of the fight over
the street car strike ('tiring the sum
mer just passed. In his petitions. Mr.
Robertson charges that the mayor
failed to perform his public duty as
head of the safety department.
Owen Not A Candidate.
Oklahoma City—Chief Justice Tom
Owen of the Oklahoma supreme court,
has no thought of becoming a candi-
date for governor three yearB hence,
fhe chief justice was asked about this
following appearance of a story In a
Itate newspaper to the effect that the
justice was grooming himself to be-
eome chief executive of the Btate in
resigning from the court, which will
take effect in about a year from now.
Vnstice Owen says he will practice
law In Muskogee when he quits the
benoh.
Conductor Killed By Black.
Oklahoma City.—J. M. Williams,
Itreet car conductor, was shot and in-
stantly killed here on his run in the
eastern part of the city. The motor-
man, George Cramer, a woman pass-
enger and a negro were the only oth-
ers on the oar. The negro was Been
to drop a pistol and jump from the
ear and run. He has not been cup-
tared. The motorman brought the
body of Williams to the terminal sta-
tion. Police are now trying to find
the negro.
Negro Is Guilty of Burning Anoother.
Tulsa.—Ernest Taylor, a negro,
charged with tying Ed Fain, another
negro, to his bed in the latter'b home
In West Tulsa and then firing the
house, was found guilty of man-
slaughter and sentenced to serve four
yearB in the state penitentiary. Pain,
railroad farter, was burned to death
In hlB West Tulsa home on the night
of August 12. Investigation dis-
closed thfct he had been bound and
gagged and then tied to his bed be-
fore the house was set on fire. Tay-
lor was arrested and charged with the
crime.
Fourteen Year Old Boy In Prison.
McAlester.—The youngest prisoner
In the i ate penitentiary 1b Leonard
Stevens, 14 years old, who was re-
ceived at the institution Sunday un-
der a 6-months' sentence for robbing
a store at El Reno. He and his ac-
complice, George Sparks, were con-
victed lor stealing merchandise val-
ued at about $25. The chaplain at the
penitentiary has made arrangements
so that Stevens wtl> not be associated
directly with older and more harden-
<-d criminals. He will be placed in
charge of the prison library.
FalrC tears $50,000.
Oklahoma City—Receipts of the
Thirteenth Annual Oklahoma State
Fair totaled $140,000. Of this sum
about $50,000 will be profit. No plans
have been formed as yet for the con-
struction of new buildings on the
grounds, although a building for ma-
chinery and a new poultry house are
needed. If a building is not con-
structed the smaller buildings on the
east part of the grounds will be mov-
ed back in order to give more roori
for implement exhibits, as the ma-
chinery men are too crowded.
E. J. Giddings Under Arrest
Oklahoma City.—E. J. Giddings,
chairman of the county democratic
central committee and wheelhorse for
Mayor Walton in the last city cam-
paten. was arrested by deputies from
the 1'nited States marshal's office on
a charge of conspiracy to interfere
with povernment operation of the tel-
egraph system. J. Garrison Kitchens,
city policeman, was arrested at the
sani-- time on a similar charge, as was
also Charles Chiistain, a barber, who
mixed in the strike.
Beer Tanks Now Hold Crude Oil
Ponra City.—Immense glass tanks,
formerly use by the William J. Lemp
Brewing Co., for the storage of beer,
will be diverted to the storage of gas-
oline in Oklahoma. Six of these glass
enameled tanks have been purchased
by Harry C. Ferrimaa. of the Wabash
Gasoline company and Earl Blake of
the Blackwell Oil & Gas Company
and will be shipped to the northwest-
ern Kay county field for storage pur-
poses. Each tank has a capacity of
p.TOO barrels.
McQInnle To Quit In October.
Muskogee.—W. P. McGinnls, who
has tendered his resignation as Unit-
ed States attorney for the western
district of Oklahoma, has Veen noti-
fied by the attorney-general tnat be
will be relieved of his duties latu in
October. C. W. Miller, first assistant
in Mr. McGinnls* office, is being prom-
inently mentioned as his successor.
Mr. McGinnls resigns to entar private
law practice here with Assistant
United States Attorney Molony. Chiof
Justice Thomas Owen will Join the
firm the first of the year.
Too Much Corn Leads to Arrest
Miami.—It took an internal reve-
nue agent versed In the ways of the
moonshiners of the Blue Ridge moun-
tains to locate an illicit whiskey still
in the cellar of a farm house ten
miles west of Miami. A man named
Hartsaw was arrested in the raid and
taken to Vinita. Suspicion that a
still was enjoying a flourishing busi-
ness was aroused when Hartsaw, ac-
cording to the government men, pur-
chased the entire supply of corn meal
in the town of Welch and large lotii
at other towns.
Ponca City Girls in Japan
Ponca City.—Notification has been
received here by O. Lew Headley, ed-
itor of the Ponca City Courier, that
Ms two daughters, the Misses Minnie
and Mildred, have arrived at Yokoha-
ma, Japan, where they are waiting or-
ders to proceed to Vladivostock.
STATEHOUSE BREVITIES
The annual meeting of the Interna-
tional association of game and fish
commissioners will be held this year
at Louisville, Kentucky, according to
announcement by Ben Watt, state
game and fish warden. The following
delegates are to represent Oklahoma
at the meeting: Ben Watt, W. T.
Hunt, J. S. Askew, Sam Hooker, S.
P. Berry, W. A. Durant, atrd George
F. Short, of Oklahoma City; J. Elmer
Thomas, Medicine Park; Joseph F,
Ludlow, John B. Doolin, Alva; John
M. Scott, Idabel; Dr. R. L. Hall, Paw-
huska; Eugene Watrous, Enid; John
Golobie, Guthrie; William Gill, Ato-
ka; Porter Newman, Durant; Bert C.
Hodges, Okmulgee; R. L. Davidson,
Tulsa; Simeon D. Slaughter, Musko-
gee; and R. R. Fitzgerald, Hobart.
The Pottawatomie county commis-
sioners took the ticklish situation by
the forelock and are now receiving
about double the amount of pay each
month. Here is how they did it: The
commissioners were cognizant of a
law passed by the last legislature fix-
ing their salary at $1,500 a year, 10
cents mileage and $5 a day for actual
road overseeing and knew that they
were not receiving it. They also
knew that the law stated that th^
would receive it If they were "elect-
or or appointed" after the law went
into effect. So they went to Oklaho-
ma City and tendered their resigna-
tions to the acting governor. Imme-
diately Acting Governor Trapp ap-
pointed Messrs. Jordan, Southgate
and Gowan as commissioners to take
their places. They were the same as
the resigning officers.
Governor Robertson and O. H.
Searcy, parole officer, joined in offer-
ing a personal reward of $100 for ap-
prehension of Paul Hadley, who vio-
lated a reprieve by the governor. Had-
ley was serving a life sentence for the
killing of a Texas sheriff, after sensa-
tional trial at Muskogee. He secured
a 60-day reprieve in July on represen-
tation that he wanted to perfect a pat-
ent he claimed he had made.
Thirty-five freight cars carrying 70
big army trucks, each having a capac-
ity of three tons, arrived in Oklaho-
ma City for the state highway depart-
ment. The trucks came from Ft. Ben-
jamin Harrison. Ind. They will be dis-
tributed by the state highway depart-
ment to the several counties for use
In road construction work.
These cases were disposed of by the
oriminal court of appeals: O. P. John-
son, Albert Pitts, Phillip Halpain,
Cherokee county, convicted of riot,
each two years in penitentiary, affifm-
ed; Wesley W. Cole, Caddo county,
convicted of stealing domestic animal,
two and a half years in penitentiary,
affirmed.
The criminal court of appeals af-
firmed the conviction of G. Belchner,
Tulsa county, for violating the pro-
hibitory law. He had been given 30
days in jail and a fine of $50.
People of the state are urged to ob-
serve fire prevention day. October 8.
in a proclamation sent out by Gover-
nor Robertson. Chimneys should be
cleaned and precautions taken in mak-
ing them safe for fire; rubbish should
be cleared from lots and premises,
and appropriate exercises should be
held in the schools, it is suggested.
Fire prevention day has been observed
for several years In Oklahoma with
beneficial results. Suggestions for
programs on this day are sent from
the state fire marshal's office to any
one interested.
Thousands of bushels of wheat is
rotting in the shock in western Ok-
lahoma. because of no cars to haul the
;rrain to market or to storage. J. A.
Whiteliurst. agricultural board presi-
dent, said in a communication to the
rail road administration making a
plea for cars for Oklahoma. Wheat
had been shocked with expectation of
threshing it soon on the assumption
there would be cars to move the
threshed grain. None has come, and
for this reason many farmers will
lose a large part if Hot all their
wheat.
IN AIL LANDS
C0NCI8E REVIEW
OF WEEK'8 NEW8
PEACE NOTES.
Tha Paris Tempi Mates that It haa
reason to believe that the supreme
council is now considering a proposal
to set up in eastern Gallcia a defi-
nite regime in favor of Poland. Thfa
would take the place of the provision-
al regime which has been maintained
since the Polish occupation of tba
country until the present.
+ * +
"I would say look out for Germanf.
There are immense resources in Jim-
sia and Japan, which she might de-
velope. Keep your eyes open." These
words were made by Maj. Gen. E. F.
McGlachlin on the eve of his taking
command at Camp Funston, Kas.
♦ + +
Italy must remain in unity with her
Allies, declared Tomasso Tittonl, the
foreign minister, in the course of his
speech in the Italian chamber, deal-
ing with the situation growing out
of the Flume incident, in which he
offered to resign in favor of any mem-
ber who believed he could handle the
pioblem better.
+ + +
The army regulation prohibiting
American officers and Midlers at Cob-
lenz from fraternizing with Germans
was revoked in an order Issued by
Major General Allen. The rule against
fraternizing became effective in De-
cember.
+ + +
President Wilson Is extremely Anx-
ious over the fate of Armenia, be-
lieving ft 1b "of Immediate human
necessity" for the United States to
take forceful action to prevent ex-
termination of the Armenian race and
that It is the bounden duty of the
government to send an armed expedi-
tion to its relief.
* * +
"It would be difficult to find a grav-
er period than this in the whole his-
tory of modern Italy," said Foreign
Minister Tittonl in alluding to the sit-
uation there. One report has it that
King Victor Emmanuel may abdicate
and another that civil war is immi-
nent.
♦ ♦ ♦
A movement Is on foot in Hungary
to restore the monarchy with the
former Archduke Francis Joseph
Otto, eldest son of former Emperor
Charles as king, according to a Buda-
pest dispatch to an Innsbruck news-
paper. The former emperor would be
named regent, the dispatch adds.
+ + +
Japan is planning officially to In-
vite China to confer on the Shantung
situation after Japan has ratified the
Peace Treaty. This fact wae ccmmn-
nicated to the correspondent by offi-
cials, who added that Japan naturally
could not compel China to accept the
Invitation.
♦ * *
WASHINGTON.
After a day of rest, President Wil-
son was described aB "slightly better"
In an official bulletin issued by Dr.
Cary Grayson, his physician. The
bulletin, which recorded the first
change to be officially noted in Mr.
Wilson's condition since he was taken
111 did not give details.
+ 4" +
Secretary Daniels characterized as
"preposterous" recently published
statements that the landing of Amer-
ican sailors at Trau, Dalmatia, Sep-
tember 23, was at the order of the
British admirality.
* * ♦
School boys and girls, the "business
and professional men and the home
makers of only a few years hence,"
are urged by Secretary of the Treas-
ury Glass to make permanent those
habits of thrift and economy which
they learned during the war.
+ + +
President Wilson has returned to
Washington to all outward appear-
ances on the road to recover/ from
j the nervous exhaustion which inter-
rupted his speaking trip for the Peace
Treaty. Complete unbroken rest the
President must have, says Doctor
' Grayson, emphasizing the intention to
I see that his patient gets it. Although
the condition of the executive Js not
deemed alarming, recovery will he a
matter of several weeks under the
most favorable circustances.
President Wilson has canceled the
j remainder of his tour under orders
i from Admiral Cary T. Grayson, the
President's physician, and returned
to Washington direct from Wichita.
Admiral Grayson gave illness and
physical exhaustion as the reason for
his action.
+ + +
DOMESTIC.
An air service, independent of all
other departments, ha^ been recom-
mended to the Senate military sub-
committee by Howard Coffin and
George Harrison Houston, members
of the mission sent to Europe to
study aviation.
+ + +
Temporary relief from the sugar
shortage is In sight with the coming
on the market of the Western beet
sugar cro;i. according to Henry H
Rolapp. chairman of ih food admini-
stration's sujar distributing commit-
tee and president of the United States
Sugar Manufacturers' Association.
The resignation Albert S. Burle-
son as Postmaster General has been
in the hands of President Wilson for
several weeks. This information was
given out by an intimate friend of
Mr. Burleson at Austin, Tax.
Eight copper companies, employing
11,000 men, announced recently that
each employee haa been provided,
without cost to himself, a life insur-
ance policy payable to any named
beneficiary. TCie policies range In
sums from $1,000 to $1,500. No med-
ical examination is necessary.
+ * +
With eight hundred troops from
Forts Omaha and Crook, Neb., and
Camp Dodge, Iowa, on riot duty, with
five hundred more soldiers due to ar-
rive later, Omaha officials were con-
fident there would be no further out-
break f the race rioting.
+ + +
An effort to lynch Mayor E. P.
Smith was made at Omaha recently
by the mob which later hanged Will-
iam Brown, negro, to a pole. The
mayor Is in a critical condition at a
local hospital. The riot centered
about the magnificent new court
house building, which was set on fire
in the efforts to reach the negro who
was charged with criminal assault on
Agnes Lobeck a white girl, a few days
ago.
+ * +
Frank Corso, who sold hair tonic to
two men who were blinded by drink-
ing it, will not be held responsible to
the courts, it wae announced recently,
at Mobile, La., Corso, It was said, can-
not be held responsible for what the
men did with the hair tonic after he
sold it
* * *
Bringing a report of "outrageous
cruelties perpetrated on American
soldiers" in prisons of the American
Expeditionary Forces in France, the
Congressional committee sent over-
seas to investigate tales of army
"prison horrors" has arrived in New
York on the transport Agememnon
from Brest.
+ ♦ +
That an industrial armistice will re-
sult from the Senate investigation of
the steel strike is the hope of members
of the labor committee. Complete
airing of labor's grievances and of
capital's fears, together with sugges-
tions from senators, will tend to bring
the clashing forces to a halt, commit-
tee members said.
+ * +
SOUTHWEST.
Three hundred Mexican families In
Mercedes, in Hidalgo County, are
homeless as a result of incursions
made by the flood waters of the Rio
Grande, it was learned when a request
for two hundred army tents was re-
ceived at Fort Brown.
+ + +
An extension of the branch line of
the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific
Railroad that runs from Lawton,
Okla., to Chattanooga, Okla., Is to
be built to Burkburnett, Tex. Engin-
eers are now in the field making a
survey of the route of the proposed
extension.
♦ + +
A meeting of the state board of
arbitration and concilliatlon has been
called by Claude Connelly, chairman,
to be held at Drumright, Okla., to set-
tle the differences between telephone
operators of the Southwestern Bell
exchange at Drumright, and the com-
pany.
♦ + *
The federal grand jury brought iu
112 indictments in its report submit-
ted to Judge John H. Cotteral of the
United States District Court, at Guth-
rie, Okla. The jury has been sitting
since September 15, and it has ex-
amined nearly four hundred wit-
nesses. There are a dozen white slav-
ery indictments in the list.
+ * +
FOREIGN.
American marines landed from a
torpedo boat destroyer to compel the
Italians to evacuate Trau, Dalmatia,
according to a dispatch from Spalato,
a short distance east of Trau. The
dispatch adds that the Italians left
after the inhabitants fired on them,
and that Jugo-Slav troops took over
the town from the Americans.
+ + +
Anti-Jewish demonstrations, partici-
pated in by about six thousand per-
sons, occurred the other night before
the city council building in Vienna.
Tbe crowd demanded the enforcement
of the alien expulsion decree, which
became effective September 20, but
has been carried out in a lax manner.
* * +
Improvement in the situation cre-
ated by the general strike on the Brit-
ish railways is announced in official
quarters. The distribution of food
was being carried ont without fric-
I tion and volunteer help was being
freely offered, it was stated.
# + +
I William W. Handley, American
j consul general at Callao, Pern Is
dead from apoplexy. He was stricken
about ten davs ago. He is survived
I by his wife. His home was in New
York.
+ + +
| The state legislature of Vera Cruz
I voted recently to annul article 27 of
J tbe Mexican legislation, which is al-
' leged by foreign oil interests to bft
I intended to confiscate oil lands in the
I states of Vera Cruz and Tamaulipas.
♦ ♦ ♦
j Premier Nitti has been given a vote
; of confidence by the Italian chamber
1 oT deputies. The government re-
, chived 20$ votes to 140. The assem-
, bly was textremely tumultuous There
were personal encounters between
several of the deputies.
The conference between the rall-
' road men's representatives and th3
British government for an attempted
( adjustment of differences on the
( wage question has resulted in failure
and a strike on the railroads has bean
I ordered to take effect at once.
SENATE DEFEATS
first voted down by 58
to 30 in first vote
on treaty
GORE ALONE AGAINST WILSON
Oklahoma Senator Joins With Repub-
licans for Amendments.—Op-
ponents 8ti 11 Retain
Hope.
How They Voted
Washington.—The roll call on the
first amendment follows:
For adoption:
Republicans—Ball, Borah, Br&nle-
gee, Calder. Curtis, Dillingham, El-
kins. Fall, Fernald, France, Freling-
huysen, Gronna, Harding, Knox, La-
Follette, Lodge, McCormlck, McLean,
Moses, New, Newberry, Norris, Pen-
rose, Phipps, Polndexter, Sherman,
Wadsworth, Warren and Watson—29.
De mocrats—Gore—1.
Total for adoption, 30.
Against adoption:
Republicans — Capper, Colt, Cum-
mins, Edge, Hale, Jones (Washing-
ton); Kellogg, Kenyon, Keyes, Len-
root, McCumber, McNary, Nelson,
Smoot, Spencer, Sterling and Town-
send—17.
Against adoption:
Democrats — Ashurst, Bankhead,
Beckham, Chamberlain, Culberson,
Oial, Fletcher, Gay, Torrey, Harris,
Harrison, Henderson, Hitchcock,
Jones, (New Mexico): Kendrick,
Kirby, McKellar. Myers, Nugent,
Overman, Owen, Phelan, Pittman, Po-
merene, Ransdell, Robinson, Shep-
pard, Shields, Simmons, Smith, (Arl-
sona); Smith, (Georgia); Smith,
(Maryland); Stanley, Swansen, Tho-
mas, Trammell, Underwood, Walsh,
(Massachusetts); Walsh, (Montana);
Williams and Wolcott—41.
Total against—58.
Washington.—At last reaching the
stage of action in its consideration of
the peace treaty, the senate swept
aside in quick succession 36 of the 45
amendments which had been written
into the document by the foreign re-
lations committee.
The smallest majority recorded
against any of the committee propos-
als was 15 and the largest was 28. All
of the amendments considered had
been introduced by Senator Fall, re-
publican, New Mexico, and were de-
signed to curtail American participa-
tion in European settlements result-
ing from the war.
Of the nine amendments yet to be
acted oh, six relate to the Shantung
section, two propose to equalize vot-
ing power in the league of nations
and one would limit American repre-
sentation on the reparations commis-
sion. In the absence of a definite
agreement for disposition of these
proposals, senate leaders thought to-
night that the debate might run on
several days before another roll call
1b taken.
Gore and Thomas Join.
Throughout the day's voting, the
democrats presented a solid front
against the amendments except for
Senators Gore of Oklahoma and
Thomas of Colorado. Seventeen re-
publicans on the other hand, lined up
against the first committee proposal
to be considered and most of them
stood with the democrats on all suc-
ceeding roll calls. , Many of them an-
nounced they were for reservations
which they believed would cover the
same ground without endangering the
treaty.
At adjournment the treai.v advo-
cates declared themselves elated at
the day's work and the opposition
leaders also were claiming a victory
on the showing made for their amend-
ments. They mustered a maximum
strength of 31, which, with absentees,
would be sufficient, they declared, to
insure the treaty's defeat unless satis-
factory qualifications are accepted.
Thirty-three negative votes on the
final roll call, they pointed out, would
make impossible the two-thirds ma-
jority necessary for ratification.
Many Make Talks.
Under a special agreement, speeches
on the amendments were limited to
five minutes and nearly half the sen-
ate membership got into the running
debate, which occupied most of the
day. Only a few senators were ab-
sent and many members of the house
crowded into the rear of the chamber,
while in the filled galleries the ushers
stood guard to restrain spectators
from applauding declarations from the
floor.
French Approve Treaty.
Paris.—Complete ratification of the
Versailles peace treaty with Germany
by both houses of the French parlia-
ment is expected very shortly, possi-
bly within four days. Following last
week's ratification by the chamber of
deputies, the senate immediately took
up the discussion. The peace com-
mittee of that body has already com-
pleted its study of the document The
debate in the senate is expected in
parliamentary circles to be quite
snort, possibly not exceeding four
days.
A leopard cannot
change its spots
Mr. Dodson, the "Liver Tons" Man,
Tells the Treachery of
Calomel.
Calomel loses you a day I You knoif
what calomel is. It's mercury; quick-
silver. Calomel is dangerous. It crashea
into sour bile like dynamite, cramping
and sickening you. Calomel attacks
the bones and should never be putlnt®
your system.
When you feel bilious, sluggish, con-
stipated and all knocked out and be-
lieve you need a dose o{ dangerous cal-
omel just remember that your druggist
Bells for a few cents a large bottle of
Dodson's Liver Tone, which is entirely
vegetable and pleasant to take and is
a perfect substitute for calomel. It is
guaranteed to start your liver without
stirring yon np inside, and can not
salivate.
Don't take calomel! It can not be
trusted any more than a leopard or a
wild-cat. Take Dodson's Liver Tone
which straightens you right up and
makes yon feel fine. Give It to the
children because it Is perfectly harm-
less and doesn't gripe.—Adv.
"Poor" Widow Finds $10,000.
On the death of her husband, Jere-
miah O'Grady, at Chico, Cal., a few
weeks ago, Mrs. O'Grady went to work
lh a local hotel to support herself and
her minor child In the belief she was
very poor. Now she finds her husband
left property at Richmond, Contra
Costa county, valued at $10,000. Hap-
pening to look through a lot of letters
and papers which her husband left,
mm. O'Grady found something about
land in Contra Costa county. She took
the paper to Attorney Harry Davids,
who made an investigation, learning
the husband Owned property in Rich-
mond.
"california fig syrup"
is child's laxative
Look at tongue! Remove poison*
from stomach, liver and
Bowels.
Accept "California" Syrup of Figs
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child 1b having the best and most harm-
less laxative or physic for the little-
stomach, liver and bowels. Children
love its delicloui fruity taste. Full
directions for child's dose on each bot-
tle. Give it without fear.
Mother! You must say "California.**-
—Adv.
In Bad With the Boss.
I was relating to my boss and sev-
eral other of the office employees my
experience In writing to a young man1
whom I had never met, having found"
jfrls address on an egg while working:
Tn a grocery store several years ago.
1 emphatically exclaimed that as
soon as he informed me he had red
hair I quit corresponding with him, as-
I- hate red hair. I had forgotten my
boss had red hair, and you can imag-
ine my embarassment after that ex-
clamation, for he was one of my most
interested listeners.—Chicago Tribune
Mikado Is Ready To Sign Treaty.
Paris.—In Japanese diplomatic cir-
cles in Paris the understanding pre-
vails that ratification of the treaty of
peace by the Mikado may be expected
within a few days.
Whole Family Killed By Car.
Springfield, Ohio.—A whole family
was killed when an interurban car
near Donnelsville hit an automobile
containing S. C. Ores, his wife and
three children. All met deatn instant
ty
WOMEN HEED SWAMP-ROOT
Thousands of women have kidney and
bladder trouble and never suspect it.
Womens' complaints often prove to be
nothing else but kidney trouble, or the
result of kidney or bladder disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy
condition, they may cause the other or-
gans to become diseased.
Pain in the back, headache, loss of am-
bition, nervousness, are often times symp-
toms of kidney trouble.
Don't delay starting treatment. Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a physician's pre
scription, obtained at any drug store, may
be just the remedy needed to overcom*
such conditions.
Get a medium or large size bottle in*
mediately from any drug store.
However, if you wish first to test thi*
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a-
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—Adv.
Campanile to Be Preaerved.
The beautiful campanile of the Cam-
brai cathedral, with one of its cornei
columns badly breached by shells, con
demned to destruction by the engi-
neering corps of the army as a menacf
to public safety, was to have been
brought down by dynamite. It wat
saved from immediate destruction bj
an eleventh-hour Intervention on the
part of friends of art. The campanili
will be taken down stone by stone, th«
material bein^ classified and laid asid<
to be put in place again when the ca-
thedral Is restored.—Paris Matin.
WN£ sss^'esig
By. If they Tire, Itch
Smart or Bum, if Sore
XA.^rJrC Irritated, Inflamed a
TOUR tlU Granulated,useMunm
often. SmI Iraa. Rtbsshcf. Safe fa
Infsnbpr Adult At all Druggists. Writefoi
trmSnbo*. RstaEpMru,ota
K
A
__
—
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The Hollis Post-Herald. (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 23, 1919, newspaper, October 23, 1919; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc268183/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.