The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, November 1, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Granite Enterprise
CMA«. I. HILL, ttfltor end P b'i*hs*
OR ANITA —— 0KUA„01|A
News Notes
t-'.pltom* of the Most
Imitortunl H«|>p«nlng* j
At Mom# mi<l Abriwd i
Lm
washington
Pros id cut Taft* summer neat ton
at Polund Springs. Me. rain" to an
• nd Saturday He left here for Cam
bridge Springs, Penn. where he will
•peak at tlte dedication of a Polish
college, thru h« *ill proceed to Wash
Isgion.
I The old time negro waiter, a fami-
liar figure In the life of the national
capital a veneration ago. came back i
into temporary service in Washing j
ton on accouut of the waitera' strike
Spectacular feaia by the aubmarine
bout* of the navy hereafter are pro
hibited, aa the reault of an order Is-
sued by Secretary of the Navy Meyer
Under no circumstances will any of
the little craft be permitted to dive !
more than one hundred feet below the !
•urface, although on the Pacific coaa
submarines have descended to the
two hundred foot level. In addition
whenever a aubmarine in future starts
out to exercise alone it must leave
with the vessels of its division a re-
port of its proposed movements. The
recent catastrophes led Secretary
Meyer to issue the order.
Prohibition among all Indian agents
and Indian employes has been ordered
by Acting Commissioner Abbott, of
the Indian bureau, who issued direc-
tions to employes to co-operate in
overcoming the great difficulties of
keeping intoxicating liquors from the
Indians. Recent reports to the bu-
reau indicate that there is a laxity
at some Indian schools and agencies ,
and that certain government physl-
?ians prescribe liquor for medicinal j
purposes. Mr. Abbott gave warning 1
that the use of liquor without permis- j
«ion of the secretary of war even for |
medical purposes was prohibited ex- j
cept wines for church purposes.
DOMESTIC
Wichita Falls, Tex., Greeks for- j
warded a contribution of 1200 to the j
Red Cross Society for use in the Bat-
A lory In the r*M
Jordan of Htn k Island. Ill. Mdlrted
Ik* charge of vending ubar ae liter- j
• lur* through Ut* wail*, returned • |
verdlgt of not guilty
Mr* UUlnn tft-.m* of Portland.
I Maine, wa* unanimous!) reelected
1 president of the National Women«
i'hrtalian Temperance Union In ses-
aton at Portland. Ore
Walter J Ugan of Illinois. a third-
year man at the naval academy at An-
napwlia. who waa coart mart i* led for
hating hated a pleb* by standing bin
on hie head, waa dismissed from tho
academy by Secretary Meyer.
Hrown McMillin. aon of et-tiovernor
McMlllln of Tenneaaee. died at llriatol.
Tenn The young man had been seri-
ously III for about ten daya suffering
from an Intestinal trouble which Is be- |
lleved to have been superinduced by
ptomaine poisoning
Mother Mary Sebaalian. provincial
of the eaatern province of the Sister*
of Notre I tame, died at the beadquar*
tera of the order at Maltlmore ller '
jurisdiction embraced the atatea of
Maryland. New York. Pennsylvania,
Connecticut and Massachusetts
The at chase at New Orlaana begun
montha ago when the bubonic plague j
broke out In Havana, to rid the river 1
front of rats, made an unexpected
catch. In one of the spring traps they
found a four-foot alligator. It la sup-
posed to have come from the ahalolw
water under the wRarvea.
Racing is practically at an end at
the Mineral Springa track, Porter,
Ind., the owners having aent word to
the officers of Govrenor Marshall that
there will be no horses left In the
stables by Sunday unleaa an Injunc-
■ tion is granted in the meantime.
The first death in Texas to be re-
ported from meningitia In some time
waa that of a farmer. Roy Mason, aged
30 years, residing near Rogers, four-
teen miles south of Temple, Tex. The
man waa sick only a few days and at-
tending physicians pronounce the
cause of death as meningitis. He was
married.
Petitions containing the names of
practically one-half of the qualified
voters of Lake Charles. La., were filed
with Mayor Richard, asking that an
election be called to determine
whether Lake Charles wants to substi-
tute the commission form of govern-
ment for the present system.
The national board of arbitration of
the National Association of Baseball
Leagues handed down these decisions:
Claims allowed: George Hargrove
against Nashville, Player Evans
against Chattanooga. Player Schraud-
er against Morristown, Tenn. The
rS OKLAHOMA STATE
CAPITAL LETTER
▼MK UPWM| COUNT DECIDE*
AGAINST PATTIKION CO.
NO TRACKS ON ROBINSON
■tr**t Car Company Will not be Per-
ml Med to Lay Track en Narrow
•treat in Capitol City-
Other Nevea.
will Put Bach in Treaoury Meat of
the A moot that Waa Appro-
priated fer Office
Oklahoma City.
Of th* 93 i 100 appropriated by tb«
la*t legialature for the office of Oof-
ernor Cruce for the fiscal year endlnt
June 10. 1*1*. fSt.ISl.7i remains un-
spent and will be returned to the stato
trenaury Statement covering the es
pendltures of the office wna made pub-
lic by State K*nmln«-r and Inspector
Parkinson The governor spent but
|36 of from his contingent fund of $12.-
&oo All of the 11.800 appropriation I
for an executive clerk la turned bark. I
likewise t.'tOO traveling expenses. Of
the fi.ooo for special aervlcea and '
OfATfl SEME
FOR GEN. DIAZ
COURT MARTIAL IMPOSES IT ON
INtURRtCTO LBAOIN.
HONOR POR RK NINMV.
PUBLIC IS AGAINST IT
Protcat from All Over Maaico
Against the Findings of Court,
•nd Madero Is Appealed to to
Save tha Man.
Oklahoma City.
L K Patteraon. at the head of one *llr* h'' • r*"rt • «. .
•f the two street car companies oper-
Vera Crui. Mex - General Felix
Diss, leader of the reeent revolt here,
and Major /.erate. Colonel Antonio
aim. i. nki.K —II k According to atatiatlra compiled on Mlgonl and Lieutenant Lima, offlcera
1 V' L K? ,h* Oklahoma la the greatest under I laa In hi. attempt to over-
perm tied to lay track on Robinson r,.venue per milo earner for the throw the government, were con-
atreet. acordlng o n holding b> the ^uroads traversing Ita area of any detnned Sunday to death by court
*«*««• In the country For Inatance j martial* Lieut Camacho. Captain
Justice Turner. Robinson street is ,j,# compilation to the Mock Island
one of the main thoroughfarea be on ,how|| ||u|, for „V(,r)
tween the bu lneea snd residence dl*- on ent|re line laat year It
trlota and more narow than the ordi Iha, fHIM, |71 M wboo the aye-
nary atreeta Several years ago Patter ,oni „ „ holl, „ disregarded and
son waa given a blanket franchise for only ,h„ Oklahoma mileage la conald-
n
5®*
Mayen. of tho rural guard, and Cap-
tain Hermtllo Martinet were sen-
fenced to 10 years Imprisonment and
Gabriel Ramos, customs collector,
and Heman Arostegul. censor of tel-
grama, were sentenced to two years
the Roblnaon privileges. RelyltiK by the entire system neces i
upou his franchise. Patterson began
work, and one of the employes was
arrested, the case going to the su
pretne court on a writ of habeas cor-
pus. The court denied the writ, hold-
ing that a city has no authority to
grant the use of a street to a corpora-
Ion which would result In a practical
denial of the public thereto.
kan war. Some of them who are !claim of Hardy Ware against chat" |
wealthy say they are ready to give i tanooga was disallowed.
their last dollar for their native land.
Fire at Lake Charles. La., from
some unknown cause resulted in the
practically total loss of the stock of
the Harrop stationery store, valued at
128,000. The company carried $15,000
insurance. The building, which be-
longed to the Jonte estate, was dam-
aged $1,000, the fire being confined to
the interior of the store.
Testimony that Arthur Lindhoff died
with symptoms resembling poisoning
was given at C^cago by two physi-
cians in the trialof Mrs. Louise Lind-
loff, charged with murdering her son, :
whose life was insured for $2,000. Dr. '
A. S. Warner and Dr. J. L Miller told j
of making a diagnosis of poison in the |
boy's stomach. Dr. Miller said he had <
advised Mrs. Lindloff to have Arthur j
moved to a hospital.
At Knoxville, Tenn. one man was j
killed and the lives of about 150 chil- '
dren were imperilled and the Church '
of the Holy host, Roman Catholic, was
extensively damaged by an explosion ■
of a heating boiler. T. P. McNamara, j
fireman and janitor, aged 62 years, :
was killed. His body was blown i
against a concrete wall and his head f
crushed almost into a pulp. Mc j
Namara had been here but a short j
time, having come here from Cincin- j
nati. The children were on the sec- |
ond floor in a parochial school, but
none were hurt.
A. A. Richards, formerly edito* of
a country newspaper in Kansas, has
become the owner of the properties
or the Andrew and Bergen Oil Com-
panies in Oklahoma. The considera
tion was $400,000. The properties
consists of 7,000 acres of leases and
1,250 barrels daily production. From
a country newspaper man. Mr. Rich
ards has risen to one of the greatest
I Deputy Sheriff L. J. Tidwell was
•hot in the breast and perhaps fatally
wounded, Fred Harmon, team fore-
man, was shot in the arm and two
Greek miners wounded in a fight be-
tween officers and Greek strike pickets
when operations by the United States
Mine tramway were resumed at Bing-
ham, Utah.
J. L. Bulock. president of the Bul-
lock Lumbre company, Louisville, Ky.,
A new rule in regard to filing
briefs which will greatly facilitate the
work of both the attorneys and the
court has been announced by the su-
preme court. The rule has hereto-
fore been that briefs must be filed by
the plaintiff in error within forty days
after the filing of the case. Very
often the case would not be reached
for submission by the court for a
year and a half. In the meantime the
question involved might have been
passed upon by other courts, neces
aitating the filing of supplemental
briefs or the obtaining of extension
of time to file briefs, which piles up
court costs in addition to making much
extra work for the attorneys.
Under the new rule briefs only have
to be filed sixty days before the date
of submission of the case. The court
will give at least ninety days' notice
gf vthen cases are to be submitted,
so that the attorneys can have time to
get their briefs in and the court itself
is saved the trouble of considering
several sets of briefs, having all of the
arguments and authorities before it in
compact form.
In an opinion to M. A. Landrum as-
sistant state superintendent of public
instruction, the attorney general holds
that the price of the adopted text
books and the notice required by law
stating that the price is fixed by the
state and that deviation should be re-
ported to the state superintendent,
must be printed on the back of the
• - - book. The opinion is expressed that
w^as arrested on a charge of^ murder, j the requirements would be complied
jf the printjng were done with a
stamp, provided it is on the back of
the book, where it can be plainly seen
by the purchaser. It is held that to
put the price and notice on the fly
leaf or inside cover would not be
sufficient.
fated an expenditure of $71 98. every
$100 earned on Ita Oklahoma mileago
neceaaitated an expenditure of $65.43
Oklahoma Is making so much bet*
ter showing industrially than her sis-
ter states in the southwst that the
ulf. Colorado ft Santa Fe. which is
the Sanfa Fe's main line from Pup
cell, Okla., to the Gulf, paid out the
sum of $78.60 to earn $100 on its en-
tire line, while on the Oklahoma por
tion of the mileage, it only cots the
road the sum of $61.78 to earn $100.
The M.. K. ft T. is another big svs
tem that is Jlndlng Oklahoma traffic
conditions decidedly better than those
prevailing in Kansas, Missouri and
Texas, the other states in which the
road is operating. The report shows
that, whereas for the entire line it
took $65.85 to earn $100, for the Okla-
homa portion of the mileage, it re-
quired an expenditure of only $59.38
to earn that amount.
j after he had run down in his auto-
mobile and killed Mrs. Ida Biggs. 76
, years of age. He was released on
$10,000 bond. Mr. Bullock claimed
that he was driving at a slow rate
when Mrs. Biggs ran in front of the
car.
Vavana, Cuba, is in dread of a rep-
etition of the recent bloody scenes i
when a brisk battle between conserva-
tives and literals took place in Cen-
tral park at the close of a meeting !
held by political supporters of Alferdo j
Zayas, a candidate for the presidency.
The cavalry guard was withdrawn !
from Central park and replaced by a j
strong force of police, who are not
permitting any gatherings in groups. I
The Epworth Leaguers of the Alex- (
andria and Monroe districts began j
their annual conference in the First
Methodist church, at Alexandria, La. j
James R. Brady of New York, flnan- j
cier and horseman, who was a recent ;
patient at Johns Hopkins Hospital, has
_ I I «\l. I- L , . . . . ' ™ ■ ! "' • • R*Mti II*. U |U V WU J ' .11 ■
! L !LT b". .,U lh* showing is decided- imprisonment. Nine other officers
^•-t th.rwto the council Withdrew ,y b,„,r. where., for every $L o ttn(, dv||laDS wer„ ,„OW(Hl to frp„
The court martial, which was pre-
l sided over by General Davlla. sat in
'* secret session from 2 o'clock Satur-
day morning until 3:15 o'clock Sun-
day morning. The sentence caused a
sensation. A great crowd. Including
relatives and many friends of the ac-
cused men, gathered outside the
building where the court sat and
wafted for hours for the finding, not-
withstanding a heavy rainstorm.
General Davila refused to acknowl-
edge the orders of the district judge
to suspend the proceedings In the
case of General Diaz and Major
Zerate, Gen. Beltran, military com-
mander of the sone however accepted
a writ of habeas corpus and suspend-
ed the execution, leaving the pris-
oners temporarily at the disposition
of the district court.
Soldiers to Be Shot.
It is thought probable that Colonel '
Migoni and Lieutenant Lima will be
shot without much more ado. The
' proceedings of the military court has }
been criticised generally as being I
very deficient. Public opinion has
been strongly against a military trial
for General Diaz. It is openly assert- j
ed that the prisoners had an inade- j
quate defense and no investigations
have been made so far as to why the '
federal troops entered the city with '
, white flags flying and the greeting I
"long live Diaz."
Public Demands Clemency.
Efforts to save their lives, espe- I
cially that of Diaz, continues unabat-
ed. Prominent women, men high in af-
fairs, members of congress and even
high army officers, have appealed to
President Madero for clemencies,
but to all he has given the same neg- i
ative answer. To a group of women
he intimated that to show clemency j
would be construed by the world as I
an indication of weakness. He cited I
as an example that when he captured I
Juarez, he pardoned General Navarro I
which action the world attributed to
weakness, instead of magnanimity.
The popular voice of protest has I
grown so strong against the execu- I
tion of Diaz that there has arisen be- j
tween the president and senate a I
sharp discord and, as individuals, the '
senators have seriously discussed I
the question of impeachment, be-
cause of the administration's defiance
of that body's interpellation Friday.
Some of the right of way of the
Fort Smith and Western Railway
Company appears to not have been
properly condemned, as shown by the
case of Ben F. Bruner and others
against the railroad company, ap-
pealed from Okfuskee county, which
was reversed in an opinion by Chief
Justice Turner. Bruner brought suit
in ejectment against the railroad. !
claiming title to forty-nine acres of
the right of way through Okfuskee j
county. The court here held that the |
publication of the notice to condemn 1
was not according to law. It is not !
Indicated in the suit whether other of
the company's right of way comes j
within the rule as laid down by the ;
courts. The faulty condemnation pro- I
ceedings were had before the United
States Court for Indian Territory at
Muskogee.
Tho Old Gentleman—How did yon
over coins to bo named Fldo John*
•on?
Tho Pickaninny—Why. old Jeds*
Rnilff h« don thought so much of
mo dat he named me after his dog.
RINGWORM SPREAD ON FACE
Campbell, Va.—"I bare been trou-
bled with ringworm on the right sldo
of my face for six or eight years. It
begun with Just very small pimples Id
spots and continued to spread moro
every year until It covered the right
side of my face. It was red. rough and
In circles, and itched and burned very
much. It was sore when I scratched
iry far® and it worried mc so much I
couldn't keep from scratching. It
looked very bad; I would hate to go
out while it was on my face Every
one noticed It and some would ask
what It was.
"I tried some home remedies before
using Cuticura Soap and Ointment,
such as —, . —— and I
could only find temporary relief until ^
I began to use Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment. I put the Cuticura Ointment on
my face and let it stay on for about
aa hour and then I washed my face
with Cuticura Soap. I used the Cuti-
cura Soap and Ointment for one month
and I was cured." (Signed) Mlsa
Virginia Woodward, Feb. 21, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32 p. Skin Book. Addresa
post-card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."
Adv.
Alphabetically Speaking.
Among a recent batch of candidates
for appointment to the police force of
Washington was a big darkey, evident-
ly of rural origin, who announced his
readiness to stand examination.
"Are you a native of this city?" ho
was asked.
"No, suh. I am from the first state
In the Union."
"A New Yorker?"
"No, suh. I am from Alabama!"
"Alabama is not the first state in
the Union, as the saying goes," re-
sponded the examiner.
"Alphabetically speaking it is, suh,"
said the candidate with conviction.
"Alphabetically speaking."
News reached here that Howard M.
Maher, for the last eight years cashier
of the First National Bank of Hom-
iny, was found dead in his bed at his
home in that city. Maher had been
slightly ill for two days, but his con
dition was not supposed to have been
serious. He had been a resident of
Osage county for twenty years and
was widely known there.
A statement of the time when taxes
are due and delinquent in Oklahoma
is made by the attorney general in a
letter to Clifford L. Jackson of Mus
kogee. attorney for the Missouri, Kat>
sas & Texas Railway. The opinion
states that if the first half is not paid
on or before December 2 that portion
of the tax becomes delinquent, and
if it continues delinquent until Jan-
uary 1 the whole tax becomes delin-
quent, but if the first half is paid
on or before January 1 the second half
does not become delinquent until
June 15 following.
Fepilar prnctirinir phrvicisns rer-ommend
snd prescribe OXIDIN'R for Malaria, be-
cause it is a proven remedy by years of ex-
perience. Keep a bottle in the medicino
chest and administer at first sign of Chills
•ud Fever. Adv.
Its Kind.
"What interest has the dog In tho
chase of the poor cat?"
"I guess it is some purr scent"
In the case brought by the Fruit
Box Manufacturing company against
the Oklahoma State Fruit Growers'
association as a law action to dissolve
the association and compel the dlrec-
iHurcui « uww ... tors as individuals to pay a bill of
presented that institution $500,000 in ' nearly $5,000 for fruit boxes. Judge
appreciation of its work and for the Rauph E. Campbell, of the Eastern
extension of its activities.
FOREIGN.
An attempt to obtain from the Duch-
ess de Tallyrand Anna Gould) the sum
of $106,500 was declared to be founded
! on extortion and usury by the Im-
(ndependent oil producers in Oklaho- periil supreme court. A real estate
ma. It was he who drilled the first company having claims against the
, District of the United States Court,
upheld the contentions of Milton
Brown, attorney for the association,
and threw it out of court, with leave,
however, to bring another action In
equity. The attorney for the associa-
tion contended that the suit was not
properly brought.
well in the Bird Creek field, where
aow are 400 producing wells and some
of the best oil properties in the Unit-
ed States.
An effort will be made to have Sena-
tor Dupont of Delaware make an offer
to Texas similar to that extended to
nis state for the purpose of building
a state highway. It has been prac
tically agreed that if he will give
$2,000,000 toward the project a like
amount will be raised in Texas.
More than five hundred patrons of
the Morrison hotel and the Hotel Val
ley, in Chicago, fled while firemen
quenched flames in the employes' an
nex of the Morrison. Three women
and one man screaming on a fire e
cape were rescued by policemen.
Ernest Revels, a young farmer, ol
Ontario. Wis. called his dog to him.
k petted it and then shot it through th« >
body. Revels then turned the gun
upon himself. Friends, aroused by
Due de Tallyrand, sent a representa-
tive to the Due and Duchess in 1911
and forced the Duchess to sign a note
' for fhe amount by threatening her
I with arrest. The court decided that
the note was not valid.
Members of the Polish National Al-
liance who had planned a "tag day"
on October 29 for the purpose of rais-
ing funds for a college, abandoned the
plan because of the danger to which
young women and girls are exposed in
such an undetaking.
A Guayaquil. Ecuador, dispatch
says: "Colonel Saavadrea and Colonel
Bustamente. who fought under Gen-
eral Flavia Alfaro in the last revolu-
tion, recently attacked the town of
Limones. in the province of Esmeral
das. according to the Eelegrafe. After
a sharp skirmish the rebels wera de-
feated by troops under Lieut
State Fire Marshal Hammonds has
aske'd Gov. Cruce that $8,000 per year
be appropriated by the next legisla-
ture for his department. None of this
comes from the general revenues of
the state. The department is main-
tained by a fund gathered from a one-
quarter per cent tax upou the gross
amount of insurance written in the
state. Last year the fund amounted
to about $9,000, and what was not
used under the legislature's appropria-
tion went to the general state fund.
A state charter was granted to the
John R. Knapp Lumber Company,-of
Nowata, with $5,000 capital stock. The
following were named as incorpora-
tors: John R. Knapp, Alice R. Knapp
and Thomas E. Eliott of Nowata.
A bill providing that teh attorney
general be notified of each tax injunc-
tion suit that may be filed in any of
the courts of the states probably will
be presented to the next legislature.
At least the atorney general has
asked Gov. Cruce o recommend such
legislation. Most tax injunction suits
filed involve state as well as local
taxes, therefore the state has an in-
terest In them. At present, however, j
there is no legal provision for notifi- j
cation of teh state legal department, i
The alleged laundry trust case was
completed before the corporation i
commission with the testimony of j
some of the general officer ofs the
company operating in Oklahoma City |
and which absorbed several local j
laundries. The examination had to
do with salaries and expenses, the j
commission desiring detail informs-
tion as to how the combination was
conducted. Testimony was also taken !
in a case involving an alleged viola- j
tion of the anti-trust law. based upon
a complaint filed by the Oklahoma |
Retailers' Association ayainst a road !
water distributer The charging of
discriminatory price* was the chief
allegation
Princess Dies.
Sorrento, Italy.—Princess Maria
Theresa, arch duchess of Austria-Este,
died suddenly here. She was the wife
of Prince Ludwig, heir to the throne
of Bavaria, to whom she was married
in 1869. Princess Maria Theresa was
born in 1849.
Davidson Declared Sane.
New York.—"Red Phil" Davidson,
confessed slayer of "Big Jack" Zelig,
was declarde sane by three experts.
The investigation was ordered by
District Attorney Whitman, prompt-
ed by various statements of tho
man's mental condition. The ex-
perts say he is suffering from hys-
teria.
Texan's Complaint Not Upheld.
Washington.—The Interstate Com-
merce Commission rendered a decis-
ion in the complaint of B. F. Gilbert
of Fort Worth asking that gasoline
irons be given the same rate from
Chicago to Ft. Worth and Texas com-
mon points that is made In sadirons
The commision finds that the rates
on gasoline irons is not unreasonable.
Usual Answer.
"What is this joy-riding accident
all about?"
"The joy riders are about all In."
WOMEN SHOULD
BE PROTECTED
Against So Many Surgical Op-
erations. How Mrs. Bethune
and Mrs. Moore Escaped.
Gasoline Explosion Injure Three.
San Antonio. Tex.—Three persons
were burned badly by gasoline explo-
sions during a flre which destroyed
the Bibb cleaning establishment, a^d
messenger service at 223 Sodth
Alamo street. The rear of the build-
ing was burned away and nearly 200
suits of clothing were destroyai.
Ctizens of Hamilton, in Okmulgee j
county, have complained to the cor-
poration commission and want the
The Shawnee Gaa and Electric com-
pany appealed to the supreme court
Pioneer Telephone company requir-d froni the assessment of it* prop-
to put in a regular switch board - erty as made by the state board of
an exchange that the people of Ham equalization The company allege*
llton *ay they are willing to furnl«:i that the assessment of $r,ofl.000 t* ei- I they would revolt.
Reye*. ' The Pioneer company now has a pay cessive and above the fair cash value
Lafollette for Woman Suffrage.
White Water. Wis.—Senator Rob-
ert M. La Foiiette in a speech made E- Pink ham's Vegetable Compound
Sikeston, Mc.—''For seven years Isuf-
fered everything. I was in bed for four
or five days at a time
every month, and so
weak I could hardly
walk. I cramped and
had backache and
headache, and was
so nervous and weak
that I dreaded to see
anyone or have any-
one move in the room.
The doctors gave me
medicine to ease me
at those times, and said that I ought to
have an operation. I would not listen to
that, and when a friend of my husband
told him about Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound and what it had done
for his wife, I was willing to take it
Now I look the picture of health and feel
like it, too. I can do my own housework,
hoe my garden, and milk a cow. I can
entertain company and enjoy them. I
can visit when I choose, and walk as far
as any ordinary woman, any day in the
month. I wish I could talk to every
suffering woman and girL"—Mrs. Dema
Bethune, Sikeston, Mo.
Murrayville, 111.—"I have taken Ly-
<1
a strong plea for woman suffrage.
He declared that if 7.000.<K>tf persons
not allowed to have any stare in it
leaving several killed behind. j station there for long distance me*- *t i* alleged by tl>« coa^aoy that a j Chanty Worker* to Organia*.
Harry H. Dunn, a newspaper cor- sage* and all business must be done raise of $40,000 wa* made in the as- Durant, Ok At a meeting held at
respondent, is under arrest in th« through the exchange at Okm !**e.. . *esed valuation of the property of the First Method!* church, a United
the shot arrived anl found the dving City of Mexico. It Is said the act re iao people of Hamilton regard it a* ihe company over lfll. whereas since j < harin«*s Societv was or nit d for v
dog licking the hand of his dead mas- l*ting to the expulsion of undesirable : a discrimination against tbem and say the former electric plant has burned , the purpose of caring for Durant s
ter ( foreigners will be applied in Dunn s ; there is enough boslnees and that they down and only has been partially re- j needy during the coming winter ami
j ease | wwcld support a switch board 4 placed I JmV
for a very bad case of female trouble
and it made me a well woman. My
health waa all broken down, the doctors
said I must have an operation, and I wa*
reariy to go to the hospital, but dreaded it
so that I began taking j ar Compound.
I g >t along so well that I gave up th*
doctor* and was saved from the opera-
tion."—Mrs. Chakles Moobe. U. R-
No. 8, Murrayville. 11L
liSTBQsuul
^ ^
-
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hill, Charles E. The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, November 1, 1912, newspaper, November 1, 1912; Granite, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc281585/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.