Mulhall Enterprise (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, October 21, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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The Mulhall Enterprise _y
established january 1. 1mj
OFFICIAL PAPER OF MULHALL
Entered at the FoatoAtt at Mu'hal!. Oklahoma*
for t:ansml$si<>n through the United States
as second class mall matter.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
ADVERTISING RATES
lp)l*play adrertisin*, single column. i-er Inch par
Week. Kta.
Copy for ada should be In this office not later
than Wednesday noon.
Local adrartlalnf. single Insertion, per line, fir*
oants.
Special rates ftren on contracts for one year or
fraction tharaor. Position of ad and length of
contract to be considered.
Kates to foreign advertisers to be foreired on
tte basis of reliability and upon the class of ad-
vertising.
Subscription Price, 91 Per Year
a. B. wo(«>,
OKLAHOMA HAPPENINGS.
Negroes are being driven from Daw-
eon, after the shooting of a deputy
sheriff by a negro.
A late report gives Oklahoma City
an Increase of twenty-four factories
over last year's report.
Lookeba has organized a commercial
club with O. M. Hardy aB president
and George Goodin, secretary.
A passing engine set tire to fifty-five
bales of cotton at Henrveta Thursday.
The loss is estimated at $2,000.
F. C. Harris, cashier of the Farmers'
State Bank at Ada, has been indicted
by the grand jury there, charged with
falsifying records of the bank.
The Norman cotton seed oil mill
has been sold by S. A. Ambrusiter to
J. G. Lindsay, J. S. Lindsay and E. R.
Chastaln for $72,000.
News of the World
Briefly Told
Moit Inportaot Event* ef the Past Week
Bailed Down for the Busy Readers
i r
WASHINGTON
The Isthmian canal commission re-
ports that August 31 there were 35,867
employees actually at work on the
canal and the Panama railroad, and,
of this number, 29,950 were canal em-
ployees. So labor recruiting was neces-
sary.
Secretary Ballinger estimates of ex-
penditures for the interior department
including pensions, cut the appropria-
tion during the next fiscal year about
14,000,000 below the appropriation this
year of $175,000,000 for the present
year.
It is reported that President Taft has
practically decided to appoint Senator
Hoot of New York, chief justice of the
supreme court of the United States
should the republican party carry the
state of New York in November.
President Taft Thursday finally ap-
proved plans for raising the wreck of
the battleship Maine, which call for
the completion of the work on or be-
fore the thirteenth anniversary of the
day of the destruction of the war ves-
sel, February 15, next.
According to the talk around repub-
lican congressional headquarters Pres-
ident Taft's bill to license corporations
doing an interstate commerce busi-
ness will be reported to the house
from the judiciary committee, and an
effort made to pass it before adjourn-
ment for the Christmas holidays.
The com crop was 80.3 per cent of
normal on October 1, or at the time
of harvest, compared with 73.8 a year
ago, and 78.444, the ten year average,
according to the crop reporting board
of the department of agriculture,
whose October crop report was issued
Monday afternoon.
Stanley Ketchel, pugilist, was killed
at Conway, Mo., Saturday.
Forty-five passengers were injured
in a collision near Talihina, Okla.,
Friday.
Porter Charlton will be returned to
Italy to stand trial for murdering his
wife at Lake Como.
The Prairie Oil and Gas Company, of
Bartlesville, purchased oil holdings
worth $2,000,000 Friday.
Twenty national guardsmen have
been detailed to search for bodies in
the Minnesota forest fire district.
Secretary of the Interior, Ballinger,
was one of the eleven passengers in-
jured in a wreck at Cicinnati, Ohio,
Thursday.
OKLAHOMA NEWS
Interesting Items of the New State Told
In Few Words For Our Busy Readers
HUNG JURY IN TEGELER CASE
Judge Carney Dismirses Jury After Be-
ing Out Ninety Hours
Oklahoma City, Okla.—After having
w restled over the c»se for more than
The annual business session of the ninety hours, the jury empaneled to
National Convention of Christian | pass upon the su"t or innocence of Ru-
churches was held In Topeka, Kan., dolph Tegeler, charged with the mur-
Friday afternoon. der of James R. Meadows in June,
President Taft wil sail for the Isth- fi'e? int° ,he diS„trlct COUrt room
mi,c nf Pannmn rvr, L m Friday afternoon at 12:30 o'clock and
mus or i anama on November'10 from ,un,
Charleston, S. C„ on the armored crui- rep0rted, 'hat " *1" impossible to
ser North Carolina for a twelve days' T^ S® y the°
trjp J ; charged the twelve men from furthar
.4 _ „ consideration of the case. The jury
°* po,,ce Milliken, of Cincin- stood ten for conviction and two for
nati, was peremptorily removed from acquittal. At his first trial Tegeler
office by Mayor Schwab Friday as a was sentenced to life imprisonment,
result of the gambling graft inquiry, j Judge Carney again questioned the
While speeding 70 miles an hour members of the Jury as to whether
the engine drawing Roosevelt's special there appeared a possibility of a ver-
train broke down but was stopped being reached. All informed the
without accident near Homesville, O., court there was no possible chance of
Friday. an agreement. After stating that he
The United States, the greatest cot- very much reeretteJ that no verdict
ton p'oducing country in the world, im- could be arrived at- and explaining that
portfi in the fiscal year of 1910," 86- a great deaI of time and mone>' had
037,691 pounds of raw cotton valued at been consumed in •he trial of the
$15,816,138. j case Ju(tee Carney thanked the jury-
j ... . , . men an<l discharged them.
>\ ith fifty days fuel and provisions
and a crew of five men, Walter Well-
man set sail Saturday in a dirigi-
ble balloon for England.
An attempt was made late Saturday
night to wreck train No. 10, known as
the "Meteor," one of the fastest trains
on the Frisco railroad, one mile east
of Kellyville, Okla.
The Louisville and Nashville rail-
road has granted a wage increase from
Suit Filed; Haskell Mentioned
Bartlesville, Okla. — A somewhat
formidable echo cf the $3,00 000 failure
of the Columbia Bank and Trust com-
pany a year ago was heard at Bartles-
ville Wednesday, when a suit was
charging Governor Haskell and the
state banking board of conspiring to
defraud the Bartlesville American Na-
tional bank stockholders out of $50,000
INSURANCE OFFICE PAYS WELL
SAVE YOUR MONEY/
One box of Tutt's Pills uve many dollar* In doc-
tors' bills. Cure diseases of the Ifver or bowels.
For sick headache, dyspepsia, malaria, constl*
pstlon and btliousness, a million people endortt
TuB's Pills
FLORIDA VIEWS —ss
tli-ifW aeenea giren free to
every new subscriber to the handsomest llln»
trated weekly in the South. Covering every
i phase of Florida life It is invaluable to those
| who are interested in Florida and the tropica.
Full of beautiful pictures, stories, history and
c urrent topics peculiar to Land of Flower*.
62 weeks fl.OO. Bend for sample copy.
THE FLORIDA RECORD
912 Realty Building Jackson villa, Flib
THE BEST MEDICINE
for Couchs
Net Income Ranks High With That of
Other States
Guthrie, Okla.—Reports from the in-
surance departments of Bix states cov-
ering receipts and expenditures for tha
year 1909, which are on file in the of- ;
fite of Commissioner Lasater show {
that the aggregate of receipts was $1,-
019,726 aud the aggregate of expendi- I
tures $363,502. The state reporting [
are Missouri, New York, Oregon, Mas- j
sachusetts, Colorado and Oklahoma.
1 he average of receipts for the year
was $170,000 and the average of expen-
ditures $60,500. The Oklahoma report
shows that the average a little more I The business man was sitting In hie
than covers the receipts of this state, office, thinking of starting for homs,
while the average expense is nearly when a suspicious looking person
five times that of Oklahoma. came In with a leather bag In hie
Following are the statements: Okla- band.
hfma. rceipts, J168.4!8; expenditures, 1 "If you don't give me $25," said the
LEFT TO A WORSE FATE
Dynamiter, Himself a Married Man,
Knew What Awaited Forgetful
Husband.
$11,917. Missouri, $66,809 and $24,109;
New York, $427,074 and $226,044. Mos-
sachusetts, $93,016 and $70,977. Colo-
rado, $209,799 and $21,556.
The total receipts of the Oklahoma
office from the advent of statehood
Nov. 16, 1997, to June 30, 1910, was
$425,^42, and the total of expenditure®
was $27,958.
visitor, coming at once to the point,
"I will drop this on the floor."
The business man was cool. "What
Is In It?" he asked.
' "Dynamite," was the brief reply.
"What will It do If you drop It?"
] "Blow you up."
! "Drop It!" was the Instant com-
mand. "My wife told me when I left
home this morning to be sure ant5
send up a bag of flour, and I forgot
it. I guess it will tako Just about as
The McAlester-Edwards Coal com-
pany of McAlester, has appealed to the
supreme court a suit in which CharleB
E. Pruitt, an injured employe, ob-
tained judgment for $2,500.
The Western Bank and Supply com-
pany of Oklahoma City Friday filed no-
tice with the secretary of state of the
increase of its capital stock from $20,-
000 to $50,000.
DOMESTIC
The Tegeler murder trial in Oklaho-
ma City resulted in a hung jury.
All of the fifty-six bodies of miners
killed in the Starkville, Colo., mine ex-
plosion have been recovered.
Ben F. Harrison Is ill in a Wood-
ward hospital from an attack of ma-
laria fever.
The state board of agriculture re-
The editors of the Thomas Tribune ports 117,258 bales of cotton ginned up
have returned from the republic of to October 1.
Mexico. They report that the shatter- Searching parties have recovered
ed grain is still golden and the morn- four more bodies from the Minnesota
10 to It per cent to conductors, brake- worth of Renfro Oil company stock,
men, flagmen, baggage men and por- This bank, capital $100,000, was one
of the string of Oklahoma financial in-
Ing sunlight fresh and fair.
The Clinton Daily Chronicle has sus-
pended publication. The Weekly
Chronicle will appear hereafter. Clin-
ton oughtn't to stand for that. Folk
generally thought It was a better town.
The Prairie Oil & (las Co. has bought
the properties of four oil and gas com-
panies in the Osage country for a con-
sideration of $2,000,000. The lands em-
brace 28,000 acres.
forest fire district.
Warren G. Purdy, former president
of the Rock Island railroad, died at his
Chicago residence Friday.
ters.
Thirty thousand dollars has been
raised by the Chicago Credit Mens'
Association to be used in the investi-
gation and prosecution of fraudulent
failures in Chicago.
One man was killed and one was
badly injured when Santa Fe passen-
ger train No. 113 ran into a burro at
Greenfield, twenty miles south of Ros-
well. N. Mex , Sunday night and was
wrecked.
The discovery of 500 pounds of dyna>
mite in an untenanted house in Los
Angeles has caused detectives to dou-
ble their efTorts to capture the perpe-
trators of the recent explosion in that
city.
The coyotes of Southwestern Okla-
homa are wondering where the Aber-
stitutions that went down when the
spectacular W. L. Norton boom burst-
ed. When the above dispatch was
shown to Governor C. N. Haskell re-
cently, he said . "The stock belonged
to the Columbia bank assets and we
took possession of it along with all
other assets. We propose to retain It;
It belongs to the assets of the Colum-
bia bank; we's got possession and
propose to maintain possession. Pos-
session, you know, is said to constitute
80 per cent of the law," and the gover-
nor smiled. "The legal controversy
Is purely one of ownership."
Election Board Organized
Oklahoma City, Okla.—The new
state election board was organized at much d>namlte as J'ou have there to
'V™.' I a meeting held here Wednesday by the PrePare ®e for the blowing up I'll get
(hp formal election of T. J. Leahy as chair- when she Eees me!"
man and Seth K. Corson, secretary. He threw himself back in his chair
Jake L. Hammon qualified as the re- and walted for the explosion, but It
publican member. R. V. Anderson, did °ot C0Ine-
formerly chairman of the county elec- 1 m a married man myself," said
tion board of Muskogee county, repub- the d>'nalIilter, and quietly slipped out
lican, was removed. Affidavit's were ~IU"strated Bits.
presented to the board, to th? cfTect | ~——
that Anderson had refused to turr over Popularity of Thais,
his records to a democrat member "Every other young actress is call-
of the board, who had been elected lng herself Thais," said Henry E. Dlx-
chairman to succeed him, also that his ey at a (linner at Mauquin's. "Thais
Temple Secures Mandamus Writ
Lawton, Okla.—District Judge J. T.
Johnson has granted an alternative
write of mandamus against the elec-
nathvs, the Sheperds, the cow punch- j tioji officers of Temple and Mangum
„. , 0rs and the other sports are going to townships, upon which hearing is to be
. * g ' undred thousand acres of ! hold their annual Thanksgiving festiv- j had Saturday, commanding that they
an n the row reservation In Mon- Itles. appear and show cause for not turn-
3 Funeral ''services 'tor S^nator^Jona- Sta,emen,s * flled <*e Okla-1 ,n* '« "allot boxes from the county dl-
than P. Dolliver will be held on Thurs-
Edmond Citizens Raid Joint
Edmond, Okla.—Sixty prominent cit-
izens of this place, indignant over the
j homa corporation commission Satur- v's'on election of last Saturday. The j wide open condition of this town, met
^.rothei
office.
is a candidate for a county
McGinnis, Thais Endicott, Thais
Schmidt—the thing is universal.
"Universal and ridiculous; for they
who have read Anatole France's story
of 'Thais' know that she was a very
naughty little girl, indeed. I am quite
sure that no real reader of 'Thais'
Wants Land Deeded Back
Guthrie, Okla.—John R. Kelley of
Goodwell, who deeded to the state an
80-acre tract of land for a consideration ,,
of $2,300, with the understanding that uld .e?rV e.1 c'rcumstances-
the Panhandle secondary argicuitural eo°seDt ,0 be called such a name,
school should be placed on the tract, . , ! "VV 8® thlnk of a man
has been advised by the attorney gen- .!1 ?g, , ® " , dau8hter to be bap-
eral that no persons or board of the 'lSPd' told the clerS>'man to call her
state can deed the land back to Kelley „ ,
In the name of the state. The school , , " I refuse to call her Venus,'
was not located on the land secured Bald ,he dayman, Indignantly. 'Ve-
from Kelley.
nus is the name of a pagan goddess.'
" 'Well, how about your own girl,
Diana?' said the man."
A fuller, but yet incomplete cotton
gin report was issued Saturday by the
state board of agriculture. It shows
that to October 1, 117,258 bales had
been ginned. Of this number, 115,655
were square bales and 2,211 round
bales.
Joseph Atwater, a negro who was re-
fused a vote In the primary election,
has appealed his case to the supreme
court. He vfants the trial heard be-
fore November 8tb.
Following the locking up of all ballot
boxes in Pottawatomie county some
weeks ago, so they may be investigat-
ed If such was ordered, and now the
day at 2 o'clock, at Fort Dodge, Iowa.
Jonathan P. Dolliver, Iowa senator,
died of heart disease at his home at
Fort Dodge, Iowa, Saturday.
The right of a railroad to refuse to
switch shipments from another line to
an industry on its own switches when
the industry is not listed in the tariffs
w'as tried before the corporation com-
mission Thursday in the case of Brick-
law by three railroads, the Orient, the ! citizens of Walter, who are promoting : while a circus parade was holding the
'Thank You's."
The man who is not thankkful for
day under the new gross Income tax wrlt came at the request of citizens of j at the Baptist church Friday morning (Udn'Me'arn any0""0'' 'D ad%erBltjr
There must be plenty of thankful-
ness In the world if those who have
loved and lost could know Just what
they have lost.
"Why are you giving thanks? They
took $10,000 from you In Wall street
a little while ago, didn't they?"
"Yes; but I got out with $20 thejr
Fort Smith & Western, and El Reno
it Western, the latter under protest.
The first football accident of the
season occurred at Enid Wednesday,
when Robert Campbell, a high school
student, sustained a broken collar bone
in a practice game.
The population of the state of Ver-
ner jir Cn nf . .V C i mont, as enumerated for the thirteenth
ner i Co. of Guthrie, vs. the Santa Fe. ! cen8Ua and made pub„c by ,he cenBu<
Requisition papers signed by Gov-
ernor Tom Campbell, of Texas, and di-
rected to Governor Charles N. Haskell,
calling for the return of J. C. Adams
and J. S. Morgan to TexaB, were re
bureau Tuesday, showed an increase
of 12,315, or 3.6 per cent; the total
number of inhabitants being 355,956,
as compared with 343,641 in 1900.
ceived Thursdav. Thev are charged i .vJU'0" " recf vin« ,el1" «*
with robbing a bank a," Franks,on 'bunk oTT'. "a? m,erchan,s ,na,'onal
bank of Los Angeles, hag failed to
Two former Oklahomans. E. F. For ] report for duty at the end of a two
De> and Harper S. Cunningham, who i weeks' vacation, starting September 17
are now residents of New Mexico, are | and a preliminary Investigation of the'
county division, but who themselves attention of the residents and, led by
have not turned in their ballot boxes, j Deputy Sheriffs Ed Boucher and
I Burke, raided a half dozen places that
To Test Ft. Sill Officers ' have never been raided before, secur-
Fort Sill, Okla.—Brig. Gen. A. L. ing whiskey at each place.
Myer, commanding the department of j
Texas, has issued general orders di- i Creek County Building Roads
reeling that the physical examination Sapulpa. Okla.-By using convict didn't know I had "—Judge"
of field officers within the department j labor Creek county has just finished '
who have not been examined during | thirty.flve miles of graded county' There are people who would do
he present fiscal year shal be held roads at a cost of $6,000. The only *rcat acts, but, because they wait for
October 2a and 26. and that test rides item of expense is the keeping of the great
-' all take place October 27, 28 and 29.] prisoners which amounts to sixty
cents a day each.
calling of a special grand Jury by Dis- candida,(,» for the I'nlted States sen- books reveals irregularities which.
trict Judge HofTman, there is consider-
able speculation as to what the Jury Is
to do.
Members of the first and second ses-
sions of the Btate legislature will hold
their annual reunion and banquet on
Statehood Day, Nov. 16. Senator Clar-
ence Davis, of Sapulpa, is president of
the organization.
ate from that territory when It be- 1 cording to Cashier
comes a state. 1 UInount to $50,000.
It Is claimed that 5,000 overall work Another
ers will Join the clothing makers strik ! i.pi.i i.,
ers In New York, swelling the total 1
number to 50,000.
Three more bodies were discovered
In the w recked Colorado Fuel and Iron
company's mine at Starkville, early
Wednesday morning, bringing the total
up to fourteen.
Acting Secretary of the Navy \\in-
throp has commended several of the
An election is to be held In Checo-
tah on Tuesday, at which the proposi-
tion or issuing bonds in the sum of CreW of (he ba,t'eshlp North Dakota
$40,000 for the purpose of installing a for herolc action in the explosion
sanitary sewer system is to be sub- "boBrd ,he warship, September 8, when
mitted Very little opposition lias been thrce ",<>,teri1 lo8t 'heir lives. Each
manifested to the proposition were given medals of honor and $100
each.
Charles Seyler,
Indian congress may be
near future as a result of
the refusal of some "blanket" In-
dians to join with members of the
five civilized tribes, in asking the in-
terior department to remove certain
restrictions from their lands.
Heirs of Rebecca Young, deceased, a
Caddo Indian, filed suit In the I'nlted
States circuit court at Guthrie Friday
Granite Cotton Receipts
Granite, Okla.—Cotton is still roll-
ing into this market at the rate of
over 150 bales a day and four gins are
kept running at their full capacity.
Up to noon Saturday there had been
ginned at this point 2,564 bales, which
at the present market price represents
the distribution here of something over
$200,000.
Hearing Water Complaint
Purcell, Okla.—Corporation Commis-
sioner A. P. Watson was here Saturday
to hear arguments in the case of the
people of the city against the Purcell
Water Co. The water supply here wus
exhausted last week, and the citizens
want the company to provide an ade-
quate source of supply.
opportunities, life passes, and
the acts of love are not done at all.—
F. W. Robertson.
The Way It Looked.
Mrs. llenham—How do you like my
hat?
Benham—You mean the one with
the mayonnaise dressing?
Tribal Lands to Be Sold Soon
Muskogee, Okla.—The department of
the interior has ordered the sale of the
unallotted land of the Five Civilized
Tegeler Wants Release
Oklahoma City, Okla.—Habeas cor-
pus proceedings were filed in the dis-
trict court Saturday afternoon by the
Tribes of Eastern Oklahoma, except attorneys of Rudolph Tegeler. twice
the timber reserve and the Begmgated j tried for the murder of James' Mead-
coal and asphaU lands, beginning not j ows. The state attorneys will oppose
the granting of bail and will demand
later than December 1. There are one
and one-half million acres of this land
to compel the interior department to 1,1 ,he Choctaw and Chickasaw nations,
Issue patents to is quarter sections of 75'000 aoreB ln the Creek and 60'000
In a letter to Spltzer & Co., bankers Fire discovered ty the night shift at
Of Toledo, Ohio, the attorney general "le plant of the Portsmouth Cotton Oil
Wednesday notified the company that Keflning company shortly before 12
the sale of real estate on which delin
quent street improvement taxes are
accrued may take place after the first
Monday in November.
I apers of incorporation were issued
Thursday to the First State Bank of
Webbers Falls Capitalization $10,000.
iter was cleared of a mur-
Harry Fo
der charge
shot his father while defending
mother.
o'clock Wednesday morning, destroyed
the oil department of the plant. The
loss will be in the neighborhood of
$75,000, fully Insured.
International effort to prohibit the
production of pernicious moving pic-
tures was urged Thursday by the lt»-
ternatlonal Humane Conference in ses-
sion at Washington by speakers who
declared certain pictures were work-
land, to each of the heirs. Some time
ago these heirs were strii ken from tho
Caddo rolls, und now seek reinstate-
ment.
Charged with attempted arson, Cliff
Cannon and Morris Farris, two prom-
inent young men of Tulsa, were ar-
rested at Chant by Deputy SheiifT Jim
Henry of that place. They are alleged
to have tried to burn the property of a
mining company at Chant.
According to the state board of agri-
culture, September was a barj month j
on roll on
FOREIGN
Crown Prince Alexander of Servia Is
critically ill of typhoid fever.
Domingo Gana, the Chilean minister
to Great Britain, died Sunday.
Accompanied by the royal family,
King Manuel left Gibraltar Saturday to
take up his residence in England.
King Manuel Is engaged In tho
preparation of a manifesto for the dis-
tribution to the press of Europe, set-
ting forth his side concerning the
revolution.
The French railroad emplojes have
been successful in their strike on tho
roads running out of Paris.
| President Diaz has Imprisoned the
I resident Taft decided Thursday, | brother of Fra
acres In the Cherokee nation.
Alva Thursday. He lnR havoc among the young
T. 11. Skaggs of Decatur. Ala., was
Instantly killed In Amarlllo, Tex.,
Thursday when the 90-horsepower Sim
plex car he was driving, turned turtle.
after a conference with Col. George
W. Goethals, engineers |D charge of
the Panama canal, to pay Ills proposed
visit to Panama early In November.
Hon. Robert Wilbur Steele, chief Jus-
tice of the Colorado supreme court
since 1907 and member of thut body
since 1101, died at his home In Denver
WedhcBnxy nlgbt, after an Illness of
•hrt;c weeks.
nnclsco I. Madelro, his op-
ponent for the presidency of Mexico.
Senor Roque. Saenz I'ena and Dr.
Dc La Plaza were Inaugurated Thurs-
day as president and vice president
respectively of the republic of Argu-
tine.
Seven lives are believed lo have
been lost in n tire which destroyed
tho King s hall building In Montreal,
Canada, Friday.
Blow to Liquor Dealers
Oklahoma City, Okla.—Superior
Judge Munden Monday afternoon
granted a temporary injunction enjoin-
ing all transportation companies in the
state delivering shipments to all hold-
ers of federal liquor dealer's licenses,
when it Is .;nown that there is an In-
tention to violate the prohibition laws
from wherever the shipment comes.
The order affects about 1,200 persons
holding federal licenses in the state.
The action was brought about five
weeks ago by Fred S. Caldwell for the
state, was argued about three weeks
ago, and has since been under advise-
ment.
an immediate retrial.
Election Inspector Resigns
Oklahoma City, Okla.—Larry Reedy,
election inspector In Precinct A, of the
fourth ward, Wednesday evening hand-
ed In his resignation to Secretary Levy
of the county election board. This Is
the second resignation to come In.
Reedy Is under accusation on a charge
of misconduct In his official capacity.
It Is said that L. Berry Ilurnett, In-
spector of Pre
Oklahoma Cotton Crop
Guthrie, Okla.—The""state board of
agriculture has issued a supplemental
report on the number of bales of cotton
ginned In the state to October 1. Af-
ter adding in a number of belated re-
ports, it is found that there were ginn-
ed to that date 117,258 bales, counting
round as half bales. This brings the
figures up to where they just about cor-
respond with the government report.
Russell Would Mandamus
Guthrie, Okla.—Campbell Russe'4
Friday instituted proceedings In the
supreme court asking for a w rit of
mandamus to compel the state election
board to submit his New Jerusalem know I found It" very' easy to°shift
NovlmberTh '° ,h0 V°K'''8 011 from ro,reo to Postum and not mind
iNovemDer sth. j the chnngo at all?
—————- "Almost Immediately after I made
Big Liquor Seizure tho change I found myself bettor, and
Oklahoma City, Okla.—Two carloads as tho days went by I kept on lmprov-
of beer and one carload of whisky was ,nK- M/ nerves grow sound and
confiscated here Saturday by the state I slept well and felt strong
enforcement officers from the Wells ttnd we"'halaticed all tho time.
Fargo & Co, The goods are said to 'No.W 1 Bm completely rured, with
have been shipped Into Oklahoma ' * ° - nervou"ness and sickness all
Life Is a grind, but the world Is full
of cranks.
COFFEE WAS IT.
People Slowly Learn the Facts.
"All my life I have been such a
slave to coffee that the very aroma
of It was enough to set my nerves
quivering. I kept gradually losing my
health but I used to say 'Nonsense, It
don't hurt me.'
"Slowly I was forced to admit the
truth and tho final result was that nay
whole nervous force was shattered.
"My hoart became weak and uncer-
tain in Its action and that frightened
me. Finally my physician told me,
about a year ago, that I must stop
drinking coffee or I could never ex-
pect to be well again.
"I was ln despair, for the very
thought of the medicines I hnd tried
so many times nauseated me. I
thought of Postum but could hardly
bring myself to glvo up the coffee.
"Finally I concluded that I owed It
to myself to give Postum a trial. So I
got a package and carefully followed
the directions, and what a delicious
nourishing, rich drink It was! I)o you
City from Kansas City. The liquor
was seized under tho ruling made a
. . In,c' B' of ,ho Third few days ago by Judge Munden of tho
ward, has prepared lis resignation and superior court, whole order held that
that It probably will be handed In.' liquor could not be shipped Into Okla-
There is also an accusation agnlnst "
liurnett.
gone. In every way I am well once
more."
It pays to give up tho drink (hat
acts on somo like n poison, for health
Is tho greatest fertuno one can have.
homa City from either intra or Inter- w!il?Mle "Mi" i!kV»"0k' '''° ,,°ni'
state points. ,on/.
"Thero'a a Ilea-
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Wood, A. B. Mulhall Enterprise (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, October 21, 1910, newspaper, October 21, 1910; Mulhall, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc305065/m1/2/?q=hoy: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.