The Kiowa County News. (Lone Wolf, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1915 Page: 2 of 8
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mum begin
510 HOLD HIE
ADMIRAL GREGOVITCH
GERMAN DRIVE TO CONET ANTI-1
NO RLE LOUS COWSiOLA
IHAd.e VIGOR.
...»
THE tom WOLF NEWS
GOA! KEMEDUCATOR DIES
DOOttfR T. WAEHINCTON DIAOU
FOLLOWING GRtAKOOWN.
A»< <*9 eg To #• Felt I" South-
•m ■ s a.~G« »—4* t **# lA
Rate* *>« i'Ote "g 0»B-
gco-wa i T ftifi.
V*e I.- — 7V~-e •»« bwi tso ms*«-r-
W
ONE HUNDRIO FIFTY ARC LOST
WHEN THE ANCONA GOES
DOWN. *
ATTACKED IT A SUBMAMKE
’’ »
W>tn AM haul* on RoorE— Not Knows i
Whttbet Any Americans Wert
on the Veteei—Wu Eoil<nf t
WeetoeN. j
ram
lal change in th
f t 1-
» ." • r .n
Serb-* or oa ’ r.
f c*!
»r 1- v* T:.e
Auj’.rc- >r; •» c
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■ ♦ ad. *r, mg
along the lice i
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Albanian or Ms
W .♦! J
i urner. :ered * . -:
. * * - -
/ .. reports i
of tr.c .. :u n >; ft- .: J tt.e I
ture of any town.
In fact tbe Serbians are now faciei
the invader:- in the mountains which
have proved a protection to them in
their previous wars and they may bo
expected to make the advance of the
Austro-Gernians and Bulgarians a mat-
ter of some difficulty.
It is probable that the opposition the
Austrian- are meeting in their effor’s
to urive back the Montenegrins is de-
laying Field Marshal Von Mackensens
army, for the right wing must be free
from this menace before they proceed
with their drive.
The news from the southern part of
the country is very conflicting. It is
now known that the French did not re-
occupy but simply made a cavalry raid
into the town of Veles, destroying the
Bulgarian ammunition stores. The
French, however, are advancing on
the west side of the Vardar river and
at the same time are repelling Bulgar-
ian attacks on Krivolak and endeav-
oring to form a junction with the Ser-
bians who are fighting in the Bubuna
pass.
British Encounter Bulgars.
A new British division having land-
ed, the force which is to be under com-
mand of General Monro is spreading
out toward Strumil.-a, where encount-
ers with the Bulgarian patrols are re-
ported.
With the arirval of Field Marshal
Earl Kitchener who soon should be on
the scene, a further development in
the campaign is expected, and it is
possible that the Gallipoli army will
become more active.
So long as the Serbian army re-
mains intact, which it has done thus
far, it is the feeling of military men
here that is a good chance to turn the
tables on the Germans and their al-
lies. The Teutons, the military ob-
servers say, can hardly send further
reinforcements for the near eastern
adventure, their line against Russia
already having grown dangerously
thin.
The Germans admit that they with-
drew troops from ground west of Riga
which they gained only a few weeks
ago at considerable sacrifice and that
the Russian fleet in the Gulf of Riga
is supporting the Russian army. By
their recent gains the Russians have
established a connection between
their forces on the Gulf of Riga by
way of Kemmern and Lake Babit to
Olao. which is half way Between Riga
and Mitau.
Teuton Retreat Forced.
Along the southern extremity of the
Russian line, west of Czartorisk. where
desperate battles have been under way
for several weeks, the Russians claim
to have broken the Austro-German
lines and to have forced a retreat dur-
ing which numbers of fleeing soldiers
were drowned and 2,000 captured. In
the Riga area the Russians maintain
they are more than holding their own.
West of Riga the Russians have con-
solidated the positions they recently
won.
A dispatch to the Daily Express from
Geneva says a message received there
from Bucharest states that the Rus-
sians have ascended the Danube river
and landed a small force of men and
guns near Silistra.
Gomraander
R-ssia.
of Uit naval forces of
MUNITIONS PLANTOESTROYED
BETHLEHEM STEEL COMPANY
LOSES BIG WORKSHOP.
Damage To Plant And Lncompleted
Guns Estimated In the
Millions.
South Bethlehem. Pa.—No. official
statement as to the loss caused by the
fire which practically destroyed the
No. 4 machine shop of the Bethlehem
Steel Company here, has been given
out. Unofficial estimates placed the
damage between $1,000,000 and
Rome—The !ta! an :tn*r Ancona baa
t**r. - k b> a large subtr.a .ne flying
i Austrian colors. She carried *3$
passengers and sixty in the crow. Two
hundred and seventy survivors, some
of them w unded. have been landed at
Bixerta.
After -inking the Ancona the crew
of the submarine attacked the life-
boat*, some of which contained wom-
en and children, according to a Tunis
dispatch to the Giornale d’ltalia which
gives a dramatic though brief account
of the attack.
"A submarine approached the An
cona toward noon.” says this account
“and as soon as the steamer saw it an
attempt was made to escape at full
speed. The Ancona wns overtaken
and stopped. Then the submarine
fired on the Ancona, sinking her
amid the desperate efforts of the pass-
engers.
”The lifeboats were next attacked,
the submarine likewise firing on them.
The submarine then disappeared im-
mediately, proceeding probably in the
direction of the Aegean sea.
“Before sinking the Ancona was
able to send out a wireless call foi
help. Aid was sent promptly and thus
160 passengers and ten sailors were
saved. They were taken to Ferry-
ville tin the environs of Bizerta,
where they were attended bv physi-
cians and the consul.
“Among the survivors are a number
of wounded emigrants, nearly all Ve-
netians ami ten Greeks. A number of
the survivors seem to have lost their
Bern in tlavtry Ms Ron T« Ii ilia
Created ana Rest Known
Of Hie Race.
Tuskegee. Ala.—Booker T. Washing-
ton, the noted negro educator end
fi under of Tuskogee Institute, died
of & nervous breakdown at hi* homo
here, four hours after feu arrival (rum
New York
The negro leader had been In failing
health for several moniha but his con-
dition became serious only last week
while he was in the east. He realized
the end was near, but was determined I
to make the long trip south to bear
out his oft-ex pressed statement that
he had bten born la the south, have
lived all my life iu the south and ex-
pert to die and be buried in the
south.”
Specialists who had examined
Washington said he was suffering
from nervous breakdown and harden-
ing of the arteries.
He is survived by his widow, three
children and four grandchildren. His
brother. John H. Washington, is su-
perintendent of industries at Tuskegee
Institute.
Washington was bom in slavery
near Hale's Ford. Va.. in 1857 or 1858.
After the emancipation of his race he
moved with his family to West Vir-
ginia. He was an ambitious boy and
saved his money for an education.
When he was able to scrape together
sufficient funds o pay bis stage fare
to Hampton. Va., he entered General
The 1915 Yield el 6ram Keep*
Western Canada to tlw Front.
The great publicity that baa been
given to the grain yielua o» the Prov-
inces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and
Alberta, the three province* that com-
prise that portion of Western Canada
east of the Britiah Columbia boundary,
has kept Canada to the front wilb a
prominence that is merited.
The grain crop of the three prov-
inces ha* now been harvested, and suf-
ficient of it has been threshed so that
it is no longer a matter of estimate aa
1 to the return*. It is *afe to aay that
J the entire yield of wheat will be up-
wards of 275.000,000 bushels, and the
average yield well over 25 bushels per
acre. In proportion to the aggregate
this is perhaps the largest yield ever
known on the continent.
Most of this wheat will grade No. 1
northern, and better, and with pres-
1 ent prices the condition of the farm-
er is to be envied. Many individual
yields are reported, and verified, and
they are almost beyond belief, but
they go to show that under the care-
ful system of agriculture that pro-
duced these yields Western Canada
would have far exceeded a 300,000,000
• production of wheat in 1915 had the
system been universal.
It was not in one or two districts
that big yields have been made kuown.
. . , , ,» The reports come from all parts of
Armstrongs school for negroes there . .. , , „ .
, , , . . , the 24.000 square miles of territory in
r. n /t .-i . /I i \ ^ • ti- o !• t ? -I VX Oil.
$4,000,000.
It was said by workmen that the | reason as the result of their terrible
spark which caused the fire could have
been extinguished with a shovel of
sand, but that while one workman was
getting the sand another tossed water
on the blaze, causing it to flare up and
ignite the oil. All other departments
of the plant are being operated as
usual and officials said rebuilding
would be started almost immediately.
The value of tne guns alone in the
shop is said to be several million dol-
lars. There were about 1,000 mach-
ines of different kinds in the building
and it is estimated their value was
several million dollars.
The burned shop was 250 feet wide.
700 feet long and four stories high, i
On these four flors 2,050 men were I
employed in day and night shifts. j
About 800 men were at work when i
the fire started anti so rapiiilv did it
spread that some employes had to*
make their escape by means of ropes.
Recently the burned building was
rebuilt at a cost said to be $3,000,000.
It was given over to the manufacture
of guns of various caliber for the
United States,. England and the al-
lies.
PLANNED A BIG REIGN OF TERROR
McManigal and McNamara Intended
To Blow Up Los Angeles.
DEFEAT FOR GEN. VILLA’S FORCES
fcrmy of 3,000 Routed Near Fuerte,
Chief Believed at Molina.
"v‘
Washington,—Defeat of 2.000 Villa
troop.-* who attacked Fuerte, Mex.. by
• superior force of the de facto gov-
•rnin< :)t vu reported in consular dis-
patches. Fuerte is on the railroad
northeast of Topolobampo. The at-
tack was said to have started on Sun
day.
Passenger servire between Vers
Crux and Mexico City w reported to
Rave been discontinued fur a few *1 is
Vo assist n the r ■ en . n* fr« ■g»t.
Dispaiehes from •• <» ! >iJ of the
landing there of * • * f‘ ;>s.
Genera! Villa w«« report! i at M<v
Itaa between Car.ean-a ir. i Nogales
• siting fur a Ua.n to tase hl u ’o
gates.
A;»-*»t ore hundred VTla d«**er»ers
gfe repo-'e 1 to ti'f tr-r-^i *n *r-e
ikr**ri* at. *~i at Nv-o ar. : ri,-re ara
repefed f». i< '•t'.g eierv 'r*.r
* . «. *., if *« a v.*f.| r.-rat \ ;!‘a
I » aiK i* n;»n t>*r Nv ». 2 -»
f>-.r « ir » «-i VC . «a*
* i . .-o »i t - m. A larye , «n
Ne aitJkt) ws Mid 4a. be ai Area ..
. r -■ . ' “ ; .\ .-
• . . 1 . v ‘ •• •
Gos Angeles.—Taking of testimony
was started after the defense had
scored a legal point cutting short the
opening statement of James IV. Noel,
special prosecutor at the trial of Mat-
thew A. Schmidt, charged with the
murder of Charles Hagerty in connec-
tion with the dynamiting of the Los
Angeles Times building five years aen.
As an indication of what he intended
to state. Attorney Noel told the court
! in tire absence of the jury that the
I prosecution proposed to prove that af-
[ ter the Times explosion .1. B. McNa-
; r.iara. who is serving a life term in San
Quentin prison, after pleading guilty
I of dynamiting the Times building and
j Ortie E. MeManigal. who turned
I state’s evidence and who will he a wit-
' ness in the present case, plotted to
' destroy the entire city of Los Angeles.
He declared that evidence would be j
i produced to show that McNamara and
I McManigal planned to set forty or
! fifty explosions in different parts of
this city the same night by means of
clockwork devices. In connection
i with tbe.-e explosions Mr. Noel S&ld
i there was to be used an arrangement
d. vised-by McNamara to cause fires
to follow the explosions.
Judge Willis said that if a conspir-
acy was proved testimony in support
ef the.-e alleea'ions might he admitted
J ]a?er. Mr Noel said 'he state pro j
posed to prove among o’her thine*
»l’*t Schmidt received $' » from Olaf
turn after he reposed tha* B R
experience.
The official list of survivors, as is-
sued in Rome, includes one American
woman, Mrs. Ct?ci> Greil of New York;
143 Italians, sixteen Greeks and one
Russian.
The statement is made that twenty-
four of the Ancona’s passengers were
naturalized Americans. Of these
nothing is known at the present time.
New York.—The Ancona sailed from
New York for Naples on October 17
She had on board 1.245 Italian reserv-
ists and a general cargo. She arrived
at Naples October 29 and was due to
sail from Naples for New York No-
vember 14.
The Ancona was built at Belfast in
1904. She had a gross tonnage of
8.210. was 482 feet in length and fifty-
eight beam.
For several months before Italy’s
entrance in the war the Ancona was
engaged in carrying home Italian re-
servists from this country and sup-
plies for the Italian government. On
one of her trips from New York to
Naples late in August last year the
Ancona w as stopped by the British at
Gibraltar and twenty-four Germans and
one Austrian were taken off the ship.
Late last summer the Ancona left here
for Italy with 75.000 bushels of wheat,
2.000 tons of hay and 500 horses for
the Italian government. On the same
voyage she carried 300 Italians in the
steerage who went back because it
was at the time they could not get
work on the New York subway
When the Ancona left New York on
her last voyage from here on October
17, she was in command of Captain
Pietro Massardo. All of her officers,
engine room force and members of the
crew were Italians.
William Hartfield, general manager
of the Italian line, characterized the
sinking of the Ancona as “an unneces-
sary crime" and “absolute murder.”
He immediately cabled the Naples of
fi e of his firm asking for afl infprma
tion regarding the disaster.
and worked his way through an ace-
demic course, graduating in 1875.
Later he became a teacher in the
Hampton Institute, where he remained
until 1881 when he organized an indus-
' trial school for negroes at Tuskegee.
He remained principal of this school
up to the time of his death.
The institute started in a rented
I shanty church and today it owns 3.500
1 acres of land in Alabama and has
nearly one hundred buildings, valued
at $500,000.
Washington won thq sympathy and
support of the leading southerners by
a speech in behalf of his race at the
Cotton States exposition in Atlanta in
1895. Of undoubted ability and
breadth of vision, his sane leadership
enabled him to accomplish more for
and among the negroes of the United
States than any negro of his time.
In addition to his prominence as an
educator, Washington gained consid-
erable fame as an author. He received
I an honorary degree of master ofai^
from Harvard university in 1S96 and
was given an honorary degree of doc-
tor of laws by Dartmouth college in
1901.
An incident of Washington’s care°r
made him a figure of national promin-
ence during the administration of
President Roosevelt. He sat down to
lunch with the president at the
White House either by formal or in-
formal invitation. There was a storm
of protest, particularly from the
south, but in spite of the resulting
i hostility shown toward him by many
white persons. Washington continued
I to exert a widespread influence to-
ward the betterment of his people.
CAPT. STREETER LANDS IS IN JAIL
KITCHENER GOES TO QUIET INDIA
More Trouble in Prospect for the Brit-
ish Empire.
“District of Lake Michigan” Raid By
Enforcement Officers.
Chicago—The police Sunday in-
raded and after the exchange of fifty
or more shots, captured George Wel-
lington Streeter's district of Lake
Michigan, the filled in land on the
shores of Lake Michigan, where until
Sunday, he has successfully defied
Mayor Thompson's Sunday saloon
closing order.
One person was wounded. Mrs. John
Holst, the wife of one of Streeter's
tenants, 192 cases of br-er were con- ^----------------------r----,
fiscated. six rifi-four revolvers and rath. St. Louis and other markets,
three boxes of ammunition were cap-
tured. one of the buildir.as in the
stronghold of Streeterville demolished
by a hook and ladder company of the
invaders, and Streeter, his wife and
fifteen others were arrested.
The land elair-ed by Streeter is
north ' the harbor and in a fashion-
which the growing of wheat is car-
I ried on. ^
Mr. Elmir Seller, a farmer south of
Strassburg. Sask.. has harvested 5,465
bushels No. 1 hard wheat from 160
acres.
Jas. A. Benner, near Daysland, Al-
berta, says his wheat went over 40
bushels to the acre, with an all round
crop of 33 bushels to the acre.
J. N. Wagner, near the same place,
also lays claim to over 40 bushels of
wheat per acre.
A .Norwegian farmer, named S. A.
Tofihagen. not far from Daysland,
had 23 acres of wheat which gave a
yield of 47 bushels to the acre.
Well. then, near Gleichen. Alberta,
D. H. Engle of Humbaldt, Iowa, owns
a quarter section of land. This land
was rented so that Mr. Engle should
receive one-third of the crop, and this
gave him $012.65, his net rental for
the crop, and there was only SO acres
in crop.
Scores of reports give yields fully
as large as those given above. A
large field of spring wheat near Leth-
bridge averaged 69 bushels, another 59
and a third 56 bushels per acre. On
the Jail farm at Lethbridge 25 acres
of Marquis wheat yielded 60 bushels to
the acre and weighed 67 pounds to the
bushel. A test lot of one acre of Mar-
quis wheat when threshed yielded 99
bushels and a 30 acre field averaged
601-3 bushels. This farm had 200
acres under crop to Marquis wheat
and it is expected the average from
the whole will exceed 50 bushels.
In all portions of Saskatchewan and
Manitoba, as well, remarkable yields
are reported, many large fields show-
ing averages of from 40 to 55 bushels
per acre.
When the story of this year s thresh-
ing is completed some extraordinary
yields will be heard of. One farmer
west of Unity. Saskatchewan. threBhed
10.000 bushels of No. 1 northern from
200 acres and such instances will not
be isolated.
Considerable of the wheat grown in
Western Canada is finding its way to
the markets of the United States, not-
withstanding the duty ’ of ten cents
per bushel. The miller in the United
States finds Western Canadian wheat
necessary for the blending of the high
class flour that is demanded by some
millers. Already near a hundred
thousand bushels of the 1915 crop has
found its way to the Minneapolis. Du-
•Th* Impression one gets in going
through Albert*. Sa*katcfaew»ii *n4
Manitoba." *aW a traveler from tb#
East, “i* th*t *11 the horse* aud team* ^
am! ail the threshing nacbiue* en-D
gec«4 make do impression t«a It*
crop*, and that It Rill »*ke aix month* '
to thresh th* gram out; but t*<b ;
•eeka ago the Canadian Pacific r*U»
way were hexing • daily ahipment of iyfyty,
1,“<i0 car* of wheat from the threw
provinces, and a week ago they had .
grt up to 2,106 car* a day. And b*-
aide* this there Is the Csnadiau North-
ern railway and tbe Grand Trunk Pa-
cific, so an enormous quantity must
be being shipped out of tbe protince*.
The wealthier fanners are building
large granaries on their farms, whilo '
there is s great improvement in tb*
storage facilities provided by the gov-
ernment."
It is therefore no wonder that th*
greatest interest was shown by thosw
who attended the Soil Products El-
position held at Denver a short tim*
ago, when it was demonstrated that it
waa not only in quantity that Western
Canada still occupied the primary po-
sition. It was there that Western
Canada again proved its supremacy.
In wheat, it was early conceded that
Canada would be a winner, and thi*
was easily the case, not only did it win
the big prize, but it carried off th*
sweepstakes. What, however, to thus*
who were representing Canada at thi*
exposition, was of greater value proba-
bly. was winning first and second prize-
for alfalfa. The exhibits were beauti-
ful and pronounced by old alfalfa
growers to be the best they had ever
seen. First, second and third cutting*
of this year's growth were shown.
At this same exposition, there wer*
shown some excellent samples of fod-
der corn, grown in the Swift Current
district.
Topping the range cattle market in
Chicago a short time ago is another of
the feats accomplished by Western
Canada this year.
On Wednesday, October 13, Clay.
Robinson and company sold at Chi-
cago for E. H. Maunsell, Macleod, Al-
berta, a consignment of cattle, 17 head
of which, averaging 1,420 pounds,
brought $8.90 per hundredweight, top-
ping the range cattle market for th*
week to date. The same firm also
sold for Mr. Maunsell 206 head, aver-
aging 1.240 pounds, at $S.55, without *
throw-out. These were all grass cat-
tle. . They were purchased by Armour
and company. Clay, Robinson and
company describe the cattle as of
very nice quality, in excellent condi-
tion, and a great credit to Mr. Maun-
sell. It speaks well for our Canadian
cattle raisers that they can produce
stock good enough to top the Chicago
market against strong competition,
there being over 4,000 range cattle ott
sale that day.
It is one thing to produce crop*
such as are referred to. and another
to get them to market. The facilities
of Western Canada are excellent. Th*
railway companies, of which there ar*
three, the Canadian Pacific, the Cana-
dian Northern and the Grand Trunk
Pacific, have the mark of efficiency-
stamped upon all their work. Beside*
the main trunk lines of these systems,
which extend from ocean to ocean,
there are branch lines and laterals,
feeders which enter into remote part*
of the farming districts, and give t*
the farmer immediate access to th*
world's grain markets. The elevator
capacity of the country is something
enormous, and if the figures can b»
digested, the full extent of the grain
producing powers of Western Canada
may be realized. The total elevator
capacity is about 170.000.000 bushels,
or nearly one-half of the entire wheat
production of the Dominion In 1915.
Of this large storage facilities th*
country elevators number 2.S00, with
a capacity of 95,000,000 bushels.—Ad-
vertisement.
It was not in wheat alone that there
were extraordinary yields. A farmer
living south of Wadena. Sask.. har-
vested 900 bushels of oats from ten
acres. 9. A. Tofthagen of Daysland
before referred to had oats which
yielded 110 bushels to the acre, while
those of J N. Wagner went 90 bush-
Wanted His Right.
The Sergeant—Look here, befor*
you're served out with your uniform
you'd better hip down to the wash-
houses and get a bath.
The Recruit—Wot? I come ’ere to
be a soldier—not a bloomin' mermaid!
—London Opinion.
Washington.—Earl Kitchener’s u’M-
niate mission during Ms mysterious
absence from the British war office is
said by confidential information re-
ceived here to be ;n India, where, ac-
cording to the same information, Brit
ish rule is confronted with a more
serious state ot unrest than ha* gen-
erally been known outside of British
official circa:
Couple*; w;th repeated rumors of ac-
tivities of German events fomenting
disconnect among the native popula-
tion of Ind-.a have come reports of d;s-
satisfaction in Egypt also ascribed to
abl*3 lake shore re-iderco district, j to the acre.
Streeter and his w.fe landed there J Ag is pointed out by a Toronto pa-
vears ac- when th°ir 'filing vessel I r**r < anada s great good fortune and
ws* wrecked or. a sand bar The *a:id
has gradually filled in between the
wreck and the shore unTil their claim
comprises several blocks of valuable
territory. Streeter called the r.ew
made land the United S*a«e? District
of Lake .Michigan and has refused
splendid service as the Granary of the
1 Empire are revealed in the record
' harvest from her rich fields of wheat
and other grains. ’ The foundation of
i its prosperity is solid and enduring.
; While mines may be exhausted and
lumber may disappear through itn
recognize any authority but that of the t provident management, agriculture Ts
•McNamara had **■ t an expansion In
Oakland. Thin wa !n Vugust. i th** same source.
I J Since the Turks failed to cut the
, Stc'm Sweep* Central Kansas. * Suez csnal, mainly through the prompt
United States. j
In previous encounters with the po- I
lice the captain and hi* wife have
usually had a high degree of success.
It was said at the police station that
when a man was sent to arrest them
be usually ended by buying a lot.
K -.r- <';-r -S’.t x-e know r *o be
d*«c ar.d a* ’* a*' *#,y injure-! some
a *y a* z*-- i.• of ihe Terrific
arrival of Colonial troop- from N-w
Zealand, and Australia, it ha* been re
ported tha* agent* from Cons’antinopl*
and Berlin have been conducting *
per-i.-;eot propaganda among the na-
tives.
w ni i-i-i ta'\ «.* —r. ah- h «»([• over
. t'* “*za‘ V -*as Tve pr pro- '•■«>»* at
: G a' i-’l Is e- itra**-! at f5‘.* u*VV
T‘e c**» «a'*-r p-sr*. a laundry, tnree ,
A- :n-g r ’?* *he Sen Fr depot and Stiep Cel lectio* Sold.
'*• v re *efi«*e» were demolished j New York.—The famous
S*r. . $e p» •racer train No. S r.ar- of American postage stamp# made bv
D «*y escaped the path, of a twister | the late Earl of Crawford has be*en
w* »-*i zwypt through the southern ' purchased t7 a New York dealer. The
.tat ef ’he city, Several |h**a**i collection It Mid k* kftv* t«*t the e*r$
isteep wep* tiled. . '• .
. ’ ' t
New Campaign Aga net Villa.
Dougla.' Arix.—With the arrival of
General Alvaro Ofcregon at Agua
Prieia. opposite here, from Nogaies,
th* Carranza force* began their ac-
tive campagn against the arm* of
1 a perpetual source of wealth, increas-
ing from year to year by the stimulus
of Individual industry and persona! in-
terest. A wheat harvest of 336.250.900
bushels from IS.000,009 acres, aa av-
erage yield of 26 bushels to the acre.
The substantial nature of this growth
In production Is shown by tbe fact
that the harvest returns are 72 per
rent greater than tbe average for th*
past five years.
The same satisfactory sod highly
Important success has been attained
in other grain crops. The aggregate
Used Whenever Quinine is Needed
Does Not Affect the Head
Jlwncw af its tonic ami laxative etTr.-f LAX-
ATIVE BROMO QUIS11SE will l* fouml belter
than or-linarr Quinine for any purpose for
whioh Quinine is use«l. Doee not earn** nee-
vou«iiei»s nor rin*rinjj In beaU. Kemeiul<er tlieiw
i* or.. . one "Bromo Quinine.” That ia Laia-
live Bromo Quinine. Look tor aiguature of
E. W. Oruve. Sic.—Adv.
When a man toils you how yon
ought to run your business, just tak*
a look at the way be Is running his
own.
It is not until be begins to peddl*
horseradish from door to door that
a mao is willing to acknowledge that
he is a financial failure.
ON FIRST SYMPTOMS
ns* “Reuovir.e ' and be cured. Do not
wait until the heart organ is beyond
repair. “Renov^ps" la the heart and
nerve tonic. Price 50c and li.00.-AdT*
A man considers his shopping sat-
isfactory if it results in the purchase
of a hat that make* him look no
worse.
Genera; Franci-co Villa in Sonora * Field of oats I* 4>!.©35.50i> bushels
( Naco. Sonorai was oc«;«e’*d by- 1.5W*
j Carranza, cavalry, unoer cCtnmaT.d of
Colonel Laiarn Cardenas. Le*»:•..< a
garrison to hold Naco, Colonel Caf-
denav immediately went in pursuit of
a Villa column headed by Ge-ieral Jo«*
Rodriguez, who had bet-n operating
i ;a*t below the i*t*m*tie«*i boundary*
from th* 11.365.000 acre* under crop.
| Of this yield 395,680.0*0 bushels are
! from the threw Prairie Province*
■ These province# also contribute 30*,-
! 2C0.000 bushels of wheat. The bar-
I ley harvest is 5fi.S6S.000 bushel* from
j 1.509,350 acres, an average yield of
114.7 buskei* gar act**
Dr. Pierre’s Fltsmint Pellet# »re th*
original little liver pills pu. up 40 yssr*
; (go. They regulate liver and bowel#.—AdV.
It takes an unusually smart man to
speak seven languages, but it tales A
smarter one to remain silent in on*.
Wash day is smile day if yon use Red
fra** Hall Blue. American uss-ic, tiureturn
1U« best made- Ads.
OnUmeag swcrwsdn better than vt*-
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Hill, F. C. The Kiowa County News. (Lone Wolf, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 18, 1915, newspaper, November 18, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc914271/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.