Colony Courier (Colony, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 17, 1910 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Colony Courier 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:
COLONY COURIER
J n srseR. hn.
K. a SICES. 1Atar
COLONY.
OKLAHOMA
OKLAHOMA HAPPENINGS
CHAMP CLARK
FOR SPEAKER
DEMOCRATS IN CONTROL1crKSty
Manitou boa let a contract for a
Mater ayatcm. The Improvement will
coat $20,«0tt.
OEMOCRAT8 LINE UP FOR
SOURI STATESMAN
MIS'
A REVIEW OF RETURNS SHOWS
SURPRISING GAINS
The Peters Oil company of Ramona
has decreased Its capital stock from
•L2fi0 0<>0 to $60,000.
GORE PREDICTS ELECTION
SENATE STILL REPUBLICAN
Btectlon officials in Pottawatomie
county were enjoyed from counting
the ballots In two precincts in that
county Friday.
Congressman-Elect Scott Ferris Wire*
HU Support and Says Election
ef Clark Will be by
Acclamation
The railroad yards at Lawton were
blocked one day this week with
trains that could not be moved be-
cause of a shortage of wuter.
Roy Stafford, of the Dally Okla-
homan, will begin the publication on
December 1, of a new free afternoon
dally paper, with Associated Press
service and special staff.
Onchlta Slate Mtf. company of Tulsa
waa Incorporated Friday. Capital,
$S5,000; directors. C. M. Downing and
M. IS Carr of Tulsa, L. H. Curtiss,
Hot Springs, Ark.
W. D. Herod, of Guthrie, assistant
county attorney here, has received the
appointment as assistant United
States attorney, under John Kmbry,
of tbe western district.
"Devil-wagons” are making their ad-
vent Into Greer county with a ven-
geance. According to the Mangum
Star there are no less than sixty ma-
chines in that city, and the farmers
are buying machines.
Tbe contrnct has been let for Tul-
sa's new $350,000 hotel. The building
la to be ten stories In height, and It Is
estimated Hint It will he completed
within ten months.
Through the agency of K. J. Buss,
representative of a cotton firm of Law-
ton, n deal was clotted Monday l>y
which Ills company bought $56,000
worth or cotton. This cotton was
grown near Lawton and will be ship-
ped to Franco.
Kansas City, Mo.—"Now It is tip to
the democratic party to make good,"
said Senator Thomas I’. Gore, of Okla-
homa, who stopped in Kansas City be-
tween trains Haturduy.
“We cannot kick on the results of
the last election. Maine was the sum-
ple and the order was better than the
sample In this case.
"It Is not proper for a member of the
senate to discuss matters In the
bouse," said senator Gore In answer to
a question, "but my personal opinion
is, there will not be even a fight over
the speakership. Champ Clark will
win."
President Must Depend on Present
Congress (or Any Legislation
Desired by Republicans
ft
i'
WBhlngton, D. C.—The outcoma of
the United Stutes senate is now def-
initely settled. The republicans are
assured of seventeen new senators,
which with thirty-four holdover sena-
tors, gives them a total of fifty-one.
The democrats are assured of tlfteen
new senators, which with twenty-five
holdovers gives t„em a total of forty.
Two senatorshlps are still In doubt,
namely, the successor of the late Mr.
Dolllver in Iowa, and Mr. Carter in
Montana, where there is prospect of a
tie.
These determined totals, however,
leave a republican majority in the
senate as follows:
Total membership, 92; necessary to
majority, 47; republican, 60; demo-
crats, 40; doubtful, 2.
The sixteen republican senators
considered assured are from:
California, Connecticut, Delaware,
Massachusetts, Minnesota, Michigan,
Nevada, North Dakota (2), Pennsyl-
vania, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont,
Washington, Wisconsin and Wyom-
ing.
The tlfteen democratic senators
considered assured are from Florida,
Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland,
Missouri, Mississippi, Nebraska, New
Jersey, New York, Ohio, Tennessee,
Texas, Virginia and West Virginia.
hollowing are the results in the
governorship contests with the ap-
proximate pluralities, democrats:
LOWER HOUSE DEMOCRATIC
BY MAJORITY OF THIRTY
Chicago.—Unofficial returns for
62nd congress gives: Democrats
elected, 226; Republicans elected, 164;
Socialists elected, 1. Totul 391. Ma-
jority of house 196. Democratic ma-
jority in house, 30.
Complete returns on the election of
representatives in congress Indicate
the democrats will have a working
majority of 30 in the next house. The
number of democrats elected to con-
gress, according to the latest returns,
which are of an unofficial character, is
226. The republican representation
will be 164, or eight Beats less than
the democrats now have In the 61st
congress.
Aboslute confidence is not felt In
the returns for some of the Wiscon-
sin districts, and It is not impossible
that the official figures will change
the totals of the two parties.
INCOMPLETE RETURNS ASSURE
VICTORY FOR DEMOCRATS
44 Bu. to the Acre
lea !
from other dintrlcts in tliai pn
ibO*(Kfc
fijS$
DRYS ARE FAR IN LEAD
irlb
______ t prov-
ince showed oilier excel*
It*lit results—m ch us 4,-
000 bushels ot w I rat
from I'io acres, t»r B3 l*a
bu. pur acre. 146,30 and 40
bushel yn-ids were num-
erous. An bigli as K2J
bus belt of oats to tho
acre were threshed from
Alberta fields in UUU.
Claims of Local Optionlats for Amend-
ment Apparsntly Without Any
Foundation Whatever
TAFT TO URGE PLANS
Next Congress Expected to Put
Through Legislative Program
Washington.—The pressing forward
of the administration’s legislative pro-
gram before the accession of demo-
cratic control in congress next year,
was discussed at a cabinet meeting
Wednesday.
Featuring the administrative meas-
ures will be the plan for meeting sec-
ond-class mail abuses by requiring
magazines—not newspapers—to pay
increased postage on advertising
pages sufficient to later warrant one
cent postage of ttrst-class mail.
The plan will he urged upon con-
gress at the coming short session.
The discussion of the election re-
Os.:
The Kansas City Southern railroad
and the Arkansas Western, an auxili-
ary corporation of the name road, on
Wednesday filed their returns with the
state auditor, under the new railroad
tax law. Both returns were mudo
under protest.
McClain county election board was
the first to send Its official report of
the election lu to the atfite board.
This Is chiefly due to Inspector Fields
end his assistant, Mayor Berryman.
In Oklahoma county the Inspectors
are still "working."
Henry Wllmerlng, expert rate man
ef the corporation commission, Hied
sn Interesting exhibit during the Oil
hearing at Guthrie, showing that the
ilklahoma earnings o( the M. K. tt
T., Santa Fa and Iron Mountain were
much greater per mile than anywhere
else on these lines.
! suits brought out individual views of
Plurality Gle president and some of his official
New York, Dlx .............. 66,000 fanlj]y jt was pointed out that In
; New Jersey, Wilson ......... 30,000 the eagj the most real harm to the
I Connecticut, Baldwin ......... 3,500 republican party wus accomplished
, Massachusetts, Foss ......... 33,000 tnuch because of the outcome in the
j Ohio, Harmon ................ 60,000
Oklahoma, Cruce
Oregon, West ....................jin the relative smallness of the deni-
Wyoming, Carey .................jocratic pluralities as compared with
Alabama, O’Neal ............ 50,000 j t.tae past when democratic priority was
Oklahoma City.—With full returns
from about sixty counties, and Incom-
plete returns from four or live more,
Lee Cruce is leading J. W. McNeal
for governor by a majority of 23,387.
With ubout forty-five complete coun-
ties on the proniultion amendment,
and a few scattering results, the
"drys" are leading by u majority of
18,747.
Morgan is ahead of Fulton in the
race for congress in tho Second dis-
trict by a majority of 735.
It is practically definitely settled
thut Bird S. McGuire is elected to con-
gress in the First district, James S.
The Silver Gup
at tbe recent Spokane
Kali was awarded to tl
A Iberia Govei
Its exhibit of groins,g
vegetable*. Keports o:
yields for 191U C4»ui*
A lberl* Government for
_ruHRes and
of excellent
u.... ____________alHo from
skatebewun and Manitoba la
e*Urn Canada.
Froo hmuMtrxIl of ISO
nit ^iiljoln.ng prt>-
■ mpilnnluf 16# atrei l«t
•3|iiirarn)ar« to lie had
Ui tho i-huii-eit illat: tut*.
Schools I'onveulent, Til-
ths
los* at
niato excollent, soil
W-s.jp
cheap, fuel envy foget and
rewHonuhle In price,
wa*tly procured,
astoj
?arii?h>i?asurr«<is. _
Write an to be%t place for set-
tlement* xettlerti’ low rallwuy
rates, descriptive Illustrated
••Last Beat Weil” (sent fre*» on
application) and other Informa-
tion, to Stip’t of Immigration
Ottawa, Cun., or to tbe CuuudUi
Government Agent.
I. 8. CRAWFORD
I*. 1JS W. Ninth Stmt. Kamil City. M*.
(Uuadd noare.t you.> 86
Headache
CHAMP CLARK.
Candidate for Speaker of House
Thu city of Urandfleld and th#
Houthwestern feingineerliig company,
which is laying water mains In that
city have been sued by W. M. Now-
man for $16,260. Newman recently
fell Into a ditch dug by tho company
and broke hts jaw. There were no
danger signals to warn people of tho
ditch.
Lawton, Okla.—“I am for you
agulnst tho world. Also Missouri
muleB. Your election for speukei'
will be by acclamation. Oklahoma a
unit on that.”
This telegram Saturday was scut to
Champ Clark of Missouri by Scott
Ferris, congressman from the big fifth
Oklahoma district, who has 2('-v>0
democratic majority behind und who
is himself a Missourian.
Champ Clark should, and 1 believe
will, be elected speaker of the next
house of representatives.” said Mr.
Ferris. "His wise leadership over the
minority In the last congress has con-
tributed no little to our success in tho
recent election, and, continued as
speuker over a democratic house, he
should wield a wonderful influence to-
ward democratic success In 1912.”
jwest having been discounted In the
30,000 primaries. Somo comfort was found
"My father has been a sufferer from sick
headache for the last twenty-five years and
never found any relief until he began
taking your Cascarets. Since ha has
begun taking Cascarets ba has never had
the headache. They have entirely cured
him. Cascarets do what you recommend
them to do. I will give you the privilege
of using his name."—E. M. Dickson,
1120 Kesiner St., W. Indianapolis, Ind.
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent, Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken. Woakin or Gripe.
10c, 25c, 50c. Never Hold In bulk. The gen-
uine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to
cure or your money back. 823
TAKE-
Tull’s Pills
The (lr«l done often netonlihee the Inviliif.
giving elasticity of mind, huoyency of body,
GOOD DIGESTION,
regular bowel* and solid fleiti. Price, 23 ct»
South Carolina, Blcaec ....... 60,000 attained, New York's plurality less
D
ISO'S
IS THU NAME
or THE BEST MEDICINE
r COUCHS & COLDS
HON. LEE CRUCE
Governor-Elect
Texas, Colquitt
North Dakota, Burke .......
The republican governors
with approximate pluralities:
Pennsylvania, Tcner
I than 70,000 plurality being cited.
. 3,0001 The expressed view was thut the
elected - defeat of the party might In reality
work for good.
. 20,000 I President Tuft renllzes the necessity
New Hampshire, Bass ........ 7,000 for fretting through all needed admln-
lthode Island, 1’othrie ........ 900 j istratlon legislation in the three
Iowa, Carroll ................. 10,000 months session, beginning next month.
Kansas, Stubbs .............. 5,000
Michigan, Osborn ............ 40,000
Minnesota, Rberhardt ........ 50,000
Nebraska, Aldrich ........... 5,000
South Dakota, Vessey ........ 12,000
Wisconsin, McGovern ............
California, Johnson ........... 25,000
Nevada, Oddle ....................
Tennessee, Hooper ........... 12,000
UNCLE JOE CANNON WILL HELP
INSURGENT8 AMEND RULES
OFFICIAL RETURNS BY COUNTIES
Condensed
Election News-
tlon Is Ahead
-Prohlbi-
Twn people were killed and two
severely injured when a Hutchinson
Houthern east-bound freight train
ernehed Into a carriage near Wuklta
Thursday night. The party was re-
turning from a wedding. Tho ap-
proach of the train was not noticed
until it struck the vehicle.
t’reparatory to building an eight-
stall roundhouse at the A. V. & W.
and Frlaco railway junction In Tulsa,
a large force of Frisco laborers have
arrived In West Tulsa. It will tnkn
about u month to complete the struc-
ture and Install the trucks slid turn-
table. The roundhouae will cost about
$50,000.
Durant, Okla.—Official vote In Bry-
an. county, gives: . Governor—Lee
Uruce idem.), 2,234; Joe McNeal (rep)
948; J. T. Gullible (soc.), 547; G. K.
Rouch (pro,), 58. Local option—For,
1,354; against, 2,288. Woman's suf-
frugu—For, 970; ugulnst, 24S.
John W. Kern Is Elected
Indianapolis.—8enator Beveridge’s
hopes for another term went glimmer-
ing Wednesday as returns showed con-
clusively that the democrats had elect
I ed the majority of the Indiana assem-
bly. According to the latest figures
i the democrats will have a majority on
joint ballot of 32.
I John W. Kern has heen endorsed by
the democrats und in all probability
i will become the colleague of Senator
Shively, also a democrat.
Hoburt, Okla.—The official count of
Kiowa county shows tne following re-
sults: Governor—Uruce, 1.414; Mc-
Neal, 1,054; Cumbie, 266; Rouch, 21.
Montana
Helena, Mont.—Returns received are
to the effect thnt the democrats have
elected at least fifty-three members of
the legislature, which menus ttftit n
Washington.—Another contest over
the question of taking from the speak-
er power to name standing commit-
tees, is expected to develop soon after
the house of representatives assem-
bles next month. This time It Is not
unlikely that the movement will re-
ceive the support of Speaker Can-
non and his allies, Inasmuch as the
next assignments will be made by the
democrats.
Interviews with Representatives
Murdock of Kansas and Norris of Ne-
braska Indicate they intend to lose
no time in reopening the fight waged
by the insurgent republicans last sen
sion which reformed the rules and
deposed Speuker Cannon from mem-
bership on the rules committee. That
contest was won by insurgent and
democratic coalition. It Is not known
what the attitude of the democrats will
be the coming session when nn effort
will be made to still further shenr the
speakership of its great authority, but
tho chances are they will seek to force
Davenport over Charles 13. Creager
in the Third, Carter in the Fourth and
Scott Ferris over J. H. Franklin In
the Fifth.
Despite tho fact that tho republic-,
ans are Issuing reports tending to
show that they will control the next
state legislature, reports which have
.come in front over the state prove
almost beyond a shadow of a doubt
that the democrats will have a ma-
jority In both houses.
The democratic committee declares
that their figures show that the next
senate will contain thirty-two demo-
crats, and the next house elgTity-fivo
democrats, giving them a two-thirds
majority In each house.
The chief political bone of conten-
tion ut present is the local option
amendment, but, judging from the re-
The Number.
"I hear your new auto made a good
record on Its trip.”
"Yes; run over In ubout an hour."
"How many?”
Beautiful Poet Cards Free.
Send 2c stamp for five samples of our
very best Gold and Silk Finish Birthday,
Flower and Motto Post Cards; beautiful
colors nnd loveliest designs. Art Post
Card Co., 731 Jackson St., Topeka, Kan
The spinster is handicapped in one
! respect. She can't tell all the things
she knows the way n married woman
can.
TO D1UVK OUT M At.AItl A
AM) III 11.1) UP THIt SYSTEM
ll.t kit>1 Iniu r<l I.KllVL'M ITa I'LI IC*i«
Taka the Old Hlandurd i.HOVKS TA8T ML «•!*>»
roNio “
l mu*
Tut) tormuli
You know wlitst you an* taking
formula Is plainly urimed on every bottle
itiM U Is oltnuly Onlnlne and Iron in a utn*
form. Tho Oulnlne drive* out Lhc
ine Iron bullai up tbe system. So
Price 60 cent*.
• I.owlti
lens
and tne
doalers foi 80 years.
e malaria
jld by all
turns In, nothing short of u figurative
earthquake can save tho amendment
from utter defent. |
Additional returns received Satur-
, day but tended to Increase the plural- ,
I tty by which the drys are leading. I
! Washita county returned a majority of
j 1,086 against the bill, Grunt came in
1 tho same column with 1,316, and other
counties followed with majorities
along the some line.
Despite the claim of the local op- '
tlontsts, they appear to be able to
offer no tangible figures which show
that there is any reason on their side.
In a telephone dispatch to the Mus-
kogee Fhocnix Thursday night they
stated that returns from twenty-five
counties put thdTh 8,000 In the leud, '
About all a school teacher gets out
of her great education Is that after
she becomes old, she knows more to
find fault about than other people.
Stiff neck! Deenn’t amount to much,
but mighty disagreeable. You've no idea
how quickly a little Hamlins Wizard Oil
will lubricate the cords und muka you
comfortable again.
There are a good many heroes In
novels who couldn't earn a living In
real life.
AM. I'P-TO-nATIB HOURKKEKI’IIjnF
I se Red Dross Ball Blue. It makes clothes
clean uud sweet as when new. All grocer*.
Because Ills son hnd been arrested
and was ubout to be Incarcerated for
• hIIcrci! drunkenness, Tucker Alberty,
• one of the most prominent men of
Weslvlllc, Adair county, shot nnd In-
stantly killed City Marshal Fnrdls
Wednesday afternoon In front of tho
West vllle jail.
Bartlesville, Okla.—Complete re-
turns In Washington county show the
following returns: Cruce, 1,517; Mc-
Neal, 1,474, Davenport, 1.4S7; Creng-
er, 1,458.
Arapahoe, Okla,—Official returns in
Uustrr county, show the following re-
turns: Uruce, 1,817; McNeal, 1,765;
fumble, 359; Rouch, 6S. No. 3, 1,208
for, 2,637 against.
democrat will be elected to succeed -----------
United Stutes Senator Thomas Uflrter. | the battle over to the succeeding ses- and that they were counting on that
to con-; slon when they will be In undisputed j majority being swelled considerably
control.
It Is pei haps better to build air
castles than to have no ambition at all.
Fifty two votes are necessary
trel on joint ballot.
Announce for Senate
Wheeling. W. Vn.—Three prominent
state democrats Wednesday announc-
ed their candidacy to succeed United
Slates Senator Scott after lute returns
showed that the democrats would con-
trol the legislature on Joint ballot and
force his retirement.
Enid, Okla.—The total vote In Gar-
held county shows the fo.lowing re-
turns Governor, Lee Cruon, 2.213:
J. W. McNeal, 3,430. Representative
In congress, McGuire, 3,005; McNeill,
2,72,.
Victory for Bryan
Lincoln, Neb.—The defeat of James
C\ Dahlmun, democrat, for the governor ^Vlves'tbeVepubllcnns hn~p^
of Ntbruskn, wits n surprise to polltl-
Stubbs Leads In Kansas
Topeka, Kan.—Ninety-nine out of the
entire 125 representative districts of
the state have been heard from. Of
these fifty reported republican legisla-
tors had been selected, nnd forty-eight
suld democrats had won. One district
Is reported doubtful. The majority of
the remaining twenty-six districts upon
which the vote for representative has
not been reported, nro known to hn\e
been carried by Governor Stubbs. This
The chief executives of eighteen
cities In Oklahoma will meet In Okla-
homa Ulty Nov. 17 for the purpose of
orgnnlr.itig municipal officers of the
state. Tho call for the meeting wan
issued by Muyor F. MvGtirr of Mus-
kogee. Tho mayors of Ardmore, Bar-
tlesville, Ulilekiishn, Unulgtite, Durant,
hi Kona, Knld, Guthrie, Hugo, l.nw-
tnn, MoAlaster, Oklahoma Ulty, 1'iiuis
Valley, Hupulpu, Hliitwncc and Tulsa
will attend.
.
Htlglor, Okla. Complete official re-
turns In Haskell county give Uruce,
1,471; McNeill, 1,176; tarter, 1,120;
Campbell, 1,142. Local option defeat-
ed by 76.
clans In ihls state. Dahltuan, because
of his tight with Bryan over the local
option plunk In the democratic pint-
form. had been picked to win. H.s op-
ponent, (’heater Aldrich, however, de-
feated him by 16,000 votes, on the same
platform that Diihlman sounded.
Grove, (lkIn.—Official count: Uruce,
921; McNeal .05; fumble, 67; Rouch
9; for congress, Davenport, 910 and
tnuger till. No. 3, <>66 for, 1,042
against.
Woman 8uffrag« In Washington
Real tie, Wash. The most Interesting
result of the election Is tho ratification
of the woman s suffrage amendment to
Die state constltulon. The nmendtuent
will become law ns noon ns the govei*-
LaFollette's Election Aatursd
Milwaukee.—United States Senator
LaFolletle, republican, will be ro-
elected to the upper house of congress
by the legislature elected In Wiscon-
sin Tuesday, which, from the returns
received up to ton o'clock Tuesday i
night, will be safely republican.
by tho counties still out.
As a matter of fact, of the forty-
eight or fifty counties which have
been reported to tilts office the local
optiniilsts huvo curried only twelve.
Their total mujorlty In these twt ah
counties, exclusive of the vote In coun-
ties where the plurality was against
the amendment, is only 4,155.
I'uttlng Truce’s majority conserva-
tively, In view of the number of coun-
ties to report, he will receive between
2h,ooo und 25,000, though the chances
are that It will run ubova the last fig-
ur».
DRINK WATER TO CURE
KIDNEYS AND RHEUMATI8M
The People Do Not Drink Enough
Water to Keep Healthy,
Saye Wall-Known
Authority.
Missing Dean Is Located
Guthrie, Okla.—It la reported that ri.
C. Flttuck, dean and business manag-
er of the Oklahoma eecondnry agri-
cultural colleges, who mysteriously
The Farmers Union Gin, of Qulntot,,
was incorporated Thursday. Capital
$6,(100; directors, O. A. Wilcox and W.
N. Kirby, of CJultitoln; utitl J. II. Lips-
rnmb. ol lOntcrprlao.
Medford, Okla. Uompleto official re-
turns show the following vote In
Grunt county: For governor, Uruce,
1,642; McNeal, 1,88«.
nor receives the official count and pro- (disappeared u it W weeks ago, has been
claims thut the amendment hut been located at BntUn Fo, N. M., and Is so-
ratified.
First Control In 1$ Years
Washington.—Josinh H. Hblltn, its-
rlously III.
California Is Republican
Ban Francisco.—lllrnm Johnson, In-
Planning a boulevard that will lie
(he most niugulllceiit driveway In Die
wrst, Die < npliul ciiiiuiilasliiu at Okla-
homa Ulty Is huall.v engaged In direct-
ing the work of Die engineers und
draught linen to hate the capltrl lots
ready for sale within three weeks.
M rc than 2,000 liiqitlii-a huvo already
Vi'Sti icuvlved by the couittilsslou.
fliicknstin, Okla.—Complete official
vote In tlriuly county: Uruce, 2,560;
McNeal, 1,287; fumble, 554; Rouch,
o9.
Pryor Creek, Okla,—Complete re-
turps trim S'ay-'s county show Uruce,
12|4; McNeil, l,127l tumble, 46;
(touch, 14. Duvcupuit, 1,230; Uivutfur
Util.
Dstlclnn of the democratic national1 surgcnl republican candidate for gov-
congressional committee, who for sev-j ernor of California, has been elected
rrnl day* has heen in charge of Ihe by about 26,000. The democrats
democratic headquarters here, claimed swept Die country districts nnd Die so-
il democratic majority III the house of clallsta were a big factor, J. HUH
Official Count Dalaysd
Oklahoma Ulty.—Secretary Seth K.
Gordon, of the state election board,
said Wednesday afternoon thut It will
ho Monday or Tuesday before Ihe
vote In the state election held Tues-
day can be officially announced. No
returns were received Wednesday.
Will Linn, former member of the
state election board, who hue been as-
sisting in the office, since lie was ap-
pointed Judge of the newly created
superior court, In Grady county, ex-
pressed the opinion that fee reino-
mission amendment Is defeated by a
substantial majority.
47. lie said:
"For the first tone in sixteen years
Die house will lie democratie, The
present house consists of 154 demo-
cratic and 217 republican, or a major-
Wilson, socialist for governor, polled
so large a vote In Los Angeles a in I
Frisco that he upset the eiilculntlnns
of both old parties, Democratic can-
didate T, A. lit II polled a much stntill-
1 y of 43 The sixty-second congress er vote than hnd linen expected. John-
will ct oslvt of a* least 219 democrats
<a.3 1.2 republicans.
son carried Han Francisco by 2.UU0,
lu general he ran behind his ticket.
Treubla at Stllwtll
Htllwell, Okla.—Tho political sltua*
thin here Is growing wnrm. The first
returns of the election show the coun-
ty tn he carried by the republicans,
but Inter In the day four dTstrlcts
were thrown out, thus giving the dem-
ocrats a straight ticket election, with
the exception of sheriff. The districts
thrown out on account of Illegal
methods used are Bunch No. 1, Lees
freak No. 1, Christie No. 1 and No,
2. Tho reptiblicatia are indignant
over the result mid talk uf a contest
ts waging.
"The numerous cases of kli. / nnd
bladder diseases nnd rhciiniuDsin are
mainly due to the fnrt that the drink
lug of water, nature’s greatest medl-
, due, him liCon neglected.
] Slop landing your system with mod-
1 h im h and cure-alls; hut get on the
water wagon. If you are ren’ly sick,
why, of course, take tho proper rnedl
clues—plain, common vegetable treat-
ment, which wilt not shatter the
nerves or ruin the stomach."
To cure Rheumatism you must make
the kidneys do their work; they are
the filters of the blood. They must
be made to strain out of the blood the
waste matter and adds that cause
rheumatism; the urine must be non
trallied so It will no longer bo a
source of Irritation to the bladder, nnd,
most of all, you must keep tlieno adds
from forming In the stomach. This
Is Ihe cause of stomach trouble nnd
poor digestion. For these condltlone
you can do no butter than lako the
following prsaorlptlobl Fluid Kxtrnet
Dandelion, one-half ounce; Compound
Knrgon, one ounce; Com pound Syrup
Sarsaparilla, three ounces. Mix by
■linking well In bottle and take In
tcnspoonful doses after each meal and
at bedtime, but don’t forget the
water Drink plenty nnd often.
This valuable ItiformnDon nnd sim-
ple prescription should he posted up
in each household and used nt tho
(list sign of tin attack of rheumatism,
hnrknehe or nrltinr) trouble, no mat-
ter bow slight.
>> I
T | y
' l»
V ( A
■
V ) 4
V
xi X* V
,1
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.
Seger, Neatha H. Colony Courier (Colony, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 17, 1910, newspaper, November 17, 1910; Colony, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc941723/m1/4/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.