The Hennessey Clipper. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 10, 1902 Page: 3 of 8
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PRINCESS 01' MOR-C.O.
Eastern Society Is I'li-nird with \ «*it
of Oriental llenut>. \\ h:>.*.e lJni:e-
ln I * Kxtiuiaite,
m r
For some weeks the mo-t exclusive
set in the Back bay, Host on, Mass.,
have been entertaining and have beea
entertained by a youthful princess i f
Tangier, Mllle. Torquia of Morocco.
For purposes of incognito the prin-
cess prefers to be addressed as Milo
Torquia. She is not yet 24 years of
age and is a perfect type of oriental
beauty. Dark of eyes and hair, lithe
of form and with skin the. complex-
ion of a sun-kissed peach*
A marvelous woman is this beauty
from the orient. She speaks English,
Spanish, Italian, French, Russian,
Swedish, Egyptian, Algerian, Danish
and the dialects of the desert, such
as Skellah.
She sings a pure contralto that
suggests the land of the cypress and
myrtle, and she dances as only the
oriental can dance.
The dancing of Princess Torquia,
however, is not the hopping motion
HYGIENE OF PERFUMES.
*e Olden Time* >le<lical Properties
Of \urieil Power W ere Aaeribetl
lo \ urloun Seen In.
Science at present shows a tendency
to turn back to some . f the beliefs of
the ancients regarding Menu. Cen-
turies ago scents were accounted more
than luxuries, Pliny records 85 rem-
edies derived from odorous rue, 41
whose base was mint, 32 balms from
roses, 22 from lilies, bulb and bloom,
and 17 medicaments strong in the vir-
tue of violets. Thus it appears that
the violet cure for cancer is among
the very new things that surface sci-
ence scorned because they were so
very old.
Now, say various experts, one must
choose and use perfumes with an eve,
or, rather, a nose, to health. So it fs
worth while to pet down the proper-
ties attributed to various perfumes.
Pure violet essence is sqid to be espe-
cially suitable to nervous people. Hut
it must be ohtaiined from the flowers
themselves, not the chemical imita-
tions.
True flower see: ts are obtained by
three ways first, by spreading fresh
blossoms upon glass thickly smeared
with pure grease, letting them stand
in the sun, and as they wither replac-
ing '.hem until the grease is as fra-
grant as the flowers; second, by re-
peatedly infusing fresh petals in oil,
and, third, by infusing them in ether.
which is then distilled to a dry solid.
After all the scent possible has been
extracted from the grease it is still
fragrant enough to make the very
finest perfumed soap.
All the citrine scents- bergamot.
neroli. orange flower water—are re-
freshing, and in a degree stimulating,
if properly prepared. To make a last-
ing perfume some animal base is es-
sential--musk, civet or ombergis. If
the base is too strong, it makes the
flower scent curiously irritant. Peo-
ple who feel themselves faint in a
crowded room are often the victims of
several scents simultaneously attack-
ing the nerves. A single odor, no mat - j despair.
ter how strong, after awhile deadens i pictures.
the olfactory nerves, whereas aeombi-1 tells of «• in i 1 war. Of the hus*
nation keeps them active. . j bandman watering the ground with
Lavender is peculiarly suited to high- blood, plowing it with swords, root-
strung temperaments. It is soothing i ol,t weeds, plucking flowers, fell-
as well as refreshing, without being trees or sowing it with corpses
unduly stimulating. Jasmine should al-I It tells of a monarch assembling
ways be used pure. A1 ne it tones [ armies, making war. taking pris-
and braces the whole system, but in oners, inviting bis subjects to a fes
almost all its compounds is singularly j tival or citing them to judgment,
depressing. Neroli is the exception. i All these dances are done to orient-
Ja-mine and neroli together in faint *1 music, of which the west has read
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M I.I.J
TORQUIA, OF MOROCCO.
of the limbs familiar to Europeans
nor the salacious muscle movement
introduced by a low order of orienta
entertainers.
It is a wonderfully graceful sway
ing of the limbs, arms, feet and legs
with which the body keeps rhythm
It is a dance that tells a story* with
the clearest of pantomime, it fea
tures love and hate and ambition and
It gives majestic history
rssence make the scent of scents for
nil who have hysterical tendencies.—
"Washington Star.
CHARMED BY EDNA MAY.
rnMeinntiiiK Nrw York Aetrean Una
Made n Deep I in pre mm ion on nn
Indian llnjnh.
Edna May, the fascinating New York
actress, who is appearing in "Kitty
Grey" at the Apollo t heater in London,
lately made a great conquest, that of
Kajah Kumar, the son and heir of the
maharajali of Kucli Behar, one of the
wealthiest of the Indian princes and
a well-known figure in London society.
Kumar has become absolutely Edna's
Fhadow. He is to be seen about with
her everywhere — shopping in the
West End, motoring in the park, lunch-
: T
• ^ yt/< -
mkrrvii
Wml VlMfi
EDNA MAY AND HER RAJAII
/ng and dining at various restaurants,
while every evening he sits admiring
her from the stalls.
He has loaded Edna with splendid
presents.
The other night she made a decided
sensation at the Savoy hotel by ap-
pearing in a very smart frock blazing
with all the Kuch Hehar crown jewels,
valued at nearly $2,000,000, which were
presented to her by the rajah.
This came to the ears of the luaha-
rajah, who forthwith \i.-ited Edna and,
according to the New York World, de-
manded that she restore the gems,
which, besides being of immense value,
are crown property, and it is not in
the power of anyone, not excepting
himself, to give them away.
Kuch Hehar is a native state of neu-
ral, India, a trifle larger than Kln.de
Island, very fertile and. like most In-
dian states, very rich.
It has a population of about 000,000
persons.
The muhnrajah. or sovereign. U en-
titled to a salute of 13 gun- not so
many as some of the other native ja mixture of salt and vinegar
rulers, but enough to show that he I salt is best for this purpose.
but only its traveled ones heard.
In these dances her cousin, the
Prince Abbas Hen Omar, accompan-
ies her on the musical instruments
peculiar to the cast.
Their effectiveness is enhanced bv
the glory of the costumes of Princess
Torquia. One of these costumes is
of a rose-tinted satin tunic, embroid-
ered with golden sequins.
! The overgarment is of slashed sat-
I in and an oriental swathing of rich
stuff. Her bead is covered turban
' fashion.
She left, her native country* three
years ago and is making a tour of the
, world with licr cousin, Prince Abbas
; Hen Omar.
i She has danced before all the
! crowned heads of Europe. Prince
i Oscar of Sweden was particularly
j gracious to her and presented her a
complete set of miniatures of the
royal family in gold frames studded
with diamonds.
In Paris President Loubet present
cd her with a white silken scarf on
which are inlaid in letters of gold
"Elysee, 19 Aout, 1900." While in the
French capital she met Eugene, the
red prince of Sweden, who has sine.;
renounced his right to the throne to
marry Miss Wild, of Baltimore.
GLOVES AND HOSIERY.
Open-Work I.nee Stockinet) nnd Deli*
cute I.nee Gloves Are in Hifch
Favor Just Mow.
Long lace gloves, long lace mitts
and long silk gloves w.ill be the top
of t'.ie mode during the summer ami
entirely supersede kid gloves except
for full dress occasions. Some of
these are of hand-made lace and ex-
ceedingly fine and costly, but there
will be variety enough in quality as
well as price. Open-work silk gloves
will be equally fashionable and much
less costly than the lace.
The open-work, or lace stockings, as
I they are called, show how the man-
j ufacturers of Europe have vied one
i with the other in the production of
. fantastic, wonderful specimens of
I textile art. They come with an open-
i work ankle, boot-top or all-over ef-
fects and tip-and-down stripes as
; well. Some of them have embroidery
j betw.een the lace stripes. Hose come
in lisle and cotton, with extracted
! designs and in all colors of summer
; gowning fabrics, so that it is possi-
ble to match the color of every gown
in hose to wear with it. House shoes
are sometimes made of the material
i of the gown, if it be heavy* enough.
| The latest shape in dressy shoes is
j ankle high, with an opening two
inches wide over the top of tTie in-
step which is* laced with narrow rib
bon. —Cincinnati Enquirer.
How to Clean Deenntera.
Decanters and carafes may b*
leaned easily on the inside bv uslncr
Rock
Shake
a ! a potentate of dignity and power. I until stains disappear.
ffifes
JOHNNYS
rfn V
[K'llMI
HISTRY LESSON
things at school
. think, of all th
A boy has got
That studyin* hlst'ry, as a rule,
Is worst of all, don't you?
Of dati s iii, r, are an awful sight.
An* though I study day an' night.
Then's only one I've got just right—
That's fourteen ninety-two.
Columbus'crossed the Delaware
In fourteen ninety-two;
We whipjuu ti,. British, lair an' square,
In fourteen ninety-two.
Wi whipped the Britlfhi Cair &n* iquui,
In fourteen ninety-two.
At Concord an' at l.< x ing ton
W ki pt th r<d-< i- n the run
While the band : 1 ijred .) hnny Get Your
Qua,
In fourteen ninety-two.
Pat. Henry, with h s dyin' breath—
In fourteen ninety-two—
Said : "tiimme liberty or death!"
In fourtei i. ninety-two.
An' Barbara Frletchie, so 'tis said,
.Med: "Shoot if you must this old
But I'd rathe
stead!"
In fourtt • n nine ty-two.
gray
uId be your own ln-
.)• to Plymouth Rock
ft y- two,
t.i: ti iii' on the dock
i.r y.iu g .in' to do?"
W e s . k > our harbordrear
i's chlldrt n's children dear
their forefathers landed
rt« r. nine ty-t wo
Jol:
cahont;
rteui l i
Smith,
fourteen r.i
th- iv:nlth
' c-w t her< a
In fourteen nir.
K< i t ucky was
In f- >urt« i n nir.«
An* 1 think th .
In fourteen nir.*
B. v. Franklin M
saved the life,
ety-two,
i bf« ,me h:.~ wife
ti ted then an' there,
: Smiths i vt rywher.',
r.y Smiths to snare
■ jureped over the moor.
YOUNu EDWIN GOULD.
VI ti, ii UK I, II,it Klitht Vr,,r« i>f \a..|I<.
l-i inst Knrc Tnlrnt aa
n "I one; ->la Uer.
>uld family heritage, which
be to make millions out of
lias developed in u new cen-
ter. Kdwiu Gould, Jr., lias set up
in business for himself. This is sur-
prising, for Kdwin Jr., is but eight
yours old. W hat is more, he is much
in earnest over his money making
venture, aid, like his father and
grandfather, has chosen to begin in
a small way. He is in the retail pin
business and bis scale of prices is one
cent for "00 pins.
^ oung Kdwin drifted into the pin
business rather unconsciously, but
bis efforts were well directed from
the first, nevertheless. lie is a
grave child and among bis earliest
reflections was one on the waste of
things in general and pins in partic-
ular. He canceived the idea that the
pins thrown away should be saved,
so he started out simply as a collec-
tor. lie gathered hundreds *>f these
little bn*ss strays and castaways
with no thought of gain.
At this stage of his development
heredity asserted itself and young
Edwin came to the conclusion that a
thing could not be pleasurable unless
profitable. So lie put a price upon
his labors and in the Gould pin es-
tablishment the motto, "200 pins for
one cent," was created.
hdwin had the pin collecting fad
for some time before it was known,
but his unnatural business instincts
. high
'■ .k.v.
FONY IN COURT ROOM.
rent n r<
I.overt Its Master, n I,
, So Much That It Follti
lllni Inside.
frw;
A
i*mI
Henrj* Ward Beeelier, often visited
the courtrooms in and around the city
of New York, where, he said, the wit
and ({iiibbles, quirks and pranks of
the judges and lawyers made better
fun than the circus.
'1 here were two scenes, many years
ago, enacted in the I nited States court
room at Frankfort, Ky., which Mr.
Beecher would have said were equal j
to Ilarnum's best. They were well
known to the lawyers of Kentucky of |
the olden time. At present we will
speak of one of these scenes.
Hon. T. 13. Monroe, at the time re-
ferred to, was I'nited States judge for
the district of Kentucky. He was
sometimes extremely absent-minded;
when he became deeply interested in
a great legal subject everything else
KDWIN GOULD, JR.
cropped out one day at a dressmak-
ing establishment where be was iu
company with his mother.
Mrs. (jould noticed that for some
time her little boy had seemed fond
of going with her to the dressmak-
er's, and sin* soon realized that tin*
clever little fellow was not without
a motive other than his natural fond-
ness for her society. He knew that
in these centers of fashion making
there were pins, a really riotous
waste of pins. One day at the Fifth
avenue establishment wl.cn >. rs.
(Jould and a friend she had brought
with her were busily engaged in criti-
cising the various imported gowns
brought out for their inspection, Miss
Ward, the head saleswoman, noticed
young Kdwin (Jould bending over a
spot on the floor where a box of pins
had been carelessly upset some hours
before. Noticing that he was pick-
ing them up she smilingly offered to
give him some.
"No," explained Mrs. (Jould, "he en-
joys collecting them. At home I
sometimes strew them over the floors
just to give him the pleasure of pick-
ing them up."
Apparently unaware of the com-
ment he had excited, the child con-
tinued bis researches, and later,
when Mrs. Gould had gone into an-
other room, and a saleswoman ap-
proached and offered him a hairpin
to dig the more recalcitrant pins
vanished; he became totally absorbed from the cracks, he was so much ab-
in it, oblivious t« the world outside; 1 sorbed that he did not even look up
he pursued his subject to the profound- to reply.
est depth. This concentration of the j Even when she told him that be
powers of his mind, no doubt, assisted would break his finger nails in tlie
him to become the great lawyer that pursuit he did not falter, and only
he was; but it sometimes raised a when she explained that the hairpin
good joke upon him. j would greatly increase his speed in
Judge Monroe lived on that high, acquiring pins did he accept it.
steep hill on the west of Frankfort. "Why do you pick up pins?" she
His saddle horse, on which be rode tasked, encouraged by his gracious uc-
down to court, was a little pony, raised ceptance.
on the hill, where he learned, with | "1 get pennies for them," answered
the goats, to climb the hill and the i young Edwin, promptly. "I pick up
stairsteps of the houses. When ttu | ,.an find, and when I have 200 1
mounted, the judge's long leg* nearly get a cent. I can make lots of
reached the ground,and when seen at money."
a little distance it was hard to tell
which of them was riding; whether the
pony was carrying the judge or the
judge the pony. He was a kind, little
fellow, loved the judge with all his
PONY FOLLOWED HIS HONOR.
might,and when at liberty they walked
around Frankfort as boon compan-
ions— wherever the judge went, like
"Mary's little lamb," he was sure to
One morning, when the judge had n
specially heavy subject on hand, caus-
ing more than usual absent-minded-
ness, on dismounting, totally oblivious
to the pony, he forgot to hitch him,
as he often did, and started off for the
•ourt room, the pony in close pursuit,
and through the capitol square and up
the court steps they went and into the
middle of the court room they walked,
seemingly ready to take seats on the
bench together, neither of them at all
embarrassed. The roaring laugh and
clapping of hands of the lawyers and
the crowd waked the judges from
their reverie, and the old town that
night was jolly as a circus.—Cincin-
nati Commercial Tribune.
( \ftep n Cotnpctrnpj\
Blim—What is Speeder doing now?
Blum —He's interested in a get-rich-
quick scheme.
Rlim—You don't sav so.
Blum—Yes; he is courting nn heir-
fss.—Town Topics.
He did not "stop working to give the
information, and even when Mrs.
(Jould was ready to go to her car-
riage he left the house of many pins
with evident reluctance, but enriched
by several cents.
The Goulds have always known the
value of money, and the earl, com-
mercial instincts developed by the
scion of the Edwin Gould family are
the natural result of influences of
heredity and otherwise. Jay Gould
was the son of a poverty-stricken
farmer in Delaware county, N. Y.
When 14 years of age he started out
to make his way in the world with a
total capital of 50 cents, and in the
next 30 years carved his way to a
fortune of more than $80,000,000.
How lo See (lie Wind.
We know very well when there is
wind, without being able to see it, but
under proper conditions it is possible
to see the wind. Choose a windy day
then secure a polished piece of metal;
a handsaw will be the best. Hold the
metallic surface at right angles to the
direction of the wind. For example, if
the wind is in the north, hold the saw-
east and west inclined about 45 de«
grecs to the horizon. Now look care-
fully along the back edge, and you will
shortly se* the wind pouting over il
like a waterfall
^ /. ■ T'
INSCRIPTIONS CN GL/.SS
nn (I II In *t !ttetlio«l, ni Here l)e-
ftcril: cd. ( an lie I nod with Some
hneee*a l > Xninteurn.
There are several methods for in-
icribing words, letters or decorative
jesi-ns on ^ iass. One calls for chem-
.cals, and is a rather dangerous
jroce-s. Another uses the sand blast
-a jet of sand discharged at the glass
object through a shield of paper,
.lasted thereon and pieced with the
.iuttern. A close re eniblance to the
latter plan for the use of amateurs is
described by the Jewelers' Circular-
Weekly. It is available only for lint
dates, not dishes. The dc.-ign i> drawn
on wiiite paper and then cut out. The
mper must be pasted onto the rlass
ieat I? and snugly, so that there v i 11
be no air holes, loose places, or shreds
overhanging the pattern. The plate is
next fastened temporarily in the bot-
tom of a wo* >den box. with t he in scrip
tion upward. Now dump in a lot of
emery powder and shot, ajid shake
vigorously. In accordance with the
fineness of the engraving wanted, tire
or rough emery or shot are used. J!\
shaking the box well in all direction*,
the emery part icles w ill soon adhere t <>
the shot and give it a rough surface;
they press and settle into it. as if the>
were driven in purposely. Th*- sharp
points >f the shot, thus prepare*!, com-
bined with the rest of the emery, cut
into the glass by the continued shak-
ing of the box, and the c.ngraving will j
ere long appear. When sufficiently '
engraved the plate is remowd from j
the box and the paper pattern washed :
off. St a rs, leaves, scrolls a nd let t ering
can be engraved in this manner. Some
parts, needing not as deep a cut ting a- ;
others, might be covered with a sliel-j
lac solution. This method i> very sim-
ple and economical, and will, without
doubt, be appreciated by every person
of artistic taste.
BIG STEAM HAMMER.
5'Iie Hydraulic Pre** llnw < omplelely
SupplantimI Tlii* Miulity I'ieee
of llueliiiirry.
What is believed to be the biggest
/.team hammer in the world is that
which was set up ten years ago in
South Hethlehcm, Pa., and weighs
tons. This lias been somethiug of a dis-
appointment, and of late has been used
but very little. Indeed, so much bet-
ter results can be secured in forging
with hydraulic presses, that the giant j
hammer is now being demolished and
removed. Engineering News, which 1
makes t bis announcement, explains the j
step in t he following manner:
"l! w as found that in the forging of I
large masses of metal by blows from a '
hammer, even though the ram weighed
tons, some undesirable effects were
produced. As a definite amount of
time is required for the molecules of
the metal to flow, the action of the
blow was so rapid that the compression
could not distribute itself uniformly
through the mass; a a result, the out-
HARNESSES THE SUN.
I lilentui lutenfor lint Sueerciled in
Suliftiltutiiiu Ileal Hu> • for
Soldering Mctala,
i iie sun has been made to perform a
new work b\ an ingenious Chicago
man. lie has hit upon the idea of Mib-
, stituting the sun's rays for the iron
: used in soldering metal.
I .1. 15. Mcrkel is the inventor of this
! new process. Mr. Merkel's soldering
outfit is as simple as the methods he
j etupl' N s in unit ing different pieces i f
i nictnl. It consists of a large and pow-
j erful burning glass and a stick of >^e-
clally prepared solder. With these he
has been able to make "joints" as linn
j as those turned out of any hardware
shop with the aid of irons and heating
|)Ots.
Every one probablx has at sometime
or ot her been t he \ let im or t he per-
petrator of the time-worn joke, iu
which the sun's rays are concent rated
in a com ex glass and focused on the
, hand or ueek, and those who have been
i through this ordeal know the amount
of heat that can be generated in this
way. They learn this from the burn-
ing sensation accompanying the joke,
it is this general principal that Mr.
Ii
/ j !■!!'
' V ■
ilk t; ^
|!v
a
THE BIG STEAM HAMMER.
side of the forging was worked and
stretched while the inside remained
practically unchanged. Internal stress-
es were thus set up. and there was a
tendency for the formation of flaws in
the interior. Especially was this true
of shafts for steam engines, which
were one of the important products of
tin* great forging plant. With the
hydraulic press, on the other hand,
the force is applied slowly and is as
i rong at the end of the stroke as at
i •:e beginning, so that a forging is
nride absolutely homogeneous, the in-
terior of the piece being as thorough-
ly and effectively worked as the ex-
terior. P.esides this, the press is a
more convenient tool to operate and
maintain than the hammer.
"At the time of its construction the
Bethlehem hammer was by far the
largest nnd heaviest in the world, and
we believe it has never been surpassed
in this respect. Briefly described, it i
was a vertical single acting steam en- !
glue with a heavy ram attached to the !
pi; tori rod. Steam admitted below the :
piston raised the ram, and its fall pro- j
liuccd the desired blow. . . The
stenm cylinder had a bore of 70 inches. J
and the piston bad a normal stroke ol
about 10 feet, which could be increased
!o nearly :2i) feet. The total weight of j
the moving mass piston, piston rod
and rain was 125 tons. The working I
-.t«-:.in pressure was 120 pounds per
1 quare inch. The hammer stood about
• f-M't above the ground and measured
feet across at its base."
SO I.I') M It ING BV SUNLIGHT.
Merhel follows iu soldering by means
of the sun's rays. '
The burning glass takes the place
of the soldering iron or tube in his
novel process. The sun's rays are con-
centrated in the glass and then are
focus ed at ti fine point on th.*' end of
the stick of solder. The ad In sive mate-
rial melts, and, falling on the two
pieces of met a I unites t hem as firmly as
under the old method.
Ordinary solder does not fulfill the
requirements of the experiment be-
cause it is so hard that it resists heat
of the intensity of that generated by
the sun's rays through the glass \
special soft composition made of pure
zinc, lead, and bismuth in certain pro-
portions is an essential feature of this
simple soldering process. A special
acid must also be prepared to aid in the
work. This is made of carbolic acid
in which has been dissolved to satura-
tion a certain quantity of zinc, with a
prescribed proportion of phosphoric
acid nnd spirits of wine.
This method of soldering ean be em-
ployed to make connection on electric
wires, to join small particles of metal
in the watchmaker's and jeweler's
trade wherever direct beat is likely to
take out temper or burn precious
stones. In the use of the burning glass
only a small spot is heated, leaving
the ad jacent part unaffected. This is
exceedingly desirable in certain lines
of work, and the joints made in this
way are as solid and durable as any.
There are, however, two positive
draw backs to the sun process of solder-
ing. One is that the solder placed in<
this way softens and dislocates in boil-
ing water or when brought into con-
tact with a higher temperature. But
the chief drawback is that the gun's
rays are not always available, and
without their aid the work cannot l>#
carried on.—-Chicago Tribune.
EANANA RIVALS WHEAT.
I ( In Twenty- !•' i v c TI m e n a * Nutritious
n* the («lven Weight of the
A mcrieii ii Cerent.
Science again brings a new para-
dox to the front. It concerns the
staple food supply of half the entire
human race—wheat. Long before the
discovery of the Chaldean ovens, ages
before Tyre's bread bowls were hewn
out of the solid rock, man grew
wheat, ground nnd baked it for his
daily sustenance.
To-day science aflirms that wheat
as a general food product is doomed;
that not only is the supply entirely
inadequate for the maintenance of
the increasing races, but that wheat
has by no means the highly nutri-
ent qualities that it has long been'
supposed to offer to hungry human-
ity, and that—mirabile dietu!— the
unprepossessing, yellow skinned,
finger shaped, despised banana of the,
tropics promises utterly to supplant
it in the estimation of the world, t
Not only that the banana is 25
times as nutritious as the given
weight of wheat, but 1hat it is 41
times as prolific. Thus fruit con-
quers over the cereal, Honduras over
South Dakota, and famine promises
to be forever banished from the face
of the earth.
The average cost of cultivating an
acre of wheat in the United States is
about $12. An acre of bananas can
be cultivated at the same cost, with
a yield 144 times greater than that
of wheat.
Bananas have 44 times the nutri
ment of potatoes, the staple of many
northern countries of Europe, ami 30
times that of rice, the main item on
the daily board of more than a bil-
lion people on the globe. With trans-.
)>ortation facilities perfected, such'
heart-rending scenes of famine as1
have been witnessed in India, Russia
and elsewhere would be made impos?
bible.—N. Y. Herald.
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Daves, N. F. The Hennessey Clipper. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 10, 1902, newspaper, July 10, 1902; Hennessey, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc105024/m1/3/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.