The Tulsa Chief. (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 21, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 3, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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The Tulsa Chief
G W Henry Ed .v Tub
1ULSA.
The Wright* are h'J ight
Seine of the < i tiMil.- ar-
ituibeiation.
tn Africa are hr.xl the .-hot,
around (he world
The umbrella man
’•.red far a rainy day
alway
beard
pre
f.....
Paiefii
ig’s
Most Tempting
Art for the
Dilettant
- Appea
l
* By MARCEL PRLVOST.
■ii hn Jordan, an old resident of Creamery Meeting
' s-Va^^rssss'
a, tdent tie -as thrown vio- th(. fo|!owicK bflJ (1‘of directors *
lentlv to the ground when the rig elected- E j.
I.it the curb, and suffered bruUes janiPg
» -rh may result in traumatic preu- ,
taenia. i *
Orr, J.
>1.1 Is, J. X.
H. Cory and
Stitos,
G A
Cuba and Porto Hico mi. t get out
Hn le Sam's bad boy cla-
I»r Wilc-y says that '*0 p. r rent of
'tie Honor sold u whisk) - t» ft i
*ut ti iay it prod it i r.'t
I he arrival ot twins eau* d a I’enn-
• ylviif,fit fanner to Cio.iinlt s-il.-id' It
*»« altogether "two much of u rood
•hlnf.
During the recent heavy storm the
hot c of C. S. Wolfe, north of \Ya-
tons i was struck by lightning, Mr.
Corn Crop Out.
The corn crop has been cr short
I b.v the dry weather at Ha.Teyville.
oni- tli d. lnit cot on bids fair to
make a flue crop if nothing happens
I to ( tit it short. Oats made n tine
rop this season.
\l\TI\t;, I I, hue, is jrntting to lie (he most tempting arl
f..r tin- tit! itant. more tempting even than mimic. There art-
more pninter- than there are musicians, writers, than every- !
thing el<e. almost. Then1 are infinite mtmlvers of them. The__
m .-t modest haibjitet of painters reunite.- hundreds of guests. Dislocated Hip.
•M t\it> exposition modem paintings rover it large ana of Mac |,’ord- who ,lvo* west of
' ll U *' 11 ,r to them; volunteers of art is located hip as the result of a fall
Th' l-ict l! it ito liiiatuia! hail induces the greater iart of 1,01,1 Id51 horse. He was riding when
• ” 1 I the horse erared, falling back on
him and injuring hint severely.
Minister Resigns.
Kev. W. A. Wherry, pastor oi the
Kir-t Christian Church at Norman,
has handed in his resignation to take
enert Seyt. 1. Rev. Wherry has
‘ ' ii in poor health recently and be
i esigns to take an indefinite vaca-
tion.
New Fraternity Home.
A contract was let this week for
the construction of a new *3,500 res-
idence at Norniau to ho occupied
'■y phi Delta Commas of the State
University. Mrs. Ulcherson is build
ins the residence.
Nothing hitidir- the n ,.n it of pros
»'>ctty like arbitrary nnd unit-.i.soiiubh
irtion do Uie pSrt c,f oil tn t capital or
«bor
The rare horse take- no pi id it; a
race, lie would much prefer to re
main at home discussing the tn- rii oi
his oats.
r --
No one need |>< surprised to ban
-hal there are grafters in Japan. Th re
were doubtlcs. grafters !ti the days
•f the cavemen.
\ British boo seems to be feared
norc in I’.rltish theaters than even
oco-cola bottles are feared by urn-
tilt os In America.
tin-'- painters to follow this vocation,
i lit majority of jk• »|v 1 c \v!io do not juiim themselves value n
picture, unless it k-ars the name of some notlH] master, only by the worth
ol its frame. Indetd, one'- imagination is to<* weak to conceive what dark
ahyss engulfs those numerous rolls of painted canvas which represent
human kings, flowers lundscnp.-... Where did they come from? Whence
ure they going.* It >s |K»s-ihle (hilt tin sc pictures hide themselves to die?
However, thi- uncertain destiny of their works does not discourage
(lie thousands of this WH-ntioii. Ever increasing mimhcr.- of indefatigable
human hands ar. mixing paints and putting them cm canvas. It would
s.-em that painting had an irresistible attraction for them.
Where, th. ti, d.x - this tempting quality which painting has for these
neophytes come in? Is it possible that they all take up this vocation in
to our inner vt ice, t - a call from God? No amateur who is
reasonable will admit this except perhaps to himself. ]f he think of all
the others he must admit that so many people cannot he ‘•necessary” art-
— . - , w"r’> °f ar< >s by the definition of it an exception. One ha- proof
.□STJrS°<- -■ • ^ - ■«.....- a* p»~»t „
'tut the cad sent hog will make him I 10 val,le the !'*gacies of th. past.
«p|r fTlt in some other wav. j Without even seving them one can confidently state that out of the
it In proposed to raise i *vei n by ’',l'1 1 ’•>- which the Paris Salon exhibits annually the number of
•barging foreigners admission to this' t'c-ally great works ,,f art is decidedly small. The rest are more or less
Th‘- ,de* •“ ' that succeaaful. Leas proaumptuoua than j fa, less chimerical than musicians,
many m- ti of talent who hang up their pictures in salons front time to
| lime admit that they paint for the pleasure of painting only.
I lie pleasure of painting ts complex. While giv-
j ing an occupation for (he painter’s fingers painting is
| not exactly a thing to stir th -nil of the amateur,
i I’he amateur i.- not ret;nired to undertake a number of
V Georgia preacher says it lakes compositions and to pick out t
from *3,000 to *5,000 a year to raise , ,, , ,
a boy If he is raised right, a good frtl,llful n'Prodlu tl°" oi a Ilou
oortloi. of the money must be invested “truant and tlu- amatc ut ha.- gained the name of an art
la sole leather straps j ist. Painting within the limits in which the dilettant
drake Collar Bone.
A. J. Norman of Gage met with an
accident while returning from a
id i .-h ; or'.- house, and he will not be
apt to harvest any this year. His
horse became frightened In getting
out of the buggy and ho fell and
hi oho his collar bore.
County Treasurer Enjoined.
Judge Campbell in the federal eour.
at McAleater granted a temporary
Injunction against the treasurer of
Seminole County restraining the col-
.ection of taxes assessed against
th - Seminole Indian land.
Had Finger Amputated.
I*aul, the seven year old son of
•I-, and Mrs. George Dauner of Heu-
nessee lia.- met with an unfortunate
accident. In some way the Itrst fin-
•i r of ihe right hand slipped into the
coupling of the windmill. Injuring the
Huger so bad'.y that it became tieces-
iry to remove the first joint.
Lawton Bond Issue Sold.
The First National Bank of Law
urn purchased Lawton's bond issue .., -
ot *125,000, voted at the la*t citv 1 Wfmt this letter made public to
elect ion. paying J12N s7.~ Then wen> ®how Hie benefit women may derive
SANTS HER
LETTER
PUBLISHED
For Benefit of Women who
Suffer from Female Ills
Minneapolis, Minn.—“I was a great
sutferer from female trot " lea which
caused a weakness
and broken down
condition of the
system. I read so
much of what Lydia
E. Finkham’a Veg-
etable Compound
bad done lor otiter
suffering women I
felt sure it would
help me, :uid I must
say it did help mo
wonderfully. My
_ pains all left me, I
grew stronger,and within three montlis
I was a perfectly well woman.
seven bidders for the bonds.
from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compotuid.”—Mrs. John (!. Moijmn,
2115 Second St., North, Minneapolis,
Minn.
Thousands of unsolicited and genu-
ine testimonials like the alxive prove
Injured in a Runaway.
Wolf ami the two younger boys ro-
e.-iving a shock. The lightning struck
'.in- ch'mney. tearing off the top, then
ran down the corner of the roof.
nocking off the plastering on the
inside of the house. The telephone
was burned out and a fire started
in the curtains near the phone.
Governo- Offers Reward.
Gov. Haskell has offered a state
•ewsrrt for tin.- captude of John Cur- ______________________________...
ii - Harber, escaping from the state th* efflcicucy of j.ydia E. ih'nkiam’s
penitentiary at MeAlester Feb. d of Vegetable Compound, which is made
this year, llarber was doing a lu"o delusively from roots and herbs,
sentence for ‘ ' ■- *
Chief of Police
17, 1907.
ii \\as uoitm .'l liif» v TCv *IUJ“ luuis duu imruSt
killing Marion Farrell I ^Women who suffer from those dis-
e of Shawnee on Oct ‘TCas1lnPi,)8PccuJiil.rH) their sex should
I not lose sight of these facts or doubt
the ability of Lydia E. i’iukham’s
Vegetable Comjiound to restore their
healbh.
we are running too big a show for u
free *how.
A (“aris milliner has gone insane,
<a>-« a culile ilispateh. A lot of worn
en oyer l.ero are raving about their
flats, raving In much the tsaine man-
ner. wo presume.
most difficult. A
at the edge of a
Highwaymen In Brooklyn who
robbed a drunken man of 65 cents
got ft ecatcncc of 6cven years. No
wonder, with all the modern improve-
•uenta in opportunities, that justice is
•tlRRuttcd when the majesty of the law
•ft defiled for less than a dollar.
From the way in which panic ky Kng-
-Ishmen are insisting that England
will suddenly succumb to an unexpe.-t
«d Invasion by Germany it will not b«
’he fault of is.werful suggestion If
Germany is not hypnotized into trying
’he feat so thrust upon her notice,
Yankee equines are winning re. or
'iition and prizes nt tlie London horse
show. The day of the horse bus hy
no means passed, notwithstanding the
progress In favor of the automobile.
I'ho noble animal has qualities which
uo inert- machine, however admirable
•a Itself, can hope to rival.
•xcrci.-'i- it is one of thus.- arts where invention and
originality have been greatly reduced. A successful
copy of a picture of a great muster with them passes
for a work of art.
It is for tlrse reasons that canvas and hnish
j stand in no danger of remaining idle.
Campaigning in Morocco Is attended
*>y perils other than those which come
iron, the hostility of tribesmen. A
olumn of Free. I. troops and native
soldiers is reported to have encoun-
tered sucli conditions that 34 men per-
ished of heat nnd thirst. That is a
harsher fate than to fall on the firing
line.
Personal
Feeling
Should Be
Guide
By Dr. THOMAS DARLINGTON
Health Commissioner ol New York Cit)
A western university professor pre-
dicts that the iwpulation of the
■ initeo States will soon overtake the
food supply Title fits in nicely with
he theory <,f tiM- other professor who
sa^-s cannibalism is the proper tiling
Food cau be supplied and the |*>pula-
cion kapt down by the simple mode ad-
vocated. which will thus kill two
flirds with one stone. It is not often
'hat tin- learned experts «o neatly
lovetml their theor -s.
'it (he Ue* 1'. an tails to me< f the
•equlrenu nts of the reformers, or
should die, ho will be succeeded by
Abdul Hamid's e t sou. Voussouf
zzitdme, \*l.o - dcr- r i ' * -.! as In every
-espec-t a b * r man than Mehmed.
he tft r. s -;'.i -. arid ;-sc i-.omcr. a
matherowtii aa nn-i a ling :«t. This
fleing Urn cu_s< R >■ ■ ms rather a pity
chat the law of Turkish succession
does not aie th -a to succeed the
'sthsr
What 1 eat myself is not vvlmt I would
recommend as the diet for anybody else.
Perhaps this i- because I follow no theory
in my eating and take what is set before
me. My only care is that the food shall
be fr. -di, a condition which 1 am glad to
>ay is usually evident. Therefore the only
<|ue»fion 1 ask as to my menu is: "Docs
it agree with me?”
Naturally I do not set up mv own fare
as n model, wm-e in that ease 1 find buck-
wheat c.ik>-s and sausage, for example, an
_ excellent breakfast food. That I am not a
vegetarian is not because Nebuchadnezzar,
’•a "frl 'eg. tarian in history, was afterward found to Ikj crazy. 1 eat
s i ‘lx what appetite and . \perienee !;av.- told me agrees with me.
I In reason for this course of diet is that if enables me to work 15
hour.- a day. Perhaps I might say that others should be glad I do not
"hat is ju.Lo-d to be a scientifically balanced dietary, for as mat-
ters an- I am able t" make a speech lasting taro hours and a half. What
* ' ‘I happen to n»v bearers if 1 rr-allj were kept in form by proper
It reminds me that once I -]>oke for two hours and ’^5 minutes
on 1 e evils of alcoholism and when 1 finished half mv hearers rushed
for nearby cafe.-, while the oilier half said that they were so tired they
id ..r wanted to hear the word alcohol again.
hut. seriously, [ should -ay that whatever I mav find expedient in
• ',,vi> anybody wi n wislu-s to fec.1 bin.-elf properly should consult
• m:!y . - - inn, w'. i; <-r or not lie is yet a sufferer from indigestion.
T-.venty-Onc Indictments.
The Superior Court Grand Jur> re-
turned twenty-one more indietnirnts
in a pa ttal report at Shawnee, mak-
ing thirty-five in all. Attorney Gen-
eral West will take charge of the
Grand Jury tomorrow
stall i toda\ he has appointed J. A.
H. Robertson, partner of Col. Roy
Homan of Chandler, District Judg
of Pottawatomie-Lincoln Counties Dis-
trict.
Injunction Is Denied.
sf.-ain the Reid-Flpes Company of
Kansas City from engaging another
u» edit the Oklahoma statute*, claim
ing he had au option on the work.
Prisoners to Penitentiary.
The following prisoners were tak-
€,n to t‘1<> penitentiary by Sheriff
Gov. Haskell Garrison of Oklahoma County: Jim
A sh wood, four years, for manslaugh
ter; i Gorge Wright, burglary, ona
car: Samson Young and Sam John,
son, burglary, three years each.
Hhe will treatyoiu* letter asstrictly
confidential. For 20 years she
has been helping sick women in
this way, free of charge. Don’t
hesitate— write at once.
THE OBJECT HE HAD IN VIEW
Injured by Auto.
Dan Mahcxey, a messenger bov or
the Western Union at Muskogee,
lies severely injured at Ids home as
the resu t of being run down by an
automobile, driven by J. N. Wilson,
pres'dent of the Washington Loan
and Trust Cotnpauy. The boy receiv-
ed an ugly gash in the scalp and
several bruises on his body. Wilson
was placed under arrest immediately
after the accident and released on
*50 bail.
El Reno Taxable Values.
The assessed valuation of El Reno,
as equalized b.v the state board, is
?.>,2j>9,000 lor ibis year, an increase
of more than one and one-ha f mil.
lion dollars over lust year’s valuation
The county’s increase in valuation
for the year is a little more (ban
*5,000,000.
The State University at Norman
has established a prirt'ng office in
ci.nnec ion with the school for turn-
ing out its own primed matter. Tii
do. nrtraent will not bo used in m-
strurLon. A two-cylinder Babcock
printing press is a part of the equip-
ment. The main publications from
this office will be the school bnllc- o'clock
ins issued six times a year, and the
Journal of Research, which is a new
publication. Those connected with
the university will be the chief con
tributors.
Indians in Campmeeting.
One thousand Cheyenne Indians,
members of the Mouonite Church,
are assembling at Cantonment, five
miles west of Canton, for their big
annual canipmoeting, the big relig-
h>us event or the Cheyennes.' Many
Menonite ministers of prominence
will attend.
Farmer Had Not Much Expectation
of Turkeys, But He Was Not
Losing Anything.
A Rhode Island farmer set a ban-
tam heu on 14 turkey eggs, and great
was the scandal thereof throughout
the neighborhood. Friends from far
and near dropped in for to see and
for to admire the freakish feat.
"Sa-ay, Silas,” asked envious lliram
Haggers, ”haow many turkeys d' yew
cal’lato ter git outer them’nigs?”
‘‘Oh, shucks!” Silas answered. “I
ain't, cal’latin’ t’ git many turkeys. I
jest admire f see that peskv little
critter a-spreadin’ herself."—Harper's
Weekly.
WAS HE RIGHT.
Abeut one o: the meanest species
jf fraud is that reported from New
York, where on'.s shi|;cd from the
*est are said to be largely mixed with
jar'.ey to give a larger profit to the
shippers On account of this diet an
•unusual namber of work horses have
lied, the frc.ud not on v thus killing
the poor animals, but also inflicting a
.oss on n class in the community least
«ble to bear it. But the modern b.tsl-
sess pirate has no more compassion
than his prototype of old whu made
ala victim# walk the plank
Reading
Maketh
a Full
Man
Bt REV. THOMAS R. 5LICER
ideals.
The Pittsburg Dispatch advises us
to "keep one unibr. 11a nt home and
suothcr at the office 1> ease send
pour recipe for keeping the one at
the office.
Whitt fate ha- ui
ways of anxious Into:,
it Is particularly so i.li-
the has on the Tori v
■ rpet is al-
i io me, but
<> • arn what
-i rpet.
Man was tliu I
Chicago woman. \
ly the jkm)r male ci.
lanced, despite that
-sip. says a
e how qicck-
e was outdis
handicap!
No liar.l and fa-d rule ns to ethics can
lie has. 1 u .ui commercial success in litera-
ture. The “i»<>st seller" is not necessarily a
had hook, bur, unfortunately, a bad book
is apt to be one of the “In M sellers.” There
arc four reasons for reading a book: In-
formal on, inspiration, entertainment and
t x. itement. As Lord Bacon savs, ‘'Head-
ing maketh a full man," but it is common
olv tv at ion that it makes a difference wliat
a man is “full” of. If a man be fagged
and need entertainment lie l as a right to
any entertainment that restores his work-
ing power without lowering his moral
If the world seem lint to him, and his outlook narrow, many an
author may he to him just ti e inspiration that he needs.
I lie best seller in Hie world is the B hie, and. happily, it is cheap, not
in the popular use. So that af'er all it is the kind of reader upon whom
the inquiry lim-t n.iiip.dly re-1. lN.-n the excitement that comes from
reading looks is as various in kind as the books themselves. The spirit
of adventure is excited in tin hoy by so good a book as Stevenson’s “Treas-
on Island." which is ro to I,, compared with the penny dreadfuls com-
monly le' resen ed hy "The I’ink " >hl-ers of the Blue Mountains,” “The
Buiiy Boy of the ( alien Lye," or "The IVsoned (Jumdrop; or. The Canny
Woman - I.’evenge," And I -• n o St. Pun! got far more excitement out
of being “a day nnd a iii-ht in deep” than nnv vulgar-minded person
has secured from lk. perusal of ' -ee Weeks.”
Karl Beck of Weatherford the
young son of the millwright, became
;o thoroughly carried away with the
carnival spirit last week that he
started a small circus of his own.
He stretched a wire from the top
.if the boiler houuse at the Weather-
ford mill and proceeded to give >h.-
boys an exhibition of -leek rope walk-
ing. The performance went off ac-
cording to program until one of the
slits, in bis shoe caught in the wire
aid he fell Into a pile of rubbish
f.-om the mill. Ho is now temporally
retired from the circus business, on
account of a broken arm ana gash
in his head
A Deluge of Grasshoppers.
Last Wednesday night abou. 9
there was a perfect hall of
grasshoppers for a few minutes.
Grasshoppers *are hardly ever seen
a* (.uymon, and while they have
largely disappeared, there arc a few
-" sDll be s -en. The appearance of
grasshoppers is supposed to he a
forerunner of a big crop.
In F. C. Mingle Caoe.
On the ground that Judge Carney
left Oklahoma Conn y and went to
Canadian County during the trial
of the murder case of Forest C.
Mingle, his attorney filed a writ of
habeas irpus to prevent Mingles
•mo... to the penitentiary tor life.
Sheriff Garrison was starting for
tl< rain when the writ was served.
Biddings claims that Carney had no
ri-’lit to leave the county during
the trial and asks that the verdict
be set aside. The writ will be heard
Monday.
Mr3. Rant—Do you think men are
more clever than women?
Mr. Rant—Some men are.
Mrs. Rant—Who are they?
Mr. Rant—Single men.
Good Knowledge for Divers.
As part of the education of the Eng-
lish naval divers, the beginners are
taught how to save themselves, should
they become exhausted, by allowing
their suits to fill with air and shoot-
ing rapidly upward to the surface,
where they arc dragged into the boat
by the attendants.
Scy Bitten by Dag.
Saturday cvcaing 'ho sun of Mrs.
Sophia McGuire of Choc tali was at.
tacked by a vicious bulldog in front
of the residence of Mrs. Triplett m
East Gentry avenue.
The dog lied been kept chained,
hut managed to pet 'ocso in some
way. and as the lltt’e fellow came
iy the dog attacked him. l-adly lacer-
atin'-' ills heed, face, ami and left
-hou! 'or. Hi-- nose was bitten com
plctolv off. and lie received a scalp
wound and gash over the lot: eye.
Ho also lost one tooth. The boy-
will recover.
Mew Engineering Building.
Plans for the new Engineering
Building for the unovarsity at Nor-
man arrived th s week and work on
the structure will commence at once.
The building will be built out of
the brick taken from the old main
building.
Oil Holdings Sold.
The properties of the Crock Oi'
Company In the Glenn pool, cons
Inp of the Grayson and Graves k-cs
•'ft. aggregating 32a acres, with §00
urrels daily production have been
• urchased by he Prairie Oil and
Gar Company, subsidiary to the Stan-
' ir.l The consideration was $22 mo.
The Standard has m-qu'red milllous
of dollars of oil producing properties
in Oklahoma in the la-t four months.
Canadian County Has Rain.
The rainfall which visited this
region Monday night covered every
tu-ro of Canadian county. From one
to two inches of water fell. Late
corn will be greatly benefited and
even early corn, which had been
damaged by the drouth, will be
helped.
Boctlcgging Ordinance.
-The city council of Norman has
1 essed a very stringent boot eg-
■ing ordnance. It knocks out
•s-oft" drinks having more than
half per cint a'cr.hol, and pjlaces
severe penalties on violators.
SURPRISED HIM
Doctor’s Test of Food.
I A doctor in Kansas experimented
' with his boy In a test of food and
| Sives the particulars. He says:
j “I naturally watch the effect of dif-
ferent foods on patients. My own lit-
tle son, n lad of four, had been- 111
with pneum- 1 during his conva-
lescence did i. m to care for nny
kind of food.
"I knew something of Grape-Nuts
and its rather fascinating flavor, and
particularly of Its nourishing and
nerve-building powers, so I started the
boy on Grape-Nuts and found from
the first dish that he liked it
“His mother gave it to him steadily
and lie began to Improve at once. In
less than a month he had gained
about eight pounds and soon became
so well nnd strong we had no further
anxiety about him.
“An old patient of mine, 73 years
old. came down with serious stomach
trouble nnd before I was called bad
got so weak he could eat almost noth-
ing, and was iu a serious condition.
He had tried almost every kind of
food for the sick without avail.
"I Immediately put him on Grape-
1 ad no say-so in enforcing rhe pro-
likewise the Gulf Pipe Lino Cotnpa- pinds^jmr^h/'com?01’0®®”1 ^
Heretofore the city authorities have N,,ts with good, rich milk and just a
.. „ .... ,Ut]e pJnch
and all fines wen:
authorities
to the county.
New Bank for Ada.
The organization of the fifth
for A.lu lias been completed
new bank will have a capital
of *'’0.000. and will have its
bank
The
s ock
bond-
< 'alters hi the Freeman Building ou
| the corner of Main s;reet and Broad-
way avenue. Tin- officers are: C H
Rives, president: .1. \V. Davis and
V B Donnghev, vice pres'dents; B.
11. Mason, cashier. The directors of
•he bank are: C. 11. Rives. J. W.
I’m i.-. B. ii Mason. M. B. Denaghev
and A Y. Semple, nil 0f Ada. It will
io open for business in about three
weeks.
Erc-.ura^d O.er Well P.-crpects.
S..in.rg a..ether strata of pas pro-
•ucing s. ::d a easur m fully , i<-h-
':| f?et In 1 ...... ... j. s. Dan.
nick t as t_ o.fl : any nt Law cu receiv-
ed nifiL'cr matt-rial euccuragenK-n’
t > l r cccd to greater depths to sc-
care ti e coked f. r commercial pro-
: ct, and the dri 1 are again being
. ert down l.o dr.Is are now to
a depth of 710 feet ur.d rfap'd y go-
ing deeper. It Is now believed that
a depth of 1,000 feet, but if neces-
sary Mr. Dann.ck Is pieparing to
iroceed to a depth of 2.,00 feet.
of sugar. He exclaimed
when I came next day ‘Why doctor I
never ate anything so good or that
made me feel so much stronger.’
"I ani pleased to say that he got
we'l on Grape-Nuts, but he had to
stick to it for two or three weeks,
then he began to branch out a little
with rice or an c-gg or two. He got
cn'irely well In spite of Ids almost
honp’ess condition. He gained 22
pounds in two months which at his
age is remarkable.
I could quoto a list of cases when
Grace-Nuts has worked wonders.”
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Henry, George. W. The Tulsa Chief. (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 21, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 3, 1909, newspaper, August 3, 1909; Tulsa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1172452/m1/2/?q=112th+cavalry+: accessed June 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.