Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 277, Ed. 1 Monday, July 29, 1918 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Society ant> local
flews Items
MBS FAYE REESE. Ed**
@ TUESDAY. ®
® M W. A. meets In Payne hall. ®
® Junior Red Cross meets in ®
® work rooms ®
® Royal Neighbors meet in ®
® hall. ®
® O I. A. ladles meet in Ma ®
® sonic hall ®
® WEDNESDAY. ®
® Christian Indies Aid meets in ®
® the teliureh. ®
® Rebekahs mee; In Odd Fel- ®
® lows' hall. ®
® Red Cross unit of South M. ®
® E. Church meets with Mrs E. ®
1 li Casey.
® ' THURSDAY. ®
® Radiant Chapter O. E. S meets ®
® In Masonic hall. ........®
® Garfield Red Cross unit meets ®
® In school house. 9)
® Sunshine Embroidery club ®
® meets In Red Cross work rooms ®
® FRIDAY. ®
® K. and L. of S. meets In Odd ®
® Fellows ball. ®
® Garfield Red Cross unit meets ®
® In school house. ®
®®®®®®®®®®®®
-o-
T. L. Blakemore is looking after
busim-ss interests in Tulsa today.
o a a
C. C. Taylor Is looking after bus!
ness interests In Oklahoma City to-
day.
a o a
Miss Katherine Irwin of Kansas
City arrired yesterday afternoon to
visit friends.
one
Mr. and Mrs E B. Nevin have re-
turned from a visit o. several weeks
at various points in Kansas.
o o a
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Daly and
little daughter Dorothy are spend
Ing the week in Joplin, Mo.
ion
Miss Ruth Johnson of Bartlesville,
a former Sapulpa girl? Is the guest
of the Misses Rose and Louise Wilk-
inson
a a a
Mr ind Mrs. T L. Blakemore and
the latter's sisters. Misses Ollie and
®®®@®®®®®®®
S RED CROSS CALENDAR. ®
. - ®
® Monday. ®
Mrs. J. W. Lockrtdce and Mrs. @
® John Bragg have charge of the ®
® surgical dressings department ®
® during the morning session. ®
® Mrs. Don McMasters and Mrs. ®
® Harry McFann direct the work ®
® of the afternoon class In sur- ®
® gleal dressings department. ®
® Tuesday. ®
® ir. the sewing department ®
® Mm J. W. I.«each directs the ®
® morning class and Mrs. E. Wll- ®
® Hams the afternoon workers. ®
• Wednesday. ®
® In the surgical dressings de- ®
® partment Mrs. O W. McFann ®
® and Mm. C. E. Fowler are In ®
•> charge In the morning and Mrg $
® 0. R. Shafer and Mm. C. T. Jen- ®
® nlngs In the afternoon. ®
® Thursday. ®
® Mm. Charles Delmer directs ®
® the morning sewing class and ®
® Mm. L. J. Burt the afternoon ®
® class. ®
® direct the work In the surgical @
® Neville and Mrs. J. W. Leafch ®
® dtrecta the work tn the surgical ®
® dressings department during the ®
® entire day. ®
® Friday. ®
Mm. J. H. Clark has charge ®
® the sewing department all day ®
® Saturday. ®
® Mm. George L. Burke has @
® charge of the surgical dressings ®
® department between 9:30 and 1 ®
® o’clock ®
®®®®®®®®®®®
— ■ o-
Fannie Bryant of Boonevflle, Ark.,
and Van H. Albertson motored to
Sand Springs yesterday.
a a a
On Wednesday, July 24th, Rev. W.
E. Loucks performed the ceremonv
which united in marriage Miss Eula-
lia W’atson and Bob Batterson, two
well known your*; Sapulpans. The
bride has been In tlfe employ of the
local telephone company as operator
for some time and the groom, a for-
mer Frisco employe. Is now in the
w
l
E
'-J
r
h
-r?-
a
Timm
Why We Must Fight
Gra hieally Pictured in
AMBASSADOR GF.RARD'S
Authorized Veasion of
“MY FOUR YEARS
IN GERMANY”
EMPRESS THEATRE
JULY 31st to AUGUST 1st
SCHEDULE OF SHOWS.
11 a. m.. 1 p. m„ 3:00, 6:00, 7:00 and 9:00
PRICE OF ADMISSION.
Adults 25s After 2:00 p. m.
Children 20c 40c to All
From 11 a m to 2 p m War Tan Extra.
service of kin government. Their
numerous fnsod* Join in extending
their heartiest congratulations.
moo
Mr. and Mm. C. Hodges were
the dinner- guests Sunday of H. 8
Williams at the Hotel Onkmore.
a a a
Mrs. Gaither has returned from a
two weeks' stay at Denison. Sher-
man and Houston.
a a a
Mrs. Claude Bone wits returned last
night from a week’s visit with fler
husband at Nortnan
o a u
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hall re-
turned yesterday from a visit of
several weeks at Colorado Springs
a a a
Mrs. Burnett Crawford, who has
been the guest of Mrs. Jimmie Wil-
son at Norman, Okla., will return
home tomorrow. .
a a a
Mm. Eugene Lavender, Mr. and
Mrs. Orva Shore and L. B. Wright accept It.
motored to Wekiwa and spent the
day yesterday.
a o n
W. R. R rum met t and wife of Bum
ford. Ky . arrived in 8apulp* to make
their home with W. A. Brummett.
They were accompanied by Mr. and
Mm. Ralph Brummett who have
been visiting in Kentucky.
JOINED RANKS OF PROFITEERS
Indian Had the Stereotyped Reason for
Increasing Hia Price (or Racket
of Berries.
An Indian In one of the western re*
ervstlons was In the habit of bringing
to Mm. Gray each spring several bas-
kets of wild berries for which, from
time immemorial, he had always
charged 50 cents a basket. A few days
ago he paid his annual visit to Mrs.
Gray's back door. The maid took the
berries and tendered the usual pay-
i ment. The Indian shook his head.
••One dollar s basket now,” he said.
] The maid called her mistress and ex- !
' plained the difficulty. Much surprised.
Mrs. Gray again offered the money tn
N. D. Menifee speut yesterday at
Norman visiting the 8apu1pa men
who are taking radio training there.
O O O
Misses Margaret McFann. Maree
Cobb, Vera Bonewltz. Bob Quinn,
Kate Dethridge, Nina Reed, Daisy
Wills of Mounds, Gwendolyn McNiel,
Messrs Lawrence Hill, Joe Quinn,
Jack Marshall, Watson Wise and
Can Im raham. Mr. and Mrs. W. C.
Wagner, Mr. and Mm. Merle Me-
the Indian, who once more refused to on
’’Why is this?" asked Mrs.
Gray. “The baskets are the same site
ns usual, are they notT"
“Yea."
"And the berries are not scarce this
year, I know, because I hare seen
bushes loaded down with them on my
rides about the country here.”
“Yes.”
“Well, then, why isn't fifty cents a
basket enough?”
The Indian shifted from one foot to
nnother quite calmly. “Hell big dam
war somewhere, be announced: "Ber-
ries one dollar a basket now.”
WASP MUST HAVE REASONED
flBa* on Record Where Insect Used
•tone as Hammer to Pound Dirt
More Firmly. .
go far ns known, only one small In-
Met—a wasp of the nphox family—
among the millions of creatures belong-
ing' to s lower order than mnn. has
ever employed the aid of a tool tv ac-
complish a desired result. The mother
wasp of this futility digs a tunnel In
the ground. de|«oslts her egg In It nnd
provides a catei pillar stung to death
or to a condition of paralysis for her
baby to feed on when hatched. The
grub subsists u|m>ii the caterpillar un-
til It passes through the pupa stage
into the perfect winged insect. Then
It digs Its way out of the tunnel and
begins Its life above ground a- a
wasp.
But after the mother wasp has made
Its tunnel, and deposited the egg. It
finishes Its task by ramming down pel-
lets of earth, little stones, etc.. Into the
mouth of the tunnel. This Is the race
habit of these wasps. It Is recorded
KhHO strioes in surgery
undoubted authority that one In-
ventive mother, when the month of the
tunnel was covered to a level with the
rest of the ground about It. brought
a quantity of fine grains of dirt to
the spot, cud picking up a small pefc-
ble In her mandibles, used it as a ham-
mer In pounding them dow n w ith rapid
■trokes, thus making the spo as firm
and as hard aa the surrounding sur-
face. Then she departed, brought more
dirt, picked up the pebble again and
used It as a hammer, us before.
War Has Brought Discoveries That
Alleviate.Fun and Heal the Most
Dangerous Wounds.
“Wpp" Is one of the new words that
will he added to the dictionary us the
direct outcome of the war. “Blpp" ts
a combination of bismuth. Iodoform
and paraffin paste, and Is the name
gft-en to one of the most Important
surgical discoveries of Dr. Rutherford
Morrison, a famous operative surgeon
of Ia>ndon. It exercises a strange
charm upon the treatment of danger-
ous wounds.
In the early days of the war doctors
employed the older forms of curative
surgery, w hich entailed long periods of
suffering to the wounded soldier. By
the new process the destroyed tissues
and Infected areas are excised, the
parts thoroughly drenched with pure
spirit, and after the application of a
thin layer of “blpp" the wound can In
many cases be sewn up Immediately
with every prospect of primary union
and no further distress to the patleng
Even wounds associated with bone In-
juries or damaged Joints, have been
successfully treated by this method,
and compound frttvlufi-s have lost
much of their seriousness.
i -7*, •* ’
i jfe
JUS
vSF: jj
1 s. ' . ^
% /
Met Sir Walter Stott.
The Rev. John Douglas, said to have
Mahan. Mis. Bess Potter and Char** 1 |£"‘W*J £ad Walter Sroti
alive, died receotly. He was ninety-
four years old and had been a residwt
of Minnesota for 50 years, says Min-
neapolis Tribune.
On his nlnety-tlilrd birthday. Rept, 11.
1016. Mr. Dougina described In detail
bis seeing the author of the Waverly
novels In 1831. With his father, the
Minneapolis man was driving In aa
old-fashioned, high-seated rickety gig
along a road near Atibojsford. Scot-
land, when “a fnnny-hioking little man
with a queer Scotch bonnet on his head
nnd gnarled stick tn his hand,” hailed
them.
Mr. l»«uglae tether -checked his
horse nnd chatted with the man for
15 minutes. Afterward the ytiwagsler
was told tfcnf the little -mnn was none
other .bun the -noted s-uthor. During
the last ”<T yean persons who could
boast of baring Men Scott alt-vc have
Itecome fewer. Two years nn> It whs
practically conceded teat Mr. Douglas
had sole claim to the distinction.
Potter spent the week-end at the
Country club.
o o o
Dr. Leo Smith has opened offlees
with Dr. Bone and Dr. Nichols In
rooms No. 3 and 4, Odd Fallows
ouildlng, for the iieneral practice of
medicine. Calls wll] be answered
night or day. Phone 580. 27<e6t
-o- ■
Misses Ruby and Anna McEuen
arrived last night from Kansas City,
where they spent the week.
a a a
Dan Quinn of Savannah, Tenn . Is
the guest of his sister., Mrs. J. T.
Maddox.
o o o
Miss Wllla May Barnhill of Sa-
vannah. Tenn , Is the guest of her
uncles. J. W. Maddox and J. T. Mad-
dox.
NOT WISE TO GO HUNGRY
Are You Knitting For the Red Cross ? J
They Need Your Help
Writer Criticises the “No-Breakfaet”
Fad Which Still Retaina a Held
on Seme People.
A few years ago someone started a
boom for the hreakfastleaa day as con-
ducive to longevity. I know persons
who have clung stubbornly to this ab-
surdity. Meredith Nicholson writes In
the Yale Review. The despicable habit
contributes to domestic unsoctablllty
and Is, I am convinced by my own ex-
periments, detrimental to health. The
chief business of the world ts trans-
acted In the morning hours, and I am
reluctant to believe that It Is most
successfully done on empty stomachs.
Pasting ns a spiritual discipline Is, of
course, quite another thing, but fast-
ing by a tired business man under med-
ical compulsion esn hardly be lifted
to the flattc of things spiritual. To
delete breakfast from the day's pro-
gram Is a sheer cowardice, a ctw
fesslon af Invalidism which la well
calculated to reduce the powers of
resistance. The man who begins the
day with a prescription thst sgts him
apart from his neighbors may ven-
ture Into the open Jauntily, persuad-
ing himself that his abstinence proves
hh. superior qualities ; but In hts heart,
ts say nothing of his stomach, he
knows that he has been guilty of a
sneaking evasion. Tf he were a nor-
mal. healthy being he would not he
skulking out of the house hreekfaat-
leas. Early rising, a prompt response
to the breakfast bell, a Joyous hresk-
, lng of the night's fast, is a rite not te
be despised In civilised homes.
A lie*l ion o r
I low about that Sale
thi-* fall? Lets talk
it over. Farm ualeR
a Specialty,
It. BENNETT
Phone OX15
Off. FARRIS
DENTIST
Office Over
Cowman's Pharmacy
IM reef l«m
Otitcr Hours 0 •• 1M-1 fe S
(Meins r i. a
Telephone 63 _
Art. L.
walker
Always a Democrat
Candidate to Suc-
ceed Himself
As
A Cool Breeze
All Night Long
will summon peaceful, strength-building slumber
on hot nights that would otherwise be unendurable
An Electric Fan
of the oscillating type will keep fresh air circulat-
ing in your bed room all through the long warm
night, enabling you to sleep and to arise completely
refreshed in the morning.
An Electric Fan is a hot weather comfort nec-
essary every hour of the day or night.
Get yours today at any dealers or from us.
Telephone 192
Football In China.
The Chinese, first as they were in
many things, were first In the field
with that winter pastime we regard
as peculiarly our own—football. They
played football from very early times,
at first with a ball stuffed with balr,
but from the fifth century with an In-
flated bladder covered with leather.
Even In the earliest days the game j
bad Its own literature, giving the tech- |
I nlcal names and positions of the play-
ers and enumerating at least seventy
different varieties of kicks; but per-
haps the most striking matter so re-
corded was that concerning the re-
ward of the players: “The winners
were rewarded with flowers, fruit and
wine; and even with silver howls und
brocades; while the captain of the los-
ing team was flogged and suffered
other Indignities.”
We Don’t Tree*
We Don’t Weal
We don’t guarantee »
core.
We Do Adjust
The Spinal Column
And make correction*
Nature does the work
J. A. Berton, D. C.
Cktropratlot
Office Hours: P to 11: 2
to 6; 7 to 8:
211 lerninin lino tan 35*
L. CONNER
All Kinds
Carpenter Work
Repairing dope ptfmj'lly
Phone 693
Checks Llttlo Used in Francs.
Checks are not much used and are
seldom accepted la France. There Is
bnt little attempt to identify the payer
of a check and anyone who either
make* out or accepts an order to pay
done so at his peril. The public tax
collector will have none of them, and
the taxpayer has to staad In line with
bis bank hills In the back yard or In the
garret of the precepteur. or else be
mutt! go to Jail for nonpayment. He
cannot send a check. There la no clear-
ing house In Parts. Banks settle their
adoounta with one another by sending
uniformed messengers, who carry cash
throng!! the streets and who stand In
line before the cashiers’ windows
waltiag to get their exact change.—
John N. Anderson tn Centnry Mags*
sloe.
Away With DEADLY POISONS
RAT C
KIUS BATS MICE AND GOPtifPS
IMMil
Central Drug Store
Sapulpa* Okla.
Mr Walker's coni pc'- !) and elfp
dency hear th« el ibr« <r
years service m lie office of the
Stale Corporation Cnnimisstnn. t)f
unquestioned Integrity and t»h'h pur-
pose, In the prime ol n,.iMhood, Mr.
Walker ha.« won the .:dmiruUot> and
vonfiden<e of all men who have
transacted business wtL'u him and
his official acts have merited ap
proval.
No candidate for pwhiK office lias
more extensive acquaintance among
Oklahoma's public men than Mr.
Walker and all of them gladly bear
witness to hts qualifications Among
those who express tbeir unstinted
faith In Mr Walker s ability and ca-
pacity to continue as <lorporatton
Commissioner ts ConrrenaaMa RcAtt
Kerris of the Sixth ltifrtrtet. who
has known Mr Walker intnnntc'y
fer many years.
Crown prince's army iu dutircr.
Read the latest reports vY«r/ day •ri- t
The Herald. . - •
“ 6 ——
i The cheapest melLod of adv*: tax-
ing. and the sure*', ts tn the r1ss«'P *"
I tied column of The Herald
While the v.nr 1* going on keep
Posted. Today's happening* will «
history. Read the Herald ,
Find lost article* w Ih a U-n M
"I*rst” liner Its th» cheapest and
quickest way.
DR. H. B. HAAS. Specialist
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
GLASSES FITTED
Burnett Building. Phone office
and Residence 554
SapulpaEJectricCo
22 S.OUTH-3 PARK STRJEET
DH. A. J. NICUOLS
Oaleopbathie Phyairian
Phone: Office 580; Residence 1340
Office in I. O. O. F. Bldg.
Today’s Bargain
Very complete 4 room house
out buildings, lot of fruit,
woven wire fence, beet
well, half block car line.
91900 cash.
TODD
Realtor, over poetoffwe
Aristotle's Prescription.
A balsam for every til, an ease for
every aebe, la translated by Steel*
from the "Secretuni Secretorum," sup-
posed to have heed written by tha
philosopher Artetotte for his pupil,
Alexander the Great. The concoct!cm
consists of Julcea of various fruits
boiled down and seasoned with musk,
ambergris and sloes, various highly
expensive olle aalted liberally with
powdered pearls, rubles, sapphires,
amethysts, emeralds, gold. etc., all bw-
lag guarded by appropriate magical
precaution*.
Alexander, however, died at an early
W age from excessive Imbibing, not of
the detectable mixtures prescribe* by
hia mentor, but of the Juice of tbo I
■rape. I *
................‘“rivmiimii
SPRINGTEX is the underwear
with a million little springs in its
fabric which “give and take’’
with every movement of the
body, and preserve the shape of
the garment despite long wear
and hard washings.
It ia the year around underwear, light,
medium or heavy weight, as you like*
“Remember to Buy It—
You'll Forget You Havu It Oa"
Atk Your DtmUr
UTICA KNITTING CO, Makars
Salts tssta: 339 flrsstesy. Ns* Ttrb
*WH4WWWHH»M»WMWM>WWW I
5 '
V
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Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 277, Ed. 1 Monday, July 29, 1918, newspaper, July 29, 1918; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1519550/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.