State Sentinel (Stigler, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, August 27, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: State Sentinel and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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k
I I
I I
Pvkbih4 Evanr Friday By Tha
flat Sentinel Publishing Co
C D MILAM Editor and Ownar
Clean streets ana alien mean bet-
'Ur public health
Help the summer charities to help
iUm poor ward off disease and death
'Orville Wright rose to the occasion
"Only a yerr deaf man does not bear
the call of the summer resorts at this
time of the year
Very soon the days will begin to
crow shorter like the funds of the
mu on racatlon -
A lemon ramlne Is threatened It Is
aid Perhaps this Is due to the fro
quency and number with which they
are been handed out of late
Poison Ivy adds nothing to the gen
oral Joy of a Sunday school picnic
Let the management bear this lq
snlnd
If the scorching automobillsts blew
sap their dust In front Instead of stir
ting It up behind they would go more
lowly
Free and Independent America has
100000 hay-fever victims They should
take the matter to the supreme court
a It Is clearly unconstitutional
As no word has been received from
Peary for a good while It is no more
than polite to assume that he has dis
covered the north pole
When you go on your vacation take
long a little something to keep off
the mosquitoes and then a little some-
thing to cure the bites
In this age of realiam why not reno-
vate some of the old saws? How
bout "The typewriter is mightier
than the repeating rifle?"
Here Is a powerful argument for
the more-daylight plan: It would give
the human race two extra hours In
the afternoon to aee the baseball
game
With the capable flying machine
cutting high Jinke the Dreadnoughts
are beginning to wonder If a more
modest name would not be a bettor
fit
"Baseball was never before so big
bualnesa and It waa never bo big a
task to keep the bualnesa going Just
right but there Is never a hint of
crookedness In thst sport No won-
der it Is the national game!
In various European end American
magasinee and other publications we
see a great many articles under such
titles as “Why England Fears Ger-
many” “Why France Fears Germany”
to It seems that there la hardly a
atlon In Europe that doean't fear
Oermany
New Tork continues the good prac-
tice of letting poor people sleep In
cne of the parks these hot nights
An extra police guard la detailed and
everything Is orderly Some of the
victims In stuffy hotel chambers must
Vo Ailed with longing to be poor “for
ne night only”
If you see a rattlesnake In- your
summer peregrinations do not run to
The faithful Bosk Modern science de-
clares that those who recovered
through fts agency In the past must
have owed their lives to a lively Imag-
ination aa the remedy is without
merit
There are dried apples — why not
tried potatoes? Germany is trying
practical experiments In the direction
-of tbe latter economy end several
potato drying plants are In operation
in different sections of the empire It
takes §30 pounds of potatoes In their
norms! condition to make 220 pounds
when dry A brisk market Is found
tor tbe product owing to the advanc-
ing price of grain
How wealth may be piled up quietly
nd amazingly is Instanced in Eng-
land where the death of a compara-
tively unknown resident of Reading
where he lived practically aa a recluBe
reveals that he iert an estate of $30-
000000 to $73000000 from which the
government will collect about $10000--000
In death duties and succession
taxes The most successful men are
mot always those who make the great-
at stir In the world
' The German company which Is
building a non-rigid dirigible balloon
with a lifting capacity of 54 persons
Las evidently not been frightened by
tbs fate of the big non-rlgld Cali-
fornia dirigible which broke under the
weight of a large load of passengers
and dropped them to the earth Un-
less the weights beneath a non-rigid
airship are carefully adjusted the
strains are apt to be dangerous to the
envelope when the ship Is driven
through tbe air by her propellers
One of the Zeppelin airships Is to be
permanently stationed at Metz That
town la a fortress in Alsace-Lorraine
which Germany acquired from France
at the close of the Franco-Prusslan
war The German government gets
Its supply of war balloons from Zep-
pelin and there you are France has
teeu Indulging freely In airships for
military purposes but a glance in the
direction of Metz once a French
stronghold but now a German posses-
sion will be sufficient to show that
there are others
STATE NEWS
From AU Over
Will Probe State Printing
Pete P Duffy has returned from
Guthrie where he has been in con-
sultation with the publishers of
papers who ‘ met to confer with the
State printing department A com-
mittee composed of J P Ken f row
of the Alva Record John Easley
of the Ardmore Democrat August
Rust of the Oklahoma City Printing
Company P P Duffy trf the El
Reno Democrat and John Goloble of
the Guthrie State Register will se-
cure all Information necessary on
printing conditions In the -State and
confer further with the State print-
ing department
Strychnine Cause of Death
The sufficient strychnine to cause
death waa found In the body of G
A Brown who died at Mlnco last
week was the report received Mon
day from the State Chemist Prof
DeBarr by County Attorney Bare-
foot The inner organs of Brown
were sent to Prof DeBarr for ex-
amination with the above result
“I And plenty of strychnine” says
the chemist “ample to cause death
Brown waa taken III soon after
drinking whiskey given him and
died in s very short time An ar-
rest has been made In the case
Broom Corn Market
Broom corn la being sold at Elk
City from $60 to $00 per ton The
Brat broom corn marketed this year
came in Bfteen days before that
marketed first last year The av-
erage price Is much better than
last year owing to thn drouth which
haa cut down the acreage The buy-
ers say that the corn la baled
green and therefore not of the best
quality Thla fault will be etlmln
ated later In the season when the
farmers quit trying to get the top
price through an early market
Oklahoma Notes
E C Patton acting secretary oi
the Corporation Commission Bled
complaint with thn commission
against a Guthrie Ice company
charging failure to free Ire solid
and discrlnilnatio between custom-
ers He alleges that the Corpora-
tion Commission Is charged $' per
per thousand for Ice while others
In Guthrie are only charged $450
Looked Like Kaneas Drouth Days
Grasshoppers s million or more
of them swarmed over Hobart Mon-
day night and attracted by the glare
of the arc lights hundreds covered
the pavement beneath the' lights
The strange phenomena la not ac-
counted for unless that tbe grass-
hoppers are migrating to a country
In search of something green to prey
upon
Renders Bank Decision
Assistant Attorney General W C
Reeves has given an opinion In r-
spouse to the question from County
Attorney Hlnch of KlngAsber Coun-
tv in revard to loans and discounts
of banks It is held that loans
and discounts are not Illegal to
taxation and that only the capital
stock surplus and undivided proOts
may be assessed
First Bale at Holdenvllle
The Brst bale of cotton to be
marketed In Hughes county for the
season was at Iwtnar today It waa
raised b (1 J Medli-r weighed 425
pounds and waa purchased by Swaf-
ford Bros of that town at 12c The
"-de up
for Medler
results: For the court house bonds
Killed Monster Centipede aKflnFt 7V °I rlty
Mrs G C Brown of East Main 'h" number required to carry of 13
street Monday killed a huge cMitl-iJ the bridge and road bonds: h or
pede in her house at Shawnee The 1 -30 against 840 or a majority o-
peat measured six Inches long iyer the number required to carry of
one Inch across aud hnd been in 1 238 Congratulatory messages have
the house for several days It Is " to the Commissioners frni
thought that It was brought In with'1'! parts of the Mate and as IhU
tnv“wo'd end eluded capture by
lufklag In dark corners
To Rebuild a Nowata Hotel
The wreckage of the -bold build-
ing destroyed by Are t Nowata
Sundsv night Is being cleared away
and will be replaed Immediately by
a structure Blmllar to the one burn-
ed The company backing the enter-
prise consists of Nowata citizens
Tie building will cost about $100-
000 Plowing With Traction Engine
Joe Hajek of near Medford Is plow-
ing with a traction engine lie has
three gang plows attached to the
engine mnklng six plowslinres In
this way he turns over alout t-lx
or eight fe?t at a time
Indians Having Festival
The Sac end Fox Indians have
been having a big dance feast and
general cnrousal at Charley Star’s
place at Tecumsed and many pnle
faces have been attracted to tho
doings The Indians butchered four
bpeves and a royal feast was in-
dulged In
Hugo Socialist Encampment
A Socialist encampment will be
held at Hugo beginning Sept 9 and
continuing Hve days
At Epworth University
Dr Frank P Davis secretary of
the State Board of Medical Exam-
iners annonnees that Epworth Uni-
versity situated near Oklahoma City
has complied with the statutes re-
garding the graduation and giving
of diplomas to those studying med-
icine Mother of Eleven
The death is announced of Nancy
E Bybe at Medford aged 74 years
She was the mother of eleven chil-
dren nine of whom are living eight
of them being present when she
died AH are married
CONDENSED
The New State
Load of New Corn
C G Motley brought to town Sat-
urday the first load of new corn
It was grown on his farm' two miles
west of town The quality Is very
good
Fire Destroys Bottling Works
The K O Harlan bottling works
at Comanche were destroyed by Are
between 11 and 12 o'clock Friday
night Ixss 3000 Insurance $1500
Origin of Are unknown
James Fisher’s Injury Fatal
Janies Fisher an oil man who
was chushed under falling timber
while working In the Tanah oil
Beld near Tulsa died here Satue
day He was 40 years of age
Railroad Strike
The section men working on the
Poteau and Western Railroad which
Is being put In repair for the re-
opening of the Poteau coal mines
have gone out on strike because of a
wage disagreement
Drew Cllam in Montana
Edgar Cook an employee in the
City Engineer’s office at Chlckasba
was one of the lucky ones In draw
Ing a claim In the Flathead reserva-
tion opening In Montana Toni Dun-
lap of that city also registered but
drew n blank
Corn Fifty Bushels to the Acre
Corn In the Red River Rottoma
near Duvall will average fifty bush-
els to the acre This la the state-
ment of Jake Miller who lives In
this section Iio says that cotton
near Duvall la also in Ane condi-
tion Children Picking Cotton
In order that they may have thn
aid of their children In cotton pick-
ing tlmo farmers of the vicinity
of Konaws hate employed a teach-
er and will aend their children to
school during July and August in
order that they will not be denied
the full year’s schooling
Waa Pioneer in Three States
Mrs M C Wood age I 81 of Mill-
hall mother of Editor A R Wood
of the Mulhall Enterprise died last
night She was s native of Masou
County Kentucky and was a pion-
eer in the opening of three States
Indiana in lH3u lows in 1835 and
Oklahoma in 1889
School Land Department
The State School 1-and Department
will offer none of the school lauds
for sale until adjustments of ai-
pralsements In Lincoln county are
made There are about 350 cases
there for attention In advertising
the new college and Indemnity lands
between 7300 and 8000 tracts will
be shown ' '
Nest of Owls for Ardmort
Ardmore has a local nest of Owls
and a large charter list was se-
cured for initiation on Monday night
of this week at Redmen's Hall Ov-
er 100 will be charter members Will
Wblley of Muskogee has gotum up
the class and will sent for the out-
fit an dlhe goat which will be oper-
ated by tha Muskogee team who will
come here
Ardmore Bond Issue
The $3831100 bond Isane that was
voted on Tuesday baa been officially
canvassed by the County Commls-
nremluni of $''3 Moner and the county election hoard
1 of Carter county with the following
Is one of thn largest bond Isnuea
In the State other counties are much
Interested In how the result went
Bee Tree Killed Woman
Mrs Robert llvliig near Porum
was killed Saturday while watching
her husband cut down a big bee
tree In falling the tree struck
another tree crashing Its branches
and sending them In all directions
One heavy limb struck Mrs Mc-
Clure fracturing her skull breaking
her shoulder and crushing her
breast
Mias Nellie Ikard Spcnsor
At a meeting of John IT Morgan
Camp of Ardmore the largest camp
of Confederate In tbe State Mis
Nellie Ikard of Ardmore was made
sponsor for the Chickasaw Brigade
at the reunion at Chickasaw next
week wlille Miss Virginia Rump was
named as sponsor for the local
camp Both young ladies are daugly
ters of well-known veterans
Hughes County Fair
The temporary organization of the
Hughes County Fair Association was
perfected at Holdenvllle Saturday
with C C I-each president and A
A Avery secretary AJournment waa
taken until Sept 17 to complete the
organization It Is proposed to have
a county fair In this city each fal
Resolution Voted Down
Freeman Smith of Pittsburg coun-
ty vice president of the State Far-
mers’ Union is at McAIester on
his way home to Indianola from
Shawnee where he has been at-
tending the meeting of the union
He stated positively that tlie reso-
lution reported in tbe morning’s pa-
pers reading ‘that we pledge our-
selves to support no man for a leg-
islative office who is not a member
ber of the ranks of creative indus-
try’’ was not adopted He said U
was ved down 3 to 1
Lead and Zinc Near Tahlequah
There Is great excitement at Tah
lequnh Okla over the fact that
Isaac Satras a farmer brought to
the town Saturday' a wagon loud
of high grade lead and zinc ore
which he discovered on s ledge near
the town la-ases are being taken
In the mineral districts along the
illluols river
Tills to Land
Assistant Attorney General Reeves
Saturday approved the title to the
1U0 acres of land selected by t th
board of trustees for the OWUllm-a
insane asylums for the site for tbe
Eastern Insaue Asylum at Vinlta
The deal for the list seres of dand
which belongs to S V Cobh and wife
will now ho closed
Fountain at Ardmore
The ladies of the W C T V
h-ve prrscuted the city of Ardmoie
at a cost of over $500 a handsome
drinking fountain which has arrived
and Is In place U was dedicated
Monday- afternoon with appropriate
speeches and song The fountain
haa s cooling apparatus that gives
Ice cold water to thirsty pedestrians
It is located on one of the prominent
corners of tbe city
Company 6's New Quarters
Company O of Ardmore of the
State National Guard since their re-
turn from Chandler have moved into
better quarters and the people of
the city are helping them fit up
their place as club rooms where
they raji play games read write
or otherwise amuse themselves dur
Ing tbe evening bours Tuesday
night they gave a vaudeville per-
formance in the Alrdome which net
ted them a large amount 1
Clearing Up Lands
Deeds to surplus Osage Indian
lands were received from Washing-
ton this week and a large force of
clerks have been installed at Foraker
to rush the work of reerding and
distributing patent to the Indians
Many applications for the removal
of restrictions on Indian lands are
being Bled and It Is expected that
a rush of homeseekers this fall ‘will
be witnessed Splendid farming lands
can be found in the Osage country
Stole $50 Worth of Matorial
Owing to the fact that the State
Reformatory Is not yet In operation
the Juvenile Court at Guthrie lq a
allure t'aturday the police arrested
wo boys who had stolen $30 worth
of muterlal from the Guthrie Auto
Snrage on Nofth Vine street The
'minty Judge refused to take charge
of the case as he had no place to
Bond the offenders The police made
the lads lake tbe property back and
turned them loose ’after giving them
good scare
First Bale at Colbert
Colbert received the Arst bale for
the season Monday which was raised
by O P Pettis who lives on J H
Holland’s place six miles east of
Colbert
A N LecraTt of Colbert bought Jthe
bale at 12c and the merchants made
np a premium of $1330 which made
Ihe bale bring for the growff! a
total of $6730 weight of bale j450
pounds The Brst bale here ' for
1608 was Sept K while tbe Brst bale
for 1907 was Sept 7
Eagles from Cimarron
The State Board of Agriculture
has received from M M Wilson
of Cimarron County two especially
laik black eagles Tbe birds are
only 9 weeks old but have practically
attained their growth The male
measures 6 feet 8 Inches from tip
to tip and the female 6 feet 2 inches
They will be kept In cageB for the
present and if the become trouble-
some will be stuffed and used to
decorate the rooms of the board
Boy 8hot Two Milea Away
A very peculiar accident haa hap-
pened to the 12-year-old son of Em-
bry Nelson a farmer’s lioy living
at McCloud The boy was drawlug
water from tho well when a bullet
struck him in the top of the head
When extracted ft was found to a 39
Winchester bail with a steel Jacket
It was later learned that a farmer
two miles away had shot at a squir-
rel and It was tho bullet from that
shot
Night Hawks Refute the Flag
Keetoowah Indians or Night
Hawks In tho convention at Big
Tucker Sprints near Tahlequah have
refused to accept the flag which
floated over tbe White House when
President Taft was Inaugurated and
have passed formal resolutions to
that effect on the ground that' it
Is a political offering The Indians
in their resolution declare that the
society is not a political society and
that a convention should have been
railed and the flag presented to all
the Cherokees The society Is but
a small part of the trtle It was
at this meeting that Congressman
Creager was to have given the flag
to the Indians but when he hard
of It bo did not attend the gath-
ering Red 8tore Changes Hands
The historical Red Sto-e situated
between Cache and Indichoma one
of the oldest landmarks In hls sec-
tion of the country aft-r going in
bankruptcy several week ago waa
sold at apubllc auction Saturday to
M S Simpson of loxwton and resold
at private sale to Paschal & Cox In-
dinn traders at the subagency north
of town The new owners will con-
tinue the store at Its old stand
Judge I R Mason of the County
Court will preach a law sermon
from the pulpit of the Christian
Church Suiidiy night tt Ardmore it
being the fourth in a series be-
ing preached there in the absence
of the pastor Rev H G Connelly
Prior to his being elected County
Judge Mr Hasan was a railway
agent These lw aermom have been
attracting much attention and crowds
have been attending The one of
Col Sidney Suggj of the Ardmorite
on last Sunday was published In
over a dozen papera la this and ad-
joining States
Affects Indian Schools
Upon the decision of the attorney
general on one provision of the pres-
ent census act depends the fate of
fifty-eight of the 194 Indian schools
cj the country
The clause which will work such
havoc in ntilan education is the- gen
eral provision which seeks to pro-
hibit the- employment of two mem
bora of the same family In the same
departent of the governent In Iheje
fifty-eight schools the bisbaud is sis
perlntendent and tho wife Is matron
and Ihe combined salary of both
amounts to enough to Veep them In
the service but the sulnry of the
husband alone would bo Insufficient
Thp schools would have to b
discontinued If the attorney general
ru'es that this provision of tile cen-
sus bill refers to all departments
of the government
The interior department has put
the matter up to the attorney gener-
al asking that the “two member"
provision of the law bo construed
to refer only to the census bureau
Suit Involving Feet
At a special session of the circuit
court1 at Holdenvllle Friday argu-
ments were heard in the case of
the state va County Judge P W
Gardner seeking to force that offi-
cial to account for feeg collected In
approval cases of Inherited Indian
lands The county Judze contended
that his acts were individual and
not official and that the fees so col
lected were his personal property
Tbe court held that a public official
being the servant of the people
could not take the time of his office
and record books of tbe people for
the purpose of creating a remunera
tlve business for himself A writ
of mandamus was issued requiring
that the f-ea be reported to which
Judge Gardner gave notice of ap-
peal The amount Involved In this
county In the eastern portion of the
state is In the same condition and
it Is estimated that the result of this
case will affect perbaiia $100000 tor
ail the counties
East Central Normal
Owing to the fart that the last
legislature of Oklahoma failed to
make an aproprlatlon for the main-
tenance of the East Central Normal
School In Ada Toni Hope J W
Hays L J Little J L Barringer
and M B Donnghey Hve leading cit-
iezns of this city have wired the
board of regenta at Guthrie that they
will pledge themselves to raise $10-
000 for the maintenance of said
school until they ran be reimbursed
by an appropriation from the legis-
lature The legislature appropriated
$100000 for the buildings of the
East Central Normal School but did
not make an appropriation for Its
maintenance this year and the cltl-
ezns of Ada are determined -the
money will be forthcoming for norm-
al work this year
Russell on State Capital
Senator Campbell Russell Wednes-
day replied to the open lotter ad-
dressed td him requesting ' that
convention of towns interested In
the location of the state capital
be called for tbe purpose of initial:
Ing a measure In opposition to tho
present Oklahoma City plan In which
he says the movement is based upon
the theory that the people can not
be trusted He announces that the
location of tbe state capital will not
be made a piece of “pie” as he
says other state Institutions have
been but that the seat of government
will go to the district that Is oeffred
othe state at a fair price and is
best located
The same proposition Senator Rus-
sell says waa offered him during
tbe last legislature He will contin-
ue to circulate petitions for tbe
New Jerusalem scheme
Bank Increase Capital Stock
Papers filed with the Secretary of '
State show that the First State Bank
of Ardmore baa increased Its capi-
tal stock from $20ooo to $30000
The stockholders are B M Worsham
of El Paso Texas Mrs Dora Mo-
Donald of Austin Texas J W
Richardson J B Boone and C I
Anderson or Ardmore
Negro Escapes Pursuers
Every effort on the part of the
city and county officers to locate a
nezro who brutally struck Mrs Rat-
cliff In the face Wednesday night
knocking her down bocauae she re-
fused to give him something to eat
have failed The negro went to the
farm house where the Ratcliffs live
and asked for a meal He was re-
fused and brutally struck Mr Rat-
cliff knocking her down The ne-
gro (led and Mrs Ratcliff fired five
shots after him with a revolver !
Btoohounds were put on the trail
but refused to follow It No arrests
nuve been made
Irrigation System
A T Ross a government elvll en-
gineer haa been In the clvinlry of
G jymon for the past week looking i
over th efleld with a view to the 1
establishment of an irrigation dam
In that vicinity soon There are sev-
eral places np and down the Heaver
river that may be satisfactory for
the establishment of such a project
although It will require more time
and further Investigation in order to
determine whether the prospects are
worth while
Hospital Assured
The Indies of Clinton interested In
the hospital proposition have met
with the chamber of rnmmerre in
company with the physicians of the
city Mrs C W Gccdwln presided!
with Mrs C E Gannaway secretary
It was decided to Incorporate a stock
company with $10000 capital and
$10 a sahre Over f200 worth of
stock was subscribed by (be ladles
present A building costing at least !
$7503 Will be er?cted patterned af-I
ter the hospital at Asheville N C j
WORTH
MOUNTAINS'
0F00LD
During Change of Life
says Mrs Chas Barela y
GranltevlU- Vt — “T was passing
through the Change of Lite and suffered
from nervousness
and other annoying
symptoms and I
can truly say that
IydiaEi1nkham’s
Vegetable Com-
pound has proved
worth mountains
of gold to me as It
restored my health
and strength I
never forget to tell
my friends- what
LydlaE llnkham’a
Vegetable Compound has done for me
during tills trying period Complete-
restoration to health means ao-much
to me that for the sake of other suffer-
ing women I am willing to make my
trouble public so you may publlstn
this letter”— Mbs Chas BARCLAY
ItFibUranlteville Vt
No other medicine for woman’i Ills'-
has received such wide-spread and un-
qualified endorsement No other med-
icine we know of has such s- record
of cures of female Ills as has Lydia £-
Finkham’S Vegetable Compound
For more than 30 years it has been-
curing female complaints such as-
Inflammation ulceration local weak-
nesses fibroid tumors irregularities
js-rlodlc pains backache Indigestion
and nervous prostration and it is
unequalled for carrying women safely
through the period of change of life
It costs but little to try Lydia E
llnkham’s Vegetable Compound and
as Mrs Barclavaaysit is “worth moun-
tains of gold ' to suffering women
A CHINAMAN SPRINKLES
hitlM by AqnlRlNf wter
trnm bit auMiih YOi
flirt it fmeu four ftnrvrv
ieithef MMbnd 4iHn haie$
r h w VB if H l sw
CLOTHES SPRINKLER
clnhe wwnlf i half tb Ua and mi
m ronnniwnlj dttrmhi
bum top MiMd for Vw dad do pudA$r
rKrfc: With poor ortir ertir band? patant nstf
separator Uirt fAffilof and vtlnihle preoiaa lint
ev BpeXeHiee ft IB Iktas ft feet
WIFELY SOLICITUDE
' Burglar— Hands up!- f
Wife — Oh John be careful of those
globes you'll break them!
In tha Future
First Ward Politician— We’ll carry
our ticket
Second Ditto— But you forget our
opponent is the reform candidate and
he will get all the women's votes
First W P — Won’t be any women's
votes to count
Second Ditto— How do- you know
they won’t vote?
First W P — Iieca use we have ar-
ranged with the stores to have big
bargain aalea on election day — Balti-
more American
Tapering Off
Whereas I Kitty Cameron have far
too many beuux (They say that I en-
courage them It really Is not so!)
Whereas To mnke life Himple la-
what I most desire for which Just
concentration la all that I require
Resolved That 1 lnstanter before
It la too late agreo hereby without
reserve strictly to- concentrate— to
give dp splitting waltzes and such al-
luring tricks cut down my field of la-
bor and concentrate on six — New
York Sun
THREE REASONS
Each with Two Legs and Tars Finger
A Boston woman who la fond
mother writes an amusing article
about ber experience feeding her boys
' Among other things she says:
'Three chubby roey-cheeked boys
Rob Jack and Dick aged 6 4 and 2
years respectively are three of our
reasons for using anil recomendlng the
food Grspw-Nuts for these youngBter
have been fed ou Grape-Nuts since in-
fancy and often between meals when
other children would have been given
candy
“I gave a package of Grape-Nuta to
neighbor whose 3 yeur old child was
weazened little thing ill half the
time Tbe little tot ate the Grape-
Nuts and cream greedily and tbe moth-
er continued the good work and it
waa not long before a truly wonderful
change manifested Itself In the child’s
face and body The results were r
markable even for Grape-Nuts
“Both husband and I use Grape-
Nuts every day and keep strong and
well and have three of the finest
healthiest boys you can find in a day’s
march”
Many mothers Instead of destroying
the children’s stomachs with candy
and cake give the youngsters a hand-
ful of Grape-Nuts when they are beg-
ging for something in the way of
sweets Tbe result Is soon shown In
gaeatly Increased health strength and
i mental activity
There’s a Reason”
Look In pkgs for the famous little
book “The Road to Wellvllle”
Ever read the-abov lettvrf A aew
-r" i-1"-’-
lalvrcst
laa Irae aad fall at ksauf
A
V
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Milam, C. D. State Sentinel (Stigler, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, August 27, 1909, newspaper, August 27, 1909; Stigler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2027882/m1/2/?q=WAR+DEPARTMENT: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.