The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, October 18, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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Granite Enterprise SlilfE'WIDE
NEWS EVENTS
CHM K. MILL. Cdltor ? •*•
nRANrrn oklahoma
News Notes
OKLAHOMA'S 1*12 CORN
A IUMPIH ONE.
CROR
I inliimr of |h* M<mM I.
| lm| ir<«nlHii|ifM>nin|* ji
I «l Mom* anil Abr.Mil
OOMC8TIC
MAY REACH 53.000.000
Now Catlmatsd that tha Crop of K12
Will B« tho Oroatoat One Cvar
Rataod In tho gtata—Other
News.
Guthrie, Ok—The Oklahoma corn
.. . . tl „ , . crop for 1912 la tba biggest In the
° history, and according lo tho
""I'' ?#, 5£ ** *•« •«-• obtainable will total
liL. W 2 P T*" I *"00,0* bushels Corn la grown in
* J avery county in tbo state. and tba a*-
Contract* bare b<N<n let by tho *pM« yl'ld In tbo state per acre la
board of county commissioners at Ho- Placed by tbo state board of agrl-
bart. okla, for alx modern steel and cu"ur" at 19 9 bushel* Adair coun-
concrete bridges. '>• m northeastern Oklahoma, lead*
with anaieragt* of forty busbcla. In
Hamlin Garland, tho author, la be- tho northern halves of both old Okla-
lleved near death aa • result of In- botna and Indian territory tho corn
Juries received In a Ore which do- crop la exceedingly heavy.
•troy<>4 tiia homo at Fon do Lac, Wla.
ARACMt PRISONERS ARt
BOON TO •( Mtl
Moacaloro Reservation. in Now Mob
Ico. Probable Homo of Tribe
far Pyturo
Lawton. Okla After II years of
Imprisonment on the Fori Hill reserva-
tion. the remaining members of tha
Apache tribe of ludlana are about to
regain their liberty under a recent act I
of congress and atart life anew prob-
ably on tha Meoralero reservation In '
Now Mexico where the tribe baa many I
frlenda and kinsmen It la under-
atoo«l that the committee of the war !
and Interior departmenta In charge of
i'ir returns) baa .!.< (nl ihut reserve j
tion aa tb« future abiding place of the
tribe.
Thero ara 2#7 living members ot fha |
famous tribe of red mm, moat of whom
COL BOOSfVELT IS
RRCtlDCNTIAL CANOIDATC ICR-
IOUSLV WOUNOrO
WORK Of CRAZY FANATIC
Notoa In Would Bo Assaaaln'a Rock'
ata Accuaa Former President «f
Being Raaponalbla for McKlo-
lay'a Death
II" waa hurried to tha Central police
atatlon to avoid a threatened lynch
ing by tho aurging croad present. and
I there he admitted lh « liia name waa
John Hchrenk and that ho came from
New Vork City.
t'llping In bio poeketa Indicated
that the man had carefully atudled
tho Itinerary of tba colonel and that
hla plan bad been well laid
The shooting occurred In the atn-et
In front of the hot. I • itlpatrlck. Col-
onel Kooaevelt reached Milwaukee
ahortly after 6 o'clock, and making hla
way through tho crowd which had
gathered at the atatlon. entered an
Roosevelt at Chicago.
_ i Chicago^—The apeclal train bear-
are descendants of the warriors who , Ing Colonel Roosevelt arrived In Cltl-! >uton,ob"e *nd **• driven to the ho-
in times past, made so much trouble caK„ -t 4 30 a m Tuesday in nr..o ,a®' "" ,°°'1 dinner In a private din*
for the t nlted Htates troops and early 7 ^ I '<*" with the members of the
t tiers of the aouthwest. Very few ,r,,l,on for hl* •n-lva, a cordon of j party on his private car. After dinner
of tha old wsrrlora are left who, led P°llc* drawn up around the ata-1 Colonel Roosevelt went lo hla room
Tba Methodist church at Dixon'*
Cbapel, three miles north of Waxa-
bacble, Tex., waa destroyed by Are.
Tho loss la estimated at #2,000. with
9$00 Insurance. The origin ot the
tiro la unknown.
Nawa has been received at Waco of
tho recent drowning in lirazii. near
Rio de Janerlo, of Wilson Bagby,
missionary to llrazil. The dead man
haa a pent practically all of bia life
at Waco, Tex.
Aviator Joseph Stevenson, wno fell i
from his biplane at the Alabama state
fair grounds, witnessed by 25.000 I
people, apparently losing his pres- j
ence of mind after going aloft fifty j
feet, died at Birmingham, Ala.
N. A. Fowler, tried for the second j
time in the Shawnee, Ok., superior
court on a white slavery charge, was i
found guilty by the Jury. He waa
sentenced to serve three years in the |
penitentiary and pay a fine of $300.
The first jury disagreed. He is the
second of six men under the same
charge to be convicted.
It waa figured by the atate board
that the total corn acreage thla year
would fall about 3 per cent under
that planted in 1911. Hut a amall por-
tion of the acreage thia year was
abandoned for any reaaon whatever,
as the seaaon haa been the beat for
corn In aeveral years. The rains
were more frequent and came at op-
portune times. Practically every
farmer who planted corn thla year got
a crop.
While the past season haa been an
exceptionally favorable one for conr
raising, the crop Is yielding much bet-
ter than waa anticipated.
by Geroulmo, repulaed the federal
troops In 188.1. In that battle Juat
acroaa the Arizona line in Mexico,
which later waa the direct cauae of tho
Improainment of the entire tribe.
During their residence at Fort Sill.
ambulance from the
on the aecond floor of the hotel and
ahortly before 8 o'clock he started for
the auditorium. Hla automobile stood
the government has been very liberal taken to tho hospital the bullet will
in ita treatment of the Indiana and bw removed llnm^,at„,y, Prepara.
they have accumulated considerable . .. ,
wealth in tho nature of horses, ma UoM at ,ba ho P" ' completed,
chinery and personal property. Thi* reated easily all the time during
they will take with them and every the three hour'a ride from Milwaukee,
member of the band is well prepared _
tion and
I*reabyterlan hoapital waa waiting.
but tbo colonel waa aleeplng and It |n front of the door and about It waa'
waa decided to wait until morning ! * big crowd, waiting to catch a
before removing him. When he la I of th® " he atartcd
SHARP PAINS
IN THE BACK
C. ml I
Have you a
ate bach, ach-
ing day and
night/
lk> you feel
•turp | nu after
bantling over
When tbo bid'
new •«« SofO
and tho action
irregular. u o
Doom's Kidney
1'illv, which havo
cured thousands
A Wgihingfoa
Case—
R Hatch. t>t* Cedar Si. Kvvrett.
W'avh . "*r re e«lne !>• mjr bata
mm miarralii, Th h"lne evrra-
Hone burned In peeelns and lo-.h 4 Ilka
bleed Mr back fui eo bod t could bard-
inlk m > >1 any Jmr e*ni hvr|. it
lhr uah me Afler ep*rl«li te failed.
|> an a Kian.jr fllle Colnpleuir cured
me."
(.•I Dou'l at Aar Dr | Store, lot a Boa I
DOAN'S SfAr1
rosTUt-Mii nuaN co.. BufraW.No> Yo,h I
IF YOU HAVE
! off
to start au idnependeni existence.
ELECTION OFFICERS RELEASED I
Men Charged With Denying Negroea j
Right to Vote Give Nominal
Bond
Muskogee. Oslh.—il >ndsmen of |
Bert C. Hodges and George Dooley, !
election officers of Okmulgee county, I
chaged with violating the federal j
conspiracy statutes and preventing
The appointment of Miss Bessie M.
Townsend as city controller was an-
nounced by the city commissioner of
Atlantic City, N. J. She has been
bookkeeper in the city controller's of-
fice for several years and will be the
first woman so far as known to hold
the position of controller in any city
In this country.
A verdict for $80,000 and costs was
awarded for the plaintiffs. D. E. J
Loewe and company of Danbury,
against the members of the United
Hatters' union of North America in I
the United States district court at
Hartford, Conn. Under the Sherman j
anti-trust law this award will be J
trebled, making the total amount
$240,000.
With one run needed to tie the j
•core and two to win, a runner on 1
third and another on second,/'Smoky" j
Joe Wood's bewildering speed turned |
two Giant batters back to the bench !
on strikes for the last two outs of
the game, and the Boston Americans,
had beaten the New York Nationals
on the latter's own grounds in the
first game of the series which is to
decide not only the world's champion !
baseball team for the year 1911, but
the greatest team of all time. The
•core was 4 to 3.
J. C. Masters, alias D. Morgan, 1
wanted in Jackson, Miss., where he is
tinder Indictment b the federal grand
Jury on a charge of fraudently using
the mails in a real estate scheme,
was arrested In Shreveport, La., by
federal officers and held under $3,- .
500 bail. He has been living .there j
eight months as D. Morgan and is I
said to have Invested several thou1 |
sand dollars in local real estate, be-
ing engaged in that business there.
He admitted his identity before Com-
missioner Slattery.
negroes from voting, surrendered the
ment to the United States marshal and
then habeas corpus proceedings were
started to liberate them. Attorney
General We^t argued the case for
the "prisoners." Judge Campbell
look the case under advisement and
permitted the men to be released on
a nominal bond. West contended
that a man was not deprived of any
right guaranteed him by the federal
constitution that could be taken away
by not permitting him to vote in the
primary.
Boy Hangs Himaetf.
Lawrence, Kan.—Verne Stevena. th«
15-year-old son of John Stevens ol
North Lawrence, hanged himself In
a barn on the Curtis farm southwest
of thia city, where he waa working
with his father. The boy was down-
hearted because he "could not go tt
achool and have fun like other boys.'
Murder Conviction.
Wilburton, Okla.—only fifteen min-
utes was required here for a Jury to
convict Thomaa McCurtain of mur-
dering Sampson Wright, Indian min-
ister, and his punishment was fixed
at life imprisonment in the state pen-
itentiary. The murder took place
when McCurtain met Wright in the
road near Red Oak on the night of
January 13, 1912, and beat him to
death with the butt of a revolver.
Milwaukee, Wla.—/Colonel Theo-
dore Ro*evelt, progressive candidate
for the prealdency. waa shot and per-
haps seriously wounded Montiay night
about 8 o'clock aa he was leaving the
hotel Gilpatrick for the auditorium
where he waa to deliver an address.
REQUISITION HONORED
Former Bank Officials Charged with
Illegally Accepting Deposits
Oklahoma City, Ok.—Requisitions
from the state of Arkansas were hon-
ored for the return of I. H. Cunning-
ham and W. R. Cunningham, former
president of the Loard of directors
and cashier of the Bank of Midland,
Ark., charged with having accepted
deposits when the bank was in an in-
solvent condition. The Cunninghams
are in Weleetka.
Coal Company Fails.
Muskogee, Okla.—The Rolen-Darnell
Coal company, owning and operating
five mines in Oklahoma and Arkansas,
was placed in the hands of receivers
in a suit brought in the federal court
here by attorneys representing sev-
eral creditors. W. E. Beatty, a coal
opeator of Oklahoma, and L. S. Mehr,
president of a milling company at
Kansas City, were appointed receivers.
The liabilities of the corporation are
said to be $200,000 and the assets |500,-
000.
Theodore Roosevelt
Who Was Seriously Wounded by a
Craed Anarchist
Stanford Is After Monnet
Norman, Okla.—Dean Monnet of
the University of Oklahoma law
school has just received an invitation
to lecture in Iceland Standford uni-
versity throughout the last semester
of the present year. This, together
with the fact that Dean Monnet held
a similar position in the University
of Chicago during the summer of 1911,
shows the standing he has in the
greatest law schools of the United
States.
Drug Store Robbed.
McAlester, Okla.—The drug store cf ... . . .
C. E. Sillix was burglarized. About "ia .a88ai,ant. captured by Albert
$45 in cash, a revolver and a jug of Martin- one of the colonel's secre-
water was taken. The robbers evi- ^anos' apparently is mentally upset on
dently thought the jug contained the ,subject of Roosevelt running for
something stronger than water. a tb'rd term as president.
The colonel proceeded to the audi-
torium, delivered the address, dur-
ing which he quieted the crowd which
went wild when it learned that he
had been wounded, and then was tak-
en to a hospital where it was discov-
ered that the bullet had pierced the
Candidate Withdraws.
Weleetka, Okla.— Mrs. Stella H.
Wortman, republican candidate for
county superintendent of Okfuskee
county, has withdrawn. The central
committee of the party has filed the
name of Herman Griffith for the place, right breast and had lodged in the
chest wall. After an X-ray examina-
Teachers Demand More Salary
Tulsa, Ok.—With about fifty grade
teachers, principals and janitors
threatening to strike if their salaries
Fatal Pistol Battle.
Houston, Tex.—Officers of the po-
lice department and occupants of a
rooming house at 1020 McKee street
engaged in a pistol battle, and as a
result Floyd L. Buckingham, the
rooming house occupant, is dead,
while Joseph R. Free, city detective,
is lying at the point of death in the
Houston infirmary.
tion he was taken on board a special
train and rushed to Chicago. It was
expected that the special would ar-
rive there about 3 o'clock -Tuesday
morning. The colonel was in bed
when the train left Milwaukee.
With the remark that "any man
looking for the third term ought to be
shot." the assailant admitted his at-
tempt to take the life of Roosevelt.
With the colonel were I'hlllp Kooae-
velt. a young cousin. Mr Cochems, Mr.
Martin and Captain Glrard.
The crowd pressed close about the
colonel and gave a cheer as he ap-
peared. Aa the party approached the
automobile. Colonel Rooaevelt'a com-
panlona stood aside and he atepped
Into the car. Martin entered directly
behind him and sat on the further side
of the car.
Assailant Close to Colonel
Colonel Roosevelt stood up waving
his hat In answer to the cheers of the
crowd. The assassin was standing
In the crowd a few feet from the auto-
mobile. He pushed hla way to the '
aide of the car and raising his gun,
fired.
Martin leaped over the car a second
after the bullet sped on ita way. Col-
onel Roosevelt barely moved aa the
shot was fired. Before the crowd knew
what has happened, Martin, who is six
feet tail and a former football player,
had landed squarely on the assassin'a
shoulders and had borne him to the
ground. He threw his rigkt arm about
the man's neck with a death-like grip ■
and with his left arm seied the hand
that held the revolver. In another
second he had disarmed him.
Colonel Roosevelt stood calmly look- :
ing on as though nothing had hap-
pened. Martin picked the man up as
though he were a child and carried
him the few feet that separated them
from the car almost to the side of the
colonel.
"Here he Is," said Martin. "Look at
him, colonel."
This happened within a few sec-
onds and Colonel Roosevelt stood gaz-
ing rather curiously at the man before
the stunned crowd realized what was
going on. Then a howl of rage went up.
Lynching Is Threatened
"Lynch him!"
"Kill him!" cried a hundred men.
The crowd pressed in on them and
Martin and Captain Girard, who had
followed Martin over the side of the
car. were caught with their prisoner
in the midst of a struggling throng of
| maddened men. It seemed for the mo-
ment that he would be torn to pieces
and it was Colonel Roosevelt himself
who intervened on his behalf.
He raised his hand and motioned to
the crowd to fall back.
"Stop! stop!" he cried. "Stand back; ;
don't hurt him."
The men in the crewd at first were
not disposed to heed his words but at j
length fell back and permitted Martin !
and Captain Girard to carry the man ;
to the hotel. After a short struggle, 1
the assassin gave up and was carried
without resistance out of the reach
of the crowd.
MMt
ltd, ion ; II >uur I<hmI iluee nut aevtmllala
you have no appetite.
Tuff's Pills
wut remedy tbc.e trouble. Price, 23 ccota.
Ml grin KKf'll'Kt and raro o!4 Indian barbt
tVlflilW • B II
* tuc M.a«tlwtwllll tWI1l|Huat,M
SHE COULD ANSWER FOR HIM
Little Comfort for Candidate In Rea-
aon Assigned by Wife for Her
Being Confident
Mr. Williams, one of five candidate*
for the office of aheriff In one of tho
northern countiea of Wisconsin, waa
making ^ house-to-house canvass of a
rural district, soliciting votes. Com-
ing to the house of Farmer Thompson,
be was met at the door by the good
housewife, and the following dialogue-
•nsued:
"Is Mr. Thompson at home?"
"No; he haa gone to town."
"I am very sorry, as I would havo
liked to talk to him."
"Is there anything I can tell him
for you?"
"My name la Williams, candidate for
aheriff, and I wanted to exact a prom-
ise from him to vote for me at tho
coming election."
"Oh. that will be all right. I know
he will promise, for he has already
promised four other candidatea tho
same thing"—Norman E. Mack'a Na-
■* tlonal Mpnthly.
Neglect and Cruelty.
"So you want a divorce?" said tbe-
lawyer.
"Yes," replied the woman with
tear-stained cheeks. "He has been
guilty of neglect and cruelty."
"In what respects?"
"He neglected to feed the bird while-
I was away and says the cruelest
things he can think of about Fido."
Good Time to Do It.
"Is your daughter going to practice
on the piano this afternoon?"
"Yes, I think so."
"Well, then, I'd like to borrow your
lawn mower. I've got to cut the grass,
■ome time, anyway."—Judge.
Accounted For.
"The piece was very raw."
"Then It deserved a roasting."
Every time you tell your trouble#
you are wasting the other fellow'a>
time.
Colonel Roosevelt declares he will
be in shape to proceed on his itiner-
ary.
Asked to Submit Copies.
Oklahoma City.—All Okalhoma
manufacturers have been asked to
were not raised, the board of educa- j furn'sh the patent office at Washing-
Uncle Tom Reneau, the oldest cit-
izen of Wood county died at Mineola,
Tex. He was 98 years old and was
numbered among the first settlers of
this section.
The live stock exhibit at the Mus-
kogee fair this year far surpassed the
exhibits of the two previous years
This year it was necessary to construct
additional stables larger than the old
ones to* house the many entries. The
best and finest blooded stock in the
southwest were brought there, at-
tracted by the liberal premiums offered
and the growing popularity of the fair.
As a result of an opinion handed
down in the supreme court Tuesday
by Justice Dunn, the Campbell Rus-
sell initiative petition, recalling the
Oklahoma state board of agriculture,
will be voted on this fail in the gen-
eral election.
J. A. Cook, of Latimer county,
under arrest and being tried at Wil-
burton, Okla., for cow larceny, de-
cided be had about all the trial he
wanted and quietly picked up his hat
and vamoosed from the circuit court
room.
A general conflagration in the Bai
kans is expected by o ; « ;ais at Paris
Montenegro's declaration of war
against Turkey is regarded as the b.
gining It Is bt. '-ttd other units
the Balkan coal: i ( . . -
as soon a* fh- .. i < f ;f
armies is complete.
tion held an exciting session Oct. 10.
No sooner had the meeting of the
board been called than in walked a
large delegation of lady teachers.
Some pleaded for, others demanded
that their salaries be placed at the
figure they had counted upon. A new
scale of salaries adopted £y the
I board had lowered the salary of many
! of the teachers. No sooner had the
: women left after being assured their
j case would be taken under advine-
j ment, than in came the principals
I with the same story to tell. After
i them came the janitors, ten in num- ]
! ber. Principals and janitors claim
| they did not obtain satisfaction.
ton with catalogues, circulars and lit-
I erature of all sorts pertaining to their
products, which will be used in the
i scientific library at Washington. Con-
tributions are to be made through
Fred W. Barnaclo, patent attorney,
with offices in the Bassett building.
The department requests three cop-
ies of such matter as submitted.
Taft and Wilson Express Sorrow
President Taft was at a banquet I that I hear this." said Governor Wil-
son. "but I rejoioe that Colonel Roos-
evelt has apparently escaped serious
injury." v
Mrs. Roosevelt Informed.
New York—Mrs. Theodore Roose-
velt was attending a musical comedy
for several minutes. He declined at at a Broadway theater Monday night
first to make any statement. Later, at the time the attempt was being
as the news was confirmed, the presl made Upon her husband's life in Mil-
which the mayor of the city was giv
ing Monday night to the president
when the news was communicated to
him. It was evident that the news
was a great blow to the president.
After receiving the news he sat silent
Oklahoma Bankruptcy Matters.
Guthrie, Ok.—J. R. McKeever, p
traveling salesman and former mer-
chant of Oklahoma City, filed a vol-
untary petition in bankruptcy in the
Kansas Plants Move to State.
Sapulpa, Okla.—Brick, glass and
other manufacturing plants in Kan-
sas requiring gas as fuel for manu-
facturing purposes, rapidly are prepar
ing to disband their plants in that
state and relocate in Oklahoma as
the result of the gas shortage which
already has caused fourteen brick
plants to close down. Others are ex-
pected to close down within the next
few weeks. The plants closed are
located at Coffeyvlile, Altoona, Iola,
ident said to the newspaper men:
"I am very sorry to learn of the as-
i sault upon Colonel Rosevelt. and I
am glad to learn that no harm was
done."
Speakers at the dinner avoided ref-
erence to the reports, but the news
soon spread to all and there was so
much discussion of the reports that
little atention was given to the speak-
ers.
Governor Wilson was at his home
In Princeton, N. J., when newspaper
men advised him of the attempt to
waukee. The news was broken to
her as she sat in a box with a party
of friends.
Shortly after midnight Mrs. Roose-
velt received a telegram which evi-
dently had been dictated by her hus-
band informing her that he was in no
danger and making light of the at-
tempt on his life. The telegram read:
"GOOD STUFF."
A Confirmed Coffee Drinker Takes to-
Postum.
I A housewife was recently surprised
when cook served Postum Instead of
. coffee. She says:
! "For the last five or six years I have-
been troubled with nervousness, in-
digestion and heart trouble. I couldn't
get any benefit from the doctor's med-
icine so finally he ordered me to stop
drinking coffee, which I did.
"I drank hot water while taking tho
doctor's medicine, with some improve-
ment, then went back to coffee with
the same old trouble as before.
"A new servant girl told me about
Postum—said her folks used It and
liked it In place of coffee. We got a
package but I told her I did not be-
lieve my husband would like it, as he
was a great coffee drinker.
"To my surprise he called for a
third cup, said It was 'good stuff* and
wanted to know what It was. We
have used Postum ever since and both
feel better than we have in years.
"My husband used to have bad
federal court with liabilities of *2,- ! Tyro, Chanute, Peru, Cherryvale and
428.72 and assets of J255. Mound Citv
Mound City.
Requisition Honored.
Oklahoma City.—Deuteronomy Van
court I T!orl1, who is under ar-.est at MrAl-
denied the application for a writ"of J b* returned to
. _ ] ty, Alabama, to answer a charge of
moaey t>nder false pre-
Habeas Corpus Denied
Muskogee, Ok.—Judge Ralph
Campbell, of the United States
E.
"I am now in the American hospital
u..ii >i, r . . ,„j uubduuu uspq 10 nave oad
Jnd I Link Jhey w II Td ir* ^ "PeI19 WUh h'8 8tomach and wou,d b*
ana I think they will Add it some- sick three or four days during which
where around. It is no more serious time he could not eat or drink .ny
kill the progressive cedUiete tor | %£.tSSU
president. with the trip. Don't worry, love to
"It ia with the greatest distress | all." THEODORE ROOSEVELT."
habeas ccrpna made by two election f
Sispectors of Okmulgee county, who j
are held to the grand jury on ih>'
charge of conspiring to prevent the
oegroea frcm v > ing in violation of
the f«"derai con«i itut ion. Tt f court
tield that be could lake no Jurisdiction
wader th> hsWa* corpus procedure.
al; he defendants their lib-
-riy oa shesr bond.
• ■ i - Governor Cruee honored
requisition for Van Horn's return.
New Oil Field
Nowata. 0 ..a.—A new oil field has
been brought ia one mile east of the
lieII pool when
j waa struck Thursday.
Injured in Gin Accident.
Belton, Tex.—Tom Smith, foreman
of the Thornton gin here, met with
a painful accident by being struck
underneath the chin by a lever of
one of the gin stands, fracturing the
Jaw bone and splitting several of his
teeth up the center, cutting his chin
and bruising hi* fate considerably.
Zelig's Slayer Indicted
New York—"Reo Phil Davidson
and took to Postum, he has had no
more trouble, and we now fully be-
lieve it was all caused by coffee.
"I have not had any return of my
Almost Reached 100. former troubles since drinking Poo-
Mineola, Tex - Cncle Tom Renein f<"*1 better and can do mor*
e oldest Citizen of l!!!™' *"rk th D ln ten years. We
everyone about it—some say tbey
tried It and did not like It. I tell them
It makes all the difference as to bow
It's made. It should be made accord-
ing to directions—then It is delicious."
Name pivfn by Postum Co. Battle
Creek. Mich. Rend th- book. The
the oldest citizen of Wood county
died here. He was 98 years old and
was numbered among the first sot-
We are all entitled to something la
thia world, if it Is only a lemon.
Farmgrs .Increase Deposits
bank-,n
report more money on deposit than • reuoo.4
they had at this time last year There fc*** • <
•J,'> «*. - — "•i u"u mm iime last rear >: er r.-ad , .
a •,Oy-barr^l gusher *he slayer of Jack Zelig, waa indicted are more deposits by farmers than for *"* ",pp*""r" *" *• in ■ <,.>•> Ti «vr
day. for flrat degree murder. j three years. mm* *•■ •■
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Hill, Charles E. The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, October 18, 1912, newspaper, October 18, 1912; Granite, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc280844/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.