The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1917 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
BIG RUSH NOW OK SELECTIVE DRAFT
FIGHT IS NOW ON
For Western Canada and the
160-Aore Homesteads.
"In n
war like thla. thi
x al*e erteo
glut --n
re rffetilveiy who
111! tbe Bride
lad gar
drn .
"It ra
mmx he repeated t
no often that
fhe «<*
mm of find
ft can p
rnritiv Ihie year.
m4 (but tb*
grit* ef e
of that fwiti are
•ttrv 14
IWirre
Whra men miw «
4 tstldi!!*
were rk
atlng their Int 1
mil**!.
•heat' <
rae the farmer's 1
MMI
Bwity.
• ttto-dallar
wh«* t.
with other gralm
« aid 0>«ntl
and vrfi
Ktahlea la pmf ru
an: ami
girt •« « l'
dt^U.
«h<> lac
rraatw hie 1
i !*rf< nittag
g nati-Mi
1 • ftftntiririf
rt «T" «
he too ti
bitch, and unlree i
unit*! fttu!
*. tlkftv mu
not be
laughs-Chicago
Now
that tbe United
fttatc* but
jom«i
rirh the Alilt*. ti
of the f
>aet haa mergrd 1
into ih* r*r-
e«nn! inl
terert of the (*••««
nr. Th*dutf
Of the 1.
yal and patriotic
citlsto U to
THIS WEEK WILL DETER-
MINE IF WE ARE TO HAVE
A REAL ARMY.
SENATE PASSAGE ASSURED
^reeideat'a P19M in tM Senate >• Ltd
■/ KaHn, a Republican. a
Oar man, tut a Patriotic
American.
1 real
a |o
•ubetantii
Mi<! every effort to bring the great
World's War to a antlefactory marlo-
el on. to a «nUt In all ways the forcee
thnt hare been fighting at tmnmdooa ,
odd* the riant |hiw«t of autocracy. ,
Victory la now n wired: the union of
the grt-nt fighting fiwc# of the l*nlt«*d
Stares navy. Ita military, Ita financial
co-op.-ration. Ita full and complete sym-
pathy. will eventually bring about a
peace that will be solid and lasting.
Canada. Juat arroaa the border Una,
that haa no mark of fortification, no
eigne of defense. welcome* the aaaiet-
ance that the United States la render-
ing. welcomee thla new partner Into the
arena that la battling for a disruption ,
of the force* that breed and beget tyr-
anny and oppreaaion. and fighting for
n democrat'c and free world. What a j
eight it will be to see the American
and the Canadian, with the Stars and
8trlpe* and the Maple Leaf of Canada
emblazoned In one fold and entwined j
|a their effort to rid the world of an
•ncubus that has disregarded all laws—•
human and divine.
There Is a necessity for the greatest ;
effort ever was made, not only on the
battlefields of Europe, not only on the !
mined and submarined sens, but in
carrying out on the peaceful fields
of agriculture, the plans so urgently j
requested by those at the head of j
the departments of resources. Tha
recent reports by the Government )
show a great falling off in the amount j
of grain that may be expected from tha
crop as of recent date, being only a !
little over 00 per cent. 10 per cent
less than the average. Every patriotic
American will bend all his effort
towards Increasing this. He may not !
shoulder a musket, but he can handle j
a hoe, he can drive a team and man- j
age a plow. He will be doing yeoman ;
service in this way, and assist in a j
wonderful manner the man who Is j
fighting in the trenches. If he does
not now own a piece of land, by all !
means get one—rent It, buy it—get it j
There is lot of vacant land that will j
give ample return for his labor.
The desire to possess a home, to lm-
prove It and to prosper, Is natural to 1
every American, and today unprece- ,
dented offers are Iteing made to secure
the residence of the home-hunter. The
war condition is draining the continent j
of Its foodstuffs and economists are
endeavoring to meet the rapid deple- !
tlnn of the nation's stores of grain and
other farm products. Western Canada J
has proven her claim to being the natu-
ral producer of economically grown :
foodstuffs and is endeavoring to over-
come a world's shortage in necessities
by offering her lands, practically free,
to anyone who will take them and pro- j
duce. Labor Is scarce in Canada, and
fs now being bonused. Good wages are
offered and the time a farm hand Is
tfrawing pay in 1917, Is considered by
Jhe Canadian Government, the same, as
residence duties on one of the free 180- j
acre farms, that this Government is |
giving away, in order to settle the fer- ;
tile prairies and bring about within |
a few years a half billion annual crop
of wheat.
The most conclusive evidence is
available to any inquirer, that Western j
Canada farm lands will produce more j
wheat of a better quality and at a
lower cost of production per acre than I
has heretofore been known In grain- |
growing countries. It is no idle state- j
ment to say. that yields of fifty bushels 1
to the acre of wheat are grown In Can- j
ada : the statement is made in all serl- j
ousness and is backed up by the let-
ters and affidavits of reliable farmers j
In Western Carta da. These farmers
are enjoying the same home comforts
that their neighbors to the south par-
ticipate; they have the same good
houses, the same good horses and
cattle, the same good roads and com-
munication. as well as the same good
social conditions, and. best of all. they
own their land and what they earn
they own for themselves, being a foun-
dation for greater wealth and inde-
pendence.—Advertisement.
Japan'e efforts to Increase the pro-
duction of cotton In Formosa so far
have been failures.
ur* will be pasted t>
majority
Fight Fer Volunteers.
Chairman Dent of the house nil!
tary committee and nine other com
mltteemen are making the ttght for
the bill an reported by them which
proposes that the army shall be raised
by calls for volunteers la Increment 1
of MO.thM* and that (be draft shall be
resorted to only, unless and until that
system has failed. Despite the op
position of Chairman Dent, adminis-
tration supporters maintain they will
overr.de his volunteer plan by from
20 to 25 votes at the very least.
Particular intereat attaches to the
debate because Representative Kahn.
a republican, born in Germany, will
present the administration views.
Representa'ive Kahn has been in ac
cord with most of the government's'
preparedness plana.
Representative Dent will make the
opening statement and Representative
Kahn will follow, offering the original
provisions of the administration s bill
as a substitute for the committte's
amendments.
KULTURl
Chicane—-A <e"it>ie U « ef the
awffennf ef Frene* e«"en e«e
eti'tere* in the tewa No yea af-
ter the raaeni German e aew«tien,
was laid at the Fund far Pnk«k
Weeded stop in a letter reee. «a
(rem Mme. Ale* • Carrel, aife of
the celebrated a-'geon ef the
Rockefeller Fow^eron. Mme
Carrel took the brat ambwtance
into Neyen. Her letter, in part,
follows.
We found ourseivee In Neye«
only twenty tour hour* after the
laat German had mewed eway.
"Neyen was a e>ty ef Mme seven
er eight thousand ."habitants, b«t
are found et least '2.000 peraans;
aa those from the neighboring
isgee had crowded n. They were
in the ceiiara. m the eutnowsea; «n
fact, had crewied everywhere they
could, then a Cite of herr^re was
unfolded to us, such as our ears
hsd never heard be'ore.
"Every woman between 14 and
SO yesrs eid had been carritd oft
nine days before the retreat began.
The youn^j women who were left
were all about to become mothers
by German fathere.
•All those people whom we found
crowded m the ceilare had hideous
taiee to tell. In the first place,
none of the French civil population
had hsd any meat of eny hind for
seventeen months. They had lived
on black bread rice. Meny had
died of atarvation and the mortal-
ity among the children had been
terrible. The bodies of those who
died had been kept for five days
unburied in the midst of the living.
"In the orphan aeylum the beds
were so close together that they
touched and on thoae beds were
children who had slept without
mattresees, pillows or covering
sine* December in their clothee,
unwaehed, unkempt and uncared
for. No words can describe the
filth of their condition. They
were covered with vermin and the
beds were nothing but a little heap
of filthy straw."
VON HIMOURG
MAKES LAST STAND
HIS CELEBRATED "LINE"
BEING STEADILY HAM-
MERED TO PIECES.
BRITISH BEGIN NEW OFFENSIVE
Third Week ef the Battle ef Arraa
Opens With Maig e Treepe Ad-
vancing at ail Pointe—-Turaa
Whipped Again.
U
-After
ng (be
Oei
ALLIED COMMISSION HERE
Conference on Military and Economic
Co-Operation Begun.
Washington—The American capital
extended a simple but heartfelt wel-
come to the British minister for for-
eign affairs, Arthur Balfour, and the
Kher members of the British commis-
sion, come to Washington, as Mr. Bal-
four himself expressed it. "to make co-
operation easy and effective between
those who are striving—with all their
power—to bring about a lasting peace
by the only means that can secure it
—namely, a successful war.
At the station live thousand persons
waited for a glimpse of the nation's
guests, restrained at a proper distance
by hundreds of policemen and by two
troops of the Second cavalry from Fort
Meyer.
WILSON VIRTUALLY DICTATOR
HOUSE TO FOLLOW HIS
RECOMMENDATIONS.
GEN. VON BISSING IS DEAD.
Executioner of Edith Cavelle Goes to
Face the Hereafter.
London.—Reuter's Amsterdam cor-
respondent says that according to a
Brussels dispatch. General von Bias-
ing. German governor genera! in Bel-
gium, died there suddenly.
General Baron Moritz Ferdinand von
Bissing was appointed governor gen-
eral of Belgium ia November, 1914. in
succession to General von Der Goltz.
He was born in 1844. During his rule
In Belgium General von Bissing has
some into prominence many times, no-
tably in connection with the execution
ot Miss Edith Cavelle, the English
nurse, fapquent clashes with Cardinal
Mercier, primate of Belgium, and the
deportation of Belgians.
12.450 Recruits in Navy.
Washington. — Since the president
Issued the proclamation declaring that
a state of war existed between the
United States and Germany, the navy
and marine corps has recruited a to-
tal of 12.450 men. The navy's gain is
10,060 and the marine corps 2,390. On
February 13 the total strength of the
navy was 54,469; today it was 74,026.
On February 13 the marine corps to-
taled 12,720 men; today it has 16,656.
The net increase in the enlisted per
Fonnel of the navy April 20 was
1,330; that of the army was 2,375.
Greece May Join War.
New York—A cablegram quoting
from an Athens newspaper the state-
ment that Greece is on the point of
entering the war as an ally of the
entente power, was received by the
Atlantis, a Greek daily newspaper
here.
Pork Barrel Likely to Get Lost—En-
tire Energies Devoted to National
Defense and Greater Cropa.
Washington. — Democrats of the
house, in caucus, agreed to consider at
the present session only such war and
general defense legislation as may be
recommended by the president.
National prohibition, which is being
urged by its advocates as a necessary
war measure, may be included under
this list, but unless the president rec-
ommends it as a war measure it has
no chance of being taken up.
It also is possible that a rivers and
harbors bill, embracing such proposed
Improvements as are deemed essential
by the war department for the national
defense may be passed. The president
has indicated his willingness to ap-
prove a measure under certain restric-
tions and the war department also de-
sires harbor improvements of a limited
character. The caucus refused, by a
vote of 77 to 71. to approve either a
J33.000.000 or a $15,000,000 waterways
bill, both of which were proposed by
Chairman Small of the rivers and har-
bors committee.
Legislation to ®ive the government
a firm grasp on food control will be in-
troduced.
Power will be asked for the 'govern-
ment not only to supervise production,
but to deal with distribution to insure
a fair supply of food to every part of j
the country at reasonable prices. De-
tails of the administration's plan have
not become known, but it is believed
actual price-fixing may have a place
in laws to be asked and that authority
will be requested to establish a virtual
food dictatorship, if that becomes nec-
essary.
The food situation, officials realize,
presents one of the most serious prob-
lems the country will have to meet
during the war.
Administration heads are bending
every effort toward convincing the
country of the greater need for produc-
tion and rigid food economies.
Secretary Houston named R. A.
Pearson, presidenj of the Iowa State
College of Agriculture, to serve indef- [
Initeiy as an assistant secretary of ag- j
riculture. At the same time he in
vited the heads of five of the greatest I
farmers' organizations to come to j
Washington for a food conference. '
Mr. Pearson will serve with Dr B T. !
Galloway, a former assistant secretary I
of agriculture, whom the secretary
called here recently from Cornell Uni-
versity to act as an emergency assist-
ant. He will have particular charge
of the organization of state boards
week's interlude,
bad be*n bo y
tine of 1 bn Bret
bringing up their
an awoiaet phase
•.Bet the furnud-
1 on the front tn
j north*™ France. General Hir IJoug-
i la 1 Haig reports that the forced undrr
j his command attai *ed on a wide front
on both sides of the River Ik-rap*.
I here a portion of the Hlndenbu^g
| line form* a barrier defending Oatu-
bral and that they are making satis-
I factory progress.
The fighting covers approximately
an eights-mile front f m outh of
I Vimy rid^i to a point well below
• Crulselle* At the north end of the
1 attack the British swept over German
J rued positions running almost due
south from Lens and captured long
xectiona of Cerman positions In front
of the Hmdenburg line and a great
| number of prisoner*.
I Further south British troops have
I captured the remainder of the village
of Trescault and occupied the greater
| part of Havrincourt wood, which
j formed a two-mile bulge in their line.
I From this point to St. Quentin the
line approaches very closely the Cam
brai-St. Quentin road.
I The British began their great offen-
sive. a fortnight ago, and the French
! followed this with their stroke along
| the Aisne a week ago. The third
week finds the British again on the
move.
| The Germans always managed to
J cling to the slopes on either side of
the hiU on which Monchy-Ie-Preux is
perched, this being the highest point
east of Arras and Vimy. overlooking
the great bro&d eaatnrn plains of
northern France. The Germans are
undoubtedly throwing their full force
into their resistance along the Scarpe.
They had brought up strong reserves
to oppose a further British advance
and had thrown in scores of new bat-
teries of artil^ry.
A success along the Scarpe not only
would threaten the new German line,
but woul4 further outflank Lens on
the south.
Meanwhile the French infantry is
being held in check along the Aisne
front and in the Champagne by Gen-
eral Nivelle while the work of con-
solidating the notable gains of the
past week is in progress. The artil-
lery is busy, however, and Paris re-
ports the breaking up of German
counter attacks at several points, not-
ably east of Craonne on the French
salient northeast of Mont Haut, in the
Champagne and on the Moronvilliera
ridges in the same sector.
The Turks in Mesopotamia have
evacuated the Istabilat position on
the right bank of the Tigris, ten miles
below Samara, the war office an-
nounces. They are now being ^at-
tacked at a point six miles nearer
Samara.
A pall of silence has fallen over
central empires, serving to accentu-
ate the reports of grave internal
troubles. In spite of the assertions
of the German press that the great
Berlin strike, which invilved at least
300,000 workers is over, there is evi-
dence that the agitation is continuing.
The Berlin Tageblatt admits that two
of the munitions workers' unions have
refused to return to work and says
that those who persist in their refusal
will be called to the colors.
GOVERNMENT WINS SUIT.
After tti«
Kuril* Is for Tired Eyes.
Movie* Had trM — Sorm Eyas —
jiwee—
IHM ft rftvovitft
■OTHUr lr« ttol fftfti dry H
CMffti tee ueaer m uw nu
B>M • lirmg u>< morm or *r
Bandits Defeated By Murguia.
Juarez.—One hundred Villa follow-
ers were hanged, 200 others killed and
wounded and a quantity of ammunition
and horses captured In fighting be-
tween the Villa forces and the com
pand of Gen Francisco Marguia in a
rugged canyon in the Babicora district
of western Chihuahua. The battle
atarted at a o'clock in the morning and
continued tor two hours, when the
Villa force, numbering more than 2.000
was forced to withdraw The losses j
on General Murguiaa aide Included ,
fifty killed.
Film Explosion Costs Six Lives.
Indianapolis.—Six persons are dead j
and a score of others are suffering i
from minor injuries aa a result of a
fire which resulted from an explosion !
of moving picture films in the office 1
of a film exchange here. Forty per- !
sons were In the building when the ex- j
plosion, followed by a wave of flame,
occurred, and a score of women sere 1
burt in the panic which followed a i
rueh for the stairways The flames
spread to the Linden and Roya! hotels,
across an alley, but gueata escaped. I
The loee is estimated at
Southern Pacific Loses Title To Two
Million Acree.
Washington.—In deciding the Ore
gon-California land case the supreme
court affirmed the Oregon federal
court's decree, enjoining the South-
ern Pacific railroad from disposing of
timber and minerals on its lands re-
ceived by congressional grant.
By trfe same decision the govern-
ment won its suit against the South-
ern Pacific railroad to regain nearly
2,300,000 acres of Oregon and Wash-
ington lands worth $30,000,000.
The Chamberlain-Ferris law of 1916
forfeiting and divesting the railroad's
title to the lands granted by congress
in 1866 and providing for federal sale
of the lands, timber and minerals,
a as upheld as constitutional.
Forfeiture of the railroad's title
was sought because It charged more
than $2.50 an acre for the land grant-
ed In 1866 by congress to induce
construction of the old Oregon-Cali-
fornia railroad of railroad extensions
into the then new northwest territory.
The old grant fixed this maximum fig-
ure at which the grantees should sell
to actual settlers. Tbe government
alleged gross and continuous viola-
tion of the $S.50 pri e restriction, fer
forty acres. It charged that the rail
roads bad sold land for prices greatly
tn exceas of that sum.
FIRST LOAN TO THE ILUES
TWO HUNDRE0 MILLION IS
A0VANCE0 TO ENGLAND.
Tmo Billion Bend leeoe Arranged Be
That Purefceeers Can Have feet
Te In Mentna te Pay-
iingtn
The united Btatee
, as tbe Brat loan to any «l tbe entente
govern mettle under tbe $T.00e. 0«,«BM j
1 finance law signed by President Wtl
son The jnotiey for this Van will be
available out of (be proceeds of tbe
$2&o,000.009 of treasury certificate of
indebtedness, due June JW. and Jaei 1
placed with tbe banks of the roun-
I try through ibe federal reeerve board ,
Thai
of tbr
ncf
la nn disposition on tbe part:
mem an government to insist j
. formal obeervanre of terhm
abit ii would tend to delay >
Ked tape a III be elite! ,
r ated wherever possible and money
«lli be pla«ed 10 the British govern-
1 out waiting for the arrival here from
l^indon of British bonds to be de
posited In tbe American treasury ns
| security.
The loan la not Intenoed 10 cover
Great Britain's full share of the three
billion dollars Intended for the allies,
but Is designed to meet Kngland's lm- j
mediate and pressing financial need*
A *omewhat similar loan soon may be
made to Italy.
Plans under consideration by ad-
ministration official* call for the la-
sue of two billion .dollars In bonds as
the first public offering under the sev
en billion dollar war revenue law to
be followed by a second issue in from
four to six months and possibly a
third thereafter.
While the whole program ia sub-
ject to revision. It la understood that
officials are also seriously consider
ing the advisability of collecting the
proceeds pf the first issue in install-
ments thirty daya apart and lasting
over a period of from four to alx
months.
Should the first Issue be two bil-
lions and the inatailmenta feature be
adopted. It ia likely that subscribers
will be given four months in which to
pay for the bonda. This would bring
revenue into the treasury at the rate
of $500,000,000 a month, ample, it is
believed, to meet the needs of the
alliea in thia country as well as Amer-
ican military and naval expenaes un-
til the new taxation measure shall
begin to produce revenue.
Getting Old To* Fast?
Lale la hie lie Wt ebawe eigne el
*mi end often the Ma<fi
Am The tea* le lame, boa* and aebf.
aad the kxteaf eetma «l tr.aa g Ttoe
aakee people leel alder thaa they are
Dae't ait f r frcpey, gravel, hafden-
lag «t the arterves or Bright a diaaaee
Use a auM kidney etinrslaal Try
Dean's K.daef filla Thovuends al el-
4arly Mhe usummend them.
An Oklahoma Case
Mra O. U Mopklaa.
\it S. Pane li. Har-
Ueevtlle. ok la. earei
-1 waa sevoealr trea-
cled with a dull,
ateady e*he la tny
back and hipa. Mora*
Ins*. I wee all worn
ant My bead a«hod
terribly aad I felt die-
sr aad tired. Ixian's
Kidney Pills « ed mo
up la Bne i «po •
betWve I would have
dtrd. tf II were aot for
tbeat."
Cel Dooa*«et Aar i*e e. ••• e Boa
DOAN'S V.-JIV
FOSTUt-MIUILKM CO- BUFFALO. It T.
PCRTtCT HEALTH. * '
A VIGOROUS BOOY.
R,m *r le* rtcfc h.eaetbe. cee.llpetle^.
tuff's nils
Different.
Mr*. Bklnn—Tell Hie gentleman I'm
not receiving today, Mnry.
Mary—H<* ain't deliverln', ma'am $
be'a collectin'."
ROOT HEADS COMMISSION.
Which Will Be Sent to Russia to
Arrange Alliance.
Washington.—Ellhu Root will head
the American commission to Russia
If he will consent to undertake the
duty. It became known that the
president has completed the selection
of the principal members of the com-
mission.
France's war commissioners to the
United States reaohed Hampton
Roads and came to Washington on the
presidential yacht Mayflower.
The commission, of w-hich Rene
Viviani. vice-premier and minister of
justice, is the official head, and Mar j
shal Joffre a member, brings no wfit
ten instructions from the French gov
ernment, the ministry having decided
to give its members unlimited power
to negotiate with the United States
on all subjects, military, naval and
financial. It is prepared to discuss
the sending of an American expedi-
tionary force to France. Marshal Joffre
and other military members will indi-
cate to the American officials with
whom they are to confer spveral im
portant military reasons which they
consider renders the sending of such
a force advisable. The most impor-
tant of these reasons is found in the
moral effect to be had from the pres-
ence of American troops and the
American flag on the battlefields of
France.
STEEL BREAKS RECORDS.
Quarterly Profits as Much as in a
Whole Year Formerly.
New York.—All previous high rec-
ords in the history of the United
States Steel corporation, both as to
earnings and dividends, were sur-
passed in the first quarterly report for
the current year.
Earnings reached the enormous
total of $113,121,018, more than the
corporation has earned in a full year
In some instances, and an extra divi-
dend of 3 percent was declared on
the common stock, in addition to the
regular quartedly dividend of 1& per-
cent on the issue and 1% per cent
on the preferred. The disbursement
on the common amounts to more than
$21,602,000.
The three months' total earnings of
$113,121,018 are in increase of $7,152,
671 over the final quarter of last year,
and net incomes of $103,330,194 rep-
resents a gain of $7,008,584.
No Prohibition Law Now.
Washington.—In laying their plans
for raising nearly $2,000,000,000 for
war expenses from taxation, house
leaders are proceeding upon confident
belief that there will be no nation-
wide prohibition legislation at this
••ssion of congress. The case against !
any attempt at general prohibition
legislation has been based upon th*
arguments that a constitutional
amendment could not be adopted and I
put into effect In leee than a year ot {
more and that the government neede j
tha revenue from liquor tax.
PAIN? NOT A BIT!
LIFT YOUR CORNS
OR CALLUSES OFF
No humbug I Apply few drope
then Just lift them away
with flngera.
Thla new drag Is an ether compound
discovered by a Cincinnati chemist. It
Is called freexone, and can
now be obtained in tiny
bottles aa here shown at
very little cost from any
drag store. Just ask for
freezone. Apply n drop or
two directly upon a tender
corn or callus and Instant-
ly the soreness disappeara.
Shortly you will find thn
corn or callus so loose that
you can lift It off, root
and all, with the flngera.
Not a twinge of pain,
soreness or Irritation; not
even the slightest smart-
ling, either when applying
freezone or afterwards.
This drag doesn't eat up
the corn or callus, but
shrivels them so they loos-
en and come right out. It
Is no humbug! It wArkn
like a charm. For a few
cents you can get rid of ev-
ery hard cora, soft corn or
corn between the toes, as well as pain-
ful calluses oj bottom of your feet. It
never disappoints and never burns,
bites or Inflames. If your druggist
hasn't any freezone yet, tell him to
get a little bottle for you from hln
wholesale house.—adv,
Twelve-hour, twenty-four-hour and
ship time can be told simultaneously
by a new clock dial. t
XJ A
-vom
A dlgeetlre liquid UnUTt. cetlitRlo snd Uve
tonic. tomblBM strength with pelaieble. srowette
UstB. Doe* not gripe or dlatarb bioouml ftUo.
Some men have courage only whenx
they lose their tempers.
Don't Be Yellow
You want to see your clothes
on wash day, a beautiful,
clear, dazzling white—not
yellow—don't you? Then use
Red 4* Gross
Ball Blue
and watch the result Dont
take chances—get the best
bluing—that's Red Cross.
All good Grocers sell it.
Large Package 5 cents.
Five Minute Safety
Vulcanizer
All 70a need le a match and live min-
ute* time Anyone caa operate. The
clampaod one dosea pre- • i r A
pared petchee. Price
If mm Seeler «eee aot beMI* tkM wo win
n4 >rr el4 upo receipt of ooe fellai aa*
Sttr mu. aetKtemee (urutee* ar we
win nfui yeer ■«e y.
SOUTHFM UNITED SALES 60.
1* ewt Twi ttmt MMeaa 0% Ma
4
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, April 27, 1917, newspaper, April 27, 1917; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc281746/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.