The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 291, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 21, 1908 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Hood's Sarsaparilla
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 22, 1908.
if
Restores the Appetite
TONES THE STOMACH-AIDS DIGESTION
Loss of appetite is one of the first indications that the system is running down.
iOU Sit Down to the table from force of habit but von larl-t kf-altk i • /
food. You, digestive orga-os seem torpid or paralyzed-do/,™ to til "
Your Head Seems Dull, oppressed, or has a sicklv irhp Tho .v,^ ^ i i
tempting: diste, arc ,« aside or so lightly take as to afford much uourTsSmew '
I hen the blood, not being well supplied loses violin, ■> 's"mcni-
through the body, and debility, languor, that 'tired feeling, are the result. Strength
Hood's Sarsaparilla supplies the great need in this condition.
nousands testify that it restores a healthy appetite, tones the stomarh -,\A* j;
ion, gives relish to food, and makes eating the pleasure it should be. ' ' ' lgCS"
S ,r.7n°SSi °f, Appetite * common in (he spring. Now is the time to take Hood's
Xdi; hV'p P;'"e Ci0C' GC' 1 b°"le d to take it May
Under the Pure Food and Drugs Law, no change was necessary in Hood'-
EM St™ '° ,h° hW °r ,>UMiC " is P<W le, pSet
any. ling but milk and lutie water for nourishment, and the medicines given her did not V
any good. I was afraid she would die of starvation. I am very thankful1Z iVl u
better since t.tine Hoods." M«, K. W„uT, E. ,56th sT, nIw Yo^ nV h
I Had No Relish for Food, and had a tired, exhausted feelW in ti
s&tSirs ^1d
Sarsatabs, prep^^troVHnolr8'sar/^rina^^l^by a^nrooe^10 f'Tfl.'0™ °' rhocola,,,-^ated tablets called
eally -he game curalivo proportie, ]00 DoSe, One Dollar. Of dn^ist^ "pri^yideD,i"
-i n C. I. HOOD CO., Lowell", Mass.
BILLUPS BOOZE BILL"
CONTINUED FROM TAGE ONE
IN THE HOUSE IN THE SENATE
shine oi
wlh hav
from th<
THE HOUSE
MORMNti SESSION.
>1>.> angler. basking In the huh-
ill.' summer Sunday aftem.ni.
the KiitH;ic till!) of bring securu
stealthy stepping safc-gu.u let-
o the state', tlsh Yesterday, the ,untie
almost unanlmousl) vutod duivn n
amendment to the tl h and game ill
making Sunday a . lot., season.
1 he value of committee work was nev-
er better demonstrated than when 'lit,
""if. debated and wrangled, hooted id.
[°d "nd denoun. . .I the various see;; ,,,
and the amendments thereto offered yes-
terday morning, adjourning for ilt'm.ij
afte. .nhiptIng live set-lions with t'i.
probability that they would be discussed
further in SQ|ng ovei tl.e measure r,.t
the second time.
The light of the morning centered
about the amendment offered by o r -n
c, Muskogee county, which in eftec
, eluded front any hunting riniiins ,nlv-
Ileges whatever, all non-residents of th.
Kate of Oklahoma, w hether they he wlll-
h ."i?1" "p " hlgh "cense f°e for
the privilege or he the gu«t of a .el*
"-or frlentl living In the state.
m „. Mo"s<' "dJ°urned, an amend-
ment raising the 11,,„s, fee from ,0
was being considered with some fay.
kinU was passed by
or.
The first bill of It
NATURE
AND A WOMAN'S WORK
the house yesterday when house bill \*o.
• < nastaln. dividing Seminole coun-
ty. into two court districts was udooted
on roll cull with but slight opposition.
I'l'e fish and gauie bill was ponding
Ashb.\ Mailed the fun and incidentally
consideration of the bill by moving to
strike out section seventeen exempting
from protection tho sparrow, coooei
hawk, goshawk sharp-skinned hawk,
crow and great-horned owl. Murray hij.
ed to get the inoUon tabled the irst
time but after a little intervening de'j-.ito
u .second motion was passed.
Murray offered a subsection to be adl-
ed. protecting the insect destroying . jad.
Wortman wanted to add the m.
frog, and then A.shby. suggested the uiol-
> -coddle and taking the floor during the
laughter that followed out of his poii >
of holding up to ridicule every bill, fan- [
j'y reproached the house for indulsi-ig
in levity. Vandev enter called his fellow-
members "frog-legislators" and h*
amendment was adopted.
harley offered an amendment to • c-
n nineteen, relating to fish, to protect
amphibious animals and fish used for ex-
hibition or scientific purposes.
Murray offered a motion to exclude'
government streams from the provisions
of the section for the reason that tl.e
•state lias no jurisdiction over such t
was adopted.
After some debate, section twenty-livo
relating to oil and sawdunt escaping in-
to stream*. ,
Jesse offered an amendment limiti.ig
residents licenses to the county in wh'ch
the licensed person lives. It was ta >l -d I
without delay Amended the resident li-I
cense clause requires the filing of r.n
application with the county elerk accom-
panied by an affidavit statins the appll-
.ant s name. age. place of residence, post
address, color of Itait and eves
r,'u°rty "nti r*"' "sf-weight
ei„T!'°, dJ"'Ufl0" of ,hc morning was ri3.
om He Wt Cr0UCh moved 10 strike
sub-section regulating non ros-
privlleges to Z i!,'""80s' Smiting hunting
privileges to residents, and long spee ,1-
' ^kiahoma for Oklahomans" and
don, ic th. man hun,
and othertr°r ma" "><">« by Hobdy
yeelerdivT a",on,P|'she<' h grea, deal
Lv'tv at t'!„',p C th" fj" its I
distasteful , ,lncontro e<1 and
who triei ? 0,ll"r members
^°,.rnidtoc0ii:~ ,h°
senate business hi' The' aftinnMn"1*^'"°
number of b'ils werm t^L- L n and a
I . re taken up in raoid
ferTed bactf'11' ti"'°r °t or re
-mblence of a ZT'T'i The °nly
iiw ngnt developed in tiip
u'e e^icls ""?°nS T
•crtPtlon „f flervJces
.fc«r;„zrf„;flh,,cii.onput-our
«nd unsound le^.l.Ho^
JuecMsf??!0'' "" the. fl0or' but "-118 n-
•f Ms'conation.1! 8 V°'e' 'n S"p"ol t
Oklahomas First
Hag Kidnapped
. I lowing day
and Mr. Ferris
In. i.iu h3 j>tat.
U ashlngU", March 1!.-The story of I , , returned to
WW lt pt>ened ,0 ,he flm n, whtcit w hotel happy ln the belief that tM
reiog. iged Oklahoma as a state is bemg -
told as an interesting epl,ode In the ills-
oi > cf the n.itioal emblem. Oklahoma
« . not be formally admitted into tho!
I nion until next July it being a time - I
state.-
annivi
honored custom to usher ti
Into tae sisterhood o„ the
of the Nation's natal day
On July 1. Oklahoma's star will be en-
titled t«. a place of its own right in the
f stars on the tlag * bli.c
eturned to
ei iiappy in thp
;.:;'d f ""*« «« by the people of hi.
t w,,h ■' l"«e Chunk Of credit. B=-
fore the resolution was ottered, however,
t"e wily Mr. McUutrc had got wtnd o'
f clusti
lydia h pinkh
Nature and a woman's work cora-
mned have prodtiti>(l the grandest,
remedy for woman's ills that the
World has ever known
In the good old-fashioned davs of I
our grandmothers they relied upon
the riiot- ami herns of the field to I
cure disease and mitigate suffering. I
the Indians on our Western!
1 lams to-day can produce roots and'
herns for every ailment, and cure
diseases that baffle the most skilled
physicians who have spent years in
the study of drugs
From the roots and herbs of the
field I.ydia E. Pinkham more than
thirty year* ago gave to the women
of the world a remedy for their pe-
culiar ills, more potenl and etlit a-
ciotts tlian any combination of drugs.
I.ydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable
U'uiixitind is now reixtgnized as the
standard remedy for woman's iils.
Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515 X.C. St.
Louisiana, Mo., writes
" Complete restoration to health
tncins so much to me that for the sake
t>f other tufferlnif women I m willine
to make my troubles public.
"Fortwelve years I had been suffer-
ing with the worst forms of female ills.
During that time I had eleven different
physlctaua without help Ko tongue
eau tell what I suffered, and at times I
cott.d hardly walk. About two vcarj
I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for a<ivic,.> I
I followed It, and can truly may that |
bytlia E. Pirkhum's Vegetable Com-
pound and Mrs, Pinkham's adrice re
htor.d health and strength. It i. I
worth m. untaina of gold to sufferinc
women."
H hat I.ydia E. Pinkham's Vege- i
'all! - Compound did for Mrs. Mutt'. I
U will do for other sufl'eruig women.
Hird M<.Guire. requbllcan con-
gressman from the Klrst Oklahoma dls-
ho forced the season. He needed
'f forty-jtix stars to help him out
district, where he was about to
his claims for a r?nominat'.on.
cpive,1 plan that was as novel
as bold. With all the stealth
ubmlt
of the i
and the
flow
ng llag
that was beau
tUu.
he i
n Ft
roceeded
Idtiy, Mil
terti>r tn
to carry out
reh t?. a day
thai
but that
caused no qui
I he
Inu
on to d
sturb the Inte
rpid
he
made a
deal with a s
nail
a res
«lt of wh
l^i tho HrM t)
•g w
>« run u
p on the flag
pol«
at Ion
Rl house
< f representatl
e it i
•'inaine,!
U afternoon *
.ly-
Hcef
•Pltol
il folds o
k-e- thc south w
ing
hill Idlll .
it w
a flappli
g in the hie.
««<
what was going on. He sent Mrs. Me-
Ut ile, one or the new state most beau-
" I and most popular women to i ,
gJounuT' eoV,f l'H l':lI>ito1 bulllllnI« and
j. quest tnat she be allowed
v ldln* fnr /hl ,lls ri'8olutiun pro.
for ,he Permanent disposition of
'K ii"u Uoating over the house of
tepreacntatives." the flag had ce.tsed to
H.at. It was safe In the powesalon "
• if. M t.ulre. A few minutes later it
linn,.*''!'". aW"5 by 1 -Xprcss to Okla-
homa, to be exhibited In the hall, where
Air. .Ict.tiltcs congr.-salonal convention
t,, meet on Monday."
fo"owlnR (Saturday) Ferris'
'I'll,. U,h adopted the house.
etn temoved front the ling i.olo
and was living „„ ,|„. wings .,f ,1*
• own to Hird McQuires henchmen m
Oklahoma. in
It arrived In time to fire the conven
aXe^carZb0^nd^ and M>
T the plum with a whooj
V«r..rv- 'f""1*- outwitted by an ad
rvr>ar> A cunning and a woman m wllo
. would l e but a feeble and m
description of the state of m
f was hotter than a hornet. |{.
ed to the gov.r„or of Oklahoma
•dm of the action tuke,, bv h.
itM ,atJt Journey through the houso of
representativea.
The messenger from the senate fad-
ing to appear, the young author of ho
famous measure went after his docu-
ment himself and was greeted with
[-•heers and applause when he raine into
the hall with the cardboard box bearing
the document, under his arm.
Ash by Injected a little life into the pvo-
ceedings. which were watched v.-Jth
breathless Interest by a crowded gallery
and asked Speaker Murray for permis
sloti to go down stairs.
"Mr. Speaker." he said. "If l am not
allowed to gr. down stairs, there will be
trouble In this camp."
He was allowed to go.
Jones opened the discussion prelimin-
ary to roll call by a.«klng the speaker
to explal nthe amendment to the emer
Rency clause and to have the new mat-
ter read. The clerk read the section as
amended.
Following Bills* motion that the house
agree to the senate amendment. Bran
son took the floor '.j explain why he
would vote for the .Mil. He stated that
iii objections to the me«iau e had been
removed by the provision for the refer-
ence of the dispensary law to the people
80. !ar iis k *** Perfectly com-
patible with the constitution and pre-
dicted that the bill would probably * De-
ceive a majority.
Ashby delivered a lengthy oration on
the lost cause and indlcentally mtdk
mention of the fact that he was tot a
prohibitionist, but that since his constitu-
ents favored prohibition he Intended to
vote for the bill.
Ilobdy in onP of the strongest speeches
that has been delivered on the floor of
the house explained the vote which he
Intendd to cast against the bill. There
could he no doubt of the sincerity of
the speaker as he talked. Earnestly, and
eloquently, he pleaded with the house to
for the cause of prohibition tmhampsred
v legislation that hindered more than it
helped law nnforcement. Although on
the losing side. Hobdy was heartily ap-
plauded as he concluded.
Wilson stated that he would voie for
the hill In deference to the expressed
wishes of his constituents, although r er-
aonally lie was opposed to the measure
Harvev I'tterback declared himself for-
ever opposed to the dispensarv, which
was nothing more nor less than a nrana
of setting the state up in the ?aloon
business.
Bow dre followed along the same line
although his speech was interrupted and
rendered of little rffert by reason of the
confusVn prevailing in the house.
After the calling of the roll. Winchest-
er Allen and Deyerly changed their /otes
jnid thunderous shouting and applause
their change securing for the bill the
necessary seventy-three votes.
When the result of the vote was an-
nounced. a wild scene ensiled. The house
immediately adjourned and the memners
crowded to the rostrum, where Speaker
Murray presented the pen with vhieh
he signed the bill to the venerable chap-
lain of the house. Rev. David B. Uav.
Then still cheering and shouting and
singing, led by Speaker Murray, seem-
ingly happier than them all. they troop-
ed down stairs and out.
Following is the compromise amend-
ment by which the passage of the bill
was secured:
Section 30. For the preservation of
the public peace, health and safely, an
emergency is hereby declared to extat,
by reason whereof this act shall lake
effect from and after its passage anu
approval: Provided, however, that article
1. shall be referred by the secretary of
state to the people for their approval
or rejection at the regular election to
be held in the year 190$, In the maimer
provided by law. and. if a majority of all
the electors voting at said election Hhall
Note in favor thereof, then said artMe
1 shall thereby, upon the official oan-
vass and publication of the vote there-
on. become a part of the constitution im-
til otherwise provided by law. But it
h majority of all the electors voting
thereon at said election, shall vote
against said article 1. the same rhall
thereby, upon the official canvass and
publication of the vote thereon, be re-
pealed: Provided, however, that that pari
of section article one (1) of this ft.
which provides that "an agency Tor the
sale of intoxicating liquors for lawful
purposes may he established by the oio-
erintendent. subject to the approval .->f
the governor, ln any incorporated town,
within this state, of one thousand nopu.
lation or more, or at any other place in
this state * here a public necessity exists
therefor, "shall not take efTect or be In
force prior to December 1st. 19ns. in
the event of such repeal, the money nd
property In the possession of the super-
intendent and the local agents shall be
disposed of for the heneflt of the state
the governor shall direct
WHAT CAUSES HEADACHE.
From October to May. Colds are the most
frequent cause of Headache. LAXATIVE
BROMO QUININE removes cause. E. W.
Grove on box 25c.
RHODE ISLAND BRYAN
Southern Press.
Providence. R. 1., March JO—Rhode la-
land democrats are beginning to jai
ii; Providence for the state convention
tomorrow, when delegates will be elect-
id to the Denver convention. There Ii
every indication that the delegation f.tn.
this state will be pledged to the support
of Bryan. The central committee ha
passed resolutions indorsing the oandl
da« > of the Nebraskan.
Te ntof the Senate H. S. Johnston
U)WS yo uas a personal privilege to n>eak,
Senator Davis, even It you arc out of t • -
der. itillups subsided.
Senator Davis then registered his last
protest against "the building up of a
ramifying machine that will spread crime,
OMahoma!" 'hroagh
i,„^ IO'i Ca" was "'en taken on the meis-
cauens HS f,bpe" Pre'a,Tansed In the
caucus, the Blllups' booze bill passed the
uppei- house of the Oklahoma leBl5la-
SENATOR OAVIS ELOQUENT
Mf. Preshient: I, I. proposed I,.'till.
Ir. Vt,„ . tnstltu'o a dispensary system.
. the state of Oklahoma, upon tht- .. i
age of this bill in the senate and housr
Th* l,P?U thc apProval of the governor!
in.H."1! d00S ),'uv,de tor in this act,
institutions, none of the kind of which
J*™ °" G®d'8 ^een earth-an experi-
ment in the field entirely. Then- is
Tew h! f"ke " °" °°d'9 BVeen "'"'th. A
few brief months ago. the people of the
mtte T, 0klahoma ^ eighteen thousand
ajorl y vcert for ,tate wide prohi',1-
tlon In that provision, it permitted this
legislature, with! nits wisdom, to estab-
lish certain dispensaries. In that cam-
paign. did you hear one word, that call-
: out8lde of those who
asked for the places? From every olat-
form where stood a prohibitionist, end
argued for the cause, di dyon hear one of
them ask for the dispensary system?
«°t I. I heard none, and I hear nono
from the part of the state, from ,vhi -It
I come, except those who ask for -dac-
es. In my judgment at this time, the
men who ask for the dispensary in the
man arc those who ask for places. 1'i;-
In numbers, as compared with all the
good people of this state, are not unlike
a coyote, at the midnight hour, on a
Kansas prairie, howling for sustenan-e
Those unacquainted with such animal
would think there wits a thousand, n-nen
there was only one. I say you now tiro-
propose this experiment, and in my judg-
ment the place hunter, are the ones ; *k-
Ing for It.
rt has been said, thmat the only t-ay
that you could enforce prohibition, v. as
to provide tlyis dispensary for medical
industrial and scientific purposes. i„ mv
Judgment, that is a far-fetched argument'.
I am against the dispensary system in
this form, and if at this hour'mp vote
would kill that portion of the bill it
surely would be killed. In my judgment,
it win not advance the interests of 'he
prohibition provisions of the constitu-
tion. In my judgment, the prohlbitl n-
t® of the state of Oklahoma do not
want it. All of thosP I have talked
with upon that subject, at least eighty
or ninety per cent of them, are against
these institution?. The district from
w-hich I come, is a fair sample I take it
of other districts, and they are against
a dispensary system. It has been aid.
that we must provide liqfor and still it
>8 sai. in the eastern portion of this
state, there is scarcely a town, but .van;
Is wide open with dives, joints and blind
tigers. Ij, the gentlemen "from Jie
forks said 011 this floor only two davs
ago. who had just returned from I is
home, in the southeastern part of the
state, that the people said, "we have
too |uch booze now—do not give iw
more. So 1' say there Is no legitimate
demand, from thost who believe in aw.
from those who believe in the best in-
terests of the public, for this svetem,
building it up as it werP and putting in
effect political machinery ramifyig e>-
ery county in this state, with the results
of which, no man can tell, and it is well |
at this hour to ponder over such.
Now. the hour has come, that will teli
whether men are fawing. and will croucti
on their knees, at this good hour. .;i
will they say from their good hearts, and
voice their votes aaginst these dispensary
institutions. It is here, and for my par',
I love the man who has got the na k-
bone, and courage to vote as his convic-
tions dictate, whether his convictions ar*,
the same aa mine or not. There are men
right now in this body, right here, who
have rolled an dtossed on their pillo\v«
in the midnight hour trying to decide
how to vote on this proposition, and :i
you 'put these institutions into • ffeot
these same heads wll Ross on ihelr pil-
lows in the midnight hour, when crime.
graft and corruption shall follow then!
1 nthls state. You, at this hour, assume
this lesponsibility, if you put this into
effect. I hold In my hand a copy of the
'hicago-Tlmes Record-Herald. Rigiit in
he left hand column. I find that tin
records show that the4 South Carolina
dispensary, has shown that great crime.
graft an dcorruption. has been caused
by it. This is somewhat a similar in-
stitution. and the time will come, if vou
vote your thirty voter, in favor of -iii ,
that you will regret to your own :*elf.
to your family, ami to the good people of
this state, that you did so. You will see
that the results, will be. that we will
return from a prohibition state, and v. ill
staif back in ti,. Other wax fa the |jit
campaign you said down with the liquor
traffle, and you now say. give us this
good medicine—Intoxicating liquor.
you pass this bill, the good peopk
111 pass judgment 011 thU
Don't
Rob The Horse
of His Corn
The
whole §j
wheat is !
w the most per- jjj
mf food given to man. It Ij
jjj has been his "staff of life" for (jj
4,000 years. Human inge-
nuity can never make corn as f
digestible or as nutritious as |j|
Shredded Wheat jjf
—a food that contains all the jjj
tissue-building material in the gff
whole wheat prepared in a
digestible form.
For breakfast heat the Biscuit in oven,
pour milk over it (hot milk in winter) and
a little cream. If you like the Biscuit for
breakfast you will like toasted TRISCUIT
(the Shredded Wheat wafer) for luncheon
or any meal with butter, cheese or marma-
lade. At your grocers.
^ Lhips from the Oklahoma Law Factory §
I Stump Ashby spoke very noisily on
| the quail question.
Mr. Ballard, from Taiadlst mad his
first speech, Thursday. It wasn't a pom-
pous, windy efTort.
Roes referred to the uncultured farmers
of the bouse as "the scientific clod hop-
pers."
Senator Campbell Russell, the w'airl-
wind and mince meat orator, owns a
pretty good experiment station.
Ono gentleman of the upper house 1
sometimes called "trie tall statesman
from Polecat creek. *
Okemah Wortman of Okfuskee, Is a
taxedermist. or bird stuffer. by profes-
sion. and a member of the lower houff
b.v the votes of several citizens and by the
grace of the committee on elections
Farmer Doolittle considers the dreaded
shirt sleeves statesman nearly equal to
Czar Tom Reed, Bismark, Richlieu aid
Machlavelle.
Law Maker Smith, of Grant county, has
been «rowned -poet lariat" of the law
factory. His rhvmlng goods are in great
demand. Ills doggerel serves as sweet
duxologies to the tired workers for t'ne
dear people.
By MATT DUHR.
V Oil t.nv lifllc lh.il ..
Tiie Bartlesvill,
pop corn brigade
prodigy presented the
vlth a bushel sack full
their favorite lunch. Dtgnltv was
stabbed in front and back.
Thursday was game and fish dav In tin
lower house. The bill contains thirty sec-
tions and several fractions
General Jamison, the most noted orln-
tliollglst of the new State, can l,e justly
called the Audubon of Oklahoma Tie
feathered songsters li re a true friend
ln the venerable gentleman
taw hills that a few hundrtd thousaua
r' r nave been killed this year to Drevenl
them from devouring the crops,
llTmL.d/SCUSS'°ns in th« lower house last
■ a, wei extra noisy. About sixiv
amendments to the game bill were noisily
on pandemonium"""' bord*r'-''1
factorvd"ig<>"! lalx*e,■ lh« flestive law
y f ,ou'd not neglect t„ carefully
use t"e Uklahoma statutes and the
■ en volumes made by the eig.n u".
. legislatures. Thosc laws are th.
repealed.Unt" or
^Thursday was ^cln. day i„ lh.
la(.e'aoVt«SO'd,,nl mUM be bu' ' owln* "I,
fenceaburildet"nf°rd " °n "P#rt
omplainti about the pub* j|
bowers of
He printing.
bUl ha> l° r«n am^Ck With.
out a tail.
,Tfoe '.H*"131" 01 th« House prayed .1-
> for the senators.
.reMrh«r^m,^ceWith 'nUd '°U'h'
Ki'1 b*
How about ,he sacred writ, of Injtlne-
tion and habeas rorpus?
•Hil.v Ono HItono qi I!VC(E-
Hiat is LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine
Mrly named remedies touietimeB deceive Th"«
Sr^.-a"d„or,?lnaI Co|d Tablet is a WFrr?£
PACKAGE wfth black and red letteria. EJ
tears the signature o! E. (V. (IHOVE Jto
STATEMENT AN ERROR
stitution.
If you ;
sustain yt
Jority.
If I ar
thougl
ould
wrong.
right.
sill
Poet-Preacher Banks spoke against the
bill for the protection of birds and other
fill wild animals. II0 said tlut ItU L...,,. , „ ,
pie didn't want or need such i la ,v f„m iS.il f, P" I
v live where the festive prairie ,1 v En|d. Okla.. Mm:. The announc-
le snake an,I bantam owl kee„ honsa n engagement of Charles Van
in the same hole. P Duvn ® d Miss Margaret Robberts, which
appeared in the state Capital are an ar-
il was hinted t:.at real farms are so Jectlof'a'1. m,r c0'"
I nor1, n* tni re is* nothing in It.
I b<
tall Ix
orlty
ther be right, and be
Jorlt
nority. than wrong, and be in the ma
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS.
FAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to
cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding
or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or
money refunded. 50c.
CASTOniA.
B««r* the ^ Hara Boucfrf
CANNON DELEGATES
(8outhern Press.)
Springfield. Ill Mi'oh 20.—Canf.«n del-
egat s nn ill probably be. selected by the
omventtlon of t*:< .-Sri district today and
that of the ISth district tomorrow.
1 with ti
lulre. notify!,,-
in th
ruMli
and th<
McOuire's
. sed
subject is men
e tempestu
Historical
t nre^ei vatlon i
lutlon
CITIZENS APPEAL
FOR INVESTIGATION \ " '
(Associated Pre^
O.. M
THAT
MEMORY OF KOSSUTH
Saking
Powdsr
ewociRs
I to Pmidont Koo e\vlt for aid n
DUEL IN DARK
MISTAKEN IDENTITY
Two Customes Officers Fight to
Death Each Supposing the Oth-
er to be Smugglers
El Paso. Tex March 20-Mountea
Customs Inspector Charles Logan and
Charles Jones fought a duel in the my
bed of the Rio Grande river In this
ity
bell
other
^nicc rnuie */o.
: mtic
i\tsiacnce rnonc y
last night and both were killed.
bodies were found this monrlng
supposed that each mistook th
for a smuggler.
At first It was believed that the two
officers had been killed by stnuuti.-s hut
this theory IP discredited as tracks
around wher© the bodies lay all flt ,he
shoes of the dead men. Three shots w. rs
heard by people living In the neighbor*
hood about o'clock last ni ht Th.
pistol of one of th. officers held
cmjMy shells and that the other
empty shell.
1-ogan was a son of the late '
T. H. I.eaan of the Cnlted States
and a brother of thc
Frank D. Wlekhsm Twelfth Infa ..
I 8. A . stationed at Governor's Island,
N Y. Jones was a railroad man at d
lived at 8an Antonio and Houston. \
before entering the customs service
twe
aptaii
rhe past few da3'a have added several \TFr
^rrTION8t0°Urlmn'---^™
Without Doubt
W e show the Swellest Line of
$2.00, $2.50 :
and' $3.00
Oxfords and Tiq<;, in'
I Tans, Patents and
^ icis ever shown in
I Town.
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.
Matching Search Results
View two places within this issue that match your search.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.
Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 291, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 21, 1908, newspaper, March 21, 1908; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126638/m1/2/?q=Quinton: accessed June 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.