The Capitol Hill News (Capitol Hill, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 6, 1912 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 16 x 11 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
*.
t
GOT TO THE CAUSE.
And Ther. All Symptom* of Kidney
Trouble Vanished.
C. J. Hammonds, 11’6 E. First St,
Fort Scott, Kans., says: “I was operat-
ed on for stone in the kidney but not
cured and some time after, was feel-
ing so bad, 1 knew
there must be anoth-
er stone that would
have to be cut out. I
decided to Lry Doan's
Kidney Pills and the
kidney action im-
» proved right away.
Large quantities of
sediment and stone
particles passed from
me and finally the stone itself, partly
dissolved, but still as big as a pea.
With it disappeared all rymptoms of
dizziness, rheumatism and headache.
I have gained about 50 pounds since
and feel well and hearty.”
“When Your Pack Is Lame, Remember
the Name—DOAN’S.” 50c. all stores.
Foster-Milburn Co.. BufTalo, N. Y.
Joke on the Doctor.
The physicians in Mankato had
agreed that during their Chautauqua
assembly they would employ a call
boy, and each was to pay his share
of the expense. This boy was to call
any doctor who was wanted, without
distu»bing the speaker, as it was em-
barrassing to him and looked as if
♦ hey were doing it to advertise with-
out expense. So it all went well until
Uprising Elephant Hots8111 Dl® m
MOST PEOPLE DO NOT KNOW
the afternoon when Strickland W. Gil-
liland spoke. As he was talking away ! the wisest and most intelligent
HE elephant is the best
known and at the
sanio time the least
known of all wild ani-
mals. Paradoxical
this may sound, It is
nevertheless true.
Nearly every one has
seen an elephant and
jd nearly every one linag-
ines he knows what
one looks like. But
this popular impres-
sion as weli as most of the beliefs
about the elephant are erroneous.
In the first place the elephants we
aee here in America are Indian ele-
phants. They aro undersized, even
the largest them.
A full-grown African elephant is
nearly three times the size of Jumbo,
which was the largest elephant ever
brought to America. I have shot sev-
eral specimens which stood over thir-
teen feet and which weighed at least
twice as much as Jumbo.
Next to the monkey, the elephant is
I or all
X&ompv'me* l
V^>
w
r
\r
certain doctor had a call from the i
platform, and he walked out rather i
ostentatiously, Some of the people
who knew of the arrangement laughed |
i animals. I am not saying this ol the
j domesticated Indian elephant, but of
I the African elephant in his native
state. And the African elephant is
or snickered, and the speaker got it. always a huge, wild bee-A. lie Is
He said. "Don’t laugh, folks. That is never domesticated,
the way my brother got his start.” 1 During the past two years that I
And everybody roared. spent in British East Africa and
- j Uganda studying the elephant as he
His Pose. : has lived for centuries, I learned sev-
"Mrs. Hewligus, what is your hus- ! eral things about him that entitles
S AXay&hvjvxz
jZJW&tA'rv /ZAysA'cy
A '/r/s aav?
Aacvyyo AF7&JB r/fir-Jhr
band’s attitude on the woman suffrage
question?”
"One foot in the air, of course. He’s
one of the chronic kickers.”
Lots of It.
"They say a man's wife often make?
him, but Bingle’s wife will never be
able to put any push in that man.”
"Just you wait until she gets e
lawn-mower in his hands.”
him to be called the most intelligent
of all animals, the monkey alone ex-
cepted.
In many respects he surpassed the
monkey, but the latter’s Intelligence
more nearly approaches our own, and
for that reason we must consider him
the highest type of intelligence.
him in moth u the cows ran off uud
left him.
These African elephants have many
signals which they use to communi-
cate among themselves; for instance,
when a cow gets the w%'nd of a hunter
she signals "on guard,” and imme-
diately every elephant in the herd
stops grazing and listens with trunk
to the ground. They are as silent as
the grave.
Even when a shot among them
causes a stampede and the forest re-
sounds with the first crash of their
moving, they can disappear without
Much to my surprise, T discovered# making the slightest noise. They can
TO DRIVE OCT MAI.ARIA
AND 1ICI LI) I I- TIIE SYSTEM
Taka the Old Standard OKOVHM TASTELESS
CHILL TONIC. You know what you ar« taking.
The formula Is plainly printed on every bottle,
•bowing It is simply Quinine and Iron In a tasteless
form, and the most effectual form. For grown
people and children, 60 cents..
Howell
dnto bankruptcy again.
Powell—Yes, failing is his failing.
Strike Breakers of Old.
Elijah was being fed by the ravens.
“I don’t care if the waiters do
.strike," he boasted.
Goodness does not certainly make
men happy than happiness makes
them good.—Landor.
There’s music In
baby—to its mother.
that the bull elephant Is rarely a fight-
er. Indeed, there is little danger from
him. The generally accepted theory
that the big bulls are not found In
the big herds is a fallacy.
The bull elephants that are found
roaming alone are almost invariably
senile gentlemen who have been cast
Hi w . off by a herd. While I succeeded in
8 .I*3* ”C8,‘ getting three splendid specimens of
see that Rowell has gone P ,, , . . .K „ * .
bull elephants the finest specimen is
still at large. I was unable to get
him, for the reason that he lives in
the center of a herd of 700 elephants,
who guard him night and day.
These herds of elephants have cow
lenders. The leader is usually an old
animal with an ugly disposition. The
cows protect the bulls, and the mo-
ment they scent danger they crowd
around them in or^pr to prevent them
from being shot. If they can see the
hunters they will charge them, leaving
enough of their number to guard tne
bulls.
Their sense of smell is very acute.
They can detect the presence of a
man a thousand yards off, but unless
he is moving they can’t see him, even
a I if he is within a hundred yards. When
they catch a whiff of wind tainted by
— man the cow elephants charge in that
direction and it is a hundred to n$e
that they will locate the person.
If it happens that a hunter can get
I near enough to shoot a bull elephant
the cows gather around the bull and
tr> to carry him away. I saw seven’ll
cows vainly try to carry off a big bull
elephant that I had shot.
If he had been able to make any ef-
I fort himself they would have succeed-
ed. but the bullet from my rifle had
j finished him, and after trying for sev-
eral minutes to lift him up and get
Those who seem to escape from
discipline are not to be envied; they
have farther to go.—A. C. Benson.
ys v
•on itsmerltsas the best of herbcathartics.
the squall of
WIFE’S HEALTH
RESTORED
Husband Declared Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound Would Re-
store Her Health,
And It Did.
move so silently that I have often
come within fifteen or twenty yards
of a big beast, mistaking his trunk
and forefeet for trees in the jungle.
On several occasions the beasts re-
ceded so quickly and so quietly that
I lost them altogether.
When they want to they can make
more noise than any animals In the
world. A herd of l,wo or three hun-
dred will trample down an entire na-
tive village and all the farms around
it with such noises that can only be
compared to an earthquake.
Again a herd will slide through the
forest so quietly than you can't hear
them ten yards away. As their senses
of smell and hearing are acute, they
rarely fall into the elephant pits
which the natives dig to capture them.
I don’t suppose one pit in a hundred
accomplishes its mission When the
elephants go through the forests they
hold their trunks close to the ground,
and by tapping every now and then
then can detect any pit, no matter
how skillfully concealed, before step-
ping into it.
The moment they strike any ground
that is the least bit suspicious they
tap it carefully and make wide de-
tours Of course, when a herd is
stampeded they haven't time to In-
vestigate the ground and then they
sometimes fall into the pits.
The generally neepted theory that
the calves are only to be found with
cows is also a fallacy. The cows are
the leaders and the fighters of the
herds, so it is only natural that they
should turn over their offspring to be
cared for by the bulls when they
themselves are busy. And that is ex-
actly the case.
I have seen bull elephants playing
with the calves and looking after
them on numerous occasions. The
fact that you see a couple of calves
does not Indicate that a cow is close
by. Their papa may te in charge of
them.
It is only a matter of a few years
until the African elephant will be ex-
tinct. Most of the fine specimens
have been killed off already. The
herds that are roaming the jungles
hnve little ivory, and are, therefore,
Immune from elephant hunters. How-
eter, as civilization spreads, the herds
are being destroyed, for the reason
that they are a menace to the safety
of the natives, besides being the de-
stroyers of much property.
Now that they are suspected of car-
rying sleeping sickness, their doom is
sealed. For this reason I am anxious
to return to Africa as soon as possible
to complete the specimens for my
group. Unless I do so no museum will
he able to group elephants as they
are in all their glory.
I inspected hundreds of elephants
without finding any really fine speci-
mens. Mrs. Ackley and I shot three
bulls having tusks each weighing over
100 pounds. But what I am after par-
ticularly Is a bull with tusks weighing
200 pounds, a full-grown animal.
Many elephant hunters have killed
three and four hundred animals with-
out finding as large tusks as we did,
but we were on the lookout only for
the finest specimens. These fine speci-
mens are very rare, for the reason
that when a bull develops tusks of
fifty pounds, which is quite an early
age, perhaps twenty-five years, he be-
comes the target of every hunter,
black or white, who sets eyes on him.
Thus it is only the more crafty bull
elephants that, seeking the protection
of large herds or clinging to the more
Inaccessible regions such as dense for-
ests, managed to survive to a ripe old
age nnd develop a growth of Ivory.
There is one old bull, perhaps the
most splendid specimen In Africa, well
known in Uganda, who has been seen
by many hunters. He is so well pro-
tected by a large herd of aggressive
cows, who charge on the slightest In-
timation of danger, that no one has
been able to reach him
On my return to Uganda I Intend
to find him and eventually Install him
In the Museum of Natural History
Ancient Building In Virginia Has Long
Been Famous for Its Fish and
Chicken Dinners—Only Dwell-
ing Left of City.
Washington.—On the Virginia side
of the Great Falls of the Potomac,
commonly known as "the Nlagnra of
the South,” fourteen miles from Wash-
ington, is an ancient building, the old
Dickie house, connected with which Is
the pleasing tradition that every presi-
dent of the United States has taken
dinner beneath its roof tree, President
Taft alone excepted. The old habita-
tion, long famous for Its fish and
chicken dinners, Is the only dwelling
left of the departed City of Matildas-
ville, that was called Into being by
the construction of the Potomac Com-
pany Canal, of which George Wash-
ington, after relinquishing his com-
mand at the close of the revolution,
was promoter and president.
Generations ago the canal was aban-
doned and Matlldasvllle vanished from
the map. The old Dickie house alone
remains. George Washington often
ato beneath its roof. When the Brit-
ish captured Washington In 1814 Pres-
ident Madison and Ills cabinet, it is
said, tarried for a meal before cross-
i»:r the river. All the presidents but
one are said by the descendants of
the original owner of the house to
have sal at the table in the little din-
ing-room when visiting the falls and
to havo partaken or fish and chicken
> cooked la a style that has made tha
Dickie family famous for Us culinary
accomplishments. Some are skeptical
enough to question this claim, but It Is
put forth with such stress that most
visitors depart strong In the faith
that they have eaten a meal in a room
that has been honored by the presence
of all the presidents but one. As yet
President Taft has not eat In judg-
ment upon a meal at Dickie’s, and the
absorbing ambition of the proprietor
of the house is to make the list com-
plete.
Since the completion of the trolley
line to the Great Falls of the Potomac
this beautiful work of nature has at-
tracted a great Interest among excur-
sionists. The trip to the falls is one
of the most popular In the vicinity of
the national capital. Last year, 170,-
000 excursionists visited tho falls. In
addition, thousands of other sightseers
made the trip by automobile or car-
riage on the Maryland side. This
route is far more beautiful than tho
one 6n the Virginia side, for the road
winds along the river and tho Chesa-
peake and Ohio Canal to the famous
Cabin John bridge, which was built
when Jefferson Davis was secretary
of war. During the civil war the name
Ashland, Ky. — 41 Four years ago I
seemed to have everything the mattor
with me. I hail fo-
m ale and kidney trou-
ble and was so bad off
I could hardly rest
day or night I doc-
tored with all the
best doctors in town
and took many kinds
of medicine but noth-
ing did any good un-
til I tried your won-
derful remedy, I.ydla
E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound. My husband said it
would restore my health and it has."—
Mrs. May Wyatt, Ashland, Ky.
There are probably hundreds of thou-
sands of women in the United States
who have been benefittedby this famous
old remedy, which was produced from
roots and herbs over thirty years ago by
a woman to relieve woman’s suffering.
It cart W hat A noth er \V oin an sa y s:
Camden, N. J. —"‘I had female trou-
ble and a serious displacement and was
tired and discouraged and unable to do my
work. My doctors told me I never could
be cured without an operation, but
thanks to Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound I am cured of that affliction
and have recommended it to more than
one of my friends with the best results."
—Mrs. Ella Johnston, 324 Vine St
If you want special advice write to
Lydia E. rinkham Medicine Co. (confi-
dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence*
HUMOROUS HAPPYLAND
» rik THE BEST STOCK
f$T"
saddles:?
able prices, write for free
illustrated catalogue.
A. H HESS & CO.
305 Travis Si.. Hoi.sioo, Tex.
Where He Drew the Line.
don’t find you trying to sell me
blue paint when I ask for black.” said
the irate customer.
"I don’t object to you trying to force
me to buy a screwdriver because you
haven’t the sort of garden hose I
want.”
“My dear sir—”
"You can try substitution all you
want to, and if you get away with it all j
right. But when you try to convince |
me every time I come into your store
that I ought to adopt your politics in-
steed of my own, I draw the line.
Good day.”
Prestige.
"The Climbleys have advanced an-
other round on the social ladder.”
"How is that?”
“They lost two friends who were
first cabin passengers on the Titanic.”
Her Future.
Charitable Visitor—Has the little
girl ever worked In fractions?
Tenement Dweller—No, ma'am; but
she's going to work in a factory soon.
Unforgettable?
"It's a fine play, don't you think?”
"Quite unforgettable! Where shall
we have supper afterward?"—Rire.
So Thoughtful of Him.
Bridegroom (two days after wed-
ding)—I haven't seen anything yet of
that $5,000 check from your father.
Bride—Well, you see. dear, papa
heard that your father had already
given us one. and he knew we
shouldn’t care to have duplicate pres-
ents.
Aftermath.
"Is the editor in?”
"All in, sir. The Civic club’s ban-
|uet must have been a hummer.”
Why He Asked Her.
She—I am sure there are many
girls who could make you happier than
I could.
He—That’s Just the difficulty; they
could, but they won’t.
Beyond the City Limits.
Mrs. Knicker—So you had to dis-
charge the waitress?
Mrs. Stubbubs—Yes; Henry takes
his breakfast on the run and she nev-
er could throw the roll into his mouth
Right Way to Proceed.
"If you take each job as you come
to It. opportunity will be chasing after
you Instead of you chasing after op-
portunity.”—President James, Univer-
sity of Illinois.
More Slander.
"Ever notice at a woman's gathering
how guilty the other women look when
a freRh arrival comes in?"
"That’s right; whether they have
been talking about her or not."
Why must these alleged press hu-
morists always be slandering the
worn to?
busy
Hard Reality.
"He pretends to be a very
man.”
"By Jinks, there's no pretense about
It. He supports a wife and seven
children on a salary of $60 a month.”
General Exit.
"Was the audience enthusiastic*”’
"Yes, indeed. I never before saw
people so anxious to get out of a
place."
There never was a
thirst that Coca-Cola
couldn’t satisfy.
It goes, straight as an ar-
row, to the dry spot.
And besides this,
Whenever
yen $re an
Arrow think
satisfies to a T the call for
something purely delicious
and deliciously pure—and
wholesome.
Delicious
Refreshing
Thirst-Quenching
Demand the Genuine as made by
THE COCA-COLA CO., Atlanta, ca.
X”* Our new booklet, telling of Coca-Cola
JL 1*66 vindication at Chattanooga, for the
iy—
ECONOMICAL SOUL WAS THIS
- *' s*. **
% *
:
Hebrew’s Attempt to Save Fare Prob-
ably Went Astray, but the Idea
Was a Brilliant One.
Arthur W. Marks of Washington
tells this story to illustrate tho tulent
of the Hebrew race for economy.
A little Hebrew got on a train in
New York to go to Philadelphia, but
hud no ticket. In the car with him
were the members of several the-
atrical companies and he noticed that,
when the conductor asked them for
their tickets they would reply:
"Company.”
"What company?" the conductor
would ask; and the actors would re-
ply by announcing the title of the
theatrical company under whose name
all their transportation had been paid
for.
"Give me your ticket,” the con-
ductor finally reached the Hebrew.
"Comp’ny,” said the little fellow,
looking carelessly out of the window.
"What company?” asked the con-
ductor.
Said the Hebrew: "The Pittsburgh
Cloding company.”—Popular Maga-
zine.
Provocation.
"Bingley, why does Oldboy refuse to
speak to you? You used to be great
friends."
"Yes. when we were bachelors; but
he’s married now."
“And what difference does that
make?"
"Well, ‘the fact is. I made him a
handsome wedding present of a book,
and he hasn’t spoken to me since."
"What was the book?”
" ‘Paradise Lost.’ Tit-Bits.
At th» Zoo.
Mrs. Rhinoceros-You have been
drinking again.
Mr. Rhino—Imposhible. m'dear;
don’t you see the horn is above my
mouth?"
The Point of View.
"Do the Bronsons lead an Ideal mar
ried life?”
"Well, the answer depends on what
you consider an Ideal married life.
They seldom see each other."
"I do believe my brother will be a
j bachelor. He has such bad luck! Ev-
j cry time he wants to marry a girl for
love she has too little money."
Listen.
i "Money talks," hut it is net over
| cordial with some of u*.
"The Niagara of the South.”
of Jefferson Davis, which was inscrib-
ed on the bridge, was chiseled out, but
a few years ago it was replaced, an
episode that attracted wide interest at
the time. From here the road cuts
across a beautiful hilly country to the
Great Falls on the Maryland side,
where there is a hotel of advancej
age.
The falls are always changing, ac-
cording to the height of tho water.
Above them is a dam which holds
back the water for the Washington
supply. A rise of one Inch at tho
dam makes a rise of eight Inches In
the water as It passes over the fal’s
and down the gorges. The spectacle
Is one of great majesty. The river
splits and runs around a craggy Isl-
and. and the two parts rush together
again and pour thunderously between
great rocks which split the flood into
three separate waterfalls, as it tum-
bles over the precipice Into tho cal-
dron. Here the water, rushing in
from three angles, forms a great whirl-
pool and thence rages through a nar-
row gorge with perpendicular walls
of granite for about a mile, where it
spreads out into a placid expanse.
Archie Finds a Sacrilege.
The last time President Tuft was In
Chicago ho was invited to tho inevlt-
! able banquet. Accompanying him were
| his secretary, Mr. Hilles, and his mili-
tary aid, Major Archibald Butt. In
the course of the dinner the Chicago
; men sang a parody of Dixie.
Butt, who is from Georgia, hnd his
whole evening spoiled right there.
, Somebody, noticing his pained expres-
! sion, asked him what the trouble was.
"Oh, that song!" he exclaimed, sad-
ly. “You might as well parody the
Lord’s prayer.”—Popular Magazine.
Proof of Precaution.
Mr. Lansbury’s concern, as ex*
pressed in the house over the mili-
tary drilling going on in the north of
Ireland reminds one of a story of how
Ireland wus occasionally taught to
shoot in the past. The war office once
sent a famous officer over to inspect
the militia regiments, and the officer,
after inspecting, asked for a few
words with the drill sergeant.
“These men of yours,” he said,
couldn’t hit a target as big as the
Tower of London. You can’t havo tak-
en much pains to teach them.”
"Tache thim to shoot,” gasped the
sergeant. "Of course I did not tache
thlm to shoot, her honor; for, bedad,
if l did there wouldn’t be a landlord
left In Munster."—Loudon Chronicle.
In an Epigram.
Mrs. J. G. Phelps Stokes (Rose Pas-
tor) stated eplgrammatically at a din-
ner in New York the value of an edu-
cation.
"Many poor people,” she said, "are
spending their second childhood in
the almshouse because they spent
their first In earning Instead of learn-
ing.”
Her Advantage.
"I should thing Buggs made things
very uncomfortable for his wife when
he has a habit of storming all over
the house.”
"What need she care how he storms,
as long as she Is reigning in it?”
The woman who cares for a clean,
wholesome mouth, and sweet breath,
Vill find Paxtine Antiseptic a joy for-
ever. At druggists, 25c a box or sent
postpaid on receipt of price by Th®
Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass.
Wants Clear Conscience.
New York.—That ho might plead
guilty to a theft in 1908 and die with
a clear conscience, Daniel Loewy was
carried on a stretcher into general
session the other day before Judge
Crain. Abraham Levy, his counsel,
told the story of the robbery by Loewy
of ten sable skins from his employer,
the skins being valued at $1,750.
Judge Crain then suspended sentence.
Loewy Is declared by physicians to
be slowly dying.
He w’ent to San Francisco in Febru-
ary, 1910, and while in the new West-
ern hotel.there vas held up, shot and
robbed by three unidentified men,
who escaped. They took all the dia-
monds Loewy had.
The man with an imagination is
always on tho ragged edge of making
his mark.
Pessimists may be men who are dis-
appointed In themselves.
DIFFERENT NOW.
Since th© Slugger, Coffee, Was Aban-
doned.
Coffee probably causes more bilious-
| ness and so-called malaria than any
one other thing—even bad climate.
(Tea is Just as harmful as coffee be-
cause it contains caffeine, the drug in
coffee).
A Ft. Worth man says:
"I have always been of a bilious tem-
perament, subject to malaria and up
to one year ago a perfect slave to cof-
fee. At times I would be covered with
I boils and full of malarial poison, was
i very nervous and had swimming in
j the head.
"I don’t know how it happened, but
j I finally became convinced that my
sickness was due to the use of coffee,
and a little less than a year ago I
! stopped coffee and began drinking
: Postum.
"From that time I have not had a
: boil, not had malaria at all, have
j gained 15 pounds good solid weight
and know beyond all doubt this is due
j to the use of Postum in place of cof-
j fee, as I have taken no medicine at
All.
"Postum has certainly made healthy,
red blood for me In place of the blood
that coffee drinking impoverished and
made unhealthy.” Name given by
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Postum makes red blood.
"There's a reason." and it is ex-
plained in the little book, "The Road
to Wellville,” in pkgs.
Ever rend the above letter? A new
one appear* from time to time. They
are iff-nulae, true, and full of humun
Interest.
Economy In Atchison.
An Atchison man is so economical
he won’t go to a hall game unless he
gets a pass to a double header.—
Atchison Globe.
Garfield Tea helps humanity the world
over. Taken for liver and kidney
troubles, bllllousness and constipation.
A long oration goes lame on the
stretch.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver la
right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gently but firmly com^
pel a lazy liver to
do its duty.
Cures Con-
stipation, In-
digestion.
Sick
Headache,
and Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE*
Genuine must bear Signature
Oklahoma Directory
FLORIDA
Why not spend your time and efforts where returns
are the greatest? Three big money making crop#
ererv roar off same ground. Growers clearing tsiu
t.i 11500 per aero from fruits and vegetable*. Ideal
-the natural enemy of catarrh.
cllmate-
■i tularin
euter. cool >. u ami era and lutlii winters. Ei> client
schools, churches, roads, telephones and all con-
»» . m er. I* n i niUn ihis opportunity. Conic and
• •*.*• r write for literature. Write today. iKtiblA
enemy
nptton, la grippe—pa
mors and mild winter
, the u mat In in.
re, healthful
Excellent
otophones and all con;
w rite for literature.
OHOVKS tOSl'AXT, 14 Zlrglir Bldg., t)klah.a. CHy,
KERFOOT-MILLER & CO.
(Incorporated)
Manufacturers of
BRONCHO BRAND
OVERALLS AND WORK CLOTHING
Wholesale Dry Goods
OKLAHOMA CITY OKLAiJOKiA
Soud a* your taall orders.
• ' : ' \ 7 ''
o > •
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.
Wilson, Amos L. The Capitol Hill News (Capitol Hill, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 6, 1912, newspaper, June 6, 1912; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc860511/m1/3/?q=%22United+States%22: accessed June 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.