The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, May 17, 1895 Page: 4 of 4
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The State Capital.
By th SUt* C«piUI Printing Co.
Society Directory
/guthrie LODGE ne 1 1 o. O. k
IjT Monday uigi.i of each week Ht 7 80. \ In-
itio* Odd Fellows mIwrjb welcome- C. A
WKIDEMAN N.li., J. Koi'caht, Secretary.
itbrielonqk No. 1, A o. i'. w., uieejw
G
r blot u, .
Workme
WANT COLUMN.
\\ li 11 l)o Vt
WautT
Do you w ant -
i>, you want a Situation"
Lh> \ .hi want to buy auythlugT
Do you v ant B<«ar.l.TH..r Lo«l feniT
!>•, v Miviu.i iinj - male or femalaT
Do you want Pupil*?
1H> you want a Pai
l>o you want rtervi
Do you want to He
Doyi. i want to Hi
ir any kind of a V<-
Do you want to ti
Htore, l."t <>r rami
Have you Lost or h ound r
Clerk
or Mechanical
louse oi NtoreT
II a Horwe, Wngoa
Itent your Houm,
turrsT
havp you s<
that you wish t
nd-II ti ml
k'll t
) Sell
if ho. Tub Caimtai, will publish
adviTUscinent rJI woniM oin- tiin
bree tnuea for <m uIh, « ne werl
a want In The State Cai'ital i
briug quick rrturna.
• *m i1h of any kind
hanire?
kind?
WANTED,
SITUATION WANTED. A lady of «
cdi > winheau position .«•. «'lerk «
office work. MIns b. Tittle. SOU, H.
atreet, Guthrie.
L"
Luther West and j.
PERSONAL.
Mayor Martin is in Kl Ueno.
A. («. Drake is here from St. Joe.
II. C. Pivllbiss is here from St. Louis
H. P. Gott is here from Kansas City.
H. J. Mitchell, of Louis, is in the
city.
E. I). Vance, oi St. Joe, is in the
city.
1). Herman, of Wichita, was in the
city today.
L. S. Hayward? of Philadelphia, is
in the city.
W. D. Jordan, <>f 'Juanah, Texas, is
in the city.
Attorney Thurston went to Pawnee
this afternoon.
K. (j. Haskins ami wife, of Marshal,
were in the city today.
(leorge Gardner returned from Okla-
homa City this afternoon.
Proprietor II II. Perry, of the Hotel
Royal, went to Purcell this afternoon.
Judge .1. W.Crawford is over from
Chandler visiting his son. II. I*. Craw-
ford.
Mrs. llurke left this morning for
Sterling, Kansas, whcie her daughter,
Mrs. Porter, is very sick.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Severns and Miss
Dora Hodman went to the Osage coun-
try this afternoon on a week's outing.
Mrs. 0. S Hidwell. sister of Mrs. S.
J. Sheppard. arrived last night from
Kattle Creek, Mich., to spend the sum-
mer with her sister.
Rev. W. I> White, of Temple,Texas,
is the new pastor at the M. 10. church
south. He seems to be a young man
of vigor and ability.
Mrs. Jackson, who kept open house
the year around on South Second,
shook the dust of the city from her
feet this afternoon forever.
Hill Shawcross, formerly Wild wood
Will, of Chandler, and Mac St. Clair
came down from Perry yesterday to
stop a day "in a real city."
Mrs. Nettie E. Chapin, of Oklahoma
City came up this afternoon, to visit
friends in the city. Her father J. 1L
Wheeler, came through on his way to
Missouri.
George Hainev, editor of the Wa-
tonga Times, was in the city yester-
day. He states they have had good
rains out there aud will have good
crops.
Volney lloggatt is down from Perry.
He looked with envy at Allen Car-
ruther's brick block and said that at
one time he could have hail it for a
good sandwitch.
Sam Lewis, the tall man who trav-
els for a St. Louis cigar house, came
in on the afternoon train, and Volney
lloggatt will have to take a back seat
on being the biggest man in town.
Mexican
Mustang
Liniment
for
Burns,
Caked & Inflamed Udders.
Piles,
Rheumatic Pains,
Bruises and Strains,
Running Sores,
inflammations,
Stiff joints,
Harness & Saddle Sores,
Sciatica,
Lumbago.
Scalds,
Blisters,
Insect Bites,
All Cattle Ailments,
All Horse Ailments,
All Sheep Ailments,
Penetrates Muscle,
Membrane and Tissue
Quickly to the Very
Seat of Pain and
Ousts it in a Jiffy.
Rub in Vigorously.
Mustang Liniment conquers
Pain,
Makes Han or Beast well
again.
McKINLtY MENU
McKinlicv, Ok)a., May 15.—[Special
Correspondence.| Mr. Willis Kobbins
returnet to Ohio last Wednesday.
Mrs. Jackson, across the creek, is
very sick; doubts of her recovery are
entertained.
Logan Hickson anil wife were at the
eapital city Friday.
A railroad through the valley would
be nice to have, but just now more
rain is preferable.
Judge Merrick aud daughter came
out to the farm Saturday.
Mr. Johnson and Duuam are having
their cattle herded on the school sec-
tion east of the store.
Well, is it not all right for father
Mooney to visit at Meridian store if he
wants to? If Mr. Christy goes away
he may want a housekeeper.
Dr. Smith and Sam were the guests
of father Mooney and Mr. Christy's
people Saturday and Sunday.
Mrs. Jacob Wolf visited the latter
part of the week in Guthrie
Mrs. Crews returned to this neigh-
borhood last week from Kansas,where
she was visiting with some of her chil-
dren.
John Preston is happy over a ne
SVM,
heir who arrived last Friday.
I). K. Campbell Is home again. So
we suppose court has closed.
Oue Who Know a.
The article in last evening's paper
stating that the Perkius girl was not
helped away by church charities is
misleading. If she was not sent by
church charities, she was helped to
get away by Christian people and
church members who are not at all
anxious to tell the people who they
are, but Christian people did help her
and did furnish her with the good
clothes she wore, aud they did it for
the love of God. One Who Knows.
Clin
denied that the infiu-
upon health is great,
AROUND TOWN.
Highest temperature, 80; lowest, 00.
Forecast: Fair.except showers in west
ern portion tonight: warmer in west
Friday.
Go to Caman for fotos.
For Rent—Furnished room at 117
East Noble.
By request, "Red Riding Hood" will
be repeated at the Congregational
church this evening.
A special queensware sale at the
Welcome for the next four days.
The usual gun club shoot took place
this afternoon at Island park.
Don't fail to stop our soliciting
wagon, even if it is on a run.—Wel-
come GR< K'K.lt V.
There was a crowded house to hear
"Red Riding Hood" last evening at
the Congregational church. It will
be repeated this evening. Price of ad-
mission, lo cents.
If you desire the soliciting wagon
to call at your house, leave orders at
the Welcome Grocery.
Dr. Peoples, the expert dentist, Ok-
lahoma and First, upstairs.
There will be a meeting of the di-
rectors of the Oklahoma historical so-
ciety at Norman tomorrow.
Anyone wanting a pretty hat cheap
go to Mrs. Saunders'.
You can get prompt delivery by or-
dering goods from the Welcome Gro-
cery solicitor or by telephone.
There will be a colored Odd Fellows
social in the old Noble hotel building
this evening.
Island park—the only place in Guth-
rie to spend an afternoon and evening.
Frank Wyatt and Jack Tearney will
cpen up a saloon next Monday in the
old "Rush" dry goods stand on Okla
hoina avenue.
The best wines, brandies and liquors
at prices to suit the times, at the same
Old Moses', 211 Harrison avenue. Call
again.
Turkish baths for ladies, 05 cents
for the next .10 days, reduced from $1,
at the Guthrie llairdressing and Toilet
Parlors.
All queensware sold at 25 per cent
discount for the next four day, includ-
ing Wednesday to Saturday.
The Tecumseh, Chandler and Guth-
rie telephane posts enter the city by
the way of Cleveland avenue. The
posts are all ready for the wires.
Go to Mrs. Saunders' for a stylish
hat for half the original price.
Now is your time to secure bargains
in queensware, beginning Wednesday
at the Welcome. Everything in queens-
ware and glassware goes at twenty-
five percent reduction.
The Salvation army will give an ice
cream supper on Friday night for the
benefit of the 8. A. War in this city a
good time is anticipated, ami every
body is inviteil to come and exchange
ten cents for an excellent dish of cream
and cake.
Get your gasoline stoves cleaned and
repaired, also lawn mowers sharpened
at Joe M. Roads', 118 N. Division.
Bicycles for sale and repairs always
on hand.
The greatest queensware sale ever
given in Guthrie will be going on the
rest of this week at the Welcome.
Blair Post, of St. Louis, has invited
Hon. L. L. Bridges, of this city, to
make the memorial address on Decor-
ation day. The post is the strongest
in that city and numbers ex-Secretary
Noble among its members, and when
alive Gen. Sherman was one of its act-
ive members.
Anyone wanting a pretty hat cheap
go to Mrs. Saunders.'
There will be a song service at the
M. E. church south every Saturday
evening at 8:15o'clock, beginning next
Saturday. New books have been or-
dered. Everybady invited to come.
If you are troubled with any disease,
ask I. 11. Stryker for a circular explain
ing, "Our Native Herbs." See auver
tisement.
Arthur Williams, the fashionable
and reliable tailor, has moved his
shop from the building on Oklahoma
avenue, east of the government acre,
to a store room at the rear of the Cap-
itol National bank, where his old cus-
tomers are all finding him. He is
kept busy all the time turning out fine
summer suits.
f| ChlrhMtrr'a KaglUk lUmmmmd tlr+m*.
ENNYROYAL PILLS
Or%taal mm* 0 hr OaaatM. ▲
J uri^Tnti rrllabU. l*bhi m>
Urug^tat '■ r
liuti
Take >
rtbbu
mother Kit*- wv'
iim4and imiMfu/wJ At I>r«CTI«t . or
f..r wttoatm MtUaoalau aaa
v "feller for L*4lt*." Uff T bf ret em
T Mull 10.000 T-umaotaU. .Vam«
CfclflBMterCfc< mlealle.,M*dUeaS«|e«r£
«:al Druggie. Pktlada.,
Sou ij ill Local Druggiii;
A FEW "FORS.'
Some Pointers It Will Pay Everybody
In Oklahoma to Read,
DO YOU WANT ANYTHING 1
It cannot be
ence of climat
and it is in recognition of this fact
that physicians send patients buffer-
ing with pulmonary diseases to great
distances for "change of air." But
when the sufferer happens to be too
poor to act upon the advice his lot is
hard Indeed. But it is not
rily hopeless. Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery can be had at any
medicine store, and to it thousands
whose cases were considered desperate
owe their lives.
l p to a certain point in the progress
of Consumption, Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery i* a posit ve rem-
edy. But delay i.- dangerous with
Consumption. In all the conditions
that lead to n. the "Discovery" is tne
retuedv. With severe lingering
Coughs, or tVeak Lungs, nothiug acts
so promptly. Every disease that can
be reached through the blood yields
to this medicine. The Scrofulous af-
fectiou of the lungs that's called Con-
sumption is oi e . f them. For this,
and for every other form of Scrofula,
for ail blood taint and disorders, ana
all chronic Bronchial, Throat, and
Lung affections, the "Discovery" is
the only remedy -•> certain that, once
used, it is always in favor.
Can anything else be ' just as good"
for you to buy V
Don't you believe it.
Our OtOeet.
The Knowlton Danderine Co. begs
leave to insist on all those affected
with baldness or any disease of the
scalp or skin of any description calling
at the Columbian barber shop and tak-
ing advantage of their free treatment.
Do not think you will be imposing, for
you will not. We are getting in shape
to advertise our ton'.c over the entire
I'nited States, aud we know that
every one that uses Danderine will be
a walking advertisement for the same.
Therefore, by taking advantage of
this offer, you will not only benefit
yourselves, but be an advertisement
for us. To those outside the city,
from whom we hear daily, will say
that you can procure Danderine from
your druggist or at our office. The
free treatment is given at our office
only.
Knowlton Danpkhink Co.
WHY SHE WAS SAD.
A Short I t-Kaon in Social Diplomacy by au
Artful l.atly'a Maid.
The beautiful billionairess was sad.
Of course this souuds like a paradox;
for no one can exactly understand how
a billionairess can be otherwise than
supremely, divinely, everlastingly
happy. But the fact remained, never-
theless, she was miserable.
She sat by the lace-curtained win-
dow, her rosy, dimpled feet upon a per-
fumed ottoman embroidered with thou-
sand-dollar hen's-egg diamonds, im-
patiently awaiting her maid, who was
bringing up from the cuisine an omelet
of nightingales' eggs and a mint-julep
made of the whole Philadelphia mint.
This was only her breakfast; you can
judge from that w hat her dinner cost!
"You ure disconsolate this morning,
mam'zelle?" ventured the maid, re-
moving the society sheet «of the morn-
ing paper (especially printed for her
on watered silk In attar-of-roses ink)
and replacing it with the delicate re-
past served in pearl-studded golden
dishes.
The beautiful billionairess raised
her languid eyelids and heaved a deep
pacliouli-scented sigh that fairly
peeled the million-dollar frescoes off
the wall. "Yes, 1 ain sad," she
moaned; "very sad." And she took a
forty-thousand-dollar sip of the julep
as a bracer.
"Why so?" persisted the maid, who
always spoke to her mistress in one of
thirty-one earthly or two huudred
heavenly dialects of Cupid. "Has not
the duke been as persistent in his pro-
posals as ever?"
"More so. I have to loan him three
million dollars a day to get rid of
hi in."
"Aren't your new Worth gowns mas-
terpieces of extravagance?"
"Marvels! That extra bushel and a
half of rubies on my ball-gown train
retards my waltzing a little, but"
"I)o you long for Paris and fear the
rough voyage?"
"Oh, dear no; I've arranged with the
Standard Oil Co. to pour ten million
barrels of oil per hour into the ocean
during the time I a in crossing to grease
the track, you know"
"What then can be the matter which
so oppresses you?"
"Only to think," replied the beauti-
ful billionairess, taking up the wa-
tered-silk newspaper once more, "for
live years I have been reported
engaged to thirty-three men, on
an average, weekly, including
every eligible bachelor or wido-
wer of both hemispheres, from a Zulu
chief to the czar of Russia. This morn-
ing ah, this morning I am miserable.
1 have toiled through sixty-nine col-
umns of solid nonpareil and nary a
single new engagement. It is awful!"
"Ah, mam'zelle, you can not think
that your popularity is on the wane.
That is impossible."
"Alas, I fear it—either that or else
the society editors have died at their
posts in faithful efforts to marry me
off."
"No. I have it—Eureka!"
The fair oue Hushed a royal flush
worthy to break the hank at Monte
Carlo. "Quick! Tell me," she cried,
"why am I slighted thus?"
"They have exhausted the whole in-
ternational directory;"
"Brava!" exclaimed the other,spring-
ing to her feet. "Then 1 must con-
sider their silence as the greatest com-
pliment of my life. Marie, you area
petticoat Daniel. Your salary is raised
two thousand dollars a minute. Swear
that you will never leave me. I shall
marry his dukelets, get you to doctor
me up a divorce, make you co-respon-
dent and we will be the most popular
women in the world. Go below aud
order us two golden bucks made of
limburger cheese and a jail bird's
and four fingers each of B. C. 450
C#yprian from the wine cellars of Pt
eles, worth six thousand dollars
drop, and we'll toast society editors in
blocks of live. God bless 'em! Ah,
you are ti jewel, Marie, a veritable
jewelN Y World.
HOTtL DALLY.
Just received the largest stock of
millinery goods that was ever brought
to Guthrie Sold at half the nsual
price Call and see them.—G. M.
Sharum, Victor Bnildiug.
Notice,
To members of Labor nnions: All
members of labor unions and their
wives are requested not to do any
trailing at "The Rush" until the pres-
ent dispute is settled between the Re-
tail Clerks lluion and Mr. I ana, man-
ager of "The Rush."
Ski v Rktaii. Ci.kkkh Union.
Ileal Kutate Traimfera.
N. Roberts to E. A. Lyon, w d.
one-half interest in lot 21,
blk 45, Guthrie wroper $ltioo uo
K. J. Blackmail to M. Foster,
w d, lots l'i and 14. blk 85,
East Guthrie 75 00
Then Read the Following and Hkl
Whara Too con Supply Youraelf—A
Little of Kvorythlug In-
quired bj Mortal*
More Be-
'lew.
For legal cap.
For abstract paper.
for carbon paper.
For manuscript covers.
For a Hall's safe, any size.
for all typewriter supplies.
For land blanks of all kinds.
For township records and blanks.
Fer Morgan's Manual, (50 cents).
For congress tie envelopes, all sizes.
For reversible document envelopes.
For statutes of Oklahoma, 17.50 cash.
For a druggist's poison record, (S3.50).
For Calvert's Settler's Guide, (50 cts).
For lead pencils or pens, by the gross.
For ladies calling cards, fancy or plain.
For rubber bands, rulers, erasers, etc.
For school district records and sup-
plies.
For Hainer's School Land Manual, (50
cents).
For school district bonds, (litho-
graphed).
For a notarial record, (13.00) and pro-
test blanks.
For inks, mucilage or anything in the
stationery line.
For any kind of a book, from 10 cents
to $3.00 per quire.
For paper fasteners, flat or round
head, by the gross.
For letter files, letter copying books
and letter presses.
For the oldest, largest and best daily
paper in Oklahoma, 50 cents per
months.
For any of the 1000 forms of Oklahoma
legal blanks, all kept in stock
ready for you on call.
For a cheap merchant's ledger, cash
book or journal, (cauvass or
leather).
For seals and rubber stamps, four
pound seal 92-50, five pound sual
•3.00.
For an attorney's pocket docket, ($1.00)
beautifully bound and a new aud
unexcelled form.
For fancy Wedding Stationery, and
Ball and Party Invitations and
Programmes.—A large stock to se
lect from.
For Banker's Draft, Discount, Certifi-
cate and Collection Registers, kept
in stock, latest and best forms,
two quire. ($2 50 each).
For Stenographer's note books, all
sizes, fsom 25 cents each to $1.00
each; a court form finely in-
dexed and unexoelled in conven-
ience.
For abstract blanks, standard form.
$3.50 per 100; special form, for
abstractors only, on heavy linen
ledger paper, $5.00 per 100—special
figures on large lots.
For our third annual catalogue and
oomplete price list, (just out),
write the
State Capital Printins Co.,
Guthrie, Ok.
P
A DRIVE
Always has go in it. The biggest go in this town just now is out Tan Shoes;
in fact they have so mach go that they go afoot, handsomely and away ahead
of all competitors. Our shoes have made a stir for this reason. They're in
demand. A really good shoe is a prize, as it means comfort for the wearer.
Fine material, first-class workmanship, perfect iits, and low prices are the
cardinal points in our footwear. Whatever the price of any shoe bought of
us, it's cheap because it wears so well.
Eisenschmidt & Hetsch
"Exclusive Shoe Dealers.
REPAIRING NEATLY DONE. 118 West Oklahoma Av«
J. D. THORPE,
204 Oklahoma Avenue.
SPECIAL PRICES
JEWEL WATCHES
I CLOCKS
i .-..iu ':
J-
1
lioiM'ral Kcpiiii'iiig done in the Jew-
elry Line. Don't forget to call before
buying elsewhere.
Think of II!
Tliv Only Itrlfk Hotel In the City ul
<1 nt li rln.
The Hotel Dally has put on a new
aud fresh appearance, having been
newly painted and papered, and un-
der the management of its owner,
Col. Dally, is stepping to the front
ranks uinong the houses of the city
that extend good treatment to their
guests. The table board at this house
is always iu the front runk aud no
pains 01 expense are spared to put on
the best the market affords.
MallroaUs I'oiulug.
And what the people want to know-
is where they can get their supplies
tin- eheapest and best. The problem
will be easily solved by going to Mas-
sey's grocery and meat market, where
you will find everything first class
•lust now 1 don't offer you twenty-
three pounds granulated sugar for $1.
that in too sweet. Hut will sell you
everything at lowest living prices.
Think this out, it is profitable for
your thinkerv. Prompt delivery.
M asnky, I'llk GKiH'KK,
Tel. 78. Coyle A Smith's Old Stand
Having opened Island park to the
public and placed refreshments of all
kinds within reach of everybody and
at all times, 1 would ask my former
patrons to patronize my new stand
the same as they did my old place on
West Noble avenue, which will remain
closed for the future.—P. P. Hi.ass.
Dr. II. L. Smith has removed his
office one block east on Oklalioms ave-
nue, over the Bee Hive Clothing Co.
and next door to A. J. Spengel's.
Three very prominent ladies of the
city went in search of the sleeping
woman on the west side yesterday and
couldn't find her; but they found the
flouring mill in full force. As they
were looking up at it, like Don Quixote
at the Dutch mill, wondering what it
was, the miller happened to let off the
blowpipe and covered them all over
with flour dust. They came back to
the city looking like they had been
put through a bolter. They think the
sleeping colored beauty with the liver
complaint is a fake.
On account of the republican league
meeting of Oklahoma to be held at
Enid May 20, the Santa Fe route
sell rouid trip tickets to Oklahoma at
rate of one fare for round trip. Par
ties can purchase from Oklahoma to
Knid on same basis. Tickets on sale
May is and M , return limit May ' 1.—
L. R. Dki.anky. Agent.
For the Reunion of United Confeder-
ate Veterans at Houston, Texas, May
29d to 25th, the Santa Fe Route will
sell round trip tickets from Guthrie to
Houston at rate of $11.70 Tickets on
sale May .'nth and 21st, limited for re-
turn to May '.'tith.—L. R. Dki.anky,
Agent.
Frank Doleater took snap judgment i . 4 , , • . n i i
on his bach.Oor friends vesUrd,.v by "tmost t'a luT,l;al an«ru,sh R.e,n,ler,Hl
leaving them without 'any notice, <l-i>^at%li.v their suffering they ap
pculcd to an eminent member of the
medical college, who invented the
amusing hut useful apparatus especial-
ly fi>r their relief. So far its results
are said to be perfectly satisfactory.
The Kar Marks.
Wading ashore, Columbus drew his
sword.
"I take possession of this land," he
exclaimed with emotion, "in the name
of their most puissant highnesses, Fer-
dinand aud Isabella."
The natives exchanged glances.
"Yes," they whispered among them-
selves, "he acts just like a promoter.
That must be the name of his syndi-
cate Dear iue."-—Detroit Tribune.
Tli«* Modern Ori'lintra Leader.
The modern orchestra has been con-
verted into a great, composite musical
instrument, on which the conductor
plays; and the specific skill he has de-
veloped of playing on this ideal instru-
ment is an exact counterpart of what
w e call virtuosity in the individual per-
former. A generation of "virtuosi of
the orchestra" has sprung up, exercis-
ing the same fascination over the great
crowd of music lovers that other vir-
tuosi have time out of mind. The or-
chestral conductor is fast becoming the
cynosure in the musical lirmanent, with
the pole star of safety or shipwreck
beaming at his baton's tip. Lightly
warbling soprani, tenors storming the
Jericho of the people's heart with "mi-
raculous sound," and sonorous basses
of llashan will have to look to their
laurels; some line day they may find
them encircling the conductor's Olym-
pian brow. In a word, the modern con-
ductor is essentially a performer; and,
whether he be a popular favorite by
reason i f his virtuosity or of the scope
modern musical performance gives to
the artistic initiative of all performers,
his virtuosity per se is unquestionably
the element by which he most gains
his asceudency over the public.—Scrils
uer's Mugazine. .
The attendants of the liihliothequf
Nafionale, iu Paris, to the astonish-
ment of visitors, all travel around at-
tending to their duties with their
noses ami nostrils completely covered
with a most grotesque looking shield
or respirator. It appears that Jin han-
dling the books called for by patrons
of the library the dust causes them the
never to return. The partner in the
scheme was Miss May Cooper, the ac-
complished daughter of Councilman
O. P. Cooper. The couple were mar-
ried last evening at the First M. K.
church by Rev. lhukncr; and even the
immediate relatives did not know any-
thing of the event until a few hours
before it took place. Mr. Doleater
had a pretty cottage all furnished in
the northeast part of the city, and
they have gone to housekeeping,
where their house is open to their
many friends.
Ladies and Misses and Childrens'
hats af 15 cents at G. M Suaki m's,
Victor Huildiug. fall anil see them.
POISON I
Are Tee Ofcejteg the Lew or DUefeer*
ln| ItT
The new pharmacy law, in tne stat-
utes of Oklahoma 1BBS, requires
that all druggists, apothecaries and
other persons, except practicing phy-
sicians In their ordinary practice, shall
keep a record of all sales of any arti-
cle or articles belonging to the class
usually known as poisons; and pre-
scribes a penalty for eaeh violation
of a fine of not let* L/uin twenty iior mart
tfian on* hundred clollan.
Few druggists in Oklahoma are ob-
serving this law, and this negleet will
get some of them into trouble.
Suppose some person asks to see
your record of when a poison was sold
to s ststed person. Ths law says you
shall furnish It, and you can be com-
pelled to do so.
The State Capital has prepared s
"Poison Record," which gives you ths
szact form of record you must keep
It is put up on first-class paper, neatly
indexed and bound.
We sell these books for $3 50 each,
and keep them in stock ready for you.
Bead in an order, acoompanied by
$2.50, and you will receive a record by
•eturn express.
4 THE
Want column
-+-OT THE—ft-
STAJE CAPITAL
REACHES
the people
. *TRT IT*-. I
••••••••••••••••••••••••a
We will sell anything in our
stock at actual cost. We intend
embarking in another line of bus-
iness. Show cases, fixtures and
safes for sale cheap.
109 Harrison Ave.
ARE YOU GOING TO BUY A
MCYCLK THIS
SUMMER IK SO HUY
A COLUMBIA.
TIIEY ARE THE
BEST MADE AND
COST NO MORE
THAN OTHER HIGH GRADE WHEELS.
C. W. WHITE, Agent.
212 W. Oklahoma Ave.
Guthrie.
Shapland's
u
13 B
113
U
s
—*$• (JO AT cost
I am selling out my buggies at actual cost. If you want a
l'haeton, Road Cart or wagon see me. We have a large line of
Gasoline stoves, I.awn mowers, Refregerators, Ice Cream Freezers.
I l'i
B. Oklahoma
Avenue.
Shapland-
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Greer, Frank H. The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, May 17, 1895, newspaper, May 17, 1895; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc103538/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.