The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 96, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 13, 1895 Page: 3 of 4
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:
* I
The State Capital.
By the State Capital Printing Co
batm «r auBfoairnoir.
to mail •DNflllia :
One year. . .ffi.00 I Three month* I l.M
Biz months.. 8 00 | One month... 71
DIUTKRKD BT OABKIBBtt
One week 15 eenU
Two weeks tS cents
weekly bditiob
Ons eopy, per yew 91.00
HPln requesting s change of Postoffice
address always give the name of the
Pottofflce to which the paper has been I
sent; otherwiae there may be a delay I
in making the eharge.
Sample copies sent frse.
WLlberal inducements to Postmast-
srs and Club Agents.
UV T1IOS.
Time-Tub I e.
NOHTH BOUND.
No. ion Uhlc.-ifro K*press, leave* • rt:|M a.m.
No. 406, Mo. River KipresH, • r :o« p. m.
No. 42S, Local Freight, • • • T.U0 a in.
SOUTH HOUND.
No. 40f , Texas KipreHH, . • |il::i0p.m.
No. 4 7, Local Kipress, • . 12:30 p. m.
No. 4 3, l.o<'al Kreljrht, • • • 1:00 p.m.
Passengers should procure tickets
before getting on the train and save
money, in purchasing round trip tick-
ets to local points 10 per cent off.
L. It. Dki.ankv, Agent.
DISASTROUS FIRE.
Flames Start in a Folding Paper Box
Factory at Philadelphia
SEVERAL FIREMEN INJURED
Tlie (ilrls Attempted to < ei Out by the
Fire Kuc'upe, Hut Were Driven Hack
—All Finally Saved— \ Muii
Killed by Lightning.
Pun. a dei.i'll i a, Aug. 13.—A lire that
threatene d to destroy the block bound-
ed by Franklin and Eighth streets and
Callow hill and lluttonwood streets,
with Willow street, a small thorough-
fare, running .east and west between
it, started at v:m this morning in the
folding paper box factory of Brown cfc
Halley. No. 11'.' Franklin street. The
llanies originated in the basement, pre-
sumably from spontaneous combustion,
and the 100 girl employes rushed
to the tire escape. The flames, which
were then fiercely shooting upwards,
drove the frightened employes back
into the upper portion of the fourth
chapter iil
The London weeks went by with art
their commonplaces, all their novel-
ties. Mr. Durrunt, benior, had finished
his urgent business, aiul returned to
his square and uninteresting country
house, llut Jim lingered on in town,
although conscious of some subtle
change in himself and his view of
things. He and Kosalys met whenever
it was possible, which was pretty fre-
quently. Often they contrived to dose
at hastilj'-arruuged luncheons and teas
in the private rooms of hote.s; some-
times, when Mrs. Ambrose was sud-
denly called away, at Jim's own rooms.
Sometimes they adventured to queer
suburban restaurants.
In the lapse of these, weeks the twain
began somehow to lose a little of their
zest for each other's society. Jim him-
self was consilous of it before he had
yet discovered that something of the
same disappointment w as dulling her
heart too. On his own side it was the
usual lowering of the fire the slack-
long good-
► * You
fCOPYHKiHT, 1S94 1
'•This had better be
!>y, I suppose?" said she
"Perhaps it had. *
teem to be always looking out for
muses of reproach, Rosa lays. I don't
<now w hat has come over you."
"It is you who have changed!" she
•ried, with a little stamp. "Anjl you
ire by far the most to blame of us two.
Vou forget that I should never have
•ontcmplated marrinjre as a possibility!
Vou have made ine lie to my mother,
lo things of which 1 am desperately
ishamed, and now you don t attempt
lo disguise your weariness of me!"
It wus Jim's turn to lose his temper
now. "Vou torgct that you gavo me
considerable encouragement! Most
girls would not have come out again
iiml again to surreptitious meetings
with a man who was in love with them
— girls brought up as you have becnl"
She started as in a spasm. A momen-
tary remorse seized him. lie leali/.cd
that he had been betrayed in speaking
as no man of kindly good feeling could
i speak, lie made a tardy, scarcely gra-
j clous apology, and they parted. A few
the roof, there were clumps of fungi,
looking like tufts of white fur.
"This is a sunlet s. sad sort of place
you have chosen," he said, looking
round critically.
The boughs had grown so thickly in
the foreground that the glittering
margin of water was hardly percepti-
ble between their interlacing twigs,
and no visible hint of a human habita-
tion was given, though the lustie shel-
ter had keen originally built with the
view of affording a picturesque glimpse
of the handsome old brick house,
wherein the Ambroses had lived for
some three centuries.
"You might have found a more live
ly scene for what will be, perhaps, our
last interview f< r years," Jim went on.
"Are you really going so soon?" she
asked, passing over the complaint
"Next week. And my father has
made all sorts of arrangements for
me. Besides, he is beginning to sus-
pect that you and I are rather too in-
timate. And your mother knows, some-
how or other, that I have been tip here
several times of la to. \N o must be
careful."
"I suppose so," she answered, absent-
ly, looking out under the l<>g roof ut a
chaflluch swinging himself backwards
The bewildering bitterness of it well-
nigh paralysed Rosalys for a few ino-
niMUts. Why had they been allowed
he and she to love oue another with
that eager, almost uuholy, passion, and
then to part w ith less interest in each
other than ordinary friends? She felt
ashamed of having ceded herself to
him If her mother had not been be-
side her she would have screamed out
aloud in her pain.
Mrs Ambrose lifted up her voice.
"What are you looking at. child? .
My dear. I want a little word with
vou Are you sure yon are attending?
When you pout your lip like that, Uos-
alys, I always know that you are in a
bad frame of mind. The vi-
car has been hen-; and he has made
me a little unhappy "
"1 should I
stupid to give
they put mi
churches?"
"Well he \
tering about > <
tho
ght lie was too
pang! Why do
. ton.s into the
that people are chat-
ami that yoiinjf Our-
rant And i must tell you that that,
from a marrying point of view, he is
impossible You know that. Ami I
don't want him to make up to you
Now, Kosalys, my darling, tell me hon
* > S
B
B
V- 6
llut each knew that their short-lived
romance was dead as tho wind flowers
that had blossomed at
birth.
its untimely
ening of a man's passion for a woman
when she becomes his property. On I duvs afterwards he wrote a letter full
hers it was a more mixed feeling. No , of 1H.njt,.nce f„r having hurt her, and
doubt her love for Jim had been of but . fclu, answt.m\ almost affectionately,
little higher quality than his for her.
She had thoroughly abandoned herself
to his good looks, his recklessness,
his eagerness; and now that tho
sensuous part of her character was
satisfied, her passion also had burnt
itself down. Hut beyond, above, this,
the conecalment of her marriage was
repugnant to Rosalys. When tho
rapture of the early meetings had died
aw ay she began to loathe the sordid
deceit which these involved; tho
secretly dispatched letters, the un-
avoidably brazen lies to her mother
who, if she attached overmuch impor-
tance to money and birth, yet loved her
daughter in all good faith and sim-
plicity. Then once or twice Jim was
latent their interviews. lie seemed
indifferent and preoccupied. His
manner stung Rosalys into impatient
utterance at the end of a particular
meeting in which this mood was unduly
'prominent.
"You forget all I have given up for
you I" she cried. "You make a fool of
story, but a second attempt to reach me in allowing me to wait here for you.
the street was successful, and the po- It is humiliating and vulgar. 1 hate
lice report that all escaped in safety. ! myself for behaving as I d< '"
So fast did the flames burn that in less
than half an hour the building was
gutted. The flames spread to the ad-
joining live-story brick building occu-
pied principally by W. J. Hucksons &
Co., dealers in jjas and electrical
supplies, and fronting on Eighth
street and an hour later this structure
was also gutted. Portions of the walls
of both buildings fell and several lire-
men are reported to have been Injured.
Rows of dwellings fronting on Callow-
hill and Franklin streets were badly
damaged !>v fire and water, and at
least twenty-five families were com-
pel led to ha <i iiv remove their effects,
and the majority of them have been
made homeless. The total loss will
amount to £,3.~>n.0<)0.
A Man Killed l y Lightning*
W'lNFii l.M, 1^. I . Aug. 13.—John
Kipp, aged 19 years, residing at Hyatt
Heights, near this plaee, was struck by
lightning this morning and instantly
killed. Mr. lvipp got up to close the
shutters. He had just entered his son's
room and was in the act of pulling the
window down when a severe flash fol-
lowed by a thunder clap that shook
th ' house from its foundation and in
au instant Kipp fell dead over his
sleeping son. The shock awoke the
family. The lightning also killed a
calf in a barn near by. The Kipp
house is completely demolished. It
was one of the severest storms in
years. The barn of John Howard was
blown down.
The renunciations are not all on
lyour side," he answered caustically.
"You forget all that the loss of his
freedom means to man!"
Her heart swelled, and she had great
difficulty in keeping back her tears.
Hut she took refuge in sullenness.
"Unfortunately we can't undo our
folly!" she murmured. "You will have
to make the best of it as well as i.
suppose the awakening to a sense of
Idiocy was bound to come sooner or
later. Hut 1 didn't think it would
come so soon. Jim, look at me! Are
you really angry? Don't for Ciod'ssake
go and leave me like this!"
He was walking slowly towards the
s
i- V '
mm
Cr^
"6*
> ~ ©
9) D
O
w
3
CL
o
-s
5"
o
O
o
3
pf
-t
P
O
m. l. turner, President.
GEO. P. BILLINGS!.KY, Cashier.
Ill sbax11 and wiff wfnt mil i.onn BTBnU.s.
great iron gate leading out of Kensiug-
JIM glaxckd at HER RTIIAIGHT PROFILE.
In August this pair of disappointed
people met once more amid their old
surroundings. Perhaps their enforced
absence from one another gave at lirst
some zest to their reunion. Jim was
at times tender, and like his former
self; Rosalys, if sad and subdued, less
sullen and reproachful than she had
been in London.
Mrs. Ambrose had fallen into delicate
health, and her daughter w as, in conse-
quence, able to dispose of her time out-
Tlll
i.i.\si: svsri.M.
A Georgia «>\-< onviet Bring* Suit for l ain-
iik<*h for 1uI uiii: ii Treatment.
Atlanta, Ha., Aug. 13. -The horrors
of the penitentiary lease system,
which is a curse to this state, are to be
shown up in the courts. Harvey Mer-
ritt, recently pardoned out of the pen-
itentiary. has entered suit, for heavy
damages against the penitentiary com-
pany. Merritt recites a horrible story
of inhuman and cruel treatment as
the basis of his action, lie was in
for twelve years, but was pardoned
after serving nine years because
he was no longer useful to the
lessees. While working for the Chat-
tahoochic Hrick Co. ami in the coal
mines of the lessees in W elker county
he alleges that he was at frequent
times beaten with inhuman savage-
ness. Sixty to seventy licks on the
naked back, he says, with a three-
pound strap was no unusual punish-
ment. At one time he was given
175 lashes, the blood spurting
forth at each blow. After this
particular beating he attempted to
escape. was recaptured ami he
recites the horrible details of the Incit-
ing he receive I. Six men held him
while Woodruff, the whipping boss,
plied the knout which was split bv the
force of the blows. One of his eyes
was put out by the terrible strap. At
another time, the ex-eonvict alleges,
because he was sick and unable to work,
he was dragged on his back for half
a mile, until the skin was rubbed off
his body, lie alleges that while in the
mines in Walker county, on account of
defective work, he was crushed by fall-
ing coal and permanently disabled.
He was forced to work in winter with-
out shoes, which caused Ills feet to
freeze.
Tent* Struck at Camp Trader-
Siidaiu. Mo., Aug. W. -The elfjhth
encampment ol tin- Second regiment.
N\ i;. M., came to n close yesterday
morning. Tent* were struck at
o'clock iind an liour Inter the troops
marched to the depot and took their
departure. The encampment was one
of the most successful musters held in
state. Ailjt
w ished.
house
and forwards on a large bougli. A
sort of dreary indifference to her sur-
roundings a sense of being caged ami
trapped had begun to take possession
of Rosalys. The present was full of
perplexity, the future objectless. Now
ami then, when she looked at Jim's
lithe llgurc and healthy, virile face,
she felt that perhaps she might have
been able to love him still if only he
had cared for her with a remnant of
his former passionate devotion. Hut
his indifference was even more palpa-
ble than her own. They sat and talked
on within the dim arbor for a little
while. Then Jim made one of the unfor-
tunate remarks that always galled her
to the quick. She rose in anger,
estly— I feel I have not looked after
you lately as I ought to have done—
tell me honestly, is lie In hive with
you?"
"He Is not, mother, to my certain
Vnowledge."
"Are you with him?"
"No. That I swear."
| To be Continued |.
* THIEVING BLUEJAYS.
A family of Them Hrlng Sorrow to the
Ileurt of u SoHpnmlter.
Samuels, the Massachusetts ornitholo-
gist, in one of his books tells a story of
a bluejay and a bit of soap. It was the
Capital National Bank
The Largest National Hank in Oklahoma Territory.
Capital and Undivided Profits, $100,000.00
W 1CK KR & FAIRFIELD
n
I'rompt attention given to Moving House-hold Hoods, l'ians and Safes.
Coal Delivered to any Part of the City.
Office ROfi Harrison Avenue West of Depot. Telephone No. 90.
anmiiiimiimillllllitlllliUlllimillll.iluiimiiiiiitm iiiiuiiiim:iii!iimuii MiuiiiiiMUiiiinniitinitiuim
ITS! ST. LOUIS REPUBLIC!
x
I FIFTY
sw ered him with cold sarcasm and J last piece of soap that a collecting par-
hastened away down the little wood. I ty in the Adirondack wilds possessed,
He followed lier, a rather ominous
light shining in his eyes.
"Your temper is really growing in-
sufferable, Rosalys!" he cried, and laid
his hand roughly on her arm to detain
her.
"How dare you!" said the girl. For
Cod's sake leave me, and don't come
back again! I rejoice to think that in
a few days It wiU :\<>t be in your power
to insult me any more!"
"D n it—I am going to leave you,
am I not? 1 only want to keep you
lerstai
prised
Ing to
I IIave declared THAT I DID,
ast on hishand-
AXflWKItED, COOLI.Y.
.on Gardens; adogg
tome countenance.
"Don't make a scene in public, for
heaven's sake, Rosalys!"
Feeling that he had spoken too
brutally, he suddenly paused, and
.•hanged:
"1 am sorry, little woman, if I was
cross! Hut things have combined to
harass me lately. < >f course wo won't
part from one another in anger."
Jim glanced at lier straight profile
with its full underlip nndfirmly-curved
shin, at the lashes on either lid, and
the glossy brown hair twisted in coils
inderher hat. Hut the sight of this
ovellness, now all his own. failed fV>
arouse the old emotions, lie simply
•ontcmplated her approvingly from an
irtistie point of vi.'W.
They had reached the gateway, and
ihe placed her hand on his arm.
"Uood-by. When shall we next meet?
To-day Is Tuesday. Shall it bo Frl-
iay?"
"I ain afraid I must go out of Lon-
don on Thursday for a day or two. 1 11
jvrite, dear. Let me call a hansom.'
lusters Hem u. | thanked him in a ."1.1 voice
Wick ham ox- I ignin, and with u last handshake
vssed himself as highly gratified.
I ind a smile that hovered on sor-
i *ow, left him and drove away towunta
Veteran Slagcl, TI years of age. and . [udgravia.
his wife, aged «W, tramped all the way Once or twice later on they met; tho
t i Washington to make proof of merit j aext interview being shorter and sad-
in a pension claim from Evansvllle, jer perhaps than thei last. *Thc one that
lud., 'JOU miles. \ 'ollowed it ended in bitterness.
moonlight meetings with Jim were dis-
continued; but husband and wife went
for long strolls sometimes in the re-
moter nooks of the park, through wind-
ing walks in the distant shrubberies,
and down paths hidden by high yew-
hedges from intruding eves that might
look with suspicion on their being to-
gether.
On one especially beautiful Au-
gust day they paced side by side,
talking at moments with something of
their old tenderness. The sky above j
the dark green barriers on either hand
was a bottomless deep of blue. The j having a furious p<
yew boughs were covered in curious
profusion by the handiwork of cner-
getic spiders, who had w oven their j evo
glistening webs in every variety of i
barbaric pattern. In shape some re- I
sembled hammocks, others purses, I
others deep bags, in the middle of (
which a large yellow insect remained j
motionless and watchful. I*
"Shall we sit for a little while In the | !«[!«£,, ft
summer house?' said Rosalys at last, in
flat accents, for a tete-a-tete with Jim
had long ceased to give her any really
strong beats of pleasure. *'I want to
talk to you further about plans; bow-
often we had better write,
Phey sat dow n in an arl
rustic log • which overlooked the mere. | flgur
a moment to come to some un-
ling! Indeed, you'll be sur-
to find how very much I am go-
leave you, when you hear what I
mean My ideas have grown consider-
ably emancipated of late, and there-
fore I t. ll you there is no reason on
earth why any soul should ever know
; f that miserable mistake we made in
the spring."
She winced a little; it was au unex-
pected move; and her eyes lingered un-
easily on a copper-colored butterfly
playing a game of hide-ami-seek with
a little blue companion.
"Who," he continued, "is ever going
to search the register of that old l'Jast-
London church? We must philosoph-
ically look 011 the marriage as an awk-
ward fact in our lives, which won't
prevent our loving elsew here w hen we
feel inclined. In my opinion thisearly
error w ill carry one advantage with it
— that we shall be unable to distin-
guish any love we may feel for another
person by a sordid matrimonial knot—
unless, indeed, after seven years of
obliviousness to one another's exist-
ence."
" I'll—try to—emancipate myself like-
wise," she said, slowly. "It will be
well to forget this tragedy of our lives!
And the most tragic part of it is that
we are not even sorry that we don't
love each other any more!"
"The truest words you ever spoke!"
"And the surest event that was ever j
to come, given your nature."
"And yours."
She hastened on down the grass walk i
into the broad graveled path leading
to the house. At the corner stood Mrs. i
Ambrose, who was better, and had
come out for a stroll- as an invalid as-
suming the privilege of wearing a
singular scarlet gow n, and a hat in
which n number of black quills stood
startlingly erect.
"Ah—Rosy!" she cried. "Oh! and
Mr. Durrunt? What a color you have
got, child."
"Yes. Mr. Durrnnt and I have been
ill discussion,
tnnimnu- I have grown unite hot over
It. He is more unreasonable than
Hut when he gets abroad be
t be as he is now A few years of
India will change all that. And to
carry on the idea of her unconcern she
turned to whistle to a bold robin that
had Hit ted down from a larch tree,
lied nn the yew hedge, and looked
answering her
whistle with his pathctie little pipe.
Durrant had come up behind. "Y
he said cynically. "One neve
how an enervating
one's brains."
lie bado them a 1 (fnoil-hv ami left,
1 when the theft was committed by
the bird the action was noted carefully
for more than scientific reasons. Hird
students know that the jay will take al-
most anything in sight and cat nine-
tenths of what*he takes, but they
thought he drew the line on soap. It
has been left to a family of Highland
Park (111.) jays to bear out Samuels'
story and to break the soap-eating rec-
ord, says the Chicago 1 ribunc.
Oil the w est side of the track in the
suburb lives a German who thought
last week that lie would try the ex-
periment of making soap for sale. Ilo
collected the proper ingredients, put
them together, stirred them to the con-
sistency of paste, and then just at even- j
ing he patted a cake and put it on a |
board in his yard t. see if It would
harden over night. He slept a little
late and when he finally went to look
at his soap cake, behold! it had all van-
ished save a thin edge. That was beau-
tiful ly hard, though, uiul not stopping I
to conjecture what had become of the
rest of the cake he stirred up the re-
nininder of his mixture and patted j
cakes until he had twenty-four, each I
weighing one-quarter of a pound. '1 he
sun had passed behind the heavy oaks I
in the yard, so the German went to the i
edge of the road, placed his boards so j
that the ends rested on two barrels, I
and put thereon his soap cakes that
they might harden.
A cement sidewalk was In process of
construction across the road and a j
"boat" full of Portland cement mixed j
to mush with water and "torpedo" i
sand, was adjacent and parallel to the
board and its load of cakes. The side-
walk contractor was across the road
aud the soapmaker went over to talk
with him. His back was turned on his
sticky product, taking advantage of
.which fact, for this bird is sharp- a '
family of seven blue jays, five full-
fledged young and the two parents, de-
scended on the board ami attacked the t
soap. The contractor saw them and
watched in amazement. They de-
voured the mixture of lye ami grease I
as a donkey devours thistles. Then the j
sidewalk man gasped out: "Hans, they |
an* eating your soap."
• The German turned, saw the last bit
of one cake disappear, and then grabbed
a big, round, smooth stone, such as the
lake casts up, and threw it, as a man
"puts" a shot, straight at the robbers.
The birds rose, calling: "Thief, thief!'
vociferously, for the bluejay is given to
calling himself names. The stone land-
ed on the edge of the board and turned
the entire soap product into the sticky
mass of Portland cement. Soap and
cement were ruined.
The jays did not stop to decide which
was the madder of the men, but made
their way toward the ravine drive,
loudly calling "Thief!" as they went.
An Ideal Community.
Mgr. Cupel is going to establish an
ideal community in the Sacramento I
valley, where he has a big ranch. On
one part of the land a space will be set
aside fur an agricultural college. This
IN FREE r.lFf'J
To Subscribers of the Twic---;«-V/eck bdition.
e One I
3 ■rrltifru '<■ the I w i< < v \\>-'
S their (intern in Ju 1 >. Ai ' 1
S AUKUM aiiSHcnt'j i>, m l .i 1 t 1 '
SinonthH. making ttic i< .1 • d".
SHcrlht-m In Aukiim i« 1 1 •
S ber 1. The tlrnt Too an.l Mi.- l:.- t
s nwcri to the nin-niiM. "Mlieie < •«
£ vv 111 In- a will- I in Un
S autsci&l fifth
| FIRST
S l«t Corrfct An«« r—<)n<- >, r • li 1 •
S Hi.'.)i III III I In' I ' 1
s Csst Is, ^ m
l
S I—One y.ar i- • - >
S viay Institute, M• m • 11 • '
~ i—RrholnrHlili' Hum." Ii
SS School. Arthur J. Han.- i i t
liUflt IteHH I'lilllM-
||IW. Willi I".mini
/CO GIFTS:
Prln si U
-Scholarship
folIeK
Com i'
I'wUKll
f Hum
"'k
ts writinic. .1 II"
=
S 10 Hi III .lit I'Mll 11> '
ZZ Col lei H
n:
s Unl
—
= i i waltei \
s 14 1;. ml,.- s. ii
S fl. 1.1 Nullii.il
— M
5 1R Hi.rln :tl. M I
= 17 New m nu
S U-19 Roui rrli
via Missouri 1
Many answer* will
nlteil Si a I eM all 1 Hi <-l
the last 3'"l siiIih. i 11m ik -
AUKUst 31. 18'.'.".. unl i
wing hund: me and *
La at Correct Ari"W
_ acholarahl|i
LAST 300 GIFTS:
=
1?
•omnto parts of tho ~
the f 1- —
Wlln.ni Pre
-(•nurse Men,
Schohtl'xhlp '
Scholarship
Scholarship
Si holurshlp
M
e ii Ti"
S v: P
Id tilled lluti'
=
EE Home < urw
g 17 Pal: l ine ' <
= ST'MM A11Y T '
August Iht
Si'-
S 15.tin: 'I till a IUe " I - Ye. I
s graving*. National Capitol, ■ ' . i • ' -
EVERY SUBSCRIBER sea^ceran REIVES A GIFT.
Subscribe
foi
idlUK i
i M K
|„C
HANI
l?Nn'Kl STATKS I.I I ' I ' II ' V
I.Alt Pilch I- i --I' «• ;
In n..t later th.iii AnKii i .. hi ..
i:vi:iiv \n.-w i 1 m
TKAIt'S sPli- - HIP i l"S I' • i 1
rei orded the III" .III. Ill I . "I\ • "I I
and llie name an 1 • Mi • I '/ 1
be published 111 the b#Ue t nip
(l.lr. «i Tin-
i-k II t'|Milil Ii*. Itr|iil III Ii- lliiilillnir,
iiuiiuiiiiiiiiiuiiimi niiiuiiuniiiiiiiii'ii'iiiii!.:nnii"ii'ii~:,^--illilliuiiiniiiiiiiii'ili'i'lHiuiuiiiii lima
J. W. McNKAL, Pres.
VV. J. IIORSKALL
A. J. SKAV, Vici
Cashier.
knows | lustltution will l e the monbignor'a
luntrv nmy fiofti-n \ «• sjn-.-iul t'art'. It In his riiriu-st pur I n iso
| t.i I'Uucato tin mo piopli" In Cull/oinla
u^riculturis, of which lie 1ms minlt' a
Tli ■ woodwork hml hoen left rough I huudsome unlraul, who had scarcely
within, anil dust}- spider wel t> hung In i won tho bettor side of her nature a
the crevices; here and there tho bark all* He never turned his
hml fullcn Iiwiiy In ".trips; uhoro, ou 1 this was tin; und!
head.
ttlers for the llrnt yeaf before
they begin to get a return for their
crops, but that very Important point
the uionsignor hopes to provide for.
Guthrie National
mwwvUAN I£eo«e e«s
Capital ~ $50,000.00
Surplus - 10,000.00
FIRST NATIONAL BANK ORGANIZED IN OKLAHOMA.
Guthrie, - • Oklahoma-
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.
Greer, Frank H. The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 96, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 13, 1895, newspaper, August 13, 1895; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc103752/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.