The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 156, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 23, 1895 Page: 2 of 4
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The State Capital.
By the 5tate Capital Printinf Co.
FRANK H. QREER, Editor.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF OKLAHOMA.
IBy KnmtMtlitof lb'
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 33, 1895.
Kxi i am) is in gn nlmoii . After
she gets all she uslts for In Venezuela
Bhe is Killing to arbitrate for tlie lial-
Wnrv wild-eyed, moon-struck poets
begin to clamor for war it is time for
the great American public to begin to
enquire "Ware are wo ut'.''
Tiik promised defense of l>urrant
and the proposed Corbett-Fit/.utnmons
fight will go rattling down the corri-
dors of time as being long on promises
and short on performance
LmvKNWoitTH, Kansas, is to have
an apple carnival on October 28. At
this time the question as to who made
little apples is to be definitely deter
mined. _______
The cause of Eugene Ware's
wierd wail for war lias been discovered
His colleague in the Electoral college
in 1888 was John M. Waller, Eugene
wants Wallers wrongs righted.
Tin exhilerating ami enthusiastic
manner in which Embassador llayard
maintains silence in regard to tin
roasting he received in the Saekville-
WeBt pamphlet stamps him as a diplo.
mat of the tlrst water.
And now it develops that the real
trouble in pulling off the big fight
was not in securing a location for th
battle, but in pursuading the blurting
bruisers to face each other anywhere
Thk Dawes commission has moved
its headquarters from Timbuctoo to
Hkowhegan. This is, properly speak
Ing, a news item, and is given out so
that the public may not lose slfht of
the fact that there is such
sion somewhere.
eoininis-
Tiik clammy corpse of ex-Congrtss
man Breckinridge addressed a b'K
audience at Louisville, Ky., the other
da}'. The dispatehes failed to state
whether it was a prospective oftlce or
a pretty typewriter that resurected
and rejuvinated this putrid and ill-
sinelllng cadaver.
K. C. .Journal: The position taken
by (Jovernor Renfrow that Oklahoma
is well qualified for statehood is sound.
The territory was settled by an intel-
ligent, orderly and enterprising class
of people, most of whom vote the re-
publican ticket. Oklahoma is better
fitted for statehood today than some
states that have been in the union a
hundred years.
Tiikiu i-> n dainty piece of romance
connected with the engagement of
MisH Vanderbilt and Duke of Marl-
borough. It seems that Consuelo
while out walking with her mother
one day happened to espy the noble
duke and in an exhuberant burst
girlish delight at beholding it she ex-
claimed: "O, mama, buy me that!
Her indulgent maternal ancestor could
deny her lovely daughter nothing and
so the purchase was made.
the American people, but until the
American people elect au administra-
tlan tbat will carry out their purpofe-
and uphold tbeir dignity and honor
Mr Waller's confidence, whi'e well
placed. mu*t continue to be Ineffec-
tive.
ABOUT HKNDINO <11 ft*.
The I'nblle Cautioned In to Hie
Proper MaUIn* of tloli<Uv lMr <*it«"
Washington, Oct. i. S—First Assist-
ant I'ostmaster General .Jones yester*
lay sent out letter* to postmasters in-
closing large cards to be posted about
the post oftloes. oautloning the public
about the proper mailing ami stamp-
ing of holiday packages. Kverv year
the department suffers more and more
through the indifference or ignorance
of senders of holiday packages, and in
spite of the repeated warnings and
every effort to prevent it, each winter
season finds the dead letter office
stored high with holiday gifts that go
astray. There is an abundance of mail
matter intended for foreign countries
in the dead letter harvest, and It seems
very difficult for the people generally
to learn what kinds of merchandise
are mailable and what are not. The
customs laws of various countries are
so different and so stringent that only
careful study can decide upon the en-
trance offcany kind of parcel whatever,
and it is not surprising that many
Christmas parcels never reach the
beneficiaries, but come back to be sold
at the "old horse" sales from this post
office curiosity shop.
SHOT ON THK MTRKKT.
A Leading Phjrildan of DkIIhn. Tex., Killed
In tlie I'renem-e of C'rowil.
Dallas, Tex., Oct. 23.—Dr. J. «J.
W'ray. one of the leading young physi-
cians of the city, was shot and killed
last night in front of Henjano's restau
rant, on Main street, by Marion Hard-
castle, a faro dealer. Wray was shot
through the right temple, in the pres-
ence of his brother. It. 11. Wray, and
at least 100 persons, as the street was
thronged with pedestrians. Hard
castle was taken to the county jail.
He said to the sheriff. ' Wray has been
my physician for six years, and he in
terfered with my family affairs."
At noon yesterday llardeastle at
tempted to cane Wray near the city
hall. The physician broke away from
him and ran. They met again in the
eveuing and conversed in a low tone
for a few seconds, when llardeastle
pulled his gun. and an instant later
Wray was dead on the sidewalk. Hard-
castie's wife had recently obtained a
divorce from her husband.
Dr. Wray was a native of Moberly,
Mo., ami came here from New Orleans
seven years ago.
CONDITION OF SILVER.
Ant hoi It lex l ook for hii Improved Oeinnnil
for the White Metal.
Nrw York, Oct 33.—The best author-
ities on silver look for a steadily im-
proving demand for the metal for some
time to come. The willingness of
•Japan to accept the indemnity from
China in silver contributed largely tc
the improvement in its price which
has been noted during the last few
months, and the accumulation of the
metal in London will go on in order tc
complete the installments of the in-
demnity at various dates of payment.
Mr. Townsend of the Hong Kong bank
confirms this view, and reports in an in-
terview that the bank is about tomake
a large shipment of silver to .Japan.
Both China and .Japan are showing
increasing inquiry for silver, as the
large amounts of the metal distributed
by both countries in payment for war
material and supplies has been diverted
to India and other silver countries.
Mr. Townsend adds that the silver was
ordered two months ago and has only
just been delivered. The silver
smelters are said to be sold ahead for
two months. Japan is minting most of
its silver money.
Who Would Hnee the Liwi of
Wisconsin Changed.
Bishop Nicholson, of the Episcopal
diocese of Milwaukee, believes the pres-
ent marriage laws of Wisconsin arc a
disgrace to the state and he docs not
liesitate to say so on all occasions. He
was more than usually vigorous in his
denunciations when speaking on the
subject the other day. "If a license
were required," said the bishop, "there
would be a material decrease in the
number of marriages. Outsiders come
here because they can be married with
little or no preliminary formality and
have a pleasant excursion from Chicago
thrown in. We should have a license
system. Both Illinois and Minnesota
have good laws, but in W isconsin we
fiave no respectable legislation on the
subject whatever. A good restrictive
law requiring the eligibility of the con-
tracting parties to be vouched for by
some responsible person and demand-
ing the payment of a reasonable fee to
the state would soon put a stop to this
scandalous business."
Rev. Judson Tits worth, of Plymouth
Congregational church, thought the
state law too lax, but also thought the
ministers of Milwaukee were responsi-
ble for allowing things to reach the
present state. "You cannot by law
prevent bad marriages," said Mr. Tits-
worth, 'but you can by law prevent
Wisconsin from being the dumping
ground for all the hasty marriages of
Illinois. By the time the next legisla-
ture meets we shall be too thoroughly
ashamed of ourselves to permit it to ad-
journ without doing something to
change the existing state of affairs."
HAS NO USE FOR BLOOMERS.
Mrs. Logan Tells of the Shocking Costumes
She Hew In Chicago.
Mrs. John A. Logan does not like
bloomers and she has her opinion con-
cerning the new woman. "In the first
place," said she in response to a query
ns to what she thought of the new
woman, "I think the appellation is of-
fensive. If by the new woman is meant
those, either young or old, who have
laid aside all restraint in indulging in
the sports, amVI might say dissipations,
supposed to be the prerogative of men,
not the least of which is cigarette smok-
ing and kindred vices, I am sorry that
her day has come. If on the other
hand is meat t the intelligent, cultured,
womanly woman, who has kept abreast
of the times and has taken advantage
of the exceptionally fine opportunities
afforded American woman of partici-
pating in everything that tends to
broaden the field of her usefulness and
develop her intellectual powers, with-
out doing violence to her heart or les-
sening her love of home and family, I
say hail the new woman.
"I passed through the park on the
South side of Chicago recently while a
bicycle meet was at its height. I had
never seen such a sight before in all
my life or had greater occasion to blush
lor the modesty of American girls.
Some were dressed properly and be-
comingly, while others appeared in
garments they were pleased to call
bicycle suits that were simply disgust-
ing on any man or woman."
FUTURE COAL MINE.
DlaroTery of a Hurled Forest OfT France
That I« Fast llctng Changed to Coal.
A singular fact is recorded—namely,
that oil the shores of Brittany, between
St. Malo and St. Lunaire, in the vicinity
of the St. Euogat station, at a placo
called Port Blanc, the tides have lately
displaced a considerable amount of
sand, say, to the depth of some 0 to
Price List of School Hooks
—AT THE —
Capita! Cily Book Store
From October 1st.
.3 10
1 05
85
17
1 00
♦ **«* ***«**♦ ,'-***********
* f
I
***************** ********
li-OWCSt l OMOIMIMOMItSSMStlM •
" """ ——" ♦
McGuffey's Rev. Primer
McOaffey's Kev. Speller
McGuffey's Rev First Reader. . ..
McGuffey's Rev Second Reader..
McGuffey's Rev. Third Reader
McGuffey's Rev. Fourth Reader
McGuffey's Rev. Fifth Reader....
Thompson's Intel'ual Arithmetic
Milne's 1st Lessons in Arithmetic
Milne's Elementary Arithmetic..
Milne's Standard Arithmetic
Ray's Primary Arithmetic
Ray's Elementary Arithmetic. ...
Ray's Practical Arithmetic
Barnes' Elementary Geography
Barnes' Complete Geography...
Eclectic Physical Oeograpny
Long's Language Lessons, part 1.
Long's Language Lessons, part 2.
Long's Lessons in English
Lockwood's Lessons in English. .
Harvey's Elementary Grammar. .
Harvey's Rev. English Grammar,
(^uackenbo's Cornp .. and Rhetoric
Burnes' Primary History
Barnes' Brief History. .*.
Markham's English History
American Copy Books
Franklin Copy Books
White's Drawing Books. No. 1 to3
Sherwood's Writing Speller
Natural Music Primer
Young People's Physiology
Hygenic Physiology
Steele's Physics
Storer A: Lindey's Chemistry 1 00
Gillet it Rolfe's Astronomy
Holder's Zoology 1 00
LeConte's Geology 1
Harkness' Latin (irammar 1 00
Harkness' Easy Methods 1 00
Harkness' Caesar's Commentaries 1 00
Harkness' Cicero's Orations 1 O.j
Harper and Burgess' Ind. Lat. Md 8."
Nature's Readers 25
Bryant Si Stratton's Bookkeeping TO
Gray's Botany 1 50
Prices I
• •
• © 0 # 0 ****++*+«* s+&
Latest
Styles
***************** ********
Store Where You Get the Most Change Back.
The Bee Hive!
Do you Want the Best?
We lay especial stress on the Excellence of our goods,
always Keeping the Quality up to the highest point;
and while maintaining our reputation in this respect,
we go to the other extreme in keeping Prices down to
the lowest possible point.
We Know that Nothing
Millinery
At your own price. Mrs. A. P. Saun-
ders will close out the entire stock in
the next ninety days at wholesale
prices. Come early and get your
choice from the finest assorted line of
millinery goods in the city. Guthrie
Millinery Ba/.aar, 107 Oklahoma ave-
nue.
Builds up business like the selling of first-class goods.
We sell them, always sell them, and don't sell anything
else. An immense assortment of New Fall and Winter
Clothing,
Tiik duke of Marlborough has an-
nounced himself as disgusted witl
America and eagt r to get away from
our barbarous shores. He says: "I
have thus far seen little else than a
desire to insult me. Why this should
be so I cannot discern. 1 came here
with every feeling of friendliness and
kindness for America and its people,
but the feeling has been in no sense
reciprocal, as far as I have been able
to discern.'' Just wait until you get
acroi-s the ocean, duke, and then vent
your spite on Co suelo. You can thus
revenge yourself on these blawsted
Ilamericans and. at the same time,
keep in harmony with dozens of others
of your ilk who have exchanged wormy
titles for American gold. You will
also evade the charge of being an in-
novator. _______________
WELL PLACED THUS!.
K. C. Journal. John L. Waller says
he trusts the American people and is
confident they will protect a citizen of
the United States, no matter how
humble that citizen may be. They
would if they could, John. The peo-
ple of the I'nitid States.are with you.
But unfortunately their hands are tied
by the administration. Fnder ordina-
ry circumstances, the administration
is the mouthpiece of the people; the
voice of the president is the voice of
the nation when we have an Ameri-
can president. But it isn't that way
now. The administration now in
power is arrayed against the over-
whelming sentiment of the American
people on every important question
touching our foreign relations, to say
nothing of domestic affairs. The Amer-
ican people are in fayorof the recogni-
tion of the Cuban insurgents as bel-
ligerents, but the administration is
hand and glove with Spain. The peo-
ple sympathize with tlie Armenians in
their Inhuman persecution, but the
official representative of the govern
ment sides with Turkey whenever
possible, and he seems to be persona
grata to the administration. The peo-
ple from one end of the country to the
other have denounced the outrages
upon John L. Waller, but if anything
has been done to secure redress the
peopl< do not know what It b# The
people are demanding a vigorous as-
sertion of the Monroe doctrine and the
maintenance of the inviolability of
Americau soil, but the administration
stenuou-ly denies that it has insisted
upon such maintenance.
Mr. Waller can confidently rely upon
Mitngled by n Train.
Cincinnati, Oct 22. The Baltimore
A- Ohio southwestern passenger train
ran over and killed John Terlinde, of
Ivorydale, and fatally mangled Emma
Burke. The two were walking to-
gether, and in bewilderment, stepped
in front of the locomotive, just as they
reached St. Bernard, adjacent to th#
north line of Cincinnati. „
Fought h IMirl with Kuzor*.
Dknvkb, Col., Oct. —Charles Ro-t
is dead and James Girard is dying at
Watkins, 21 miles east of Denver, as
the result of a duel with razors. Both
men were employed as section hands
on the I'nion Pacific railroad. There
had been a feud of long standing be-
tween them.
< i n • lied lo I It'll t li In it Mm«-
Hartshoknk. I. T., Oct. 23.—John
Thomas, aged 82, unmarried, employed
iu one of the mines here, met with in-
stant death yesterday by being crushed
in a wreck of three loaded pit cars,
which had brokcu loose from the bal-
ance of the trip and started backdown
the slope.
Caitiff OuarwntInrd Kalud.
El Paso, Tex., Oct. 23.—The govern-
ment quarantine against Mexican cat-
tle has been raised. Eighty-five thou-
sand head of cattle have already been
bought in Mexico for shipment into
this country, ami 40.000 of them are al-
ready oil the border readv to enter thi«
Wurkeil Mglit Forea.
Washington, Oct. 23. —There was a
sudden spurt of activity at the navy
yards last night ami between seventy-
five and a hundred men were put on
night work to finish up the armament
of the battleship now lying at the
Mare island navy yard at San Fran-
cisco. This is the first time in many
years that a night shift has ever been
worked at the navy yard and it is re-
garded as somewhat remarkable.
\ St. ,R(i««*| h I'rlilw Minting.
St. Joskph, Mo., Oct. 23.—The pretty
bride of James Leach, to whom he was
married early this month, disappeared
a few days ago aud no trace can be
found of her. Before her marriage she
was known asoneof the prettiest girls
in the city and hail suitors by the doz-
en. She left her home ostensibly on
;in errand, but had previously made
preparations for flight.
Armenian It*-for in« In Fores
Constantinopi.k, Oct 23.—An of-
ficial communication embodying the
Armenian reforms, has been made pub-
lic through the Turkish press. It is
carefully worded iu order to show
that the reforms are in harmony with
existing laws, so as to avoid exciting
the Ttrki
lipal roynl liv Flrr.
Pa ins, Tex.. Oct. 23. —The town of
Bar wot, in Red River county, 22 miles
>ast of here, was completely destroyed
by fire last night, only a few build
ngs in the outskirts of the place be
ing left standing. The loss will read
ttoo.ooo.
jli .ss ii 13CU. ii . on
13 feet. Accompanying this remark- j |Bunshlne of the
able phenomenon is the fact that for-
ests known to have been buried for
periods covering some eighteen or
twenty centuries have now been
brought to light and a vast forest has,
it appears, been discovered in process
of transformation into coal. Ferns and
the trunks and barks of trees are to be
seen in an advanced state of decompo-
sition, showing, in fact, the films and
flakes which are found in coal, and,
while some of the trunks are 10 feet iu
length and still very distinct, they arf
becoming rapidly transformed.
JEWISH SOBRIETY.
QUEER THINGS IN TEXAS.
Han, U'oou and Air Act Strangely
Northern Kyei.
There are some queer things down
here, writes n Texas correspondent of
the Fulton Democrat. For instance,
the best wood you can get will burn
out while you are mixing the dough
for your biscuits. There has not been
a night in three months when one
,neoded any covering. All gloves,
shoes and other leathern articles will
soon mildew and be ruined if neg-
lected. One cannot keep bread and
cake in tin boxes, as they will thus
spoil in a day. It. is the washerwom-
an's paradise, owing to the fine bleach-
ing qualities of Texan artesian water
and Texan sunshine. Stamps and en-
velopes stick together In the most ex-
asperating fashion in spite of every
precaution. A daily bath is not a lux-
ury, but a necessity; one living hero
lean understand why the nneier.t Pom-
peiians spent so much time in their
baths, The sun's heat is like a blast
from a hot fnrnace; it will blister the
Jtender flesh**on one's shoulders In a
minute; and yet one can walk, work or
drive in this sunshine with impunity
;frotn danger of sunstroke, and with far
less discomfort than in the summer
north. One may take
a severe cold, and in a day It is gone.
The severest fevers usually vanish in a
day. One may £et his feet wet, or may
be thoroughly drenched in a rain, with-
out evil effects except to his clothing.
JERSEY CITY'S CHARON.
Ferrlei
CLOTHING FOR MEN, BOYS AND CHILDREN
To select from that is worthy of your immediate atten-
tion. Our Clothing is right up in quality, right up in
style, right up in assortment. Just what will please
you. Come and see, no trouble to show them whether
you buy or not. You are always welcome at the
BEE
Clothing
HIVE
I House
Oklahoma Ave., and First St.
Guthrie, O. T
Cv«u In Time* of Storui and 8tr«M the
.Iihh Abfttaln from Liquor.
During the current month as many as
forty thousand meu and women em-
ployed in the various branches of the
clothing trades in New York city have
been on strike, and they have met with
a measure of success that was hardly
expected even by themselves. A par-
ticularly interesting feature of the
itrikes, which have taken place one
after the other since the opening of the
month, has been the universal sobriety
and peaecfulness of the people engaged
in them, nearly all of whom are Jew
1Kb Russians who have come here with-
in a few years. Not as many as half
lozen of them were arrested for in-
toxication ami still fewer of them for
guy breach of the peace or other un-
lawful conduct. There was no per-
ceptible increase in the amount of
|iquors consumed in the quarter which
they inhabit during the period when
they were out of employment. Mass
meetings were held daily in the imme-
diate vicinity of drinking saloons or iu
buildings part of which were occupiod
saloons, the keepers of which say
that their sales of l eer were even
lighter than usual, while there were no
calls for stronger liquors. Thousands
of members of the Brotherhood of
Tailors were assembled daily for a fort-
night in aud around Wulhalla hall,
hardly a man of whom ever drank any-
thing more alTecting than soda water
ur lemonade.
There is a marked contrast between
Ibis sort of thing, says the New York
Sun, and that which frequently exist-
l in former times in the great strikes
MOVING SIDEWALKS.
ParU Soon lo IIit« hii Affair Similar to
that In U « at th« World'* Fair.
Authorities of Paris have under con-
sideration a proposition for a sort of
electric railway from the base to the
top of Aloutmartre (a hill iu the city of
Paris) which is to be quite similar to
the moving sidewalk which was exhib-
ited at the world's fair. The speed of
one of tlie platforms is here to be three
kilometers per hour, and that of the
other, which eoutains the seats, is to
be six kilometers per hour; it is capa-
ble of seating fl.000 passengers at one
thne on 340 platforms, each of which
has two double reduction motors of
fifteen horse-power; the maximum pow-
er required is said to We KU) hormj-power.
— it is a curious fact that the best
lur for felting purposes comes froul
Knglish rabbits which are bred near
the sea. No explanation has yet l>eea
iua*ie of this singular circumstance
>ver -Tlie Gap," and, I.Ike th.
St j * llo.it man, <«etn Your Obolna Flrat.
The shortest of all ferries, and one the
ordinary New Yorker only stumbles
across through some untoward circum-
stance, is that at "The (lap," between
Communipaw and Jersey City, says the
New York Herald.
Go to Communipaw and then ask
some one how to get to Jersey City, and
the chances are that you will be told to
return to New York and take another
ferry. But if your informant be a train-
man, particularly a Lehigh Valley man,
he will tell you to risk your life by
crossing the tracks of a great railroad
system, walking two hundred yards
and finding the shortest of ferries.
There you will find a great wide row-
boat, a solemn visaged man and about
fifty yards of unbridged water. The
fare is two cents. He of the solemn
visage collects it before he leaves the
Communipaw side. He does not row; ho
sculls and propels the boat with a sin-
gle oar from the stern. Sometimes he
earns thirty cents <311 one passage.
lie is a great admirer of the Penn-
sylvania railroad as an upright and ad-
mirable corporation. Some time ago it
was proposed to bridge the gap. The
Pennsylvania objected. But for that
were Charon's occupation gone.
So now he swears by the Pennsyl*
vania and at the Lehigh Valley, for the
employes of the last named railroad
have a ferry of their own.
TIT FOR TAT.
California Woman I ><►«•* an She I'leaar* and
Her Ilu b.ind Dsn MlcewUe.
The will of Joseph A. Ford, of tha
wholesale dry goods firm of Murphy,
Grant & Co., lias just been filed for
probate in San Francisco. The second
clause of the will is as follows:
"As my wife has In all p.ispb acted entirely
of hor own free will nti 1 against what sin
ltnow urre my w ishes, ami has ; sorted that
the only ro iaoii that sho did not auk for a di-
vorce was the llvlujf she recolvod from me, 1
expressly desire that she shall not receive ont
dollar of my est:ito or what will come to m«
from the estate of my mother "
The bulk of the estate Is left to
the 15-year-old son of the deceased.
Mrs. Ford, who is a stepdaughter of E.
J. Baldwin, the millionaire turfman, U
now traveling in Europe with her sou
and hor exact whereabouts are uu
known. The estate is valued at upwarf
of f 100,000.
Mnnki'ii'^fake n Town.
The suburbs of Mulnto, Mitm.af
overrun with rattlesnakes of all sizes,
from monsters 0 feet long to the young
ones less than a foot in length. Several
people have already been bitten by the
reptiles, the last victim being a far
laborer employed by James Wilsoi
Where the snakes came from Is a my
tcry
simple (ilre of Headache.
An apostle of physical culture elaimi
that the simple act of walking bu
ward Is a never falling cure fornerv
headache
PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS.
—Customer—"(iive me a dozen fried
Oysters." Waiter—"Sorry, sir; but
we're all out of shellfish, excepting
eggs."-Crypt
—She—"It will be a pleasure to ma
to share your troubles and anxieties."
He—"But I haven't any." She—"Oh,
you will have when you are married.'')
—Tit Bits.
—Dozer—"I sec your crowd is calling
for a reform in the town government
for next year." Dinzer—"Yes, sirreel
and, mark this, by fair means or foul,
we're determined to get it."—Roxbury
Gazette.
—An Improvement — "Mrs. Ham-
merhard doesn't pound the piano as
much as she did." "No; since she'i
been taking boarders she spends her
time poundiug the steak."— Detroit
Free Press.
—"So Maud has a title at last," said
the dear girl in pink. "Yes, but it's
a second-hand one," replied the deal
girl in blue. "How so?" "The noble-
man she married was a widower."—
Chicago Post.
—"Ever have any trouble with you*
wheel?" "Not yet," said the Sweet
Young Thing. "So far whenever 1
have run over anyone I have been able
to get away before he got up."—In-
dianapolis Journal.
—No Ground for Complaint.—Cus*
tomer—"The butter you sold me tastes
just like so much cheese." Grocer—
"You will observe, madam, that 1
charged you only for the butter,
though."—N. Y. Sun.
—In Boston, of Course. —Hicks —
"But, really, what kind of a looking
girl is this Miss Beckon?" Wicks—
"Well, I can hardly say; you see, she
didn't have her glasses on the day (
saw her."^-Boston .'J^nserinl
CANCER BY INOCULATION.
A Doctor Furnished the First IEstablished
Case Id This Country.
For the first time in the history of
medicine in this country has a complete
chain of inoculation from cancer been
established in the case of Dr. Edward
W. Burnette, of 115 West Thirty-fourth
street, New York, who now lies ut
death's door. The woman from whom
he received the disease, as the result of
a rather careless act after treating her
case, is also dying from cancer. She
called upon Dr. Burnette last autumn
with an irritation on the tongue. The
doctor applied nitrate of silver with Im
finger. Some time later he shaved him-
self, and in doing so scrratched his left
cheek. To stop the flow of hU>od ho
applied a powder with his finger. He
noticed that the cut stung him longer
than usual, but he paid little attention
to it. A swelling resulted from the
scratch and cancer developed. This
woman in turn was inoculated by
using a speaking tube In the business
house of a man who has since died from
cancer, and who first had had his
tongue cut out. In every case the can-
cer was of the same sort, known a j
"largo cell sarcoma." Dr. Burnette
has been several times operated upon,
but with no success, aud it is now
feared that the poison has so thorough-
ly permeated the system that cancer u/
the liver has developed.
CAFE!
WALLY
* ONGS
FISH, OYSTERS and GAME OF ALL
On Hand all tlu> Time.
KINDS
Only Short Order House in Guthrie.
Second St. near Harrison.
.(Cotton Exchange
(iEO. STROBBEI „ I i-op.
-HicFip WIP& IiHtOHRS, BANDIES AP
Corner Second and Harrison Avenue.
M. L.TURNER. President.
GEO. E. MLLINGSI.EY, Cashier.
Capitol National Bank
The Largest National Bank in Oklahoma Territory.
Capital and Undivided Profits, $100,000.00
WICKIJKR & FAIRFIELD
J Ul
Prompt attention given to Moving House-hold Goods, Plans and Safes.
Coal Delivered to any Part of the City.
Office 508 Harrison Avenue West of Depot. Telephone No. SO.
J. W. McNEAL, Pres. A. J. SEAY, Vice-Pres,
W. J. HORSFALL, Cashier.
Guthrie National
jvwww 1} K •oocooce
Capital - $50,000.00
Surplus ■ 10,000.00
FIRST NATIONAL BANK ORGANIZED IN OKLAHOMA.
Guthrie. - Oklahoma^
"SAY AY E'NO' ANDY E'LL NE'ER BE MARRIED.
DON'T REFUSE ALL OUR ADVICE TO USE
SAPOLIO
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Greer, Frank H. The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 156, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 23, 1895, newspaper, October 23, 1895; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc103847/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.