The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 16, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 10, 1898 Page: 2 of 8
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"PERSEVERANCE".
Instructive Oration of Miss Jennie
Massey.
•'•GLIMPSES OF FLOWERY KINGDOM.
Valedictorian
SIM Pearl MIITomI.
dux, Point* n"*
Her
the
"llrlaDlnii"' •"
riaainXr"'
our onw
price for the crown of the victor.
The proudest motto for the young.
• Write It in lines of gold upon thy
heart and in thy mind the stirring
words unfold.
And in misfortune's dreary hour, or
fortune's prosperous gale.
•Twill bear a holy cheering. 'There s
no such word as fail-
-THE FLOWERY KINGDOM."
GKADI'ATINO ORATION BV MISS
STELLA MAE REXROAD
• ' — «- xz TS£Z?£!X£2Z
in love with his own image In the foun-
tain and changed into the flower bear-
in* his name, and the hyacinth sprang ;
from the bl-«>d of Hs'acinthus, ac«_.- ,
dentally killed by Apollo.
Passing from the realm of .egend
that of history, the violet suggests N.i-|
poleon, called Corporal Violet by h.s
followers, and the primrose is ass -c;a:- .
ed with Lord Beaconsfleld. I
The rose has become emblem a t
England: the lily of Franc-; the thi.-f.e
of Scotland: and the shamrock of Ire-
land. . .
Our own nat! nal f >\ver has n :
been chosen, but at present the c >1-
umbtne has many adv .cat-*. It gr >ws
in nearly every state of the union; Its
free trial to
any honest man
the foremost medical company w
thb WORLD is thk rl.'bkof w eak
men makes this offer.
The following orations were deliv -red
at the High School commencement ex-
ercises Friday evening:
perseverance.
Tonight we launch our ships upon the
Jeep; .he puro white sails are inflated
by the breexe and the signals are fly-
ing from stern and mast head.
Behind us lies the realm of our child-
hood. before us naught save the vast
expanse of the ocean. We can not P.-n-
which hides futurity
We know not how
.,>t and all n my
if I c >utd imder-
t and all, and all
act, and
eirate the veil
from mortal view
strong or how weak yon waves may
become in after years. Yet we know
that every cloud has Its silver lining.
"Perseverance is a Roman virtue."
That wins each God-like
pluck* suci egs
52*en from the spear-proo
rugged danger.
Perseverance will overcome every ob-
"Where there's a will there s a
says an old adage and the lives
afford many Instances of
little yello*v
chemical composl-
and
formed
ely placed in
Flower In the crannied w ill
I pluck you out of the crann
Hold you here r--
hand
Little U ^
stand
What y u are. r.
in all, , , , „
I should kn« w what G -d .ml man «.«*.
Truly, "A learned man cou'.l give it
a clumay nam- ."
He could pluck it apart an 1 namj its
divisions; sepals, petals, stamer..'. I
tils, anther* and filament. He c .a. 1
say that the beautiful green / its leaf
is due to little grain* of eh. •! •!'«• "
that when it begins to fade, th-'.' P-""
Will be supplied with
grains «* a 11 d zauth- p>
He might give it
" He might go farther and "how how
the first cell was firmed in the lltt.-.
,vule; how that divided Into two cells,
md after Innumerable divisions
I subdivisions, finally there was
crest of the perfect embry-
' the seed, patiently awaiting an opp -t-
tunity to develop.
He might trace the growth from the
tiny seedling to the mature plant or
stately tree. He might name Its famH>
and give the characteristics of i.ie sp.
ctes and varieties, yet he
Plain that one mysterious propeitj,
called life. . . th
The genius which can subdue the
forces of steam and electricity
erless to push the smallest grass ij
through the soil. The skill which
carve marble and engrave gold can not
make one delicate. fragUe blossom.
After a life time of study the great
e*t man must acknowledge himself > -
tied in the presence of a work ills in .
Now wonder the study of plants has
facinated the minds of many. The.r
uves are typical of the strugg.es, trie
aspirations, the victories of human life.
In their varied forms we truly
••beauty blossoming out of law.
The dawn of man's existence
him interested in plants.
About 300 B. C. Theophrastus
Plants. The Eider
a description of one
famous f >r medica
was done in the
HAPPY nARWAOB, HEALTH, ENERGY AND
LONQ LIFE.
in «'l the world tndvr—in *11 the hiitory ol
th?world—no doctor or institution h" treated
as ha* the futnod
fc&IE ilhillCAL COM
"History
I Pliny has left us
j thousand plants.
Flytrap,
taining very
fitacli
way,
of great men
the power of the will. This, together
•with perseverance and the honest per-
formance of duty, will assuredly assure
success. In entering upon this vast
scene of action, where every one Is
Jostling against his neighbor, crowding
here, trembling there, and pushing
along at such a headlong pace, we can
not expect to drift comfortably along
wilh the tide and yet attain the happi- |
ness which thousands are so eagerly
pursuing. Everything has Its price.
For the beautiful dawn pervading all
*he earth with the glory of the new-
born day, there has been the night.
for the rose bathed in the morning
dew. and cruel thorn; and for the
sparkling wine the purple grape has
been bruised and torn. The poet sings:
"Were there no race to run, no bat-
ties fierce to fight,
Were there no brains to rack, no
fears, no death, no night,
Then there would be no crown to
wear, no laurels green;
No endless life to gain beyond this
transient scene."
Another says. "Upon our difficulties^
surmountod we build our ladder to
heaven."
Great ends can only be obtained by
(great means. "Paradise Lost" was
written by Milton, when the light of
day fell upon his sightless eyes veiled
in a shroud of eternal darkness. Those
.soul stirring notes now gliding along
n exquisite harmony, now swelling in-
to the roar of the thunder storm, and
again bursting forth into joyous
strains as the laughter of some moun-
tain brook as It dashes along Its way,
awoke no answering ech
poser's heart—Beethoven was deaf to I Very sharply upon
his own music. A homeless one was he
who wrote "Home, Sweet Home.
Blsmark. the greatest of all states-
men. was once scorned, scoffed at and
considered almost in the light of a fa-
natic. Yet he has scaled the wall of
opposition, he stands upon the topmost
pinnacle of glory. His hand clasps the
Olive twig his brow Is encircled by a
wreath .if earth's brightest laur ls.#
In all times and in all ages, sorrow
has scourged the human race. Affllc-
lions lay bare what i* nobles In man
He only who has bowed his head be-
neath the pruning knife, whose soul has
been purged by sorrow and suffering.
wears u|>on his brow the seal of noD.l-
ity.
Ywi aged man, Just lingering upon
the threshhold of eternity, whose brow
is pervaded by a light, half divined,
whose eyes beam with a holy tender-
ness. and whose lips breath messages
,is it were from heaven, was not always
ihus. His heart once, too, was torn by
j-onflicting passions, his path was not
without its stones and piercing thorns
«lse this peaceful change had ne'er
been wrought.
Man was born to overcome difficul-
ties. From the cradle to the grave,his
life Is nothing but a series of battles.
tory which only urges him to Join again
In the conflict, to surmount another
wall even higher than the first.
No matter how wildly the tempests
rage, tho' the billows roll In upon us
with almost overwhelming f>-r> •_ and
the whirlpool rises to engulf us into
the fathomless depths below. I t us
not despair, let us stand firm and un-
llinchlngly as the wall amid the raging
elements, battling manfully for the
right, even should we founder on
treacherous sands, and failure be the
■ nd of our endeavor, success i.-< em-
bodied in that very failure.
Ami when old age creeps up n
when the light of youth has left ur
eyes and time has threaded our hair
with silver, when dreams <>f the laurel
ind olive branch have long faded
then at last, when th
spent their fury, lik
Ing brows will be
fresh green Ivy
The barriers
Is pow-
blade
can
name suggests Columbi
name is derived from th^ Latin wtd
meaning eagle: i's leaf b-ing of many j
parts Is emblematic of our motto,^ E.
Plur bus Unum;" and the lobes of .is
divisions are thirteen In number, cor-
MB iodine to the original CoUmlM.
Egyptian and Chaldean astrologers (
have searched the sky to determine the
fates of men by the stars, unconscious
that their fortunes w.-re to a. much
(greater extent controlled by the r. -a-
lers ar und them than the stars above, j
I "Spark full well. In language quaint i
and olden i
On- who dwelleth by the castle
Rhine,
When he called the flowers so blue,
and golden. !
Stars that in earth's firmament do |
chime."
\S Galileo's telescope revealed the
wonders of the sky to the astronomers. ,
the micr- -cope revealed the wonders of,
earth to the botanist. And as the
astr .n .mer grouped the stars into con-1
stellations which he called families.
Vres ag' there were flowers uf which
we have n -w no trace except, perhaps,
a fragment in some rock.
They have vanished from our firma-
ment—our "Lost Pleiades.
Hut bright and beautiful are the con-
stellations that remain, rivalling the
brilUan y of Orian of Andron eda.
• N,. less infinite greatness ^ .
in the creation of a tiny bl
Thl H due to the fart that thc eomwiny ea*
BE
"They'VlIMind their magically elective appll-
ace and a month', course .4 o
jositivcly on trial, without txpeu*., to auy ro
AW nud bfpatd unM mutts are Mou-ti to
our weather-beaten barks are lost for-
ever in the surges of the deep. ««|
have eate-md each other, loved each
other, and now we must par:; but may
parting only draw closer the tie that
binds us. God grant our lives may be
as successful as our sch.wl days, and
that we r..ay meet In the land where
parting Is unknown. And now
"Nine sisters come from their convent
on the shining heights.
Of Pierus, the mountain of delights.
To dwell among the people at its base
Now seems th* world to change a
times and space,
Splendor of cloudless days and starrj
nights.
And men and manners, and all sounds
and sights.
Have a new meaning, a diviner grace.
Proud are these sisters, but not too
proud to teach
Science and song, and all the arts that
please.
So that while housewives spin, and rar-
mers plow.
Their comely daughters clad in home-
spun „
Learn the sweet songs of the Pierides.
i Rural News ol Oklahoma, j
**************************
NOTICE—411 correspondents must ha*e the
name of tonn, county, township and name of
correspondent on each letter to Insure publi-
cation. The name Is not for publication
SAMPSON AT WORM
Believed to be Fighting Spanish of
Cape Verde.
V. OAtrial %> Hw Hern Herelved
--Heavy ( anoonrndln* Heard
\nr WiiiiIf * rtxti.
ance un l a month's course
liable
Hot
and acknowWiafa oy w? "*• Ar>f,riBnfe -nj
T' • Kr.-' v." al « "tai'itny s Apr'«ance «nu
Remedies have ^-n talked of and wntuaaboul
in the world
to vitalize, de
tissue, new lile.
^ .vfflk exceues,
°' They gl'™ full strength, develorrnent and tone
to every i<nrtiou and onian of the
| |o a short time, and application must be made at
om. than uwi—
reatlon f a massive planet." | wri^to^eVjg MBDl'cAL o8jg| g'.g*
T . .... b •"/ talo. N. y.. and rsier to then oiler in tlili paper.
""
found
wrote
enly bodies moved
ible to mortal ears.
If this is true, surely the fi wers j
in a mighty anthem with the ^
• f the spheres," and the stars of >
respond to the s:ars uf heaven. "«
depth of the riches, both of the
d. rn and knowledge of God.
•Music :
arth ;
, the :
DELUSIONS.
THE ORATION DELIVERED
MISS PEARL C.IFFORD.
of
that
one
Venus
dew
are
tenacles
rolling
carried
properties. Litle
' .i,nre until the 11th century n
Brunfels wrote an Illustrated histor>
of plants.
In the lTth century John Ra>
England made the division In to fl
erins and flowerless plants. The next
century saw Linnaeus, arranging his
nomenclature and descriptions, much
of which we use today.
Then Goethe conceived the idea
all flowers were descended from
original or standard Bower-others be-
ing merely variations This he coul
not prove, but it led to the ImportanJ
conclusion that all parts of the plant
except the root and stem are modiflca
tlt>ns of the leaf.
Flou^rs are altered branches
pals, petals, stamens and other por
ti ins are only modified leaves. Thl
variety of leaves is illustrated in mans
curious plants.
A striking example is the
leaf has two lobes con-
sensitive filaments. If
in the com-I t he,j bv an insert the lobes
the hinge-like mid-
rib " leaving" the unwary insect a pris-
oner to be absorbed by the plant.
Another strange carnivorous Plant -s
the Sundew, named from a v,s. :d fluid
secreted and resembling drops o
In thes unlight. Entangled msec
Immediately graspel by the
on it- leaves, and by a curious rollln
movement of these tenac.les are
to the center of the leaf and there .
V'Darwin performed an interesting ex-
periment with these plants. He placed
r.mst meat upon their leaves, permit-
ting them to absorb it. occasional.y re-
newing the supply, rpon comparison
with other plants, those that were f
showed a marked Improvement in num-
ber. size and color of flower stalks and
leaves. Again, leaves appear in tlu
form of pitchers, of spines, of tendrils
scales, and other forms which no one
but a botanist could recognize
The lik-n^ss may be easily trace,
trough various forms of flowers and
fruit—still echoing the words of (« -
the: "All flowers have a resemblance
none is the same as another.
And the chorus points to a mystica
law-
Points to a sacred riddle.
In recent time, the study of the cr>
ptogamia or flowerless plants has ex
cited much attention—some as nv
mildews and yeast b.-ing scarcely iJ
cognized as plants. The most common
and best known of this class
mushroom. Its study has received the
dignified name of mycology.
Among the most beautifu. of toe
crypt -garnia are the ferns. They have
„o 11 -.vers and no true seeds. Mans
admirers of their delicate foliage, have
never observed on the under side of the
leaves, the little spores corresponding
t,, the seeds -if (lowering plants.
Hut the smaller plants are surpflSFel
in grandeur by the trees—those faithful
companions bringing food, protection,
comfort and enjoyment to man.
There are those famous foreigners.the
banyan with its vast rooting branches,
luable palm, the Australian eu-
;th its tall, beautiful mar-
then the gigantic re.l-
if our own California, and the
hi. h our American p--ets have
celebrated. Of the oak, Lowell
i no crown to mark
md the elm, he hon-
In some profit, though with loss of
name or health,
In some plunder, spent on vices or by
stealth.
Many persons in this great world art
deluded by thinking that power brings
happiness. So they strive for office and
strive for power and strive for fame:
but power does not necessarily bring
happiness. The more power one has
or higher the office he holds, the more
responsibility Is thrust up--n him. In
the struggle for power, men strive for
positions which they are n->t qualified
to fill. What is fame?
'Tis the sun's gleam on the mountain
spreading brightly as it flies.
'Tis the bubble on the fountain rising
lightly ere It dies.
The love of praise howe'er concealed
by art.
Reigns more or less, and glows in e\er>
heart;
The proud, to gain it, toils on tolls en-
dure.
RIVERSIDE RIP PI. IN G S.
Lacey. Kingfisher Co.. Ok!a.. May 10.—
IVople in this vicinity are very much ex-
cited over the war news.
R.iin in abundance anil the busy farm-
er is putting in his crops.
Mr. Glynn has a nice trade in the mer-
cantile business.
Ed Yount is the proud father of a big
baby boy.
Harvey I'tterback was In Kingfisher ?■
few days this week.
John Harnett made a flying trip to King-
fisher this week.
Alvah Hopkins has bought a fine team
of horses.
Mr. Wood sold a fine team t>> Mr. Night-
ngale this week.
Miss Emma Smith has accepted a
sition in Mrs. Morrissey's millinery storv
Kingfisher.
New York, May 9.-The World has
received the following copyrighted ca-
blegram from (leorge Rronson Rea,
dated Puerto Plata, San Dooming.),
May 8:
"Dominican officials rep.-rt heavy
cannonading off Monte Orlstl, about fif-
ty miles from here.
"It is believed here that Rear Admir-
al Sampson's squadron Is engaging the
Spanish Cape Verde fleet.
"The firing began about •> o clock this
morning, and was terrific.
"The American fleet was due to ar-
rive in Porto Rican waters yesterday
afternoon. The Spanish fleet was ex
neeted about the same time.
•Sampson came here with orders t
find the Spanish fleet and reduce it.
He will, after
ish ships, begin
if necessary, he
ture Porto Rico."
WORK.
^ , |
lestroylng the Span-
strict blockade, and,
will bombard and cap-
RED OAK NEWS.
Red Oak. Cleveland Co.. O.*.. May 10.—
R. M. Fowler is on the sick list thi.
Use it reg-
Ther is a common aphorism travel-
ing the rounds of society written by
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.:
"Tell me not in mounrful numbers,
Life is but an empty dream.
For the soul is dead that slumbers. ^
And things are not what they seem."
A delusion is a mistaken conviction.
The evidences of these delusions may
be constantly seen about us every-
where. They are silent wili-'o-the-
wisps that lure us ini - a seemingjr>al- , ~"m' d hun it but to make it sure,
ace Of marble halls, with unnumbered The mo 8c„)tr,g.now on thrones
flitting Pleasures here and there and O er gwoes a
everywhere: but in realty the> re ^ the midnight lamps in col-
SOUfCtS Of pain and worrs. In""r| ""
lives delusions are as numerous as flo ^ prays, preaches, pleads,
ers in the fields and meadows in - Harangues in senates, speaks in mas-
spring and summer. One could spend I Harangues in
a life-time in recounting delusions, and
RAD PAY AND HARD
The bad pay and hard work jf t'-ain-
1 nurses has often been mad • the sub-
ject of benevolent remonstrance by
eminent medical men and non-pr ...
si ,nal philanthropists. It is well for an
invalid, before he gen so bad as to
need a nurse nr doctor, to use Hostel-
ler's Stomach Bitters if he has chilis
and fever, constipation, rheumatism,
lyspepsla and nervousness.
ularly.
INDIAN TRADES.
EDITOR OF THE OSAGE JOl RNAL
CRITICIZED.
Cleveland, O. T.. May "-(Special Cor-
respondence.)-! he editor of the Osage
Journal has taken upon himself the great
responsibility of righting the wrongs of
the Indian traders as against the Okla-
homa legislature, the officers of the coun-
ties and the supreme court of the United
States; a responsibility that but few men
would like to assume, yet this editor as-
sumes the task wiih great gusto. liu
starts out by saying "we would let loose
some of our pent-up spleen and give 'em
h .-• I think that he has been letting
his spleen loose for some time, as he has
Sige Cummins is up again after
vere spell of fever.
James Beddo of the Kickapoo country.
has been visiting his father at thin place.
Several of our neighbors have been call-
ed to Norman as witnesses an«l jurynvn.
Rube Smith and wife of the Chickasaw.
are here visiting.
Several claims are for sale in this lo-
cality. ,
hall ^ms™''k^wnUm "his'"irta of kept up In his paper in nearly every issue
the countrs" swooped down upon us las.
s a result all crops will have
not entirely cover the subject.
\mong those which we may view, ai-
m st daily, are the delusions of dress.
s-"'iety position, wealth and power.
The love of dress often deludes peo-
p\ - into following grotesque fashions.
Fa*hi-in sometimes makes a reasonable
demand of us. and then we ought to
yield to it. but o make fashion a (rod.
is death to both body and soul. The
daisies of the field have their fashion
,,f color and leaf, the honey-suckles
have their fashion of ear-dr
snow flak
heel, the writer
and the
querades.
It aids the dancer'
head,
And heaps the plain with mountains of
the dead:
Nor ends with life, but nods In noble
plumes,
Adorns our hearse, and flatters on our
tombs.
VALEDICTORY.
Tonight we end our high school
course. Our memories linger on scenes
forever past. We have climbed the hill
thus far toge.her. Many stones have
weeK.
to be replanted.
The war excitement is Increasing and
the patriotic enthusiasm Is at fever heat.
WARWICK ITEMS.
Warwick. Lincoln Co., Okla.. May 11.—
High waters are numerous after a few
ilavs and nights pouring rain
A Sunday school was organized at War-
wick Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Linton of Bell Cow. were
tho guests of Mr. Bovard's last Sunday.
The heavy rains will set the farmers
more busily at work again as It done a
great deal of damage on the creek bot-
toms.
War Is the talk of the day.
Homer Harmon is going to start to Cu-
ba next week.
Mr. and Mrs. Calkins and Mr. and Mrs.
Potete were in Chandler Saturday.
Miss Ettle Dewese of Fallis, is visiting
her sister. Mrs. D. IB. Weaver.
the foolish chatter of 'taxation without
representation;' he has talked it so much
at it is possible he thinks the burden <
of taxation comes upon him. Now I am 1
sorry if he has that Idea, a* i don't be-
lieve he ever paid a penny of tax in his
life, to anyone, not even to the Osage
Nation. He became a squaw man to
avoid taxation, we think. He is cham-
pioning the trader's cause when they are . f
a class that never paid a penny of tax |
on their business until Oklahoma passed
♦
h
Hung out of the winter we upturned, many difficulties
the
calyptus
ble-like stems.
elements hav■
the wall our aeh
Hiled by a wreath •-
which Impeded us
says. "There li-
the forest's king.
"Doge of "Ur leafy Venice here.
Who with an annual ring d. '.li wed
The blue Adriatic overhead
mely associated with hums
-cm and flower*? No wond
heavens have their fashion of exqui- ,
•ene*s. Having a dress more costly
than a friends will not bring joy or
.appiness to any woman. Content-
ment is uueen of the heart and cannot
be found adorning the brilliant dress
f man. Those who depend for their
omfort upon the admiration of others.
irfe subject to frequent disappoint-
ment. Some one will criticize their ap-
-arance or surpass them in brilliancy.
Many are the delusions of society. |
Young women sometimes imagine that
ie.usure an-1 happiness ar- to be deriv- |
ed from moving in fashionable society,
attending operas and balls: often the
w ittiest and seemingly the gas est, has
a heavy heart.
The desire to have a good position in
this life deludes many. A person may
think that if. by some stroke of what
is called god luck, he could attain to
j.,rne position of wealth and distinction,
higher than that for which God has by
nature fitted him. he would be su
premely happy. An English 1 >rd, min-
ing in the highest sphere, was -me day
found seated with his chin in his hand
and his elbow on the window sill, look-
ing out and saying. "Oh. how I wish
I could exchange places with that
dog."
The desire to amass wealth seems t<
be Inborn In some men. They toil ear-
ami late, from day to day. and year
■ ear. save in every p-ssibie way.
and deprive themselves and their fami-
lies of every advantage tha wealth can
hest-.w. They will sometimes compel
thl-r employees to work unremittingly
and f t the smallest possible remunera-
t-. n All this and even more than this
men have done, to accumulate wealth,
but gold does not bring contentment.
y.-u mas* see pj--ple happy and misera-
ble in all conditions of life. In a fam-
ily where the last loaf Is on the table,
and the last stick -if wood in the stove,
sometimes there is cheerfulneMl While
in i mansion often there is unmistak-
able -V den.-s .f -lis ord and unhapps-
|n ,s. Real happiness oftener looks out
of The window of a humble home than
through the opera glass In the gilde
box of a theatre. What is wealth.
*T;s a rainbow still re :ig as thf
panting f..ol pursues; or a t. y that
v,,uth unheeding se ks the readier way
mounted.
. *y
H
the imaginative Or-
, ks the laure
Yet what
rimes s.one m -n wll (1-
their felend- r share,
We trisected oaui. con-
demned Catilene, destroyed Ilium, and
lead Aeneas to the Golden Fleece. We
dmonstratd the laws of attraction and
("pulsion, of capillary action, -if light
m l heat. Of electricity and magnetism.
We learned of the beautiful flowers,
the jewels of the earth, of tides and
winds and storms, frequently engaging
in hurricanes and blizzards. The tree
of mathematics has bloomed and we
plucked the fruits of algebra an-1 ge-
| ometry. The Importance and significa-
tion of the Ego, we have learned from
physcology. Now the moments being
the time of parting with redoubled
wing. This is our last fond meeting.
The world is wide an-1 we must dwell
apart I dare not lengthen these sweet
ad moments. How hard 'tis to break
these tendrils that have grown round
our hearts. Though it gri-v.-s to re-
member. it is vain to regret. All fare-
wells must be said.
Honorable members of the school
board, to s"ou we express our gratitude,
for the privileges we have enjoyed. In
coming years, we will trace our suc-
cess to this instituti -n which
4uard. With words of recommendation.
I say good-bye
Esteemed instructors, we cannot ex-
press our heartfelt gratitude to you
for your kind and ever watchful care
over us. warning us of impending dan
gers, and removing obstacles from our
way. The lessons which you have giv-
en are fixed deeply in each heart, an
will n< t soon be effaced. \N ith a heart
filled with esteem and love, I bid you
farewell.
Dear schoolmates, our long assocla
tion has been happy and harmonious
the thought of parting fills our heart
with sadness. To your faithfulness
uprightness, we commit ilv> future < a
•r of our beloved school. ith
heartfelt sorrow, I bid you farewell
Dear classmates, for a dozen yea
we have worked and planned togethe
we have wandered in the fields
knowledge, and often me t and mlngl
our thoughts in « onfldential friend
ship. And now as we go forth to
gin alone the work lying before
let us encourage each other with
strengthening words. We launch our
vessels upon th^ billowy sea of lift'
around us our friends anxiously wat
our course. They will rejoice if w.- i
rive safely at port, or weep bitterly
The bad breath is a danger signal.
Look out for It! If you have it, o. |
any symptoms of indigestion, take a
bottle or two of Dr. Pierce's golden
Medical Discovery. It w ill stra ghten
out the trouble, make your blood pure
and healthy and full of nutriment . >r
the tissues. Il Is a strong sra-emtnt
but a true one that the "Golden Medi-
cal Discovery " will cure 9S per cent, of
all cases of consumption if it is taker,
in the early stages. It will relieve ven
the most obstinate c-s-.-a Ji' long staiiu-
ing.
El Reno. O. T.. May 10.—(Special.)—The
body -if the man found in the Caddo coun
try Sunday May 1. with the head severed
from the body, was exhumed yesterday j which the Osage
an-1 identified as that of a man named
mlt, a cousin
- by 11.".. «I -". •*'
not do anything toward detaching this
ion from Oklahoma to please
sum or money. vim - *— -
morning for the scene
orders to arrest parties suspected of be-- or
ing implicated In the murder. Journal.
BODY IDENTIFIED.
Ol'SIN OF FRANK GAI'I.T. A WEAI
THY CATTLEMAN.
this tax law . and the supreme court sus^'
talned it. Ii was a new thing to them, i
they had made their millions without
helping the government one penny. These
traders do not pay to the United States
Government nor to the Indian Nation
with whom they trade one penny of tax.
either directly or Indirectly, outside of
the live civilized tr..,es (they are under
different laws) and this apostle of justice
knows this to be true. And again he
says "but as that Oklahoma congrega-
tion." meaning every one in Oklahoma
with the exception of himself and a few
Indian traders and cattle barons. I sup-
pose. "our one regre- is t-.at the presi-
dent didn't call for t-5.000 men to be draft- i
ed from Oklahoma Instead oi only 123 to
tight Spaniards." He further says "were
they all drafted from Oklahoma w.- woui.^ ;
like to see the Spaniards pour the shot i
and shell into them till they were a thing r
of the past—all this we would ask and
still claim to be as patriotic .us any on-
dare to be." Great scott! this editor has
mistaken egotism for patriotism! We
have no hesitancy in saying that any
man who will publish such stuff as this
should not be allowed .0 print a paper
even If he Is a squaw man living within
the borders of Oklahoma. ouch men as
this editor should not be allowed to mar-
ry among Inoians, as such men are an
a'rehists. and are liable to stir up insur-
rections among e Indians if they have
any influence. However, in tnis case there
is no danger, as Indians never talk with
him Believing that congress Is now
well Informed as to the condition as to
Nation stands to Okla-
homa. and that it will not listen to th.
of Frank Oault.Ihowl made y such men as this or ^
and a few others who desire to live
,uth side of the South Cana<"
and that the body was robbed of a large j
of money. Officers left here this Osage
the crime wilt, a few Indian traders and cattle barons,
even to please tne editor of the Osage
you
/wear mi
'W,
your thinking cap or y.iur y.
working cap? The woi.;, :i ft
who studies to save i- r*.*lf H
labor and exp.u e—who w
strives to have her house m
st at all times ti ti Is ftk
nothing so helpful as y
usf
D
WashingPowdgr
IteRt for cleaning everything.
Largest package — greatest
economy.
The N. K. Fairhank Company,
Chtcatr i hi i.i . N w York.
Huston rhlluilf Iphia
MlnjPW
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Greer, Frank H. The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 16, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 10, 1898, newspaper, May 10, 1898; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc104494/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.