Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1907 Page: 3 of 8
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FORTY FIVE BUFFALO
THEIR KIND IN THE
WILL PRESERVE
WICHITA MOUNTAINS.
\
Among its many distinctions,
Oklahoma is to now become the
home of the American buffalo.
But no longer will the bnstlv
neckeg beast be the prev of the
animals of the forest and plain,
rro longer will the red men take
sport in their death, only in his
dreams of the Happy Hunting
Grounds; no longer will the white
man ride the tops of the passen-
ger coaches as the trains cross
the plains, and slay the animals
for the sport of seeing them fall.
Protected by the government
in the heart of the Wichita
mountains in southwestern Okla-
homa, the Bos Americanus or bi
sod, erroneously called buffalo,
tbe American stag, is expected
to thrive and again become num-
erous,
Fifteen of the herd of forty-
five of the New York Zoological
park passed through on their way
to the Wichita buffalo range
■where the young animals will
once again be free to roam as they
please. Caged in iron and wood-
en crats and shipped in the pat-
ent stock cars, the buffaloes
snorted and bellowed their dis-
gust tor the proceeding through-
out their journey. Their disgust
for the shipping treatment was
only measured by their joy on be-
ing released on their arrival at
the park. The herd was met at
the station by teams and hauled
Living Alone.
Are you happy and content only
when you are in the company of
others? Do you, as soon as you find
yourself alone, "just run over" to a
friend's to chat awhile, because you
get lonesome? One who finds himself
or herself getting into this attitudo
toward solitude, needs to do a little
serious, wholesome thinking—alone.
Such are In danger of learning to live
wholly from without, forgetting to live
from within.
Friendship Is good for us. We all
need it to broaden and round out our
lives. Companionship is wholesome
and helpful for every one.
But she who can say, "I am never
leas alone than when I am alone."
holds the secret of a happy life.
If you can spend a day alone, hap-
pily content and satisfied with your
own company and thoughts, it Is a
pretty good indication that your inner
living is reed; that you art not de-
pendent uron others for your mental
pleasure or profit.
in their crates to the forest re-
serve twelve miles north of Cache,
Okla.
The animals will not be turned
loose in the park which contains
7,680 acres of ground until spring
when they will be allowed to
roam the mountains at will. Dur-
ing the winter they will be kept
in four corrals loo feet wide by
200 feet long. Inside each of the
corrals forty foot shed have been
prepared in which the animals
will winter. They will be fed al-
falfa hay.
To protect the herd from the
roving animals of the Wichitas,
a wire fence of coiled steel spring
wire ninety inches high has been
built around the entire area.
The animals will be under the
personal supervison of Keeper
Frank Rush,, government fores-
ter, who has spent his life on the
plains and in the cow camps.
The idea of a southwestern
herd, founded by a gift from the
New York Zoological society,
origineted with Dr. William T.
Hornaday, director of the park,
and from its earliest mention it
was warmly endorsed by the ex-
ecutive committee of the society.
The offer was made to the secre-
tary of agriculture, who immedi-
ately accepted it and ask<>d the
society to select a site for the
new feed range that would be
Care of Oil Cloth.
Oilcloth should never be scrubbed;
if this course «s followed the paint will
•tuickly be wora off. It should first
l>« carefully swept with * soft brush
to remove all the dust and fluff, then
wiped with a large soft cloth wrung
out of tepid (not hot) water. If It Is
very dirty It may be neewsary to usa
a little oft soap, but tht shoufd be
done rarely, and on no account must
uoda be used. When it Is dry, wipe
oyer with • cloth or sponge dipped
In skimmtd milk, which will brighte*
uud preserve the colors and give it a
polish. After sponging with the naUh
dry with a cloth
OASTOHIA,
Boart tie Kin!l VoU HaV0 *lways ""UgH
Public Sale.
Having rented my farm for 1908 and
am moving to town, I will sell the fol-
lowing property at public auction at
my farm 3 miles south of (iuthrie (con-
tinuation of Pine street) nw. J of Sec.
34, T. 16, 2 W., Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1907,
commencing at 10 o'clock a. m. snarp:
8 head of horses, including 4 colts; 1
dapple grey horse 6 years old, wt.
about 1200 lbs; 1 bay horse 12 yrs, wt
1200; 1 bay horse 4 yrs, wt 900; 1 bay
mare 5 yrs, wt 950; 1 mire colt coming
2 yrs, 1 horse colt comi ir 2 yrs and 2
suckling colts. 2 mules, 2 bay 3 yrs.
and 1 2 y, old, 3 yr old is broke.
14 head of extra good milch cows,
most young; 1 high bred red Durham
bull; 4 shoats, wt 35 lbs each; 4 shoats,
wt 150 lbs each; 2 brood sows with 12
pigs, 1 wagon and hay rack; 1 binder, 1
lister, 1 bull rake, 1 spring wagor, 1
corn grinder, 1 mower and rake, 1 Am-
erican spring tooth cultivator, 1 sucker
state seed drill, 1 double shovel culti-
j vator, plows and harrows, 2 corn culti-
vators, 1 cotton planter, 2 sets work
harness, 1 organ, 2 bedsteads, 1 steel
range and a lot of barred rock chickens
and ducks.
About 150 bu corn in crib; about 75
shocks Kaffir corn and about 40 of corn
and a lot of cowpea hay in stack.
Terms: All sums of $10 or under,
cash; over$10 a credit of 12 months on
approved security notes to bear ten
per cent from date. 5 per cent off for
cosh. Free lunch at noon.
Joseph Ropp.
R A holt, Auctioneer
A L Cocbum, Clerk
Men's Work Shoes, all solid leather,
$1.75 to $3.50 The most wear for the
least money in shoes at Robinsons.
Th* of rmdtm.
Looktnf back Into history. •
Is amazed to find how tnng It took
the world to find out the joys of free-
dom. Moses saw it. and determined t «
get It for his people. Paul had a Rood
deal to say about It. Here and there a
"liberator" rose up fiom century
centurj. Probably more have lived
than we know of. It did not use to ba
considered worth while to chronicM
the dolnss of any but the iron-gloved
tlass. When Green wrote his "History
of the English people'' it Was an in-
novation. "People." forsooth! What
were they that they should have thei.-
history written! I.ists of kins* 111 '
their doings were history.
With the granting of the habeas
corpus the joy of England increased
enormously. Even the music changed
(rora the minor to the major key. the
key of Joy.
Presently it be-an to be decerned
that men behaved Ustter, the more
freedom they had. It was found that
women were truer and better the leas
they were spied upon and guarded
Schoolmasters discovered that disci-
pline could be mainta ncd and improv
Sd bv giving to their pupils much
more liberty and l-ss punishment
(linn they had ever had.
Little bv little it has dawned upon
r.s all that one of the chief joy. of
life is having one's own way. Gen-ral-
,v a man betters his way. feels his
responsibility and raises to meet t
when he has the power. Chester \
Arthur was a wonderful example of
l*,p truth of this sayinx.
One re« nn why people so raac'i
niore like to keep house rather than
•0 board is because in housekeeping
bv themselves they have their own
way. They may not really enjoy so
l.nod a table, nor so clean a house, but
they have their own way. and so ihev
i re happier.
If you wrnt your wife or your hus
hand to be happy, give t>er or hira- 33
Tar as you possibly ran, her or his
own way. With a nature possessing
a spark of nobility, it will pay. You
will get your return a thousandfold.
In family discipline we forbid our
children rnrnv things that ti ey want
pnd might just as well have. The mod-
ern authorities say that a child shot-ll
be granted his own way so far rs poss-
ible. He must early he t. uV.it 'h0
rights of others, and r.ever to lnfrings
upon them. Keep him intelligent and
sensitive to moral values—then trust
as largely as you can t<> his own judg-
ment. It is said to be the best way.
A great many women want to vole.
Others do not. Women have seldom
had any of their disabilities removed
through any striving of their own.
The veiled women, the unschooled wo-
men. the footbound women would for
ever have stayed veiled, unschooled,
foot-bound. If outsiders—generally
noble. generou3 men—had not stepped
in—here one and there another; and
removed the restri tions and oppres-
sions. The least thing that could b
done would seem to be to let each di
os she plesses. Freedom, freedom! St.
Paul, Plato. Seneca would have thought
mad a nation la which every man can
vote. We tnfy be mad and we may go
to ruin yet—but in spite of certain
daager slgna's it does not look so
now. It looks u though the freedom of
all men t* vote had been a good
thing for and could hardly be
overdone.—Kate Vrson Clark-Brook-
lyn EaeU.
Ohedlanc* In ChlMmn.
Itenl obedience In children consists
In tlclns wl'ft they have beta told to
- i rVforfuUy. promptly and exactly.
To sccr.re such obedience a mother J
ihouM never give a command unleS3 1
she expects to have it obeyed. Having
given it she will not be bluffed or team-
ed out "f seeing that it is obeyed.
One of the most effectual means of
1 curing obedience is to secure the
el lld's attention before giving a com-
mand. Many times a child does not.
Sev because he does not hear half that
1 said to him. or only half under-
nds.
Never allow a child to take Ills own
,Tie for obeying, as that is only en-
mraglng his natural desires to do as
pleases. This is a source of fric-
tion that may easily be avoided if a
mother Is consistent.
One of the simplest and best meth-
ods to obtain obedience without ill-hu-
mor or arousing antagonism, and to
win and hold children's respect, an.l
confidence Is to be reasonable in de
mands and whenever possible, to ex
plain the motives, for request, refusal
or demand.
No mother should think it lowerin
her dignity to stop and give a reason
to her children for her actions.
Let the mother put herself in he?
children's places. Would she feel likn
obeying cheerfully many command!
that seem to be givfn only to interfera
with one's pleasure and which seem
unnecessary and unimportant?
The fact that a mother will explain
to her children her reasons and treat
her children as though they had somi
rights, will win a quicker and happie
response and secure prompt obedtenci
to an imperative command al other
times when there is not opportunity
for explanations.
Even the tiny little tot at the knee*
understands a great deal more, than
most mothers appreciate and a reason
stated simply will make clear many
questions that might have proved a
vexatious obstacle in the ways of obed«
ieuce.—Exchange.
%
Advertise your city
And Country by sending some of those beau-
tiful Souvenir Post Cards of ours to your
friends ia the East or elsewhere.
We have post card views
of the Constitutional Convention in session.
The New lone Hotel, Court House, Masonic
Temple and mauv others.
Guthrie in a nut shell
With twenty-lour views of the city, is a good
novelty and everybody wants one. Call and see
our line. Thousands of cards to select from.
F. B. Lillie & Co.
TWO ENTRANCES
204 Harrison Ave. 119 South First St. Phone No. 7
QUI HRIE. - - - OKLAHOM
OASTOHIA.
Bears the "1,16 ^'nl1 ^ HaW A|W,S B°U^
Signature
of
QUEER HEARTS.
There is one curious fact which not
everybody notices about the common,
finger-long green caterpillars of our
larger moths. Their hearts, instead of
beius In the front, are at the back of
the body and extend along the entlra
length of the animal. One can see the
heart distinctly through the thin skin
and can watch its slow beat, which
starts at the tail and moves forward to
the head.
Hearts of this sort, reaching from
head to tail, are not at all uncommon
in the simpler creatures, says St. Ni-
cholas. The earthworm has one, and
so have most worms, caterpillars and
other crawling things.
Hearts in the middle of the back
are also quite as frequent as those In
what seems to us to bo the natural
place. Many animals, the lobster, for
example, and the crawfish and the
crab, which have short hearts like
those of the beasts and birds, never,
theless hare them placed just under
the shell In what In ourselves would
he the smtll of the back.
Find War letter In
Old Junk Trunk.
In an old trunk, bought recent-
ly at public auction in St. Louis
along with other second-hand
goods, the Renfrew Furniture
company, of Alva, Okla., has
found a letter which was written
by a Union soldier in station at
Harrison's Landing, Va., to a
sister in New York City and of
date July 7, 1862.
The envelope is addressed to
Miss Teresa Surand, No. 47 West
Broadway,' New York City, and
| was returnable to Capt. ]. S. Tis-
sott, acting adjutant Fifty fifth
I New York.
New Oklahoma Granite.
Mr. J. E.Ogrosky, who bought out
the Capital City Marble and Granite
Works, has moved the business to Vine
street, half a block north of lone Ho-
tel, in one of Joe Rhode's buildings. He
has considerably enlarged the stock
and does business all over the territory.
One of the new features is the use of
a granite from the quaries of Cold
Springs, in Caddo county, where anew
stonecutting plant has recently beea
established. It is considered the finest
! granite in the world, is dark gray in
| color and of a fine, perfect grain, so it
polishes without a flaw. Mr. Ogrosky
I has A. E. Marr in the field as general
I salesman, and intends to make Guthrie
I the center for the best tombs of the
state.
.HENDERSON
811 to 815 WALNUT ST., KANSAS CITYi MO.
Over 80 year® In l£an*R« City. EST ABLIBHEO 1867.
slaufto'tris' u Chronic, Hbtvous and Special Diseases,
Cures guaranteed or money refunded. All medicine! furnl«h«d ready (or use-no
mercury or lniu.toui medicines used. N o detention from business. Fattenta at a """J"
treated by mall and eipress. Medicines sent every when. free f.™™ A"*. st t? J5r
Charges low. Over 60,000 cases cured. Age aud experience are important. Stat* your
case and aend tor terms. Consultation free and aoafldeoUal. personally or by latter.
It is human nature to sing In tkl
parlor aud swear in the kitchen.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Hate Always Bought
When a man talks to himself the
Question Is always one-sided.
The possession of prudence is a cur«
for lack of luck.
Mak * Rambling Remarks—Th
hobu
Seminal Weakness n<i
Sexual Debility, of youlhful
follies and moms-causlug night loaseii
and Iom of sexual power, plmplrs and
blotches on Ihs faea, confused ideas and
forsetfulness, hsshfulness and aversion to
society, sir., cured for life. I atop night
losses, restore sexual owsr, nerve and
brain power, enlarge and strengthen weak
Fiarvs and make tou fit for marriage. Bend
or free book and list of questions.
CaJaImm Radically cured wltfc a
blNOlUrO new Iafalllble Home
AUaI Treatment. No ln-
HnCI Ulwwl strameatv, no pala, no
de'ea loa fromSualasss. Cursgusrantaed.
Book and Hat of questions f rss-senl sealed.
Hydrocele and
DUSimacIc few day9 without pain
■ III 111 OS IS or danger. Book free.
Varicocele scrotum causing aer-
yous debility, weakna.ia of tbe sexual sts
tem, eto., permanently cured without pain
CxmIvIII* That terrible disease. In
oypmil&j an its forms and stages,
cured for life Blood poisoning and all
private diseases permanently cured.
DAAIf both taxes—06 pages, 27
DvVW pictures, with full desorlptlon
of above diseas.-s, the effects andoure, sent
sealed In plain wrapper—free.
triui tkll 1 ekfsr Us 1 (srasttet It soststM
Fan Mussum o* AaavossY fob Mm
Good Printing Promptly Done at,
I he Oklahoma Printing
I' Company-:- N.First St.
PIANO PRICES THE LOWEST
E. H. KNAUSS
We have just received and have oti the
we always consider quality
We have but one price and
Our plan of selling is on the easy
Never before in the history of Guthrie has the people bad the opportunity to own a piano at the low price that is now otfired at
floor 2 car loads of pianos from the Eastern market. These pianos consist of some of the best known makes tn buvine pianos for the trade
before price. Every piano on our floor is fully guaranteed by our personal and factory guarantee. Our system t « 'cables everyone to own a piano
that price is placed on a card in plain figures on every instrument, so that your child would be as safe in se^ect'®fJ* - JL f m us as the wisest buyer. Ou. r „ .
monthly payment plan by investing a few dollars a month you are able toown one of these:htgh Rradeng ■ piano s { fr0tn $6, $7, $8, Srt, tl2, $15 Pe r month.
W« •*— bce'secn S lS4"we"t customer ,h'c .d,„«agc of choice of c. Colo, of vooc^
SAME QUALITY OF GOODS
Don't be deceived by our competitor that states that they can save you from $50.00 to $i50.00 on an imstrument. \*c lnvitc compardistributers for*the northwestern part of
grade of instrument, and tone quality.
WE DEFY COMPETITION
IN PRICE IN
I
wisb ;„u to believe us .o^o.U.ic.- But wish to say KS K,^ =o i«V«r loohed «... e ...no.
Oklahoma. We issue a special invitalion to the public to come and see the largest and most complete stock o p • ' -t every buyer
The prices are not only the lowest, but the pianos are the best that workmanship and tncterial can produce.
and prices ranging from
Call and investigate this
Stock before buying. Our
prices are just as we repres-
ent them
S100, $185, $200, $230, $235, $250, $265, $270, 5280
$290, $300, $335, $350, $385, $400, $435, $47r>, $7r>0
Don't fail to see us.
Visitors will be shown the
same courtesy as pur-
chasers.
104 W. Harrison Ave., GUTHRIE, OKLA.
E. H. KNAUSS
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1907, newspaper, October 24, 1907; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc112569/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.